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Choice of Biden: A Mixed Verdict

 I have mixed feelings about Obama's choice of Joe Biden for VP. On the one hand, since Obama may (unbelievably) actually get electedI in November, I'm somewhat satisfied with the choice. There is nothing scarier to me than an Obama presidency with another foreign policy neophyte (like Bayh or Kaine) in the #2 spot. At least in Biden Obama will have some "adult supervision" of sorts, a deep base of experience and some seasoning on issues of national security. In the "what do we do if Obama wins" scenario, Biden was the best choice for Veep.
 
Having said that, the Biden selection is both dangerous for Obama and a huge opportunity for McCain. Here's why:
 
1). Obama has based his entire campaign on changing the "politics of Washington". Though he hasn't really campaigned as an outsider, the dominant theme of his candidacy is "change". Picking Biden, first elected to the Senate in 1972 and the ultimate fixture there, hardly is reassuring to his core of support that seeks something of a revolution in Washington. It shows again how fake his campaign is -- and it may cause people to start looking more deeply at what he's really saying on the trail. We can only hope this to be the case.
 
2). The choice if Biden shows clearly that through all this bravado, ego and confidence, Obama actually questions his own experience to be president. Its a little like George Bush picking Dick Cheney as VP in 2000; through all that Texas bravado, Bush knew that he needed seasoned help at the executive level to govern the country. It is clear now that Cheney had an out-sized influence on Bush after 9/11 -- and whatever you think about the Iraq war, it shows that early on, an inexperienced President can be dramatically influenced by a far more experienced #2. So, Obama understands that he isn't really up to the task of doing this alone -- which again, I have mixed feelings about. On the one hand it proves that he is a total poser who is already over his head -- not a good thing for a president. On the other, it also shows that maybe he really knows he's clueless when it comes to foreign policy and that he needs the help of someone more seasoned than he is. That means he may not be the egomaniac I feared he is. We'll see.
 
3). Biden is both a plus and a big potential liability on the campaign trail. He's had a history of "speaking first and thinking later", and tends generally to talk too much. He's had a number of failed presidential bids himself, and has said some phenomenally stupid things in debates and in off-the-cuff remarks. His 1988 bid for the Democrat nomination was torpedoed by the revelation that he had plagiarized large portions of a speech by then-Labour leader Neil Kinnock of Great Britain. Biden also failed a class at Syracuse University Law School after copying a paper in a legal methods course. Those issues will certainly follow him into the campaign. But he also has some of the same "human" characteristics of John McCain which make him a good campaigner: a sense of humor, a quick wit and some genuine charm that voters tend to respond to.
 
4). To many of those who support Obama, however, Biden represents the past, not the future. He's a "old, gray haired white guy". He's not young, hip or cool. I suspect that a huge number of voters are on the Obama band wagon for all the wrong reasons -- because he's black, young and hip -- and to those people, the Biden choice looks like something of a sell-out. It may prove to de-energize the Democrat's base a bit, which is a good thing for McCain. For many on the left, Biden simply won't be liberal enough -- Biden supported the 2002 Iraq War Resolution, for example. He has since regretted that decision and to this day was against the surge, preferring a policy of splitting up Iraq into three seperate federal territories. He actually now admits that though the surge has helped. it was till "against American interests". That's a position that will be hard to support now that he is the general election.
 
Finally, the Biden choice put forward an interesting challenge to McCain. Obama used his Veep choice to admit a weakness and provide some wisdom to the ticket. How will McCain respond? My guess is that he will make something of a mirror choice by picking someone young, dynamic and conservative. Someone like Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota. It will be the opposite "May-December" ticket that the Democrats have -- though stronger because the experience and judgment will be at the top of the ticket, not the bottom. Its a great choice for McCain to signal both that "I'm in charge" and that "I don't need any help on day one unlike that other guy over there."

Exactly. The Biden selection presents a great opportunity for McCain to hammer into November. Now he just needs to be smart and strategic in his own choice. Let's hope he will be.

 

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Obama: Et Toujours de L’Audace (Ever More Audacity)

It is has always been clear that Barack Obama has a huge ego. After all, how else can a half-term U.S. Senator with little relevant experience convince himself to run for president of the United States? You have to have a very high opinion of yourself, to say the least – an opinion that has no doubt been considerably raised by the cult-like following he has engendered among those who seek a Messiah rather than a president. Obama clearly believes he is the “one we’ve been waiting for” – and it doesn’t hurt when the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi recently introduces him as a “gift from God”. That’s a strange thing for a liberal to say, I admit – but it has to go to your head when everyone keeps telling you how unique, brilliant, scholarly and intellectual you are (etc. etc. etc.).

In any event, he certainly got the title of his recent memoir right, for there is no better word to describe Barack Obama than “audacious”, which is defined as “recklessly bold in defiance of convention, propriety, law and the like”. He certainly has defied convention with his grass-roots campaign that was able to slay the Clinton dragon, and his comments on the campaign trail have often violated a sense of propriety, at least in the opinion of all those working class voters clinging to “guns and religion”. His most recent performance in the Saddleback Church debate against McCain, for example, was nothing if not lawyerly; in the great tradition of Bill Clinton (remember his famous “it depends on the meaning of the word ‘is’”?), Obama attempted to split the middle on virtually every answer, hemming and hawing in an effort to be the perfect accommodator. The result was that he appeared to be vague, indecisive and unsure of himself.

In fact, his meteoric rise has made him famous, but when you push him on the issues, his answers are painfully shallow. When compared to John McCain, the difference was quite striking. McCain was concise, concrete and clear. He so obviously knows what he thinks and believes, and isn’t particularly interested in splitting the atom to make sure he covers all his bases. When Rick Warren, the moderator of the Saddleback event asked both candidates whether evil exists and if so, what should be done about it, McCain said three words: “yes” and “confront it”. Obama, on the other had, gave a rambling answer that shows both his shallow understanding of the world, and more importantly, his true feeling about America. He said that evil does exist, citing Darfur and “the evil in American cities”. No mention of Islamic terrorists who fly airplanes into buildings, or suicide bombers who blow up innocents. He then went on to say that we must be careful in confronting evil, because in the name of opposing it, America has often committed evil acts itself – a prototypical response from the left, which is enamored with blaming America first. It was an appalling answer for a man who would be president.

Of course, such an answer fits perfectly with the previous comments of both Barack and Michelle Obama, and with their former pastor Reverend Wright and friend William Ayers – the former Weather Underground terrorist. It’s a familiar narrative, now – even if it is being conveniently ignored by the mainstream media. And it provides a shocking contrast to John McCain. McCain’s personal story is well-know, as was his willingness to go against public opinion and argue in favor of the surge in Iraq. While Obama still can’t bring himself to admit that the surge has worked and America will win in Iraq, McCain rightfully deserves credit for both his courage and judgment, and his willingness to make the tough decisions in order to safeguard our interests. McCain knew then (and knows now) that our defeat in Iraq would be devastating to America, to our military and to the Middle East. Obama, by contrast, seems strangely invested in our defeat – maintaining his intention to withdraw our combat forces upon taking office, irrespective of events on the ground – a position that he reaffirmed most recently in an August 19th speech before the Veterans of Foreign Wars. It is also a policy that ignores the success of the surge. It’s a denial of reality, and it’s audacious given the very serious American interests involved.

Recent polling seems to suggest that the American public is catching on. The most recent Rasmussen poll shows McCain now with a five point lead over Obama in the wake of the Saddleback debate – reversing what had been a 3-5 point deficit. It is still early, and Obama will get a bump out of both his choice of Veep and his well scripted speech at the Democrat National Convention this next week. But McCain will as well, and if moves to solidify the Republican base with a strong VP choice, he will have a lot of momentum going into the remaining three months of the campaign. My bet is with McCain, because Obama can’t be protected from himself, no matter how well scripted he is 99% of the time. It will only take 1% of the real Obama to come out to turn the election.

