In response to my last political post,
the subject of High Road vs. Low Road was brought up. One comment suggested that I thought
Obama’s was the former while McCain’s was the latter. In fact I was suggesting that
both roads were tactics used by both candidates, and that I feared the election would be won and
lost, as it usually is, by fighting along the low road to election day.
My current favorite reporting about road-taking comes from the St. Petersburg Times, which keeps
up with both campaigns via the Politifact.com
Truth-o-Meter. To each statement by each candidate and their campaigns (including emailings
by candidates and parties), they sort statements into True, Mostly True,
Half True, Barely True, False and Pants on Fire. Currently
those3 sort out this way :
Obama Biden McCain Palin True 39 7 25 4 Mostly True 23 4 19 0 Half-True 20 4 19 3 Barely True
12 3 19 0 False 18 4 22 0 Pants on Fire 0 2 4 0
Some of the rulings are generous. For example, they found Sarah Palin’s claim that she put
the state’s jet up for sale on eBay is true, even though it wasn’t sold on
eBay.
As H.L. Mencken said, Looking for an honest politician is like looking for an ethical
burglar. (More good quotes — all correct — here.*)
For what it’s worth, I favor Obama for two main reasons. One is that I’d rather see
the country run on the ethics of empathy rather than those of fear. The other is that McCain and
Palin are both warriors at heart (McCain was ready for war with Iraq right after
9/11, and Palin preached
that the Iraq war was part of God’s “plan”) — and we’ve had
eight bad years of that already.
I also think Obama is more likely to nominate top-notch non-ideological judges and to reform
government in general. Also that he is less likely to screw up the Internet, which is the single
best thing the world has going for itself. Finally, that he’ll restore the faith of the
rest of the world in the sanity of the U.S. electorate and its government.
As for the economy, I think McCain understands the private sector — and the good it does
— far better than Obama. If I were voting by my economically consevative and Libertarian
sympathies alone, I’d favor McCain. But this election isn’t about that. This election
is about throwing the old bums out and trying some new ones.
Back to the War Issue.
A few decades back Penelope Maunsell said of a former
employer that “His management style was to find a problem and intensify it”. Same
goes for politicians. There are exceptions, but that’s close to a rule.
I don’t doubt that John McCain is a first-rate military man. His experiences as a prisoner
of war obviously strenghtened his character and equipped him with a high degree of sympathy for
those suffering injustice, as well as for members of the armed forces. But John McCain shared
with George W. Bush the urge to solve the problem of terrorism with the use of force, and lots of
it. I don’t doubt that this response was exactly what Osama Bin Laden and other terrorist
leaders were looking for.
Even if the Surge is working (and I’m inclined to agree that, on the whole, it is), that
does not excuse McCain from having supported the Iraq War in the first place. That war has not
only killed countless thousands (beyond the counted thousands of our own casualties), but put the
country terribly in debt, weakened our military positions elsewhere, and diminished our
reputation throughout the world. It was strategically wrong, in a huge way. McCain’s bad
judgement on this count alone is reason enough not to elect him.
[Later...] Calvin Dodge
points to
RedState’s take on FactCheck.org’s
take on Palin’s acceptance address.