Bowling for Columbine was very good actually. Informative me thinks.
It could have been, but he did too much slanderous editing. Most of the points are good, but Moore screwed them up by wanting to portray things in a very specific view that was a bit far from the reality--regardless of a fair bit of info being almost right.
On the video:
1) It is funny
2) Persecution? Yeah, let's forget imperialism...oh, and corporate control of everything (kinda like we are now). The colonies were for England, not the pilgrims.
2.A) We didn't kill that many Brits. We just weren't going to give up, so they did.
3) KKK became an illegal terrorist organization in 1871? Well, illegal...that depends (IIRC, laws allowing the KKK to enforce JC laws were not called into question for a good while). But it was a terrorist organization by 1866 (read: 1866 was an election year). The NRA actually tended to be (can't generalize and say it deinfitely *was*) against the KKK, and specifically chose leaders that were against them, even if many members also were in the KKK. However, neither of the two had anything to do with the JC laws (mainly because everything to set them up was there before either organization. Note I do not recall when the NRA was founded at the moment) or each other. Not that they weren't related, but all they did to either of their causes was put a new face on them. So, to be specific, they had nothing to do with each other in the sense that they were moving parallel and they didn't start or stop anything, just increased the scale and changed the look a bit.
4) Why mention Rosa Parks and leave our Plessy vs. Furgesson(sp) and Brown vs. Board?
5) The vast majority of what is depicted as happening in order was going on over a century before the civil war, and only changed slightly afterward, even up until the 1950s. The guns are about the only correct part. The way the KKK evolved was actually pretty smart, keeping the rich white guys in power, and using the poor whites to help them stay that way. Although several other things, like Enron, were smart, too
.