One final note: it was particularly telling when Rick Warren asked both Obama and McCain about their personal failings. While McCain copped to infidelity in a failed first marriage, Obama answered (after a long pause) that he is “sometimes focused too much on himself” (I’m paraphrasing here). How appropriate that answer is given the fact that his campaign is all about him, and not about us. And how interesting a contrast it is to McCain, who has given a lifetime of service to this country and was rewarded with a broken body as a POW in the “Hanoi Hilton”. McCain has his foibles, to be sure. But he’s been tested. And he hasn’t been found wanting.
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The Arrogance of Barack Obama

The Wall Street Journal has an absolutely brilliant editorial today here entitled "Obama on Clarence Thomas". It offers a view into what I and other bloggers have long been saying -- that beneath that well-scripted "post racial" veneer, Obama is a typical left-wing ideologue. When left alone, without a script, these real beliefs seep to the surface, painting a pretty divisive picture.

In answering a question on judicial appointees in a Town Hall style debate where he and John McCain appeared together (but not at the same time), Obama took a huge and demeaning swipe at the lone black jurist on the court, Clarence Thomas.

"I would not have nominated Clarence Thomas. I don't think that he, I don't think that he was a strong enough jurist or legal thinker at the time for that elevation. Setting aside the fact that I profoundly disagree with his interpretation of a lot of the Constitution." The Democrat added that he also wouldn't have appointed Antonin Scalia, and perhaps not John Roberts, though he assured the audience that at least they were smart enough for the job.


Once again, Obama raises the specious issue of Thomas' background, experience and intelligence. Now, if the former law school professor would have bothered to check his facts, it is clear that though he may disagree with Thomas' judicial philosophy, he is nothing if not smart. That's a typical attack by the left to demean the Thomas tenure on the court. Because though Thomas is technically black, because he doesn't follow the liberal orthodoxy, he must not be smart -- otherwise why wouldn't he be the reincarnation of Jesse Jackson?

Even more telling, however, is Obama's perception of Thomas' lack of experience. As the Journal puts it:

So let's see. By the time he was nominated, Clarence Thomas had worked in the Missouri Attorney General's office, served as an Assistant Secretary of Education, run the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and sat for a year on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation's second most prominent court. Since his "elevation" to the High Court in 1991, he has also shown himself to be a principled and scholarly jurist.

Meanwhile, as he bids to be America's Commander in Chief, Mr. Obama isn't yet four years out of the Illinois state Senate, has never held a hearing of note of his U.S. Senate subcommittee, and had an unremarkable record as both a "community organizer" and law school lecturer. Justice Thomas's judicial credentials compare favorably to Mr. Obama's Presidential résumé by any measure. And when it comes to rising from difficult circumstances, Justice Thomas's rural Georgian upbringing makes Mr. Obama's story look like easy street.

I've noted before the arrogance that Obama carries with him -- anyone who believes that "he is the hope we've been waiting for" must have a very, very high opinion of himself. But here again, the facts don't fit the rhetoric. Obama may be a great speaker, but he's a neophyte. That's just a fact. He's the least experienced potential president in modern times. He may fancy himself as a Messiah figure, but his resume is weak. And much, much weaker than the U.S. Supreme Court Justice he demeans.

And, here again, the issue of Obama's true beliefs present a troubling picture of someone who has packaged himself to be president. He and his wife are on record in many places as having views that are both radical and out-of-the-mainstream.

The media, of course, has largely left these statements, writings and activities out of the news, preferring to report on his present scripted speeches as evidence of his hope-filled narrative. But the true evidence is there, and it often comes out in the kind of off-the-cuff remarks that were elicited in this debate format. It is why John McCain has pushed for Town Hall-style debated, and why Obama has resisted in favor of only three traditional debates before network news anchors. Its the kind of antisceptic format where Obama can control the angels of his not-so-better nature.

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Missing In Action

If you need proof that the anti-war movement in this country is more about anti-Americanism than it is about war, look no further. Russia's brutal invasion of Georgia this past week has gone virtually unnoticed by a host of anti-war organizations, including Code Pink, whose mission is described as

"a women-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement working to end the war in Iraq, stop new wars, and redirect our resources into healthcare, education and other life-affirming activities."

Apparently, affirming the lives of Georgian civilians -- including women and children -- doesn't count. As the
Wall Street Journal reports today, Russian troops have stood by while rebel forces from South Ossetia (armed and trained by Russia) have run amok in Gori and other Georgian towns, terrorizing reporters, UN workers and civilians. "Ossetian irregulars entered Gori on Wednesday, prompting an exodus of ethnic Georgian refugees who recounted tales of looting, burning and shooting. Most of central Gori is still held by Ossetian militias, while the Russian forces are deployed mainly in the outskirts."

A look at the Code Pink home page today says nothing about the Russian invasion, the overwhelming use of force or the abuse of non-combatants. The home page does have sections on "helping Iraqi women" (perhaps they think that Iraqi women were better off under Saddam Hussein), "Don't Bomb Iran" (the Mullahs will certainly listen to reason) and "Raising a Ruckus" at the Democrat National Convention (I guess Obama isn't anti-war enough). Though the Code Pink movement is based on a human rights agenda, they apparently haven't been watching the news: Russia's actions in Georgia bring to harsh reality the kind of terror that Code Pink and other leftists fantasize U.S. soldiers perpetrate on civilians: indiscriminate killing, bombings, raping and pillaging.

Why the double standard? Because Code Pink and other anti-war organizations hate America, and carry a double standard: our use of force -- whether to depose the brutal Saddam Hussein, to eliminate the Iranian nuclear program or to destroy Al Qaeda -- is never justified because the values and ideals we fight for aren't worthy of it. Simply put, the anti-war movement in America is not really anti-war. It's anti-American.
 
                                                               *   *   *   *   *
 
The Russian invasion of Georgia is a poke in the eye to both the U.S. and NATO -- both of which have been feckless in the handling of Russia over the past decade. As Vladimir Putin has enjoyed warm relations with George W. Bush, he has systematically rolled back democracy in Russia, and used the power of Russian oil wealth to bully its neighbors. Russia is on a roll to assert its power and Putin's goal is to revive the Soviet state. The Bush Administration has given Russia a pass, and the EU -- totally dependent on Russian oil and natural gas -- has played footsie with Putin as he has sold weapons systems to Iran. Putin knows that the EU is weak, and that America is stretched thin in Iraq and Afghanistan. He's poked us in the eye and we are unwilling (Europe) and unable (U.S.) to do anything about it. A sad moment for the West.

                                                               *   *   *   *   *

One last word on the idiocy of Code Pink
and the anti-war crowd: the focus on negotiating with Iran. I've written previously
here that both the left and Barack Obama, who is on record as wanting direct negotiations with Iran "without precondition", fundamentally misunderstands the Iranian regime. Iran is a revolutionary state. By definition, revolutionary states are dedicated to the violent overthrow of the "ancien regime" -- or the existing international order. The Iranian Revolution that deposed the Shah in 1979 was done in the name of a new Islamic world order. The exising regime is a direct decendent of the Ayatollah Khomeini's revolutionary movement. Though Iran may co-exist with the rest of the world today, it does so only to finance its aims of becoming a nuclear power so as to challenge (and destroy) the West.

In this context, negotiating with Iran is folly: Iran's goal is spreading revolution. It is the raison d'etre of the Iranian government. Nuclear weapons are core to this goal. It isn't negotiable. But that doesn't stop the idealists in America and Europe from hoping that though it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it isn't really a duck. Hope against hope, maybe its a dove after all.
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Buy Now, Pay Later

I realize that I'm taking a risk that this blog will become an anti-Obama site, but defeating Obama is the number one priority for me now, so that will take much focus. The small part I can play in educating people as to the danger of "Obamamania" is worth the risk of becoming redundant.
Before getting back to my good man Barack, however, let me say a word or two about John Edwards. What a creep! We always knew that he was nothing more than a trial lawyer with big hair -- the kind of guy who wants to soak "the rich" so he can himself become one. Rules don't apply, of course -- not even his own vows to stand by his wife stricken with cancer.

