Showing posts with label rhetorical devices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rhetorical devices. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Every Argument In Support Of The HHS Mandate

Gary Willis, in a blog on that noted theological site, the New York Review of Books, has opined that the uproar over Obama's HHS mandate is being caused by Republican con men and Catholic fanatics. Willis, to his credit, makes virtually every leftie argument in favor of Obama's HHS mandate that I have heard to this point, plus a few more:

- The conflict over the HHS mandate is really about contraception, not religion.

- If the issue is about religion, than the question is whether Catholics can force their views on everyone else.

- Obama has offered a reasonable accommodation, but the Bishops are fanatics acting unreasonably.

- The fact that the Bishops are even complaining about this shows their bad faith.

- Catholics want to impose a religious dictatorship on America.

- The Church got it wrong on contraception, and thus they should be ignored.

- The "religious freedom" argument is about whether we as a nation can disagree with the Bishops (stated while ignoring the HHS mandate)

- The polls are in, contraception is accepted by most Americans, and therefore this core doctrine of the Church is not entitled to be respected under the First Amendment.

- Contraception is not a valid religious issue since there is no mention of it made in the bible,

- Left wing interpretation of natural law is obviously superior to the Pope's. The Pope got it wrong on contraception, and so the Pope can and should be ignored.

- The Catholic Church thinks sex is dirty. Let's hear a cheer for free love!!!

- Catholic doctrine should be subordinate to polling.


What follows is an answer to those issues:

By a revolting combination of con men and fanatics, the current primary race has become a demonstration that the Republican party does not deserve serious consideration for public office. Take the controversy over contraceptives.

Willis begins with a patently false premise. There is no controversy over contraceptives - nor for that matter the plan-B abortion pill Willis ignores throughout his argument. Both contraceptives and plan-B abortion pills are unconditionally available in America to all women today. Indeed, there is nothing stopping the government from opening up kiosks to hand out contraceptives and Plan-B abortion pills like candy, free to any and all. The Catholic Church isn't contesting that. The sole issue is whether the federal government is violating the First Amendment when it forces religious institutions and individuals to pay for those items in violation of their core religious beliefs, with their only remaining alternatives being to pay a fine or dissolve.

American bishops at first opposed having hospitals and schools connected with them pay employee health costs for contraceptives. But when the President backed off from that requirement, saying insurance companies can pay the costs, the bishops doubled down and said no one should have to pay for anything so evil as contraception.

This is a cynical argument. Obama backed off nothing. He announced - without coordination with the bishops - an accounting trick as an accommodation. Contraceptives and abortion pills don't fall off trees. The only way a health insurer can make them available is to collect sufficient premiums to cover their costs. So all Obama is doing is telling insurers of Catholic institutions that they have to use some creative accounting. The costs are still going to be paid by the Catholic institutions for their employees regardless of how the accounting is done. Moreover, Obama has done nothing to address those Catholic institutions that self-insure.

And it is not just Catholic Church institutions that are at issue and that Obama does not address. Most Christian sects share the same doctrines regarding abortion and contraception. And then there are the individual devout believers in Catholicism who run secular businesses, but who will also be required to fund the HHS mandate contrary to their religious beliefs. Mr. Willis describes complaining about that as something radical. But the First Amendment Free Exercise clause is written to protect religious individuals every bit as much as institutions.

Some Republicans are using the bishops’ stupidity to hurt the supposed “moderate” candidate Mitt Romney, giving a temporary leg up to the faux naïf Rick Santorum; others are attacking Barack Obama as an “enemy of religion.”

I must admit, it has been so long since I have read or heard anyone called a "naif" (Ivanhoe?) that I had to look it up. I was prepared to give Willis kudos if it made sense, but "naif" merely means "naive." So Santorum is faux naive? That makes no sense. It does however mark Willis as a faux intellectual. At any rate, Obama is an enemy of religion - as has been virtually every honest socialist since the founding of socialism in the crucible of the French Revolution some two centuries ago.

Pusillanimous Catholics—Mark Shields and even, to a degree, the admirable E. J.Dionne—are saying that Catholics understandably resent an attack on “their” doctrine (even though they do not personally believe in it). Omnidirectional bad-faith arguments have clustered around what is falsely presented as a defense of “faith.” The layers of ignorance are equaled only by the willingness of people “of all faiths” to use them for their own purposes. Consider just some of the layers:

So for the Catholics and other religious in this country to mount a "defense of faith" is, according to Willis, a mark of ignorance and bad faith. I know the left does not like to have to justify their baseless assertions in argument, but this is ridiculous.

Far too many Catholics have fallen for the utopian belief of the left - that society can be perfected on earth under the benevolent hand of an omnipotent government - when we now have two centuries of historical evidence, much of it soaked in blood, and all showing to the contrary. Moreover, much of the Catholic "left wing" don't seem to understand that they have made a bargain with devil in the secular socialist left. These people want to see Christianity as a whole put to the dust-bin of history. It is almost like Stockholm syndrome.

The eyes of many of the Catholic left have apparently been opened on that score thanks to Obama and the HHS. But then again, Obama promised to be a uniter, not a divider.


The Phony Religious Freedom Argument

The bishops’ opposition to contraception is not an argument for a “conscience exemption.” It is a way of imposing Catholic requirements on non-Catholics. This is religious dictatorship, not religious freedom.

Oh, you lefties, you love turning arguments on their head and accusing an innocent opponent of doing what you yourselves are doing. The Bishops' argument is a moral one. It does not impose anything on non-Catholics. It does not stop a single person, Catholic or non-Catholic, from purchasing a contraceptive. The only imposition in this case is of course from Obama, who would impose the costs of contraceptives and abortion pills on the Catholic Church. I would say nice try, but it wasn't.

Contraception is not even a religious matter. Nowhere in Scripture or the Creed is it forbidden. Catholic authorities themselves say it is a matter of “natural law,” over which natural reason is the arbiter—and natural reason, even for Catholics, has long rejected the idea that contraception is evil. More of that later; what matters here is that contraception is legal, ordinary, and accepted even by most Catholics. To say that others must accept what Catholics themselves do not is bad enough. To say that President Obama is “trying to destroy the Catholic Church” if he does not accept it is much, much worse.

