Bill Ayers can write (not that what he writes about is worth anything), but he's got this huge stigma behind him, so anything he writes will never be taken seriously. The concept that he would use a promising student with similar (to what extent, only they know) views on things as an outlet he can use to get his message out is not all that laughable.
Ah, it all makes sense now. Ayers wrote twenty books under his own name, despite knowing that they could never be taken seriously. But, after all, they were only about education, the subject to which he has devoted the less regrettable parts of his adult life and of which he is a professor.
However, there were
some views he had that he wanted taking seriously, and about which he
really wanted to "get his message out", such as his views on growing up in Indonesia and Hawaii, which he didn't do, his "message" about Barack Obama's family, who he hasn't met, his feelings about being black, a color which he is not, his views on his trip to Africa to look for his roots, which he did not undertake, and so forth.
Funny sort of "message", but then Ayers is a funny sort of man.
So then he looked around his radical terrorist pals to see whose work he could pass it off as, and Obama said: "Hey, you know, that sounds so like
my biography would that I bet we could kid people I wrote it."
And Ayers said: "Great, because the imprimature of an obscure law professor no-one's ever heard of is just what I need to give my book credibility."
Yes, it all fits together like an intricate jigsaw. "Laughable"? Heavens, no.
I think an impartial observer would have to first decide how well cusum analysis can fingerprint an author. The author of the article says it's not perfect at identifying who wrote what, but I would like to know what the certainty of the cusum analysis rubric is.
Ah yes, of course, the way to test this non-laughable hypothesis is to enquire as to the validity of a method of authorial fingerprinting which has not actually been used to test it.
If only Sherlock Holmes wasn't as fictional as the rest of this preposterous tarradiddle, you could give him lessons.