The balance of the segment was spent mocking Romney’s tortured torch metaphor, a torch that World War II vets can’t hold up as high anymore, so we have to seize it, but it’s not America’s torch, it’s the torch of freedom. O’Donnell tries his best to figure out what the
O’Donnell could have saved himself some time on that score if he had paid a little more attention to his intro.
O’Donnell’s intro focused on Mitt Romney’s Vietnam War “activism,” in which he actively demonstrated in favor of the draft, shortly before avoiding that draft by volunteering to knock on doors in France in search of Mormon converts. That mission, Romney said earlier this year, was made “tough” by the presence of American troops in Vietnam.
Lawrence’s assessment of Romney, as that rare draft-dodger who actively demonstrated in favor of the war he was trying to avoid, contains the answer to the Romney’s history of non-service in the military. “No honorable draft dodger I know,” O’Donnell said, “urged other young men to submit to the draft in his place. To go to Vietnam in his place. To die in his place. I know of no one other than Mitt Romney whose conscience was so twisted.”
The key words there are “in his place.” As I’ve explained before, there&
Mitt Romney didn’t support sending others to die in his place, because fighting and dying for his country was never Romney’s place.
Here’s the video, from The Last Word:
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