I think you misinterpreted my response of
as meaning that I could point out presidents who had said something similar in content to what Obama said (or what some have interpreted the content to be). That is not what I meant. I was referring to the broader topic of presidents who had been taken to task over matters of semantics, or poor wording."I can go back and point out numerous examples of the same thing happening with every president who opened his mouth."
After that I believe things just snow balled.

So yes, we were talking about two different things more than once.
In short...my points:
1) Obama may have chose poor wording, but I don't believe that indicates in any way an attempt to downplay either antisemitism or the dangers of extremism.
2) Obama has chosen a side (Rip argued otherwise earlier) in this battle and he's clearly not sitting it out like some personification off Switzerland.
3) The choice not to tie all of Islam to extremists within their ranks by wording it as "Islamic Extremists" in public discourse is a calculated move on the administration's part that is intended to keep the larger Islamic world from falling victim to the belief that we are at war with all of Islam, a common recruiting tool used by extremists. It also helps in our dealing with our Muslim allies by making it clear we are making the distinction between Islam and extremists.