"A wise and frugal government which shall restrain men
from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government."
(Thomas Jefferson)


Sunday, September 5, 2010

New Oval Office Rug Gets Quote Wrong -- Failure to Source Quotes

This is another example of the incompetence of this Administration not to research the origin of the quotes before using them. With the large amount of money this Administration has spent to remodel the Oval Office, you would think someone would have been smart enough to research the quotes used on the rug. Are the people in the White House who commissioned this rug and awarded the contract that inept or are they arrogant? Whichever, the Oval Office now has a rug with quotes that are attributed to the wrong person.

No big deal you say, but it is a big deal because if you write a paper using quotes and don't attribute them to the original author, then you are plagiarizing:

plagiarize: to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own : use (another's production) without crediting the sourceintransitive verbto commit literary theft : present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source. (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)
All these Academia types in the White House and not one of them bothered to check the source of the quotes? Are these some of the people writing our history books like the one in Texas that was given out for review in the 90's that had over 2,000 mistakes?

New Oval Office Rug Gets Quote Wrong
Updated: 2 hours 38 minutes ago

Lauren Frayer
Contributor

AOL News (Sept. 5) – When President Barack Obama ponders big policy decisions, he might find inspiration from some of his favorite quotations inscribed on a new rug in the Oval Office.

The rug's perimeter is lined with sayings from Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy and Teddy Roosevelt. It also has a quote that Obama has described as his favorite from Martin Luther King, Jr.

Only it turns out – after the rug has already be sewn and laid down – that it's been incorrectly attributed to King.

A saying on a new rug in the Oval Office is attributed to Martin Luther King Jr.,
but the quote actually came from an abolitionist minister from Massachusetts.
 (photo by AP)
"The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," is a phrase the civil rights leader used regularly. Obama even referred to it in his election victory speech in Chicago on Nov. 5, 2008.

But it turns out that whenever King used the phrase, he was actually echoing another speaker a century before him, whom he admired: the Massachusetts minister and abolitionist Theodore Parker, who in 1853 said, "I do not pretend to understand the moral universe; the arc is a long one. . . . But from what I see I am sure it bends toward justice."

The quote has often been attributed to King, but it seems Obama, his biographer David Remnick and none of the White House decorators bothered to look into its historic origins or even do a quick search on Wikipedia – which has an entry listing Parker is the original author of the phrase.

The mistake was first reported by The Washington Post, and reporters raised it with White House Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton on Saturday. Burton stood by the attribution to King, saying that the civil rights leader uttered those exact words on Sept. 2, 1957, according to CNN.

Another of the quotes on the new Oval Office rug is from Abraham Lincoln's 1863 Gettysburg Address, in which the U.S. president referred to a "government of the people, by the people and for the people." It turns out that Lincoln, too, was paraphrasing Parker, who wrote in 1850 that a democracy is "a government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people."

Source: AOL News

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