For Willis to claim that contraception is not a religious matter is akin to Sebelius ruling that a Catholic charity is not a religious organization. Sebelius and Willis are both applying ridiculously narrow definitions to meet their goals. It is risible. Simply because mention of the pill, the IUD, or abortion does not appear in in the New Testament does not mean that they are of no religious concern. Contraception and abortion directly raise the issue of the creation of life imbued with a soul by God. Maybe its just me, but that sounds kind of central to all of Christianity.

Natural law is not devoid of moral underpinnings, nor does it fall outside the competence of the Church to make binding moral judgments within the rubric of natural law. Thomas Aquinas wrote extensively on that issue. And indeed, Pope Paul VI, in Humanae Vitae, did in fact reason within the construct of natural law to find artificial contraception "immoral" and "evil." (H.V., Par. 14). Willis can have contrary opinions to Church doctrine, but in this case he is being wholly dishonest about the nature of those doctrines.

To disagree with Catholic bishops is called “disrespectful,” an offense against religious freedom. That is why there is a kind of taboo against bringing up Romney’s Mormonism. But if Romney sincerely believed in polygamy on religious grounds, as his grandfather did, he would not even be considered for the presidency—any more than a sincere Christian Scientist, who rejects the use of medicine, would be voted for to handle public health care. Yet a man who believes that contraception is evil is an aberrant from the American norm, like the polygamist or the faith healer.

Disagreeing with Catholic bishops is of course not an offense against "religious freedom" - it is a function of it. Willis nonetheless uses this construct as a means to obfuscate the real argument - that requiring a religious institution to act against the tenets of its faith is where the offense against religious freedom lies.

It is interesting that Willis brings up polygamy as an issue, because it was center stage in Reynolds v. U.S., the first Supreme Court case interpreting the 1st Amendment's Free Exercise of Religion clause. A Mormon man was prosecuted for polygamy and appealed on Free Exercise grounds. The Court resolved that case by looking at mainstream religious doctrine extant at the time of the signing of the Bill of Rights. Mormonism was an invention that preceded the adoption of the First Amendment, and polygamy was "odious" to then extant mainstream Christian traditions. Thus polygamy fell outside the ambit of Free Exercise protections. In the instant case, Catholic Church doctrine on contraception and abortion can be traced back to antiquity, and though reexamined by the Church in the 1960's, were certainly settled doctrines at the time of the inking of the First Amendment. This should qualify for protection under the Free Exercise clause.

Although Willis frames the issue cleverly, what Willis is arguing for in reality is that today, some two and a quarter centuries after the inking of the First Amendment, any religious tenet in conflict with modern secular left wing dogma should not be honored as legitimate and, thus, should fall outside First Amendment protection. Willis and the left would have the rock upon which Christ built his Church loosed into the quicksand of the modern secular socialist left.

The Phony Contraception Argument

The opposition to contraception has, as I said, no scriptural basis. Pope Pius XI once said that it did, citing in his encyclical Casti Connubii (1930) the condemnation of Onan for “spilling his seed” rather than impregnating a woman (Genesis 38.9). But later popes had to back off from this claim, since everyone agrees now that Onan’s sin was not carrying out his duty to give his brother an heir (Deuteronomy 25.5-6). Then the “natural law” was fallen back on, saying that the natural purpose of sex is procreation, and any use of it for other purposes is “unnatural.” But a primary natural purpose does not of necessity exclude ancillary advantages. The purpose of eating is to sustain life, but that does not make all eating that is not necessary to subsistence “unnatural.” One can eat, beyond the bare minimum to exist, to express fellowship, as one can have sex, beyond the begetting of a child with each act, to express love.

And Willis got his theology degree where? You can compare Willis's secular reasoning within the natural law sphere to that of the Pope in Humanae Vitae and perhaps glean a few differences in the moral thrust. That a leftie such as Willis ultimately comes to a different conclusion is hardly surprising, but it is also meaningless. Catholic religious doctrine has been decided by the Pope, sitting ex cathedra.

Willis can't abide that reality that it is only the Pope's view that matters, since to do so is to concede the argument that Obama and the left are in fact conducting an attack directly upon the religious freedom of the Church. Nor can Willis even concede that different people could arrive at different, yet valid conclusions, without likewise conceding the argument. Instead, he declares the Pope's encyclical a "phony" and thus, the modern left can impose their will on the Church, marginalizing it in American society.


The Roman authorities would not have fallen for such a silly argument but for a deep historical disrelish for sex itself. Early Fathers and medieval theologians considered sex unworthy when not actually sinful. That is why virgin saints and celibate priests were prized above married couples. Thomas Aquinas said that priests must not be married, since “those in holy orders handle the sacred vessels and the sacrament itself, and therefore it is proper (decens) that they preserve, by abstinences, a body undefiled (munditia corporalis) (Summa Theologiae, Part 3 Supplement, Question 53, article 3, Response). Marriage, you see, makes for defilement (immunditia). The ban on contraception is a hangover from the period when the body itself was considered unclean, as Peter Brown overwhelmingly proved in The Body and Society (1988).

It is hard to see what relevant point Willis is trying to make here. Pope Paul VI's reasoning in Humanae Vitae is in no way is prudish or implies that sex is "unclean." Is Willis suggesting that, since the modern left has been pushing a secular message of sex without consequence, moral or physical, in and out of marriage, that modern Christian sexual morality is thereby invalidated? Curious.

The Phony “Church Teaches” Argument

Catholics who do not accept the phony argument over contraception are said to be “going against the teachings of their church.” That is nonsense. They are their church. The Second Vatican Council defines the church as “the people of God.” Thinking that the pope is the church is a relic of the days when a monarch was said to be his realm. The king was “Denmark.” Catholics have long realized that their own grasp of certain things, especially sex, has a validity that is lost on the celibate male hierarchy. This is particularly true where celibacy is concerned.

So to restate Willis's argument, Catholicism is antiquated, the Catholic hierarchy cannot pass judgment on moral issues surrounding sex because they aren't out chasing skirt every night, and therefore it is only legitimate that questions of Church doctrine and sexual morality be determined by polling. Unfortunately, Willis neglected to site the biblical references supporting that argument. I have read most of the Bible, and I have yet to see reference to the Prophet Rasmussen or the Book of Pew.

