Author Topic: Obama in plain view.....NRO  (Read 440 times)

headhuntersix

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Obama in plain view.....NRO
« on: June 04, 2008, 08:12:38 AM »
Obama in Plain View

By the Editors

The Democrats have gone all the way. They have nominated arguably the most left-wing major party presidential nominee ever, certainly the most left-wing since George McGovern.

Obama’s victory is a repudiation not just of the Clintons personally, but of Clintonism. Bill Clinton won the presidency based on the Democratic Leadership Council model of a new kind of Democratic politics that pivoted toward the center. Obama not only has had no Sister Souljah moment, he initially embraced his Sister Souljah (in the form of Rev. Jeremiah Wright, introduced to the American public in videotaped rants). He has made no creative policy departure on par with Bill Clinton’s advocacy of welfare reform in 1992 — in fact, has made no creative policy departure at all. He is the old wine of McGovernite liberalism poured into the alluring wineskin of “hope” and “unity.”

Democrats have done Republicans the favor of nominating one of the few Democrats this side of Dennis Kucinich who could lose this year. But he still has to be slightly favored over John McCain. Political conditions are grim for Republicans. Their two-term incumbent president is scorned, many of their policies are unpopular, and people have been departing their party in droves, if polling of party ID is to be believed. On top of this, there are Obama’s formidable personal talents. Not just an inspirational speaker, he ran a campaign in the primaries that was well-organized and strategically deft. He is not to be underestimated.

If he wins with the kind of larger Democratic majorities he is likely to see in the House and Senate, he will be in the strongest position of any Democratic president since LBJ in 1964. It will not be a replay of the Clinton presidency: Clinton styled himself a moderate and after 1994 spent the rest of his presidency triangulating off a Republican congressional majority. And the current Democratic Congress is more uniformly liberal than the Democratic Congress of 1993-94. Obama will be in a position to deal conservatism some of its worst setbacks in 40 years.

Standing in the way of this fate is John McCain. He took the fight to Obama in an aggressive and well-crafted (if poorly delivered) speech last night in New Orleans. He has to try to blunt Obama’s nebulous message of change as much as possible, by pointing out that McCain himself is the one who has actually taken political risks for bipartisanship, whereas Obama’s agenda is an antique liberalism. McCain must demonstrate that Obama’s record and biography are at odds with his current political persona as the national Pied Piper of unity.

McCain also has to raise doubts about Obama’s national-security credentials — but must avoid the temptation to run exclusively on the Iraq war and the war on terrorism. He needs, above all, to show that he has a compelling domestic reform agenda, which he has been slowly developing and talked about last night.

All while facing a strong political headwind. Obama will probably shoot up in the polls now that he has secured the nomination. Democrats will unify and the coverage will initially be dominated by the historic nature of his accomplishment as the first African-American nominee of a major party. We can all honor what his nomination says about the openness and dynamism of American society.

But by nominating Obama, the Democrats are betting that Clinton’s triangulation and Bush’s perceived failure have changed the country so much that an uncompromising liberalism is once again politically viable. If McCain presents a competent and reformist conservative alternative, he can prove the Democrats wrong.
 
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headhuntersix

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Re: Obama in plain view.....NRO
« Reply #1 on: June 04, 2008, 08:15:28 AM »
It looks like the presidential battle will be about one overarching theme: judgment versus experience. And Exhibit A will be the Iraq war.

Barack Obama insists that judgment is more important than experience. Truth be told, he’s right. A wise leader with no experience is preferable to a moron with plenty. But that’s not really our choice.

John McCain argues that experience yields good judgment. The battle-scarred soldier, the trial-tested lawyer, the accomplished surgeon: They make the right calls because they’ve clocked field time. McCain contends he’s walked through the fire and learned valuable lessons as a result.

Obama’s people frame things differently. Obama campaign strategist David Axelrod recently told the Huffington Post: “It is not a question of longevity in government. It is a question of judgment, it is a question of a willingness to challenge policies that have failed. And (McCain) seems just dug in.”

On the surface, this all sounds like a perfectly reasonable disagreement — indeed, it sounds like precisely the sort of debate we should be having during a presidential election.

The problem is that it doesn’t reflect reality. Obama, who was a young state senator from a very liberal district in Chicago and a star parishioner of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s Trinity United Church of Christ when the country was debating invading Iraq, would have voters believe that he carefully weighed the pros and cons and concluded it would be a bad idea.

You may be willing to give Obama the benefit of the doubt. I am not. A far more plausible explanation is that Obama took the position you would expect him to take. Just as it never occurred to him that his pastor would be an albatross in a national election, it never dawned on him that he should take a stance other than the one expected of anyone on the far Left of the Democratic Party, never mind on the far Left of the Chicago Democratic machine. This doesn’t necessarily obviate Obama’s bragging rights, but the idea that in 2002 he would have taken any other stance strikes me as unlikely as Michael Moore siding with the pro-Bush camp.

Even if you want to give Obama the benefit of the doubt, it’s hard to give him the benefit of the facts.

As a candidate for U.S. Senate in 2003, Obama said he would “unequivocally” oppose President Bush on the war. But once in office, he voted for every war-funding bill — until he decided to run for president.

After the invasion, Obama did not favor an immediate pullout from Iraq. Right around the time he delivered his brilliant keynote address to the Democratic National Convention in July 2004, he told the Chicago Tribune that when it came to the war, “there’s not much of a difference between my position and George Bush’s position at this stage.”

In other words, while he opposed the war, he was committed to Bush’s initially flawed military strategy. That was not the position of Moveon.org.

During the long battle for the Democratic nomination, however, Obama’s position evolved (or devolved) into a consistent call for withdrawal in order to differentiate himself from Hillary Clinton. When the Bush administration finally surged troops last year, it was Obama who “dug in,” insisting that it wouldn’t work — and in fact would make things even worse.

By last November, the success of the surge was obvious to all open-minded observers, yet Obama insisted that the gains had come merely in a few “certain neighborhoods.” Anbar and Diyala provinces are somewhat larger than mere “neighborhoods” (ditto the “Triangle of Death”). In January, Obama’s denial took a new form. During a debate, he suggested that progress was attributable to the Democratic congressional victories in 2006, because Sunnis saw that America would soon bug out.

Meantime, there was the supposedly dogmatic McCain challenging Bush’s approach to Iraq nearly from the get-go. In the summer of 2003, in response to the upswing in violence, he called for “a lot more military” in order to win in Iraq. He said he had “no confidence” in Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. In May 2004, McCain told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that “we’ve got to adjust to the realities of the situation as it exists and that means doing whatever is necessary and acting decisively.”

McCain was challenging Bush when Obama was assuring voters there wasn’t “much difference” between his position and Bush’s. And now Obama is locked into a position despite the facts on the ground. Obama may indeed have great judgment, but his record shows little experience employing it.
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War-Horse

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Re: Obama in plain view.....NRO
« Reply #2 on: June 04, 2008, 08:22:42 AM »
Mccain has flip flopped so many times that he has zero credibility with americans.  Last nite  he clinched the nomination for obama.


Life was good during the clinton years anyway.  We were prospering and people want that back.....youre a weird dude hh....

headhuntersix

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Re: Obama in plain view.....NRO
« Reply #3 on: June 04, 2008, 08:26:02 AM »
Yeah except there is no Internet revolution coming...and oh yeah...Clinton governed as a Centrist with a Republican Congress. This guy is a borderline socialist surrounded by anti-american libs and racists.
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