Actually, in Cryer’s case his embellishments are somewhat
understandable. He was running for office. He was a candidate for
city council in Ocean City, Maryland, in 2006. He was just doing
what a lot of successful politicians do. They run claiming
achievements that are completely fictional and those who are caught
often win office anyway.
Remember Richard Blumenthal, the attorney general of
Connecticut? He ran for the Senate claiming, “We have learned
something important since the days that I served in Vietnam.” That
was a lie, but the Hon. Blumenthal repeated it in various forms
throughout his campaign. In truth, he received no less than five
military deferments and finally a sweet job in the Marine Reserve.
He also lied about his athletic career. Contrary to his claim, he
never was captain of the Harvard swimming team, or even swam on the
team. The voters elected him nonetheless.
How many other whoppers had this fraud told pursuant to becoming
a member of the U.S. Senate in 2010? I would suggest his record
abounds with them. However, so does the record of countless other
politicians. There is Jimmy Carter claiming to be a nuclear
engineer. There is Senator Jean-François Kerry, launching his
campaign for the presidency as a war hero, despite his taped
appearance before Congress denouncing the war and alleging that his
comrades committed war crimes. There is Al Gore getting ensnared in
a thicket of petty lies beginning with his campaigns for the
Senate, continuing with his campaigns for the presidency, and
culminating with his present campaign where he serves as the
world’s chief proponent and exploiter of global warming. It has
made him millions, and forget not the Clintons. They are the
longest running con act in American history, with Bill conning his
draft board and Hillary creating her visit to a Marine recruiter—or
was it an Army recruiter?
So I can understand if Joseph Brian Cryer feels a little abused.
Had he won his campaign for city council he would be on his way to
greatness. He could have been a Joe Biden. Maybe from the city
council he would have sought the governorship, possibly the Senate.
By then he would have received a Purple Heart, possibly the
Congressional Medal of Honor. He had his whole life before him
until the spoiler Shipley struck. Shipley has denied the masses
another hero. How many more politicians’ lives will Shipley
destroy?