Yes, You Can Borrow My Speech: Why Obama's Lifted Words Matter

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Huffington Post   |  Rachel Sklar
First Posted: 02-19-08 12:00 PM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:46 AM

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O Man

I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the reaction to Barack Obama's lifted speech, a loaner from friend and supporter Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick, has been mild. To my mind, it's not because it's not shocking that the candidate soaring to victory on the wave of his inspiring oratory and stirring message was found to have borrowed some of that stirring message wholesale from a speech delivered almost a year and a half ago — call me crazy, but that I found sorta shocking. No, to me it seems to fit with the general modus operandi of the media: If it's Hillary Clinton, the intent was probably nefarious, if it's Obama, it's no big deal, and why is Clinton's team blowing it so opportunistically out of proportion?

I shouldn't be surprised, but I am — because this one just seems so straightforward. Hillary needles, saying that "talk is cheap" and that words were nothing without action. Obama responds, like so:

"Don't tell me words don't matter. 'I have a dream' — just words? 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal' — just words? 'We have nothing to fear but fear itself' — just words? Just speeches?"

Inspiring, soaring, heartfelt — but not exactly original. I'm not talking about the references — those are obvious. We're meant to get them. I'm talking about their configuration, combined together to form a specific argument in response to the claim that talk is cheap.

Here is the problem: They weren't his words. Flashback to October 15, 2006, and Deval Patrick on the campaign trail to the Massachusetts governorship.

"'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal' — just words? Just words? 'We have nothing to fear but fear itself' — just words? 'Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.' Just words? 'I have a dream' — just words?"

The Obama campaign has said that this is no big deal. With respect, I disagree. I think this is a big deal, particularly for Obama, whose stock in trade is soaring oratory and his inspirational message of hope. I know I keep using those words — and I'm not alone — but it's important here, because it goes, in effect, to Obama's core competency. Put bluntly, Obama was attacked for offering "just words," and he made his case for the value of words by using someone else's recycled speech from over a year ago. This is his argument for why talk isn't cheap?

There are two problems here. Let's first deal with the charge of so-called "plagiarism." This isn't plagiarism per se, since it was an authorized use and was not "stolen," which seems to be a necessary component of the act. But the other necessary component applies: The passing off of another's work as your own, the absence of attribution, the "presenting as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source." There can be no question that that was done here.

The second problem is this: The so-called defense by Obama, cool as a cucumber, that he and Patrick often put their heads together and swap ideas and use each others' bits. (Well, evidence of that is cropping up but I'm focusing on this one example, since that's what's prompted the lack of outrage.) Obama and his supporters have said essentially that these quotes like those cited are fair game, and there's noting proprietary about them. Which is true — what is proprietary is how they were used. That is what is at issue — not the fact that Obama and Patrick quoted the same great statesmen, but that they used virtually the identical formulation and configuration. That's the issue. That's what makes this lift so egregious - it was wholesale.

(And, incidentally, it was clearly distinct from both John McCain and Clinton using the phrase "fired up and ready to go" — the former was clearly done tongue in cheek, and the latter, while very possibly an effort by Clinton to horn in on a rival's slogan, doesn't quite rise to the standard of "taking another's work and passing it off as your own." One phrase is one thing; the rhythmic, structured linking of three in an identical fashion to make an identical point of an associate is quite another. It was also clearly distinct from Clinton's use of the phrase "And we asked ourselves, will we say when the call comes 'send me'?" when her husband, President Clinton had said two years earlier: "Say to him what he has always said to America? Send me." NBC News offered that up as somehow analogous, even though both Clintons were referring to a freaking quote from the Bible (Isaiah 6:8) — and even though, in the Bill Clinton clip, the freaking crowd chanted "send me" right along with him. Sorry, but the two examples are completely different, and it was disingenuous for NBC News to have presented them as comparable.)

Whew! So much effort, parsing the differences, breaking down the episodes. And to what end, right? What's the big deal, really? It's a fair question. We know Obama has speechwriters, as does Clinton; we know they both have teams that work together (er, sorta) to put forth the message. I don't think Obama sat in the editing suite agonizing over the final cut of his Superbowl commercial.* Obviously. The issue is, he is presenting himself as a singular candidate at a singular time presenting a singular response, and oratory is his singular feature. The upshot of all that is that his moving, inspiring speeches hit the mark because they speak to the need now, the desire for change now, the hope for the future starting now. When the veracity and honesty and efficacy of that is called into question, you expect that Obama's response would therefore come from the now — or more precisely, "the fierce urgency of now" as he said in tonight's victory speech, quoting Martin Luther King. In what world does it make sense to meet the fierce urgency of now with a recycled speech from over a year ago? No matter how good the words are, they're from someone else's now — not only the now of another candidate, but the now of other voters.