Thus it seems Willis and the left would add an addendum to Mathew 18:18. That's the bit were Jesus told the soon to be First Pope, Peter, that "whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven." That is one of the biblical passages that gives the Pope the final authority to pronounce on matters of religious doctrine and morality. Willis would rewrite that bit to add "subject to majority approval." I can't wait to see Willis's rewrite of the Golden Rule. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor, but only when using HHS approved contraceptives."

There was broad disagreement with Pius XI’s 1930 encyclical on the matter. Pope Paul VI set up a study group of loyal and devout Catholics, lay and clerical, to make recommendations. The group overwhelmingly voted to change the teaching of PiusXI. But cardinals in the Roman Curia convinced Paul that any change would suggest that the church’s teachings are not eternal (though Casti Connubii had not been declared infallible, by the papacy’s own standards).

When Paul reaffirmed the ban on birth control in Humanae Vitae (1968) there was massive rejection of it. Some left the church. Some just ignored it. Paradoxically, the document formed to convey the idea that papal teaching is inerrant just convinced most people that it can be loony. The priest-sociologist Andrew Greeley said thatHumanae Vitae did more damage to the papacy than any of the so-called “liberal” movements in Catholicism. When Pius IX condemned democracy and modern science in his Syllabus of Errors (1864), the Catholic historian Lord Acton said that Catholics were too sensible to go crazy every time a pope does. The reaction toHumanae Vitae proves that. . . .

So let's see. The issues of contraception and abortion were given a second look by the Church with the advent of modern contraception, there were two sides to argument, and the Pope picked one. The left disagrees with the Pope's choice. And that matters the tiniest bit why?

The only person whose decision counts is the Pope's. Now, people who disagree with that on a fundamental level can leave the Church, or choose to live in sin. But none of that remotely gives the left in America the right to substitute their morality for Church doctrine. That is, according to Thomas Jefferson, what the Free Exercise clause was meant to prevent.

But to be clear, that is precisely what Willis is arguing for, with the goal of the replacing God with a socialist government as the final arbiter of morality in our society. As I quoted in A Historical Perspective On Religion & The HHS Mandate:

In any left revolution, be it progressive, bolshevik, socialist, fascist, maoist, or bolivaran, it is necessary to knock down organized religion. The Catholic Church competes for the hearts and minds of people and does so effectively, as do the evangelical Protestant churches, etc. Further, the Church is organized and so can put out a message of opposition. So at some point the revolution has to take the Church on, or lose.

And there it is in a nutshell. The left is the enemy of religion and Obama is their standard bearer in this attack on religion through the HHS. Mr. Willis's entire argument, replete with misstatements of fact and use of rhetorical devices, is used to hide that fundamental truth. The HHS mandate is not about contraception, it is about whether God or government will be the final arbiter of our nation's moral code.

On a final note, is it possible that Obama's decision to post the HHS mandate now is a cynical ploy right out of Wag The Dog. Is HHS mandate designed by Obama to create a social policy issue that would deflect from economic concerns going into the 2012 election. Certainly a lot of people are speculating about that, and not without some due cause. Given the apparent collusion on this issue between someone in the HHS decision chain and George Stephanopolous in his moderation of the 8 January Republican debate, it certainly leads one to suspect that this mandate is part of Obama's reelection year strategy. That suspicion gains a lot more life when one sees how the HHS pushed out this mandate long before it had finished what would be a normal review. HHS Sec. Sebelius, in her recent testimony before the Senate, admitted that, in the rush to announce the HHS mandate, she did not bother to float the mandate through the Justice Dept. for an opinion on its First Amendment legality, despite being asked to do so by 27 Senators, nor did HHS bother to studying how the mandate might impact on those 60% - i.e., the majority - of all companies and organizations that are self-insured.








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Demonizing Their Opponents

One of the memes on this blog is that the left doesn't debate their opponents, they demonize them. And here is Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters making my point . . . literally.



(H/T Bluegrass Pundit)

Dr. Sanity has a great post up on the left's methods of argument and psychological denial. It is well worth a read.

The left is a wasteland of vacuity that stands today at the apogee of their power. If the U.S. is to survive, they need to be beaten into the dustbin of history.





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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

If You're Surprised, You Aren't Paying Attention

ABC News Jonathan Karl reports:

The newfound civility didn’t last long. Political rhetoric in Congress doesn’t get much nastier than the words of one House Democrat during the debate on repealing the health care law.

In an extraordinary outburst on the House floor, Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) invoked the Holocaust to attack Republicans on health care and compared rhetoric on the issue to the work of infamous Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. . . .

If anyone expected the left to act with "civility," they must have been in a coma for the past half century. It was about then that the left stopped arguing the issues with intellectual honesty and substituted demonizing their opponents as their primary means of winning arguments. The day "civility" is forced upon the left is the day they cease to be a force in American politics.

Update: From Peter Wehner at Commentary, via Instapundit:

In our post-Tucson world, I’m eager to see people like E.J. Dionne Jr., Dana Milbank, and Harold Meyerson of the Washington Post; George Packer of the New Yorker; James Fallows of the Atlantic; Paul Krugman, Frank Rich, and the editorial page of the New York Times; Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow, Chris Matthews, and Ed Schultz of MSNBC, and scores of other commentators and reporters all across America both publicize and condemn Representative Cohen’s slander.

Each of them will have plenty of opportunities to do so. I hope they take advantage of it. I hope, too, that reporters ask White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs what his reaction is. And I trust President Obama, who spoke so eloquently last week about the importance of civility in our national life, has something to say about this ugly episode as well. If the president were to repudiate Mr. Cohen quickly and publicly, it would be good for him, good for politics, and good for the nation.

But if the president and his liberal allies remain silent or criticize Cohen in the gentlest way possible, it’s only reasonable to conclude that their expressions of concern about incivility in public discourse are partisan rather than genuine, that what they care about isn’t public discourse but gamesmanship, not restoring civility but gaining power.

Hopefully, neither Mr. Wehner nor Instapundit will be holding their breath while awaiting the forceful denouncements of the left. Let the deafening silence commence.

