I may regret posting here, but this has really been bothering me, so here goes. To me, the problem with what Ms. Sheehan, and also Mrs. Young, did, is they violated the rules of decorum of the United States Capitol. Of course they had every right to protest (or show their support) anywhere else they pleased: outside the Capitol, in front of the White House, in Crawford, even in their own front yards. However, it is not allowed in the gallery of the U.S. Capitol. It bothers me that many people today think that because they disagree with, or dislike our government, and/or the people who hold the high offices within our government, they do not have to show respect towards those institutions. The U.S. Government, along with its high offices (President, VP, SC Justice, Congressman) are much bigger than any one person and all are entitled to a certain amount of respect. When you are in the Capitol building, you are expected to behave in a certain way out of respect for the institution, much the same as how appropriate clothing (no shorts) is expected when visting the Vatican, or how silence is expected of visitors to Arlington during changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknowns. You may not be Catholic, or you may not care about the unknown men buried at Arlington, but you are still expected to follow their rules of decorum. Upon meeting the President (I know some of you perish the thought, but stay with me.), he should be addressed as "Mr. President" or "Sir" out of respect for the office of the President of the United States, whether you like GWB, or detest him. It drives me crazy when news organizations refer to him as "Mr. Bush", not because it is disrespectful of the man, but of the office he holds. It reminds me of a story I once heard about Ronald Regan. He refused to ever enter the Oval Office wearing anything other than a suit and a tie. When asked about this, he remarked that he didn't want to disrespect the office of the President. He knew that the office was much bigger than one man. The same goes for the Capitol of the United States. It is more than just a building; it is an institution where the bodies of our government come together to work to uphold the ideals laid out for us by the Constitution and our founding fathers. The people who gather in that building may try to promote policies or have personalities that we find objectionable, and we have the right and responsibility to speak out against them. But out of respect for the institution, those protests should not take place in the gallery during a State of the Union address.
There, I've said my peace. It may not be as eloquent as I intended (Things always sound better in my head than when I write them down.), but the increasing lack of civility and appropriate behavior among many people in this country is something that bothers me greatly, and I feel that is the true crux of this whole situation. Just because we have the "right" to do something, doesn't mean there aren't situations where acting on that right is completely inappropriate.