Matthews opened the segment by playing a clip of the moment when Romney asked Obama if he had characterized the September 11 attack in Libya as terrorism on the day after the attack. Rather than respond to the question, Obama replied simply “proceed.”
“It was the face off in High Noon. And the President of the United States was Gary Cooper.” said Lipton. “At
Matthews then played a clip of the confrontation between Obama and Romney over the GOP nominee’s assertion that permits for energy exploration on federal lands is down over the last four years. As crosstalk between the two candidates died down, Romney spoke over the president attempting to get his point across and told Obama “you’ll get your chance” to respond.
“I don’t think he understands the Constitution of the United States,” said Matthews after watching the exchange. “He’s the President of the United States. You don’t say, ‘you’ll get your chance.’”
“If Mitt Romney were the president and Barack Obama were the challenger, and these roles were reversed, and Obama treated Romney – the president in this construct – the way he was treated, you would have heard an outcry from coast to coast and you would never, ever hear the end of it,” Lipton said, inexplicably. “It is rude. It’s inexcusable. I think it’s a very, very sad day when the presidency, which has been under fire since Nixon — and particular this president — can be treated this way by someone who is an American citizen.”
“I think it’s a lack of
“He looked down at him as a person,” said Matthews. Lipton said that he would not go that far, saying that he could not read Romney’s mind. “Is he looking down on the president? I wouldn’t be at all surprised,” Lipton said. “There are reasons for it.”
“Many of them bad,” Matthews concluded.
The pathology of this conversation should be self-evident. When the president becomes iconic – a figure that is deemed by his supporters to be beyond criticism — there is a dangerous dynamic at play.
Watch the segment below via MSNBC:
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