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October 28, 2008

Andrew Sullivan: The Top Ten Reasons Conservatives Should Vote For Obama

Andrew Sullivan in his excellent Atlantic blog:

Screenhunter_10_oct_28_213910. A body blow to racial identity politics. An end to the era of Jesse Jackson in black America.

9. Less debt. Yes, Obama will raise taxes on those earning over a quarter of a million. And he will spend on healthcare, Iraq, Afghanistan and the environment. But so will McCain. He plans more spending on health, the environment and won't touch defense of entitlements. And his refusal to touch taxes means an extra $4 trillion in debt over the massive increase presided over by Bush. And the CBO estimates that McCain's plans will add more to the debt over four years than Obama's. Fiscal conservatives have a clear choice.

8. A return to realism and prudence in foreign policy. Obama has consistently cited the foreign policy of George H. W. Bush as his inspiration. McCain's knee-jerk reaction to the Georgian conflict, his commitment to stay in Iraq indefinitely, and his brinksmanship over Iran's nuclear ambitions make him a far riskier choice for conservatives. The choice between Obama and McCain is like the choice between George H.W. Bush's first term and George W.'s.

7. An ability to understand the difference between listening to generals and delegating foreign policy to them.

6. Temperament. Obama has the coolest, calmest demeanor of any president since Eisenhower. Conservatism values that kind of constancy, especially compared with the hot-headed, irrational impulsiveness of McCain.

5. Faith. Obama's fusion of Christianity and reason, his non-fundamentalist faith, is a critical bridge between the new atheism and the new Christianism.

More here.

Posted by Abbas Raza at 04:40 PM | Permalink

Comments

Blog Statement about Barack Obama.

I just read a terrific online article about Barack Obama at www.ebmpublishing.com. The article was wonderfully written and showed why America is willing to accept him. I’m even considering voting for him.

Posted by: Kendall | Oct 28, 2008 4:45:40 PM

Here's another point:
The complaint by McC/Palin that a slightly higher graduated income tax (not just the having, versus not) is "socialist" is misleading and irks me. Hey, when are those who say they don’t like “redistribution” by tax rates, going to prove your honesty by opposing the current cap gains rate already being lower than the tax on people who, ironically, actually did work hard to produce new value and earn the money directly? (I mean the base CG tax rate before any inflationary “time” adjustments - I support indexing.)

Also, McCain wants to make the CG rate even lower! I don’t want my earned income to be redistributed to mostly worthless speculators! If we want to encourage real capital investment, than have a tax break like deducting initial investment from taxable income, at the front end, instead of a sop to traders. (You'd be surprised, how many people don't even consider than my selling XYZ stock to Mr. B brings me the money, not company XYZ.)

Posted by: Neil Bates | Oct 28, 2008 4:51:08 PM

Andrew Sullivan is celebrating the post-racial candidacy (and possibly the presidency) of Obama a bit prematurely, in my opinion. Those us who grew up in countries with entrenched identity politics (religion, caste, gender) know that sometimes people eschew prejudice for common sense. Just because a male chauvinist votes for a female head of state or a casteist elects a candidate from a lower caste, doesn't mean the end of personal predilections. Think Indira Gandhi and Benazir Bhutto and the status of the majority of women in India and Pakistan. Even a racist might vote for Obama. But that doesn't mean America is going to be the cheerful Rainbow Coalition in the near future.

Posted by: Ruchira | Oct 28, 2008 5:16:43 PM

Wow, those are some great succinct points. I have been ashamed for quite some time that I ever voted Republican (albeit long before Cheney-Bush). Republicans need to take a good hard look at George Washington and Thomas Jefferson - they certainly would never have the non-thinking religious zealots in the far right.

Posted by: Kirk Mower | Oct 28, 2008 7:13:29 PM

A sad commentary on the political illiteracy of a ignorant nation.

Posted by: Dave Ranning | Oct 28, 2008 9:29:06 PM

Too late to the party, Andy

Posted by: Mick | Jan 4, 2009 8:17:25 AM

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