Phildonia,
Thank you.
BPSCG said:
Acknowledged - that would be pretty boneheaded.
But then that still leaves the question that Brown raises, namely, why go to so much trouble to get so many facts right, then screw up in such an amateurish way? What is the simplest possible explanation?
Here is my own working hypothesis. Very speculative. I believe the following theory could explain the situation, but I would not ever, ever, suggest that this hypothesis is proven.
Someone who hates Bush somehow got his hands on memos very similar to these. There have been press reports about a purge of files done when Bush was governor. Perhaps someone pulled them from the trash at that time, or slipped them into their own hands when they should be throwing them away.
Of course, if this was done by an employee, this would be improper conduct. It could get you fired.
Now let us suppose that something on the originals would reveal the origin of the files. Perhaps the originals were actually torn up, and then the pieces retrieved from a trash bin? Perhaps a mark had been made on them that indicated they had been reviewed by a particular person? Who knows? One way or another, someone has them who is not supposed to have them, and the condition of the original was such that inspection of the original might reveal how that person got them.
So, he wants to reveal them, but he doesn't want anyone to know that he was the source. He makes a copy. To his eye, being a rank amateur, they look real enough. He knows the information is correct, and to him, they look real enough. Or possibly, he knows he is faxing them to CBS. He assumes that CBS wants their content, not the documents themselves. He figures that if CBS just has a fax, no way would they go on the air with just that.
CBS, meanwhile, thinks it has a scoop, and doesn't want to waste the time properly examining the documents. Or their "unimpeachable" source is trusted by them enough that Rather and company thinks they are solid.
I think Occam would like that explanation a bit better than the various forms of skullduggery that are suggested. It postulates that the content of the memos is genuine, which is why the source could speak about them as real. Since he has the real documents, he can sound totally sincere and convincing talking to CBS. He might even say "I'll give you copies of these documents." In his mind, his transcription of the documents is a "copy", but the person on the other end thinks he means a photocopy. CBS, meanwhile, is totally convinced of the authenticity of the source, and due to the miscommunication, thinks they have a photocopy. This only requires that you assume a certain amount of stupidity involved, but there is plenty of that to go around.
But, to reitterate my opinion, I am a genuine Bush-hater, and I don't care if every single word in these documents is the absolute truth. George Bush was a person of privilege who got into the guard to avoid Vietnam service, and then at the end, was more interested in working a political campaign than Guard service.
Tell me something I don't know. It makes me angry that the DNC, with explicit or implicit approval of the Kerry camp, thinks that this is a worthy topic for the campaign.