Thursday, September 2, 2010

Copyright violation #3 - per the Kelley Rule on Copyright Violations

Understand that Kelley has accused this editor dozens of times for not following accepted rules of copyright law. Here, Kelley quotes without mentioning the author of the article. In fact, if one does not click on the hyperlink, one might assume that Kelley actually wrote the article.

Glenn Beck Lied On His Big Day...

There was this interesting little story I came across on Mother Jones that I thought was funny - Glenn Beck lied to his crowd on
Saturday (isn't honesty one of those principles or virtues Beck talked about).
Beck also invoked Washington while describing the inspiring experience of visiting famous tourist destinations around the nation's capital. "I have been going to Mt. Vernon," he explained. Holding out his hands for emphasis, he declared with emotion, "I went to the National Archives, and I held the first inaugural address written in his own hand by George Washington."

It was an eyebrow-raising revelation and certainly an original image: Beck cradling the actual words of the first president. But would the persnickety gatekeepers of the nation's historical legacy at the National Archives allow some talk show bombthrower to put his mitts on a rare (and fragile) artifact? The answer, it turns out, is no way. Beck was not telling the truth.

Beck did receive a special VIP tour of the archives, arranged by an as-yet unidentified member of Congress. During that tour, he did get a peek inside the "legislative vault," which isn't open to ordinary visitors. But Archives spokeswoman Susan Cooper insists that Beck didn't lay a finger on any precious documents, much less George Washington’s inaugural address. That would be a major violation of policy. "Those kinds of treasures are only handled by specially trained archival staff," she explains. Cooper acknowledges that someone at the archives did show the document to Beck, but that was the extent of it. Regarding Beck's claim that he held the document, Cooper says that seeing such documents for the first time can be a very emotional experience. "I'm certain it was a figure of speech," she says.
How can we trust a man who has continually lied to his audience?

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