I'm like ... Omigawd. Valley Guhls in Drag - so it Was contagious.

Why.. Mick LaSalle musta just gone round the bend and plumb missed the Shakespearean underpinnings of what merely seems the babbings of Ren & Stimpy on some bad kool-aid.

Unclearly, what we seem to have here is .. translated across <- - - - -> the age-gap: Shrub's inner-speak; that stuff that goes on in the jelloware during those narcoleptic deer-headlights i n t e r v a l s .. like the famous Seven Minutes.

And here it [link|http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/10/17/PKGAJ98TG11.DTL| IS!] from the mouths of these Deliquescent Doodz, our Murican pair'o Fellinis, close as we get in '04 . . .
Forget "Fahrenheit 9/11." "Team America: World Police" is easily the most riveting political satire of the year, if not the most entertaining, silliest and dirtiest.

[...]

"Team America" constitutes a generational litmus test like none before it. At the screening I attended, younger viewers laughed hysterically and emerged with huge grins on their faces; older viewers sat in silence and walked slowly from their seats, scowling.

[...]

Q: Still, do you ever feel like you cover your asses too much by taking on targets on opposing sides?

Parker: I don't think so, because we do take somewhat of a stand at the end. I mean, I believe we do make a point at the end of the movie. Some people consider that point to be fairly right wing, and some people consider it to be fairly left wing.

Q: What do you think that point is?

Parker: (Laughs) The thing is, obviously, we're not setting out to make a movie going, "Look, America, this is how you should run things, this is how it should be." Because then we'd be no better than the f -- actors we hate. But the only thing that we assert is that there's a difference between d -- and a -- . That's the biggest thing that we assert.

Stone: That's such a strong political statement.

Parker: And it really kinda is! Because that's the thing that we realized when we were making the movie. It was always the hardest thing. We wanted to deal with this emotion of being hated as an American. That was the thing that was intriguing to us, and having Gary (the main character) deal with that emotion. And so, him becoming ashamed to be a part of Team America and being ashamed of himself, he comes to realize that, just as he got his brother killed by gorillas -- he didn't kill his brother; he was a d -- , he wasn't an a -- -- so, too, does America have this role in the world as a d -- . Cops are d -- , you f -- hate cops, but you need 'em.

You be (Here Come) da {shudder} Judge.