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Tag: Culture War (Page 4 of 6)

Time for a speech on patriotism

What is real patriotism? Does it involve wearing a flag pin? Of course not, and that’s Obama’s position. True patriots want America, the country we all love, to achieve its true greatness. That means standing up and speaking one’s mind when the government is screwing things up.

Obama constantly addresses these themes, and as pointed out in the post below, he spoke to that in his latest speech as well. But he needs to hammer this point home, and address all the silly rumors circulating around the web. A stop on the Larry King show afterwards wouldn’t be a bad idea as well.

Andrew Sullivan has some good advice for Obama, and he touches on this point as well.

Make a speech about the Internet slurs. Stop ducking them. Confront them. Talk about your Christian faith and your childhood exposure to Islam. Tell people about your parents. Debunk that idiotic pledge of allegiance meme. Grab the flag pin issue by the lapels. Do it all at once undefensively. Yes, it will raise the profile of every single slur. But if you rebut them candidly, gracefully, calmly, you will defuse them. You can run but you can’t hide from Internet crapola. So confront it; defeat it. Right now, on these issues alone, the Obama camp is actually captive to the politics of fear. Don’t be.

Obama’s challenge

The smear campaigns are starting to take their toll. He was going to have to address this stuff at some point in the general election, so maybe it will help him in the long run to deal with this stuff now. Joe Klein sums up the problem.

There was another issue bubbling, which I hesitate to raise because it is largely scurrilous. It has to do with Obama’s patriotism. There is a segment of the American populace that just can’t get past his name. There are Internet sleaze purveyors — a few, sadly, with roots in the Jewish community — who have exploited this fact to spread slanderous nonsense about Obama. Hillary Clinton disgraced herself by playing into these innuendos by telling 60 Minutes that Obama isn’t Islamic “as far as I know.” Over the past few weeks, though, both Barack and Michelle Obama have given ammunition to the smear artists. Michelle’s moment was her extremely unfortunate statement that the success of her husband’s campaign had made her “proud of my country” for the first time in her adult life. The Senator’s moment came in the Ohio debate when he played political word games before rejecting the support of the bigot Louis Farrakhan. The hesitation was noticeable — and unacceptable. There are other guilt-by-association problems floating out there: the occasional over-the-top racial statements by Obama’s pastor Jeremiah Wright; the fact that Obama has been described as “friendly” with 1960s dilettante-terrorist William Ayers. It seemed clear on primary night that Obama was aware of this potential problem, as patriotism replaced hope as a theme of his concession speech. He echoed John McCain in citing Abraham Lincoln, and called America “the last best hope on Earth.” That was the only “hope” he mentioned — a fascinating calibration.

I noticed the same thing in his speech. He emphasized the love he has for his country. This is not new for him, but addressing the patriotism issue head on is not a bad idea.

Is the Clinton campaign playing the race card . . . again?

This ad looks pretty suspicious. The Clinton campaign is denying that they made Obama look darker in their ad, but the photos being circulated around the web look pretty bad.

I think the whole race/Muslim/Farrakhan issue did him in. He obviously needs to overcome this and keep addressing these rumors.

The question is whether the Clinton campaign is fanning the flames. Let’s see how this ad plays into the discussion.

Obama on education

Government can’t do everything. Parents need to do their part.

“Turn off the TV set, put the video game away. Buy a little desk or put that child at the kitchen table. Watch them do their homework. If they don’t know how to do it, give them help. If you don’t know how to do it, call the teacher. Make them go to bed at a reasonable time. Keep them off the streets. Give them some breakfast. Come on! And since I’m on a roll, if you’re child misbehaves in school, don’t cuss out the teacher! Do something with your child!”

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