On this blog in history: November/December 2003

As I’ve been doing these posts linking to material from the archives (my way of addressing the concerns Jared Wilson raised about the ephemerality of blogs as a medium), I’ve been working my way through posts from the first part of last year. There isn’t a lot from the middle of 2007, though, so for the moment I’m going to jump back to the end of 2003, when I first started doing this.“The Occupation of Iraq Means Liberty”
That line comes from a column by Kamel al-Sa’doun, an Iraqi then living in Norway, writing in a London-based Arabic daily, who called the U.S. invasion and occupation “a blessed and promising liberation for Iraq, even if the U.N., Europe, Russia, India, and all the Arabs say otherwise.”“Evangelism”? What’s that?
On the controversy over Avodat Yisrael, a Messianic Jewish congregation planted by the Presbytery of Philadelphia, and what it said about the PC(USA) and evangelism.No guru, no method, no teacher
On the incarnational art of Van Morrison.“All Americans”? Uh-huh, riiight . . .
On the illusion of post-9/11 international goodwill.“That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”
No, network execs weren’t any smarter 43 years ago, just luckier (maybe).“There’s too much to do—I’m bored.”
On the overstimulation and emptiness of contemporary Western society and how it stimulates us to sloth.A tree grows in Brooklyn
On Christmas, Kwanzaa, and the place of holidays in the public square.

Whither Sarah Palin?

If you read my last post, you know that my prognosis for the McCain/Palin ticket is pretty grim. This raises the question (at least in the minds of some), what does this mean for Sarah Palin and her political future?The answer is, I think, nothing bad. The immediate presumption is that it would be better for her political prospects to win this election, since “incumbent VP” is usually a pretty strong position from which to run for president; but as I noted last night, Gerard Baker’s right that this is probably going to be a rough four years to be sitting in the Oval Office, and there’s no guarantee that a McCain presidency would be a successful one. Obviously, I don’t believe an Obama presidency will be, and just as obviously, I think a McCain administration would at least be better; I don’t know that I actually think it would be good. I think his judicial appointments would be solid, and I trust his instincts and judgment on foreign policy and national security; given, however, that he can’t even make up his mind whether he wants to attack Barack Obama or not, or on what, or how, or what his message is, or how it should be delivered, and that he can come up with plans on health care and other issues but can’t seem to muster the wit and will to articulate and defend them clearly . . . well, let’s just say that if he does win, I don’t have high hopes for his administration’s record on domestic policy. I think a President McCain could handle Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the rest of the crazies in Iran as well as anyone could; but facing an equally hostile regime on Capitol Hill, I think he’d be much less effective in dealing with Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. As such, it’s entirely possible that a loss in November will be a blessing in disguise for Gov. Palin.The question is, where does she go from here? The immediate answer is of course obvious: back to Alaska. Equally obvious is the fact that that doesn’t answer the question. At this point, Gov. Palin would have to be regarded as the frontrunner for the GOP presidential nomination in 2012, since she has national recognition and a broad base of support in the party, well beyond anything that any other potential candidate can muster; the question is, what does she need to do to build on that?The first thing, I think, is to keep herself out there as a national politician. This may be somewhat tricky to do, because the usual way to do this—run for the Senate—is not an obvious option for her. Lisa Murkowski’s Senate seat comes open in 2010, but for Gov. Palin to run for it simply in order to facilitate a presidential run two years later would be the worst sort of politics, and it seems hard to believe that Alaskans would go along with it. What’s more, such a tacky move would only damage Gov. Palin’s standing and reputation. There is the possibility that Ted Stevens’ seat could be available after the election, if he loses his trial but wins re-election; in that event, the Senate would probably expel him to serve his sentence, which would trigger a special election in which she could run for his seat. This sequence of events, however, seems unlikely (among other things, the government’s case against him is actually remarkably flimsy), and even if it did occur, it might not be a good opening for Gov. Palin anyway. Sen. Stevens has won a rock-solid seat by bringing home large quantities of pork, on which the state of Alaska is largely dependent, given how much of the state is owned by the feds. Gov. Palin has done a fair bit in her time in office to reduce that dependence, but there’s a lot more work to do in that regard; for her to run for the Pork King’s seat on a pledge not to seek pork probably isn’t tenable at this point—and for her to run on any other basis would ruin her nationally.Given that, it seems that she will need to work by other means to keep herself on the national stage. It would help if she were to do so in a way that convinced conservative skeptics like Charles Krauthammer, Kathleen Parker, George Will, David Brooks, and Christopher Buckley—not that their opinions are particularly important, but because impressing those who ought to be her supporters and currently aren’t is the most direct way to establish herself as the true standard-bearer of the Republican Party. As well, it would be best for her to choose an approach that will not only benefit herself but also benefit the party, strengthening it and bringing it back to its roots. Therefore, as one who framed the troubling challenge presented by Iran with the question “what would Reagan do?” I would suggest that Gov. Palin should ask herself the same question, and do what Gov. Reagan did in the 1970s:

Reagan . . . [spent] years in the 1970s mulling the great issues of the day, reading voraciously, and presenting detailed commentaries on everything from the SALT and Law of the Sea treaties to revultions in Sub-Saharan Africa to the future of Medicare. Then and only then, finally, after 16 years on the national stage, did the GOP give Ronald Reagan its nomination and present him as its candidate for the presidency.

