<div class="section1"><div align="left" style="position:relative; left: -2"><table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" align="left" border="1" width="32.1%"> <colgroup> <col width="100.0%" /> </colgroup> <tr valign="top"> <td width="100.0%" colspan="1" rowspan="1" style="" valign:="" top="" background-color:="" f3f3f3=""> <div class="Normal"><img src="/photo/911434.cms" alt="/photo/911434.cms" border="0" /></div> </td> </tr> </table></div> <div class="Normal">Michael Moore has lost the battle, but the war has just begun.
<br /><br />A day after George Bush returned to another four years in the White House, Moore must have been drinking down his sorrow from those mini-bottles the US citizens have voted for: his website <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">michaelmoore.com</span> preferred to remain silent about the result. <br /><br />Moore''s blog which propagated everyday why Bush wasn''t the right choice is stuck in time, still urging people to go and vote. All that has changed is picture of Bush, made up of what looks like tiny photos of all the soldiers who have died in Iraq.<br /><br />Moore''s legion of Bush-bashing works engaged the public domain. He mobilised 1,200 people to film the entire voting process to spot any discrepancies. <br /><br />He released <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Fahrenheit 9/11</span> just weeks before the elections. He wrote several books, including Dude <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Where''s My Country, Will They Ever Trust Us Again, Downsize This! Random Threats From An Unarmed American</span>: all critical of Bush, all readable mixtures of fact and conspiracy theories. <br /><br />Moore''s message before going to polls was loud and clear: This is it. Let''s do it!<br /><br />Moore, like many other analysts and engagers of the public domain, must be trying to figure out what exactly went wrong with the Democrat vote. <br /><br />But does Moore need to be despondent? Not exactly. He''s made himself famous by bashing Bush. He''s got to be pleased, in some corner of his mind. After all, he''s just got four more years to flay Bush. <span style="" font-style:="" italic="">Fahrenheit 9/11</span> The Sequel, more book contracts, more public exposure. <br /><br />Not all bad then: neither for Moore nor for creative dissent. Let Round 2 begin. This has to be entertaining.<br /><script language="javascript">doweshowbellyad=0; </script></div> </div>