I went ahead and watched three hours of Republican
convention coverage on PBS last night, even though I
knew it would make me want to shout back at the television
every so often. I heard false statements uttered and
accepted without challenge from the commentators --
for the most part I'm not going to venture a guess right
now as to which were lies and intentional distortions,
and which were mistakes and misconceptions held by the
speakers, but it seems to me that matters of fact should
be corrected. And it also makes me wonder how many such
things slipped right by me during the Democratic convention,
because they were in line with what I wanted/expected to
hear, or lined up with things I already mistakenly believe,
and were similarly un-challenged by those reporting and
commenting on the event. The media would be doing me
a service by pointing out false statements made by
each side. Reasonable people can disagree about
matters of opinion or speculation, about what our
goals should be and how to prioritize them, even
about interpretation, but as Daniel Moynihan famously
said, "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not
his own facts."
One phrase that stuck in my mind, partly because
I was a little surprised to still hear it after the
Palin nomination, was when Obama was referred to
(by Fred Thompson) as "the most inexperienced nominee
to ever run for president."
Let's see:
eight years in a state legislature and two years in the
US house of representatives can be made out to be a
little light in terms of preparation to become POTUS, I
suppose, when running against someone with a longer
history ... but that candidate not only got
elected, he gets brought up as a shining example of
how wonderful a Republican president can be! With the
same amount of time at the state level, Obama has two more
years in the Senate than Abraham Lincoln did in the House.
And you'd think that Republican orators would be expected
to know something about the most famous Republican
president, n'est-ce pas? After all, I'm not
as well versed in history as I ought to be, but it took
me less than five minutes to find that out.
I still don't know who was the least experienced candidate
to run, but it's easy to find candidates less experienced
than Obama who won.
So I'm not inclined to give them a pass on that one.
Even if 'twas an honest mistake the first time they used
it, by now the speechwriters have had time to look it
up. At this point, whether it's honest ignorance or a
deliberate bogon, there's not really any excuse for it,
and anybody discussing the speeches where it's used should
be pointing it out and correcting it. Any time you hear
them say Obama is inexperienced, think. "You mean like
Lincoln was? Or Reagan? Or
Bush?"
If they want to say Obama's insufficiently experienced,
that's a matter of interpretation/opinion (which calls
into question the speaker's grasp of history, but they
can still have that as their opinion). But to call him
the least experienced candidate in history is, quite
simply, untrue.