The Gaffe That Almost Wasn't

  • The smear campaign against Cain continues 


    By now the internet, radio, television, and wagging tongues everywhere are all abuzz over the latest campaign blunder by Herman Cain. But is it really the gaffe everyone says it is? Or was it a selective editing job a la Ed Shultz?


    Well, call me cynical, but I’ve seen enough media shenanigans to be suspicious of anything taken out of context and this definitely tripped my radar. In the clip that has gone viral (below), Cain does appear to be caught off-guard by a question on Libya, a topic he ought to have been ready for.


    My first reaction was to wonder how many clips like this land on editing room floors instead of online. In a world used to hyper-slick video and equally slick candidates, a moment of thought gathering can seem disastrous. Still, this isn’t about a some candidate’s “senior moment.” Rather, it is about a hatchet job gone awry.

     

    This clip was released by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel along with the entire half-hour interview it was taken from. For my part, I think the whole interview is worth watching as Cain performs admirably. But for those who just want to get to the goods, skip ahead to about the 20 minute mark.


    What a difference a little context makes!


    The clip that went viral begins with one reporter asking, "So, you agreed with President Obama on Libya or not?" Seems like a follow-up to a related question. But in the full length video, one can clearly see that Cain was responding to a question about Bush’s policy of promoting democracy abroad. Suddenly, the interviewer tosses up the question, turning it into one about Obama. He didn’t even ask a complete question.


    Whatever Cain might have said would have been placed in context of his previous answer. No doubt to make some bizarro equivocation between Bush and Obama. Cain wasn't about to let himself get drawn in and instead tried lay down a different context before answering. When Cain says, “I just wanna make sure we’re talkin’ about the same thing before I say ‘Yes I agreed’ or ‘No, I didn’t agree,’” he is establishing the framework for his answer, not struggling to remember where Libya is on the map.


    Did Cain fumble? Of course, he was lobbed a rotten toss. Could he have done something better with it? Hindsight usually tells us "yes." But does this so-called "gaffe" reveal a woeful lack of knowledge of foreign policy on Cain's part? Hardly.


    Rather, it seems that this group of reporters thought they were setting up a clever “gotcha” moment that didn’t pan out. One reporter asks the Bush question and another suddenly shifts gears to Obama without touching the clutch. But their little "gotcha" setup didn't produce the desired results. So, robbed of the gaffe they thought they had so cleverly set up, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel was forced to run with Cain's pause as the next best thing.


    The video is very amateurish, with lots of shuffling and ambient noise. MJS is a newspaper, so I'm not faulting that. But it does why the so-called pregnant pause was there at all. In the full interview, Cain can be seen and heard speaking freely and knowledgeably about Libya and a range of other topics, including collective bargaining, the economy, finance, ObamaCare, his support among women and African Americans, Occupy Wall Street, and much more. He is shown deftly fielding questions from at least four separate reporters and demonstrating that he is readily knowledgeable about every area he is quizzed on.  


    But when it comes to Libya, the reporters repeatedly try to put words into Cain’s mouth, (“So, you are saying…”) which he resists. When Cain seeks clarification to the Libya question, the reporter explaining even seems to have some difficulty. That's because Bush never got involved in Libya, so the supposed connection made no sense.


    Besides, given how much attention was paid to Libya in the press, it’s downright ridiculous to think a presidential candidate would be so woefully prepared for the topic. Even prepared, the reporter’s vague inquiry would be difficult to answer. After all, in spite of how the story ended for Colonel Gaddafi, the Obama position on the matter changed almost daily as the late-colonel’s days were running out. Which of Obama’s positions was being referred to? That should set off buzzers in most people’s minds.


    All the same, pundits of all stripes were quick to pounce in an attempt to ensure that the prophecy which states “no outsider shall be nominated” shall be fulfilled. Cain’s pause—routinely billed as being eleven seconds, but I time it at only eight—was taken as evidence that the presidential candidate doesn’t have a firm enough grasp of foreign policy issues to be commander-in-chief. Others used is as an excuse to drag up the sexual harassment allegations that went nowhere. One of the odder claims was that the entire GOP lineup is now toast. (Aren’t they even going to take a swing at Newt?)


    Some conservative talkers declared the Cain-Train derailed, calling his flub an unforgivable embarrassment for the movement. Harder hits suggested that his campaign’s initial response—that Cain was tired—only indicates that Cain wouldn’t be able to handle the proverbial “4 am phone call.” Old attacks on the 9-9-9 plan were dusted off, though sounding hardly more convincing than before.


    Of course, none of this would get the slightest credence if it weren’t for the fact that the media knows the electorate prefers appearances over substance. The question of context ought to be a natural one, but it’s not. Instead, a moment of thoughtful reflection, taking the care not to answer an important question blithely, gets contorted into evidence of shallowness and unpreparedness—precisely the opposite! Cain, ever the gentleman, seems to be taking the event in good humor, saying he is flattered that the media now scrutinizes his pauses since they cannot attack what he actually says. He may be the first candidate to actually be above the finger-pointing and name-calling that the current gaffe-master-in-chief so bemoaned four years ago.