Obviously, she’s still going to have her day job; but in and around that, and raising her kids, I believe Gov. Palin should devote as much time as she can to studying and writing on the great issues of our own day. Keep building her governing experience dealing with the challenges of Juneau—and as much as possible, take advantage of that to use Alaska as a “laboratory of democracy” on issues like health care—but engage intellectually as well with the challenges of Iran and Pakistan, Social Security and judicial philosophy, the future of NATO and how to deal with a resurgent Russia, practical approaches to changing the system in D.C., and what our stance ought to be toward China. Co-author pieces with leading conservative intellectuals—maybe an article on judicial nominations with Antonin Scalia, to throw out one wild idea. Help rebuild the conservative intellectual treasury that was squandered by the GOP during its time in power. And off these articles (and perhaps books), I’d like to see her give speeches under the auspices of the Hoover Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, the Ethics and Public Policy Foundation, the Institute for Religion and Public Life, and other such organizations.In short, I believe Gov. Palin should keep her name out there, not just by doing political things (though she should certainly continue as she has begun in Alaska), but by using both her position and her gifts to articulate, develop and defend conservative political philosophy and its applications. In so doing, if over the next four years voters become accustomed to seeing her name and picture appear along with insightful, well-argued, thought-provoking pieces in places like The Atlantic, the Wall Street Journal, conservative opinion magazines such as National Review, the Weekly Standard, and The American Spectator, websites like RealClearPolitics, and perhaps even on occasion in the MSM if they allow it—including, on topics which make it possible, illustrations from her own achievements in Alaska—then she’ll maintain her public profile but in a way that gives the lie to those who’ve tried to dismiss her; and along the way, she’ll reinvigorate American conservatism in much the same way as Ronald Reagan did, and help the GOP along in the necessary task of taking stock and getting back to being the party it needs to be. Two birds, one stone—and an entirely fitting task for one who would be her party’s leader, to start by leading it back to its soul.

Projecting an Obama presidency

I noted yesterday that I expect Barack Obama to win in November. I’m not one of those who think the race is over, not by a long shot—I’m just skeptical about the McCain campaign’s ability and will to make its case, especially after blockheaded moves like writing off Michigan. The key, I think, is that they haven’t been able to convince enough people that Sen. Obama isn’t a centrist (and aren’t likely to do so), even though on all the evidence, he isn’t. He’s a gifted politician at letting people believe of him what they want to believe, and people would prefer to believe that he’s “a uniter, not a divider” (for all that, I’d prefer to believe it); John McCain hasn’t succeeded in convincing enough people otherwise to win.The thing is, unlike George W. Bush, who did have a record of working in bipartisan fashion in Texas, Sen. Obama has no such record; and if such talk from the bipartisan Gov. Bush didn’t translate to results in his presidency, how much less should we expect true bipartisanship from a President Obama?Perhaps the most interesting indicator on this came during the debate when Sen. McCain said of Sen. Obama, “It’s hard to reach across the aisle from that far to the left.” Sen. Obama’s response: “Mostly that is me just opposing George Bush’s wrongheaded policies.” He seems to have thought that was a good comeback—as did others, from the post-debate commentary—but it wasn’t; in point of fact, it was a concession, one which offered a real insight into Sen. Obama’s mind. What he said in effect was, “You can’t expect me to be bipartisan when confronted with policies with which I disagree.” Granted, one must be careful not to push one sentence too far, and certainly absolutizing it would be unjustified; but the attitude expressed in that line is the exact antithesis of true bipartisanship. It’s the attitude that defines “bipartisanship” as “I’ll work with them when they’re not wrongheaded”—which tends to boil down to “when they do most of the compromising.” And given that George W. Bush wasn’t really all that conservative, it’s not like Sen. Obama (and the rest of the congressional Democrats) were being asked to reach a long way across to the right. But then, as Stanley Kurtz notes, this is the pattern for Barack Obama:

Obama’s vaunted reputation for bipartisanship is less than meets the eye. The Illinois legislature has long been home to a number of moderate Republicans, less fiscally conservative than their colleagues, many from districts where the parties are closely balanced. It was easy enough to get a few of these Republicans to sign onto small, carefully tailored spending bills directed toward particularly sympathetic recipients. The trouble with Obama’s bipartisanship is that it was largely a one-way street. Overcoming initial opposition from Catholic groups, for instance, Obama cosponsored an incremental bill on abortion, requiring hospitals to inform rape victims of morning-after pills. Yet rejecting compromise with the other side, Obama voted against bills that would have curbed partial-birth abortions. In other words, Obama is bipartisan so long as that means asking Republicans to take incremental steps toward his own broader goals. When it comes to compromising with the other side, however, Obama says “take a hike.” Obama voted against a bill that would have allowed people in possession of a court order protecting them from some specific individual to carry a concealed weapon in self-defense. The bill failed on a 29-27 vote. Bipartisanship for thee, but not for me: That’s how Obama ended up with the most liberal voting record in the U.S. Senate.

