Before the
right-wing
commenters howl -
there's
documentation for
all of these
statements. Let's
take them one by
one: In addition to
Cheney and
Whittington, the
hunting party
included Katherine
Armstrong (who was
in the car at the
time of the
shooting: more on
that later). After
lots of evasive
comments that only
referred to a "third
hunter," we now know
her identity:
Pamela Willeford,
the US Ambassador to
Switzerland.
Then
there was this
Armstrong quote on
MSNBC and picked up
by
Firedoglake
(later dutifully
scrubbed, but
preserved on Google
cache): "There may
be a beer or two in
there," (Armstrong)
said, 'but remember
not everyone in the
party was
shooting.'"
Interestingly,
Armstrong's playing
with words here. She
later said that she
(Armstrong) hadn't
had anything to
drink, so at least
one of the other
three must have been
drinking - and the
other three were
shooting. So while
her statement was
literally correct
("not everyone ...
was shooting"), it
gives the false
impression that
nobody drank and
shot.
Then there was
this item (courtesy
kos):
Armstrong said
she saw Cheney's
security detail
running toward
the scene. "The
first thing that
crossed my mind
was he had a
heart problem,"
she told The
Associated
Press.
In other words,
she didn't see the
accident. All
of her statements,
replete with
colorful sidebars
about getting
"peppered pretty
good," gave the
false impression she
was an eyewitness.
She wasn't.
And what about
Dr. David Blanchard,
who made such light
of Whittington's
injuries? Before the
heart attack
occurred, Blanchard
gave no indication
that pellets had
entered
Whittington's torso
or major organs (we
now know that at
least one other
pellet entered his
liver). I found
an interesting quote.
After asserting that
spiritual beliefs
help people recover
more quickly (which
studies have
suggested may be
true), Blanchard
said this of people
with out of body and
near death
experiences:
"These people do
quite well in
their disease
processes," he
said. "The Lord
wasn't quite
ready for them
yet . . . It
makes believers
out of them."
It's likely that
Blanchard is also
the same "Dr. David
Blanchard" who is
listed as Vice
Chairperson of
World Hope
International, a
Christian
evangelical aid
group.
Blanchard's
certainly entitled
to his own beliefs,
and World Hope
International (if
he's the same
Blanchard) has done
some good work,
albeit with a
proselytizing bent.
But most
evangelicals in this
country are ardent
supporters of the
Bush/Cheney
Administration. This
may explain the
otherwize puzzling
word choices Dr.
Blanchard made to
play down
Whittington's
injuries, especially
before the heart
attack made that
more difficult to
do.
So was Cheney
drinking, and was
there anything
inappropriate about
this hunting party?
We don't know, and
nobody's
investigating.
There's reason to be
suspicious. We
do have the
suggestion that
drinking was taking
place, we have
inconsistencies and
a pattern of
deception in
Armstrong's
statements, we have
a shooting injury
that's far more
serious than
originally claimed
... and a Sheriff's
Department and
national press that
have already
proclaimed the VP
innocent of all
wrongdoing.
I was right to
call this
Cheney's
Chappaquiddick.
The parallels get
stronger every day.
Of course,
Chappaquiddick
happened almost
forty years ago, and
Ted Kennedy's turned
his personal life
around. Cheney's
actions happened
this weekend.
There's reason to be
suspicious of the
Vice President's
behavior, starting
with the cover-up
itself.
They're trying to
spin it as just a
badly handled case
of press relations,
but it's could be a
whole lot more than
that.