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Lamont and Trump like heroes who don’t get captured. Greenwich aristocrat denigrates Nathan Hale.

Early in the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump belittled John McCain’s military service in Vietnam. “He’s not a war hero,” said Trump of McCain at a Family Leadership Summit. “He was a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren’t captured.” McCain spent 5 1/2 years in a North Vietnamese prison camp after being shot down over Hanoi while on his 23rd flight mission. When the Communist government of North Vietnam tried to score a propaganda victory by releasing McCain after his father became commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, McCain refused to violate the POW code of accepting release before fellow prisoners who had been captured earlier.

Governor Ned Lamont sounded a lot like Trump recently when he spoke of replacing state hero Nathan Hale with lexicographer Noah Webster. Hale was hanged as spy by the British in 1776. Lamont observed that Hale was a “nice enough guy who was captured after a week at the inn. If he had two lives to give for his country, he would have been a spy for us for two weeks.”

Lamont seems to think of himself as a public personality in addition to being governor. He often compares himself to the title character in the series “Ted Lasso”. Now the governor has reduced Hale to material for the Democrat’s strained comic act. If Lamont does believe Hale is no longer worthy of being Connecticut’s state hero, then the governor has revealed something far more unsettling.

Hale was a distinguished student at Yale and joined the Connecticut militia in 1775. He fought in the Battle of New York when the British overwhelmed the Continental Army, forcing George Washington’s troops to flee across the Hudson River under cover of a thick fog.

Washington needed intelligence on British movements and asked for volunteers to disguise themselves and return to New York. Hale volunteered, entered New York, and was caught by the British. They executed him by hanging on September 22nd. He is famously said to have declared at the gallows, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.”

Webster, born in West Hartford in 1758, was a teacher who became an important dictionary and textbook writer, publisher and entrepreneur. Webster was also one of the Federalists’ busiest proponents of private wealth over personal virtue as the foundation of a free nation. Webster’s American history textbook did not mention slavery. He is a curious figure for Lamont to champion as a means to denigrate Nathan Hale.

Published March 16, 2023.