Posted by
Citizen G'Kar on Monday, November 03, 2008 1:40:51 AM
In 1806, Noah Webster published A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. What made it so revolutionary was its new
style of spelling, breaking away with English tradition (with clear French
influences). As Paul Harvey tells it, this was the
finishing touch to the American Revolution. Along with its subsequent editions,
it established a foundation for words in the American variance of the English
language. Not sure what a word means? Just look it up in Webster’s.
Life is no longer so simple or straightforward. Political
Correctness, fringe movements that demand ubiquitous recognition, lawyers,
educrats and historical revisionists have obfuscated language to the point
where people actually say things like “It depends on what
your definition of ‘is’ is.” With a
straight face, no less. Orwell’s Newspeak has nothing on us
hyphenated-Americans.
Patriot
Take the word “patriot” for instance:
A person who loves his country, and
zealously supports and defends it and its interests.
Wow, that’s simple, straight-forward. Of course, today it’s
been watered-down or rewritten to mean “a citizen”, someone who picks up
litter, a community organizer, “citizen of the world”; or (negatively) a
nationalist, or simply “idiot”.
Senator Joe Biden defines “patriotic” as paying more taxes.
Dissent
“Dissent is the highest form of
patriotism” – Thomas Jefferson Idiot Unknown
Thomas Jefferson is oft misattributed this quote, but there
is no evidence to support he actually said it. It is doubtful, not only because
it is inconsistent with what he is known to have said, but mostly because it is
a nonsensical statement and Jefferson is not
known for nonsense.
Do these “patriots” dissent on increasing minimum-wage?
Global warming? Universal healthcare? Higher taxes? Daring to ask about higher
taxes? Do they dissent with the politicians for whom they voted? Are they so
patriotic as to vote for politicians with whom they dissent? Of course not;
that would be silly. No, such “patriotic” dissent only applies to anti-war
protesting and personal hatred of George W. Bush.
It seems the left has difficulty with patriotism, as Webster
defines it. Some talk about loving their country, but need these new
pseudo-definitions to give them enough wiggle room to pretend something
irrelevant they were already doing makes them patriotic.
Barack Obama
Patriotism, being a form of love, cannot be measured or
quantified. Therefore, if someone claims to love America patriotically, we must take
their word. After all, only God can look at the heart. All we can do is look at
the outward appearance.
For instance, Senator Obama is the Democrat’s presidential
nominee. They have decided he is their best and brightest example of
everything they believe, stand for and practice. Surely, he is the most patriotic
of them all, and his patriotism is representative of theirs.
Barack loves his wife Michelle. Yet would he have sat in the
pews so unmoved for decades in a church where the pastor constantly points out
her flaws, personally? Would he fail to notice him saying “God d--- Michelle!”?
Let’s pretend he was away that week; do you think he might have heard about it?
If she told him out about it years later, would he criticize her for “looping”
that one quote, and lecture her on where he’s coming from because of his race,
and that he could no more disown him than he could disown his grandfather?
What if William Ayers had bombed someone in Michelle’s
family? Would he introduce him to their daughters as “a man in the
neighborhood”? An “education reformer”? A “courageous individual who rescues
hope from despair”? Would his little girls feel safe? Could they trust Daddy to
protect them?
Did Barack woo Michelle by wining and dining her at her
expense, while telling her he would take her money along with all her family
had saved up and “spread the wealth” because she’s not redistributing fairly?
And if she had the audacity to ask a question, would his sidekick laugh at her
for having the American dream, while government cronies investigate her to
shame her for not being properly licensed? Would he make himself look cool to
his misogynous peers in San Francisco
by talking about her ignorance in clinging to her religion? Would he attend
lavish parties at the estates of her fair-weather friends and publically humiliate
her, boasting “I’m going to make you a great lady. Why don’t you speak a second
language? Why can’t you be more like socialist Europa or communist Chyna?
They’re sexy; they’re cool.” Would he remove his ring at these girls’ homes?
Had Barack wooed Michelle in that manner, Oprah would be
insisting she have her head examined. Had Michelle Obama suffered such verbal
abuse from the pulpit, at her husband’s insistence and complicity, she would
not have called it “love”; she would have called a lawyer (and not some
constitutional lawyer inventing new imaginary “rights” out of thin air – that
somehow magically undermine her rights). No, Barack is protective of his
wife Michelle, shielding her from anyone who dares to ask an impertinent
question. Suddenly, dissent is far from “patriotic”; it is a racist personal
attack.
Had Obama put his children in harm’s way like that, would
the nation be fawning over him or would everyone be screaming for child
protective services to tear them away from him and lock him up forever?
Fortunately, Obama is a fellow traveler, so his daughters were never in any
danger in Ayers’ living room; the terrorist Obama thought was “reformed” is
only dangerous to other patriotic Americans and their children.
