Posted on 10/05/2008 4:48:42 PM PDT by PowerPro
Note: This essay was preceded by Cashill's 3-part WND.com series: "Did Bill Ayers Write Obama's 'Dreams.'"
A steady attack on the white race . . . served as the ballast that could prevent the ideas of personal and communal responsibility from tipping into an ocean of despair.
Barack Obama, Dreams From My Father
Shortly before launching his career, first as a community organizer and then as a radical bomber, Bill Ayers took a job as a merchant seaman.
Id thought that when I signed on that I might write an American novel about a young man at sea, says Ayers in his memoir, Fugitive Days, but I didnt have it in me.
Although Ayers has tried to put his unhappy ocean-going days behind him, the language of the sea will not let him go. Indeed, it infuses much of what he writes. This is only natural and often distinctive, as in an appealing Ayers metaphor like the easy inlet of her eyes.
Less natural is that much of this same nautical language flows through Obamas earth-bound memoir, Dreams From My Father. For simplicity sake, I will refer to the memoirs author as Obama.
Ayers is particularly eloquent when writing about the fury of the elements as, curiously, is Obama. Consider the following two passages, the first from Fugitive Days:
I picture the street coming alive, awakening from the fury of winter, stirred from the chilly spring night by cold glimmers of sunlight angling through the city.
The second from Dreams:
Night now fell in midafternoon, especially when the snowstorms rolled in, boundless prairie storms that set the sky close to the ground, the city lights reflected against the clouds.
These two sentences are alike in more than their poetry, their length and their gracefully layered structure. They tabulate nearly identically on the Flesch Reading Ease Score (FRES), something of a standard in the field.
The Fugitive Days excerpt scores a 54 on reading ease and a 12 th grade reading level. The Dreams excerpt scores a 54.8 on reading ease and a 12 th grade reading level. Scores can range from 0 to 121, so hitting a nearly exact score matters.
A comparable nature passage from my novel, 2006: The Chautauqua Rising, scores a 61.6 with an 11 th grade reading level. The samples I submitted from my own semi-memoir on race, Sucker Punch, score in the 63-76 range.
In reading Ayers, one senses that he is unaware how deeply his seagoing affects his language. Memory sails out upon a murky sea, he writes at one point.
Indeed, both he and Obama are obsessed with memory and its instability. The latter writes of its breaks, its blurs, its edges, its lapses. He also has a fondness for the word murky and its aquatic usages.
The unlucky ones drift into the murky tide of hustles and odd jobs, he writes, one of four times murky appears in Dreams.
In Dreams, we read of the whole panorama of life out there and in Fugitive Days, the whole weird panorama.
Ayers writes poetically of an unbounded horizon, and Obama writes of boundless prairie storms and poetic horizonsviolet horizon, eastern horizon, western horizon.
I can imagine him standing at the edge of the Pacific, says Obama referring to his grandfather, his hair prematurely gray, his tall, lanky frame bulkier now, looking out at the horizon until he could see it curve.
Ayers often speaks of currents and pockets of calm as does Obama, who uses both as nouns as in a menacing calm or against the current or into the current.
As a point of contrast, the author of Obamas Audacity of Hope never uses calm as a noun and uses current almost always as an adjective to mean contemporaneous.
The difference between the two Obama books on the word current is striking. In Dreams, there are four uses of current as noun and two as adjective. In Audacity, there is one of use of current as noun and twenty as adjective.
The metaphorical use of the word tangled might also derive from ones nautical adventures. Ayers writes of his tangled love affairs and Obama of his tangled arguments. The word tangled does not appear in Audacity.
Am I suggesting that Obama used different ghostwriters for the two books? Yes, at least in part.
There is no doubt that Obama contributed to both, and for Audacity Obama could have afforded more than one writer or editor, but there is something about the sea imagery that distinguishes Dreams.
Although not necessarily related to the sea, but perhaps inspired by it, are the emotionally charged words that appear frequently in both Fugitive Days and Dreams: fierceness, fury, rage, despair, and cruelty.
(Both books, by the way, make frequent use of the colon.)
Ayers writes of another panorama, this one an immense panorama of waste and cruelty. Obama employs the word cruel and its derivatives no fewer than fourteen times in Dreams, twice as many times as in Audacity.
On at least twelve occasions, Obama speaks of despair, as in the ocean of despair cited above. Ayers speaks of a deepening despair, a constant theme for him as well.
Then, of course, there is what Obama calls a rage at the white world [that] needed no object. On this subject too one sees in Dreams a hint of the nautical in phrases like "knotted, howling assertion of self" and "withdrawal into a smaller and smaller coil of rage."
In Fugitive Days, Ayers talks of an uncontrollable rage as though it were a storm. One wonders whether the Weathermens inaugural act of mass violence, the Days of Rage, has its roots in Ayers maritime experience.
There are any number of intriguing non-nautical word connections between Dreams and Fugitive Days, but one that deserves mention is the repeated reference to lies, lying and what Ayers calls our constructed reality.
But another part of me knew that what I was telling them was a lie, writes Obama, something Id constructed from the scraps of information Id picked up from my mother.
That whole first year seemed like one long lie, Obama writes of his first year in college in Los Angeles, one of at least a dozen references to lies and lying in Dreams, a figure nearly matched in Fugitive Days.
