February 18th, 2008
Is Obama’s Plagiarism the Change You Can Believe In?
It has now come out that Obama’s rousing speech at the Wisconsin Democratic Party — you know, the “words don’t matter?” speech I just wrote about — is plagiarized from a speech by Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick. Here is Deval Patrick’s original speech from 2006:
Now here is Obama on Saturday night:
It is profoundly ironic that in his chance to rebut critics who say that his speeches are emotionalistic fluff — just words — he doesn’t even use his own words!
Obama is basing his whole campaign on his superior ability to inspire people, to get them excited about “change you can believe in.” His ideas aren’t really very different than Hillary Clinton’s, and in fact, people have pointed out that a lot of “his” ideas come from legislation that Hillary Clinton proposed long before Obama ever came on the scene.
I wouldn’t bother to point this out about any other candidate, but since Obama’s whole candidacy is based only on the importance of getting you inspired, this is directly relevant. My point is this: Obama wants to inspire you to believe in him — he says policies don’t matter if you aren’t feeling inspired! — and yet he relies on stolen material to inspire you. I wonder how inspired you’ll feel when he runs out of new or borrowed material and goes into re-runs. I bet then you’ll wish you had given more thought to the important issues.
P.S., If you ask me, Deval Patrick’s is the more inspiring version. Maybe Obama supporters should draft him as their candidate instead!