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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Andrew Klavan Nails It: The Robotic Argument Of The Left To All Opposition

Although virtually every person on the right has pointed this out in so many words, Andrew Klavan nails it. He does the best job I have seen yet of describing the lefts attitude towards - and response to - all opposing arguments.



Actually, the left's rhetorical device is aimed not merely to the speaker, but it is equally aimed at all potential listeners. To them, the message is that, regardless of what the speaker has to say, the listener should pay no heed because the speaker is illegitimate. That is the whole basis for the race card, PDS, and of course, this past week's blood libel.

A hat tip to the best blog you will find down under (water at this point), Crusader Rabbit. Do pay them a visit and wish them some dry weather.

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Friday, August 13, 2010

The Liberal Idea Machine

The Agenda Project’s goal is to build a powerful, intelligent, well-connected political movement capable of identifying and advancing rational, effective ideas in the public debate and in so doing ensure our country’s enduring success.

Mission Statement of the liberal Agenda Project

The latest "intelligent, rational and effective idea" from the Agenda Project to advance public debate?



(H/T Another Black Conservative). Isn't that pithy. They must be ivy league grads.

This is part for the course for our modern left. Demonizing and dismissing out of hand the arguments of their opponents is their only strategy. The Tea Party challenges Obama's profligate spending and vast new statist programs - the left plays the race card. State that Obamacare's mandate is a tax, utterly ridiculous says Obama. Raise ethics charges against Maxine Waters, it's racism. Challenge the building of the Ground Zero mosque - religious bigotry, says Mayor Bloomberg. Paul Ryan's ideas to bring us back to fiscal sanity - flim flam says Paul Krugman. Indeed, as to the last example, WSJ recently ran an article on how Krugman is merely one of many on the far left who would like to see Paul Ryan disappear without having to address the substance of his arguments.

We have seen this same meme played out hundreds of thousands of times over the past decades. Indeed, the same Democrats who created the massive housing bubble and who destroyed our credit system in the process did so on the grounds that any challenge thereto was racist.

And now with November fast approaching, it's down to the left's final argument, f*** tea. These people are as intellectualy dishonest as they are intellectualy bankrupt.

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Saturday, January 16, 2010

WaPo & Obama's Rhetorical Devices

A "rhetorical device or resource of language is a technique that an author or speaker uses to convey to the listener or reader a meaning with the goal of persuading him or her towards considering a topic from a different perspective." All people use rhetorical devices, such as irony or metaphor. The left commonly uses such devices as labels to circumvent debate and demonize a subject. Obama does that and more. The WaPo has taken notice, and indeed, devotes a whole column to one specific device "Let me be clear." This from the Washington Post:

When Obama is being "clear" these days, he is saying something quite different than when he was being clear in 2007 and 2008. His shifting use of the phrase traces the arc of Obama's time on the national stage, from campaign sensation to a president beset with challenges that rhetoric alone cannot overcome. In a presidency in which everything is murkier than Obama could have imagined, the "let me be clear" preface has become a signal that what follows will be anything but.

Heh. Do read the entire article.

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Monday, January 4, 2010

NYT: Torturing With Rhetorical Devices


The NYT editorial board is in full screeching moral outrage over the fact that a lawsuit brought by several guests of Gitmo against Donald Rumsfeld and friends has been dismissed. The editorial is outrageous in its bald assertions of fact and law. This is the opening line of their editorial:

Bush administration officials came up with all kinds of ridiculously offensive rationalizations for torturing prisoners.

With but one exception, that statement encapsulates the left's entire method of argument as regards "torture" and what once was called the "war on terror." One, label enemy combatants as something other than enemy combatants - a term with specific meaning in the law of war denoting a class of enemy not entitled to treatment as POW's. Two, by virtue of that redefinition, imply that such individuals are akin to criminals and thus entitled to Constitutional protections. Three, baldly assert that the CIA's enhanced interrogation techniques, including waterboarding, were "torture" without any reference to or discussion of the applicable law. And four, ignore reality - baldly assert that there was no reason whatsoever to submit anyone to "enhanced interrogation."

I won't bother to further fisk this piece of ridiculous propaganda. I've dealt with the issue of "enhanced interrogation" and torture in some depth here. I have also dealt with the fake moralism of the left here. Suffice it to say, There is not a shred of intellectual honesty to the NYT's editorial - nor to most arguments coming from the left. They deal in false memes, rhetorical devices and repetition. It worked for them through 2008.

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Saturday, May 23, 2009

Obama Has The Left Going Nauseous


This is hilarious. From a reading of the lead article in the NYT today, it is obvious that the left is having severe trouble coming to grips with the reality that the moralizing of the One was deception on steroids and that the One is actually adopting most of the Bush blueprint for the War on Terror. One could well imagine that Pepto, Immodium and Depends have been flying off shelves since Thursday in all areas where the far left congregates.
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Ah, but it is so much fun watching the left try to come to grips with Obama's decision to adopt most of the programs from the Bush War on Terror. The cognitive dissonance arising out of the gulf between Obama's moral preening and his actions is going to have leftie heads exploding soon. And it may already be happening over at the NYT, where they are wrestling today with Obama's embrace of "indefinite detention."

"Indefinite detention" is actually the clearest issue in the entire War on Terror. We are operating pursuant to a formal declaration of war - the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), 115 Stat. 224. Thus, the law of war applies. Under that law, taking prisoners in war and holding them until hostilities cease is, to quote the activist left wing of the Supreme Court in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, "so fundamental and accepted an incident to war as to be an exercise of ‘necessary and appropriate force.'" That is the alpha and omega of "indefinite detention." The fact that hostilities might not end for decades is simply not a consideration.

The left's nausea, as the NYT makes crystal clear, comes from their desire to treat the war we are involved in as a purely criminal matter. Indeed, that would be completely in tune with all of the high moral rhetoric on the topic that Obama repeated near daily on the campaign trail. And thus it is just hilarious to watch the NYT adopt, without attribution, some of the One's own campaign rhetoric in their article as they try to reconcile themselves to Obama's embrace of "indefinite detention." This from the NYT:

President Obama’s proposal for a new legal system in which terrorism suspects could be held in “prolonged detention” inside the United States without trial would be a departure from the way this country sees itself, as a place where people in the grip of the government either face criminal charges or walk free.