Edwards was a master at repackaging himself for whatever suited his purpose. In the 2008 campaign he became a populist, fighting for the "little guy" -- even though he's a multi-millionaire. Such is the gullibility of the electorate that is almost worked.

All those press conferences that used his poor sick wife standing beside him to elicit sympathy is just another example of how far these sociopaths will go for power. It's sickening. And since he was the one to bring "the moral voice" to the Democrat party, you have to wonder what that says about all those other crooks -- Pelosi, Reid, Schumer, etc. It's a long list!

Speaking of packaging yourself for the American people, Barack Obama is the new master of this art form. After all, his campaign manager, David Axelrod, has managed to take a first-term United States Senator with no experience, no accomplishments and make him the next coming of the Messiah -- not a bad trick! He's also managed to inoculate Obama by using the "race" card strategically, negating the justifiable criticisms of his (slim) record, his campaign promises and his relationships with nefarious characters (Ayers, Wright, Rezko, etc.). Its been a brilliant political strategy -- even if it does America huge damage.

At the core of this packaging, of course, is to convince people that Obama isn't a Marxist who generally dislikes America. He's been carefully scripted to give soaring speeches, but at the margin they have a tinge of negativity to them. Even in front of 200,000 Berliners, he couldn't help but dig at the nation he seeks to lead, saying in effect that America hasn't always lived up to its best aspirations and ideals. Excuse me? Perhaps he doesn't realize that America lost over 250,000 men liberating the world from Nazi tyranny, and then spent trillions of dollars protecting the Germans from Soviet aggression -- all so those Berliners could safely congregate to hear Obama's speech. It was America who ran the Berlin airlift when the city was divided, and who forced Gorbachev to "tear down that wall" that separated East from West. Of course, history isn't Obama's strong suit as I've written previously (Obama:Don't Know Much About History) -- but shouldn't a prospective U.S. president understand the role for good and justice that America has played in the world??

You see much more of Obama's basic negativity toward America when he speaks off the cuff. Recently, he attempted to answer the question that a seven year old girl posed to him -- THE standard question you get when you run for president: "Why do you want to be president"?

Rather than give some soaring answer about how, though this is a great nation, we have problems at the margins that need to be fixed, Obama fell into despair. It was telling -- because it fits with a candidate whose true agenda is a total revolution in the social, economic and political structure of the country:




It is very similar to the comments that Michelle Obama made in the campaign -- before she was deep-sixed from sight. Notice how you don't see much of her anymore and that she isn't allowed to speak now? Its because the campaign is afraid she'll slip up again and say what she really thinks and feels. Can't take that chance! Remember what I wrote about her previously that reviewed her thesis work at Princeton? Read it again here: Michelle Obama's Racist America.

So the moral of this story is, don't believe what you see and hear of Barack Obama. And don't believe what you read in the main stream media, who is invested in his coronation. You must think critically, read the blogs, subscribe to the Weekly Standard or National Review, listen to Hugh Hewitt and Dennis Prager -- do your homework!

We are being hard-sold a packaged good by a very talented marketing team -- and we need to resist the temptation to "buy now".

We'll be paying for it later!
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No-BAMA!!

If you care about this country and our system of free enterprise and entrepreneurship -- and don't want to be swallowed by a Marxist economic model -- what follows is a MUST READ. f you don't read anything else this weekend, please read this! (Courtesy of Donald Douglas, a fellow conservative blogger -- who is also a must-read at American Power):

Peter Ferrara writes in
Obama's Left-Wing Extremism about just how radical Obama's economic policies will be:

"Barack Obama has proposed increasing every major Federal tax. He supports increasing individual income tax rates, allowing the Bush tax cuts, which cut rates for all income levels, to expire. He has proposed almost doubling the capital gains tax rate, from 15% today to 28%. He supports more than doubling the tax on dividends, from 15% to as high as 39%. He has proposed numerous corporate tax increases. He supports increasing the death tax back to the stratospheric levels that applied before President Bush. He supports increasing the payroll tax on higher income earners.

But Obama needs those tax increases to finance his promised massive increases in government spending approaching a trillion dollars over four years. All projections show that America cannot afford all the entitlement promises it has already made, with Federal spending projected to almost double relative to the economy over the next 35 years. Obama just ignores this looming crisis, and, instead, promises to add the largest entitlement of all, national health insurance. All of these nationalized health programs around the world start by promising free health care for everyone, but end up with rigid, stifling bureaucracies designed to deny care to control runaway costs. Our nation's health care problems can be solved without massive new government spending and control, and the deteriorating quality and freedom of choice in health care that inevitably involves. But instead of new and innovative ideas that would increase patient power and choice, Obama serves the Left that wants to use our health care problems as an excuse for more government power and control. Instead of the promise of a new unity and hope, Obama promises to take us back to the already failed ideas of the past.

BUT THIS IS ONLY the beginning. In legislation he has already introduced in Congress, Obama proposes a new global war on poverty financed by American taxpayers. The bill would commit the U.S. to the goal of the 2000 United Nations Millennium Summit to reduce world poverty by 2015. The head of this UN project has already called for a new global tax to finance this goal. For now, Obama's bill would increase U.S. foreign aid by $65 billion a year toward this end."

So now we're going to end poverty around the world on the backs of American workers! More subsidization of corrupt governments who will steal our money while continuing the oppression of their peoples. Doesn't anyone read history? The War on Poverty in the 1960s DID NOT WORK -- because you can't buy people out of their socio-economic situation. Welfare reform in the 1990s (which Obama OPPOSED) worked because we changed incentives, making it necessary for people to get jobs rather than paying them to stay home.

The only way the world will get out of poverty is if we continue the robust global trading economy and insist that governments in these countries reform! This is INSANITY!

* * * * *
 
In "Obama The Closer" , Kyle-Anne Shiver gives a great summary of how the radical lefties of the 1960s -- those who nearly destroyed civil society during the Vietnam War -- are salivating at the prospect of an Obama presidency. They know that Obama's grass-roots community organizing in Chicago is part of a simmering Marxist movement that still exists:

"Whether it’s Billy Ayers or Bernadine Dohrn, Tom Hayden or Jane Fonda, or any of the other lesser-knowns, 60s Marxist radicals are lining up behind Obama.Obama’s young worshippers think they see something altogether new, a unique persona, seemingly magically transported to this moment in history to help them finally be the ones to net the elusive butterfly of socialism’s never-realized promise.

The kids think they see something new. But do they?

Sixties’ radicals see their as yet unfulfilled yearning for socialist utopia in a well-groomed, glittery, establishment-approved package. The college kids today, flocking to Obama rallies, don’t look much like we did, with our tie-dyed shirts and frayed bellbottoms, our waist-length hair or wild Afros. And they seem to see Obama as the antithesis of 60s’ madness, with a been-there-done-that-want-something-new kind of thirst, a quest for which youth has always been known. Obama is clean-cut. He talks unity, not subversion. He promises equal outcomes without resorting to violence to get them. He endorses marriage and fidelity for himself, without condeming other lifestyle choices. He speaks in highbrow English, rather than the 60s revolutionary slogans...

Evidenced by his list of supporters, from Ayers Dohrn, Hayden and Fonda, to the New Black Panthers, the New SDS, the New Winter Soldiers, et al., the radical Left has anointed Obama as the One. Every aging, anti-war, anti-capitalist group and their new offshoots are flocking around Obama like moths to a flame.

He is the One they’ve been waiting for.

Biding their time during the dark, dreary days of Reagan, throughout the self-absorbed Boomer years, into the Yuppie sellout decade, and on through the compromising Clinton years, they’ve waited and planned and hoped.To these rabid Marxist radicals, Obama is the One, because he’s probably their last chance to see socialism triumph on our own soil. They have grasped the reality of their own mortality.

And this could be very bad news for America. Who, in his right mind, really wants anything these radicals were peddling?"


