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Republicans Love To MisQuote Our Founding Fathers

Started by irishbobcat, June 07, 2011, 10:30:03 AM

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sfc_oliver

Have I?

I don't go around patting myself on the back much.

But yes I have accomplished everything I have ever set out to do. And some things that I didn't set out to do.

Have I ever failed? Not that I can remember. As long as you don't count 3rd year Spanish......
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

irishbobcat

Sarge, I have done many things successfully! Thanks for asking!  Have you???????

ForumManager

Posts by IrishBobCat have been reported and have been deleted from this thread.

sfc_oliver

Didn't imply a thing did you? Total Fail Dennis, as per normal. Have you ever done anything successfully? Only asking a question.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

irishbobcat

#11
Sarge, again, you continue to twist the message like a good neo-con does.....

all I did was ask you a question......



sfc_oliver

No problem Dennis , in that case i'll ask the moderators what they think of your liable.

You accused us of operating an illegal gambling bar. You have named yourself a liar and fool.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

Rick Rowlands

All politicians misquote.  Politicians are not experts or the smartest people in the room, they simply won a popularity contest.

irishbobcat

Sarge, I have nothing against veterans, my father fought in WWII....

again, you are a typical neo-con republican who twists the message here.....

I have nothing to apologize for....especially to you....

sfc_oliver

Still waiting for that apology. I wondered if you were man enough to admit your error. I see you aren't.

BTW you missed an excellent dinner. You should have come,  then you could have apologized to all the Veterans that belong to the post.

Oh and don't be afraid, we won't sue you for the liable you've committed.

Do have a great summer.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

sfc_oliver

Why don't you stop in tomorrow evening at 6PM. Have dinner on me.

You will then see that the American Legion is not all about bars and drinking.

You see you are again speaking out of the wrong end.

Lowellville American Legion Post does not operate a Bar. We do not participate in any gaming machines. Though we do have a 50/50 raffle once each year.

What did we do this past year?

We provided a firing squad for 3 veterans funerals.

We also conducted a service for each of them at the Funeral homes.

We provided the Color Guard for the Mt Carmel Society.

We provided a Color Guard for the Red Hawk Pow Wow, at the Trumbull county fairgrounds.

We hosted meetings for both the County American Legion and the County Veterans Council.

We placed 5 gross of flags on veterans graves in 2 cemeteries.

We hosted the memorial Day ceremonies at those same 2 cemeteries.

We provided the Honor Guard/ Color guard for the Lowellville Day Parade.

We sponsored the attendance of 2 High school students to attend Ohio Buckeye Boys State.

What have you done besides cut and paste?

Care to try again or does that crow you're chewing on taste bad enough?

I'll be happy to accept your apology right here in public.

<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

sfc_oliver

You prove me right every time.

You are so predictable it would be funny if not so tragic.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

sfc_oliver

Dennis, as with all politicians the left also lies. Now if you want me to look for examples I am very confident that I can match you one for one.

And I have been told that I do a lot worse things than wrap myself in the flag. Of course I earned that right. But that is besides the point. Your post did nothing but prove you are, and probably always will be a partisan hack.

Do have a great day.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

Dan Moadus

What a laugh! As if the "Left" cares about what the founding fathers thought.

sfc_oliver

You really do have this hatred in your heart don't you?


From your own copy and paste:

Quoteeven President Obama have misquoted the Founding Fathers in recent years — reverently repeating words that are either altered or entirely false



And i am more than certain if anyone cared enough to look that they would find just as many on the left as what this author found on the right who have mis quoted the founding fathers. This entire story is nothing but partisan hackery.
<<<)) Sergeant First Class,  US Army, Retired((>>>

irishbobcat

By David A. Fahrenthold, Published: June 6
On election night, a jubilant Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) laid out the modern-day tea party's philosophy — in the words of a man who was alive for the Boston Tea Party.

"Thomas Jefferson," the newly elected Paul said, "wrote that government is best that governs least."

No, he didn't.

Last year on the House floor, Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Tex.), angry about the federal overhaul of health care, read a quote he said was from George Washington.

"Government is not reason. It is not eloquence," Gohmert read. "It is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."

Except, historians say, Washington never said those words.

