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Blog-GateYes, CBS screwed up badly in ‘Memogate’ — but so did those who covered the affair
Columbia Journalism Review ^ | January 3, 2005 | Corey Pein

Posted on 01/03/2005 3:13:27 PM PST by TankerKC

Blog-Gate
Yes, CBS screwed up badly in ‘Memogate’ — but so did those who covered the affair

By Corey Pein

“The drama began when CBS posted forged National Guard documents on its Web site and, that same evening, an attentive ‘Freeper’ (a regular at the conservative FreeRepublic.com Internet site) named Buckhead raised suspicion of fraud. From there, intrepid bloggers Powerlineblog.com and Little Green Footballs, the Woodward and Bernstein of Rathergate, began to document the mounting signs of forgery.”
— Chris Weinkopf in The American Enterprise Online

“The yeomen of the blogosphere and AM radio and the Internet took [CBS’s 60 Minutes II] down. It was to me a great historical development in the history of politics in America. It was Agincourt.”
— Peggy Noonan in The Wall Street Journal

“NOTE to old media scum . . . . We are just getting warmed up!”
— “Rrrod,” on FreeRepublic.com

Bloggers have claimed the attack on CBS News as their Boston Tea Party, a triumph of the democratic rabble over the lazy elites of the MSM (that’s mainstream media to you). But on close examination the scene looks less like a victory for democracy than a case of mob rule. On September 8, just weeks before the presidential election, 60 Minutes II ran a story about how George W. Bush got preferential treatment as he glided through his time in the Texas Air National Guard. The story was anchored on four memos that, it turns out, were of unknown origin. By the time you read this, the independent commission hired by the network to examine the affair may have released its report, and heads may be rolling. Dan Rather and company stand accused of undue haste, carelessness, excessive credulity, and, in some minds, partisanship, in what has become known as “Memogate.”

But CBS’s critics are guilty of many of the very same sins. First, much of the bloggers’ vaunted fact-checking was seriously warped. Their driving assumptions were often drawn from flawed information or based on faulty logic. Personal attacks passed for analysis. Second, and worse, the reviled MSM often followed the bloggers’ lead. As mainstream media critics of CBS piled on, rumors shaped the news and conventions of sourcing and skepticism fell by the wayside. Dan Rather is not alone on this one; respected journalists made mistakes all around.

Consider the memos in question. They were supposed to have been written by Lieutenant Colonel Jerry Killian, now dead, who supervised Bush in the Guard. We know Killian’s name was on them. We don’t know whether the memos were forged, authentic, or some combination thereof. Indeed, they could be fake but accurate, as Killian’s secretary, Marian Carr Knox, told CBS on September 15. We don’t know through what process they wound up in the possession of a former Guardsman, Bill Burkett, who gave them to the star CBS producer Mary Mapes. Who really wrote them? Theories abound: The Kerry campaign created the documents. CBS’s source forged them. Karl Rove planted them. They were real. Some of them were real. They were recreations of real documents. The bottom line, which credible document examiners concede, is that copies cannot be authenticated either way with absolute certainty. The memos that were circulated online were digitized, scanned, faxed, and copied who knows how many times from an unknown original source. We know less about this story than we think we do, and less than we printed, broadcast, and posted.

Ultimately, we don’t know enough to justify the conventional wisdom: that the documents were “apparently bogus” (as Howard Kurtz put it, reporting on Dan Rather’s resignation) and that a major news network was an accomplice to political slander.

What efforts did CBS make to track down the original source? What warnings did CBS’s own experts provide to 60 Minutes II before air time? These are matters for the independent commission, headed by Lou Boccardi, former chief of The Associated Press, and Dick Thornburgh, the former U.S. attorney general. But meanwhile, the dangerous impatience in the way the rest of the press handled this journalistic tale bears examination, too.

‘IT ISN'T JUST RUSH LIMBAUGH. . .’
Three types of evidence were used to debate the documents’ authenticity after Rather and 60 Minutes II used them in the story. The first, typography, took many detours before winding up at inconclusive. The second, military terminology, is more telling but also not final. The third, the recollections of those involved, is most promising, but so far woefully underreported.

