Actually amongst the so-called intellectual classes in the USA, there has been a sort of anti-patriotic sentiment. Being patriotic -- from doing little things like being at attention during the national anthem to larger commitments, like taking on military service -- is scoffed upon by the teachers, professors, and academics, as well as artists, journalists, and popular entertainers (country music and talk radio being the exceptions).
This isn't so wrong except that rather than offering any sort of viable positive alternatives to the status quo, our intelligentsia churn out a steady stream of banal, cynical, irony. Which dissuades the best and the brightest from contributing and ultimately leaves us with the leaders we deserve: cynical, dumb, and lazy.
In the end it breaks us. Fifty years ago, a child's ambition might be to become a scientist, astronaut, doctor or senator -- contributors to society and the greater good, to be a good American. But nowadays kids are looking to develop computer games, be on reality shows, or maybe become personal injury attorneys. And a big contributor to this breakdown of our culture is the shift towards the cynical, sarcastic, and ironical.
Tell a ten-year old to be a good American and you'll get a Bart Simpson chuckle and probably a swear word in response.
Any thinking person can see the obvious irony in Chris's picture. It's common and demoralizing. Perhaps it gets a pat on the head -- acceptance amongst art peers -- but so what?
Maybe it's a start of a larger project if Chris digs deeper. But as a stand alone image, it's ehh, a tosser.