Posted on 07/05/2015 6:15:02 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Theres nothing more American than Fourth of July cookouts, fireworks and political speeches, especially as we enter another presidential campaign season. For politicians, nothing suits the holiday better than invocations of our nations Founders. Not all such exclamations are cut from the same red-white-and-blue cloth, however. Pay close attention as the candidates praise the Spirit of 76, and youll see that theyre not taking a break from partisan rhetoric, but engaging in politics at its most elemental level. Heres a guide to some founding-related phrases and what they really mean today.
Founding Fathers
Nothing says Im a conservative more than this phrase. Thats because it evokes an image of rich white guys who didnt like taxes (until they had to wage a war, in which case they raised them to levels unimagined under British rule, but thats another story). Warren G. Harding coined the term, and since 2000, it has been used almost exclusively by Republicans. The more conservative the candidate, the more likely youll hear it. Rand Paul, George Pataki, Scott Walker, Mike Huckabee, Ted Cruz, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry have all flogged the Founding Fathers. But dont expect to hear this from Hillary Clinton: She uses Founders instead.
A more perfect union
This is the liberal response to Founding Fathers. From the Constitutions preamble, the phrase originally expressed the hope that the Constitution would be an improvement over its predecessor, the Articles of Confederation. Today, liberals use it to imply that the nation and perhaps even the Constitution werent immaculately conceived and stand in need of reform. Youll encounter it especially when politicians want to take on large issues such as race or the increasingly prominent role of big money in politics. Expect to hear this from Clinton and especially openly liberal presidential candidate Bernie Sanders,
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
When politicians invoke Lincoln or Freedom or Sovereignty or The Founding Fathers, they are not invoking the things named. They are calling out stereotypes they hope to be associated with. Feel good about (stereotype here) and you’ll feel good about me.
Like anything, mostly BS so low info voters will rally around them. Not always, but mostly. And 8 times out of 10 they seem to get it wrong.
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