Posted on 09/04/2018 12:57:18 PM PDT by Kaslin

Before I deliver a curveball to conservative America, some insulating opinions:
The first steps of man on the moon in July 1969 deserve to be ranked among the greatest things our nation has ever done; it was emblematic of an American spirit that has been allowed to ebb;
Hollywood has been a siphoning drain on that spirit, taking numerous opportunities to minimize American exceptionalism and mitigate our greatness against decades of narratives about our sins;
And, there is a globalist fetish active today that regards the United States as merely the member on the United Nations roster between the U.K. and Uruguay, resisting assertions of our irreplaceability in the modern world.
There. Are we good? Now to the point of the moment: this flap over the First Man film depiction of the American flag planted by the Apollo 11 astronauts is one of the great overreactions in recent pop culture history.
Having now countered virtually every conservative voice I value, from punditry to elected office, Ill throw down some additional credentials. When those steps were taken on that unforgettable summer night, I was eleven. As most of America unplugged from the achievements to follow, I stayed glued to grainy TV transmissions from the lunar surface during the five moonwalking missions to follow during the following three years. My path through the radio talk show industry has given me the opportunity to interview many of these American heroes, sometimes in person.
But enough about me. Suffice it to say that when I heard the first murmurings of a film version of First Man, James Hansens 2005 biography of Armstrong, I was thrilled for multiple reasons, chief among them an opportunity for America to revisit one of humanitys greatest moments, made possible by the energy and initiative of Americans.
And therein lies the needless current controversy. Was the Apollo 11 triumph a crowning moment for American achievement specifically, or human achievement broadly?
The answer is obviously both, and those facts are not contradictory. While the first footprints on the lunar surface deserve a singular spot on the list of events since the dawn of man, there is no diverting from the fact that it was an American president who mobilized us, American scientists and engineers who made it possible, and American astronauts who achieved it.
But wait. Apparently there is something that can attack every vestige of our national pride at this conquest. It apparently withers into globalist smoke if the movie about it does not contain the moment, at 11:41 p.m. Eastern time, when Armstrong and Aldrin deployed the American flag.
That moment means everything to me. I wasnt just a human kid watching that ghostly black and white transmission from the Sea of TranquilityI was an American kid. And as they planted that flag and took that call from President Nixon and set up those experiments and gathered those moon rocks for an incomparable two and a half hours, my patriotic pride and adolescent adrenaline were both maxed out. We had, after all, beaten the Russians.
But perhaps it is worth noting that the Armstrong biography and its attendant film are not about the race to the moon in general, or geopolitics, or even American can-do grit, as in Ron Howards 1995 classic Apollo 13, about a lunar voyage that barely escaped tragedy.
First Man is about the man. The book is about the man; the movie is about the man. The chapter of the book that addresses the moonwalk contains no dramatic, profound mention of the moment that has sparked the current fuss. Shall we now savage its history-professor author as a Russian spy?
Hansens account does share details that take us directly into the nuts and bolts of the moment. The flag was designed to be pulled taut, but the support arm did not extend enough, giving the stars and stripes a permanent, wrinkly wave on the airless lunar surface; the lunar soil was so unyielding that there was concern the flag might topple; and while we have the iconic flag photo of Aldrin taken by Armstrong, there is no reciprocal flag photo of the actual first man on the moon, because as they prepared to take it, President Nixon called.
I devoured these stories when the book came out thirteen years ago, and at no point did it remotely occur to me that the author had not made a big enough deal over the lump-in-the-throat moment of the flagpole striking the lunar dirt.
Heres whats going on here: a Business Insider story last week by entertainment writer Travis Clark featured two facts with two words that proved incendiary: the flag-planting scene is omitted, and the Canadian star defends it.
The rodeo began immediately.
Ill put my #MAGA jingoism up against anyones, but I actually examined what the story appears to be. To omit can mean to delete or cut, but it can also refer to a mere absence, as in The Stones omitted Brown Sugar from their setlist. It doesnt necessarily mean it was there and then axed; it might mean it was never there. In the case of First Man, the flag deployment was never there.
But the fires were already lit among conservatives who have had it up to their eyeballs with Hollywoods aversion to patriotism, a community of which I am a proud and vocal part. Throw in Ryan Goslings defensethat his portrayal of Neil Armstrong reflects a man who viewed his feat as a human accomplishment at least as much as an American oneand the barrage of posturing was instantly unrestrainable.