Is America really prepared to elect this guy president? The left will tell you that we're all wrong -- that it's all an exaggeration...that these attacks against Obama are "racist scare tactics". Don't be fooled! The reality is that this guy is a dangerous radical.

Just Say NO-BAMA!!



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Lost In Translation

Why Obama's European Visit Fell Flat at Home

Recently, I received an e-mail about Barack Obama’s recent trip to Europe. It was from a friend from my school days in Zurich who still lives in Switzerland, and it summed up quite perfectly the prevailing reaction from Europeans about the Democrat nominee for president:

“Oh, how wonderful it is (sic) to have a man of the world as America’s president!”

Leaving aside the now-familiar (if in this case unintended) presumptuousness that Obama supporters routinely exhibit, this simple statement validates how desperate the Europeans are for an “anti-Bush” – someone erudite, cultured, elegant in manner, and above all else, eager to embrace diplomacy in all its multilateral glory. Obama’s Berlin speech, while short of an “Ich bin ein Berliner” moment, was tailor made for a Europe that seeks an America in its own image – idealistic, nuanced and profoundly non-confrontational.

Unfortunately for the Obama campaign, however, the European trip, highlighted by his speech to 200,000 adoring Berliners in Germany, seems to have fallen flat here in America. In a USA Today/Gallup poll conducted just after the completion of the trip, Obama’s lead among likely voters evaporated in a 9 point swing, with McCain surging to a 4% lead over Obama -- reversing a pre-trip deficit of 5%. Significantly, in separate questions, the poll shows that support for the view that he can handle the job of Commander-in-Chief, that he will do a good job on fighting terrorism and that he is capable of handling the war in Iraq all dropped as well. By these measures, Obama’s trip through the Middle East and Europe, which was designed to show that he was up to the job of dealing with foreign policy issues, must be seen as something of a failure. Many analysts, including The Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol, believe that Obama’s speech in Germany and his overall trip abroad may prove to be a negative tipping point in the election – something akin to a “Dukakis in the tank” moment.

Euro-Skepticism

There are several reasons why Obama’s trip, so celebrated in Europe, backfired here in America. Many Americans remain skeptical of European values, motivations and judgment -- particularly on issues related to security and the war on terror. As one American recently said to me, “I’ll always love Paris and London as a place to visit; but if the Euros are for something, I generally think I should be against it.” The roots of this go deeper than just the lingering resentment many Americans still feel over French, German and Spanish opposition to the Iraq War. Though France’s president Sarkozy and German chancellor Merkel have worked to repair some of damage done by their predecessors, many Americans nonetheless feel that Europe can’t be counted on when needed. The issue of Iran is a case in point: in a recent poll conducted by the BBC, over 60% of Americans favor strong economic sanctions or military action against Iran’s nuclear program, compared to only 34% in the U.K. and 37% in Germany. Europeans are far more likely to have faith in multilateral institutions and negotiations than do most Americans – a particularly important distinction given Obama’s stated willingness to meet with Iranian president Ahmadinejad without preconditions.

In addition, other polling seems to reinforce the notion that Americans, though clearly invested in a strong Atlantic Alliance, understand that there remain divisions with Europe. A recent poll by GlobeScan sponsored by the British Council found that “on average Americans characterize their views of Europeans as cooler than a friend but warmer than a casual acquaintance”. Americans have generally lukewarm views of France (48% positive, 31% negative, 15% neutral), Spain (47% positive, 16% negative, 26% neutral) and Poland (41% positive, 15% negative, 30% neutral). Views of Turkey lean slightly negative (29% positive, 35% negative, 23% neutral). Only opinion of the UK (72% positive) and Germany (62%) were above 50%. Not exactly a love fest.

The Audacity of Hubris

This Euro-skepticism may provide some context to the Obama trip, but it is not in itself dispositive. The Obama campaign designed the trip as something of a pre-election “victory tour”, with all the elements of a state visit. The candidate spent time with heads-of-state, conducted presidential-style news conferences and soaked up the adulation of throngs of Europeans who came to catch a glimpse of him. It was covered by a fawning global media that literally gushed with his every appearance. In a sign of just how (self) important Obama saw his trip to Berlin, the campaign originally considered giving the speech from the Brandenburg Gate – the site two historic presidential speeches: JFK’s “Ich bin ein Berliner” in June, 1963 and Ronald Reagan’s “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall” speech of 1987. Both of these speeches were given by actual sitting presidents who had proven their bona fides in the Cold War, not by a presidential candidate who hasn’t even become the official nominee of his party. Apparently, only after German Chancellor Merkel called the request “inappropriate” did the Obama campaign relent, finding another location for the speech.

Obama’s desire to speak at the Brandenburg Gate smacks of hubris, but it paled in comparison to his actions while in Berlin. His now infamous decision to cancel his visit with the wounded troops at the Ramstein and Landstuhl Medical Centers because he couldn’t turn it into a campaign event, was a PR disaster of the first order – particularly since he decided to work out at the gym at the Ritz Carlton instead. For a candidate that has stumbled badly among Clinton supporters in the heartland, and who famously made the “cling to religion and guns” remark in reference to them, Obama still doesn’t seem to understand that Americans dislike elitism. Not visiting U.S. troops wounded in battle because he couldn’t get any campaign mileage from it says to the American people that he doesn’t appreciate the sacrifices of ordinary Americans in uniform, and that consequently, he may not be fit to be Commander-in-Chief.

Remembering Dewey

Finally, Obama’s European and Middle East tour had an air of presumptuousness about it. He flew in with his entourage as if he had already won the election, meeting with General Patraeus in Iraq and making it clear that, though the General opposed a withdrawal timetable, he as the future Commander-in-Chief knew best. The media coverage, which a majority of Americans now feel has been unfairly biased in Obama’s favor, was nothing short of fawning. His trip was a state visit in everything but name, even providing daily schedules that looked like carbon-copies of the schedules provided when George Bush travels abroad. It is obviously news to the Democrats -- who are already redecorating the Oval Office -- but there is still an election to win in November. Americans are famous for rooting for the underdog – a position that John McCain has already won from in the Republican primaries earlier this year. The more the campaign, aided by the media, acts as if Obama’s victory is inevitable, the more they run the risk of appearing arrogant in the eyes of many voters. Many of the voters that Obama needs to achieve victory in this election still need to be wooed, convinced that Obama is worthy of their vote. They don’t want to be talked down to, taken for granted or dismissed. These voters aren't going to vote for him simply because he's black, or because he talks about "hope". In the end it will come down to real issues -- like national security, energy policy, the economy, taxes -- and Obama must have real answers. “Change" just won't cut it.

It might be wise for the Obama campaign to remember the story of Tom Dewey. Running in the 1948 election against an unpopular incumbent president (Harry Truman), Dewey ran well ahead the entire election. After 16 years of Democrat Party rule, it was widely seen to be a Republican year – it was time for change. The post-war economy was stagnant, the Soviet Union was ascendant, and the country was struggling with rebuilding Europe and Japan. Truman was seen to be competent but dull. Dewey, on the other hand, was the dashing Governor of New York, well-spoken, well-educated. A thoroughly modern man. The media was so convinced of a Dewey victory, that the Chicago Tribune went to press with that famous headline, “Dewey Beats Truman”, before all the votes were counted.

You already know the rest of the story.
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The Left's Nanny Aspirations

I saw a great bumper sticker the other day: "I'm For Higher Taxes: Vote Obama 08". It made me laugh. Most pro-Obama stickers I've seen are either on 60s-era VW bugs (right next to the flower-power symbol) or Toyota hybrids. This one was on a Ford F150 truck, which I suppose validates what demographers would predict. Only those gun-clinging, church-going red necks who drive big trucks would dare be against St. Obama, right?

