This Just In

Nov 12, 2010 15:56

LOLing at this hard. How do people think they can get away with plagarism -- or pretending you were at meetings that you clearly were not at -- in the age of the Internet? If you can find it to cut-and-paste, anyone can find it to out you as a plagarist and liar.

Ryan Grim writes in The Huffington Post:

When Crown Publishing inked a deal with ( Read more... )

life, politics

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Comments 6

kadymae November 13 2010, 01:52:36 UTC
Heh. My favorite is the bookstore staff who are shelving this book in the "crime fiction" or "true crime" section of the store.

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tartysuz November 14 2010, 06:18:27 UTC
Hee. I checked one of the big indie bookstores today and no one had moved it into true crime -- yet.

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daveroguesf November 13 2010, 20:31:46 UTC
This is not, indeed, surprising.

I remember when they interviewed Martin Sheen about his encounters with Bush while making THE WEST WING - Sheen said that Bush could be characterized with a certain lack of intellectual curiosity.

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tartysuz November 14 2010, 06:17:26 UTC
So Oliver Stone's W was a documentary, wasn't it?

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yourlibrarian November 14 2010, 02:11:48 UTC
Are we surprised? Just imagine what his college papers were like.

Then again, Karl Rove and Dick Cheney directed most of the events in the Bush years, so, you know, they can't really plagiarize themselves ;)

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tartysuz November 14 2010, 06:16:02 UTC
Is it a right wing plague? The premier of Alberta was caught plagiarizing almost half of a 13-page paper for a course he was taking via correspondence in 2004. Again, he (or his assistant) cut-and-pasted entire paragraphs from the Internet. They have no concept do they?

And yeah, Bush isn't doing anything differently than when he was in office: just reiterating the words of Cheney & Co. as if they were his own.

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