Did Al Gore
actually invent the Internet?

Yes. Al Gore also invented sliced bread, body odor and the stuff that
grows inside toilet bowls at reststops on the Jersey Turnpike. Now doesn't that clear up the
confusion?
"I've traveled to every part of this country during the
last six years. During my service in the United States Congress, I took the
initiative in creating the Internet."
Vice President Al Gore in an interview with
CNN's Wolf Blitzer.
"If Gore invented the Internet, I invented spell-check."
Former Vice President Dan Quayle on Gore's claim that he
helped invent the Internet.
"I hereby reveal that I'm really Christopher Columbus. I discovered
America and wrote the Declaration of Independence."
Steve Forbes reacting to Gore.
No Credit Where It's Due
by Declan McCullagh
3:00 a.m. 11.Mar.99.PST
WASHINGTON -- It's a time-honored tradition for presidential
hopefuls to claim credit for other people's successes.
But Al Gore as the father of the Internet?
That's what the campaigner in chief told CNN's Wolf Blitzer
during an interview Tuesday evening. Blitzer asked Gore how he was different
than other presumptive Democratic challengers, such as Bill Bradley. "What
do you have to bring to this that he doesn't necessarily bring to this
process?"
Replied Gore: "I'll be offering my vision when my
campaign begins, and it'll be comprehensive and sweeping, and I hope that it'll
be compelling enough to draw people toward it.... I've traveled to every part of
this country during the last six years."
Then came the kicker: "During my service in the United
States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet."
Huh? Preliminary discussions of how the ARPANET would be
designed began in 1967, and a request for proposals went out the following year.
In 1969, the Defense Department commissioned the ARPANET.
Gore was 21-years-old at the time. He wasn't even done with
law school at Vanderbilt University. It would be eight more years before Gore
would be elected to the US House of Representatives as a freshman Democrat with
scant experience in passing legislation, let alone ambitious proposals.
By that time, file copying -- via the UUCP protocol -- was
beginning. Email was flourishing. The culture of the Internet was starting to
develop through the Jargon File and the SF-Lovers mailing list.
Of course, politicians weren't completely unaware of the
Internet.
According to one account, when Senator Ted Kennedy learned in
1968 that Massachusetts-based BBN had won the ARPA contract for an
"interface message processor," he sent a congratulatory telegram. It
thanked the upstanding folks at BBN for their ecumenical spirit in devising an
"interfaith message processor."
Blitzer, unfortunately, didn't appear to know any of that.
After Gore took credit for the Internet, Blitzer simply moved on talk about
polls showing Texas governor George W. Bush and Elizabeth Dole ahead of the vice
president.
Washingtonpost.com:
Gore Deserves Internet Credit, Some Say
This Washington Post article explains in a fairly objective
way what actually went down.
Father Of The Internet
Al Gore shows how he became the Father of the Internet in this
comix story.
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