<\/a>I don\u2019t know why Rudy Giuliani said what he did<\/a> about President Obama, but it was just plain dumb. Speaking at a fund-raiser for Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, Giuliani said, “I do not believe, and I know this is a horrible thing to say, but I do not believe that the president loves America.\u201d<\/p>\n Love is one of the least quantifiable words in the English language, and for Giuliani to question anyone\u2019s love for anyone or anything is not an act of reason. How many times has he taken the vows of marriage and professed his love for a woman, only to have it end miserably in a bitter divorce? Some may say that Giuliani did not show strong commitment or sound judgment, but few if any questioned whether he ever loved any of his wives.<\/p>\n Questioning anyone\u2019s love of country or patriotism is in many ways an act of desperation. Since you can\u2019t prove love, accusing someone of not loving something means that you must be upset with that person for something else but don\u2019t want to say it. With Giuliani on Obama, we can let our imaginations fly. Does he not like the president because he is \u201cof the other party?\u201d Is it because Obama seems comfortable within his skin, where Giuliani may have doubts about his own self-worth? Is it because the President is black? I don\u2019t know the answers to these questions because they too cannot be proved. What I do know is that for Giuliani to question the President\u2019s love for his country is just plain dumb.<\/p>\n The wise thing to do after having said something ill-advised is to try to stop the hemorrhaging. That apparently is not the path that Giuliani has chosen to take. As CNN reports<\/a>, \u201cRudy wouldn\u2019t be Rudy if he backed down.\u201d He has repeatedly stood by his words.<\/p>\n One of the problems that Giuliani has is that, upon taking an errant step, there are few allies to suggest to him that he might want the reconsider the path that he is taking. As Politico\u2019s Mike Allen reports<\/a> a Democratic pollster saying,<\/p>\n This seems like such a no-brainer. Come out, strongly criticize Giuliani’s words, and say that’s not what the Republican Party stands for: I might disagree with President Obama’s policies, but I have no doubt he loves his country. And be the first of the 2016 R’s to say it. When will these guys get it? Scott Walker just stood there.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Walker just stood ther, and Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal called to congratulate Giuliani.<\/p>\n