This all suggests that all the post-partisan language we heard from Sen. Obama ca. 2004 is unlikely to be reflected in an Obama presidency—especially since whatever his talk, Nancy Pelosi and the rest of the House and Senate Democrats aren’t running on promises of bipartisanship. They’re going to want to press their agenda, and who gives a hang what the GOP wants. As a consequence, if President Obama wants to get bills passed—and he will, as every president does, because that’s how presidents have “accomplishments” and “legacies”—it will have to be the bills they want, on their terms; Speaker Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and the rest of the Democratic powers on the Hill will take up their pipes and fiddles, and President Obama will dance to their tune. Speaker Pelosi will be the dominant figure in national politics (since I expect Majority Leader Reid to turn out pretty clearly as second fiddle to her first), and it will be her agenda driving the bus.Now, this might be a pretty stiff conclusion to draw, but there are several good reasons to think that this is how it will go. First, as Dick Morris pointed out three months ago, this is what happened to Bill Clinton in 1993, even though the congressional Democratic caucus was considerably less liberal then than now (for example, the Speaker of the House was Tom Foley of conservative eastern Washington, not Nancy Pelosi of liberal San Francisco) and the new president was a former governor who was used to working with a legislature. Clinton couldn’t “triangulate” with his own party firmly in control on the Hill, and so

as he took office as president, Bill Clinton found no alternative but to move dramatically to the left, shelving for the moment his promises of a middle-class tax cut and welfare reform. He had no choice.The Democratic majorities in both Houses served him with notice: Either you stay within the caucus and not cross the aisle in search of support for centrist policies, or we will do unto you what we did to Jimmy Carter when Tip O’Neill turned on him and made his life miserable.

If Gov. Clinton couldn’t govern as a centrist with the Democratic Congress of 1993-94, it’s almost inconceivable that Sen. Obama will be able to do so with the even more liberal Democratic Congress we will likely have in 2009. For one thing, he doesn’t have the experience in how to get his own agenda through a legislature; for another, despite all his use of centrist language, Sen. Obama has no observable record of centrist political impulses, much less achievements. (Indeed, he has little record of achievements at all, but we’ll get to that in a minute.) That’s why Stanley Kurtz, in his extensive examination of Sen. Obama’s years as a state senator, says he’s “fundamentally . . . a big-government redistributionist”:

Obama’s overarching political program can be described as “incremental radicalism.” On health care, for example, his long-term strategy in Illinois was no secret. He repeatedly proposed a state constitutional amendment mandating universal health care. Prior to the 2002 budget crisis, Obama’s plan was to use the windfall tobacco settlement to finance the transition to the new system. That would have effectively hidden the huge cost of universal care from the taxpayer until it was too late. Yet Obama touted his many tiny expansions of government-funded health care as baby steps along the path to his goal. The same strategy will likely be practiced-if more subtly-on other issues. Obama takes baby-steps when he has to, but in a favorable legislative environment, Obama’s redistributionist impulses will have free rein, and a budget-busting war on poverty (not to mention entitlement spending) will surely rise again.

