Posted on 06/07/2008 6:33:28 AM PDT by K-oneTexas
Why McCain Would Make a Better President by Aaron Goldstein
McCain knows what government can and cannot do. More importantly, he knows what government should and should not do.
Should Barack Obama be elected President of the United States this November his chances for a successful term in office are slim to none.
As the candidate who extols the virtue of hope and change and whose audience chants in unison, "Yes we can!," Obama has set expectations so high that he is bound to fall short of lofty expectations.
After all, Obama has said this election is not so much about winning as it is about transforming the nation. This transformation would consist of (but would not be limited to) ending the War in Iraq; giving every American government health care, stopping lobbyists from running Washington and ending tax breaks to American companies that ship job overseas. It would come as no surprise to me if Obama told his adoring audiences they could eat all the ice cream they wanted without getting indigestion.
Levity aside, it does beg two questions. Can Obama transform this nation? Should Obama transform this nation?
If Obama cant transform America then he is going to have a lot of explaining to supporters who will find themselves disenchanted and disappointed. They will come to view Obama as just another politician, a mere mortal. On the other hand, Obama could very well transform America but that doesnt mean he should.
Sure we can leave Iraq. But what if Iran takes over Iraq? Sure Obama could meet with Ahmadinejad and try to reason with him. But what if Ahmadinejad laughs at Obama and decides to take Americans hostage? What if withdrawal from Iraq emboldens Islamic fundamentalists to carry out another attack on American soil on the scale of 9/11 or perhaps greater?
Sure we can give every American government health care. But will Obama tell Americans that their health care will be rationed? Health care for every American is nice as long as Americans dont mind waiting two years for an MRI exam or for surgery. Heaven help those who dont have two years to wait.
Sure we can stop lobbyists from running Washington and curtail their power. But tell me how you go about it without violating the First Amendment? And are some lobbyists more equal than others? I have a friend who tells me that only people who lobby for bad things should be reigned in. So would Obama exempt unions, environmentalists and anti-poverty organizations from lobby reform and only target those organizations that support lower taxes, veterans and Israel?
Sure we can stop giving tax breaks to American companies that ship jobs overseas. But how does whooping companies upside the head for investing overseas encourage them to invest at home? Besides, does Obama really want to stop American entrepreneurs from investing in places dear to him, such as Indonesia or Kenya, even if those entrepreneurs could have created those jobs here?
There are two lessons here. Dont make promises you cant keep and dont make promises that arent worth keeping.
Conversely, not much is expected of John McCain. While liberals have swooned over Obama, many conservatives view McCain with suspicion. In fact, one of the pledges McCain has made is downright unpopular staying in Iraq to win. But, of course, it takes a man of courage to do the right thing even if it isnt the popular thing at the time. McCain supported the surge in Iraq when nearly no one else in Washington would. Yet because of his political clout that accompanied the brilliant strategy of General David Petraeus, the surge has worked. Of course, there is more to be done in Iraq. But if anyone can see this nation through what has become a very complicated war it is McCain.
Make no mistake. McCain isnt trying to win a high school popularity contest with his position on Iraq. Why would McCain stick his neck out for President Bush, a man with whom he has had substantive differences, if he did not truly believe in winning the War in Iraq, let alone the surge? McCain is dead serious when he says that he would rather lose an election than lose a war. The same cannot be said for Obama.
Of course, McCain wants to win this election. But he doesnt want to do it by telling people what he thinks they want to hear. Nor does he want to do it by telling people he is going to transform this nation. To do so would be an act of outright dishonesty. Besides, no one person, no matter how attractive and charismatic, should delude himself and others into thinking he can transform the nation with the stroke of a pen. McCain knows what government can and cannot do. More importantly, he knows what government should and should not do.
McCains proposals are modest but practical. They include an annual holiday on the Federal Gas Tax and Diesel Tax from Memorial Day to Labor Day; a repeal of the alternate minimum tax, a reduction in corporate taxes from 35 to 25%; a direct refundable tax credit for individuals and families looking for alternatives to employer-based health insurance; providing families resources to move their children from failing schools and an opportunity for homeowners to trade an onerous variable rate mortgage for a long-term fixed rate mortgage that better reflects the market value of the home. These proposals arent spoken of in grandiose language nor will they transform America. But they will help Americans who are in genuine need of it and help make day-to day-living a little more manageable.