Lollll . . . Apparently the author actually bought hook, line and sinker into the Obama campaign rhetoric. I am actually amazed that the author didn't weave the words "hope" and "change" into the first paragraph. To continue with the article:

. . . the question of [the] constitutionality [of indefinite detention] would involve a national look in the mirror: Is this what America does?

Roflllll . . . well, no, it would involve a look at the Constitution and applicable laws of war - and where the plain language of the Constitution is actually the baseline for interpretation, then sure, indefinite detention is what we do. We've done it in every war we've been involved in since 1776. All nine Supreme Court Justices agree on that one. The disconnect here occurs because the author substitutes "empathy" for the plain language of our founding document and he substitutes Obama's rhetoric for the Bill of Rights. I am sure you can see the problem. To continue:

. . . Mr. Obama chose to call his proposal “prolonged detention,” which made it sound more reassuring than some of its more familiar names. . . .

Oh, my sides are splitting. More reassuring? Good God, the author sees the purely superficial and cynical device Obama is using, and is still comforted by it? Lolllllllll . . . . Apparently they are consciously grasping for straws over at the NYT in an effort to make this horrible turn of events somehow acceptable. I wonder how Dr. Sanity would categorize this particular defense mechanism - willing self-delusion?

At any rate, do read the whole article. It is a howler.








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Sunday, May 3, 2009

EcoAmerica & Tenditious Redefinition


It is one thing to cast about for words that frame your ideas in a positive light. We all do that. But it is another entirely to co-opt words and vastly redefine them in order to sell your ideas - sometimes to include even ideas that represent the polar opposite of what the co-opted words were originally meant to convey. The latter has been an insidious hallmark of the left for over the past century. It is Orwellian.

The NYT reports that EcoAmerica is trying to figure out how to recast the language of "global warming" to capture the support of more people. Focus groups are telling them that when people hear the words "global warming," the majority think of unwashed long-haired libs and complex scientific debates. What Eco-America has suggested follows the left's long established game plan.

Dafydd ab Hugh pointed out in a post a few days ago, Word Inflation,

When a word comes to mean anything at all... then it really means nothing at all. Effectively, we no longer have a word for torture, real torture, like al-Qaeda carries out routinely. No such word, thus no such concept; no concept, no torture! By trivializing what should be profoundly evil, we allow evil to flourish unremarked, let alone unprevented, unrepented, and unrevenged.

. . . If you no longer have the words to discuss the war against the Iran/al-Qaeda axis, designed to end militant Islamist terrorism, then those concepts no longer exist either: If you can't say it, you can't think it.

Dafydd refers to this as "tenditious redefinition." It is certainly a form of rhetorical device that the left has been using with regularity since the start of the 20th century. Orwell saw this over half a century ago and captured it perfectly with his "Newspeak."

Thus we have the People's Democratic Republic of . . . name your favorite communist police state where there is neither Democracy nor a Republic. But for the people living there, how are they to know that those arguing for democracy in their state are arguing for something the polar opposite of their current situation.

Or take the Employee Free Choice Act pushed by Obama and Big Labor. The words imply that employees will be given a greater ability to choose about unionization, while the reality is, of course, precisely the opposite, with the Act actually removing from employees their right to a secret ballot.

And it was only a few weeks ago that the Dept of Homeland Security issued a document to police across the U.S. that included within the definition of dangerous "extremists" those who vocally defend the Constitution or who protest such things as gay marriage. Such people are not only no longer, by definition, a part of mainstream America, they are instead a threat, and a potentially violent one, to our nation.

All of that said, we come now to an effort by Eco-America to change the language of "global warming." Their most Orwellian proposal is to stop using the words "cap and trade" to label the system Obama proposes to force carbon limits upon American businesses. Note that cap and trade represents a huge cost to every American that, from the outset, will cost each and every American family nearly $4,000 annually. Eco-America's suggestion to change the language to . . . get this . . . "Cap and Cash Back."

That is probably the most Orwellian of suggestions to come out of Eco-America, but the others are equally as insidious. For example, EA recommends that Greens "[d]rop discussions of carbon dioxide and bring up 'moving away from the dirty fuels of the past.'" The problem with that is that it makes it appear that the arguments over whether carbon is a cause of global warming are settled. Further, it implictly labels carbon dioxide is an unwanted pollutant. It is anything but.

At any rate, Dafydd ab Hugh has a good post up on this with some of his own suggestions. My favorite is his suggestion that, instead of referring to an "ice age," the new terminology should be that its "cool to be blue." Indeed.







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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Dissecting The Rhetoric of Ethan Winner


Eswinner was the screen name of the individual who posted several Youtube videos sliming Sarah Palin. Dr. Rusty Shackelford at the JAWA Report did a yeoman's piece of investigation into the origin of these videos, finding that the work likely was from an individual associated with a particular PR firm associated with David Axlerod. A person identifying themself as Ethan Winner has responded. Münzenberg, blogging at Soob, has done a formal dissection of Mr. Winner's rhetoric. For students of argument and persuasive writing, it makes for a very interesting read:

Typically PR and communication hacks have had training, at sometime, in speech writing and rhetoric. This letter is a good, short example of rhetoric.

let us narrow the view and look at the persuasive appeals this letter makes.

Typically rhetoric makes three appeals:

Ethos - appeal to character

Logos - appeal to reason

Pathos - appeal to emotion

They are generally in this order with the meat of the rhetorical piece being the appeal to logos.

A writer, like Mr. Winner here, will open with an appeal to his character. He is trying to appear credible and remove any prejudices you might have against him. In this case he fully admits to have producing the video. He also then admits to having paid someone to do the voice-over. Honesty like this is disarming. With that out of the way he moves into the main body of a rhetorical work: appeal to reason. . . .

Read the entire post.

