libertango: (Default)
Some may remember how I like to track things down when they get distorted on the internet. For example, the "privilege meme", which was widely attributed to researchers at Illinois State, when in fact they're at Indiana State. Or Mary Schmich's adivice to "Wear Sunscreen", which got attributed to Kurt Vonnegut.

The most recent example of this is the idea that Obama recently said, "Call me if you need me." This has caused a range of reactions in the right-wing blogosphere, from snickers, to indignation, to outrage.

One little problem: He never said that phrase.

Here's the clip of what he said, from YouTube.

Here's the transcript:

OBAMA: You know, what I'm going to do is, I'm going to -- what I have told the leadership in Congress is that, if I can be helpful, then I am prepared to be anywhere any time.

What I think is important, though, is that we don't suddenly infuse Capitol Hill with presidential politics at a time when we're in the middle of some very delicate and difficult negotiations.

So, you know, I think the message is, if you need us, if I can be helpful, I'm prepared to be there at any point.

But, keep in mind, again, I'm talking to Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, the congressional leadership, Hank Paulson, I'm talking to them every single day. We have been working around the clock. And, you know, presidents are going to have to deal with more than one thing at a time. It's not necessary for us to think that we can only do one thing and suspend everything else.


The condensation of that to "Call me if you need me," appears to have started with this blog post -- except even then, the exact phrase occurs only in the title. The body text says, "...Obama said that if they [Congress] need me, they’ll call me."

But the true irony lost on the echo chamber is this:

If you don’t need to call on him, why should you? That thought is directly in the spirit of Ronald Reagan and conservative, limited government. Remember the sign on his Oval Office desk? “There is no limit to what you can accomplish if you don’t care who gets the credit.”

For someone who’s been accused of thinking he’s a messiah, it strikes me as a very humble statement.
libertango: (Default)
("Privilege" is in scare quotes here because, in my observation, the word isn't used except by people who already have it. Not unlike one who rails against the bourgeoisie is almost always a bourgeois.)

A very odd thing about this, right off the top: "The list is based on an exercise developed by Will Barratt, Meagan Cahill, Angie Carlen, Minnette Huck, Drew Lurker, Stacy Ploskonka at Illinois State University." Um, no, in fact. They're from Indiana State. Here's Mr. Barratt's page on "Social Class on Campus". Here's Barratt's faculty page. Here's Barratt's personal page.

The switch from Indiana to Illinois appears to have occurred very early on in the meme process. If you search by the cited researchers plus "Illinois," you get 819 hits. Do it with "Indiana" (the accurate version), and you get only 9. I suspect this is not unlike the time Mary Schmich's advice to, "Wear sunscreen," got mysteriously attributed to Kurt Vonnegut.

This is the original paper with the exercise, which appears to be meant to be done in a live class, not filled out as a questionnaire. (Note: MS WORD .DOC format, which Barratt seems to prefer throughout his pages.) Questions have been edited out, and a few have been re-worded, on their way to LJ.

In someone else's post of the meme (I won't point to it, since it's Friends Only), I had some more notes:

To spare you further ramblings of a wordy bastard... )

See generally: Paul Fussell, Class; Lewis Lapham, Money and Class in America; Nelson Aldrich, Old Money.

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Hal

March 2022

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