Anyhow, the Democrats have more in store for you than just higher taxes and higher gas prices. They mean to control your lives in every conceivable way -- from forcing you to buy health insurance to telling you what you should and shouldn't eat. The leftist city councils of both San Francisco and Los Angeles have started a trend that will be coming to a Democrat-controlled Congress in your future. San Francisco has now banned the sale of cigarettes in pharmacies within the city limits, meaning that you can't by smokes when you are buying toilet paper, toothpaste or filling your prescriptions. Didn't you know? Smoking is bad for you, so San Francisco is telling you not just where and when you can light up, but where and when you can buy the cigarettes themselves. City leaders are hopeful that they can use this as a springboard for expanding the ban to include warehouse stores, supermarkets and other locations. Before long, you won't be able to buy a smoke anywhere within the city limits.

Los Angeles, meanwhile, has decided that there are too many fast-food restaurants in "low-income" areas, and has now passed a one year moratorium on new locations for the 32 square miles of South Los Angeles. It turns out there are a lot of fat people who live in South LA -- so the City Council has decided to put people on a forced diet. Nevermind the fact that the market dictates demand, and the people eat at these places because they are a cheaper alternative to more expensive fare. There are currently 400 fast-food joints in this area of Los Angeles. Why? Because people both like and can afford junk food. Unless you start paying people to eat at more healthful, expensive restaurants (shhh -- don't give them any ideas!) this won't create new alternatives. It will only mean few choices for the food people want to eat.

So, you can see a trend here, right? The left doesn't believe you are capable of making your own decisions on what you put into your body -- so they will make it for you. They will decide if you are too fat, and tell you what kind of restaurants can come into your neighborhood. They will tell you the smoking is dangerous to your health, and outlaw cigarettes. They will tell you what kind of car you should drive, and tax you if you dare resist. It's the nanny state at work.

Of course, it goes deeper than this. The left also thinks that driving harms the environment (and its dangerous, too) -- so they want the price of gas to go up so you won't be able to use your car as much as you do now. They use the threat of global warming as a cudgel with which to bludgeon people into making personal choices that are less convenient, cost more and lead to fewer individual freedoms. They are out to control your every waking moment -- not just from cradle to grave, but also from dawn to dusk.

Here's what my bumper sticker would read: "I Need A Nanny: Vote Obama '08"
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No Surprise: Obama Prefers Germans to GIs

The story about Barack Obama snubbing the injured GIs in Germany is now making the rounds, and though it won't be widely reported by a media that has drunk the "Obama punch", it is a telling bit of news. As reported in various blogs and opinion pieces around the web, Obama was scheduled to visit troops injured in Afghanistan and Iraq at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. When he found out that he couldn't bring the press and his "posse" with him, however, Obama abruptly canceled the visit, choosing instead to work out at the gym at the Ritz Carlton in Berlin. When asked about the cancellation, the campaign came up with a lame excuse that it "would be inappropriate to make a stop to visit troops at a U.S. military facility as part of a trip funded by the campaign." Did they not know that before they had scheduled the visit in the first place? Such an explanation, of course, is the ultimate in spin; the real reason that Obama canceled the visit is that he didn't want to waste his time visiting wounded soldiers if it couldn't be recorded by the media. If he can't use it for his quest to become president, why bother?

This is an important window into the elite of the Democrat party, which doesn't particularly like the military and has little respect for their mission or their sacrifices. When the leader of the Senate and the House go on record as saying the "war is lost", while making every effort to end funding for the troops while they are in combat, it isn't difficult to draw the conclusion that they are anti-military. It is hard to "support the troops" while you are undermining their mission at the same time. It doesn't add up.

What does add up is that Barack Obama's Berlin visit was roundly enjoyed by the Germans, who saw the kind of president of the United States that they desperately want. The anti-cowboy. The kind of president who will speak eloquently about peace-though-negotiation, and who won't put the West in the uncomfortable position of actually acting in defense of liberty. The Germans (and most Europeans) of today don't remember Hitler's fascism and thus don't appreciate the value of decisive action, believing that all problems in this world can ultimately be worked out in the UN or other deliberative body. In the end, they want accommodation above all else. Obama, who wishes to talk to Iran without preconditions and who believes in being a "citizen of the world" first and foremost, is just the guy for them.

But it remains to be seen if he is just the guy for us here in America, where the vote will really count. The snub of the troops at Landstuhl goes hand-in-hand with what much of "middle America" finds so troubling about Obama: a sense of elitism and a disdain for those who "cling to religion and guns". In the primary season against Hillary, Obama had trouble with those "Reagan Democrats" and other white middle class voters in places like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana. These are the very voters who remain unconvinced by "Obamamania", and who are less likely to vote willy-nilly for an empty mantra of "change". They see Obama as someone who courts their votes by day and bad-mouths them by night. They know that Obama sees himself as superior, and it just doesn't sit well with them. These voters see themselves as the heart and soul of America -- not the Hyde Park/Harvard Square types who run the Democrat party. That's precisely why Hillary stuck it out in the primary to the bitter end -- because she knows that her supporters are not naturally his supporters. For Obama, it is too bad that the Berliners don't have a vote come November.

To me, of course, the whole Obama trip this past week had an air of arrogance about it; as if he has earned the right to speak from the Brandenburg Gate, where JFK famously said "Ich bin ein Berliner" and where Ronald Reagan challenged the Soviets to "tear down this wall". Kennedy and Reagan had earned the right to make those speeches from such a symbolic perch as warriors of the Cold War. In the end, Obama bowed to pressure and selected another venue from which to speak. But the question remains: what has Obama ever done that he should even consider speaking from such an historically significant place? For that matter, what has Obama done to qualify him to be President of the United States?

The answer is nothing. But that doesn't matter to him, because he's absolutely convinces of his ability to lead the free world, healing the planet, solving world hunger and parting the oceans while he's at it. He is, after all, the change he's been waiting for.
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Are We Tough Enough?

The Liberal Asymmetry of the War on Terror

On Thursday, July 10, 2008, U.S. Army notification teams paid visits to the families of two U.S. soldiers who had been killed in Iraq. Notifying any family of the death of their son, brother or husband is never a routine event, but in this case it was both extraordinary and particularly painful for all involved. The two soldiers, Sgt. Alex Jiminez and 19 year old Pvt. Byron Fouty of the 2nd Brigade of the 10th Mountain Division, had been missing since May of 2007. The two soldiers were captured by Al Qaeda in Iraq in May of 2007 while on patrol south of Baghdad in the area known as the “triangle of death”. Unlike the comfortable, closely supervised conditions that await terrorists captured by U.S. forces on the battlefield, American soldiers captured by Al Qaeda enter what can only be termed a torture zone -- where their fate is almost certain to be a painful and grisly demise. To wit: another soldier, Pfc. Joseph Anzack Jr. was also captured along with Jiminez and Fouty; his body was found floating in the Euphrates River a week after the initial attack. During the past year, the families of Jiminez and Fouty continued to hold out hope that the two soldiers were still alive. Sadly, this was wishful thinking.

The fate of Jiminez, Fouty and Anzack – and the threat of similar treatment to the thousands of U.S. troops now in harm’s way in Iraq and Afghanistan -- raises some important issues, particularly in light of the recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush that gave habeus corpus rights to the terrorists being held at Guantanamo. In this election year, the Boumediene decision reminds us that we are waging a war against an enemy that is not bound by the same rules that we are. Somewhere in a cave on the Afghan-Pakistan border, where Osama Bin Laden may be hiding, and among a whole host of Islamic terrorist groups from London to Tehran, the Supreme Court has unwittingly reinforced what our enemy has already known about us. It has said, with legal finality, that our desire to be fair can be turned against us, exploited for key advantages in the war on terror.

This war against global terrorism has, of course, always been an asymmetrical struggle. By definition, terrorists who use suicide bombings as a means of carrying out their policies can never be matched by the Judeo-Christian world, with its norms and rules underpinned by morality and law. While we fight these terrorists – both on the actual battlefields of Afghanistan and Iraq, and in the streets of European and Asian capitals – with tactics defined by rules of engagement, our enemy knows no such limits. While many in the West wring their hands over the detainees at Guantanamo, our soldiers like Jiminez and Fouty captured by Al Qaeda in Iraq have been mutilated and beheaded. It’s the kind of asymmetry that gives nightmares to both our troops and their families.

