Posted on 07/23/2014 3:09:45 PM PDT by Kaslin
Well, it seems Papergate just ensnared Montana Democratic Senator John Walsh. Mr. Walsh was appointed by Gov. Steve Bullock to replace outgoing Sen. Max Baucus, who decided to become the Obama administrations Ambassador to China. Walsh is described by the New York Times as having something the Democrats lack in their political ranks: a seasoned military record. Walsh is a decorated Iraq War veteran, but his reputation might be marred by a final term paper he wrote in obtaining his masters degree, where a substantial portion was written without crediting anyone (via NYT):
An examination of the final paper required for Mr. Walshs masters degree from the United States Army War College indicates the senator appropriated at least a quarter of his thesis on American Middle East policy from other authors works, with no attribution.
Mr. Walsh completed the paper, what the War College calls a strategy research project, to earn his degree in 2007, when he was 46. The sources of the material he presents as his own include academic papers, policy journal essays and books that are almost all available online.
Most strikingly, each of the six recommendations Mr. Walsh laid out at the conclusion of his 14-page paper, titled The Case for Democracy as a Long Term National Strategy, is taken nearly word-for-word without attribution from a Carnegie Endowment for International Peace document on the same topic.
In his third recommendation, for example, Mr. Walsh writes: Democracy promoters need to engage as much as possible in a dialogue with a wide cross section of influential elites: mainstream academics, journalists, moderate Islamists, and members of the professional associations who play a political role in some Arab countries, rather than only the narrow world of westernized democracy and human rights advocates.
The same exact sentence appears on the sixth page of a 2002 Carnegie paper written by four scholars at the research institute. In all, Mr. Walshs recommendations section runs to more than 800 words, nearly all of it taken verbatim from the Carnegie paper, without any footnote or reference to it. In addition, significant portions of the language in Mr. Walshs paper can be found in a 1998 essay by a scholar at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, a research institute at Harvard.
On Wednesday, a campaign aide for Mr. Walsh did not contest the plagiarism but suggested that it be viewed in the context of the senators long career.
Montana is one of the states Republicans seem poised to pick up in the 2014 midterms.
Shouldn’t that be “democrat” rather than “democratic”?
True
It’s a socialist world - no such thing as private property for those not part of the inner leftist circle.
Everything the proletariat has belongs to everyone else.
(in the minds of the liberals)
Anything a liberal wants is up for grabs.
/s
Democrat and plagiarism, how unusual.
Was he a Teddy Kennedy protege ?
“...So he had a blog.”
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Yes, inspired by Al Gore, he invented blogging.
Walsh occupied a two-star General slot as the Adjutant General of Montana. However, the United States Army refused to grant “Federal Recognition” to Walsh because of the findings of an Inspector General investigation of Walsh. He remained a Colonel.
There should be an investigation into the Soldier’s suicide that Walsh talks about.
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