Posted on 11/25/2003 6:05:52 PM PST by OESY
DES MOINES, Nov. 24 It may be called the Case of the Disappearing Pause.
When President Bush laid out the potential threat that unconventional weapons posed in Saddam Hussein's hands last year in his State of the Union address last year, he became tongue-tied at an inopportune moment.
The line read, "It would take one vial, one canister, one crate, slipped into this country to bring a day of horror like none we have ever known." But Mr. Bush stumbled between the words "one" and "vial." And when at the word vial, he pronounced the "v" as if it were a "w."
Yet in a new Republican commercial that borrows excerpts from that speech, Mr. Bush delivers that line as smoothly as any other in the address, without a pause between "one" and "vial," and the v in "vial" sounds strong and sure.
Republican officials acknowledged yesterday that the change was a product of technology. The line, they said, was digitally enhanced in editing "to ensure the best clarity."
The difference between the speech and excerpt was noticed by strategists for former Gov. Howard Dean of Vermont. They saw it as they put together their own advertisement attacking the spot, which presents the Democratic candidates as undermining the fight against terrorism. Word trickled back to Democratic officials, who retrieved the tape and confirmed that there was, indeed, a difference.
The Democrats asked whether the Republican National Committee had gone to the White House with sound equipment to have Mr. Bush recite the line anew for what was the first Republican commercial of the campaign season here. That might have meant that the party was not being truthful when it said it had not coordinated with Mr. Bush when it made the advertisement, a possible violation of law.
The Republicans said there were no such doings. "The audio that you hear is from the State of the Union address, the video that you see is from the State of the Union address," a spokeswoman for the national committee, Christine Iverson, said.
Party officials said the line in question was "cut and pasted." Still, Democrats were ecstatic over the perceived chink in an advertisement that they have criticized for days as unfair.
"Audio cutting and pasting is `Bush speak' for them having doctored their own ad," Jim Mulhall of the Democratic National Committee said.
Ms. Iverson said the Democrats were not exactly aboveboard when they made an advertisement this year that featured an excerpt from the State of the Union address in which Mr. Bush said, "Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa," a statement that was reported to have been based on questionable intelligence.
She noted that the Democratic advertisement had left out the beginning of the sentence, "The British government has learned that. . . . "
A Republican strategist said it was not uncommon for specialists to rework candidate's speeches to sound better in spots, just as newspapers do not tend to include "umms" and "uhs" in quotations.
Douglas E. Schoen, a Democratic pollster who worked for President Bill Clinton, said that making an alteration in the State of the Union address was different.
"The distinction I would make," Mr. Schoen said, "is what the president says at the State of the Union is an essential part of the historical record."
Martin Kaplan, associate dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California, was less concerned.
"Changing the sense of something is a serious issue, this isn't that," Mr. Kaplan said. "But it does change the sound of leadership. It's relevant for a president whose narrative is that he's inarticulate."
It may be called the Case of the Disappearing Pause.... Democrats were ecstatic over the perceived chink in an advertisement that they have criticized for days as unfair." Audio cutting and pasting is `Bush speak' for them having doctored their own ad," Jim Mulhall of the Democratic National Committee said.
Ecstatic = Pathetic. Just when did Democrats renew their interest in great oratorical skills?
"One man with courage makes a majority."--Andrew Jackson
"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."--Franklin Roosevelt
"The buck stops here."--Harry Truman
"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."--John Kennedy
"Better put some ice on that."--Bill Clinton
"It all depends on what the meaning of 'is' is."--Bill Clinton
"And when at the word vial, he pronounced the 'v' as if it were a 'w.'"--Jim Rutenberg, New York Times/Democrat Lackey
"Party officials said the line in question was 'cut and pasted.'"--Jim Rutenberg, New York Times/Democrat Lackey
I love the smell of desperation in the evening...
Speaking of "technological dubs"...
It may be called the Case of the Disappearing Pause.... Democrats were ecstatic over the perceived chink in an advertisement that they have criticized for days as unfair." Audio cutting and pasting is `Bush speak' for them having doctored their own ad," Jim Mulhall of the Democratic National Committee said.
Ecstatic = Pathetic. Just when did Democrats renew their interest in great oratorical skills?
"One man with courage makes a majority."--Andrew Jackson
"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."--Franklin Roosevelt
"The buck stops here."--Harry Truman
"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."--John Kennedy
"Better put some ice on that."--Bill Clinton
"It all depends on what the meaning of 'is' is."--Bill Clinton
"And when at the word vial, he pronounced the 'v' as if it were a 'w.'"--Jim Rutenberg, New York Times/Democrat Lackey
"Party officials said the line in question was 'cut and pasted.'"--Jim Rutenberg, New York Times/Democrat Lackey
See Jason Blair RE: Accuracy in NYT Reporting. :o)
...but douglas didn't get caught sucking toes, so we don't have any idea why his opinion should matter.
Something is rotten in the state of DemLand.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.