Andrew Sullivan had a little blurb about Sarah Palin's photo with the American Flag draped over a chair. This was a followup to another entry that linked to a Runner's World profile of Palin as a runner (the political bickering in the comments is predictable and predictably irritating, but some people evidently go in for that sort of thing). Within that RW profile is a photo gallery of Palin in her gear pretending to prepare for a run.
God Almighty, where do I start?
I'll start where I started reading, I guess.
Andrew Sullivan accused her of "brandish[ing] Trig as a political pawn at every opportunity." I really don't think anything written in the profile was political, so having Trig in a few pictures was hardly using him as a political pawn. If it were some other celebrity with a small child, I wouldn't be offended to see that parent pictured with a kid in a jogging stroller. Good for her for exercising, and setting an example for her children.
The photos remind me of the sort of embarrassing cheesecake you'd find in grandpa's workshop. A little too new to be kitchy, kept too precious so you know grandpa's thinking prurient thoughts and the whole experience just makes you shudder.
The flag draped over the chair was offensive to me. I consider myself a patriotic American. I happen also to be pretty liberal, but I don't see patriotism as anathema to liberalism, or vice versa--I also want to stress that patriotism goes beyond how we treat our symbols. Anyway, if there's any truth from the recent Todd S. Purdum's article in Vanity Fair about Sarah Palin's past as a predictor of her future, then I can't say I'm surprised by her carelessness with the flag. To quote Purdum, "Alaskans of every age and station, of every race and political stripe, unself-consciously refer to every other place on earth with a single word: Outside." In other words, if he's right, she considers herself an Alaskan first, and an "American" second.
What offended me more in her portrait with the flag on the chair was her "Blue Star" flag in the window, on the left. Literally, on one hand she's proud of her soldier, on the other, fuck the flag. I question her patriotism, but again, if Purdum's article is accurate, her allegiances lie soley with herself.
And that's what really bugs me more about the current crop of Republicans: their cynical branding of themselves as more patriotic, more American than thou, and to prove it, they have the lapel pins, they have a flag in their Runner's World photoshoots, and as Bill Mahar has so cleverly pointed out, they talk about family values with their second wives (Reagan, McCain et al). If we just take them at face value, this image says, everything will be OK. And if we question anything of their message, we're threatening their First Amendment rights (O'Reilly, Limbaugh).
As long as at least 50% of the voters exercise a little critical thinking, I couldn't be more pleased than to see these cynical jerks scrambling to step on one another to declare themselves the leader of the Republican party. If we're not careful, though...

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