There actually was a time when an “e” ended a political career. Or, at least, the misuse of an “e.” I refer to that fateful day in 1992 when Vice President Dan Quayle told a 12-year-old schoolboy that “potato” was spelled with an “e” at its end. While the reality is that a flash card Quayle had been given bore the misspelling, the mistake was seized upon by the media and used to cement the eye-candy-and-air image of the boyishly good-looking vice president. It was a silly way to measure a man, but image is everything in politics.
So now it’s time for the
gander’s sauce. If it was justifiable to
write off Quayle as a dolt for stumbling over the spud, how should we react to
frequent misspellings in press releases issued by the White House? Michael O’Brien at The Hill’s Blog Briefing
Room reports on this story, writing,
“Misspellings
continued to plague the Obama administration on Thursday [9/9], after two more
releases containing errors were sent to reporters in the last 24 hours.”
First
the White House staff misspelled Obama’s first name, writing it as “Barak.” Then, O’Brien reports, there were two more
examples. They are, “Recvoery.gov
Version 2.0 $18 Million Contract Awarded” and, referring to U.K. leader Gordon
Brown, “The Prime Minister wlecomed the President's plans for a nuclear
security conference in 2010.”
Now, while sweating the small
stuff can get you branded as punctilious today, a person’s failure to attend to
detail tells you much about him. And
this is not at all like the Quayle potato blunder. Not only had the former vice president been
given that flash card bearing the misspelling, it’s also understandable that he
wouldn’t have spotted the error, since the plural form of the word does end in
“oes.” Second, unless you’re an Idaho
farmer, you probably haven’t written the word “potato” in a very long time. Lastly, it’s simply impossible for an
individual to make continual public appearances without making some
mistakes. Hey, just ask Al Gore about
how “a leopard can’t change his stripes.”
But what the Obama
administration exhibits is quite different: institutional
sloppiness. It’s one thing for an
individual to sometimes make mistakes; it’s quite another when a large
organization repeatedly churns them out.
And let’s place this in perspective.
Some may note that Internet
news and commentary websites are rife with mistakes as well, and this is
true. However, this is often a function
of manpower. Most e-zines simply do not
have the staff necessary to achieve near perfect presentation, as they usually
operate on a shoestring budget. In
contrast, if you write for even a small magazine, their superior finances allow
for tremendous oversight. A piece will
be filtered through a number of different editors. It then may be returned to the writer for
review, allowing him to assess the editorial changes and make a few more
alterations before the work ever makes it into print. The result of this collaborative process is
that you really can cross all your t’s and dot all your i’s.
Now, the fact that the Obama
administration isn’t achieving quality even approaching that of a small
magazine is striking. This is the White
House, remember, with the endless resources government provides. Hasn’t the person or people writing Obama’s
press releases ever heard of a spell-check program? Wouldn’t it be reasonable to have at least two different individuals
proofread the material before disseminating it to the whole world? Such
institutional sloppiness is inexcusable.
Some may say I’m being
picayune, that this is much ado about nothing.
But if you think this sloppiness somehow magically limits itself to the
issuance of press releases, then you’d probably believe that Michelle Obama
buys her sneakers at Wal-Mart. In point
of fact, it tells us something about those at the helm of our listing nation.
It’s not that they’re
stupid. A genius, even a responsible
one, can transpose letters while typing just as he can fail to spot the
misspelling of a type of starchy tuber.
But when such errors are consistently made by large groups of people
working together — that institutional sloppiness — it bespeaks of a lack of
conscientiousness and attention to detail, to an absence of the desire to
uphold standards.
This is characteristic of
liberals; it is part of their world view.
These are the people who don’t trouble over standards in morality
because, their relativism informs, Truth doesn’t exist anyway. They don’t worry about the standards
prescribed by the Constitution or, for that matter, any inconvenient law of man
because, without Truth, laws can be based on nothing transcendent. And, of course, if these greater matters can
be ignored, why worry about language?
(I’d bet that the too-cool-to-care leftists in the White House are the
type of people who, in personal emails, replace “you” with “u” and don’t capitalize
the first letter in a sentence. I bet
they can spell “socialism” and “social decay” just fine, though.)
This is the modus operandi of
the situational values set, of those who have contempt for standards. After all, if standards are ever and always
negotiable, why worry much about them?
Without Truth to use as a yardstick for determining them and making
moral decisions, you might as well just use the only guide you have left: emotion. This is why liberals are so
feelings-oriented.
So, in the case of the press
releases, spelling errors are minor problems but a major indicator. With such institutional sloppiness, why
should we think that the Obama administration is meticulous about anything? Why would we think that they’d pay attention
to the details of where stimulus money is going? How could we expect them to iron out all the
details of managing national health care?
Why should anyone trust that these liberals could, as they purport to be
able to, regulate an economy involving millions of minor details? We have a bull in the china shop of policy.
Yet, what is worse is liberals’
failure to attend to detail in their own minds.
