Novelist Vince Flynn on the War
Fri, Nov 16, 2007 at 9:31:23 am PST
I have to admit, I had not heard of novelist Vince Flynn or his character Mitch Rapp before reading this interview, but he sounds like an LGF kind of lizard.
Q: How can we win the war on terrorism when many cannot acknowledge who the enemy is?
A: That’s a tough question. I’ll waffle on this. As a society, we need to start demanding a few things. We have embraced liberty, equality in the sexes and religion — we believe in all of this. If you want to come to this country and you are Muslim, you had better agree and be fine with the Christian and Jewish faith. But if you are going to come over here and preach hatred and raise money for Hamas and Hezbollah, we’re going to kick you out of the country.
As an Irish-Catholic kid in the 1980s, I remember being disgusted with the thugs and the terrorists in the [Irish Republican Army] and I don’t remember anyone who was Irish-American saying to [novelist] Tom Clancy after “Patriot Games”: “How dare you portray people in the IRA for what they were, a bunch of thugs and terrorists?” What drives me nuts is people like [the Council on American-Islamic Relations] who, any time somebody in fiction or on TV has a villain who happens to portray what is going on in the world today — Islamic radicals who embrace a cult of death and are running around killing innocent women and children — they get upset about it. CAIR would better serve American Muslims if they spent more time criticizing these Islamic terrorist groups.
Q: If Americans are so opposed to torturing our enemies, how do you explain the popularity of Mitch Rapp?
A: They’re not opposed to torturing men like Sheikh Mohammed, but they don’t want to run around and talk about it in public. Look at Hollywood. They all detest President Bush because their friends will think they are smarter by hating him. They wear it as a badge of honor. They try to prove to people they are smart and compassionate and enlightened, so people will like them. But instead, they make these movies the American people don’t want to see, because deep down inside, the American public does not want to see a movie that bashes America. People like Rosie O’Donnell say they love America, but they have a funny way of showing it.
People want a guy like Mitch Rapp looking out for them. People want to believe there are guys like this out there protecting us.Q: This year has seen a surge of antiwar films, which are flopping like dominoes, while “Protect and Defend” is the No. 1 book this week. Is Hollywood ready for Mitch Rapp yet?
A: I don’t think we are quite there. Hollywood is now saying people don’t want to watch movies about war. No, Americans don’t want to watch [bad] anti-American movies about war. Americans would love to watch a great movie where Mitch Rapp is meting out punishment to these crazy zealots, but I don’t know if Hollywood has the guts to do it. If Democrats take the White House, Hollywood will make a movie like that in a heartbeat.