The language of hope matters — its authenticity and its transparency. No matter how inspiring and sincere and genuine Obama may be, his words have to reflect that, end to end. He can't just go over and pull the lever on the Hope-o-Tron for the perfect pre-packaged soundbite — not if he wants his message to be credible. If he truly cares about the power of words, then they can't be ones he swapped in there out of convenience, because they sounded good. There's got to be a higher standard — because words matter. And that's a direct quote.

Related:
Nasty Clinton-Obama Fight Descends To "Plagiarism" Accusations [HuffPo]
HRC On The Offensive: "You Campaign With Poetry, But You Govern With Prose." [ETP]
Quote crisis hits Obama
Barack brushes off accusation he crossed line with lifted language [Chicago Sun-Times]
Patrick: Plagiarism Accusation Against Obama 'Extravagant' [ABC]

Related Video:
A Misstep for Obama?
[NBC Nightly News] (see below)






*In the interests of scrupulous full disclosure, I said something similar yesterday on MSNBC. Whoa, I totally just plagiarized myself! Actually, in all seriousness, that was one of three such I did MSNBC over the past two days — and one of many across cable and network news, never mind every other type of media — so Beth Fouhy of the AP, saying that the story didn't have a life of its own other than being pushed by the Clinton campaign is pretty disingenuous. And also wrong.

I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the reaction to Barack Obama's lifted speech, a loaner from friend and supporter Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick, has been mild. To my mind, it's not because...
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the reaction to Barack Obama's lifted speech, a loaner from friend and supporter Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick, has been mild. To my mind, it's not because...
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Rachel,

You're brain doesn't work right. I know you're not aware. Know you would deny. Know it's not your fault.

But Rachel, you're brain doesn't work right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 02/20/2008
- LeeFromVA I'm a Fan of LeeFromVA 10 fans permalink

Wow, you're still talking about this. People saw it as petty and it worked against Hillary. Didn't you get the memo? You should save yourself some embarrassment and pull your post. Besides, you have to be ready to support Hillary's next line of attack (which won't work either).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 02/20/2008

FOR GOD'S SAKE IT'S JUST A FEW WORDS.

Cut to people on the deck of the Titanic:

"Excuse me, but I believe you're sitting in my chair." "No, this is my chair." "Well no, it isn't, you took that chair from me." Argument follows.

Repeat ad nauseum.

Here we go, worrying about little details while the big picture is lost. Just what the corporate media want us to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 PM on 02/20/2008

The big picture. Ummm. Do I detect some shenaniganism in the tendency to use the quotes? Are politician like Patrick and Obama playing HS level games and sucking in an unsuspecting imature public? Obama's finally starting to throw out some meat with his speachifying. Not much different from the lady's I see. We'll see what's inside that cocky exterior now. I hope he'll be able to deliver the goods with supporters inside Congress. Maybe the lady will show him the way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 02/20/2008

Does anyone else out there think that Bill Clinton's BJ from Monica is directly responsible for the past eight years of hell? Think about it, if Gore hadn't had to distance himself from Saint Bill we'd all be living in a parallel universe now. But, even though we like to think different, it could be worse. The idiot currently living in the White House could still be trying to get elected...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 PM on 02/20/2008
- aznurse I'm a Fan of aznurse 60 fans permalink

Hell yeah! It was Bill lack of respect for his wife, his daughter, his job that did help get this downfall started. I get really pissed off when I think of him resting his head on the whitehouse pillow (that we paid for) Now everyone acts like it never happened. Sure the repubs were out to get him and the media loves stuff like that. But why take the risk?? He had to know he was being watched.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:20 PM on 02/20/2008
- rblackbird I'm a Fan of rblackbird 12 fans permalink

Rachel, thank you for being (unfortunately) one of the very few journalists who has viewed Obama with reflection and critical analysis. You look below the flashy surface to see the substance, if any, beneath it. "All that glitters is not gold."

All his supporters anticipate a golden age of politics should Obama win. In that event, those of us who support Hillary fear a failed Obama presidency ahead of us. When he is faced with major international crises, economic dislocations, and Congressional resistance to his programs, events will show whether he knows what to do. Speeches won't be much of a help. He does not have enough of a record to inspire confidence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 02/20/2008

"just words"
seems like that's the only thing borrowed from Patrick.
Should Obama have also given credit to King, Lincoln, and Roosevelt?

This is much ado about nothing.

ooops! W.Shakespeare

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 02/20/2008

Same "words" clearly you DO NOT get it. Very familiar phrases--it's a Black thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 02/20/2008
- xenofile I'm a Fan of xenofile 11 fans permalink

With respect, I disagree.