Unfortunately, it provides no sleepless nights for many on the left, particularly those who have applauded the court’s decision in Boumediene, and who believe that the principles of democracy should never be outweighed by the practical necessities of war. This includes the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Barack Obama. Though Obama has given the left-wing base of the Democratic party whiplash with his recent tack to the center, he has remained steadfast in his intent to both withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq “beginning immediately” upon taking office, and to continue the left’s unraveling of many of the Bush Administration’s Patriot Act-based intelligence and security reforms. In comments made after the Boumediene decision he said, “I mean, you remember during the Nuremberg trials, part of what made us different was even after these Nazis had performed atrocities that no one had ever seen before, we still gave them a day in court and that taught the entire world about who we are but also the basic principles of rule of law. Now the Supreme Court upheld that principle yesterday”.

Leaving aside the distinct difference between the nature of Islamic terror and the war crimes of the Nazis (not to mention the fact that the Nuremburg trials were not adjudicated in a civilian court but rather before a military commission – of the same type that the Court in Boumediene specifically proscribes), Obama’s statement depicts a troubling but familiar view: that the war on terror cannot (and should not) be waged in a manner consistent with the methods and tactics of our enemies. Now, nobody of a sound mind would suggest that we should resort to suicide bombings or summary executions; but there is a toughness that is missing in our desire to wage war with all the due process of American law. Those like Obama who see the need to give every terrorist their “day in court” have essentially made the war on terror an abstraction -- a political football that pits the ACLU and other leftist organizations against the administration of George W. Bush.

Lone Survivor

Of course, to those on the front lines, the war on terror is no abstraction, but a real war where people get killed. Just ask Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell, part of a four-man reconnaissance squad ambushed in Afghanistan in July, 2005. Luttrell, who wrote a best selling book about the ordeal called “Lone Survivor”, was on a covert mission deep inside the Afghan-Kush Mountains when he and his teammates were inadvertently stumbled upon by three goat herders, who immediately put their mission at risk. Luttrell, his commander, Lieutenant Mike Murphy, and the other two members of the team were suddenly put into the kind of real-world predicament that policy-makers and ACLU lawyers could never care – or dare – to imagine. Standing on that hillside in striking distance of a major Taliban village, the four Navy SEALs had to make a battlefield decision as to what to do with the goat herders. Let them go and they were almost certain to report the SEALs position to the Taliban, thereby both endangering the mission and their own safety. Kill them, and they likely would have been able to maintain their position and, if not complete the mission, at least extricate themselves without having been discovered.

As Luttrell recounts, it was clear to the SEALs that the right military course of action was to eliminate the threat by killing the goat herders -- a tough, even brutal act, but one that these warriors were clearly capable of. But, the decision on that hillside didn’t hinge on what was best for the mission; rather the decision was based principally on what would happen to the SEALs once they returned to base. Fresh in their minds was what happened at Abu Ghraib and the way the “liberal media” in the U.S. had tarred and feathered the military. Luttrell quotes Lt. Murphy as saying: “When they find the bodies, the…media in the U.S.A. will latch on to it and write stuff about the brutish U.S. Armed Forces. Very shortly after that, we’ll be charged with murder. The murder of innocent Afghan farmers”. To Luttrell, at least, this was pretty compelling: “Was I afraid of these guys? No. Was I afraid of their possible buddies in the Taliban? No. Was I afraid of the liberal media back in the U.S.A.? Yes. And suddenly I flashed on the prospect of many, many years in a U.S. civilian jail alongside murderers and rapists.”

Faced with this prospect, the herders were set free; a decision that the SEALs quickly came to regret. Over the next few hours and, for Luttrell, the next few days, the SEALs were attacked relentlessly by a Taliban force of 150 to 200 fighters. Lt. Murphy and Luttrell’s comrades Petty Officers Mathew Axelson and Danny Deitz were killed after a valiant struggle; Murphy was later awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism. Eight more SEALs and eight other Special Forces soldiers were later killed when their helicopter was shot down on a rescue mission shortly after the battle began. It was the greatest single loss of life in the history of the SEALs. Luttrell managed to survive almost a week on the run, partly under the protection of a friendly Afghan village that fended off the Taliban in an effort to protect him. He was later awarded, along with Axelson and Dietz, the Navy Cross, the nation’s second highest award for valor in combat. The experience of these SEALs in Afghanistan, while extreme, is representative of the conflict between our ideals and the reality of war.

After the Election: Values or Victory?

With the very real prospect of an Obama presidency on the horizon, a central question arises: will the Democrats under his leadership continue to choose the protection of our civil values over tactical success in the war on terror? This very question has been in play over the long-running debate over the use of water-boarding and other coercive interrogation techniques. CIA Diector Michael Hayden admitted earlier this year that the CIA had used such techniques on three captured terrorists, including the mastermind of 9/11, Khalid Sheik Muhammed (who has also admitted to having personally beheaded Wall Street Journal reporter Michael Pearl). The water-boarding occurred in 2002, when the threat of another terrorist attack was high, and the three captives were the only detainees ever to be water-boarded while in U.S. custody. According to Hayden in sworn testimony before the Senate, the water-boarding of one of the detainees, Abu Zubaydah, led directly to the capture of Khalid Sheik Muhammed and the foiling of an “active terrorist plot” against the United States. In short, it worked.

On the issue of interrogation techniques, there is little that seperates John McCain from Barack Obama. McCain is on record as opposing coercive interrogation methods and would ban them, while also moving to close the prison at Guantanamo. In an interview in 2007 with Chris Wallace of Fox News, McCain said this: “any intelligence information we might gain through the use of torture could never, ever counterbalance the image that it does — the damage that it does to our image in the world." In the same interview, McCain went on to claim that coercive interrogation doesn’t work, and shouldn’t be a regular part of our anti-terror arsenal.

It should be said that McCain is one of the only people in Washington who has actually been tortured himself, undergoing years of bone-breaking abuse at the hands of the North Vietnamese during his time as a POW in Hanoi. The real question on this subject is this: Would McCain authorize the use of coercive interrogation techniques (including water-boarding) in the case of the “ticking time bomb” scenario – when intelligence gathered could save the lives of thousands (or millions) of Americans? Here, in a 2005 essay he wrote for Newsweek, McCain is on record as being somewhat more flexible:

“In such an urgent and rare instance, an interrogator might well try extreme measures to extract information that could save lives. Should he do so, and thereby save an American city or prevent another 9/11, authorities and the public would surely take this into account when judging his actions and recognize the extremely dire situation which he confronted.”

This is somewhat consistent with McCain’s oft-stated view that the United States. is in a global struggle with Islamic extremism, and that the real threats posed by this war must be dealt with as a special case, using all available intelligence methods and military power to combat. As such, it was not surprising that McCain came down harshly on the Boumediene v. Bush decision, saying that it was “one of the worst decisions in the history of this country”. Though McCain has been critical of Guantanamo, his desire to close it was based principally on the use of military Commissions -- not civilian courts – to gradually dispose of detainee cases. It most certainly did not include the granting of the same habeus corpus rights available to American citizens.

Barack Obama, for his part, supports the conventional liberal view that the fight against terrorism is best done via conventional law-enforcement techniques. This is a stark reminder of the differences between the Clinton administration, which treated the repeated attacks against American interests in the 1990s as a series of criminal acts, and the Bush administration which, since 9/11 has looked at terrorism as a security threat that necessitated coordinated military action to defeat. Obama clearly intends to return to the law enforcement model if elected. Recently he said this:

“What we know is that, in previous terrorist attacks -- for example, the first attack against the World Trade Center, we were able to arrest those responsible, put them on trial. They are currently in U.S. prisons, incapacitated.”

