RE-INVENTING
BUSH
PRESIDENT'S LEFTWARD TILT STARTED IN A LAB
By: Rich Smith
Some years ago an audio recording-tape company launched an ad blitz that employed
the now-famous slogan "Is It Live, Or Is It Memorex?" - the idea being that this
particular brands cassettes were of such superior quality that youd not be
able to tell whether what you were hearing was real or mere playback from the magnetized
storage medium.
Well, apparently, something similar is afoot with President Bush. Everybody remembers how
during the 2000 bid for the White House the guy from Crawford, Tex., talked like a
conservative and, for a time following his election, acted like one. Then, suddenly and
inexplicably, he began speaking and behaving as though his middle initial was Ted Kennedy.
On issues ranging from education to the environment, Republican Bush toed the Democrat
party line. |
People who thought they had put a real American in high office and rid
1600 Pennsylvania Ave. of the socialist vermin previously occupying it scratched their
heads in puzzlement over whatever became of the conservative Dubya who appeared before
them in stump speeches and debates along the campaign trail with promises to set us free
from authoritarian, intrusive government.
As usual, I have the answer. The George W. Bush you today see on television is not
really George W. Bush. Its a fake image of him made possible by a frightening new
invention from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Earlier this month, the leftist Boston Globe revealed that scientists at M.I.T.
"have created the first realistic videos of people saying things they never said. In
one demonstration, the researchers taped a woman speaking into a camera, and then
reprocessed the footage into a new video that showed her speaking entirely new sentences,
and even mouthing words to a song in Japanese, a language she does not speak. The results
were enough to fool viewers consistently."
The Globe then cheerfully informed us that "the technology will also
provide a powerful new tool for fraud and propaganda - and will eventually cast doubt on
everything from video surveillance to presidential addresses."
Aha! See? There it is - the admission that this technology could be used on presidents.
Well, my friends, Im here to tell you that it already is being used on presidents -
one in particular: Bush 43.
Heres my theory. The real George Bush - the conservative you and I voted for -
was kidnapped about a year ago and is being held in an abandoned warehouse down by the
docks (which is where kidnap victims are always kept by their abductors). Tom Daschle,
Dick Gephardt, Hillary Clinton, et al, are running the country now. They come up with
socialist legislation, pass it, then get one of their criminal acquaintances - a forgery
pro on parole from Sing Sing - to put a reasonable facsimile of Bushs signature on
it. That night, on the news, they show you a clip of the signing ceremony - and its
Bush alright, only its stock footage of him taken in 2001 after he signed the tax
cut, the last conservative piece of business he was able to get done before they nabbed
him and stuffed him in that waterfront warehouse. Next, you see a close-up of Bush,
explaining why he didnt veto the measure. This is where the M.I.T. facial-animation
invention comes into play: by manipulating the stock footage, they have Bush convincingly
appear to say that communism is good for our country and thus this new law will be an
important addition to the arsenal Big Government has at its disposal to bring hugs and
kisses and hot cocoa and fresh bed-linens to a divided and hurting nation and blah, blah,
blah. Meanwhile, youre sitting at home viewing all this in utter disbelief, going
"What the hell?"
Hell is exactly right. Because thats where the idea for this facial-animation
technology originated. Imagine the first time the scientists gathered at a conference to
discuss it and map out its development. It probably went something like this:
Conference chairman: "My fellow scientists, it is only too obvious that
what this world needs most is more fraud and deceit. Look around you. Tragically,
theres just not enough mendacity available for all concerned. I ask of you, what can
we do to remedy this deplorable state of affairs?"
Pointy-headed guy in audience: "Mr. Chairman, Id like to suggest we
move forward with my departments cloning project. Were proposing to clone a
race of supermen who are genetically engineered to do nothing but lie with unsurpassed
smoothness. Bill Clinton has already volunteered his DNA to get us started."
Chairman: "Has potential. But lets hear some more ideas first. You,
there - you in the back wearing the Grim Reaper hood and whose face is hidden in deep
shadow. Any thoughts?"
Grim Reaper hood-wearer (gesturing with his raised, skeletal finger):
"Three words. Facial. Animation. Technology. It will be the wave of the future. For,
whoever controls the technology of facial animation can rule the world through
disinformation. Up would be down, down would be up and the masses would be unable to tell
the difference. After they become conditioned to total, continuous deception, you could
even show footage of someone you claim is the real Jesus Christ mouthing the words
"Glory to Satan - obey his commandments" and people would believe it, even
though camcorders didnt exist 2,000 years ago."
Chairman: "Superb. I think were all in agreement then. Facial
animation technology is the way to solve our worldwide shortage of fraud and deceit. But
how would we sell it to the public? Theres still a multitude of the unwashed running
around loose out there who might object to us spending millions of taxpayer dollars on a
technology whose only real use is to improve the ability of Big Brother to play tricks on
them."
Grim: "No problemo. Tell them its intended purpose is to give new
life to long-dead Hollywood icons. For example, who wouldnt love to see breathy,
hush-voiced Marilyn Monroe brought back from the grave with all-new dialogue that has her
talking dirty like Julia Roberts in her role as loud, foul-mouthed Erin Brockovich? Can
you say sexy?"
Oh yeah, now theres a winning ploy for you. I just cant wait to see John
Wayne reanimated and updated so that his famous line of "Im not gonna hit ya;
like hell Im not gonna hit ya" becomes the politically correct "Im
not gonna knit ya an AIDS quilt; like hell Im not gonna knit ya an AIDS quilt."
Fortunately for us who love and seek after truth, facial-animation technology still has
limitations. According to The Globe, the M.I.T. method "works only on video of
a person facing a camera and not moving much, like a newscaster....[T]he new method only
seems lifelike for a sentence or two at a time, because over longer stretches, the speaker
seems to lack emotion." Which is why early experiments with the technology centered
around frozen-in-place Ted Koppel (I kid you not).
Still, the geniuses at M.I.T. are determined to overcome. Theyre adamant that the
world needs this technology. And, what the world needs, the world gets - whether it wants
it or not. "It is only a matter of time before somebody can get enough good video of
your face to have it do what they like," The Globe quotes one Matthew Brand, a
research scientist at a Cambridge-based laboratory for Mitsubishi Electric.
I dont know what you and I can do about this monstrous evil other than to suggest
we start scouring the pier district until we find that abandoned warehouse where the real
President Bush has been stashed. Once we un-gag and untie him, maybe he can help us figure
out some way to foil the plans of the deceivers. Perhaps he can do an executive order
banning all such technology from our shores and pledge to drop a daisy-cutter or two on
any foreign lab that decides to pick up the ball and run with it. But at least from then
on, when Bush speaks to us on camera at a bill-signing ceremony, well know whether
hes live or Memorex.
Rich Smith has been a freelance journalist since 1976 and is
currently based in a nearly liberal-free zone along the rim of California's fearsome
Mojave Desert. He is a regular columnist for Ether Zone.
Rich Smith can be reached at newsdesk@cci-yuccavalley.com
Published in the June 7, 2002 issue of Ether Zone.
Copyright © 1997 - 2002 Ether
Zone.
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