As such, where President Clinton does seem to have been at least someone uncomfortable with the line he had to toe at the beginning of his term (judging by the way he moved toward the center once the reality in Congress changed), Sen. Obama is likely to be quite comfortable with that agenda. (He has, after all, supported it 97% of the time in the Senate when he’s bothered to show up to vote.) The reality of bipartisanship can be expected to disappear on all important matters (except perhaps when congressional Democrats want to be able to blame Republicans for an unpopular necessity), leaving behind only the language—which will likely be used primarily to bash Republicans as obstructionist for not going along with the program.This is especially true given that Sen. Obama has no record of resisting his own party. Rather, he’s been a machine politician for his whole political career; it was the Chicago machine that helped create him, and its own rules by which he played to force Alice Palmer out of his way in his first election, and he’s never once stood up to it. He’s never challenged it, or questioned it, or even really sought to influence it in any way. He even endorsed Richard Daley for re-election as mayor, which was perhaps the one time he really disappointed his liberal supporters in Chicago (since Mayor Daley’s an old-school Democrat, not a modern liberal Democrat), because he’s the boss and you don’t mess with the boss. Then down in Springfield, when even Illinois politicians call their state “one of the most corrupt at this point in the United States,” he claimed to make a difference, but nothing really changed, except that he contributed to the growth in spending that has led to severe budget problems in Illinois. Indeed, even now that he’s out of that environment, his state’s junior U.S. Senator and his party’s presidential candidate, he still didn’t want to stand up to the political bosses, like his mentor Emil Jones, the president of the Illinois State Senate; when asked to use his influence to help resurrect an important ethics bill aimed at reducing the corruption in Springfield, he initially refused; it was only when coverage in the Chicago papers made that problematic that he changed his mind and asked his old mentor to reconsider the issue. The other concern that I see here is in the words and attitudes of Speaker Pelosi, Harry Reid, Charles Schumer, and other senior Dems. Every time they open their mouths, I’m a little more convinced that they don’t see Sen. Obama as the leader of their party, but as the instrument through whom they intend to accomplish their purposes. Whether it’s Sen. Schumer declaring that Sarah Palin’s “lack of experience makes the thought of her assuming the presidency troubling” while remaining serenely untroubled by Sen. Obama’s lack of experience (which makes me think that the subtext is “he’s just out front running the campaign; when it gets down to brass tacks, it will really be Uncle Joe running the show”), or Majority Leader Reid calling on Sen. McCain as essential to help solve the financial crisis while essentially ignoring Sen. Obama, I just don’t see any reason to believe that these folks take their own nominee, the presumptive head of their party, seriously. I’m increasingly of the mind that they see him as the PR-flack-in-chief, the appealing face they want to put on the front of their agenda, nothing more—and if he should try to break out of that role and stand up to them, they’ll punish him for it.As a result, I have four substantive concerns about an Obama presidency. Two might be described as “conservative concerns”—things I don’t want to see because I’m conservative in my thinking that those who are liberal will welcome. The other two I think can fairly be called general concerns, because they’re things that it seems fair to assume liberals wouldn’t want to see happen either.One, I expect to see a hard-Left turn on social issues, including a significant reshaping of the federal judiciary. This, I think, is Reward #1 President Obama will owe his base, and one which he’ll be happy to give them; based on past performance, I expect the Senate GOP to roll over for this process and present their collective belly in submission. Obviously, liberals will be glad to see an administration committed to abortion on demand, expansion of gay rights, the submission of our Constitution to international opinion, etc.; I won’t.Two, I expect to see a hard-Left turn on economic issues. Hugh Hewitt did an excellent job of laying out what this will look like in his post “President Barack Hoover”; I don’t see any need to reinvent the wheel (especially when I couldn’t do half as well at it), so I’ll just encourage you to read it, with this comment: the core of Hewitt’s post is the reality that Sen. Obama’s announced agenda, if he puts it into practice (and I believe Speaker Pelosi et al. will hold him to it), will be a recapitulation of the mistakes President Hoover made that played a major role in turning a stock-market crash into a depression. This is a very real possibility, and I believe is a major reason why the markets are continuing to perform poorly: they expect Sen. Obama to win, just as I do, and they expect him to put his plan into effect, just as I do. Thus his own plan helps drive the economic crisis that will help him win, which is another neat little irony. Still, again, I realize that the Left has a different view on this than I do; we’ll see who’s right. I’ve certainly never claimed to be infallible, but I think the record of the last eighty years bears me out: raising taxes in a crisis brought a depression; the Reagan tax cuts started a long period of growth (not uninterrupted, but an upward trend for a long time) that has benefited everyone. Yes, we still have a lot of people who are poor by comparison to society as a whole—but materially, those who are poor today are a lot richer than the poor of thirty years ago.Three, I believe the approach we’ve seen from the Obama campaign to dissent and criticism will be repeated in the policies and responses of an Obama-led Executive Branch; given the clear willingness of his campaign to suppress freedom of speech to prevent criticism of their candidate, I believe we’ll see the same willingness from his administration and his chief congressional allies. This will mean a surge in the kind of the strongarm political tactics that we’ve already seen entirely too often this year. The thin part of the wedge will be the reinstitution of the “Fairness Doctrine” as a political/legal weapon to silence conservative talk radio and the pundits of Fox News. (Given what you can do with the Internet these days, I don’t think it will actually work to any significant degree; if that drives the Dems in Congress to try to regulate Internet speech, we could really be in for a battle royale.) Now, given that many American liberals want to see the return of the “Fairness Doctrine,” it may be optimistic of me to call this a general concern; it could turn out that liberals as a class are perfectly happy with censorship and political thuggery as long as it’s only used against people with whom they disagree. Certainly that has proven to be the case in other countries. This isn’t Canada, however, and I don’t think it’s likely to be any time in the near future; until proven otherwise, I think it’s necessary to give American liberals credit that their commitment to freedom of speech is real, and thus believe that most of them will not be willing to tolerate and defend this sort of behavior over the long haul, even if carried out by politicians they otherwise support. I certainly hope they won’t, because the Obama campaign’s efforts to shout down Stanley Kurtz and David Freddoso (in an effort to intimidate Chicago radio station WGN into canceling their appearances on Milt Rosenberg’s show) ought to be disturbing to anyone who cares about free speech. Of even greater concern should be the Obama “truth squads” in Missouri, where the campaign enlisted allies in public office to threaten prosecution of any TV station that runs any ads about Sen. Obama that the campaign deems untrue. Not only is this approach outrageously biased (one side’s allowed to lie, but the other isn’t?), it gets into some very grey areas about interpretation and intent, and thus raises some real concerns as to the approach an Obama Department of Justice might take to the First Amendment. This kind of approach, like Joe Biden’s suggestion that an Obama/Biden administration might prosecute the Bush administration, is nothing more nor less than the use (or threat of use) of political power to punish one’s opponents, intimidate critics, and silence dissenters; it’s the sort of thing we’re used to seeing in Zimbabwe, not here—and as the case of Zimbabwe shows, there’s nothing, not even money, that can corrupt a democracy faster, or more severely. I’ve argued before that one of the great problems with our politics in this day and age is that we absolutize our own perspectives—we assume that our own perspectives and presuppositions are the only legitimate ones, and that those who disagree with us can’t possibly be doing so sincerely, but must be acting out of motives that are selfish or otherwise wrong. The criminalization of politics, which we’re starting to see urged by the Obama campaign, is a more extreme version of that problem, because it argues that those motives are not only wrong, but are in fact criminal in nature. The chilling effect of that sort of approach should be deeply worrisome not just to conservatives, but also to true liberals.Four, and clearly a matter of general concern: al’Qaeda is weakened badly but far from dead—they still have the ability to pull something, and there’s good reason to think they’ll try. They’ve tested each of the last two administrations with a major attack in the first year (even if the 1993 World Trade Center attack didn’t succeed), and they’re bound to repeat the pattern if they can. As Hugh Hewitt says, “International jihadism must sense this is a moment in which any strike they can muster would have enormous consequences for Western confidence,” which gives them a powerful motive. This will only be reinforced in the case of an Obama administration, because al’Qaeda will almost certainly be denouncing him as an apostate—they’ll have to follow up their propaganda with an attack. If I had to guess, I’d think they’ll target the DC area, some combination of the Pentagon, the Capitol Building and the White House; my fear would be that they’ll use suitcase nukes.If and when this happens, I predict that we’ll see the same sort of ineffective, dithering response from Obama/Pelosi/Reid and their foreign-policy advisors that we saw to al’Qaeda provocations during the Clinton administration. (Remember the cruise-missile attack on the pharmaceutical plant in the Sudan?) I say this for a couple reasons. First, the sort of thing we’ve seen from Sen. Obama on foreign policy has been stubbornly refusing to admit that the surge worked in Iraq; stubbornly refusing to admit that we’ve significantly weakened al’Qaeda through the fight in Iraq; failing to understand that Afghanistan is a nearly impossible place to fight a war; repeatedly publicly announcing his intention to violate Pakistani sovereignty should he be elected (and why is it OK to fight in Pakistan but not in Iraq?); proclaiming moral equivalence between invader and invaded when Russia launched its attack on Georgia, then changing his position a couple times; allowing his running mate to tell the Israelis that an Obama administration wouldn’t take any serious measures to prevent Iran from going nuclear; surrounding himself with people who don’t like Israel when Israel is our only firm, stable ally in the Near East; and proclaiming repeatedly that he will meet with enemy dictators face to face without preconditions. I don’t see any signs that he understands how to conduct foreign policy effectively, that he has the instincts to identify an effective response, or that he has the will to carry it out.A couple years into an Obama presidency, I expect to see someone write the same sort of article about him that James Fallows wrote about Jimmy Carter; like President Carter, Sen. Obama is bright, fluent, and well educated, but ineffectual. Indeed, he lacks even the modest record of achievement Gov. Carter could claim—he simply has no significant professional accomplishment at any level of life. He was chosen as president of the Harvard Law Review, but wrote virtually nothing for it, and while he was well-liked by everybody, this was in part because he avoided conflict and confrontation—leaving an impending crack-up to his successor. The results of his time as a community organizer were modest, at best. He ran the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, which conspicuously failed to improve Chicago schools. As a state senator, he authored no major legislation. In the U. S. Senate, the same is true. He claims his campaign as evidence of his executive ability, but the more we find out about his campaign, the less impressive that is; he’s spent a lot of money in places where he will get no significant return, his campaign staff run a disorganized, chaotic ship which makes it hard for the press accompanying them to do their job (though they dote on him despite the consistent disrespect they receive), and he can’t even keep his campaign plane from stinking. As Beldar says, this raises a real question: “If Obama can’t perceive that problem on his own campaign plane and see to it that even that problem is solved, why would you ever think he can handle the national economy or world affairs?”The funny thing is, behind all this is the reality that a McCain loss could be the best thing possible for the Republican Party. For one thing, a victory in this election won’t be the usual prize for the winner; far from it, in fact. As Gerard Baker argued in The Times just before the first debate,