I often quote G.K. Chesterton, and one reason I like him so much is that
he was a “complete thinker.” That is, he
would analyze a matter from every angle, thereby peeling away the layers of
illusion and uncovering Truth. But this
is uncommon among normal people — and unheard of among the left. This is one reason why they can embrace
nonsensical, illogical ideas. Some of them
may entertain communism, completely ignoring the simple fact that if people
were good enough to make a communist government work, we wouldn’t need
government. They embrace
multiculturalism, oblivious to the plain fact that nations without a unifying culture
descend into disunity. They will say
that man is just a highly evolved animal, but then insist that, in the violent
animal kingdom, this animal’s children must be “taught” to be violent (when
arguing against spanking). They will
aver that homosexuality is inborn while just as passionately averring that sex
roles must be taught. They will insist
that relative are right and wrong while also insisting that the right is
absolutely wrong. And just recently,
Obama cited
California as an example of a state that is energy efficient yet economically healthy. He ignored two minor details, however: bankruptcy
and rolling blackouts.
Barack Obama is an urban rube. And he surrounds himself with likeminded —
or, I should say, like-impassioned — urban rubes. Some fancy these people sophisticated, but
while they give the illusion of sophistication, they possess none of its
substance. They were simply raised wrong
and rendered bereft of logic, as they never learned to subordinate emotion to
reason so that the former wouldn’t cloud the latter. They are people who don’t cross their t’s and
dot their i’s in anything, be it philosophy, personal life or policy. They are ruined souls. And they are bringing us to ruin.
As for Dan Quayle’s potato problem, if an onus belonged anywhere, it was on the institution that printed an incorrect flash card. And we should note that this institution was a school, one of those great bastions of liberal unthought.
© 2009 Selwyn Duke — All Rights Reserved
Good essay Selwyn! I hope people in al 57 states read this. You should think of having it translated into the Australian language so the can read it too. Perhaps you could convert it to an audio format so the Queen could down load it to her ipod.
Posted by: Walt | July 16, 2009 at 08:05 PM
If, you are too stupid to use spell check...well, what can I say.
Posted by: Edward Williams | July 16, 2009 at 11:05 PM
Spell check doesn't catch comma use, does it Eddie?
Posted by: Eddie's spell check | July 17, 2009 at 12:06 AM
You don't have to try to turn it around. You will still be stupid. It's generally acceptable to use punctuation to mimic pauses in speech. You really are stupid aren't you (comma) stupid.
Posted by: Ray Hicks | July 17, 2009 at 09:19 AM
What, no hits on your site yet so your back? Good to know you got out of the hospital. Missed ya.
Posted by: Ray Hicks number one fan | July 17, 2009 at 10:57 AM
Why don’t you use your real name, chump? You embarrassed or something?
Well…I am glad to be back. Whenever I think I’m out…you knuckleheads “keep pulling me back in.” Thanks for the welcome and checking out my blog. I’ve got some warm spiritual messages and nice pictures for you there. (Warning: There may be some bad words used.) Just in case you forgot it’s:
http://rayhickslovesyou.blogspot.com/
It’s not like this site is doing too well either. Seems like old Walt Holton and Phillip France are the only ones who post here…A couple of Pavolvian dogs, licking up the Selwyn-Duke-Puppy-Chow and not even appreciating him for what he is.
Despite the seeming lack of interest on this site (he appears to have a better following on the rabid-dog, J.B.S. one) Selwyn Duke, is the king of the fascist agitprop writers. He’s just not widely appreciated.
Duke makes that fat-pig Rush (the only thing he’s ever rushed to, was the buffet-line and an oxycontin bottle) Limbaugh look like the drooling moron he is. Why Selwyn associates with Michael (I swam with Alan Ginsberg; commando-queer-bait) Weiner, has to be a money thing. Even Sean Hannity, in his most manic of bi-polar states, can’t hold a candle to Selwyn Duke. He can almost convince me with his arguments.
But, you guys buy it all; hook, line and stinker-after-stinker of his articles. I’m just trying to turn the room light on for you…a daunting task with you religion-ridden, traditionalists; noses buried in the past, angry the world is changing around you and frightened by the prospect.
The least you can do is fire-back with your real name (or just one name, you’re not kidding anybody.) Unless you’re a coward that is…Then, it’s okay to go on the way you have…
All right, I have to stop here. There’s a good cage-fighting match on television. God Bless (okay; I’m lying here…I don’t really think there is a God.)
…Ray
Posted by: Ray Hicks | July 17, 2009 at 10:11 PM
I would like to add to Selwyn's profound and keen observations this fact:
Being a liberal means never having to say that you are wrong.
Think about it.
Every icon of modern (20th Century and beyond) liberalism has proven to be a miserable failure and resulted in more suffering. I could list them ad infiitum, but let me ask everyone out there reading this:
Can you identify one success story of modern liberalism? Just one is all I ask.
The modern liberal-progressive-leftist is proven certifiably insane when the facts bear out. This stands to reason the aversion they have to actual facts, if not their outright hostility toward them.
Posted by: Philip France | July 21, 2009 at 09:43 PM