Haste explains the rapid spread of thinly supported theories and flawed critiques, which moved from partisan blogs to the nation’s television sets. For example, the morning after CBS’s September 8 report, the conservative blog Little Green Footballs posted a do-it-yourself experiment that supposedly proved that the documents were produced on a computer. On September 11, a self-proclaimed typography expert, Joseph Newcomer, copied the experiment, and posted the results on his personal Web site. Little Green Footballs delighted in the “authoritative and definitive” validation, and posted a link to Newcomer’s report on September 12. Two days later, Newcomer — who was “100 percent” certain that the memos were forged — figured high in a Washington Post report. The Post’s mention of Newcomer came up that night on Fox, MSNBC, and CNN, and on September 15, he was a guest on Fox News’s Hannity & Colmes.

Newcomer gave the press what it wanted: a definite answer. The problem is, his proof turns out to be far less than that. Newcomer’s résumé — boasting a Ph.D. in computer science and a role in creating electronic typesetting — seemed impressive. His conclusions came out quickly, and were bold bordering on hyperbolic. The accompanying analysis was long and technical, discouraging close examination. Still, his method was simple to replicate, and the results were easy to understand:

Based on the fact that I was able, in less than five minutes . . . to type in the text of the 01-August-1972 memo into Microsoft Word and get a document so close that you can hold my document in front of the ‘authentic’ document and see virtually no errors, I can assert without any doubt (as have many others) that this document is a modern forgery. Any other position is indefensible.

Red flags wave here, or should have. Newcomer begins with the presumption that the documents are forgeries, and as evidence submits that he can create a very similar document on his computer. This proves nothing — you could make a replica of almost any document using Word. Yet Newcomer’s aggressive conclusion is based on this logical error.

Many of the typographic critiques were similarly flawed. Would-be gumshoes typed up documents on their computers and fooled around with the images in Photoshop until their creation matched the originals. Someone remembered something his ex-military uncle told him, others recalled the quirks of an IBM typewriter not seen for twenty years. There was little new evidence and lots of pure speculation. But the speculation framed the story for the working press.

The very first post attacking the memos — nineteen minutes into the 60 Minutes II program — was on the right-wing Web site FreeRepublic.com by an active Air Force officer, Paul Boley of Montgomery, Alabama, who went by the handle “TankerKC.” Nearly four hours later it was followed by postings from “Buckhead,” whom the Los Angeles Times later identified as Harry MacDougald, a Republican lawyer in Atlanta. (MacDougald refused to tell the Times how he was able to mount a case against the documents so quickly.) Other blogs quickly picked up the charges. One of the story’s top blogs, Rathergate.com, is registered to a firm run by Richard Viguerie, the legendary conservative fund-raiser. Some were fed by the conservative Media Research Center and by Creative Response Concepts, the same p.r. firm that promoted the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. CRC’s executives bragged to PR Week that they helped legitimize the documents-are-fake story by supplying quotes from document experts as early as the day after the report, September 9. The goal, said president Greg Mueller, was to create a buzz online while at the same time showing journalists “it isn’t just Rush Limbaugh and Matt Drudge who are raising questions.”

In order to understand “Memogate,” you need to understand “Haileygate.” David Hailey, a Ph.D. who teaches tech writing at Utah State University — not a professional document examiner, but a former Army illustrator — studied the CBS memos. His typographic analysis found that, contrary to widespread assumptions, the document may have been typed. (He points out, meanwhile, that because the documents are typed does not necessarily mean they are genuine.) Someone found a draft of his work on a publicly accessible university Web site, and it wound up on a conservative blog, Wizbang. The blog, citing “evidence” that it had misinterpreted, called Hailey a “liar, fraud, and charlatan.” Soon Hailey’s e-mail box was flooded. Anonymous callers demanded his dismissal.

Hailey is more restrained in his comments than other document examiners more widely quoted in the press. Of course, cautious voices tend to be quieter than confident ones.

Hailey wasn’t the only one to feel the business end of a blog-mob. The head of one CBS affiliate said he received 5,000 e-mail complaints after the 60 Minutes II story, only 300 of which were from his viewing area.

The specific points of contention about the memos are too numerous to go into here. One, the raised “th” character appearing in the documents, became emblematic of the scandal, as Internet analysts contended that typewriters at the time of the memo could not produce that character. But they could, in fact, according to multiple sources. Some of the CBS critics contend they couldn’t produce the specific “th” seen in the CBS documents. But none other than Bobby Hodges, who was Colonel Killian’s Guard supervisor, thinks otherwise. He told CJR, “The typewriter can do that little ‘th,’ sure it can.” He added, “I didn’t think they were forged because of the typewriter, spacing, or signature. The only reason is because of the verbiage.”