It is highly probable that that moment, the very hour that he takes office, will be the high point of his presidency. Whoever wins on November 4 will be ascending to the job at one of the most difficult times for an American chief executive in at least half a century. . . . 2008 may be the best year there has been to lose an election.This sobering reality was startlingly underscored this week by none other than Tom Daschle, the former leader of the Senate Democrats, the national co-chairman of Mr Obama’s presidential campaign, and the likely White House chief of staff in an Obama administration. He told a Washington power breakfast that he thought the winner of the election would have a 50 per cent chance at best—at best—of winning a second term in 2012.

If my primary concern were the good of the GOP, I’d be rooting for a close but real loss for Sen. McCain—perhaps to see Sen. Obama just edge over the 50% mark. It might be fun to see the McCain campaign manage an Al Gore Special (a defeat in the Electoral College combined with a measurable lead in the popular vote) just to see all the lefty pundits who denounced the system eight years ago suddenly become its biggest fans, but that wouldn’t do. Eight years ago, that scenario left Democrats walking away thinking they didn’t need to change anything because they hadn’t really lost, and that attitude hurt them in 2002 and ’04. As Bill noted over on The Thinklings, the GOP really needs to take a long, hard look at itself, and then regroup, rethink, and reboot; and that’s not going to happen unless the party takes a defeat that its most influential folks have to admit is a defeat.Of course, one might think that a squeaker of a victory would spark the Democrats to similar humility, leading them to govern with caution and moderation; but I don’t see that happening. They’re too angry and eager, and the hard-Left wing of the party has the ascendancy—and they’re firmly committed to no-quarter politics. If they eke out a close win, I expect to see the pundits write it off as “well, that was just John McCain; against a real Republican, we would have blown ’em out,” and charge merrily off to do exactly what they want to do. If I’m right in the concerns expressed above, the result will be a backlash in 2010 at least as bad as the 1994 backlash that brought the congressional GOP to power at the midpoint of exactly the sort of disaster term that Gerard Baker was talking about, followed by another Republican in the White House in 2012. That’s the best-case scenario for the GOP, to be sure, but it’s clearly a far better case than anything a McCain victory in November could create; it’s also, however, a very bad case for the nation. (Worst case would be everything about this except the GOP taking inventory and cleaning up its act, thus giving us a return to power by a party that hadn’t learned anything from losing it.)That’s why—and you may not believe this, but it’s the absolute truth—when Sen. Obama wins in November, I’m going to be praying hard for him to make good, wise, godly decisions, to stand up to his own party—and win—to actually govern from the center and make room for the beliefs and opinions of those on the other side of the aisle; I’m going to be praying that he will respond adroitly and decisively to the crises he inherits, and promptly, forcefully, and wisely to the new ones that come along. I’m going to pray, in other words, for an Obama presidency to be a wise and clearly successful one (though I acknowledge that to some extent, I’ll be asking that he disappoint his own base in so doing), even though that’s not what would be best for the party I support. I have a lot of disagreements with Sen. McCain, but this is one thing on which I totally agree with him: when it comes to politics, it shouldn’t be party first, it should be country first.

