Saturday, January 30, 2016

Bill Bonner, moron.

Bill Bonner's normally a source of many intelligent insights into economics and politics. Three days ago he chose, however, to characterize Sarah Palin as a "moron" for how she endorsed Donald Trump. She "fits in . . . somewhere" in the phrase "the poor, the despised, and the hopeless halfwits."

Let us determine who is the halfwit.

This is what Mr. Bonner says she says:

“Trump’s candidacy,” announced Ms. Palin, “it has exposed not just that tragic ramifications of that betrayal of the transformation of our country, but too, he has exposed the complicity on both sides of the aisle that has enable it, okay?”

What does that mean?[1]

We'll parse it for him.

First off, Palin's quoted above as saying "Trump's candidacy it has exposed . . . ," but she clearly intended to say "Trumps candidacy has exposed . . . ." However, she stumbled slightly over the word "candidacy" and chose to continue by starting over with "It has exposed." This is known as correcting errors on the fly or finding an alternate way to express one's thought, however slight the modification.

Bonner also quoted Palin inaccurately. Instead of writing that she said "has enable it" he should have quoted her as saying "has enabled it." He also failed to indicate there was a pause after "tragic" to indicate she was reformulating her thought and he failed to insert "the" before "ramifications."

So before he gets to any substantive objection to her words, Bonner fails to record Palin accurately in four ways. But Sarah Palin is the hopeless halfwit.

An accurate version would have been:

“Trump’s candidacy [. . . .]” Ms. Palin began, pausing briefly before continuing, “[I]it has exposed not just that tragic [. . . the] ramifications of that betrayal of the transformation of our country, but too, he has exposed the complicity on both sides of the aisle that has enable[d] it, okay?”
On the substance, Ms. Palin thinks there has been a transformation of the country and it's of a certain type that she thinks amounts to a betrayal on the part of those who effected it. "Betrayal of the transformation" is clearly understandable as "betrayal consisting of the transformation." This is an example of an ellipsis.

She goes on to say that both Republicans and Democrats have been working to effect this transformation. It can be inferred that she perhaps believes they might not have effected this separately but she comes right out and says they have nonetheless worked together on this and that this complicity has enabled the transformation. (Emphasis as she delivered it.)

So what Palin said is that Trump's candidacy (1) has exposed the aforementioned ramifications of the betrayal and that "he" (2) exposed the complicity of those who effected it. So, there we have it. Palin's thought was quite clear and she erred only by using non-parallel structure by saying "he has exposed" rather than "it has exposed."

Bonner, however, is acting like an obtuse jackass in misquoting her then saying he can't make sense out of what she said.

Contrary to Bonner's Snarkschreib, Palin's thoughts are perfectly understandable and logical and, mirabile dictu, 100% correct on the effect of Trump's candidacy, the transformation amounting to a betrayal, and the complicity of both parties therein.

A certain Mr. Sam Leith, a "scholar of rhetoric" helped Bonner "deconstruct" what Palin said by, says Bonner, characterizing it as an “'anacoluthon,' which [Leith] describes as a sentence that 'sets off boldly in one direction and, with a wrench of grammar, jumps the tracks and ends up pointing in another.'” Maybe it's just me but that seems like a fancy way of saying that if one makes a grammatical error you can end up not expressing yourself clearly. Do we really need a 50-cent word for "grammatical error"?

The only "wrench of grammar" in what Palin said is the "he" rather than "it" error and Leith no more understood what Palin said than Bonner did. Leith, the "scholar of rhetoric," either doesn't know the meaning of "anacoluthon" or doesn't know how to recognize one. Maybe he meant "wench of grammar" which makes a certain kind of sense here, if you think about it.

Bonner goes on to say he still doesn't know what she meant to say but that "there's a disease that caused" her to say what she said and the name of that disease is the anacoluthon disease, which term does not describe a disease at all but some kind of extra reprehensible grammatical and/or logical error. Palin made no such error, unbeknownst to them, but they were so caught up in the novelty of their clever new word they never got around to clarifying what disease causes one to commit an anacoluthon.

So Bonner and Leith are the morons who fell in love with the cleverness of their low-rent attack and accidentally forgot to get around to parsing the substance of what Palin actually said. Palin's vibrant personality and unabashed love of America shine through throughout her speech which Bonner and Leith apparently mistook for stupidity. A common elite mistake.

