RALF SEIFFE |
Chicago Columnist Illinois Leader Political Analyst Entrepreneur Business Advisor Chicago Illinois Review |
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SEIFFE: Why I Can't Vote For Senator McCainTuesday, January 29, 2008 By Ralf Seiffe Florida
votes today and the winner of the Republican contest will take all the
available delegates. With Rudy Giuliani’s likely swoon, Florida has
become a contest that will likely propel the winner to the party’s
nomination this summer. The conventionally wise tell us John McCain is
the most “electable” candidate and the political class tells us he’s
the one to support. If he wins, however, he will sunder the Republican
Party, possibly forever, because conservatives will not support him.
The problem goes far beyond the foolish legislation he has sponsored; it is
a much more fundamental problem. Note
that Senator McCain earns a mid-80’s rating by the American Conservative
Union yet is reviled by the folks who consider themselves “true
conservatives.” The phenomenon is probably explained by the fact
that the Senator is the grandson of two admirals and his own formative years
were spent in the Navy or as a guest at the Hanoi Hilton. It is through this
prism that the Senator probably views most things and that gives him a
proclivity to vote conservatively. Indeed,
John McCain rises to the public stage on the strength of his exemplary
military record. There is some comfort in the notion that a President
McCain would be at ease with the military--and vice versa--in the time of
rising Islamo-fascism. The Senator’s military record allows voters to
project his heroism to a prospective presidency but, what if we used the
military standard to judge the Arizona Senator’s political career? It
seems to me that the military’s job consists of four basic functions:
identification of the enemy; assessment of his intent; understanding the
assets he has available and the creation of a plan to deal with any
eventuality.
In
our political sphere, conservatives believe there is a right and wrong.
Extending the analogy, we believe that the American Left’s vision is so
wrong that those who advocate it must be considered the “enemy.”
Senator McCain has spent much of his career trying to make the Left’s bad
ideas respectable for his fellow Republicans with initiatives like McCain-Feingold
or McCain-Kennedy or McCain-Lieberman. He does not share the
conservative’s view that there must be an alternative to the Left, not a
series of compromises. His willing participation and support of the
enemies of liberty does not make him a bad guy. Instead, it illustrate
that the Senator does not understand the true nature of the Left, a much
more profound problem for conservatives. For failing to identify the
enemy, the Senator is ineligible for further promotion. Senator
McCain may fail to identify the enemy because he does not understand the
Left’s intent. There is no mystery that the Left’s long-term
objective is to control political thought in federal elections--Common Cause
and other organizations similarly hostile to the First Amendment have been
working to socialize elections for more than a generation. In that
time they have been very successful in restricting Americans’ ability to
express themselves by contributing to political candidates. One can
only imagine their euphoria when McCain went them one better and attacked
free speech, directly. Campaign
finance restrictions may be the Senator’s penance for the Keating Scandal
but his personal expiation served the intent of the Left in a way that they
could not have achieved without cover from the Republicans. Failing to
understand this signals conservatives that a McCain presidency may be just
what the Left intends. The
thoughtlessness of McCain-Feingold also shows the Senator’s
misapprehension of the assets available to the Left. The Left acts
collectively and has a long-term plan to achieve their political goals.
With McCain-Feingold’s changes to the regulatory environment, the Left has
approached “Soros, Inc.” with the message that the legal climate had so
changed in their favor that they can capture control of American sentiment.
They’ve made their case and have raised $500 million in pledges to create
an institutional assault on American liberty generally and Republicans,
specifically. The result is Media Matters and other Left-wing
troublemakers. Failing to understand how the equilibrium of the Left
and the Right’s assets used to work and why campaign finance “reform”
provides huge advantages to the other side again disqualifies the Senator on
the military scale. The
fourth obligation of a leader--whether in the military or not--is to have an
informed and passionately held vision for the future. In a political
situation, it is one’s core beliefs that generate policy and provide the
fortitude to resist the predations of the Left. I cannot identify any
vision from Senator McCain that presents a positive view of the future and
an alternative to the left, rather than a compromise with them. It is
this lack of a firmly held vision that actually compels compromise with the
Left because there is no alternative, contrary plan with which to do battle.
Conservatives recognize this as the most powerful disqualifier and the
single most important reason McCain fails to make the grade in this
analysis. For
these reasons, I conclude that Senator McCain fails this “military test”
and is fundamentally unsuited to be president. His very nature
predicts more disasters like McCain-Democrat and conservatives inately
recognize this. Far from being the most electable, he cannot be
elected at all. He will not motivate the conservatives any Republican
will need to win in 8 election and Obama will claim the moderates. If
he becomes the standard-bearer and moves the party to the left,
conservatives may begin to think there's no place in the party for them.
But
what if lightening strikes and the Democrat is abducted by UFOs or is
indicted after their nomination? A President McCain may position
himself as an adherent “bipartisanship” but this analysis shows he’s
more likely to function as a ratchet towards tyranny and maybe not know it.
In fact, the Left may do better with McCain as president than it would with
Hillary or Obama. That’s because Republicans in Congress would find
it exceedingly difficult to cross a Republican president than a Democrat.
In
any event, McCain does present this dilemma for Republicans:
is it better to stay home on November 4th or vote for Senator McCain
rather than the Democrat? I don’t know. See
the January 25th post by the IR Editor connecting McCain with Soro's
"shadowy" organizations for more. Ralf Seiffe advises business start-ups and product launches from Chicago, Illinois and is a political analyst and columnist for the Illinois Leader and Illinois Review. Webmaster Contact: Alynn Patzer alynn11111@aol.com
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