You've acknowledged that the plagiarism charge is a red herring.
But it's "shocking" that Obama spoke words that were not original to him.

Everybody "knows" that Kennedy said, "Ask not what your country can do for you...." Why, I've known that for almost 50 years. Only it turns out, as a commenter recently cited, that he borrowed that turn of phrase from Khalil Gibran. (oh-oh, Muslim alert!)

What politician writes all his own speeches, doesn't use a speechwriter? Maybe things are different in the rarefied atmosphere you inhabit, but most of us don't really expect originality in political speeches. That's why we're not shocked or offended.

It's not that words don't matter -- of course they do. But what matters most is not originality -- or we wouldn't still be performing Shakespeare after hundreds of years. In political speech, what matters most is (a) does what they're saying make sense, and (b) do they really believe it? And that's where Obama trumps Clinton. Too many people don't believe that she is sincere.

This is not about press bias -- Obama getting a pass where Clinton would not. It's not about failure to attribute sources -- NOBODY CARES, except for the chattering classes. It's not about words, it's about heart. I do think Hillary has one, but she has been very careful not to show it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 PM on 02/20/2008
- j0e I'm a Fan of j0e 6 fans permalink

Hillary's nasty echo chamber... you guys need to get a life, and start thinking about what you want to do with it once your candidate finishes alienating everyone and goes on to lose. You cannot simultaneously slam a person for being "vague" and then make all of your attacks on that person be about personality or character (which is losing btw, because Hillary doesn't seem to have any). Your campaign is hopeless broken and spewing smoke, and you really ought to pull off the highway before you hurt yourself or, god forbid, the party.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 02/20/2008
- Serfie I'm a Fan of Serfie 14 fans permalink

I can't wait until all you Obama Thugocrats are out there during the general election, trying to get 60 million voters out to vote by yourselves.

Thugging your way to the nomination is not the same thing as beating the Republicans, whose Thug machine is well-oiled and well-financed.

At that point, hope and mantras will be all that you have. Let us see how far supplicating at the altar of Obama will get you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 02/20/2008
- j0e I'm a Fan of j0e 6 fans permalink

This is a hilarious mantra from the Hillarites: He's beating McCain by 5-7% points nationally, while your candidate is LOSING to McCain. I thought only Rethugs we're this detached from reality... Thugging? Really? Like trying to disenfranchise voters in Iowa and Nevada? Thugging, you mean like trying to smear a fellow candidate with insinuations about selling drugs? Thugging, you mean like implying that the supporters of a primary opponent are "cultists"? You people are divorced from reality, the American public know this, and I'd be prepared to lose by 10-15% on March 4th. Seriously, all fantasies aside, you guys are toast and you have only yourselves to blame. Bye now...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 02/20/2008
- Sean I'm a Fan of Sean permalink

'Thugocrats'? Wow, nothing like coded racism in the so-called party of tolerance. I know! Let's call his supporters "THUGocrats!" Yeah, that'll work! It will subliminally call forth the stereotypical, racist image of black males as drug dealing, gangbanging THUGS. While you're at it, why not remind us that Obama *gasp* has fathered two children by a black woman?? OH THE HUMANITY! There is nothing I despise more than closet racists, haters and bigots. You and others like you are pathetic. Good riddance to you and your bottom-dwelling ilk.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 02/20/2008
- Oldtimer I'm a Fan of Oldtimer 21 fans permalink
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Obama will make mince meat of McCain in a debate.
He knows how to find the words that expose
fear mongerers. Roosevelt would make mincemeat
of McCain and Bush, Robert Kennedy would make
mince meat of McCain or Bush. Sometimes a voice
comes along that can turn the fear card on itself.
America has been ruled and fooled by fear for some years now. I fully expect that Bush and Cheney will create an international incicdent to
push fear (national security)back up front and center in this election year, no matter how bad
the economy tanks. Like Roosevelt and Kennedy,
Obama can address a message to the home of the
brave - the people of America (and the world)
that now is not the time for FEAR. We can be
more secure if we are not constantly spending
every minute, every dime on worrying about
AL Queda (Islamic Fascism?). We need to be wooried about what corporations and a Bush
Supremem Court are going to do to our Democracy!
That's a much bigger threat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 PM on 02/20/2008
- Oldtimer I'm a Fan of Oldtimer 21 fans permalink
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Here! Here! Well said. I agree with you. This is
all sour grapes that Hillary isn't going to take
what she assumed was hers. Obama could have and
maybe should have said "Just words? I think Deval Patrick said it best with these words........"
Hillary Huffers would still complain.
As the Clintons go down the interesting question will be how they handle their secondary status.
As we all watch Obama win hearts and minds we will
see why he becomes the leader of the party.
Aren't Presidents wuppose to lead the party?
Indeed, it will be fascinating to see if the
Clintons handle losing as well as oh, I don't
know, Al Gore! At least Al lost with incredible
grace and turned the loss and it's lesson into a
revitalized drive to save the planet, to win
hearts and minds anew around the world, to win
respect, to become the leading voice calling out
Bush's willful disregard for the Constitution,
and inevitably an Academy Award and Nobel winner.
Will the Clintons turn loss into a positive like
Al? Not if they follow Hillary Huffer's example.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 02/20/2008