Sarah Palin spoke for over 20 minutes with only occasional references to her notes and was coherent and understandable throughout. However, even she would rearrange some of the commas in the final result, as any person who has ever done any public speaking can do. Even when you talk before Rotary and not on national television you don't always get it just right.

But that doesn't make you a moron.

This cheap attempt at making Palin look foolish (by people who came out looking like asses for their own errors) reminds me of Vice President Quayle. Everybody "knew" what a moron he was, just like all the top people now "know" what a moron Palin is.

Except they're not.

Notes
[1] "In Praise of Sarah Palin…" By Bill Bonner, Bonner & Partners, 1/26/16.

Bonner is also mystified by the meaning of "stump for Trump." Really, Bill? These ladies know what it means to "stump for" someone. Bonner also objects to Palin's alleged neologism "squirmish" (and an earlier "refudiate"). See paragraph above on the realities of public speaking. Maybe, even, like Pee-wee Herman, she meant to do that.

H/t: Acting Man.

8 comments:

  1. I think Palin terrifies them, Colonel. She represents the kind of courageous, outspoken and loyal American who will one day spell the doom of these slippery half-people.

    ReplyDelete
  2. In this darkening time it's somewhat encouraging to remember that from darker times, our Revolutionary War and Civil War, we survived, strived, and thrived.
    As we search through this dark night of our country's soul we have our forebears guiding light and the promise of Deuteronomy 30:16.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Agreed, KG. Bonner's attempt to make her look foolish is small potatoes in one sense but, let's just say it's of a piece with the overall antipathy to anything that is lively, spirited, and genuine. Bonner fails to get the essence of this woman and thought himself to be so clever for pointing out her lack of intelligence. Since the leftist disaster really took hold in France in 1789 and elsewhere later in the late 19th century the West has had to deal with an internal enemy that embraced pride and destruction. A love of darkness and power became a permanent part of our culture and you better believe that the darkness in the souls of men hate the life that is in Palin and all the other normal people not besotted with some horrible life-denying ideology. Population control, birth control, abortion, euthanasia, rationing of care for the old, stupid libertinism, militant atheism, and coercion are all the signal features of the left. They embrace all that means death for individuals and for their own civilization. I think it's why there's such a philosophical divide in the West now. You can't compromise with people who love death.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Deuteronomy points the way, Howard. If we will return to the worship of the sublime and abandon the conceit that man has more than the tiniest understanding of the truths of our existence will will come through this. Only some great chastisement will reorient man. Solzhenitsyn caused it the pitiless crowbar of events. Until then man will embrace error. German government stupidity is emblematic of men enchanted by chaos and evil.

    ReplyDelete
  5. A return to Scripture and the moral absolutes would (will) be a breath of fresh air, as is Sarah when she speaks. The people who poke fun at her and don't understand her don't understand us, either.
    And, she's easy on the eyes, too. Hot, even. The kind of girl they were afraid to talk to in school. Which is probably why they're gay.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Amen on Palin's beauty. Line ups of conservative women have circulated on the web of which she's been a part. They compare well with the pics of the liberals.

    I'm not one who personally turns to Scripture but I recognize the West swims in a see of Christian principles, no matter how much the fanatic secularists and atheists dislike that fact. I'd be happy if the Christian foundation of our civilization could be acknowledged and not treated as something like trash that somehow landed on our doorstep to be disposed of ASAP.

    If the left would just go on about developing their own code of ethics I'd be happy. Instead, they seem not to be able to do with without trashing competing systems.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ethics and the Left are mutually exclusive. I don't believe it would ever happen that they would come up with a code. They are far too busy tearing down the Judeo-Christian code. LGBT, abortion, trying to make pedophilia a norm instead of a disorder, an aberration, etc.

    Concerning Palin - who I also find very attractive - have you seen the comparison photos of women at conservative rallies compared to the women at liberal rallies? Night and day. Some of the ugliest (physically _and_ spiritually) females in existence are seen at liberal rallies.

    My father, rest his soul, was fond of saying that there was no such thing as an ugly woman. However, he died before he ever saw Janet Reno, Janet Napolitano, or Hillary Clinton.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I think that's where the left and the libertarians intersect -- rejection of outside norms. The leftist wants something that's "authentic," "real," or pleasurable. The libertarian wants to do everything with a handshake or a sincere request for non-interference or the return of his lawnmower.

    Your father thinks like I do. But his observation is still true v-a-v the young ones. Rational women have an appeal all their own.

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated. I am entirely arbitrary about what I allow to appear here. Toss me a bomb and I might just toss it back with interest. You have been warned.

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.