    The fact remains that Herman Cain is an intelligent and qualified outsider that the media--liberal and conservative alike--feels it is their duty to destroy. If it takes a few lies and misrepresentations to do it, so be it.


    Join the group Proven Ways for all the latest. Visit the Cogiteria to see all my work.

Comments

98 comments
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z "Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy--Under Herman Cain, with the installation of the FairTax--the unions will be crippled." -- Not if he believes that they deserve to have more collective bargaining for more employees. Again, READ THE COMMENTARY on the link you showed m...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z And I should make clear, I don't hate the 9-9-9 plan. Even though I have some reservations about some aspects of it and the effect on our economy, I think that it would be BETTER than the crap we put up with now. I'd vote for it, if it were my place to vo...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah Sigh--You are right, it won't pass, not as long as we have passive sheeple convinced it can't.
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z You look at Congress, the Senate and the House, and the democrats there, and the moderates and RINOs, and tell me you honestly think they'll pass that plan as it is today. Never gonna happen, and there's nothing sheeple about it. You name call all the tim...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Rich Helmold
    Rich Helmold JZ, many of the candidates have offered up tax reform plans; do you think none of them can pass? Or just Cain's?
    BTW, I believe Cain has said he does not expect his plan to pass as written but rather sees it as a starting point to get the process moving. ...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah Do you think my use of sheeple applies to you Jimmy? I will stop using terms like sheeple when they stop acting like sheeple who think the people in Washington have the last word. I will repeat what i said earlier in this thread since you seemed to have m...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah I agree Rich and good question; are they all impossible to pass? I think it is worth noting that the other candidates came out with competing plans only in reaction to Herman Cain's plan. Newt, Perry and especially Romney were perfectly content to leave t...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z Rich, I think if you read my last comment that answers - but let me specify that Congress is by its very nature opposed to changing dramatically the tax system. I am all for it - I lean toward a flat tax, but there are good things about value added taxes ...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z Hassan, Sheeple is a silly term and beneath any real discourse on American politics.
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah Jimmy you are again focused on the minors while ignoring the major. Unfortunately sheeple is an all to apropos term in describing the way we have abdicated our thinking to the media and our power to the people in Washington.
    The major issue that you are a...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z Hassan, I choose not to use such overused and hackneyed terminology. I have never said we don't have the power - but we're going to have to be willing to work at it for decades - not one or two election cycles.
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah If there is one thing we should have learned from Barack obama and the Democrats the last two years is that decades are not necessary at all to make swift change. He got his horrific healthcare bill passed in less than two years. Because they had resolve.
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah That was the whole point of my article "The Cain Praxis", conservatives like you are busy talking about what cannot be done and the Democrats came in and just did it. People were convinced that Obama would fail at healthcare "reform", yet here we are. No ...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Hassan Nurullah
    Hassan Nurullah And the argument has been made, that we would have had healthcare reform under Bill Clinton if not for Herman Cain turning the public against the idea when he crushed President Clinton on national TV. That is why Obama did not allow public debate on the issue.
    November 19, 2011
  • Rich Helmold
    Rich Helmold Obama & Dems had to work hard and corruptly to pass ObamaCare, it will be extremely difficult to undo it the longer it is allowed to progress and integrate into our health system and society. So, it is imperative to kill is ASAP. But that cannot be applied to other ingrained programs that have been around for decades, where people have grown dependent upon them. Those will have to be phased out, "if" enough support can be mustered up to do so and the progressives will be fighting it all the way with lies and deceit.
    As to we the People having the power, Sarah Palin recently wrote an article of how Congress is corrupted by power and money. Of course we all know this but she agrees with Hassan.
    How Congress Occupied Wall Street
    “I've learned from local, state and national political experience that the only solution to entrenched corruption is sudden and relentless reform.”
    more
    November 19, 2011 - 1 likes this
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z Hassan, Obama is the culmination of 60 years of movement from the left. I'll tell you this: If you get a conservative in the White House, and conservatives running the House and Senate, and try to do everything we'd like to do right off the bat, you'll se...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z "conservatives like you are busy talking about what cannot be done and the Democrats came in and just did it." -- I think I just answered that. Public debate is still ongoing on Obamacare, and fewer people are for repeal than just over a year ago.
    November 19, 2011
  • Jimmy Z
    Jimmy Z Rich: Read the link Hassan posted some 30 comments ago, or my quote from it. The writer there made a great about about Cain's naivety - When does collective bargaining for public employees ever NOT create an undue burden on the tax payers? Forget the way...  more
    November 19, 2011
  • Tom Jefferson
    Tom Jefferson This blogs going a little viral, help it out, share share share. Don't let the MSM get away with this hit job.
    November 19, 2011
  • Todd "tryanmax" Maxwell
    Todd "tryanmax" Maxwell I guess I just don't hear words that sound like union support in Cain's statements. I grew up in a union family, and I can tell you that union people won't hear support in those words and, in fact, most will hear them as very anti-union. That's the perspe...  more
    November 21, 2011 - 3 like this