Unfortunately, this statement is wrong -- the bomb-maker in that attack, Abdul Rahman Yasin, escaped to Iraq (yes, Iraq!) after the bombing and remains at large, as did the financier of the first WTC bombing Khalid Sheik Muhammed until he was captured in Pakistan. But the sentiment is clear: Obama seeks to return America’s terror fight back to the courts and the dysfunctional relationship between the FBI and our myriad intelligence agencies. With Obama sure to be leading a Democrat-controlled Congress, there will likely be a roll-back of the coordinated civil-military terror-fighting approach that has successfully protected the U.S. homeland since 9/11/2001.

And where does Obama come down on the use of coercive interrogations? Again, he is squarely in the camp that believes that such techniques run afoul of American values and serve to simply “breed more terrorism”. During the hearings on the nomination of Mike Mukasey for Attorney General, Obama issued this statement:

"I have been consistent in my strong belief that no Administration should allow the use of torture, including so-called 'enhanced interrogation techniques' like water-boarding, head-slapping, and extreme temperatures. It's time that we had a Department of Justice that upholds the rule of law and American values, instead of finding ways to enable the President to subvert them. No more political parsing or legal loopholes.”

Given this statement, it is reasonable to assume that as president, Obama would place the “rule of law” over the security of the nation. His desire is to permanently outlaw the very form of interrogation that was successful in the case of Abu Zubaydah, and might very well be needed at a future time to gain intelligence about an impending attack. Obama has unilaterally disarmed us from using even the threat of water-boarding, because Osama bin Laden and his cohorts now know that he will outlaw it if and when he becomes president.

This is, of course, standard fare at the base of the Democratic party – the core support that has put Obama in the position to be president. According to a recent article at the liberal HuffingtonPost by R.J. Eskow, (“Blue Alert: Obama And the Dems Need Contingency Plans for Terror and War”, June 24, 2008), this is a clear issue on which “Democrats should explain that torture is un-American, that it breeds terrorists -- and that it doesn't help catch bad guys” (emphasis in original). In fact, Eskow claims that America has tortured “dozens of innocent Iraqis only to send them home with $100 in their pocket. That's like raping a woman and then leaving money on her dresser.” But don’t despair, because Eskow is actually looking out for the American military, who he thinks will somehow be hurt by all this torture going on at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and the hundreds of other places where the U.S. is holding detainees. “How many (Americans) know that we won't get better intelligence that way, but that more American soldiers are likely to be tortured as a result? The short version: Torture is un-American, and it hurts our military.”

Try convincing Sgt. Jiminez and Pvt. Fouty that some reciprocity actually exists in the treatment of our soldiers by an enemy that has no sense of humanity. Eskow makes the common claim on the left that somehow our willingness to use tightly controlled methods to extract intelligence information has some symmetry to the kind of brutal tactics used against us; if we stop our “torture” and ascribe to our democratic principles, our enemy will surely do the same.

All of which shows the tremendous disconnect on the left between the virtue of theory and the hard practical realities in this war. While it is aesthetically pleasing to talk about the importance of our values, it remains clear that the terrorists we fight can – and will – use these values to their advantage. As this is being written, hundreds of Guantanamo detainees are petitioning the U.S. courts for hearings that may lead to their release. And unlike Marcus Luttrell’s SEAL comrades who died that day in Afghanistan, they will live to fight another day.
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Michelle Obama's (Racist) America

When Michelle Obama made her comments about feeling "truly proud" of America for the first time in her life, there were many who were willing to give her a pass. Apologists in the media were willing to give her the benefit of the doubt, signaling (again) that nothing the Obama's do or say will get much real scrutiny.
 
The facts, however, for those who are interested in such things (liberals are obviously not) -- is that Michelle Obama is someone who doesn't like America and is disdainful of whites. Her sitting for 20 years in the church of Jeremiah Wright is no accident. It is, rather, an affirmation of her beliefs that black separatism is the right course of action for the black community. If Michele Obama is carrying some of Barack's message of "change" for America -- whites should watch out. This is the kind of change that will lead to more racial division and hatred, not less.

How do we know this? Because Michelle Obama has said so in her own words. As Snopes.com reports, in her senior thesis at Princeton, Michele Obama stated that America was a nation founded on "crime and hatred'. Moreover, she stated that whites in America were 'ineradicably racist'. The 1985 thesis, titled 'Princeton-Educated Blacks and the Black Community' was written under her maiden name, Michelle LaVaughn Robinson.

"Most alarming is Michele Obama's use of the terms 'separationist' and 'integrationist' when describing the views of black people. Mrs. Obama clearly identifies herself with a 'separationist' view of race. 'By actually working with the Black lower class or within their communities as a result of their ideologies, a separationist may better understand the desperation of their situation and feel more hopeless about a resolution as opposed to an integrationist who is ignorant to their plight.'

"Obama writes that the path she chose by attending Princeton would likely lead to her 'further integration and/or assimilation into a white cultural and social structure that will only allow me to remain on the periphery of society; never becoming a full participant.'

I guess that becoming First Lady of the United States is a peripheral job! And what kind of First Lady would Michele Obama be? The First Lady of all Americans? She writes:

'There was no doubt in my mind that as a member of the black community, I am obligated to this community and will utilize all of my present and future resources to benefit the black community first and foremost.'
And, she gives what seems to be a "call to arms for affirmative action" policies that could be the hallmark of an Obama administration.

'Predominately white universities like Princeton are socially and academically designed to cater to the needs of the white students comprising the bulk of their enrollments.'

"Michelle Obama does not look into a crowd of Obama supporters and see Americans. She sees black people and white people eternally conflicted with one another. The thesis provides a trove of Mrs. Obama's thoughts and world view seen through a race-based prism. This is a very divisive view for a potential first lady that would do untold damage to race relations in this country in a Barack Obama administration."

Obviously, Michele Obama isn't going to be president herself. But if she feels this way and sat with her husband for 20 years in a church that espouses many of these same views -- is it not possible (indeed probable) that the candidate himself might harbor such views as well?

At the crux of this, of course, is that Barack and Michelle Obama are not agents of change, trying to bring a new politics to Washington. They represent the same old liberal politics of the past, and echo the tired old divisive racial politics of Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and, yes, Louis Farrakhan. This is not change! This is just more of the same packaged in a nice eloquent suit.

Is this really what America in 2009 wants? More of the same old failed policies of the left?
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Al Qaeda's Perry Mason Moment

Undoubtedly, the ACLU and other left-wingers who don't believe the threat of Islamic terror is real will rejoice in today's Supreme Court decision. In a 5-4 vote, the Court ruled in Boumediene v. Bush that enemy combatants who have never set foot in the U.S. should be granted the full protection of the United States Constitution. This includes the right to Habeus Corpus, which will ensure that every detainee at Guantanamo gets their "day in court".

For those who recall the fiasco that was the Padilla case (and does anyone remember O.J. Simpson?), granting access to the U.S. courts will result in an endless parade of show trials where lawyers for the defendants will posture and preen in a bid to embarrass the American government. And even more damaging, the rules of evidence will compel the government to disclose classified information to the public that may include critical "sources and methods" of the intelligence agencies. The government will then have a stark choice: provide the information that might jeopardise sources and current operations, or let the prisoner walk. We already have evidence that several enemy combatants released from Guantanamo have returned to the fight against American soldiers. If you are interested in protecting the American public, what kind of choice is this?

The Boumediene decision is indefensible -- both as a matter of judicial and public policy. While the court traditionally follows stare decisis (or precedent) in its rulings, in this case the court specifically went against its prior ruling from 1950 in Johnson v. Eisentrager. In that case, the court specifically ruled that alien combatants had no right to Habeus Corpus. According to James Taranto at the Wall Street Journal, the reason for overturning Eisentrager was something of a technicality:

"The majority distinguished Guantanamo from the facility at issue in Eisentrager--a U.S.-administered prison in occupied Germany--on the ground that although the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base is technically on Cuban territory, America exercises "complete jurisdiction and control" over it. Thus, detainees have constitutional rights pursuant to today's ruling only if they are held at Guantanamo."

