this is really pretty funny. read on...
Quote:
George Bush accused of borrowing from other books in his memoirs
Former US president's Decision Points contains anecdotes seemingly lifted from books by several authors
* Chris McGreal in Washington
* guardian.co.uk, Sunday 14 November 2010 19.24 GMT
George W Bush Former president George Bush has been accused of borrowing from other books in his memoirs. Photograph: Al Behrman/AP
George Bush's memoirs were billed as offering "gripping, never before heard detail" of his time in the White House.
Now it appears that Decision Points is not so much the former president's memoirs as other people's cut and pasted memories.
Bush's account is littered with anecdotes seemingly ripped off from other books and articles, even borrowing without attribution some might say plagiarising from critical accounts the White House had previously denounced as inaccurate.
The Huffington Post noted a remarkable similarity between previously published writings and Bush's colourful anecdotes from events at which he had not been present.
Bush borrows heavily from Bob Woodward's account Bush at War, which the White House criticised as inaccurate when it was published in 2002. He also appears to take chunks from a book written by his former press secretary Ari Fleischer.
Bush recounts a meeting between Hamid Karzai and a Tajik warlord on the Afghan president's inauguration day, which he used as an example of hope for the future of the country.
The former president writes: "When Karzai arrived in Kabul for his inauguration on 22 December 102 days after 9/11 several Northern Alliance leaders and their bodyguards greeted him at an airport.
"As Karzai walked across the tarmac alone, a stunned Tajik warlord asked where all his men were.
"Karzai responded: 'Why, General, you are my men. All of you who are Afghans are my men.'"
The Huffington Post notes that the account and the quote are lifted almost verbatim and without attribution from a New York Review of Books article by Ahmed Rashid.
Bush also lifts a quote from an interview John McCain gave to the Washington Post on Iraq and then presents it as though McCain had said it to him.
Even where Bush is present and is quoting himself, he appears to have had his memory jogged by the accounts of others without finding much to add.
Many of the borrowed lines are taken from Woodward's Bush at War, with the former president's accounts of meetings bearing a striking similarity to Woodward's.
Bush's publisher has suggested that only confirms the accuracy of Decision Points. Others have suggested it is a reflection of two traits the former president was often criticised for lack of original thought and laziness.
Bush also quotes Woodward's writings almost word for word in places. Where Woodward writes: "The second option combined cruise missiles with manned bomber attacks," Bush says: "The second option was to combine cruise missile strikes with manned bomber attacks."
And where Woodward's book says: "The third and most robust option was cruise missiles, bombers and what the planners had taken to calling 'boots on the ground'," Bush says: "The third and most aggressive option was to employ cruise missiles, bombers and boots on the ground."
Bush manages to remember exactly the same shouts as Woodward from the crowd at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks "Do not let me down!" and "Whatever it takes" even though there must have been a slew of them.
He appears to have borrowed from the memoirs of Fleischer in relating an anecdote about a hospital visit to meet injured survivors of the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon.
Striking similarities between Decision Points and other writings, uncovered by the Huffington Post website
In Decision Points, Bush describes the inauguration of Hamid Karzai, which he did not attend: "As Karzai walked across the tarmac alone, a stunned Tajik warlord asked where all his men were. Karzai said: 'Why, General, you are my men. All of you who are Afghans are my men.'"
From Ahmed Rashid's The Mess in Afghanistan in the New York Review of Books, as related personally to him by Karzai: "As the two men shook hands on the tarmac, Fahim [the Tajik warlord] looked confused. 'Where are your men?' he asked. Karzai turned to him in his disarmingly gentle manner of speaking. 'Why General,' he replied, 'You are my men all of you are Afghans and are my men
'"
From Decision Points: "The second option was to combine cruise missile strikes with manned bomber attacks."
From Bob Woodward's Bush at War: "The second option combined cruise missiles with manned bomber attacks."
From Decision Points: "The third and most aggressive option was to employ cruise missiles, bombers and boots on the ground."
From Bush At War: "The third and most robust option was cruise missiles, bombers and what the planners had taken to calling 'boots on the ground.'"
Decision Points: "One man yelled: 'Do not let me down!' Another shouted straight at my face: 'Whatever it takes.'"
From Bush at War: "'Whatever it takes,' they shouted. One pointed to [Bush] as he walked by and yelled out: 'Don't let me down.'"
From Decision Points, quoting John McCain in a manner that suggests he is talking to the then president: "'I cannot guarantee success,' he said, 'But I can guarantee failure if we don't adopt this new strategy.'"
From an interview by McCain with the Washington Post in 2007: "'I cannot guarantee success, but I can guarantee failure if we don't adopt this new strategy,' he said.'"
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George Bush accused of borrowing from other books in his memoirs | World news | The Guardian
and a link to the huffington post story:
George Bush Book 'Decision Points' Lifted From Advisers' Books
if i could imagine cowboy george to be a person of principle, i'd be inclined to think of this as an exemplary act of cultural suicide, a kind of hara kiri in book form.
if i could imagine the plagiarism as a kind of confession, a revealing of bush's inner-most mediocrity, but staged with a degree of self-awareness, so a move directed at self-destruction, i'd admire it.
if i could imagine this as an act of political sabotage carried out by the ghost writers hired on to make the memoirs, i'd applaud it.
if i could imagine it as a conceptual action, it'd be kinda awesome.
but it's none of those things.
still, there's something remarkable about this newest moment in the ongoing saga of shabby, careless thinking typical of contemporary conservatism in general and of the bush people in particular.
it's remarkable in its intellectual and editorial laziness, characteristics that sum up the stifling mediocrity of the bush administration, which seemed full of people for whom this sort of lazy plagiarism that'd get a frat boy undergraduate suspended for a semester or more was a way of life. and its even more remarkable in it's cluelessness, both on the part of whomever wrote the "memoirs" but also on the part of whomever edited them.
but what do you think?
are you planning on reading bush's memoirs?
have you read them?
what did you think?
at this point i'm still thinking the only way i'd read this book is if i stole it from the crime section of a bookstore.
but maybe i'll read it. i just don't want to buy it.