The Democrats, and so-called progressives, are doing such a
good job of attacking Obama that McCain is struggling to come up with a
campaign strategy. If the barbs against the Illinois senator keep up at
a steady rate, McCain won't even need a strategy---all he'll need to do
is keep his mouth shut.
Clearly, the single most precarious
issue, for Obama, is the war. While the economy may be the ultimate
concern for working Americans, nobody takes John McCain's economic plan
as anything but a continuation of that of his predecessor's, but those
who oppose the ongoing occupation of Iraq will account for a greater
presence at their polls than voters who support Nader or Barr.
For
some, it is too bad the world comes in three dimensions. How much
easier it would be if one could merely say "let's roll up our tent and
go home." Yes, there are serious questions about whether a President
Obama will allow for the continued occupation of Iraq long after the
military leaves. But, Obama's mistake might not be that he said he
intends to revisit the idea of troop withdrawal in the first 16 months
he's in office, or that his decisions, as a commander-in-chief, will
depend on the situation in Iraq at the time.
Curiously, like
President Kennedy before him, Obama's biggest mistake might be that he
recognizes, and acknowledges, that his decisions are nuanced, not
obdurate, and subject to change. Doubtless, JFK kicked up a lot of
dust, behind the scenes, from those whose interests were better served
by maintaining, and expanding, troop presence in Vietnam, and Obama is
kicking up a lot of dust by saying he is thoughtful, willing to move
into the gray zone and out of the binary field of black and white,
right and wrong, progressive and conservative. This scares the wits out
of people.
Nothing bothers this country of the Puritans, by the
Puritans, and for the Puritans more than a thinking president. Look at
all the crap thrown at Jimmy Carter for not blowing up Iran when he had
the chance.
But, hey, simply yelling out "stop the war, I want
to get off" won't do it either nor will voting for Ralph Nader (read:
John McCain). The solution is to work with the problem, not abandon it,
and hold Obama to task for his pledge to have better judgment.
More
importantly, we need leadership that will move us from a wartime to a
peacetime economy, and one whose vision is to de-escalate, not look for
more parts of the globe to preempt or provoke.
Those who argue
that Senator Obama doesn't have a "plan" to get us out of Iraq are
naive if they think that a Kucinich, Nader, or any other "plan" would
not meet with fatal resistance from the military industrial complex.
Didn't we just come out of eight years of pathological lying? Do we
want to elect another president who will lie to us?
The
infrastructure for war, and wartime profiteering, are deeply embedded
in our country's ethos. Patriotism is inseparable from militarism. If
you have any questions about that, just listen to what conservative
talk show pundits, like Bill Bennett, say about guys like Wes
Clark---that he's a four-star general makes him perfect presidential
material. Okay, so why did we ask Pakistan's Musharraf to take off his
uniform if generals are so ideally-suited for governance?
We
need leadership that will address the need to continue affirmative
action programs at a time when we have more youngsters of color in our
nation's prisons than in our nation's universities.
In the end,
those who contend that Obama represents a movement are right, and he
must account to that movement, and it is up to the talking heads,
pundits, progressives, and Congress to hold him accountable once he
takes the oath of office.
In the meantime, efforts to sabotage
him by pointing out his flip-flops will only result in a president,
McCain, who has the opportunity to appoint another neanderthal to the
Supreme Court, and provoke greater global hostility in the name of
homeland security.
While McCain may be limping, he's not
wounded, just a bit dazed. Who'd have thought that he'd be up against
this kind of opponent---clearly not the designated heir-apparent. But,
make no mistake, while he may need to refresh his settings, or regain
his balance, McCain is far from down for the punch, and this recent
effort to expose, and attack Obama can only help McCain in November.
If
nothing else, we've learned from American History 101 that nobody
shoots themselves in the foot better than Democrats. In the next four
months, those who want to see a Democrat in the White House must get
behind Barack, and not pander to Republican talking points about
flip-flopping.
There will be plenty of time to pontificate on
his weaknesses once he's in office, and call him to task on his pledge
to work with Chris Dodd on the retroactive immunity clause in FISA
reform. After all, like the others before him, Barack Obama's first
task, on becoming president, will be brainstorming about how best to
win another term.
So, leave the swift-booting of Obama to the
Repugs. Let the McCainites call him Sergeant Flip Flop. Hell, they'd
call JFK a flip-flopper, too, for talking about making changes in his
Vietnam policy, as well as thinking about lifting the trade embargo
against Cuba not, as he said for moral reasons, but because, unlike
those who followed, Kennedy had the wisdom, and foresight, to work
toward a global economy.
Higher order thinking is lost on a
unitary executive, as well as a country caught up in dichotomies of
"good guys" and "bad guys," so what happens to a presidential candidate
who is more comfortable playing Hamlet, and entering the gray zone, in
a country without Hamlets that is overrun by Macbeths, Macdonalds and,
unless we're careful, McCains.
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