Really, this doesn't make any sense. You make claims that Kerry is being deceptive, using evidence presented in the book. I counter those claims. Then, instead of replying to my responses, you say "you haven't read the book!" I really can't see how this isn't ducking the question. And after I read the book, suddenly all my arguments will magically become addressable?RandyM wrote: >> I've presented arguments to claims in the book. They can be addressed, point by point. Or, you can just hide behind this.>>
I choose not to debate the claims of a book when the book has not been read by BOTH people involved in said debate.
Come on. If you're going to make claims, you should back them up. "You haven't read the book" is hiding.
Quick point: you're setting up another ad hominem (attack the magazine as biased first before making your point).>> http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5831541/site/newsweek/
"Lambert’s surviving military records do not include the initial recommendation for this medal, so there is no way to know who filled the required role of witness to vouch for Lambert’s actions. But the citation contains such detail about the actions of both Thurlow and Lambert—actions that Kerry cannot have known since his launch was on the far side of the river—that it seems implausible Kerry could have written the recommendation."
This is the key piece. I don't buy it. Aside from the fact that Newsweek (I have a gift subscription regrettably) sides regularly with Kerry and the Democrats on almost every issue.
This isn't the assumption. They're saying that it seems odd that Kerry would be writing spot reports for things he didn't witness. Even if he did write the report (again, there's no evidence for this), he would have to get testimony from others about what happened. So you have to assume that Kerry got everyone's testimony, added stuff about being under enemy fire, got Thurlow and Lambert Bronze Stars under false information, all so that Kerry could add details that would make him look good later? This is a stretch, and it's something that you have no evidence for.The assumption that is made here by the author of this report is that Kerry could not have known what happened with Thurlow and Lambert, so he couldn't have written the spot report. Hm, so Kerry, right after picking Rassman out of the drink, ran back to the front of his boat, and filed a report about it, and therefore it didn't include information about Thurlow and Lambert. Oh, wait, I got another idea. After rescuing Rassman, Kerry went to one base, and all the other swift boats went to another base, so that they couldn't have shared their stories before writing reports, and Kerry filed his report in a vacuum.
That's likely. And what the men told them is that there was a firefight.Or could it maybe, just maybe, be that these swift boats, all based at the same spot, returned home, the men talked about what happened and one of them (Kerry or someone else) filed the spot report that included the details of what happened as told by the men?!
Actually, I'll agree with you on this. This is a possibility. But then whoever wrote this would have to rely on the testimony of others there, and write up a report. So you have to assume that the person who wrote it decided to lie about incoming fire, something you have no evidence for.The conclusion that if Kerry didn't see it, he couldn't have written the spot report, is absolutely ludicrous and I find it amazing that you don't see that.