NEWS BLOGS
NEWS BLOGS
category: news
03 Nov 2008

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama’s grandmother passed away late yesterday at the age of 86.  She had been battling cancer.  Obama had taken some time off from his grueling campaign to spend time with her at the end of last month.  He had described her as “the cornerstone of his family.”  Read more…

category: news
03 Nov 2008

 

We’ve been hearing Conservatives and Republicans endorsing Barack Obama left and right.  In the past, I had never understood how people who vote one way their entire lives could all of a sudden change their minds and vote for the other side.  This, at least, is a great way to look at things if you’re Republican but can’t bring yourself to vote for John McCain.

“If I were to give one reason why I believe electing Barack Obama is essential tomorrow, it would be an end to this dark, lawless period in American constitutional government. The domestic cultural and political reasons for an Obama presidency remain as strong as they were when I wrote “Goodbye To All That” over a year ago. His ability to get us past the culture war has been proven in this campaign, in the generation now coming of age that will elect him if they turn out, in Obama’s staggering ability not to take the bait. His fiscal policies are too liberal for me - I don’t believe in raising taxes, I believe in cutting entitlements for the middle classes as the way to fiscal balance. I don’t believe in “progressive taxation”, I support a flat tax. I don’t want to give unions any more power. I’m sure there will be moments when a Democratic Congress will make me wince. But I also understand that money has to come from somewhere, and it will not come in any meaningful measure from freezing pork or the other transparent gimmicks advertized in advance by McCain. McCain is not serious on spending. But he is deadly serious in not touching taxes. So, on the core question of debt, on bringing America back to fiscal reason, Obama is still better than McCain. If I have to take an ideological hit to head toward fiscal solvency, I’ll put country before ideology.

[…]

But I do know that he [Obama] will handle these wars with reason, with prudence and with care. Those are three qualities absent from the White House for eight years. And I do know that Obama’s very person, and what he symbolizes, will do more to restore America’s image and repair our global public relations than any single measure any new administration will be able to accomplish.[…]”

May the best man win.  Read more…

category: news
03 Nov 2008

You gotta give the Republicans credit for not going down without a fight.  They are basically attaching Obama now for having the EXACT position as John McCain, look:

WTF?

category: news
03 Nov 2008

Jeffrey Hart becomes the latest conservative to endorse Barack Obama: A speechwriter for Reagan and Nixon—who worked at the National Review for four decades—on why he’s voting for Obama.

Read on:

Republican President George W. Bush has not been a conservative at all, either in domestic policy or in foreign policy. He invaded Iraq on the basis of abstract theory, the very thing Burke warned against. Bush aimed to turn Iraq into a democracy, “a beacon of liberty in the Middle East,” as he explained in a radio address in April 2006.

I do not recall any “conservative” publication mentioning those now memorable words “Sunni,” “Shia,” or “Kurds.” Burke would have been appalled at the blindness to history and to social facts that characterized the writing of those so-called conservatives.

Obama did understand. In his now famous 2002 speech, while he was still a state senator in Illinois, he said: “I know that a successful war against Iraq will require a US occupation of undetermined length, of undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences. I know that an invasion of Iraq without a clear rationale and without international support will fan the flames of the Middle East, and encourage the worst, rather than the best, impulses of the Arab world, and strengthen the recruitment arm of al Qaeda. I’m not opposed to all wars. I’m opposed to dumb wars.”

Burke would have agreed entirely, and admired the cogency of so few words. And one thing I know is that both Nixon and Reagan would have agreed. Both were prudential and successful conservatives. But all the organs of the conservative movement followed Bush over the cliff—as did John McCain.

More.

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