Friday, September 2, 2011

update: Five of 12 NASCAR Drivers Invited To Meet With Obama At White House Decline Offer…


Bitter clingers.
(SB Nation) — President Barack Obama will honor NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson and the 11 other Chase drivers from last year in a White House ceremony on Wednesday – but nearly half of the 2010 playoff contenders won’t be there.
NASCAR said Thursday that five drivers – Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, Kevin Harvick and Tony Stewart – will not be attending the White House visit due to “schedule conflicts.”
They must be very busy people. Regardless of one’s political views, the president is still the president – and an opportunity to speak with the leader of the free world is a rare and special one.
You’d think whatever photo shoots or sponsor appearances these drivers have lined up on Wednesday afternoon – if that’s indeed the reason – could be rescheduled. After all, this is the President of the United States we’re talking about here.
For a sport that prides itself on patriotism, having so many drivers turn down the president’s invitation simply seems strange.
Johnson, Denny Hamlin, Jeff Gordon, Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, Jeff Burton and Matt Kenseth will attend.
Note:
NASCAR will be arriving in New Hampshire September 24, 25, 2011.  Loudon, NH is just a stone's throw away from our home and we can actually sit in our front yard to watch as their planes arrive before the race.


Folks who follow NASCAR's races will be pouring in all week, with their campers and the two races per year in New Hampshire are two of the state's largest events and quite an aid to NH's tourism season.


Yes, NASCAR and its crews do take pride in its patriotism and so do its fans!  However, what one individual considers a "patriotic act" as in this case of a photo-op with this president, others clearly refuse for the same reason - patriotism.  Not choosing to have a photo taken, standing next to a president who has betrayed the core values of Americans and its allies, choosing instead to bow to nations that supported those who attacked the United States on Sept. 11th, is an act of patriotism.

BravoGreg Biffle, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, Kevin Harvick and Tony Stewart -  and welcome to New Hampshire! Now, "start your engines" .....
LOUDON, NH - SEPTEMBER 19:  Fans fill the grandstands during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on September 19, 2010 in Loudon, New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Motor Speedway




Tony Steward - car #14

Tony Stewart 


UPDATE:


September 2, 2011

NASCAR drivers give thumbs down to presidential visit

Rick Moran
AMERICAN THINKER

This is interresting from a cultural perspective. If you're going to ridicule Americans for loving NASCAR as many liberals do, don't expect their stars to lend their names and faces to a photo op for a liberal president.
SB Nation's Jeff Gluck is clueless:
President Barack Obama will honor NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson and the 11 other Chase drivers from last year in a White House ceremony on Wednesday - but nearly half of the 2010 playoff contenders won't be there.
NASCAR said Thursday that five drivers - Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, Kevin Harvick and Tony Stewart - will not be attending the White House visit due to "schedule conflicts."
Star-divide
They must be very busy people. Regardless of one's political views, the president is still the president - and an opportunity to speak with the leader of the free world is a rare and special one.
You'd think whatever photo shoots or sponsor appearances these drivers have lined up on Wednesday afternoon - if that's indeed the reason - could be rescheduled. After all, this is the President of the United States we're talking about here.
For a sport that prides itself on patriotism, having so many drivers turn down the president's invitation simply seems strange.
The sneering condenscension of the left for "NASCAR Dads" has not gone unnoticed among the ranks of drivers - most of whom have a pretty good PR sense when it comes to their fans. Like C&W singers, the bond between a driver and his fans is very close and it is not surprising that since most fans of NASCAR have strong feelings against the president, that drivers would forgo the opportunity to be a prop in  his re-election campaign.
As for Gluck's "patriotism" shot - is he really equating patriotism with being an extra in a campaign commercial for a candidate they don't support? Besides, I don't recall hearing that argument during the Bush years when dozens of lefties from every walk of life dissed Bush by either turning down invitations, or by showing up and "speaking truth to power." Politics is politics and what's good for one side, is good for the other.
You go, boys.