The New English by Resident Bush
In all of the election debates in 2000 I noticed that
George W. Bush repeatedly made a fundamental English language error.
Al Gore didn't make any mistakes as far as I could tell.
-
2000 Oct 3,
First Debate.
Note inconsistent transcripts.
-
www.debates.org,
CNN:
"There's differences."
No, that should be
"There
are
differences."
-
www.debates.org:
"The first is, the difference is there
is
no new accountability measures
in Vice President Gore's plan."
CNN:
Well, the first is -- the difference is,
there
is
no
new accountability measures in Vice President Gore's
plan."
No, that should be
"... there
are
no new accountability measures ..."
-
2000 Oct 11,
Second Debate.
-
www.debates.org,
CNN:
"There's
too many issues
left unresolved."
No, that should be "There
are
..."
-
2000 Oct 17,
Third Debate.
Note inconsistent transcripts.
-
CNN:
"So I think step one to make sure prescription
drugs is
more affordable for seniors -- and those are the folks who
really rely upon prescription drugs a lot these days -- is to
reform the Medicare system, is to have prescription drugs
as an integral part of Medicare once and for all."
www.debates.org:
"I think step one to make sure prescription
drugs is
more affordable for
seniors, those are the folks who really rely upon prescription drugs
allot these days is to reform the Medicare system.
Have prescription drugs as an integral part of Medicare once and for all.
No, that should be "drugs
are
..."
(Note that the second use of "is" shifted the meaning.)
-
CNN:
"You bet
there's things
the government can do."
www.debates.org:
You bet
there's things
that government can do.
No, that should be "there
are
..."
-
(Insert messy election results here, with arbitrary turnout.)
-
2000 Dec 28,
Press conference by Resident "elect" Bush:
There
is
gonna be disagreements.
No, that should be "There
are
..."
-
2002 July 4, a patriotic day to point out the real
state of the union!
CNN reports:
"The International Criminal Court is
troubling to the United States," Bush told
reporters following a tour at a Milwaukee
church. "As the United States works to
bring peace around the world, our
diplomats and our soldiers could be
drug
into this court, and that's very troubling --
very troubling to me."
Drug?
No, that should be "our soldiers could be drugged
..."
We can see now why it is so troubling!
;^)
Pointers to transcripts:
Other related web sites that give more examples:
Note:
No governmental electrons were used to create this web page.
(This page was created entirely with my personal
resources on my own time.)
Tom Schneider's Home Page
origin: 2000 Oct 20
updated: 2003 Jan 1