This week, Sarah Palin (R), former Alaska governor and a possible 2012 presidential candidate, has been ridiculed for her telling of a story about America's founding. By her account, Paul Revere made his famous midnight ride to warn the Redcoats about the colonists.

But in Washington, nobody should feel too smug, as Palin is hardly the only politician with a habit of helpfully twisting the historical record, accidentally or not, and sometimes with politically handy consequences.

Senators, congressmen and even President Obama have misquoted the Founding Fathers in recent years — reverently repeating words that are either altered or entirely false.

The problem results, in part, from an unfortunate marriage of two 21st-century trends. One is the new obsession with the heroes of the American Revolution as guides in a fearful era defined by political division and deepening debt. The other is America's continued willingness to believe things it reads on the Internet.

"As Jefferson said, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance," Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.) said during a speech last summer.

That quote is cited as being from Jefferson online, but — alas — Jefferson never uttered it. The research staff at Monticello, Jefferson's estate, says it was incorrectly attributed to Jefferson beginning in 1838, after he had died.

Word of this debunking, however, doesn't seem to have reached Capitol Hill.

"Our third president, Thomas Jefferson, said this," said Rep. Marlin A. Stutzman (R-Ind.), speaking on the House floor last month. "Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom."

A search of the Congressional Record and C-SPAN archives, covering the past two years, turned up at least 30 instances of politicians mangling the words or deeds of the country's founders.

Some errors were odd enough to be funny. In March, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) told a crowd in New Hampshire that the battles of Lexington and Concord took place there. But those fights actually took place in Massachusetts.

Other misquotes seem to carry political suggestion. Obama has been criticized for making the same mistake at least twice in his speeches. When he recites a passage from the Declaration of Independence, he leaves out three key words.

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that each of us are endowed with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," the president said in a speech at a Democratic fundraiser, according to a transcript on the White House Web site.

What the document actually says is "that they are endowed by their Creator." Conservatives accused Obama of omitting the Declaration's grounding in religious faith.

A White House spokesman said that Obama had gotten the passage right on "countless occasions."

Republicans have used incorrect quotes to portray the founders as sympathetic to modern conservatism. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (Utah) offered this 2009 argument in favor of gun rights. "President George Washington said that the right to keep and bear arms is 'the most effectual means of preserving peace,' " Hatch said on the Senate floor.

But Washington actually wrote something different: "To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace."

A Hatch spokeswoman said Monday that he wasn't sure how the error occurred but that Hatch "continues to believe that the right to keep and bear arms is fundamental and essential for liberty."

In 2009, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) read a quote from Jefferson, which seemed like a warning about the welfare state.

"The democracy will cease to exist," Coburn said, putting up a placard with the quote printed on it, "when you take away from those who are willing to work to give to those who would not."

But the researchers at Monticello say those aren't Jefferson's words. Their research says this quote first surfaced in 1986, 160 years after Jefferson's death.

Asked about the error Monday, Coburn's staff did not say how it was made. A spokesman said that misquoting founders is far from the capital's biggest problem.

"Of course we want to be accurate," spokesman John Hart wrote in an e-mail. "However, we have a $14 trillion debt because politicians have misapplied the founders' words — particularly those in the Constitution — not because they have misquoted the founders."

But voters might just as easily ask themselves: Even if the founders didn't say those things, would they have agreed with them?

Yes, no and maybe, historians say. Jefferson was an advocate of a smaller central government — although in an era when the government was far different than it is today.

"I think that the Postal Service was, like, six people" in Jefferson's time, said Jill Lepore, a historian at Harvard University. "And he thought that was too many."

Washington, on the other hand, advocated for a stronger central authority. Edward Lengel, who has edited Washington's papers, said he was frustrated that modern politicians ignore historical facts.

"It's a betrayal of Washington's legacy. It's a betrayal of who he was," said Lengel, a University of Virginia professor. "He would have been outraged to find people manipulating his words, or making things up, to indicate that he supposedly believed this or that thing."

But, Lengel said, misquoting the founders is a tradition that started even before the founders were dead. During Washington's second term as president, he said, political enemies circulated fake letters in which Washington allegedly expressed admiration for an enemy, Britain's King George III.

He said that at first, Washington said nothing. He thought people knew him well enough to know the quotes were fake.

They didn't.

"People really believed it," Lengel said.