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Truer Words Never Spoken


Obama said yesterday in a speech to the VFW that "McCain doesn't know what he is up against." That is the most accurate statement Obama has made to date. And therein lies his problem. No one knows what McCain is up against. Obama has yet to articulate a doctrine, policy or principal that he has not revoked, revised or tossed out - all the while claiming that his latest articulation represents no change whatsoever from the views he has always held. Obama, whose poll numbers are dropping just slightly slower than lead dropped into the ocean, is vowing to fight back - aided and abetted by the MSM, of course. But his problems are all self-inflicted. Thus, it seems his only options are to delegitimize criticism and to dishonestly paint John McCain.

Obama is losing ground in the polls, with at least one poll, the Zogby poll, now showing a McCain with a 5 point lead. McCain has led a steady drumbbeat against Obama for lacking substance. In response to the Russian invasion of Georgia, McCain looked decisive, Obama weak. And all of that was topped off with a commanding performance by John McCain and a weak performance by Obama at the Saddleback pseudo debate.

A big part of Obama's problem is his dishonesty and blaring hypocrisy. He has raised flip flopping to an art form heretofore not seen in American presidential politics and added on top of it a layer of dishonesty and hypocrisy that is breathtaking. The abortion issue is but the latest shining example. On the day of the Saddleback interview, Obama claimed that he was being maligned with suggestions that he supported infanticide:

The presumptive Democratic nominee responded sharply in an interview Saturday night with the Christian Broadcast Network, saying anti-abortion groups were "lying" about his record.

"They have not been telling the truth," Mr. Obama said. "And I hate to say that people are lying, but here's a situation where folks are lying."

He added that it was "ridiculous" to suggest he had ever supported withholding lifesaving treatment for an infant. "It defies common sense and it defies imagination, and for people to keep on pushing this is offensive," he said in the CBN interview.

At issue is the Born Alive Infant Protection Act, a bill in the Illinois state Senate that sought to protect against bungled abortions by requiring that a fetus that survived an abortion be defined as a person. . . .

It turns out that Obama was lying about his position. He voted against the above referenced bill in the Illinois Senate. Big Lizards has the whole story and Doug Ross also has an excellent post complete with copies of the documentation. And then when that lie was caught, Obama added another layer of dishonest nuance, as Hot Air explains. All of this was on top of his craven refusal to answer the question put to him at Saddleback of when does life begin.

Another Obama problem is his inabiity to back up his promises with anything substantive. He has been asked several times now, in light of his promise to heal the partisan divide, to show an instance where he reached across the aisle on a contentious issue. His answers have been inane, weak and deceptive. When first asked that question a few weeks ago by during a Fox News interview, Obama responded that, while he voted against the appointments of Judge Alito and Roberts, he nonetheless defended Democrats who voted for them. When asked the question at Saddleback, he responded that he had worked with John McCain on bi-partisan ethics legislation. That of course was true - for one week in 2006. That was until Obama backtracked and refused to participate any further, garnering this response from McCain:

Republican Sen. John McCain on Monday accused his Democratic colleague Barack Obama of “partisan posturing” on the issue of lobbying ethics reform . . . “I concluded your professed concern for the institution and the public interest was genuine and admirable,” McCain, R.-Ariz., wrote in a letter to Obama, D-Ill., Monday. “Thank you for disabusing me of such notions.”

Thus, Obama's problems are self inflicted. He is a fundamentally weak candidate with a few superficial strengths. He has tried to ride the wave of his utopian and meaningless rhetoric - but that only went so far before McCain started pointing out the obvious, that the emporer had no clothes. On specific issues, Obama pretty much has no identifiable positions or the positions he does hold, once identified, are disclaimed as the need arises. Again here, McCain has done little more than point out the obvious, often with a bit of humor.

Obama's response has been to "fight back" against the McCain onslaught. We seem to be getting a taste of that in Obama's speech to the VFW and his latest deeply dishonest ad on the economy now playing in the swing states.

Obama's fighting back against McCain at the VFW was to simply demand that McCain stop being critical of Obama. In essence, it was Obama's attempt to paint any criticism of himself as being an attack on his patriotism. I suspect this will work as well as Obama's attempts to paint any criticism of him as being racially motivated. This from the WSJ:

Speaking before the Veterans of Foreign Wars this morning, Barack Obama delivered an amazing show of chutzpah. John McCain had addressed the VFW yesterday, and as the Associated Press reports, he was predictably critical of Obama:

McCain . . . said Obama "tried to legislate failure" in the Iraq war and had put his ambition to be president above the interests of the United States. He said the Illinois senator did this by pushing for a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq and by voting in the Senate against a major appropriations bill to help fund the troop increase.

Here is Obama's reply:

"One of the things that we have to change in this country is the idea that people can't disagree without challenging each other's character and patriotism. I have never suggested that Sen. McCain picks his positions on national security based on politics or personal ambition. I have not suggested it because I believe that he genuinely wants to serve America's national interest. Now, it's time for him to acknowledge that I want to do the same. . . ."

Of course, if Obama were to accuse McCain of picking his positions on national security based on politics or personal ambition, everyone would laugh, because it obviously is not true. By contrast, there is quite a bit of evidence that Obama has placed political expediency above national security . . .

In politics one often hears the charge of hypocrisy: My opponent criticizes me for X, but he has done Y, which is just as bad or worse. Obama's argument here, though, is roughly opposite in form. He concedes that McCain is above reproach on this particular subject and therefore demands that McCain treat him as if he were beyond reproach. Obama's acknowledgment of a McCain virtue is well and good, but it does not mitigate or excuse his own shortcoming.

Powerline also does an exceptional deconstruction of Obama's VFW speech and his attempt to cloak himself from criticism under the rubric of patriotism. It is not Obama's patriotism that is suspect, its his judgment and his willingness to put his ambition over the best interests of the country.

In the swing states, Obama is running ads that amount to cutting and splicing, taking quotes out of context and taking statements McCain made assessing the economy from a time before the economy went into its current rough patch. This from the NYT:

In Philadelphia; East Lansing, Mich.; Green Bay, Wis.; and at least five other major cities, Mr. Obama is heavily showing an advertisement contrasting a statement by Mr. McCain that “we have had a pretty good, prosperous time with low unemployment,” with appearances by people making statements like, “The prices of gas are up; the prices of milk are up.” . . .

Here is Factcheck.org's take on the ad:

"An Obama ad uses dated and out of context quotes to portray McCain as clueless on the economy.

