Buttle's World

22 July, 2009

Pardon me, Vanity Fair, but your snark is showing

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 15:58

This too-clever-by-half edit of Sarah Palin’s resignation speech says to me that Vanity Fair could use better editors. Of course, the snark starts with editing a transcript and not the speech prepared as written. Granted, if Peter Robinson had turned in this speech to Reagan the Gipper would have sent it back. But some of the speech is clearly just extemporaneous speech. Editing punctuation on a transcript is not a criticism of the original speaker.

Setting that aside, let’s look at a couple of their “improvements”.

Original speech:

From the shores of Maine and California to the tip of Barrow, we live in peace because centuries ago many fought for something far greater than themselves, and so many continue to fight for us today.

Vanity Fair wants to make it:

From the shores of Maine and California to the tip of Barrow, we live in peace because 233 years ago many brave men and women fought for something far greater than themselves, and so many continue to fight today.

How does adding “brave men and women” improve the sentence? Worse, the wonkish 233 years is a clumsy replacement for the perfectly adequate “centuries”. Nobody thinks that centuries means exact multiples of 100 years, for crying out loud.

Later on, Vanity Fair substitutes God for faith (they aren’t really the same thing) without improving the sentence at all. And they want her to look dumb for saying Seward was in Lincoln’s cabinet instead of Andrew Johnson’s. Yes, Seward’s purchase of Alaska happened in Johnson’s administration, but he was a member of Lincoln’s cabinet, too.

Those aren’t the only bad edits. Glass houses, anybody?

I’m not a huge Palin fan, and I’m not trying to be an apologist. The thing I like most about her is that leftists like these at VF treat her with such disdain. They must be very afraid of her.

Star Trek: Generations, an in-depth analysis

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 14:02

This is one of the funniest things I’ve seen in quite a while. The guy is really good (I especially like the dead-wife runner). While watching, I realized two things:

  1. I’ve never seen Star Trek: Generations
  2. There’s no way the film could be as entertaining as this review.

There’s some language, mostly bleeped.

Compassion

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 12:14

Incompetent Buffoon Watch

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 9:51

How’s that “regaining respect for America abroad” thing going, Mr. President?

The Obama administration has managed to open a wide gap between itself and some of America’s most reliable allies, those of Central Europe. In the recent Open Letter to the Obama Administration from Central and Eastern Europe, some of the most magnificent freedom fighters of the region, including former presidents Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic and Lech Walesa of Poland, have warned that the U.S. should not take their countries and peoples for granted.

Britain Death Watch

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 6:23

Yet another reason why I have no desire to even visit England: It is clearly now a police state, where it’s illegal to even photograph the coppers.

Waylett and his long-term friend John Innis, 20, were stopped under the Terrorism Act in Lodge Road, St John’s Wood, west London, after the actor took a photograph of a police patrol as they drove past.

When that kind of behavior is illegal, there are no meaningful freedoms left.

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