« "Words Alone" | Main | Cluck Cluck Cluck » 10 Aug 2008 08:54 pm Optimism and AmericaHere's a fascinating post from a right-wing "patriot":
He's responding to an off-the-cuff statement from Obama to a child that
It seems to me that if "optimism" means always saying that America has never fallen or failed, then Ronald Reagan was an inveterate pessimist. His campaign in 1980 was premised on the notion that America had objectively declined as a nation under the hapless presidency of Carter. His optimism was about how to improve that. How, after all, could it have been "morning in America" if it had never been night? Obama's position is exactly Reagan's in this respect. He represents a repudiation of the past eight years in which America has clearly declined, its standing in the world reduced more dramatically than under any previous modern president. When the American president has shown contempt for the rule of law, when he launched a war without UN approval because of pressing evidence that turned out not to be true, when he mismanaged that war grievously for years, when he removed America from compliance with the Geneva Conventions, when he added over $32 trillion to the debt the next generation has to pay and turned a surplus into an annual deficit of half a trillion dollars, when he has squandered eight years without leading on the question of non-carbon energy, when he has revealed that his administration is not able to respond to a historic natural disaster ... then, yes, this country has declined. More precipitously than at any time since the Carter debacle - who at least was able to combine international fecklessness with a historic peace agreement in the Middle East and a stronger record on human rights. To vote for the party that gave us the past eight years is not optimism. It's clinical denial. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e553db59028833 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Optimism and America' |