Summary

Obama's campaign is running a TV ad in Indiana that asks the question: "How can John McCain fix the economy, when he doesn't think it's broken?" But the ad uses quotes from McCain that are old and taken out of context:

The ad shows McCain saying, "I don't believe we're headed into a recession." But McCain said that in January, and he also acknowledged at the time that the American economy was in "a rough patch."

The ad then shows McCain saying in April, "[T]here's been great progress economically." But the quote is lifted from a much longer response; McCain went on to say that the "progress" made during Bush's tenure still wouldn't console American families who are facing "tremendous economic challenges."

The third quote from McCain, "[W]e have had a pretty good prosperous time, with low unemployment," also comes from January. In his full response, McCain went on to say "things are tough right now."

So, at any rate, to return to the initial quote from Obama, no, we, like John McCain, really do not have any idea what we are up against in Obama. We do not know what he stands for. But we do know that he is trying every card in the book to deflect all criticism by delegitimizing it as impermissibly motivated. We do know that he is governed first and foremost by ambition. We do know he has a history of close association with radicals. We do know that he is fundamentally dishonest and hypocritical. We do know that he is ducking and running from any real debates with McCain. Is there anything else we really need to know to round out the picture before November?


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Saturday, August 2, 2008

More on Obama & His Preemptive Race Card (Update - VD Hanson)


"Obama campaign officials, lacking any example of McCain ever pointing directly or indirectly at Obama's race as an issue in the campaign, have backpedaled rapidly away from any suggestion that their Republican opponent is using the very tactics Obama suggested on Wednesday."

That is a quote from today's WaPo column by Dan Balz, who does an excellent job of running this story to ground, though even he ignores that this is not the first time the "post racial candidate" has jumped deep into the racist scat to use it as a preemptive weapon against criticism specifically from McCain and Republicans. [Update: I have added comments from VD Hanson writing at NRO who asks "Why is Obama foolishly evoking race time after time?"


___________________________________________________________

You can find the background to the story blogged here and here. As to the latest from Obama on this issue, he and his campaign are now playing the racist orphan card - claiming he is being victimized because the McCain camp utterly refuted the suggestion that racism is at the heart of criticism of this most unqualified of candidates. This today from Dan Balz:

Was it Barack Obama, who not so subtly pointed to John McCain and seemingly accused him of trying to scare voters by drawing attention to the fact that Obama doesn't look like (read: he is African American) all the other presidents? Or was it McCain's campaign, which cried foul over Obama's statements with such vehemence that race became the story of the day on all the networks, in all the papers and on all the blogs?

McCain campaign manager Rick Davis and Obama chief strategist David Axelrod continued to argue the question of who played the race card on the Friday morning shows. Davis blamed Obama; Axelrod blamed Davis.

"We were reacting to what Barack Obama himself said about John McCain," Davis said on NBC's "Today Show." "And I think we were perfectly within our rights to protect our candidate and to point out that we're not going to lay down for these kinds of tactics. . . .

"He said it to a crowd in rural Missouri, 99 percent white," Axelrod said moments later on the same program, explaining the context of Obama's remarks. "There were all kinds of press there. Nobody reported it as a racial comment. Nobody certainly said what Rick Davis just said, that he called John McCain a racist. The only time this became an issue was when Rick Davis and their campaign decided to kick it up and make it a racial issue, and that's exactly what -- they've been running a negative campaign for weeks."

Four things are already clear from the controversy. First, Obama campaign officials, lacking any example of McCain ever pointing directly or indirectly at Obama's race as an issue in the campaign, have backpedaled rapidly away from any suggestion that their Republican opponent is using the very tactics Obama suggested on Wednesday.

Campaign manager David Plouffe was pressed hard during a conference call on Thursday for examples and could not point to any. An inquiry to the Obama campaign later in the day produced no immediate response and later no answer to a direct question asking for evidence to buttress Obama's suggestion that McCain would try to scare people into not voting for Obama because he's black.

Officials deny that Obama was suggesting that McCain is racist or running on a racially based message. But they believe the McCain campaign has embraced a low-road strategy and, hoping to contrast themselves with previous Democratic nominees, are prepared to respond to every attack.

Second, the sense of grievance over this issue within McCain's high command is deep and palpable. . . .

Before all this happened, McCain advisers believed that the Obama campaign successfully pinned a racist label on Bill Clinton during the during primaries -- for comments that drew protests from some leading African American politicians -- and were determined not to let the same happen to McCain. Also, they take personally any suggestion from the Obama campaign that they are part of a campaign that would play the race card and are indignant about it.

. . . Third, the more that race is a topic of conversation, the more it could hurt Obama. Though he has been direct in warning about the use of scare tactics by his opponents, he is deeply aware that he is asking much of the electorate to cast a vote for someone with his biography and experience. . . .

. . . Finally, the lack of respect between the two candidates continues to grow. Both began the general election with predictable statements about their desire to have a vigorous but respectful debate. Obama regularly pays tribute to McCain's service in Vietnam. McCain has spoken with admiration for Obama's obvious talents.

In reality, neither now seems to have a high opinion of the other. McCain's lack of respect has been evident for some time. He seems to view Obama as a pretender, who talks about change but has not been willing to cross his party or any important constituencies as a senator, which in McCain's view is necessary to truly change Washington. Obama certainly does honor McCain's service, but is dismayed over what he regards as continuous attacks from McCain. . . .

Read the entire article. My only criticism of the above article is that Mr. Balz does not force the Obama campaign to define what they mean by charging that the McCain camp has taken the "low road." Clearly, Obama is using that as a fall back position - another rhetorical device to dispense with any criticism of his lack of experience and judgement.

It is unfortunate that Balz has written this as a blog post and not an article. His, though flawed, is the most honest treatment of this so far. Far better then the NYT editorial board, who, as the McCain camp pointed out, seem to be auditioning as a group for a spot on Kos as daily diarists.