I completely agree with you, Joe. I think this whole thing is nothing - everyone uses material that is not their own on the stump - its called a speechwriter. But I agree that Obama was a little sloppy in lifting the quote directly with attribution, so this may be a blessing in disguise - he will be more careful and its better that it happened now than against John McCain. The McCain race might be competitive, but the Clinton race is over. Sloppiness with words is a problem, however, and not just for Obama. Ms. Sklar uses the word "freaking" (a substitute for another f word) several times in this peice, including one in relation to a quote from the Bible (as in "freaking Bible quote"). Now THAT'S offensive and sloppy speech.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 02/20/2008
- mi I'm a Fan of mi 13 fans permalink

If Hillary had used Devall's words, he would
be up in arms!! If Bill had said he just
discovered pride in his country the whole
Obamination would be up in arms.
The media is making a fool out of Americans
again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 02/20/2008
- j0e I'm a Fan of j0e 6 fans permalink

nah, no need... people who make these kind of baseless insinuations about how Obama would handle Bill making this comment are already fools.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 02/20/2008
- vsign I'm a Fan of vsign 34 fans permalink

All the photos I see of Obama look like "Ted Haggard" head of a MEGA-CHURCH. I really resent my democratic party being taken over by this false prophet. He has everyone in my party believing he can win because he is the second coming. This is soooooooooooo CREEPY. He will not win because some of us will take a nap instead of going to church and we want a grown-up to be in charge of the red button.

One thing Europeans have criticized Americans for is what they see of us now - too religious and self indulgent. After the reality of the german experience, they will never trust an American president who exhibits this kind of character.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 02/20/2008
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vsign, we live in Ireland (Dublin) and the Irish I know are very supportive of Obama's campaign, and impressed by him. I've had many Irish people tell me that they wish they could vote for him. Kind of surprised me, since B. Clinton is very popular here.

The only thing that I've heard is doubt that Americans would actually elect an African-African to be president. Anecdotal, I know, but let us not generalize about who Europeans will or will not trust.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 02/20/2008
- tabatha I'm a Fan of tabatha 9 fans permalink

the issue is this:

obama conned the audience

the audience did not know obama had "permission" to use deval's oratory

the audience at the moment it heard and reacted to the "inspiring oratory" felt moved by what they believe was obama's own original thoughts and oratory

obama was passing someone else's words off as his own....the audience did not know this....that's the bad part

deceit

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 02/20/2008

It seemed to me that when Obama freely pilfered Edwards' campaign rhetoric few cared and it was not brought to the attention of the public. It seems to me that the Obama mythos has been sold so effectively that the Clintons have little chance of countering it. Barring a major mistake, the Obama nomination campaign is probably home free (no more problems all the way to the Democratic nomination). If and when this happens, I will again be interested in electoral politics, to wit: will Obama be successful in trivializing the attacks against him in the general campaign?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 02/20/2008
- SKayum I'm a Fan of SKayum 2 fans permalink

The comments here are so interesting to me, if also a little disturbing. Obama isn't even the president yet, and already there's no accountability.

But let's forget the issue of plagiarism for a moment. (After all, consensus on this page is that Rachel Sklar's very valid points have no credibility because she's Canadian and might be a Clinton supporter.) If someone accuses you of being all talk, wouldn't the best response to combat that accusation (aside from not lifting someone else’s words to prove the value of your own) be to prove that you can put your words into action or that you have put words into action? The "just words" rhetoric is certainly well put together, but doesn't it divert from the point of the accusation? Yeah it sounds good, and it doesn't hurt to compare yourself to all these great men (and really, what inspirational leader doesn't go around telling everyone how inspirational he is?), but Jefferson, JFK and Dr. King could all walk as well as they could talk. And the opposition is questioning your ability to do the same. So how does the “just words” rhetoric counter that argument?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 02/20/2008
- derekw007 I'm a Fan of derekw007 12 fans permalink
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Can't we all just agree that Obama and Clinton both have wieners, but Clinton's is bigger (and a former President)?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 02/20/2008
- veracal I'm a Fan of veracal 2 fans permalink

Funny!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 02/20/2008
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