Over at NRO, Jonah Goldberg points out the ridiculousness of the administration’s attempts to leverage the bin Laden killing to promote its domestic agenda, but in doing so, he misses a crucial point about the president’s historical confusion in the State of the Union:
Which brings us back to salmon regulations, immigration, high-speed rail, renewable energy, and other action items on Obama’s “win the future” agenda laid out in January’s address. Back then, Obama said we were in a “Sputnik moment,” referring to the time when the Soviet Union’s launch of a satellite inspired the Apollo space program and increased spending on scientific education and research.
…the most bestest part, as Brennan might say, is the simple fact that the president doesn’t know how we’ll “win the future.” In his Oval Office address on the Gulf oil spill, Obama explained that we don’t know how we’ll get where we need to go or what the destination will even look like.
But that’s the genius of the Sputnik analogy. Since, as Obama explained, “we had no idea how we would beat (the Soviets) to the moon,” it’s okay that we don’t know how to “win the future.” And that in turn means that during the weakest recovery in half a century, we can blow billions on mythical green-energy jobs, push a government takeover of health care, encourage skyrocketing gas prices, impose crippling regulations and higher taxes, and make “investments” in white elephants and high-speed salmon.
To clarify, Sputnik did not in fact give us Apollo, though it did kick off the space race, so to conflate Sputnik with not knowing how we would beat the Soviets to the moon is historically ignorant. Apollo occurred not as a direct result of Sputnik, but as a result of Yuri Gagarin beating us at getting a man into space (on April 12th, 1961, three and a half years after Sputnik), the embarrassment of the Bay of Pigs fiasco a few days later, resulting in a need to show that we were still in the game internationally, and our (final) success in getting a man into space ourselves (though not orbit) on May 5th, boosting our confidence. Twenty days after that (the fiftieth anniversary is coming up in a few days), Kennedy announced the goal of sending a man to the moon and back by the end of the decade. So even if you buy the president’s absurd logic in attempting to contextualize Apollo, it would have made much more sense to talk about our “Gagarin moment,” not our “Sputnik moment.”
And of course, as I’ve written before, anyone who uses the hackneyed phrase “If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we…” almost always makes an inappropriate analogy in the process.
If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we make appropriate analogies?
Dunno, to call it a “we had ’em by the short hairs and we gave it away” moment was a little bit too vulgar and course of speech for an officer in the United States Navy, and certainly inappropriate for the Commander-in-Chief.
Coarse. Coarse of speech. Those English teachers let me down!
Titus wins the Response of the Day award.
The last line of my linked essay: “If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we get people to stop making bad analogies with putting a man on the moon?”
Or, as the sf writer Larry Niven put it, “If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we put a man on the moon?”
Who ever reads your linked articles?
Oh, right, ask 100 American school kids “Who was Gagarin”, and how many do you think will know the answer?
How about “If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we put a woman on the moon?” Maybe that would get the feminists riled up enough to put it on the national agenda….
Oh, right, ask 100 American school kids “Who was Gagarin”, and how many do you think will know the answer?
My guess is about the same number as who knows what “Sputnik” was, other than the fact that the Messiah mentioned it in a speech a few months ago.