By Peter Beinart
The Atlantic - Feb 3 2014
rom the moment Barack Obama appeared on the national stage, conservatives have been searching for the best way to describe the danger he poses to America's traditional way of life. Secularism? Check. Socialism? Sure. A tendency to apologize for America's greatness overseas? That, too. But how to tie them all together?
Gradually, a unifying theme took hold.
"At the heart of the debate over Obama's program," declared Rich Lowry
and Ramesh Ponnuru in an influential 2010 National Review cover story,
is "the survival of American exceptionalism." Finally, a term broad and
historically resonant enough to capture the magnitude of the threat. A
year later, Newt Gingrich published A Nation Like No Other: Why American Exceptionalism Matters, in which he warned that "our government has strayed alarmingly" from the principles that made America special. Mitt Romney deployed the phrase frequently
in his 2012 campaign, asserting that President Obama "doesn't have the
same feelings about American exceptionalism that we do." The term, which
according to Factiva appeared in global English-language
publications fewer than 3,000 times during the Bush Administration, has
already appeared more than 10,000 times since Obama became president.
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