Banner ad

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Barbara Boxer: awfully full of herself

Barbara Boxer exhibited her arrogance yesterday in a hearing when an Army brigadier general was testifying before her committee and he made the dread mistake of calling her ma'am.
The feisty California lawmaker felt the need to remind an Army brigadier general of that fact Tuesday during a hearing before her Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, where the military officer testifying had the apparent gall to call Boxer "ma'am."

Brig. Gen. Michael Walsh, with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, was testifying on the Louisiana coastal restoration process in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He began to answer one of Boxer's questions with "ma'am" when Boxer immediately cut him off.

"You know, do me a favor," an irritated Boxer said. "Could say 'senator' instead of 'ma'am?'"

"Yes, ma'am," Walsh interjected.

"It's just a thing, I worked so hard to get that title, so I'd appreciate it, yes, thank you," she said.

"Yes, senator," he responded.

However, Walsh surely meant no disrespect, as military protocol advises that officers may use "sir" or "ma'am" when addressing anybody higher than them on the chain of command.

"We would call them 'sir' or 'ma'am' or 'senator such-and-such'," Army spokesman Lt. Col. Nathan Banks said. Banks said any of those terms would be "appropriate" when addressing a senator.

According to one guide, the Navy and Coast Guard typically use "mister" or "miss" to address officers below the rank of commander, and "sir" or "ma'am," or a specific title, to address anyone at that rank or higher.

"You can never go wrong by using 'Sir' or 'Ma'am,' but it is a nice touch if you can properly address a senior officer," says the guide, Military Protocol: Uniformed Services.

Tuesday's hearing was hardly the first time a military officer used those terms during sworn testimony.

The same day at a Senate Armed Services subcommittee hearing, two Navy officials repeatedly referred to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., with the title, "sir."

"Yes, sir," Navy Vice Adm. Bernard McCullough said when answering questions.

Wicker raised no objections.
It's a sign of what a small person she is. She is too concerned with getting her title straight and demanding what she considers a suitable sign of respect. She also demonstrates how little contact she must have had with members of the military. Otherwise, she would have been quite used to being addressed as ma'am and hearing the male senators addressed as sir.

As Allahpundit wrote,
Is Boxer’s ego so fragile and her method so imperious that she’d publicly humiliate a guy whom she has no reason to believe is being anything less than respectful?
Barbara Boxer - no grace whatsoever.

Only a graceless, very small person would pull rank like over a brigadier general.

6 comments:

Donald Douglas said...

American Power tracked-back with, "Did Boxer Call Him 'General Walsh'?".

Scott said...

I guess he could follow the Star Fleet Academy protocol, and call anyone senior to him "sir," regardless of gender, race, or species. Senator Boxer seems alien to me.

tfhr said...

Scott,

I think Senator Boxer could pull off that Princess Leia twin danish side-mounted hair bun look. "Princess Boxer"?

Jeff Hall said...

tthr, every boy who grew up dreaming of Princess Leia is going to read your post and go "Aaauhg!"

Pat Patterson said...

Before or after the mad dash to the bathroom? Instead of Star Trek I thought the resemblance to Alia Arteides was more apt.

http://tinyurl.com/mhelma

Skay said...

You are right Pat--perfect likeness!