Normally, I enjoy looking at and talking about bulges in men's clothing. Hello! Happy to see me today?
But I'm tired of presidential bulges, frankly. Since the Clenis still gets trotted out, linguistically speaking, by Republicans even today ["but what about all that money Clinton's blow job cost us, huh?"], I'm not keen to hear about yet another presidential pup tent, even if it's nowhere near the presidential pup.
So I don't want to see any more stories about what President Bush might have been wearing under his jacket during the first presidential debate until someone has real, gen-u-ine EVIDENCE that the bulge in his jacket was caused by something other than bad posture, poor tailoring, or an alien parasite feasting on the president's spinal fluid. Because until then, the story will — and does — sound like an act of desperation by people who should not be feeling desperate. Kerry is still holding his own, so the last thing he needs is for some publicity-seeking supporter to go off half-cocked and pull a junior "CSI" routine using Photoshop and some rumpled shirts.
Unless, maybe, that supporter is a NASA physicist who specializes in image analysis.
Today, Salon ran a story about a physicist who claims to have proven that the rectangular bulge in the back of the president's jacket could not have been caused by a wrinkled shirt underneath, as the president claims.
Maybe I should believe this guy. It sure would be fun! After all, Dr. Robert M. Nelson, the scientist in question, has some lofty credentials:
He's a senior research scientist for NASA and for Caltech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and an international authority on image analysis. Currently he's engrossed in analyzing digital photos of Saturn's moon Titan, determining its shape, whether it contains craters or canyons.
So I suppose I have to concede that Nelson, a rocket scientist, is far more qualified than I am to analyze Bush's bulge. Nelson doesn't claim to know what the bulge is, specifically, just what it is not, specifically. But he does comment on what it could be — a radio device — and he's willing to stake his world renowned reputation on it. But I still don't quite believe there's a news story here, at least not yet. Nelson hasn't seen the actual jacket or shirt, and yet he claims having scientific evidence that proves the president lied when he said what was under that jacket.







Article comments
1 - Matt H.
BHW -
I wonder if W's fopaw from his first campaign..."I know how hard it is to put food on your family"...led to the buldge under his jacket?
And I can't believe your "Normally I enjoy looking at and talking about bulges in men's clothing" intro didn't attract any comments - which indicates that perhaps the RightWingers were indeed worried that maybe the bulge WAS a radio device...(grin)
2 - Dee J.
Matt, You did mean "Faux Pas" right?
3 - Eric Olsen
Fox paws?
4 - bhw
Faux poos?