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Bush censored?
You can put this thread wherever you want since I wasn't sure where it should go. During the Q&A part of Bush's 1 o'clock speech it sounded like a portion of what he said was censored. I remember him saying something to the effect of "And the vice president has said *bleep for a second* and I..." Or it was something like that. It was early on in the Q&A, like 4th-5th question I think. Did anyone else hear it? I know a friend of mine who was listening on the radio heard it too, and I was watching it off of CNN seperately. What was the sound? Was it a technical difficulty or did they actually censor him?
Jam it back in, in the dark.
Last edited by FallDragon; Nov 8, 2006 at 09:59 PM.
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I can testify that I also heard this bleep. It was rather long - too long to indicate curses or anything.
I was listening on the radio, so I couldn't read any lips. What was it all about?? It must have been a technical difficulty? I thought that was a live speech. Most amazing jew boots |
There's nothing in the transcript to suggest he was censored. Probably a fluke.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
I don't know anything about a bleep during the Q&A, but during this speech you are talking about, did anyone else notice that Bush repeated a five-minute segment of his speech, word for word? He was talking about the track record of Rumsfeld's replacement Robert Gates, and once he was finished, he said something along the lines of "This war in Iraq is a costly war" or something to that effect, and I thought "Didn't he say that exact thing a while ago?" After that, he talked about Rumsfeld's replacement again, and word for word, repeated that part of the speech. I could have followed along it was that exact. I guess the teleprompter messed up.
I'm not a Bush fan or anything, but I feel sorry for the guy when I hear or watch him speak. Actually, I get really nervous and usually have to change the channel when I watch him speak. It's like watching an actor on stage messing up and being more nervous than they could ever be at the moment. Anyway, I wish I kept the radio on the speech longer. I would have liked to have heard this beep. My guess was that it was just techinical difficulties. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I was speaking idiomatically. |
Hmmm... They haven't censored much of anything in the past whenever he has said anything, so who knows? If it was live, then it was probably most likely a glitch, I have heard many glitches like that on live TV before.
How ya doing, buddy? |
i think this is what you're referring to:
[edit] also, the associated press' transcript says the same thing (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...type=printable) FELIPE NO
Last edited by aikawarazu; Nov 13, 2006 at 12:58 PM.
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You know what - I was watching the speech on MSNBC and I'd remembered hearing a very long bleep in the middle of the speech too. I just chalked it up to a technical error because I figured that if the president was cursing like that on national television then the media probably would have made a far bigger deal about it considering how already visibly testy and agitated he was at the time.
How ya doing, buddy? |
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
In regards to Bush, though, I'd expect more of a Yale Alumnus. Especially one that has been afforded the kind of lifestyle and resources the Bush family enjoys. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. Posting without content since 2002. |
Money does not buy smarts, intelligence, or common sense Duo.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I know I couldn't lead this country. I was speaking idiomatically. |
Are you sure about that? Not being able to lead the country, I mean. I'd like to clarify that statement, but to do so you'd have to have a intimate level of understanding of my thoughts/beliefs on the subject and this thread I feel is not the appropriate place.
Traditionally, educated people, "intellectuals" were generally a product of the upper-echelon(s) of society. Not always, but it definitely was a vast majority. This plays into the whole classist struggle, which came into the eye of the mainstream public through all of the activists in the civil rights movement who advocated Marxist theory. The whole idea behind the classist struggle is that the educated, established, oligarchy would continually dupe the masses into perpetuating their (meaning the upper class') sociopolitical hegemony. Therefore, those who spoke with eloquence and affectation were regarded as untrustworthy, sort of like the familiar serpent who used flowery language to deceive us. Conversely, those who attempted to communicate on the level of the average working class citizen was regarded as trustworthy, because they weren't trying to disguise their intent within oration. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? Posting without content since 2002. |
Sad to say it doesn't scale well to industries where demand is more plentiful than workers -- computer programmers, for example, do not have a union. I predict that this will change in the next ten years though. For an example of the same sort of exploitation that has led to the formation of unions in the past, look at EA. They're one of the most egregious offenders in this regard. I could go on and on, but this isn't the right thread for that, for sure. FELIPE NO |