I am assuming I am the tallest person blogging....I would say thats a pretty safe assumption, The only person taller than me that I know has a hard time tying his shoes...let alone turing on a computer.

Saturday, September 06, 2008

After the Convention is the afterconvention and after the convention is the hotel lobby and....

As the thousands of red, white and blue balloons, the tinsel and the tickertape descended from the rafters on the Republican convention moments after John McCain had finished addressing it, I at last worked out what had been the key difference between this event and the Democratic beano the week before.



The Democrats have a world view based (as Dr Johnson might have put it) on the triumph of hope over experience. The Republicans’ is rooted firmly in reality.

Republicans were given a real vision for the future of America, not empty promises

In Denver, speaker after speaker lauded and coddled one minority group after another and promised the largesse of the American taxpayer would alleviate their misery. In St Paul the message was about all Americans pulling together, getting government out of their lives, and making everyone richer and happier as a result.

When Mr McCain spoke, the faithful were still galvanised and awe-struck by the performance of his remarkable running-mate 24 hours earlier. In that sense anything he could say or do was bound to be an anti-climax. Yet his steady, measured, statesmanlike speech was the perfect complement to her benign but startling demagoguery.

Thus is the flavour of the next two months established. She will eat their opponents alive; he will be there to explain from the apparently limitless fount of his wisdom what will be done on the tree-strewn road ahead. It is a horrible cliché, but of the two men aiming for the White House, Mr McCain has more of the demeanour of a president.

This is nothing to do with his white hair, still less his white skin: it is everything to do with his gravitas and his record.

Some of us thought, and hoped, that he would win the nomination in 2000 over the manifestly inferior George W Bush. The qualities he had then are the same ones that give him the edge over his opponent now: a “story”, to use the campaign’s favourite word, of genuine heroism, service and leadership; coupled with what are now the first signs of a grasp of what it is possible to do to right America’s economic wrongs without first making them considerably worse.

Mr McCain has been on Capitol Hill for 26 years. He not only knows how the system works, he actively despises it and wants to reform it. He brings immense wisdom and good judgment to the table. It is that, rather than a beauty contest based on some celebrity X-factor, that should decide the election on November 4.

In his speech to the delegates in St Paul Mr McCain dealt only in the broad brush. In this, he was rather like Mr Obama in the Broncos’ stadium at Denver a week earlier. But unlike Mr Obama, Mr McCain littered his broad brush with odd moments of detail, and clear statements of vital principle. His delivery may have lacked the charisma and sonority of his opponent’s, but what he delivered will have connected with tens of millions of Americans, consolidating the shock of the new imposed on them the previous evening by Sarah Palin.

The biggest gap remains his economic programme: he cannot much longer delay explaining how he is going to cut spending, cut the deficit, and provide the tax cuts he promises.

No-one deserves to get a job on Buggin’s turn, or on the basis that he or she has been in the queue for it the longest; but that is not what qualifies Mr McCain for the White House. He drew attention to the most important fact about modern life: not the global economic convulsion, from which America has in the last fortnight started to show the first faint signs of recovery, but the fact that the world is a dangerous place, and getting more so. Mr Obama doesn’t know where to start on this, and the claims made for his good ol’ boy running mate Joe Biden being an expert on foreign policy are charitable to say the least.

In the next eight weeks Mr McCain needs to hammer home the perils to western civilisation not just of Islamic extremism but also of a new Cold War and a restless China. He made a good start yesterday, but this notoriously inward-looking country still needs more of a wake-up call. His television debates with Mr Obama, starting later this month, will be crucial in what must be his strategy of trumping charm and effortless superiority with raw experience.

The convention was a comparatively sober affair, not simply because of the shadow from Hurricane Gustav but because the revivalist hysteria that smothered the Democrats was absent here. But that, of course, is all about the connection Republicans have with reality, practicality running through their veins as idealism does through the Democrats’.

Post taken from the English Newspaper the Telegraph, Article title John McCain offered Republicans vision rooted in reality, not Barack Obama's empty promises. Written by Simon Heffer...Educate yourself further here.

6 Comments:

Blogger dvjs said...

went through word by word and wow amazed bvy your post but then read it written by somebody else. just like the politicians, newsmakers, media, and what not article plays out john mccain as the one. could pust an article stating how barack is the one. the one however, is the united states as a whole. one man and his adminastration is not going to make everything happy and neat. the people will. someday. anyway, to start am looking for a leader that doesn't come across as a bone head. for my vote, don;t label myself as one but am leaning towards the people's elbo....i mean if you can smell what the roc...barack is cooking. dumb am i but am glad your blog is back.

11:40 PM

 
Blogger Jonathan said...

I posted it because I read this article and many people (espcially in law school) get in heated debates about who and what party is going to win the election. I tend to do my homework and at first glance I too was excited about Nobama...He has grand ideas, and I know he wants a better America.

But the one thing that scares and me and that no one has had an answer for is, his connections to some individuals who are on the edge of reality, (see Rev White, Bill Aryes), (I know passionate people are sitting there saying what about McCain, he has voted with Bush, I will get to that)But at some point in Obama's life he had to look at these people and say you know what, You guys make sense, I can get on board with that...Thats what scares me, and untested and unknown president makes me nervous...

On to McCain, I think DVJS put it best in saying one way or the other will not fix America, it needs to come from the people...I encourage you all to read the greatest generation, good book, talks alot about the old (not entitled) America. So McCain's voting record, well depending on the source its around 90%, but looking at Obamas record, there are some staggering facts, Obama didn't vote in many Key issues, and in many of those key issues, McCain voted against party lines (ie against Bush), and keep in mind many of the bills that go through congress are pretty mundane, (all in favor of lunch say I)...

Long story short, Get your own facts, Get your own information, the media should be used as tool to shock you into finding out the truth. America is a wonderful country in that the Government is basically open to any and all research...So its there for the taking...

I have no problem if you support Obama, I did at first as well...but simply supporting him because, "He is not Bush" doesn't cut it...A vote for McCain is NOT a vote for Bush...SO please take these next two months, learn about the next president, and make an educated choice...

Oh yeah and lastly, VOTE!

12:26 AM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I literally laughed out loud at your title. A little homage to R. Kelly and Jay-Z always does good by me.

5:04 AM

 
Blogger Jonathan said...

and 'Round about 4 you gotta clear the lobby and take it to your room and .......

I am glad someone got it...Much love

7:24 AM

 
Blogger yote slayer said...

Great repost and great comment after the fact. We as Americans aren't stupid and don't need decisions made for us. That is why I'm voting for McCain.

10:33 PM

 
Blogger pacing the cage said...

hope is a good thing. maybe the best of things. and no good thing ever dies. turns out Andy Dufresne was referring to Obama. Experience only counts when it aides you in learning how to improve life. You can learn just as much from people by looking at what you don't like about them as you do from what you like about them. The bottom line is you may learn the same amount from the good and bad, but the people you like are the ones that stamp your life forever. Your loved ones, your mentors, the people you admire most are the ones that mark the times of our lives. McCain can't be that, not when he is against Obama. Whether Obama has the answers or not, we will see, but what he does have is the power to invoke belief, support, and hope for a better future. He could speak about taking a dump on your front lawn and it would sound fantastic. He can and has lifted the masses, and though it sucks to say, if he can stay alive, things will improve. This country, this generation, won't let him fail. We took our country back, and by all means, the times they are a-changin.

8:24 PM

 

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