Barack Obama, writer?

It would never have occurred to me to ask whether or not Sen. Obama wrote the books attributed to him; but as the Anchoress points out, writers write. It’s what they do, because the need to write drives them. If circumstances are such that they have little time or energy to spare from the other demands of life, they may write very little, but when they can, what they can, they write.Which does raise the reasonable question: do we see that kind of drive in Sen. Obama’s life? Put another way, do the existence and quality of his books (and particularly Dreams from My Father) square with the rest of his writing career? We know Barack Obama wrote virtually nothing for the Harvard Law Review despite serving a term as its president; we know that at Occidental College, he wrote some truly awful poetry; and we know that when it comes to any other evidence of his ability as a writer—”a school paper, an article, a notebook, his Columbia thesis”—that he’s been careful not to let us see it. Jack Cashill argues that on the basis of this evidence, the only reasonable answer to the question is “no”:

Prior to 1990, when Barack Obama contracted to write Dreams From My Father, he had written very close to nothing. Then, five years later, this untested 33 year-old produced what Time Magazine has called—with a straight face—”the best-written memoir ever produced by an American politician.”The public is asked to believe Obama wrote Dreams From My Father on his own, almost as though he were some sort of literary idiot savant. I do not buy this canard for a minute, not at all. Writing is as much a craft as, say, golf. To put this in perspective, imagine if a friend played a few rounds in the high 90s and then a few years later, without further practice, made the PGA Tour. It doesn’t happen.

If Cashill’s skepticism is correct, this might seem a curiosity; it’s not exactly a major literary scandal, after all. Indeed, in the realm of political ghostwriting, it would be at most a distant second to JFK accepting the Pulitzer for Profiles in Courage. If Cashill’s analysis, which is close and compelling but not conclusive, is correct that Barack Obama’s ghostwriter was none other than Bill Ayers, that would certainly give the lie to his efforts to deny any kind of close relationship between the two of them, but again, it’s not like there’s any great wrongdoing here. The fact that this question can be not only raised but convincingly argued, however, is a reminder of one very serious issue with the Obama campaign: even after all these months, despite the books, we still don’t really know all that much about Barack Obama, let alone feel like we know him—and he’s done everything he possibly can since bursting on the national scene to keep it that way.

The last hurdle for an Obama victory

I’ve been working for a while on a post, which I’m planning to get up later today, on what I expect out of an Obama presidency—and at this point, that pretty much is what I expect. I believe John McCain has a chance to win, but I don’t believe he’ll make his case forcefully enough to do so. Still, because there are significant unanswered questions about Barack Obama, he does have the ability to do so, and as a consequence, the McCain campaign has been starting to show some signs of life again. A lot of that is due to Sarah Palin; now that they’ve let her off the short leash to campaign on her own and do things like local TV interviews (that one’s with a Tampa station), she’s once again injecting some energy into the ticket. It also helps that the MSM are finally starting to notice some of the things the Obama campaign has been trying to keep behind the curtain, as with this CNN report on the relationship between Barack Obama and Bill Ayers:

This is an issue for which the Obama campaign has no good answer, as Mark Halperin’s interview with Robert Gibbs shows. All Gibbs, a senior adviser to the Obama campaign, could do was try to answer questions Halperin wasn’t asking and refuse to address the question he was asking: “Does Barack Obama think it’s appropriate to have professional ties to an unrepentant terrorist?” Gibbs ended up (on a question about his favorite country-music lyric) with this: “I’ll say it to you, Mark, but not to your listeners: ‘Here’s a quarter, call someone who cares.'”Some might say that Sen. Obama’s association with Ayers shouldn’t matter; if the Obama campaign wants to take up that challenge, address it straight on, and make that case, more power to them. So far, though, they’re refusing to do that, trying to duck the question and hope people just don’t care; and as Peter Wehner notes, that’s not a responsible approach.

Some may believe it should matter a lot, some may believe it should matter a little, and some may believe it shouldn’t matter at all. But that association, like the associations with the Reverend Wright and Tony Rezko, are part of Obama’s history and deserve to be discussed in a temperate, reasonable, factual way. Mark Halperin attempted to do just that. Team Obama’s evasive and clumsy response simply raises additional doubts about its candidate and his past. If there’s a simple explanation to Obama’s past associations, it would be helpful to hear what it is.