Hodges’s doubts about the memo rest mainly on military terminology, and he has a list of twenty-one things wrong with the terms used in the CBS documents. He says he came up with the first ten in a couple of minutes. For example, he points to the use of “OETR” instead of “OER” (for Officer Effectiveness Report), and the use of the word “billets” instead of “positions.” This helped close the case for some, but probably shouldn’t have. Even preliminary digging casts some doubt on the evidence. For example, Bill Burkett was quoted in a book published last March using the term “OER,” suggesting he would’ve known better had he forged the documents as Hodges and others implied in interviews. And newspaper stories and Air Guard documents indicate that the term “billets” was indeed used in the Air Guard, at least in the mid-1980s. Such small points don’t prove anything about the memos. But they do suggest that the press should never accept as gospel the first explanation that comes along.

THE DOUBLE STANDARD
As Memogate progressed, certain talking points became conventional wisdom. Among them, that CBS’s producer, Mary Mapes, was a liberal stooge; that her source, Bill Burkett, was a lefty moonbat with an ax to grind. Both surely wanted to nail a story that Bush got preferential treatment in the National Guard. Still, there was a double standard at work. Liberals and their fellow travelers were outed like witches in Salem, while Bush’s defenders forged ahead, their affinities and possible motives largely unexamined.

The Killian memos seem to have grown out of battles that began long before last September. In early 2004, Burkett had featured prominently in a book, Bush’s War for Reelection, by the Texas journalist Jim Moore, who also co-wrote the Karl Rove biography Bush’s Brain. Bush’s War for Reelection included a story dating back to 1997, when Burkett worked as an adviser to the head of the Texas National Guard at Camp Mabry. In that role, Burkett says, he witnessed a plan to scrub George W. Bush’s file of embarrassments.

When this came out, the press naturally turned to the people Burkett had named in Moore’s book. And those men — Danny James, Joe Allbaugh, John Scribner, and George Conn — all dismissed Burkett’s story. That’s four against one, but not necessarily case closed. Most reporters omitted some basic, and relevant, biographic facts about Burkett’s critics.

For example, Joe Allbaugh was usually identified in press accounts — in The New York Times, the Baltimore Sun, and USA Today, to name a few — as Bush’s old chief of staff. He is much more. In 1999 Allbaugh, the self-described “heavy” of the Bush campaign, told The Washington Post, “There isn’t anything more important than protecting [Bush] and the first lady.” He was made head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency after Bush’s victory, resigned in 2003, and went on to head New Bridge Strategies, a firm that helps corporations land contracts in Iraq.

Danny James, a Vietnam veteran and the son of “Chappie” James, America’s first black four-star general, is also a political appointee whose fortunes rose with Bush’s. He had his own reason to dislike Burkett. Burkett’s 2002 lawsuit in a Texas district court against the Guard claimed that the staff of then adjutant-general James retaliated against him for refusing to falsify reports. It was dismissed, like other complaints against James and the Guard, not on the merits, but because under Texas law the courts considered such complaints internal military matters. Without further investigation, we are stuck at he said, she said.

Many of the people defending Bush in February on the scrubbing story appeared again in September, when the alleged Killian documents appeared on CBS. Other defenders appeared as well, and rarely were their connections to the Bush camp made clear, or the basis for their claims probed.

Other pieces of context might have been helpful, too. For example, Maurice Udell, the former commander of the 147th Fighter Interceptor Group, in which Bush served, first came to Bush’s defense in 2000 and was resurrected for the same cause in 2004. After Memogate he was a guest on Hannity & Colmes and was quoted in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, saying the memos were “so totally false they were ridiculous.” He also popped up in The Richmond Times-Dispatch and an Associated Press story. No one noted the cloudy circumstances of Udell’s exit from the military (probably because the relevant clips are hard to find in electronic databases). In 1985, after an Air Force investigation into contract fraud, as well as misuse of base resources, Udell was ordered to resign. The initial probe included an allegation of illegal arms shipment to Honduras, but the charge came up dry.

Context was also lacking in quotes from Bush’s old National Guard roommate, Dean Roome, who appeared with this old boss Udell on Hannity & Colmes. With one exception, Roome’s press appearances have served a singular purpose: praise the president, attack the memos. The exception was notable and often reprinted. Last February, USA Today used a quote from a 2002 interview with Roome: “Where George failed was to fulfill his obligation as a pilot. It was an irrational time in his life.” Roome says the comment was taken out of context, and emphasizes how great it was to fly with Bush.

