Mary Mapes has seized on Dan Rather’s Quixotic attack on CBS at a bloody shirt (enough metaphors yet?) to wave in defense of the truthiness of their journalism about President Bush.
Go read the whole thing, but move the drinks away from the keyboard when you do.
It has been three years since we aired our much-maligned story on President Bush’s National Guard service and reaped a whirlwind of right-wing outrage and talk radio retaliation. That part of the assault on our story was not unexpected. In September 2004, anyone who had the audacity to even ask impertinent questions about the president was certain to be figuratively kicked in the head by the usual suspects.
What was different in our case was the brand new and bruising power of the conservative blogosphere, particularly the extremists among them. They formed a tightly knit community of keyboard assault artists who saw themselves as avenging angels of the right, determined to root out and decimate anything they believed to be disruptive to their worldview.
To them, the fact that the president wimped out on his National Guard duty during the Vietnam War — and then covered it up — was no big deal. Our having the temerity to say it on national TV was unforgivable and we had to be destroyed. They organized, with the help of longtime well-connected Republican activists, and began their assault.
Actually, we had done a straightforward, well-substantiated story. We presented former Texas Lt. Governor Ben Barnes in his first ever interview saying that he had pulled strings to get the future president into the National Guard after a Bush family friend requested help in keeping the kid out of Vietnam.
And we showed for the first time a cache of documents allegedly written by Bush’s former commander. The documents supported a mountain of other evidence that young Bush had dodged his duty and not been punished. They did not in any way diverge from the information in the sketchy pieces of the president’s official record made available by the White House or the National Guard. In fact, to the few people who had gone to the trouble of examining the Bush record, these papers filled in some of the blanks.
We reported that since these documents were copies, not originals, they could not be fully authenticated, at least not in the legal sense. They could not be subjected to tests to determine the age of the paper or the ink. We did get corroboration on the content and support from a couple of longtime document analysts saying they saw nothing indicating that the memos were not real.
Instantly, the far right blogosphere bully boys pronounced themselves experts on document analysis, and began attacking the form and font in the memos. They screamed objections that ultimately proved to have no basis in fact. But they captured the argument. They dominated the discussion by churning out gigabytes of mind-numbing internet dissertations about the typeface in the memos, focusing on the curl at the end of the “a,” the dip on the top of the “t,” the spacing, the superscript, which typewriters were used in the military in 1972.
It was a deceptive approach, and it worked.
These critics blathered on about everything but the content. They knew they would lose that argument, so they didn’t raise it. They focused on the most obscure, most difficult to decipher element of the story and dove in, attacking CBS, Dan Rather, me, the story and the horse we rode in on — without respite, relentlessly, for days.
Oh my Freaking God.
Look, Mary, let me try and explain it to you. I’ll make it simple, I don’t have a lot of time.
I don’t for a second doubt that Bush pulled strings to get beneficial treatment. Similarly, I don’t doubt that Kerry gamed the system to leave Vietnam before his tour was up. People game systems all the time – and in both cases, it’s a legitimate issue to raise when someone is running for office.
But the fact that Bush may have used pull doesn’t justify lying – or careless assertion of facts that can be easily disproved – to do a hit piece just in time for an election. Let me put it another way:
Captain Dudley Smith: Would you be willing to plant corroborative evidence on a suspect you knew to be guilty, in order to ensure an indictment?
Ed Exley: Dudley, we’ve been over this.
Captain Dudley Smith: Yes or no, Edmund?
Ed Exley: No!
There’s a reason why we let guilty suspects go free when cops plant evidence.
Mapes and Rather got a hard-on for Bush, and were blinded by the glee that they’d be able to lay a hard hit on him just in time for the election. Sadly for them, they stopped paying attention to the details.
Mapes, delusionally, claims that the typographic facts about the documents they hung their case on are themselves ‘deceptive’ and that the documents are ‘fake, but accurate’. If Mapes and Rather had been honest journalists, they would have run with the provable facts about Bush’s military history – they would have has a much less sexy story, but a real one.
And Mapes is just off her freaking rocker when she claims that the fact that attacks on Bush were met with brickbats while ignoring that attacks on Clinton were equally met with personal vendetta.
But then zombies were never very smart.