I am not suggesting for a minute that McCain will implement these things with ease. After all, McCain has said he will veto any legislation that contains earmarks. A Democrat-controlled Congress isnt likely to be inclined to go along with McCains proposals if he chooses to carry a veto stamp in his pocket. But McCain has also made a career of working with Democrats and if there is any Republican President who could get things done with a Democrat Congress, it is McCain. That might be an anathema to some conservatives but it will be music to the ears of the majority of Americans, liberal and conservative, who just want their government to work.
There is nothing wrong with Americans who are filled with hope and want change. But there is a difference between optimism and wishful thinking. Some promises arent attainable while other promises would do more harm than good. Barack Obamas rhetoric might soar to the highest sky but in the real world his words are out of reach. John McCains rhetoric might not stir our collective imagination but in the real world his words rest on a foundation of solid ground. This is why I believe John McCain would make a better President of the United States.
Aaron Goldstein writes about the things that pique his insatiable curiosity. In addition to politics, he is an aficionado of baseball, poetry, music and ketchup flavored potato chips. Aaron satiates his various appetites in Boston. aargold24@hotmail.com http://www.poetsforthewar.org
Tru dat holmes!
Here's your mug Neocon......
I consider McCain as a continuation of the hemorrhaging. MommaObama is a bullet to the head...
Re. #38. It was like you mind melded with me. I could not agree further. 100% dittos, especially on you last part. I despise McCain, but MommaObama is truly frightening. He will not throw the Nation of Islam under the bus if he gets elected. People better get ready for what is coming...
Apparently we have a server hiccup and for a while I thought I was rudized for taking a stand for McCain.
It is time to acknowledge that while McCain may not be what we want, he is still a good man, a patriot, and a hero
and that Obama is none of above.
And I even though I don’t agree with him always I will have to vote for him, anything else is a surrender to the forces that are pulling Obama’s strings. What better proof of that is the way that Hillary has conceded.
When I saw that my bull5h!+ detector blew and I stopped reading.
Which category does protecting the borders fall into? What government can or cannot do? And, if we can't protect our own borders, why are we pissing away American treasure and spilling American blood trying to protect Iraq's, eight thousand miles away?
The GOP is offering, yet again, as they first did when they ran Poppy Bush against Mike Dukakis, the Sure-our-candidate-is-a-pile-of-crap-wrapped-in-skin-but-the-other-guy-is-a-bigger-pile-of-crap-than-ours argument. That argument I bought for twenty years but am not going to this year. Buying that argument produced a GOP that continued to slither leftward. I will not help it on its socialist way anymore.
That is a brilliant point, “We have nothing to offer but fear itself.” Good one.
Therein lies the problem, and the solution, cobra.
WHY is he the "only choice" we have been given?
WE are supposed to be making the choice in a government OF, BY and FOR the people!
Instead, some "central committee" elitists in my state jimmy rigged the rules for the primary this year, thwarting the WILL of the people. Actually, in the past 3 weeks I am hearing they did not fix the rules, and instead I was blatantly lied to at the polls when I voted in our primary.
The RNC and their kool-aid drinkers not only allowed the ENEMEDIA to co-opt OUR primary, but joined in the fiasco, by sponsoring the REPUBLICAN debates and setting the rules for participation with phony polls.
He may have been coronated back in January, but he has NOT been nominated. We have just under 3 months to do something about that. Capitulating to the elitist/DNC/RNC/Enemedia cabal is not something many of us are willing to do. We prefer to be part of the solution as opposed to perpetuating the nightmare. Is that so difficult to understand? I really hope it isn't and you will look at this thing very carefully.
That works as well.
You are absolutely right on the reparations. Once in power Obama et all will pay any price to stay there, both morally and financially (the latter involuntarily supplied by all citizens).
Politics is war carried on by other means. The results are who gets what, when, and where. I've already listed what will come with Obama.
ditto!
I don’t get it. In post 17 you say you’re voting for Obama, and post 26 sounds like you’re giving reasons for voting for McCain. Am I missing something?
“Why McCain Would Make a Better President”
Better than....” Pond scum? Maggot infested road-kill?
How about better than barak hussein obama? Those are your real choices, as much as you seem to enjoy comparing a war hero to pond scum or maggot-infested road kill. Real class.
“I know my vote will probably put Obama into office”
Someone has an exceedingly high opinion of himself.
Excellent post.
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