In his office, Roome had taped up a printout of a September 16 Washington Times story in which the reporter asked Roome to speculate about who “the forger” was. Roome does not name Burkett but hints that it was he, without offering specifics. Roome also has a framed picture of President Bush signed, “to my friend Dean Roome, with best wishes.” Another picture shows Roome and Bush on a couch. Roome says it’s from this past March, when he attended a private party in Houston with Bush and about a dozen old friends. The meeting, Roome said, was a back-slapping affair, in which Bush told the group how he cherished his old friends from the Guard, Midland, and Dallas.

When the central charge is a cover-up, as it was in the CBS story, vigilance is required. Thus, the connections between Bush’s old associates should have seen print. Together the men formed a feedback loop, referring reporters to one another and promoting a version of events in which Bush’s service is unquestionable, even exemplary. With such big names and old grudges in play, journalists are obliged to keep digging.

The Memogate melee peaked in late September. On cable, Joe Scarborough of MSNBC held forth with hasty overstatements: “I’m supposed to say ‘allegedly forged.’ I think everybody in America knows these documents were forged.” His guests threw in anything that sounded good: “You know, Dan Rather’s being called on the Internet, ‘Queen of the Space Unicorns,’” said Bob Kohn, author of a book on why The New York Times “can no longer be trusted.” (The “Space Unicorn” line had first appeared on Jim Treacher’s conservative humor blog, and quickly wound up on The Wall Street Journal’s online opinion page.)

Conclusions were often hidden within questions, no matter how little evidence supported them. NBC’s Ann Curry, hosting the Today show, asked a guest, who had no way of knowing: “Was CBS a pawn in a dirty tricks effort by the Kerry campaign to smear . . . President Bush? Can we go that far?”

No, we can’t. But by the time Dan Rather announced on November 23 that he would step down from the anchor spot in March 2005, the bloggers’ perceptions had taken hold. For example, the December 6 issue of Newsweek stated, incorrectly, that Rather had acknowledged that the 60 Minutes II report “was based on false documents.” The following week the magazine’s “Clarification” was limited to what Rather had said, not to what Newsweek or anyone else could have known about the documents.

Dan Rather trusted his producer; his producer trusted her source. And her source? Who knows. To many, Burkett destroyed his own credibility when he told Dan Rather that he had lied about the source of the Killian memos. Still, many suppositions about Burkett are based on standards that were not applied evenly across the board. In November and December the first entry for “Bill Burkett” in Google, the most popular reference tool of the twenty-first century, was on a blog called Fried Man. It classifies Burkett as a member of the “loony left,” based on his Web posts. In these, Burkett says corporations will strip Iraq, obliquely compares Bush to Napoleon and “Adolf,” and calls for the defense of constitutional principles. These supposedly damning rants, alluded to in USA Today, The Washington Post, and elsewhere, are not really any loonier than an essay in Harper’s or a conversation at a Democratic party gathering during the campaign. While Burkett doesn’t like the president, many people in America share that opinion, and the sentiment doesn’t make him a forger.

Jim Moore, who relied on Burkett for much of his book on Bush, says he initially called some of the generals who worked with Burkett to check his source’s reputation — but didn’t tell them what the story was about. They all said Burkett was honest and trustworthy. When Moore called them back, and described the accusations, only one of them, Danny James, then changed his opinion, calling Burkett a liar. George Conn, the ex-Guardsman who said he didn’t remember Burkett’s story of file-scrubbing, nevertheless told reporters Burkett was “honest and forthright.”

Newsweek’s Mike Isikoff has said that he interviewed Burkett last February and thought Burkett “sounded credible,” but didn’t use the Texan’s story because he couldn’t substantiate it. Good decision. CBS couldn’t prove the authenticity of the documents in its story, and look at the results. Dan Rather has announced his resignation under a cloud and his aggressive news division is tarnished. And the coverage of Memogate effectively killed the story of Bush’s Guard years. Those who kept asking questions found themselves counted among the journalistic fringe.