The thing is, as Sen. Obama knows full well and most people don’t realize, for him, “just some guy who lives in my neighborhood” isn’t nearly as dismissive as it sounds. He lives in Hyde Park, in a fairly tight-knit community of intellectuals who range from “very liberal” to “extremely liberal”; folks like the Obamas, Ayers, and Rashid Khalidi, the radical Palestinian advocate who lived in the neighborhood until 2003, formed a much closer group, a much stronger community, than the word “neighborhood” suggests to most people these days. The folks who live in the Obamas’ neighborhood, including Ayers and Khalidi, have done a lot to shape them into the people they are.Along with these associations goes another one, Sen. Obama’s ties to ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now); this is a bit of an odd case, since he likes to talk about his time as a community organizer, but doesn’t want people to know about the organization that would show them what that was really all about. That might have something to do with the fact that ACORN is being investigated for voter-registration fraud (we now have, for instance, 105% of the eligible population of Indianapolis registered to vote—and it’s not just happening there, it’s all over the place), which is particularly troubling since the Obama campaign has paid ACORN $800,000 for voter-registration efforts. You’d think his campaign would know that this is what they mean by “getting out the vote,” given his long association with them. (Earlier, during his time on the board of the Woods Fund, that fund gave ACORN almost $200,000.) Then again, in Chicago, this is just standard operating procedure, so maybe it doesn’t seem unreasonable to them. Even so, you can understand Sen. Obama and his campaign not wanting people to know what “community organizing” really looks like:

Acorn’s tactics are famously “in your face.” Just think of Code Pink’s well-known operations (threatening to occupy congressional offices, interrupting the testimony of General David Petraeus) and you’ll get the idea. Acorn protesters have disrupted Federal Reserve hearings, but mostly deploy their aggressive tactics locally. Chicago is home to one of its strongest chapters, and Acorn has burst into a closed city council meeting there. Acorn protestors in Baltimore disrupted a bankers’ dinner and sent four busloads of profanity-screaming protestors against the mayor’s home, terrifying his wife and kids. Even a Baltimore city council member who generally supports Acorn said their intimidation tactics had crossed the line.

Obviously, that sort of strategy isn’t any visible part of Sen. Obama’s run for the White House; but this isn’t the image he wants people to have in mind when he talks about being a community organizer.In a lot of ways, it seems to me, what the Obama campaign is really trying to do is to keep people from thinking about him as a Chicago politician, because everybody knows what that means. I think that’s the big reason they want us all to forget about Bill Ayers, and Tony Rezko, and the Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright, and for that matter Richard Daley; because if you start thinking about him in terms of those people, and then throw in the questions about the legitimacy of a lot of the money the Obama campaign has raised (and their failure to answer those questions), then Sen. Obama stops looking like a new figure in politics and starts looking like nothing more than old-style Chicago corruption with a new face. I’ve said before that the McCain campaign needs to tie Sen. Obama to Nancy Pelosi (and also Harry Reid), and they do (and they’ve tried, at least somewhat, but so far without enough success); the other thing they need to do is tell the public that he’s just another Chicago politician. Gov. Palin has started making that case; Sen. McCain needs to step up and drive it home.HT for several of the ACORN links: The Anchoress

That’s the Internet for you

I’m moving and thinking very slowly today, trying to steer chains of reasoning around the sharp headache that keeps flickering behind my eyes; I had a couple posts I wanted to work on today, along with sermon work and some other things, but nothing’s happening very fast.I do want to mention, though, something that amused me last night. I have to admit, I didn’t watch the debate—I already had a headache, and figured I could catch up with it later—so I was bewildered, sometime after 9:30, to get up and check my blog traffic and find it going clean through the roof. Turns out, when John McCain made his comment about Barack Obama’s overhead-projector earmarks, that hordes of people pulled up Google and went looking; and for whatever reason, when you Google Obama overhead projector or some variant of that, my post “Barack Obama as overhead-projector screen” from this past July is right there near the top. It’s just a short post that has nothing to do with the earmarks Sen. McCain was talking about—rather, it’s a brief comment on a remarkable column by the redoubtable Shelby Steele—but there you go: that one post got more hits in half an hour last night than the whole blog had gotten over the previous week, as one person after another checked it out. I do hope most of those folks kept going on down their search lists (as I did, with one of them) to find the information they wanted on Sen. Obama’s earmarks. (If so, they might also have found a link to this piece on Sarah Palin’s record on earmarks, which is much stronger.) As it is, though, I’m reminded of a complaint I’ve heard a time or two before that the problem with Internet searches is that they lack serendipity. The usual comparison is to looking a word up in the dictionary, and all the other interesting words you run across while you’re trying to find the one you want; supposedly, the precision of our Internet searches means that people don’t experience those accidental discoveries anymore (which may be a good thing or a bad thing, depending). Offhand, though, I don’t think we’ve gotten to that point. My blog bears me witness.

The crux of theology

I’m up late, can’t sleep, feeling crummy, just sitting here on the couch with the laptop wandering the Web doing things that don’t need much brainpower (I could be trying to tackle Colossians 2:9-15 for this Sunday’s sermon, but I think it would take two falls out of three without breaking a sweat); but even in moments like these, God is at work, and there are grace notes. For whatever reason, his Spirit brought to mind the story of how Karl Barth, during his visit to America in 1962, was asked how he would summarize his theology; this brilliant Reformed thinker, the greatest and most important theologian of his century, this prolific mind who wrote millions and millions of words, answered, “Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so.” That really is the bottom line, isn’t it? What a comfort.

Unspectacular

It’s been quite a while since I’ve been tagged in a meme; apparently, though, Pauline over at Perennial Student tagged me a couple weeks ago, and I missed it. (I’ll admit, I tend to be a bit erratic in my reading.) This one’s pretty simple: name six unspectacular things about yourself. This offers me a wide, wide field . . .

