Sally Quinn nails the performance of the two Presidential candidates in The Washington Post.
I want to live in a world where Gen. David Petraeus and Meg Whitman, former chief executive of eBay, are the wisest people I know, where offshore drilling will help ease our energy crisis, where a guy stays in a Vietnamese prison camp even when told he could get out, and has great stories to tell. I want to live in a world where I was absolutely certain that life begins at conception, where a man is a maverick and stands up against his Senate colleagues when he disagrees with them, where the only thing to do with evil is defeat it, where a guy will follow Osama bin Laden to the gates of Hell to capture him. I want to believe that our biggest enemy is radical Islamist terrorists. I want to be part of a world that doesn't have to raise taxes; where America is a beacon, a shining city on a hill; where our values are simply Judeo-Christian values; and where a man always puts his country first. I want to be one of "my friends."
That (Obama's) kind of nuance is hard to understand sometimes -- it's unclear, complicated. Obama's world can be scarier. It's multicultural. It's realistic (yes, there is evil on the streets of this country as well as in other places, and a lot of evil has been perpetrated in the name of good). It's honest. When does life begin? Only the antiabortionists are clear on that. For the majority of Americans (who are pro-choice), it is "above my pay grade," in Obama's words, where there is no hard and fast line to draw on what's worth dying for, and where people of all faiths have to be respected.
I would rather live in McCain's world than Obama's. But I believe that we live in Obama's world.
Quinn saw the same dynamic that Fred Kaplan did in Slate after the candidates gave major foreign policy speeches a month ago.
In short, while Obama's analysis has some lapses and holes, at least it is an analysis; McCain's is a bit of a fantasy.
--Ballard Burgher
Monday, August 18, 2008
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Here's the chilling question I wonder about.
Are the people who live in John McCain's fantasy world the same people Andrew Bacevich describes as being in a state of denial about today's national political crisis?
How many of them will bother to vote?
Let's hope Obama can turn out the vote among those who inhabit the real world.
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