While 2004 brought many stories of greater public import than how George W. Bush spent the Vietnam War, the year brought few of greater consequence for the media than the coverage of Memogate. When the smoke cleared, mainstream journalism’s authority was weakened. But it didn’t have to be that way.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: buckhead; bullzogby; cbsnews; fr; howtostealanelection; leftistmccarthyism; lyingliars; mediabias; memogate; pajamapatrol; rathergate; tankerkc; zogbyism
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To: TankerKC
He is misrepresenting the facts, that's bad enough. He's also ignoring the large issue, the context. If Dan Rather, & CBS News, claim the President was AWOL and disobeyed a direct order, they have to be airtight in their sourcing. They weren't.

They can't hide behind "we're stupid, not evil". They can't escape by saying the bloggers haven't proved the documents were forged to CBS' satisfaction. The burden of proof is on the accuser and CBS didn't meet it. The rest of this article is an inept attempt to muddy the water.

81 posted on 01/03/2005 5:00:07 PM PST by Dilbert56
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To: steveyp

http://www.coreypein.com/resume.htm

Note the last line in his Resume.


82 posted on 01/03/2005 5:00:40 PM PST by steveyp
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To: steveyp

I retract.

It's a self-promotion site.


83 posted on 01/03/2005 5:04:38 PM PST by steveyp
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To: TankerKC
This proves nothing -- you could make a replica of almost any document using Word.

Okay, author. Money where the mouth is. Recreate the documents that are known to be authentic, using only MS Word. Get 'em to line up near perfectly.

I am so glad "we" have the internet, and FR, to critically dissect issues.

84 posted on 01/03/2005 5:09:00 PM PST by Cboldt
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To: Howlin
Thank you, my friend, for finding this gentleman's address. I sent him the following letter, which I suspect you will concur with. Have a look-see.

Dear Corey,

There are three probable overall conclusions from your long article in the CJR. 1. You attempted to write a definitive article without developing an understanding of the importance of serifs, kerning, superscripts, computer programs, and the typewriters available in any Air Force Reserve Office in the world. I'm inclined to be charitable and go with this basic error as the explanation for the failure of your article.

The other options are: 2. You did not bother to get to the bottom of the blogosphere's findings about the memos because you were biased in favor of the conclusion tentatively reached that CBS wasn't so bad. Or, 3. you may have had an inkling of the truth in this story, but after all you were writing for the CJR, the castle keep of the MSM. So you felt obligated to toe the line.

There is one more possibility, You believe that you arrived at the truth and reported the truth. I dismiss that as beyond probability. But if you claim that is an accurate analysis, feel free to jump into an active discussion of your work, which you will find here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1313225/posts?q=1&&page=51

I won't hold my breath waiting to hear from you. But it would be interesting if you crop up.

Sincerely,

John Armor, Esq.
(aka, Congressman Billybob)

85 posted on 01/03/2005 5:12:31 PM PST by Congressman Billybob (Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.)
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To: steveyp

Well Kill Me a Kulak!! All them big city journalism professors can't tell the memo was forged ("Whats the Kern Frequency?")

Is'nt that there Columbia University where they have that big Pulitzer outfit that last year reaffirmed Duranty's cover up of the Ukrainian Holodomor?




86 posted on 01/03/2005 5:12:55 PM PST by blackminorcapullets ("My Plan is Simple - We Win, They Lose" President Ronald Reagan)
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To: Howlin

Corey is Pe'in in the wind. But, of course, he is an un-
biased purveyor of facts with no axe to grind.


87 posted on 01/03/2005 5:13:08 PM PST by Sivad (NorCal Red Turf)
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To: Southack

Don't forget that the forgeries used the wrong paper size too.


88 posted on 01/03/2005 5:24:30 PM PST by RightWingConspirator (Glad that Ted the Boorish Drunk, Hitlery the Witch and John Fonda/Fraud Kerry are not my senators.)
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To: TankerKC

What a sad attempt to cover up the crimes of rather and SeeBS.


89 posted on 01/03/2005 5:30:03 PM PST by ozzymandus
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To: TankerKC
When I read the title to this article by the 'prestigious' Columbia Journalism Review, "Blog-GateYes, CBS screwed up badly in ‘Memogate’ — but so did those who covered the affair", I thought this was going to be a hard-hitting analysis of how the MSMs failed to highlight the fact that renegade, and out of control, journalists attempted to stage a coup of the United States government through the use of forged documents. That's the story I keep waiting to hear discussed - and one which those that 'covered the affair' have failed to discuss. Instead, the Columbia review just submits some soppy whine about the blogosphere. What a waste.
90 posted on 01/03/2005 5:30:23 PM PST by El Cid
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To: VRWCisme

Welcome!!!