All the right buttons are lit hereglobalism that seeks to dilute American greatness, and a Hollywood culture that outright denies it. But in a headlong rush to hit mash those buttons, an overreacting throng misses or ignores the fact that Armstrong did indeed view this as an achievement of enormous value to the world and to humanity as a whole.
I know because he told me.
In October 2008 at the Frontiers of Flight Museum in Dallas, I moderated a panel observing the 40thanniversary of the first manned Apollo flight. I asked about the unique mantle he wore, featuring perhaps unequaled heroism and distinction. At every turn, he deflected attention from himself and toward the team that had put him there, reflecting at length about how he had spent the years since 1969 in gratitude that he was an initial chapter in what he hoped would follow, a story of mankind exploring among the stars.
None of this obscures the American flavor of the story of Neil Armstrong, an Eagle Scout whose crew made sure the first craft to land on the moon carried the call sign of the bird that is our national emblem.
I steadfastly believe that if this story had not sent everybody off the ledge, that millions would have walked into First Man on its opening weekend in October, and virtually no one would have come out bellyaching that our nation and its flag had been impugned.
Now well never know, but heres a crazy idea. How about if everybody shuts up about this until theyve seen the movie? If, as the final credits roll, with no flashbacks to this weeks convulsions, everyone objectively feels as though our national triumph has been sullied by a dismissive Canadian director and star, then at least those views will be based on honest experience.
Ill bet that doesnt happen.
Whatever. As for me and my house we will not bother with this piece of globalist propaganda.
I won’t even watch it for free.
Not going to a theater and not paying the money in great enough numbers will give Hollywood a strong message, since money is al they understand.
P.S.; aren't there any American directors or actors who can make a movie about American history?
Mark Davis can screw his neocon self. I have never liked the sanctimonious prig.
I’m referring to the idiot who wrote this article when I say, I’m not wasting my time on this movie.
Have you seen the Trailer. They carefully omit, avoid, cover the American flag on Armstrong’s left arm. YOu can see it barely at one moment when he is walking to the capsule.
I am quite sure that every effort was made to avoid having the American flag in any scene of this movie.
The fact that our flag is not planted on the moon in this movie makes it a farce. It makes the agenda very clear to me.
It’s like hearing that the remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still was about Earthlings not protecting the environment. I didn’t watch that movie either.
Save you breath. I’m not watching this joke of movie, and I’ll bet you it will flop the first month at the box office.
If I watch a movie like Zulu, I expect to see a bit of glorification of Queen Victoria's Empire. The same should be true of a film about the first moon landing.
Good old Mark Davis the tool. We can always count on him to shill for the enemy.
When he substituted for Rush, I switched the Channel.
Not paying this director and his actors
No revisionism for me
My money my choice
Will have to watch Apollo 13 again
“We had, after all, beaten the Russians.”
FAR more importantly, we had beaten the Soviets.
So Davis is asking us to spend money on movie tickets to see this anti American drivel. Nope. Bad ticket sales will send the message loud and clear. It was a singular American achievement. No other country has done it.
If it was for BOTH, then how come the American part is missing?
JUST SAY NO! To ‘First Man’
I plan on seeing the movie. I wont pay to do so, they wont get a penny out of me. I’ll evaluate it for myself.
One of the most Patriotic moments in American history and the omit the Patriotism.
No thanks.
Globalism has no Patriots, it a big reason they have to run the country down. They can’t compete.
They can call it an achievement for the world, but not by the world.
WE did it. No one else.
Messaage to Mark Davis: No way in hell will I go to that movie, buddy boy. I’ve decided to budget that money for scratch-off tickets â¦
Sure, we subcontracted out a few things from other countries, but it is a joke and a travesty to insist that this has as much to do with the world as it does with America.
If it were a simple oversight, I could live with it.
BUT THE FACT THAT THE PEOPLE ASSOCIATED WITH THIS FILM MADE A CONSCIOUS DECISION TO EXCLUDE THE SYMBOL OF AMERICA MAKES THIS A NO GO UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.
And the author of this opinion piece can go "shut up" himself.
It’s really quite simple, despite the author’s blathering on and on — the flag was left out for no good reason.
who’s this guy??? he own stock in the movie? My husband is a huge space fan- not going to watch that film now.
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