This, then, will be the final straw for Guantanamo, which both Barack Obama and John McCain have vowed to close in any event. But for the remaining 270 detainees there -- all hardened Al Qaeda extremists or other terrorists caught in Iraq and Afghanistan -- the circus is about to begin. How many of them will be released to fight another day? Justice Antonin Scalia, for one, believes that it will endanger American lives. In dissent he writes in Boumediene:

"[Today's decision] will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed. That consequence would be tolerable if necessary to preserve a time-honored legal principle vital to our constitutional Republic. But it is this Court's blatant abandonment of such a principle that produces the decision today."

The abandonment of the principle of precedence is hard to understand in this case -- particularly since the differences between Eisentrager and Boumediene are minute. This is a clear case of "legislating from the bench" -- the kind of judicial activism that is anathema to the strict constructionism that conservatives prefer from the Supreme Court. One can only conclude that the liberal justices on the court have a political statement to make -- that the constitutional protections for enemies caught in battle are more important than the security interests of the nation. Of course, most liberals don't believe there is a real and present security threat -- despite that fact that Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11, is one of the first detainees to benefit from his "Perry Mason" moment.

In many ways, this decision shows the vital importance of the Supreme Court in the coming election. For all the discussion in this blog and others as to the issue of foreign policy and economic experience, the most lasting impact of the next presidency will undoubtedly be who he picks to replace Justice John Paul Stevens -- the next likely justice to retire. While Justice Kennedy provided the critical fifth vote, the four liberals -- Souter, Breyer, Ginsberg and Stevens made up the solid block in favor of this decision. Stevens, appointed to the bench by Gerald Ford, is 88 years old and will likely retire during the next presidential term. His replacement will determine the direction of the court for many years to come.

We all know the kind of justices Barack Obama will appoint -- those in the Ginsberg/Souter/Scalia/Stevens mold. John McCain is on record as wanting to appoint justices more in the mold of John Roberts and Samuel Alito, both of whom joined the minority in opposing the decision in Boumediene.

Once again, a clear choice come November
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Obamanomics: Doing Socialism Proud

America, if you think things are bad now, just wait until 2009 if Barack Obama becomes president. You can take his recent comments on the price of gas to the bank: The Democrat nominee actually believes that the high price of gas is a good thing -- because it will force all you SUV-driving religious clingers in the heartland to buy a Prius and go green. Nothing like $8-a-gallon gas to change behavior. In Obama's view of the world, the less you drive the better, because it will lower greenhouse gas emissions and teach those big, bad oil barons that they better think of a new way to gouge us -- like cellulose ethanol or biofuel from kitchen grease. Nevermind that those hurt the most by this increase in gas prices will be that hardworking single mother who commutes 50 miles to work every day for her $35,000 a year job. Wait, isn't she a member of the Democrat's core voting base?

Obamanomics will strangle the economy and put us deep into a recession. Because in addition to his regressive tax policy, he'll burden the economy with more spending and more regulation. It has been proven over and over again that you can't tax and spend your way out of an economic slowdown -- it just doesn't work. In fact, over the long run, higher taxes never lead to greater economic growth. Higher taxes are a disincentive to work more, earn more and invest more. Why is that basic human nature so difficult for Democrats to understand? Is it because they always believe that the ends -- providing for the poor, the needy and the unemployed -- is more important that taking care of those who actually work and pay the taxes?

A recent editorial by the Investors Business Daily seems to reinforce this latter view:

"Make no mistake: This tax hike is gargantuan. Simply by not making Bush’s tax cuts permanent, taxes will rise by a minimum of $2.8 trillion between now and 2018.”

The IBD says that if the tax cuts are allowed to expire in 2010:

-- Spending will rise by half a trillion dollars over the next five years. And the Democrats will pay for it by raising taxes by $683 billion — “the biggest such increase ever.”

-- About 48 million married couples — “the heart of the middle class that Democrats say they want to help” — will see an average annual tax increase of $3,007.


-- The tax bill for the elderly will rise $2,181 a year on average.

-- A single parent with two children earning $30,000 a year will see a tax hike of $1,600.

-- A family of four earning $50,000 a year will be hit with a tax increase of 191 percent.

-- The 2009 budget for the first time ever spends $1 trillion on discretionary items — non-defense, non-entitlement.

“This is a foretaste of future fiscal recklessness under a Barack Obama presidency (he voted for the bill),” the IBD observes.

Noting that the budget would weaken the economy and kill job growth, the IBD concludes: “This is supply-side economics in reverse — creating massive disincentives to work, save and invest, and shrinking the pie.”

So, the Democrats and Obama say they are for the "little guy" and want to end the "tax cuts for the rich". Never mind that the "rich" include the millions of small businesses out there that make more than $250,000 per year and employ (literally) tens-of-millions of people. Ending the Bush tax cuts will increase taxes in all income brackets, will create a disincentive for investment and will reinstate a confiscatory "death tax" of 55% on assets in excess of $1 million. Do people with assets in excess of $1 million deserve to have 55 cents of every additional dollar returned back to the government -- which has already taxed that dollar when it was earned? Is that fair in any way?

It is if you are Barack Obama, who is happy to take your money so he can give it to someone he deems more needy. Classic redistributive economic policy that any socialist would be proud of.
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The Clearest Choice: The Next Commander in Chief

Recent polls suggest that the most important thing on the minds of Americans today is the economy -- which on a daily basis, with gasoline and food prices at all time highs, is understandable. When you go to the polls to vote for Congress, that's a great thing to focus on; it is Congress that has the "power of the purse" and that has been spending our money with reckless abandon, preventing further domestic oil drilling and distorting food prices with the Farm Bill and other hand-outs. When it comes to Congress, you should vote your pocketbook.
 
But, when it comes to the presidency, focusing on the economy is folly. Why? Because the president has limited powers when it comes to economic matters. As head of the Executive Branch, he proposes a fiscal budget and has the power of the veto -- but that's really it. He doesn't pass legislation, doesn't load spending bills with pork, and doesn't work on behalf of constituents to fund "pet projects". The president's main job is in the realm of foreign policy. He sets the country's foreign policy agenda, acts as the nation's "chief diplomat". And he serves as the U.S. military's Commander in Chief. As the Commander in Chief, he makes the ultimate decisions on how and when to use military force. Budgets come and go, and rarely is a president remembered for his limited actions on the domestic front. But whether it is FDR and Truman in WW II and Korea, JFK and LBJ in Vietnam, Reagan in Grenada, Bush 41 in Panama and Desert Storm, Clinton in Kosovo and now Bush in Iraq and Afghanistan, presidents are always remembered for their actions as Commander in Chief.  In many ways it is the only reason to vote for anyone to be president.
 
Which makes the choice in this election so stark. The choice on this criteria between John McCain, a foreign policy expert and war hero, and Barack Obama, a neophyte one term United States Senator is pretty clear. Take their response in 2006 to the failing war in Iraq. McCain, who had been calling for the surge since 2004, publicly called a change in strategy in a speech entitled "Choosing Victory" (1/5/2007): more troops on the ground, a more active role in the "clear, hold and build" strategy central to a counterinsurgency. He called for "the surge" before the surge was even being contemplated by the Bush administration. Now that we are on the verge of victory in Iraq, McCain's mock "Commander in Chief" decision was both unpopular, bold and ultimately correct.

And what of Barack Obama? While McCain was choosing victory, Obama was choosing defeat, introducing the "Iraq War De-escalation Act of 2007" (1/30/2007). Obama, who hasn't been to Iraq since January, 2006, had long decided that the war was lost. He publicly predicted the surge would fail, citing the fact that Iraq was now in "civil war", and refused subsequently -- even in the face of evidence to the contrary, to admit that the strategy of General Patraeus and U.S. forces was actually working. Even as a candidate and would-be Commander in Chief, Obama couldn't bring himself to giving the troops he seeks to command the plaudits they deserve.

If you don't believe me, take a look at the video below of Obama speaking about how he intends to gut the defense budget and cancel needed weapons systems. If you believe that there is a real and present danger out their from Islamic terror, and you find the recent moves in Russia and China alarming, you will be very worried in deed that this man may be the next president.

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