Posted on 10/23/2012 8:32:44 AM PDT by smoothsailing
October 23, 2012
My wife, the very shrewd Sally Pipes, penetrated to the heart of the debate in a single sentence tonight when, only about 15 minutes into the exchange, she observed: “Romney’s flag pin is much larger than Obama’s flag pin.”
Indeed, it was, as I confirmed in the next split screen of the candidates.
Ever since the 1960s, liberals have been sensitive about the dimensions of their patriotism, and here, on national television, in a debate over foreign policy, Obama had been clearly outmaneuvered. His fleet was noticeably smaller than the challenger’s. His bayonet — well, you get the point.
Obama and the flag pin have a back story, which I wrote about in my chapter in Confronting Terror, the anthology of reflections on 9/11 ten years after, published last year by Encounter Books and edited by John Yoo and Dean Reuter. As a candidate for president in fall 2007, Obama not only declined to wear a flag pin on his lapel, but also defended his decision on grounds of high principle. “The truth is that right after 9/11, I had a pin,” he said in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on October 3. “Shortly after 9/11, particularly as we’re talking about the Iraq war, that became a substitute for, I think, true patriotism, which is speaking out on issues that are important to our national security. I decided I won’t wear that pin on my chest. Instead I’m going to tell the American people what I believe will make this country great and hopefully that will be a testimony to my patriotism.” The next day he went further, suggesting that people who wear the lapel pin are compensating, as the Freudians say, for their own inadequate patriotism. “After a while,” he explained, “you start noticing people wearing a lapel pin, but not acting very patriotic. Not voting to provide veterans with resources they need. Not voting to make sure that disability payments were coming out on time.”
He didn’t want to confuse wearing a flag pin, which would appeal to policemen and firefighters and other middlebrow types, with the “true patriotism” that would appeal to artists and professors. True patriotism means attending to “disability payments” and the other programs of the welfare state.
It took Obama about six months to abandon true for false, or rather for pretended patriotism. In an April 2008 town hall meeting in Pittsburgh, a veteran handed him a pin and asked him to wear it, which he did for a day, leading to what Time magazine called “a much-ridiculed question on the issue at a much-ridiculed ABC debate later that week.” In his reply to the questioner, Obama said, remarkably, “I have never said that I don’t wear flag pins or refuse to wear flag pins.” The media ridiculed the question, not the answer, which after all showed the brazen disregard for common honesty that postmodern intellectuals prefer. As the campaign and then his presidency proceeded, the flag pin became more or less a staple of Obama’s wardrobe. He was wearing it on the night he announced Bin Laden had been killed.
And he wore it conspicuously at last night’s debate. But somehow his disdain for, or at least impatience with, ordinary American patriotism — infamous, for example, from his remarks about American exceptionalism being just like Greek exceptionalism (well, both countries are broke) — shone through.
Though he’s tried to put Sixties-style anti-Americanism behind him and behind liberalism, he hasn’t quite succeeded. Despite the points he scored against Romney, he couldn’t persuade voters that Romney was an unsafe guardian of the national interest, nor, despite the moderation of his own foreign policies, could Obama persuade them that he himself was an instinctively trustworthy guardian of those interests.
So another draw, which is more good news for Romney, the guy with the bigger flag pin.
— Charles R. Kesler is author of I Am the Change: Barack Obama and the Crisis of Liberalism.
We also see O exaggerating his manhood again!
It’s not the size of your pin it’s the size of your heart, The size of your patriotism, Obama has shown time and time again that he is no patriot.
No Patriot would say America is not exceptional.
No Patriot would tell the Russians he would have more flexibility after the election.
I noticed...........
Gee. I wonder why that is?
Could it have anything to do with openly rooting for the deaths of our servicemen in every conflict beginning with Vietnam?
Could it be that liberals have had everything to do with kowtowing to our enemies when they are in charge?
Could it be because people like John Kerry, Jane Fonda and too many others to mention have openly sided with our enemies and undercut our government?
Could it be because liberals don't value national security and cut defense budgets every chance they get in order to fund their comically useless social programs?
Could it be that our CURRENT president kicked off his political career in the house of someone like THIS, that people question his patriotism?
YOU ARE DAMNED RIGHT IT DOES!
I noticed too. :)
I still have a problem with placing things on the flag, but.. That protocol was over with years ago, I guess.
No Patriot would say “The future does not belong to those who insult Islam”.
No Patriot would say “The future does not belong to those who insult Islam”.
My wife has always said O was overcompensating for a “personal insecurity!”
Remember when Barack said he wouldn’t wear the flag pin in 2008? Obama lies to sell shineola to the rubes and red dupes.
My daughter and I were instant messaging during the debate and I told her Romney won because he’s got a bigger flag. And bigger ideas and a bigger heart.
These symbols are important. I recall that there was some special pin associated with Hillary Clinton, an eagle of some sort, that went viral in the lib community. Then, one day there was some female talking head that, when she came on camera, said “oooh I can’t wear this on camera” and promptly took the pin off.
Obama deliberately not wearing a pin is as loud a message as Romney wearing one.
I have seen another pin that looks suspiciously like the gloved hand holding a rose that DSA uses, at some political rallies.
http://annhand.blogspot.com/2009/01/political-jeweler-creates-patriotism.html
here it is, the Liberty Eagle Pin that Hillary and friends wear, or wore a while back.
I decided I wont wear that pin on my chest. Instead Im going to tell the American people what I believe will make this country great and hopefully that will be a testimony to my patriotism. The next day he went further, suggesting that people who wear the lapel pin are compensating, as the Freudians say, for their own inadequate patriotism. After a while, he explained, you start noticing people wearing a lapel pin, but not acting very patriotic.
The difference in the flag pins has been there all along. I saw it at the first debate. Whenever either one is wearing a suit coat, I look for the pin. Obama doesn’t always have one on, even with the suit coat.
Obama’s pin is way too small. Almost looks like an earring to me.
Remember—Michelle on July 4th was caught saying:
“All this for a damn flag!!”
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