As intriguing as these word connections are, there are some objective, data-driven ways to prove authorship, one of which goes by the name cusum analysis or QSUM.
This analysis begins with the measurement of sentence length, a highly significant and telling variable. To compare the two books, I selected thirty-sentence sequences from Dreams and Fugitive Days, each of which relates the authors entry into the world of community organizing.
Fugitive Days averaged 23.13 words a sentence. Dreams averaged 23.36 words a sentence. By contrast, the memoir section of Sucker Punch averaged 15 words a sentence.
More to the point, the 30-sentence sequence that I pulled from Audacity averages more than 29 words a sentence and clocks in with a 9th grade reading level, three levels below the earlier cited passages from Dreams and Fugitive Days.
To do a complete QSUM analysis requires skill and software beyond my proverbial pay grade. My thanks to those who have gotten me this far. The intro to QSUM and the Flesch analysis, as well as the pdfs of Audacity and Dreams, have all come courtesy of WND readers.
If anyone knows someone capable of taking the analysis the next step, please contact me through my website, cashill.com. Most such scholars reside within the universities, and that scares me.
One final subjective note about the introductory quote. As a writer, especially in the pre-Google era of Dreams, I would never have used a metaphor as specific as ballast unless I knew exactly what I was talking about.
Seaman Ayers obviously did.
Below is the preceding WND.com series: Did Bill Ayers Write Obama's "Dreams"?":
* Part I: Did Bill Ayers write Obama's "Dreams"? * Part II: Deconstructing the Text * Part III: Why it Matters
I just wish I knew how to find out for certain. As you can see, Cashill is also looking for someone to help take his analysis to the next step.
Does anyone know of an expert who could validate or disprove Cashills arguments?
Cannot a computer progam compare two books (or articles)
and by common uses of phrases and so forth determine with
high probability that they were both written by the same person?
There is a computer program that I think is called “turnitin” (”turn it in”) which is used to catch plagiarism, I don’t know if would be helpful here
www.turnitin.com
“Cannot a computer progam compare two books”
I think you have hit on a solution. But would not one have to locate the software they are stored on?
I have little doubt Ayers ghost wrote for The Empty Suit Marxist.
I wonder who provides vocal support to Obambi's little earpiece.
Something like this has been out for a few years I believe.
English composition teachers I understand use the program to find plagiarism and so forth.
There are computer programs that can aid in identifying the author of a work, based on other writings by the same author. I believe this helped “out” Joe Klein as the author of Primary Colors.
Unfortunately, any computer analysis would not be definitive as to the author. However, it could show that it is highly unlikely that someone wrote two separate documents. Unfortunately, Obama never wrote anything before his sudden prolific autobiographical bent. The one thing he must have written - a college thesis - seems to have disappeared according to reports I’ve read.
To me, there’s little doubt that Obama wrote either book. He didn’t. If he had that capability, he would have written op/ed and persuasion pieces (or even legislation). The fact that he probably didn’t pen word one is not unusual. Most autobiographies by politicians, sports heros, and businesspeople are ghostwritten. Not all, but many will admit it and give tacit credit to the actual writer.
Having a ghostwriter wouldn’t be surprising. If it’s Bill Ayers, that would be quite damning, but only to those capable and inclined to read enough to figure out who Ayers is and what Ayers stands for. At this point, if pictures turned up that showed Bill Ayers or bin Laden were in Obama’s wedding party, the media would pooh pooh it and nothing would result.
There is no longer a free press. I didn’t really understand that until this election.
Having Watched Jack over the last 20 years I would agree with him.
I think he gets dismissed too much because of his TWA 800 writings but He is probably right there too.
I don’t know of an expert, but I do know that such comparisons have been used in court and in academia to prove or disprove authorship. Some turns of phrase and word orders etc are like a writer’s DNA.
You know it just occurred to me... Hitler wrote two books before he rose to power too. (the second was never published, though).
From now on, we shall refers to his first book as: Träume meines Vaters.
Look how many books Ayers has published. quite a few perhaps twenty of them
Finding plagiarism is different than identifying style. Heck, I’ve uncovered a disturbing amount of plagiarism from competitors simply by using Google to search key phrases.
Plagiarism is so rampant today that I routinely check work by copywriters and ad agencies. You would be surprised how often I encounter it.
While it matters to me and disqualifies anyone from ever doing business with me, most people don’t care. We caught a competitor copying a book word-for-word and reselling it as his own (for $250 as a “manual,” rather than $19.95 retail). I alerted the publisher because I’d like to stop this guy. No one cared.
Just look at the election. Plagiarist Joe Biden is unfit for public service as a serial plagiarist. Yet, no one cares. Even the journalists who make a living on the intellectual property of prose care less about Biden’s intellectual property theft.
Society is becoming increasingly Orwellian.
From what I’ve read about Obama and Rezko and their “mutual admiration” society, Obama sponsored Rezko in numerous government funded low-cost housing developments in his district, then looked the other way while one by one the developments failed and sit boarded up, and kept recommending Rezko for more gubmint millions irresponsibly in spite of the failures of Rezko. Meantime, back scratching continued.
I would agree that Obama was set up for writing the books deliberately - but we don’t know who the “donor” was. Is.
I wish I had the time, money, and know how to follow this. I firmly believe Bambi did not author his own books.
It's part of the "looter" mindset of some people. They're not driven by right and wrong, but can they get away with it.
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