JOHN BRUMMETT: Caught red-handed in truth
Submitted by Kat on July 6, 2008 - 10:44am.
JOHN BRUMMETT: Caught red-handed in truth
Review Journal | July 6, 2008
Wesley Clark did nothing wrong except respond in kind to a newsman's question and do so honestly and frankly.
Of course it is not permitted in contemporary American politics to be honest and frank. Plain words are certain to be exploited by the media and the other side.
And it is a cardinal sin of modern politics to let a media questioner lure you into speaking in his terms, by which you have erred in getting what the experts call "off message."
The "message," you see, is the sterilized rhetoric you have been restricted by handlers to say, no matter the question. It has been poll-tested and focus-group tested, most likely. Getting "off" it means you let your Stepford side get overtaken by your human side.
This may help explain why Clark didn't fare any better when he ran for the Democratic presidential nomination four years ago, possessed of a stellar general's resume and seeming, by his having commanded the NATO air war in Kosovo, to be a godsend for the Democrats during war time.
But then he forgot what his "message" was on the Iraq war resolution, and he cried out for his press secretary during a press gaggle. He didn't seem so commanding, which was supposed to have been his schtick, and that, as it turned out, was that.
So, anyway, Bob Schieffer on CBS "Face the Nation" wanted to have a little foreign policy episode last Sunday. He got Clark to speak for Barack Obama.
Clark informed the Obama campaign of the invitation and his appearance was blessed by the campaign. But Clark and the Obama campaign did not coordinate their preparation or "message," or so they say, which is convenient considering that Obama had to come back and disown the honesty and frankness that the general had let slip.
This was Clark's point on the program: McCain is a war hero, yes. Clark called him a national hero and a personal hero. But, Clark explained, the real qualification for president in regard to foreign policy in war time is having made executive decisions that affect life and death, and in doing so after consultation with foreign and domestic leaders. Clark said McCain hadn't had that actual executive war-time experience.
So then came this, fatefully:
Schieffer: "I have to say, Barack Obama has not had any of those experiences, either, nor has he ridden in a fighter plane and gotten shot down. I mean ..."
Clark: "Well, I don't think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be president."
Oh, my.
The first charge of the media and Republican brigade is that Clark diminished the heroic, horrible, character-testing war experience of this American patriot, McCain, who spent five years in enemy captivity.
It simply is not so. Clark had previously said very plainly that McCain was a hero to the nation and to him personally.
What he said was that McCain's experience didn't qualify him for the presidency, which it doesn't. Others have been shot down. Others have been tortured. Others have survived such unspeakable ordeals. It makes all of them our heroes and worthy of our respect.
But it won't necessarily make any of them a good president.
Some have said that Clark diminished McCain's military service by referring to his "riding" passively in a fighter plane, rather than piloting it. Some have said this is the old prejudice of ground fighters against the fly-over boys.
But I would invite you to review the transcript excerpt to see that it was Schieffer who, in his typically argumentative question, used the phrase "ridden in a fighter plane." Clark was responding in the context and phrasing of the question.
He did not err factually. He did not err morally. He did not err patriotically.
He merely erred in the only arena that seems to matter, the one of political messaging.

I didn't hear any reference to Bob Schieffer being responsible for the inartful words, nor any discussion about how the bruhaha started because of something that happened on his show. Or did I miss something?
Brummet gets it. It wasn't that long ago that Sen. McCain angrily took Sen. Obama to task (essentially bullying him)for not wearing the uniform - while debating the New GI bill - which passed and was signed into law sans McCain. Those who have seen American Son (which I hopefully assume those here have seen it, if not you owe it to yourself.)know Wes doesn't take kindly to bullies. Wes took care of the bully and his minions. His thanks? Far less than gracious.
"Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants."
Gen. Omar Bradley
"Diminished" is a soft edged and vague word, as far as words go. And it appears to be an extremely popular one to use in election seasons to smear the so called "diminishers".
It's derived from Latin and Old French- to indicate "smallness".
a. To make smaller or less or to cause to appear so.
b. To detract from the authority, reputation, or prestige of
--
Hillary's comments about LBJ's responsibility for signing Civil Rights legislation into law, was on its face merely legislative fact... but when the corp press word-manglers and manipulators get a hold of it-- it's not what she SAID that counted (no, it never is) but rather, what she IMPLIED. What she INFERRED. Or... what she MEANT by it. What she DIDN'T actually say, but "obviously" (to some) MEANT to say.
And who is the "some"? The arbiter possessing of these mystical reading between the lines skills? Well, anyone - it turns out! From a so-called 'journalist' or pundit to a disapproving blogger eager to make a point and strike down a foe. In election season, it's the oppo mode du jour.
So Wes is said to have "diminished" McCain's service which we all know (those of us who place more weight on what was SAID over what was UNSPOKEN) we all know he did quite the opposite in his initial praise and reverence for McCain's service.
Earlier Nick Juliano tried to float the "fact" that Wes had "diminished" Barack Obama's qualifications to be CIC in a conference call in which he stated that he was "disturbed" by Samantha Power's statement regarding O's possible shifting Iraq strategy. Yes that is what Wes said that led Raw Story's Juliano to conclude Wes was - again- a "diminisher". This time of Obama. Next time, it's of McCain.
We all know Wes Clark is one of the last people to engage in any gratuitous diminishing of any public official, especially A) a fellow Dem (Lieberman exclusion) or B) a fellow combat veteran.
As bloggers the best we can do is continue to stress what lies in between the Quotation arks "_______" is the only thing that was actually said.
The rest is someone else's interpretation of the speakers intent.
Pet Peeve Rant over. :)
It wasn't Wes that demised McCain's military service as he called him a personal and national hero. So who did? It was the McCain organization. They are the ones that brought forth the swift boater of yesterday to lie about Wes' length and nature of service.
Main Entry: 1de·mise Pronunciation Guide
Pronunciation: dmz, d-
Function: verb
Inflected Form(s): -ed/-ing/-s
Etymology: Middle English demisen, from Middle French demis, past participle
transitive verb
1 : to convey (as an estate) by will or by lease
2 obsolete : RELEASE : let go
3 obsolete : CONVEY, GIVE
4 : to transmit (as a title or the sovereignty) by succession or inheritance
intransitive verb
1 : to demise the sovereignty
2 : DIE, DECEASE
3 : to pass by descent or bequest
I know there's a joke in here somewhere about McCain's age...
We learn. We change. That's progress. If we don't do that, well, we're GWB.

Son of a gun, you learn something new every day. However, I'm having a hard time fitting one of those definitions into Ernie's use of the term.
The Grammar Snob
MoveOn Petition:
http://pol.moveon.org/clark/?rc=homepage
sorry if this has already been posted...I've been away for a couple of days and hadn't seen it.




to defend Wes. Where is the leadership? Crickets.