Illinois state senator plagiarizes JFK blatantly, uses no-one-would-be-this-dumb defense

Behold the comparisons between President Kennedyโ€™s famous June 11, 1963 speech on civil rights and a recent floor speech by Illinois State Senator John Noland, in support of civil unions.

Noland, or whatever aide crafted this asinine attempt pull one overโ€”at wakes, do they deliver the Gettysburg Address?โ€”apparently had a sense of humor to go along with his gall.

What else can explain how Kennedyโ€™s conclusion, โ€œwe are confronted primarily with a moral issueโ€ became Nolandโ€™s claim 47 years later, โ€œwe are at long last confronted with a moral issue.โ€

More than one, Iโ€™d say.

โ€œAdmittedly, there are similarities between the two speeches and in retrospect it obviously would have been better for me to acknowledge the Kennedy speech when I delivered my own speech on the floor of the Senate,โ€ Noland said.

But he added that, โ€œI did not copy the speech and claim it as my own work. No one could expect to do that successfully with such a famous speech.โ€

Ah, the old, no-one-would-do-something-this-dumb defense. An oldie, but a goodieโ€”kind of like Kennedyโ€™s speech, on civil rights.

โ€”DM

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