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September 1, 2008
"Change" the
Channel!
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
At the opening ceremonies of the Olympics in
Beijing, I found a small Chinese flag had been
placed on my seat, and on 90,999 other seats in the
Bird's Nest stadium. Needless to say, I did not
wave that flag -- we smuggled in our own 3x5 foot
American flags, which we displayed with honor. But
there was a sea of little Red flags around us.
Apparently, the organizers of the big Demo
confab in Denver took a cue from the Chinese and
supplied small American flags on every delegate's
seat, which the cadre of Obamaphiles waved
obediently and incessantly. (I suspect those flags
were made in China.)
No small irony here that the subject of all this
fervor, Barack
Hussein Obama, refused until recently to wear
that flag on his lapel, much less recite a pledge
to it.
Of course, all the flag waving played well for
the TV audiences, but liberal protagonists have
always been about appearances, appealing to
feeling, style over substance.
Indeed, as I previously summarized in an essay
entitled, "Why
the Left can't get it Right," ask liberals
about some manifestation of their worldview -- for
example, why they support a charlatan like Obama --
and their response will be predicated by, "Because
I feel..."
On the other hand, ask conservatives about what
they believe, or why they do or don't support John
McCain, and their response will be predicated by,
"Because I think..."
At Obama's crowning, we witnessed a stadium full
of feelers -- sensitive, emotional, sentimental
types, bursting with tearful glee at the prospect
of one of their kind becoming the next president of
the United States.
Now, I don't mean to suggest that there is
something wrong with strong feelings; had I not
contained my own on occasion, there'd be fewer
Leftists on our planet. It's just that we need to
set our feelings aside when making serious
decisions, such as who will be our next commander
in chief.
All this notwithstanding, here are a few
"feeling" moments from the past week.
Nancy Pelosi felt proud: "I am very proud of the
Democrats in Congress," the House Speaker told
delegates. Proud of what, that the
Democrat-controlled Congress now has an approval
rating of 9 percent? Or are they proud of
all the feel-good resolutions coming from Pelosi's
colleagues in the House -- more than 1,900 of them
-- a congressional record?
John Kerry felt the need for change: "We need a
leader who understands all our security challenges,
not just bombs and guns, but global warming, global
terror and global AIDS." That assertion left me
wondering why anyone would vote for Hussein instead
of McCain. Of course, I had to think about it.
Since Jesse Jackson had already let us know how
he feels about Obama, Bill Clinton took his place
at the podium, lip quivering as he felt our pain.
And Hillary was just radiant, feeling that all the
stars were aligning for her campaign in 2012.
Michelle Obama felt good about herself. "I left
a job at a law firm for a career in public service,
working to empower young people to volunteer in
their communities." I suppose the best part of that
feeling is the $275,000 annual salary she draws
from a privately owned hospital whilst "working to
empower young people."
And Michelle no doubt felt good about hubby
Barack, who she says will "bring us together and
remind us how much we share and how alike we really
are." Can't you just feel it?
Capping the DNC love fest, The One himself, whom
I fully expected to walk onto his Greek
temple set in a toga and gold laurel leaf
crown, appeared before thousands of delirious,
glossy-eyed sycophants who were chanting his
mantra. Obama, a master propagandist whom running
mate Joe Biden described as "the first mainstream
African American who is articulate and bright and
clean and a nice-looking guy," albeit "naive,"
offered his own slate of feel-good sentiments about
a "country I believe in." (How about that American
flag lapel pin on his $1,600 suit!)
In short, Obama constructed his ruse around a
few themes.
He insisted that he is our savior, the
embodiment of a "promise that has always set this
country apart -- that through hard work and
sacrifice, each of us can pursue our individual
dreams but still come together as one American
family."
He promised to reverse the "failed policies of
George W. Bush," and a "third" Bush term, as he
frames McCain's policies.
He proclaimed that, "Ours is a promise that says
government... should do that which we cannot do for
ourselves" and proceeded to outline the same worn
socialist policies his "useful
idiot" predecessors have promoted for the last
half century.
In his final appeal to the faithful, Obama
promised a presidency "that pushes us forward even
when the path is uncertain; that binds us together
in spite of our differences; that makes us fix our
eye not on what is seen, but what is unseen, that
better place around the bend."
At least he was able to correctly identify the
city he was in this time.
I am sure it comes as no surprise to genuine
American
Patriots, those who recognize a kindred spirit
in the Patriot character of presidential candidate
John
McCain, that at the conclusion of Obama's
coronation in Denver, thousands of those little
flags ended up in trash
bags with other delegate refuse.
It's not that those Demo flag-wavers don't like
our national flag, it's just that they don't have a
clue about the "Republic for which it stands," or
its seminal document of incorporation, our
Constitution,
or the Patriots who have pledged "To
support and defend... so help me God," or the
hundreds of thousands who have given their lives to
honor that pledge since our founding.
Obama certainly does not get it.
In the end, of course, no amount of logical
dissent will make a lick of difference to most
Democrat voters. Logic, after all, requires
thoughtful analysis, and the Democrat hordes are
too busy feeling great about Obama to muck that up
with logic.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2008 by Publius Press, Inc.
The
Patriot Post Archive
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