Posted on 02/24/2008 7:11:53 PM PST by Congressman Billybob
Senator Hillary Clinton, among others, has begun using swiftboating as a verb. Her use is courtesy of the New York Times. Now, with extreme and unintended irony, the Times has sought to swiftboat Senator John McCain, and has been swiftboated in return by its own ombudsman,
To sort all that out, we go back to the beginning, so the original swiftboaters dont get swiftboated in the bargain. Does that make sense? I thought not. Hang on and it will all become clear.
The original swiftboaters were crews of Swift Boats in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam. These were small, fast vessels with a small crew, commanded by a Lieutenant. Senator John Kerry commanded one, ending his very short tour with three Purple Hearts. He later offered his military background as a qualification to run for President.
I debated against Kerry, in college. I was in Yale, and in the Yale Political Union, when he walked in the door. I had little respect for him then, I have less for him now. It was not a surprise to me when the majority of Kerrys fellow swift boat commanders, and a majority of his commanding officers, came forward to say his career was much less than he proclaimed it to be.
These men came forward, and in public, televised statements, told the truth about what Kerry in Vietnam. These statements were made mostly in advertisements, because the media chose not to explore whether Kerry was lying about his service. Those ads were paid for mostly by small donations from Vietnam veterans, still angry about being called war criminals by John Kerry in the winter soldier project and such.
Many observers credited the swiftboat campaign as making a critical difference in Kerrys narrow loss of the presidency.
But who was telling the truth, John Kerry or the swiftboaters? The New York Times claimed that the swiftboaters allegations had been refuted. Since much of the press takes their lead from the Times, the belief that the swiftboaters brought down Kerry with lies, is widespread. But that is also a bald-faced lie.
Is it true that 47 million Americans are uninsured? No, it is a lie. One-third of those are not Americans, but Mexicans and other aliens, Another third are Americans who have changed jobs, and have other insurance by years end.
Is it true that the Arctic ice is melting to extreme low levels (and the coasts are going to be flooded, and were all gonna die...)? No, it is a lie. Arctic ice did melt during the summer. It does that every summer. But now its back to its usual level. And at the same time, the Antarctic ice was growing.
Was John Kerrys military record what he said it was? There is one way, and one way only, for a veteran to demonstrate the truth about his military record. That is to sign a Form-180, which allows the release of his confidential records. Kerry claimed he did that, finally, in 2005, but neither that Form nor his full records have ever appeared.
In the absence of complete, official records it is only Kerrys word against the word of most of his fellow officers and all of his commanding officers.
The law has a concept called adverse inference. At trial, if one party controls a certain document and doesnt produce it, the judge instructs the jury they may draw an adverse inference, meaning that the missing document must be harmful to the party concealing it. Thats not as complex as it sounds.
Consider: you have a five-year-old child. You hear a crash in the kitchen. You get there, a chair is beside the refrigerator, the broken cookie jar is on the floor, your child is a few steps away. You ask, Where were you when the cookie jar got broken? If you dont get a good answer, you draw an adverse inference.
For an accurate description of the swiftboat-Kerry contest, read To Set the Record Straight by Scott Swett and Tim Ziegler.
Now, when Hillary Clinton uses swiftboat as a verb, she means a false attack on a politician which causes harm. But her very use of that verb swiftboats the swiftboaters. Their attacks were true. If they werent, Kerry would have blown them out of the water by releasing his military records.
This week the Times swiftboated itself. It ran a front-page article accusing John McCain of having an affair with a lobbyist, and providing biased political help to her clients. Except the article only implied the affair because there was no proof. It only implied the undue influence, because there was no proof of that, either.
There was also a dash of hypocrisy. When the Times editorially endorsed McCain in the Super Tuesday primaries, this hatchet job article was in the pipeline.
The Times, however, has swiftboated itself. Without the quotes, that verb means to tell the truth about a person or institution, and cause (justly deserved) harm. The Times own ombudsman has written a column condemning its editors and reporters for violating journalistic standards.
If you have time, get and read the history of the swiftboaters. When anyone uses swiftboat as a verb, you should ask this question: Is the person using this word to sell me a political falsehood? If the answer is yes, then the speaker is a liar, and the new word should be in quotes. That will make politics more honest, and protect the reputations of thousands of men who served quietly and with honor, on US Navy Swift Boats.
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About the Author: John Armor practiced in the US Supreme Court for 33 years. John_Armor@aya.yale.edu He is running for the 11th Congressional District of North Carolina.
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John / Billybob
Notwithstanding the deceptions from the left, “Swiftboating” is to tell the truth about someone, by means of named and verifiable sources, so as to destroy the candidacy of a particular person. Not one thing the Swiftboat Vets told about Kerry was false.
So are you saying that McCain wasted his money hiring the democrat -top -gun- lawyer? Appears to me the supposed hit piece was more like a negotiated settlement not a hit piece because there was no there there. Idle gossip over ancient events.
Well written as usual.
BTTT
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You do.
Bush won by 3 million.
Nixon beat McGovern by 18 million.
Another aspect of "swiftboating" that I think plays an important part in how the verb is used and perceived, is that it includes an element of long-standing grudge. That is, the Swift Boat Veterans had been slandered by Kerry 30-some years before he ran for President -- the injury and offense done those many years before had not abated.
So I think it's worth noting that "swiftboating" necessarily includes some amount of "giving what they got coming to them, at last".
That applies to the NYTimes in this instance as well, though the timeframe is different. They've nursed a grudge against conservatives for a long time, and their attack on McCain reeks of it. But similarly, I think their ombudsman probably has had ample opportunity to correct the NYTimes, and is getting no small pleasure in giving them their comeuppance.
Any comment? In addition to "destroying with truth", does "swiftboating" imply a long-held hurt that may finally be addressed?
There, fixed it.
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BUMP and Ping!
I like it.
Ping
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My grandparents used to say that a leopard doesn't change it's spots and a zebra doesn't change it's stripes. The New York Times doesn't change either; John McCain was a fool to ever trust the indorsement of the NYT! They were setting him up for this (or another) hit piece. They deliberately sat on the piece that Drudge reported about the semen-stained blue dress because Bill Clinton's sex life was his private business.
Now they make up something that is so flimsy as to be nearly invisible and they think the Conservative will turn on John McCain? I have news for them - the Conservatives have nearly all made up their minds one way or the other already. They will vote for him or they won't but snide, sneaky, deliberate lies will not turn those who are for him to be against him, or those who are opposed to him to vote for him, but they just might convince a few of those who were "on the fence" to jump off on his side.
If this one hadn't been "in the pipeline" they would have "invented" something. That's what the liberal media does - does anyone remember the phony story about officer evaluation reports on GWB that destroyed Dan Rather's career and credibility?
Liberals can't help it - it's what they do! They LIE!
Swiftboating as it applies to the ....
to tell the truth about a person or institution, and cause (justly deserved) harm
(Thanks John)
It is thoroughly documented in
The daily does of deceit and dishonesty
served up by the NYT almost defies belief.
Thank God for the courage of the honorable Swiftboaters
... then in ‘Nam and again against Kerry.
And those Orwellian twisters of language at the Slimes
again undertake to pervert the historical record
because THEY fancy themselves the newspaper of record.
Lordy, how i hope there really is a final accounting!
btt
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