As you may have heard, President Obama clapped on Politico at the White House Correspondent's Dinner the other night. Politico, feeling humorous (or something) responded.
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President Obama presented a revised version of history at the correspondentsโ dinner on Saturday night when he unveiled issues of POLITICO from previous centuries. And while POLITICO certainly didnโt exist during the Civil War or the fight for Americaโs independence, the White House (or the group they outsourced this part of the comedy routine to, at least) appears to have used a different โsourceโ of news that also didnโt exist then to provide the context of the fake articles โ Wikipedia.
Hereโs the first sentence of text for the โLincoln Saves Union!โ headline (subhed: โBut Can He Save House Majority?โ): โIn the presidential election of 1860, the Republican Party, led by Abraham Lincoln, had campaigned against the expansion of slavery beyond the states in which it already existed.โ
And hereโs the account from Wikipedia, the user-edited database: โIn the presidential election of 1860, the Republican Party, led by Abraham Lincoln, had campaigned against the expansion of slavery beyond the states in which it already existed.โ
The same goes for the White House/POLITICO "stories" for โJapan Surrenders! Whereโs the Bounce?โ (Wikipedia entry) and โTalks Break Down, Independence Deadโ (Wikipedia entry).
Two more things: The WH parody needs to check the spelling of Gen. Douglas MacArthurโs name, and Emperor Hirohito was born in April, not August.
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