Bill Richardson has been dining out on his draft story
for decades. When the Albuquerque Journal
contacted people who had described Richardson as a drafted
baseball star in written material and asked them why they had done
that (the lie found its way into at least one book via
Richardson's yarn-spinning to a sports writer), their response was
to say that Richardson had told them that and they believed
him. So when Richardson says that he got the impression that
he was drafted from "a program" produced by the Cape Cod
summer league team he played for he is blowing more smoke:
Who supplied the bogus information that found its way
into the program? Richardson did, or Tufts universityÂ
baseball officials he had misled. Not wanting the facts to
get in the way of a good story, Richardson couldn't bring himself
to tell people a more scaled-down version of being almost
drafted.
Richardson's Clinton-era formulation, "In my mind that
meant I had been drafted,"Â is reminiscent of another weasel
from the Clinton years, Robert Reich. In his memoirs, Reich just
made stuff up, concocting heated dialogue he says took
place in meetings that C-Span tapes exposed as bogus.
Caught out, Reich said that his invented dialogue "captured"Â
something true about the meetings, a "mood" and so forth. "These
are my perceptions," he said. Subjectivism covers a
multitude of sins.
topics:
Sports