Michael Moore was so reviled after his 2003 Oscar speech — in which he yelled, “Shame on you, Mr. Bush!” from the stage — that he hired nine ex-Navy SEALs to protect him. “[I] met with the head of the top security agency in the country, an elite, no-[bleeping]-around outfit that did not hire ex-cops, nor any ‘tough guys’ or bouncer types,” Moore writes in his new memoir, “Here Comes Trouble.” “They preferred to only use SEALs and … due to the alarming increase of threats and attempts on me, I had nine of them surrounding me, round-the-clock.” The gadfly also recalls the vitriol unleashed at the Kodak Theatre the night he won Best Documentary for “Bowling for Columbine” and was booed off the stage. “An angry stagehand came right up to the side of my head, screaming as loud as he could in my ear: ‘[Bleep]hole!’ ” Moore writes, adding, “When we walked into the Governors Ball, the place grew immediately silent, and people stepped away for fear their picture would be taken with me.” He says Robert Duvall complained to the hotel where Moore stayed that his mere “presence was causing a commotion.”