Try http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/1313257/posts DUmmie FUnnies

Ask PJ-Comix to put you on the "ping" list -- you will get a "new posts for you" whenever a new thread is started.


91 posted on 01/03/2005 5:33:18 PM PST by freedumb2003 (My DU name is Bunny Planet and I don't care who knows it! Everyone reveal yours!)
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To: TankerKC
Well thank you Marie Antoinette, but I don't want any cake!

This is astonishingly bad reporting.  This clown would fail logic 101, but of course that is not a pre-req for Journalism school.

On September 8, just weeks before the presidential election, 60 Minutes II ran a story about how George W. Bush got preferential treatment as he glided through his time in the Texas Air National Guard. The story was anchored on four memos that, it turns out, were of unknown origin.

Gross prejudice, badly phrased.  The story was not "about how George W. Bush got preferential treatment," as if that were an established truth.  The story was a rehash of crap discredited hundreds of times by multiple official and independent sources that psychotic Bush hating freaks (like Dan Rather) refused to let go of.  It was, in fact, a baseless accusation against a sitting President in time of war.  I call that TREASON.  Hang the bastards, including this traitor. (intentionally inflamatory remark meant to catch the MSM's notice)

The story was "anchored" on four OBVIOUSLY amateurishly forged memos from a known psychotic (really - he has been committed several times, including voluntary commitments by himself - so he knows he's crazy) who has been peddling more and more extreme and bizarre anti-Bush conspiracy theories over the last 10 years.  No credible journalist would return this clown's phone calls.  That is until the DNC put him in touch with Dan Rather.  This isn't rocket science.  It's conspiracy to commit treason.  RICO is the least of their troubles.  This jerk is now an accessory after the fact.  Twenty five to life.

Dan Rather and company stand accused of undue haste, carelessness, excessive credulity, and, in some minds, partisanship, in what has become known as 'Memogate.'

No, Dan Rather and the Democrat party stand accused of fraud, forgery, conspiracy and treason.  Oh, and they stand accused of assuming that the American people are idiots.  Fortunately, they are wrong on their last assumption.

We know Killian’s name was on them. We don’t know whether the memos were forged, authentic, or some combination thereof.

Tortured and absolutely BS construction.  We know that Killian's name was placed on them, but no credible source will attest to them, including CBS' own "experts," as they are obviously photo copied from other documents.  We do know that the memos were forged by simple experiments performed by numerous independent sources who HAPPEN TO BE RECOGNIZED EXPERTS IN THE FIELD.  What part of "you have been caught red handed" doesn't this idiot understand?

they could be fake but accurate, as Killian’s secretary, Marian Carr Knox, told CBS on September 15.

Well, here's a provable lie.  Marian Carr Knox was not "Killian's secretary."  She was a secretary who occasionally, but rarely (according to all other witnesses in the office) interacted with Killian.  Anyone who still sticks to the "fake but accurate" line of "reasoning" is easily dismissed as a complete twit.

We don’t know through what process they wound up in the possession of a former Guardsman, Bill Burkett, who gave them to the star CBS producer Mary Mapes.

Lie by omission.  Bill Burkett, the aforementioned self described psycho, is not a former AIR National Guardsman.  he spent 28 years in the ARMY National Guard.  You will notice that the "objective" journalists who want to promote these lies always talk about him being in the National Guard, without pointing out this inconvenient fact.

Burkett has no credible reason to ever come in contact with any of the individuals involved, except extreme partisan/criminal Democrat party politics.  Burkett's chosen corroborating witness for his charges (destroyed documents to cover up Bush "crimes") has testified that it never happened.  Burkett does have a history of making easily disproved (repeatedly) wild charges against the entire Texas National Guard and the government of Texas, particularly former Governor Bush, who he has fixated on as the cause of imagined illnesses he believes he contracted while on duty in Panama.  Those claims of illness have been repeatedly debunked and discredited.

The bottom line, which credible document examiners concede, is that copies cannot be authenticated either way with absolute certainty.

Absolutely wrong.  All credible authorities, including CBS' own "experts" agree that you cannot authenticate documents that have been treated as described.  It is, however, possible to prove that they are forged.  As has been more than adequately documented, these documents were forged.  The bottom line is that this author is pushing a partisan hit piece attempting to cover up criminal and even treasonous behavior with additional lies.

We know less about this story than we think we do, and less than we printed, broadcast, and posted.