Update: Victor Davis Hanson discusses the source of this from Obama - hubris and his willingness to play to anything that will support his candidacy in impromptu speaking - and the grave danger in this tactic:

Obama's problems with race have nothing to do with his half -African ancestry or his own experience with racism and unfairness, but boil down to his deftly wanting it both ways: reminding the Germans he is a different sort of American from what they're used to (false, they knew Rice and Powell well enough), while preempting by suggesting others will evoke race, but in a negative context. But his polls, I wager, will begin to slip from all this, because all this sophisticated triangulation is about to blow up in the public mind.

1) The voter is starting to hear serially from Obama about race; they were promised a racially transcendent candidate, but so far Obama seems obsessed with identity, either accusing others of racism, or using heritage himself for political advantage. This is a tragic blunder.

2) He has the same want-it-both-ways with odious racists: Rev. Wright is a former spiritual advisor, and "brilliant" scholar who nevertheless serially slurs America, whites, Italians, Jews, etc. Ludacris is "a great talent" and "talented" to such an extent Obama wants him in his I-pod menu, and has met with him—but also a racist to be shunned. Ditto Pfleger. A pattern is emerging: Obama associates with or tolerates racists when such quasi-intimacy cements street-cred as an authentic minority or someone cool in the anti-Bush mode; but then when they inevitably revert to form, he not merely casts them off, but is "shocked" at their usual expression, and so like speed bumps they litter the roadway as he barrels ahead.

. . . [H]e must remember why he lost all those primaries to Hillary and to what degree his campaign since then has addressed those concerns that lost him those electorates. When a West Virginian hears that Obama is accusing others of racism, or hears him promise that racial reparations will now be a matter of government deeds not words, or a rapper brags he is a favorite of Obama and then slurs Clinton, McCain, Bush in thinly disguised racist terms, it starts to create an image of someone who is not bringing people together, but precisely the opposite.

Why all this? Inexperience and hubris—the same overconfidence that makes him say we need a Pentagon-sized new civilian aid department, to inflate our tires to avoid drilling, and must stop merely talking about reparations and starting doing something about them. His handlers need to return to the teleprompter, since all these incidents have in common the impromptu moment.

Read the entire post. VDS seems to see this as a tactic to be changed. The scary part is that it is a window into the charachter of Obama. He is very simply a man whose principles, if he has any, are clearly subordinate to his ambition.


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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Obama and Rhetorical Devices

Labeling something is a useful method we all use to communicate ideas. That's fine as long as the label is accurate and is not being used as a rhetorical device to delegitimize an argument and shortcircuit any debate.

Obama and his camp are using labels for precisely the latter reasons. When Obama says "the politics of fear," what he really means is he does not want an honest debate on the national security dangers facing our country. Using a method that is both supremely cowardly and incredibly disingenuous, he wants to forestall debate and delegitimize criticism of his weaknesses on national security. It is an outrage given that the issue is one of existential importance to our nation. The artifice he is using needs to be pointed out and condemed, publicly and loudly.

Securing our nation is the single most basic duty of our federal government. To do that, we need to come to a consensus on the likely threats to our nation and how to combat them. Bush today, speaking at the Knesset, said that talking to genocidal mad men is naively dangerous and gave the single best historical example, talking to Hitler in the 1930's instead of confronting him. We know from the historical record that had France and England done the latter, WWII would likely not have occurred - at the cost of 60 million lives and a European economy in the tank for decades.

As soon as Obama heard the word he appeasment in Bush's speech, Obama raised his hand and said "that's me." That is an analogy I've pointed out on this blog ad infinitum. Obama wants to engage the Iranian theocracy and has promised to do so without precondition within the first year of his presidency. There is precious little to distinguish the Iranian theocracy, in its genocidal madness, expansionism and threat to the world from Hitler in 1938. So taking a look at the hierarchy of argument posted below, when the sum of Obama's response is to label Bush's argument the "politics of fear," and "dishonest, divisive attacks," where does that put the craven and disinguous Obama on the hierarchy of argument below? He doesn't even make it up to the level of "contradiction" it would seem.



Gateway Pundit has an exceptional post on how Obama's national security arguments quite literally are founded on this rhetorical device of calling any discussion of the threats facing us "the politics of fear." And he notes the origins of the rhetorical device - a Marxist device to minimize the threat posed by the Soviet Union - quoting from a NY Sun article:

. . . The phrase, "politics of fear," reemerged from the dustbin of anti-anti-communism on far left Web sites like Alternet in late 2002. In the Cold War, it was employed to deride public school air raid drills, the House's un-American Activities Committee, and Ronald Reagan's anti-red campaigns. Since the end of the Cold War, the phrase has been resurrected by politicians and pundits alike to say the electorate ought to fear the people trying to scare us, not these terrorists and tyrants they keep going on about.

In 2004, the British state broadcasting arm, the BBC, aired a three-part documentary called the "Power of Nightmares: The Rise of the Politics of Fear." According to this film, the threat of Al Qaeda and radical Islam was a foil for a broader neoconservative power grab. The two radical movements are equivalent, relying on one another to scare the good and decent majorities of Europe and America.

Mr. Obama would never say anything this strident. Part of his appeal is that at his best he transcends partisanship. But the "politics of fear" signals the left's own scary narrative about the Bush years, namely that our government was taken over by neoconservatives briefly to launch the Iraq war.

This is the chord Mr. Obama strikes when he boasts of his opposition to a non-binding resolution supporting efforts already underway to counter Iran's proxies in Iraq. Mr. Obama has attacked Mrs. Clinton for voting for the Iran resolution sponsored by Senators Kyl and Lieberman, implying that the legislation would give Mr. Bush the authority to invade Persia. His Web site says Mr. Obama "believes that it was reckless for Congress to give George Bush any justification to extend the Iraq War or to attack Iran. Obama also introduced a resolution in the Senate declaring that no act of Congress — including Kyl-Lieberman — gives the Bush administration authorization to attack Iran." . . .

Read the entire article.

Update: To paraphrase someone I overheard yesterday, Obama is turning this on its head. The politics of fear are what the Salafists did on 9-11 and 7-7. The politics of democracy require free and open debate. He wants no debate and for the voters to fear Republicans more than they fear our enemies.

Update 2: Related question at Hot Air - why did Obama jump to the bait like a hungry catfish when the word appeasement was mentioned but no appeaser identified:



Read the whole post.


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