Showing posts with label plausible deniability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plausible deniability. Show all posts

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Post-Modern Political Honesty: Part III--Plausible Deniability... Everybody's Doing It!

Plausible deniability is a term coined by the CIA in the early 1960's and popularized by President Bill Clinton in the 1990's.

Clinton popularized the phrase by using the technique so much, though he never uttered it publicly. Instead, his playbook was incrementally publicized through the interviews and written offerings of his strategists and advisers, once they were untethered by his reelection. So, it was about twenty years ago that we learned that, as a rule, Clinton calculatedly quashed blowback by applying the concept of plausible deniability to explanations of his questionable political moves and conflicting remarks made under oath. I give you Bill's iconic semantic defense, enshrined in the many definitions of the phrase sexual relations and the word is, as THE seminal example.

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have certainly adopted this tactic.

Consider how Trump responds each time he's confronted about his crass commentary. Three episodes, occurring early in the primary season, will amply prove the point. Take a look at how he explained his remarks about Carley Fiorina's face, Megyn Kelly bleeding, and Mitt Romney being on his knees. His reference to Fiorina's face was metaphoric, he said. And he was referring, he claimed, only to those orifices that are north of Kelly's neck. While Romney being on his knees was, Trump said, an allusion to begging. Each of these explanations is just plausible enough that the Donald can deny that he meant what he clearly implied.

Hillary, on the other hand, incrementally reshapes her message in response to political and media pressure, in hopes that enough people will have a that's reasonable reaction to the latest tweak that disinterest will prevail. Witness her ever-morphing talking points about her handling of classified information on her personal server and network.
  1. There was no classified information on my device.
  2. "I did not send or receive any classified information on my email."
  3. "I did not send or receive any  information marked classified on my email."
  4. "I did not send or receive any  information marked classified at the time it was sent or received."
As each one proved to be false, she proceeded to the next. But, at each turn her delivery remained unchanged, blurring the lines between the iterations and giving the impression that she'd been saying the same thing all along. When FBI Director Comey's recent Senate testimony on point demonstrated that version 4 was false, Hillary made a crass and cynical decision to implicate her staff. The (paraphrased) message evolution looked like this:
  1. My staff would not send me any information marked classified at the time it was sent.
  2. My staff would not knowingly send me any information marked classified at the time it was sent.
  3. The members of my staff are professionals; And I resent the implication that any of them would knowingly send me any information marked classified at the time it was sent. (In the mind of John Q. Public, defining and sticking up for her staff acts to separate her from them, and amplifies the staffs' supposed culpability.)
While Hillary and Trump have different methods of proffering plausible denials, their general approach is the same. That is, to control people by controlling information; this creates power. Foucault would be proud.

But wait. There's more! Donald and Hillary have sprung from Plausible Deniability to Surreal Denial...

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Musings on 5/31/16: The Real Donald Trump... T-shirt

An anecdote from twenty years ago.

Running into a colleague as I left the office one evening, I expressed frustration with my unsuccessful efforts to get through to a patient in the Borderline range of development (psychologically speaking). He smiled wryly, nodded knowingly, and said, remember, they all wear t-shirts that say ALWAYS THE VICTIM; NEVER RESPONSIBLE; AND REALLY ANGRY. This phrase has always stuck with me.
                                                                           ~

It also happens to describe Trump perfectly (which makes sense since narcissism is a variation of borderline personality). Think about it:


Trump is Always the VictimThe Donald's belief in his victimization can be seen in his perpetual pattern of perceiving people to have treated him unfairly. Indeed, this is his default explanation for loosing a primary or caucus, not winning an argument, and being outplayed politically. Examples abound.

Trump is Never Responsible. His primary method of responding to public approbation and confrontation by journalists, after another of his nauseating declarations, is denial. He flat-out denies saying what he said. This, even in the face of news outlets spending weeks airing video showing his denial to be untrue. Narcissists lean heavily on defensive denial. However, when the Donald is not using this primitive defense, he uses a conscious version of it, plausible deniability. See Musings on 3/4: Applied Clinton Speak for a complete explanation of this.


Trump is Really Angry. In 1,000 words...









That about sums it up. 

Friday, March 4, 2016

Musings on 3/4/16: Applied Clinton-Speak

GOP Front-runner Donald Trump may be headed for a presidency contest with Hillary Clinton, but he seems to be borrowing heavily from Bill Clinton's political playbook. That playbook was incrementally publicized through the interviews and written offerings of his strategists and advisers, once they were untethered by his reelection. So, it was about twenty years ago that we learned that, as a rule, Clinton calculatedly quashed blowback by applying the concept of plausible deniability (a term coined by the CIA in the early 1960s) to explanations of his questionable political moves and conflicting remarks made under oath. I give you Bill's iconic semantic defense, enshrined in the many definitions of the phrase sexual relations and the word is, as THE seminal example.

Now consider how Trump responds each time he's confronted about his crass commentary. Three examples will suffice to amply prove the point. None is about his public statements during his divorces; that would be too easy. Instead, let's take a look at how he explained his remarks about Carley Fiorina's face, Megyn Kelly bleeding, and-just yesterday-Mitt Romney being on his knees.

His reference to Fiorina's face was metaphoric, he said. And he was referring, he claimed, only to those orifices that are north of Kelly's neck. While Romney being on his knees was, Trump will say, an allusion to begging.

Expectedly, many shouted back that he was clearly not speaking figuratively about Fiorina's face, that he was obviously referring to

Megyn's menstruation, and that his knee narrative suggested fellatio on its face-if you will. 

Others carefully reviewed exactly what he said each time, quietly concluding that-if Trump planned this-he has irrecoverably and unceremoniously supplanted Bill Clinton as the most skilled politician ever.