That sounds like a rather bizarre justification for continuing to push proven falsehoods.  Sounds suspiciously like a guilty conscious admitting complicity in the conspiracy to me.  Call Oliver Stone!

Ultimately, we don’t know enough to justify the conventional wisdom: that the documents were “apparently bogus” (as Howard Kurtz put it, reporting on Dan Rather’s resignation) and that a major news network was an accomplice to political slander.

Oh no you don't.  You can't construct a straw man of lies and then manufacture a convenient out for your favorite bigot and traitor.  This sounds precisely like the BS pushed by the Klan in Mississippi after the Freedom Marchers were found buried in the earthen dam.  BS is BS.  Fortunately the smell never washes away from anyone who trades in it.

The rest of this article is more of the same.  I will not soil myself further with this cretins ramblings.  If pressed I will go back and document the increasing bizarre "evidence" and "conclusions" that this loopy SOB engages in, but right now I need a shower.

One can always remember that the ultimate lesson of the concept so dear to the loony left, Karma, is that "time wounds all heals."

92 posted on 01/03/2005 5:34:17 PM PST by Phsstpok (Often wrong, but never in doubt)
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To: MarineBrat
You can produce many different document styles with Word, but you can't do it with a typewriter.

Even worse, typerwriters of the day were awful. They dropped, slanted, missed, and generally had impurities in the final product -- even the vaunted IBM with the typeballs. To exactly match a document produced in that era would take hours -- shifting over to the right a point, dro;pping a letter a 1/2 point, etc. etc.

To do it in 5 minutes PERFECTLY is/was proof. Only modern printers can produce a document with perfect spacing, sizing and kerning.

93 posted on 01/03/2005 5:39:26 PM PST by freedumb2003 (My DU name is Bunny Planet and I don't care who knows it! Everyone reveal yours!)
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To: EternalVigilance

His nose is Ratherbrown"

Hey, this young intern wants a job with CBS.


94 posted on 01/03/2005 5:39:53 PM PST by wildbill
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To: ElkGroveDan

Yes, indeed, the Piltdown man was just a re-creation of an actual fossil find which seems to have since been misplaced.


95 posted on 01/03/2005 5:40:50 PM PST by bvw
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To: supercat
The documents were produced using letter spacing and formatting conventions that were not devised until the 1980's and 1990's. Someone with a list of all the letterspacings and formatting conventions required could have produced such a document in 1972 using a pantograph engraver, but that someone would happen to hit upon the right formatting conventions or letter spacing by chance is absurd. The notion that someone would use a pantograph engraver for a memo-to-file is also absurd.

Precisely. The typography is, itself, conclusive. The memos were not typed on a conventional typewriter, thus they could not have been produced in 1972.

Ergo, they are patently and demonstrably bogus.

Which means that their content is immediately made irrelevant and meaningless, even though Corey Pein goes on to try to "substantiate" the memos by examining their content. Which, for a "professional journalist" is a bizarre technique, indeed.

Note that the Columbia School of Journalism continues to support the Old Media's malfeasances while throwing dung at the New Media which showed them up. Given that the Old Media is literally dying and the New Media is where the "journalism" jobs will be in the future, one wonders if this approach is really good career counseling for their graduates...

96 posted on 01/03/2005 5:43:47 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: TankerKC; Howlin
TankerKC: I'm not familiar with CJR.... I assumed that they were a "middle of the road" journalism review. Perhaps I was wrong.

'Fraid so. CJR is a The Nation wannabe, but often achieves something closer to dKos and DU.

Thought you might like this: Memogate: The experts and the amateurs

Corey Pein of the Columbia Journalism Review made many errors in his article about the bogus National Guard memos, but I'm going to deal only with my field of expertise, and discuss the typographic issues behind the exposure of the documents as fraudulent.

97 posted on 01/03/2005 6:01:27 PM PST by optimistically_conservative (The soldier, be he friend or foe, is charged with the protection of the weak and the unarmed.)
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To: Southack
I have e-mailed Corey Pein to log in and join us in this little tete-a-tete. I would be most interested in his response to your #57.
98 posted on 01/03/2005 6:02:23 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: dandelion

One and the same.

Very interesting, eh?


99 posted on 01/03/2005 6:08:22 PM PST by Howlin
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To: optimistically_conservative

Oh, great find! Thank you for the ping!


100 posted on 01/03/2005 6:09:13 PM PST by Howlin
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