Plagiarize This!
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
DIGG THIS
Planet Punditry
has been abuzz these past few days over the alleged plagiarism committed
by Sen. Barack Obama in a campaign speech in which he copied Massachusetts
Governor Deval Patrick’s use of quotations from Martin Luther King,
Jr. Thomas Jefferson, FDR and JFK without crediting Gov. Patrick.
That’s right.
So I guess if I were to come across a particularly effective use
of a quotation from Patrick Henry by a writer on this web site,
I would be obliged to say: "As Bill Huff (let us say) said,
Patrick Henry said…" And then if you were to read my essay
and wanted to use that same quotation, you would be obliged to say:
"As Jack
Kenny noted, Bill Huff cited those unforgettable words of Patrick
Henry, ‘Give me liberty or…’"
Give me
a break!
In case you
missed it, Sen. Charisma was responding to repeated claims by Mme.
Hillarious that Sen. Charisma offers the voters of America nothing
but words – beautiful, noble, high-minded oratory, with nothing
but speeches and crowd excitement to show as accomplishments. Apparently,
the same charge had been made against Patrick by his eminently forgettable
Republican opponent in 2006. So Captain Charisma responded in the
same way, citing the importance of "mere words."
"‘I have
a dream.’ Just words? ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal.’ Just words? ‘Ask not what your
country can do for you’…" And so on.
Now, because
Obama did not credit Patrick, the Clinton camp is charging, "plagiarism."
It may get pettier than that and probably will, but that’s bad enough
for now.
Now it turns
out that in his first Inaugural Address, President Bill Clinton
employed the words of another without attribution. As Sam Roberts
pointed out in Wednesday’s New York Times (See how I am carefully
attributing things?), the new president began his speech that January
day with a reference to the "depth of winter," quickly
followed by the invocation of a "spring reborn in the world’s
oldest democracy, that brings forth the vision and courage to reinvent
America."
Never mind,
for the moment, the hubris involved in the notion that President
Clinton, the choice of a minority of those voting, was charged with
the mission to "reinvent America." The point Mister Roberts
(whom I cite once again) was making is that those words were, as
Clinton later recalled, found on a page in a typewriter of the Rev.
Tim Healey, a friend of the new president’s and a former mentor
at Georgetown, a Jesuit university. Roberts wrote that Clinton said
(See, I’m still not plagiarizing) the words were in a letter the
priest was writing to Clinton at the time of his fatal heart attack.
(The Clintons have that effect on a lot of people.) The priest was,
so Roberts said that Clinton said, offering some suggestions for
the Inaugural Address.
Now was Rev.
Healey acting as a volunteer speechwriter or was he writing as an
authority, who expected to be cited as such if and when his thoughts
and words were used in the address? Well, Mr. Roberts quoted Jimmy
Breslin, who, Mr. Roberts said, wrote in Breslin’s Newsday
column a few days after the Inaugural:
"When
Healy sent Clinton that phrase it was with the idea that he would
be alive and that he would hear Clinton say, ‘In the words of the
Rev. Tim Healy...’"
Well, as Bob
Dole, President Clinton’s vanquished challenger in the 1996 election
might say, "Whatever." (I apologize for being unable to
find the original source for "Whatever.")
Now back to
that business about "reinventing America." That one slipped
by me at the time. I know that early in his first term, the Boy
Wonder of Arkansas delegated to Vice Predator Al Gore the task of
"Reinventing Government," a big enough job. (I loved Joe
Sobran’s typically deft response: "How about reinventing freedom?")
But I didn’t know King Bubba himself was planning to "reinvent
America." But maybe that’s the same thing. For the Clintons
and others of their mindset, America and the American government
are pretty much the same thing. There is not much room for any aspect
of America that is not supervised, subsidized and legitimized by
the government.
That includes,
need I say, the "right to choose" abortion, which right
exists and may be found, say the wizards of the high court, in the
penumbras of other, enumerated rights that point to an unspecific,
unarticulated "right of privacy." So one woman’s act in
privacy, carried out in conjunction with her physician and anyone
else she chooses to include in the decision, is something you and
I must pay for, even if one or both of us believe it is an unjust
and immoral act namely the deliberate killing of an innocent human
being. And that is true even if you or I or both of us believe that
abortion is to the late 20th and early 21st
Century what slavery was to an earlier era: something that caused
Thomas Jefferson to say (as cited by Bartlett and others), "I
tremble for my country when I know that God is just."
That’s what
the "right to privacy" and "freedom of choice"
has come to mean to people of a mindset shared by Clinton, Obama
and nearly every Democratic office holder above the rank of state
representative (and most of the state "reps," too). In
fact, the Arkansas BillHillies arrived in Washington at least 20
years too late. America had already been "reinvented"
by 1993 – most memorably and dramatically, on January 22, 1973,
when the U.S. Supreme Court issued its rulings in Roe v. Wade
and Doe v. Bolton.
There is one
thing Supreme Court decisions and speeches by presidents and candidates
for president have in common: they make you hope that they live
up to Mark Twain’s observation about Wagner (as cited by many before
me), that "Wagner’s music is better than it sounds."
Unfortunately,
these usurpers of America’s liberties are not better than they sound.
If anything, they are worse, which is why the Clintons wish to play
on our fears of the "silver-tongued devil." (Forgive me,
but I don’t know who coined the phrase "silver-tongued devil."
I do know that in the early 1970’s, singer-songwriter Kris Kristofferson
came out with a song, which I believe was also the title of an album,
"The Silver-Tongued Devil and I." But don’t quote me on
that.) Strange that the Clintons should be warning us of a slick,
smooth-talking candidate for president now. Sort of like Goebbels
warning against propaganda or Elizabeth Taylor warning us of the
dangers of celebrating film stars who have made frequent divorce
and remarriage part of their "lifestyles."
I mean it,
Bob Dole is looking and sounding better all the time. No silver-tongued
devil he, Bob Dole simply attributed most good things to Bob Dole
– you know, Bob Dole will do this, Bob Dole won’t do that, Bob Dole
is not afraid to say or do some other thing. Asked finally why he
didn’t simply say "I," Bob Dole said (as quoted in the
New York Times and elsewhere) "You get your name out
there the other way."
But Bob Dole
on the campaign trail used to read aloud the Tenth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution: "The powers not delegated to the United
States by the Constitution, nor denied by it to the States are reserved
to the State respectively, or to the people." Now Dole did
that with proper attribution. But if he had forgotten where he found
that principle and quoted it and acted on it anyway, I would not
have minded.
Would you?
February
22, 2008
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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