Posted on 09/26/2004 7:20:50 AM PDT by OSHA
Figure 13. The upper right shoulder of the e shows signs of damage throughout the memos. (Image scanned at 4200 lines/inch).
Perhaps these are just random samples taken from words and merely pasted together into a pastiche. If so, a proper analyst would indicate from where each sample was taken so that other researchers could duplicate his work.
He also seems to think, because he "scanned at 4200 lines/inch", that a scan of a low rez scan will improve the image if scanned at a higher rez. This is not useful information because we do not know what level of scan was done at each step of the original copying process, what level of compression was used in the PDF files he downloaded, or what level of reproduction his printer used.
I also note the "good" doctor's sloppiness... there are TWO Figure 13s in his document.
It appears to me that his evidence of "wear" is more likelly evidence of pixelization of the printing/scanning/copying/repeatedly process. Note that in the word "meetere..." the "consistent" wear supposedly shown in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 5th "e's" is NOT CONSISTENT in the 4th "e"!!!
I think his analysis is flawed.
He may have demonstrated that the forger was a little more thoughtful than we gave him credit for. The professor's work seems to me to indicate that the forger downloaded the "Typewriter" font and used that to attempt to spoof a typewriter of the early '70s... with the same font metrics as Times New Roman. He himself pointed out that many of the Typewriter fonts were created from copy scanned from REAL (shall we say "worn out") typewriter copy.
Check our my post just above this... Post 81
So it looks like this guy might have thought the same thing, then because he/she wanted it to look authentic, went out and got/downloaded a font called "typewriter", thinking it would look like an old fashioned typewriter, but instead, they got a proportional font that looks very very much like Times Roman....? Awww heck, probably not..
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1228013/posts
The article was written by this guy: Contributor Occupation Date Amount Recipient HAILEY, DAVID UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY/ASSOCIATE PRO 5/25/2004 $250 Kerry, John
RICHMOND,UT 84333
But I am sure he doesn't have an agenda. He is a professional educator and would never let his political inclinations influence his scholarly work.
Actually, I did look at his web site and he is a good interface designer. Nonetheless, he is suffering a recto-cranial inversion if he believes that you can overlay and match letter for letter 1972 typewritten docs and 2004 default settings computer generated docs.
Remember, the article is not intended to change the minds of the educated. It is to fool the fools.
The two are not mutually exclusive.
Well, to be honest, isn't that what freepers tried to do to Clinton? And were pretty successful, in fact, considering about 50 mil of taxpayer money was spent on it?
Well, but wait a sec. Are you saying Bush DID show up for the physical? Or that the thrust of these memos is wrong? Remember, the secretary who said she did not type them, nevertheless agreed that they did reflect the opinions of her boss, who supposedly wrote them. I read the article, and his analysis that the printed characters display evidence only seen with mechanically produced text seemed fairly persuasive. The guy doesn't say he's sure of anything, but he's got 30 years of text analysis at the Univ. of Utah (hardly a liberal school). There's a lot behind these memos that we're not aware of, but there's not much doubt that back then, Pres. Bush was indeed irresponsible, and may well have been doing some kind of chemicals that made him leery of having a physical. Do you want Bush supporters to seem shallow and uncritical, which is what I think it looks like when you are so quick to call these memos fake with very flimsy analysis, and thus ignoring the flaws in Bush that is their subject. You should read what this guy has to say. I think about 75% of it is pretty credible. The rest is open to question, which he himself says.
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