  1. I’m physically utterly unspectacular—moderate height, thinning medium-brown hair, glasses. (At least my beard is reddish.)
  2. I sing baritone in our church choir; I do not sing solos.
  3. I love baseball, but my best position is bench jockey. As a hitter, I used to be pretty good at getting on base, but in the field I’m strictly a utility player—I can make errors at all nine positions.
  4. I love Chinese food—the real thing, not the Americanized stuff (though some of that can be pretty good, too). In fact, I’m very fond of every Asian cuisine I’ve tried (Thai, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Malay, Indonesian, Indian, Lebanese). That’s one of the things I really miss about living in Vancouver, BC: all the authentic ethnic food.
  5. I’m a diehard Seattle sports fan. So far this year, the Mariners have lost 100+ games, the Sonics have been stolen by an Oklahoma robber baron, the Seahawks are 1-3, and the Husky football team is 0-5 on the season (and 0 for their last 7). I’ve pretty much stopped reading the sports pages.
  6. Having grown up mostly in the Pacific Northwest, I’m a complete weather wimp, especially when it comes to heat and humidity. I can deal with the winters here in Indiana, but summer’s no fun.

For this one, you’re supposed to tag six people, but a) it’s late, and b) I never have good luck with my tags, so I’ll just throw it open: if you want to respond, consider yourself tagged.

Random thought re: M. Night Shyamalan

The latest issue of Touchstone arrived today; I’m currently partway through Russell Moore’s excellent article “The Gospel’s Bigger Idea: You Can’t Tell the Story of Jesus Without Jesus,” which I would link to if it were only available online. (I may very well post on it later anyway.)At the moment, though, my brain is off on a tangent. Dean Moore notes in his piece that he’s never seen the movie The Sixth Sense, in part because a friend told him about the “twist” ending, which he assumes means the movie is now ruined for him.

If I saw the movie now, I would see the same film everyone else saw at its release, but I would be seeing it with the mystery decoded. I would see where the story was going.

This is true, but I don’t think it ruins the movie. I watch very few films, but I have seen that one, at the urging of a couple good friends of ours; I watched the whole thing, appreciating some aspects of it and very much not appreciating others, and waiting for the twist ending—and when it came, was very surprised to find myself not surprised, because the “twist” was something I had understood from the beginning of the movie. I was interested to be told afterward (was it in the extras on the DVD? I don’t recall) that M. Night Shyamalan had actually not expected it to be a twist for the audience—it was a revelation for the protagonist, of course, but he assumed the audience would understand the situation. His indirect exposition at the beginning proved to be rather too indirect for most people to catch, however, and so the film ended up a different experience for audiences than he had expected.This is, I think, unfortunate, for two reasons. One is that people watched the movie less as a character study—which was the aspect that I really liked; Bruce Willis did a terrific job with a fascinating role—and more as a horror thriller. That probably helped Shyamalan at the box office, but I think it weakened the effect of his work. To put it in terms of this post, this focused people more on the mystery in the story (“What’s the twist going to be?”) and less on the mystery of the story: who are these two characters, what are they about, and what is the real meaning of what’s going on?The other is that it established Shyamalan as a sort of O. Henry of the theater, with a hefty dollop of Poe or Lovecraft: a guy who made creepily atmospheric films that set you up for a great twist ending. Again, that was great for him in the short run, and most people agree that Unbreakable was a major accomplishment as well; but trying to live up to that has been an increasing burden on him, and one that seems to be ruining him as a writer and director. His greatest break, the jolt of surprise that (with an assist from The Blair Witch Project) made a megahit of The Sixth Sense, may ironically be the thing that breaks him. It’s too bad; he’s a gifted storyteller, if he’d just stuck to telling real stories instead of artificial ones.

No half measures

HT: U.S.S. MarinerIn bringing the 777 to production, Boeing took the pursuit of perfection to its logical extreme: to make sure the wings were as strong, and as capable of enduring severe weather, as the design team wanted them to be, the company built an entire airplane (just the structure, not the interior equipment) just to break it, and then they took that plane and bent the wings until they snapped. The hope was that the wing would withstand at least 150% of the stress it would ever have to endure in the air; it did, breaking at 154%.There is, I think, a lesson here for the church—and no, it’s not “stress your volunteers until they break,” which too many churches already do. Boeing didn’t break people, they broke stuff; the church should always be able to tell the difference (which means, among other things, that we really shouldn’t get into the world’s habit of referring to people as “resources” and “assets,” because those are stuff words). Specifically, Boeing put the mission ahead of the stuff, and if they needed to break stuff to get the mission done right—to be sure they’d built a plane that was at least as good as they wanted it to be—they went ahead and broke the stuff. Indeed, they built it for the express purpose of being broken, just so they could be sure.The American church, I think, could stand to profit from their example. We have our mission statement direct from the mouth of God:

Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

We need to make sure that that mission—which is completely antithetical, be it noted, to using up and burning out the people we already have in an effort to attract more people—is the driving motivation behind everything we do, to the point that nothing else is allowed to hold us back. If concern for those outside the church means that some of our stuff gets broken, then so be it. (Indeed, if concern for those inside the church means that we focus more on feeding and discipling them than on prodding them to contribute to the building fund, then praise God.) Certainly, we should be good stewards of the things we have; we should invest the time and money to take care of whatever buildings we own or use, and to do everything to the best of our ability to the glory of God. But we don’t exist to have an attractive building—or, for that matter, a large building—or to have great music, or to have a well-produced worship service, or to have lots of programs. We exist to make disciples of Jesus Christ, including each other, and all those other things exist to support that mission. If that means allowing some disorder and some breakage, we need to be willing to let that happen; if it means not having the big building and the big budget, we need to embrace that. We can’t be about the stuff; we need to be about making disciples—all about making disciples, nothing held back—and let the stuff fall where it will.