It appears Obama does indeed care for, protect and even
zealously defend those he loves. Sadly, it also appears America is not
one of those.
It feels like we are watching a Jerry Springer episode entitled “America: low self-worth, no self-respect; needs a manipulative lover” or “Politicians who hate America
and the voters who love them”.
The Cinderella Story
The list goes on and on, but let me wrap it up so simply even kids watching Disney could get it (alas, intellectual pinheads
probably won’t):
Suppose Cinderella could vote on her new stepmother. She may
not know whether the stepmother is wicked or not, but the ugly stepsisters are
not nice, and treat her cruelly. “Dad, can we talk? How about you just get a good life insurance policy instead?”
(Note to all idiots, useful or otherwise: unlike those who trashed Palin’s daughter, I am in no way slamming Obama’s daughters any more than I am implying he will marry George W. Bush. The ugly stepdaughters are
Ayers, Wright, Alinsky, Marx, Stalin, Castro, Chavez, ACORN, and more – get a clue!)
The Enemy of My Enemy
“The enemy of my enemy is my friend.” – Unknown
This ancient military axiom was the reason we allied
ourselves with the Soviet Union to defeat Nazi Germany – even as we geared up for
a cold war that would last longer and cost more. But to defeat the immediate
threat, we had to set that aside until victory was achieved.
But if the enemy of my enemy is my friend, what does that
say about the friend of my enemy? Why are so many Americans eager to defend
those who mean us harm, those who speak ill of us, or simply look down their
noses at us? Why is it more palatable to condemn Joe the Plumber than Hugo
Chavez? Why are there fewer preconditions to meet with Ahmadinejad than Fox News? Why are we expected to
“understand” radical Muslim/communist/European hatred for America, but not Americans’ love for America?
Why must we empathize with Wright’s condemnation of America rather than acknowledge how America
continues to be the country everyone else yearns to come to?
Many on the left constantly find themselves distancing –
ever so slightly, rhetorically – from those who overtly hate America and mean it harm. But they
never come out and condemn America’s
enemies with the same passion, zeal and vitriol they express when condemning
their fellow Americans who “dissent” with their views.
Who do they consider enemies? And who do they treat as
friends?
The Last Refuge
“Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.” – Samuel Johnson
Again, this quote
is clever, but oversimplified. Brevity is the soul of wit (Shakespeare) but the
people who buy into the “dissent” mentality are also vulnerable to reading it
as “patriotism = scoundrel”. Of course the flag has been abused to cover up
legitimate grievances. As a result, politicians are reluctant to criticize
another’s patriotism (but many are quick to be “offended” at having their
patriotism questioned – whether or not it is actually addressed).
Even commentators
such as Rush Limbaugh, who are not personally
running for office, often temper discussions with qualifiers such as, “I’m not
questioning your patriotism; I’m questioning your judgment.” These qualifiers
attempt to discuss really bad ideas that have extremely unpatriotic
consequences but which need to be discussed as bad ideas rather than defending
overzealous protestation against questions of one’s patriotism which were not
actually asked but come through in the bad ideas proposed against one’s
country.
I, however, am
not focusing on the bad ideas in this essay. There’s plenty of discussion on
that already, despite widespread apathy among those who should be examining
platforms and history.
I am
focusing specifically on patriotism. On love of one’s country – America, for those “citizens of the world” who
resent borders, national identity, and, well, America.
And while I
cannot presume to know what’s in someone’s heart, I can make an intelligent
appraisal of one’s actions. Webster’s definition of patriotism includes not
only loving one’s country, an abstract concept, but it also includes zealously
supporting and defending it and its interests. Too often, we see more zealous support and defense of America’s
enemies.
It is clear that
Obama, and many like him, tolerate treatment of America that they would never
tolerate towards their loved ones. And that kind of tolerance is, by
definition, unpatriotic.
John McCain
This is not a resounding
endorsement of Senator McCain. He has shown some serious flaws in his judgment.
Not the least of which is his foolish approach of “reaching across the aisle”
to work with opponents such as Senator Obama, whose unpatriotic tolerance of America’s
enemies is intolerable. The friend of the friend of my enemy… gets to be a bit
tangled.
McCain is quick
to distance himself from anyone who says anything that might remotely be
construed as offensive (for example, “Barack Hussein Obama”). But surprisingly,
even though he knows lots of people (one of Obama’s explanations/excuses) I’ve never seen him linked to anyone who’s bombed the Pentagon, stomped on the
flag, or preached “God d--- America!”
For all his faults, and lo they are many, John McCain loves his country. And he zealously supports and defends it and its interests.
John McCain is,
by definition, a patriot.