March 16, 2012  
Obama Flubs U.S. History --  Again
By _Carl  M. Cannon_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Carl+M.+Cannon&id=14539) 

  
He wasn't born in Kenya, and he attended some of this country's finest  
schools, but as he demonstrated anew on Thursday, Barack Obama shares with his  
fellow Americans one of their most dubious national traits: a nonchalant  
disregard for historical accuracy. 
In an age when Twitter and other social media can propagate with 
distressing  efficiency the fake Lincoln quote, the false Twain quip, the 
invented Ben 
 Franklin advice, Obama is a president for our times. 
 


Speaking yesterday about energy, the president found it necessary to 
casually  slander Rutherford B. Hayes. In Obama’s telling, Hayes was a Luddite 
who, when  confronted with the invention of the telephone, wondered who would 
ever want to  use one. 
“That’s why he’s not on Mount Rushmore,” Obama intoned. “He’s explaining 
why  we can’t do something instead of why we can do something.” 
It’s hard to know where to begin unraveling this, but a good place to start 
 is the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center, where resident scholar Nan 
Card  confirmed to any journalist who bothered calling her -- which is more 
than you  can say for the White House speechwriting crew -- that Hayes 
never said anything  of the kind about the telephone, or any other invention. 
According to contemporaneous accounts, what Hayes really said when he first 
 used the phone was, “That is wonderful.” 
In fact, Hayes installed the first telephone in the White House, along with 
 the first typewriter, and invited Thomas Edison in for a visit to show off 
the  phonograph -- and was no one’s idea of a technophobe. “He really was 
the  opposite,” Card told _Benjy  Sarlin of Talking Points Memo_ 
(http://2012.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/03/obama-mangles-us-world-history-in-energy-spee
ch.php?ref=fpnewsfeed) . “Between the telephone, the telegraph, the  
phonograph, and photography, I think he was pretty much on the cutting  edge.” 
This is not first time Obama and his communications team have fallen for a  
quote they apparently ripped from the Internet. 
In the waning days of his 2008 campaign, then-Sen. Obama criticized  
Republicans with this statement: “Abraham Lincoln once said to one of his  
opponents, ‘If you stop telling lies about me, I’ll start telling truth about  
you.
’ ” 
(If that quote doesn’t sound like Lincoln, that’s because it wasn’t. Adlai 
 Stevenson, another Illinois Democrat, was fond of this line. So was 
William  Randolph Hearst, who used it when he ran for governor of New York in 
1906,  although Sen. Chauncey Depew, another New Yorker, employed it back in 
the 
19th  Century.) 
Although tradition holds that a president’s words are his own, some of this 
 stuff comes from careless staff work, and some comes when he’s just 
winging it.  Given the demands of modern presidential politicking, no one is 
going 
to be  perfect. But that doesn’t explain why, as president, Obama keeps 
discussing the  “Intercontinental Railroad,” supposedly built in the United 
States in the 19th  Century. (It was called the Transcontinental Railroad, and 
crossed no  oceans.) 
In his very first news conference as president-elect, Obama was asked if he’
d  spoken with any former presidents in preparation for taking office. He 
replied  that he’d talked with all the ex-presidents “that are living,” 
adding with a  smile, “I didn’t want to get into a Nancy Reagan thing about 
doing any  séances.” 
(Besides being mean-spirited -- and Obama quickly phoned Mrs. Reagan to  
apologize -- this was inaccurate: Nancy Reagan consulted an astrologer; she  
didn’t converse with the dead.)  
____________________________________
  
A couple of months later, the second paragraph of Obama’s inaugural address 
 contained another historical mistake. “Forty-four Americans have now taken 
the  presidential oath,” he said. (Not quite. While Obama is the 44th 
president, 43  men have taken the oath. Grover Cleveland, because his terms 
were 
not  contiguous, is counted as both the 22nd and the 24th chief executive. 
Two  presidents, but only one American.) 
This kind of fact-checking can come across as pedantic. Even his most  
persistent critics don’t believe, for instance, that Obama really thinks there  
are 57 states in this country, as he said in a moment of exhaustion at the 
tail  end of the 2008 campaign. 
But some conservatives have noticed that Republicans are invariably at the  
butt end of Obama’s historic flights of fancy. Asked during his first few 
months  to explain his rationale for banning waterboarding and releasing the 
previous  administration’s “torture memos,” Obama gave this answer: 
“I was struck by an article that I was reading the other day talking about  
the fact that the British during World War II, when London was being bombed 
to  smithereens, had 200 or so detainees. And Churchill said, ‘We don’t 
torture,’  when . . . all of the British people were being subjected to 
unimaginable risk  and threat. . . . Churchill understood, you start taking 
shortcuts, over time,  that corrodes what's best in a people. It corrodes the 
character of a  country.” 
(Except that it was blogger Andrew Sullivan who said those things, not  
Winston Churchill. The “article” Obama was reading was, let’s just say,  
underreported. The British did torture German prisoners during World War II. 
Not  
to mention the 16 Nazis hunted down by the British and assassinated after 
the  war while Churchill was prime minister. ) 
But social media is good for more than disseminating untruths. It’s also 
very  good at poking fun at those who promulgate them in the first place. 
A new hash tag on Twitter, _#BarackObamasPresidentialFacts_ 
(http://twitter.com/#!/search/#BarackObamasPresidentialFacts?q=#BarackObamasPresidentialFact
s) ,  popped up yesterday, full of the clever irreverence we’ve come to 
expect: 
“James A. Garfield loved lasagna and hated Mondays,” tweeted one wag. 
“Before winning the White House, Warren G. Harding and his running mate,  ‘
Nate Dogg,’ had 4 platinum albums,” proclaimed another. 
“Ulysses S. Grant was our first Greek president,” proclaimed a third. 
A whimsical Abe Lincoln made a cameo on #BarackObamasPresidentialFacts, 
just  as he did in the real Obama’s memory banks: “Abraham Lincoln was born in 
a log  cabin where he invented pancake syrup,” 
But as Lincoln said -- or was it Mark Twain? -- truth is the first casualty 
 of war. (Actually, that sentiment is originally Samuel Johnson’s. “Among 
the  calamities of war,” Johnson wrote in 1758, “may be justly numbered the 
 diminution of the love of truth by the falsehoods which interest dictates 
and  credulity encourages.”) 
That quote is more than 140 characters, but it’s worth remembering  
nonetheless. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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