Robert L. Daniels of
Variety criticized the play an "abstract, sloppy satire" and a "a blatant display of tastelessness". Simon Saltzman of
CurtainUp called the play "circuitous and seriously lost in tasteless charades and obscenities".
Talkin Broadway's Bob Rendell praised the play's themes, writing that Blessing was "unflinching in his hatred of what he sees as an immoral America whose foreign policy is to support, train and arm vicious dictators who slaughter and terrorize their own people" and that he made "a very strong case for his views". Neil Genzlinger of the
New York Times described the play as funny but "unpleasant to watch". == References ==