I always thought that this quote was probably fabricated. When a Tribe B reporter encounters a “man on the street” , “black friend”, “highly placed source” or in this case “an aide” who is ostensibly a member of Tribe A, yet goes on to issue a quote that is more or less a call to arms for B I’m immensely suspicious.
I could still buy it though, if the aide talked like the protagonist of his own story. But he’s just an orc, snarling his hatred of applause lights to the innocent reporter. I don’t buy it.
It’s not too uncommon for reporters to massage quotes, or at the very least to quote selectively, in order to push an editorial agenda or tell a better story.
I always thought that this quote was probably fabricated. When a Tribe B reporter encounters a “man on the street” , “black friend”, “highly placed source” or in this case “an aide” who is ostensibly a member of Tribe A, yet goes on to issue a quote that is more or less a call to arms for B I’m immensely suspicious.
I could still buy it though, if the aide talked like the protagonist of his own story. But he’s just an orc, snarling his hatred of applause lights to the innocent reporter. I don’t buy it.
It’s not too uncommon for reporters to massage quotes, or at the very least to quote selectively, in order to push an editorial agenda or tell a better story.