Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

'Tanned, Rested, Ready' Jindal Swings At 'Hyphenated Americans'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jul, 2015 11:54 AM
    Stung by media criticism that he is distancing himself from his Indian heritage, Bobby Jindal's presidential campaign is hitting hard on his 'hyphenated Americans' theme with T-shirts touting him as "tanned, rested, ready".
     
    The $20 official T-shirt which is supposed to be a nod to Jindal's Indian heritage and his dislike of "hyphenated American" modifiers as well as a play on a famous Richard Nixon line, is apparently his way of getting back at the "liberal media."
     
    Way back in 1988, a T-shirt sold at the Young Republican convention in Seattle depicted "a smiling Richard M. Nixon" with the slogan "He's tan, rested and ready," according to the New York Times.
     
    "The liberal media said, 'There's not much Indian left in Bobby Jindal,' so we made shirts to mock them," Jindal, the first Indian-American governor and the 13th Republican candidate in the 2016 White House race, tweeted Tuesday.
     
    The line is an apparent reference to a quote from Pearson Cross, a political science professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette who is writing a book on him, in a Washington Post profile of Jindal.
     
    "The liberal narrative that developed this week was disgusting:
     
    apparently Bobby isn't brown enough for them," said Jindal campaign manager Timmy Teepell as cited by The Advocate newspaper.
     
     
    Jindal's presidential super PAC - a supposedly independent political action committee that may raise unlimited sums of money and engage in unlimited political spending independently of a campaign-also criticised "hyphenated Americans."
     
    The first television advertisement released by "Believe Again" PAC in Iowa, the state from where presidential campaigns of both parties traditionally begin, uses clips of Jindal's campaign launch suggesting that the use of "hyphenated Americans" is divisive.
     
    "I'm done with all this talk about hyphenated Americans. We are not Indian-Americans, Irish-Americans, African-Americans, rich Americans, or poor Americans - we are all Americans," Jindal says in the "We are All Americans" ad.
     
    Jindal is returning to Iowa this week to hold various events through Saturday, including participating in at least two July 4 parades and tours of local factories.
     
    Meanwhile, Twitter went wild Tuesday asking Bobby Jindal questions with the #AskBobby hashtag after his political action committee encouraged people to ask the presidential candidate questions.
     
    The hashtag, which is used to track trending topics, quickly became among the top 10-most used topics on the service by Tuesday afternoon, according to NOLA.com.
     
    But going by a sampling, apparently this was not what the Jindal campaign was hoping for.
     
    Ben Moser @benjaminmoser Can you tell me the difference between Obama's "illegal executive orders" and your "totes legit executive orders?"
     
    #AskBobby
     
    LoveWins @word_34 - #AskBobby Would you consider this the first sign of the apocalypse or the second sign?
     
    NonProphetess @nonprophetess - Is the cognitive dissonance of having a biology degree and being viciously anti-science overwhelming?
     
     
    Brent Rogers @BrntRgrs - Who is your favorite Supreme Court justice? I'm guessing Scalia. Did I get it right? #AskBobby.
     
    Scalia was one of the judges who gave a dissenting opinion in the Supreme Court ruling allowing same-sex marriages across the US.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'
    The two countries also inked 13 agreements, including in the sphere of air services, cyber security and transfer of sentenced prisoners.

    Modi Visit: India, Mongolia Stress 'Bonds Of Hearts And Minds'

    India Won’t Forget Kargil War: Musharraf

    Recalling the Kargil conflict of 1999 between India and Pakistan, former military strongman Pervez Musharraf on Sunday said New Delhi would never be able to forget the three-month-long battle when his armed forces "grabbed India by the throat".

    India Won’t Forget Kargil War: Musharraf

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday tried his hand at the morin khuur, a traditional two-stringed fiddle, that was gifted to him by Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj.

    Modi Plays Mongolian Fiddle, Strikes New Chord In Ties

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child
    Harman Singh, 22, did not think twice before removing his turban to help the five-year-old who was hit by a car on way to school in Wellington

    Sikh Man In New Zealand Breaks Religious Protocol, Removes His Turban To Help Injured Child

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs
    Sikhs in Australia have expressed outrage after a daily published a cartoon of a Sikh man smoking a cigar, a media report said on Friday.

    Australian Newspaper Shows A Sikh Smoking Cigar, Creates Outrage, Protest Among Australian Sikhs

    Nine Indian Students Win Awards At Prestigious International Science, Engineering Fair

    Nine Indian Students Win Awards At Prestigious International Science, Engineering Fair
    The top prize, the $75,000 Gordon E. Moore Award, went to Raymond Wang, 17, of Canada.

    Nine Indian Students Win Awards At Prestigious International Science, Engineering Fair