Monday 20 October 2008

We have a winner...cue the entrance music for Colin Powell...

Obama is leading 35-0, he's on his opponent's 5 yard line and there's 15 seconds left in the game...

...and in walks Colin Powell to side with the winner.

I have little doubt that were McCain in the same position in the election as Obama then Powell would be siding with him instead. He has a long history of fence-sitting, sniffing the wind and then taking side with the winner.

Naturally, the left has embraced Powell's endorsement of Senator Obama with glee and treated him like the return of the prodigal son, conveniently forgetting that they called him an Uncle Tom during his time as Bush's Secretary of State and repeatedly accused him of being part of a conspiracy to lie the country into war with Iraq.
Colin Powell, the Republican once tipped to become America’s first black President, endorsed the Democrat, Barack Obama, yesterday as a “transformational figure” who was ready to be the next Commander-in-Chief.
Note that it's a Republican who was once tipped to become America's first black President...it makes a mockery of the left's accusation that the right is racist.
President Bush’s former Secretary of State said that he was backing Mr Obama, not because of his race, but because he had met the standard to be an exceptional President. And he delivered a stinging rebuff to the Republican, John McCain, describing his campaign as petty and troubling.
How has Obama 'met the standard to be an exceptional President'? Seriously? The man has a lifetime of achieving absolutely nothing. The much pilloried Sarah Palin has a stronger resume than does Obama. It's an incredible statement by a former senior official.
Endorsements rarely have a decisive impact in presidential politics, but the effusive backing for Mr Obama by a man so widely respected could play a significant role in persuading some undecided voters. It also ensures that the news will dominate media coverage of the campaign for the next 24 hours, robbing Mr McCain of one more day to change the trajectory of the race with only two weeks to go until the election on November 4.

At a rally in North Carolina, Mr Obama basked in the endorsement, calling General Powell “a great soldier, a great statesman and a great American”. He added that he was beyond honoured and deeply humbled to have his support.

General Powell, who oversaw victory in the 1991 Gulf War, made clear that his decision to back Mr Obama was as much a sign of his unhappiness with Mr McCain, his campaign and his choice of Sarah Palin to be his running mate. General Powell, an avowed moderate, said that Mr McCain’s choices in recent weeks — especially his selection of the Alaska governor — had raised questions in his mind about the Arizona senator’s judgment.
It seems to me that Powell himself would have liked to be considered for VP and is miffed at being overlooked.
“I don’t believe she’s ready to be President of the United States, which is the job of the Vice-President,” General Powell said bluntly. He decried what he called the “rightward shift” of the Republican Party — he cited Mrs Palin’s selection as an example — and criticised Mr McCain’s “unsure” response to the economic crisis. “Almost every day he had a different approach to the problems we were having,” General Powell told NBC’s Meet the Press.
"Rightward shift"?

McCain has a no drilling in Alaska policy and has embraced the leftist ideology of global warming, as well as being the most inclusive person in the Senate by working with the other side.
Mr McCain, who has known General Powell for 25 years, sought to play down the endorsement, saying: “It doesn’t come as a surprise.” He pointed out that he had been endorsed by four other former Republican Secretaries of State.

General Powell, 71, who was also the National Security Adviser to Ronald Reagan, said that he had asked himself: “Which is the President we need now?” Referring to Mr Obama, he continued: “And I come to the conclusion that because of his ability to inspire, because of the inclusive nature of his campaign, because he is reaching out all across America, because of who he is and his rhetorical abilities — and you have to take that into account — as well as his substance — he has both style and substance, he has met the standard of being a successful President, being an exceptional President.
Inclusive? Reaching out?

The only reaching out and bringing together that Obama has achieved is to bring the centre left, media left and loopy left into the same tent and get them to behave themselves.
“I think he is a transformational figure. He is a new generation coming . . . on to the world stage and on the American stage. And for that reason I’ll be voting for Senator Barack Obama.”
At least Powell has that right, Obama is a transformational figure. One that will transform American society into the same type of unsustainable nanny state that is now having so much trouble in Western Europe.
General Powell criticised Mr McCain for invoking the Vietnam-era domestic terrorist William Ayers as an Obama associate. “I think this goes too far. And I think it has made the McCain campaign look a little narrow. It’s not what the American people are looking for. And I look at these kinds of approaches to the campaign, and they trouble me,” he said.

“I feel strongly about this particular point,” he added. “We have got to stop polarising ourselves in this way.”
Here's a question to ponder.

If John McCain had have been involved with a right wing terrorist who blew up government facilities then would he get such an easy pass as Obama?

Timothy McVeigh is the right's William Ayers.

If your daughter brought home a boyfriend who palled around with Timothy McVeigh (let's assume that he had been 'rehabilitated' by the Chicago establishment and given a cushy university post rather than the death penalty) but who was 8 years old in 1995 when McVeigh killed 168 people in Oklahoma City then would you be concerned to look more deeply into that relationship?

Powell is free to endorse whomever he likes.

The fact he felt it necessary to go to the media to make his announcement about who he was supporting rather than quietly going to vote like 100 million other Americans says more about the man and his ego than it does about either McCain or Obama.

(Nothing Follows)

1 comment:

Jack Lacton said...

Yep, overly sensitive certainly is a good description.

One of the issues that Republicans have in this election is that the media is so in the bag for Obama that they're abrogating their responsibility to undertake objective investigative journalism unless it's of Sarah Palin.

Obama's associations are, quite frankly, shocking.