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NOREEN: Stop the general before he steals again

Patterning one’s work after someone else’s is one thing and plagiarism is another.

According to the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, to plagiarize is

• To steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one’s own

­• To use (another’s production) without crediting the source

• To commit literary theft

• To present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source.

Notice the attribution there? That’s how authors give credit to other sources. If they don’t provide the attribution they could be accused of plagiarism.

Theft is a violation of Commandment No. 8.

Which brings us to Maj. Gen. Bentley Rayburn, the retired Air Force general who twice ran unsuccessfully for the Fifth Congressional District seat and who failed in his quest to be hired as Falcon School District 49 superintendent.

In November, Rayburn was on a slate of speakers for Newsapalooza, a collection of conservative pundits put together by KVOR radio. About 300 people paid  $10 apiece to hear, presumably, the speakers’ original thoughts.

Rayburn critiqued President Obama’s foreign policy performance. Rayburn discussed Iraq, Afghanistan, American “exceptionalism,” North Korea and Pakistan. The speech presented a neo-conservative’s view, and considering the audience, that was appropriate.

Except for the fact that Rayburn largely stole the speech (including that line about “exceptionalism”). It was given originally by John Bolton, who served as United Nations ambassador in the George. W. Bush administration. Bolton’s speech was delivered in Washington, D.C. on Sept. 11, then adapted for the Hillsdale College web site.

There are many remarkable  similarities between Bolton’s speech and Rayburn’s. You can judge for yourself by perusing a line-by-line comparison on my blog today, but here is a small taste.

From Bolton: “the Obama administration is pursuing a policy that can accurately be described as neo-isolationist — a policy characterized by an unwillingness to be assertive in the world. … This policy traces back in the Democratic party to George McGovern.”

From Rayburn: That leads to an unwillingness perhaps to be assertive in the world…You could draw parallels to the McGovern time.”

Here’s another one. From Bolton: “More broadly, the Obama administration believes that its predecessor didn’t negotiate enough on issues like the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. The president has said repeatedly—starting with hisInaugural Address—that the United States must hold out its hand to countries like North Korea…”

And again, Rayburn: “In his inaugural address Obama expressed a wiliingness to hold his hand out to North Korea.”

In a dramatic understatement Monday, Rayburn acknowledged: “I took something from a number of speeches I had read.” He acknowledged that Bolton “had some good things to say.”

Asked if he ever credited Bolton, Rayburn replied: “I don’t believe I did.”

You didn’t, Gen. Rayburn. We have the audio.

In his campaigns Rayburn has touted his leadership. With such a casual attitude about someone else’s intellectual property, imagine the leadership Rayburn could have provided for students as the superintendent in D-49.

General, consider yourself dismissed.

Read my blog, hear Bentley Rayburn’s speech and see a line-by-line comparison of his speech and John Bolton’s atgazettedev.gazette.com/blogs/barrysblog. You can reach Noreen at 636-0363.

 

Photo by KEVIN KRECK, THE GAZETTE



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