Obama vs. McCain: The Big Picture
Opinion Editorial by Thomas Sowell -
Jun 26, 2008
56 ratings from readers
McCain and Obama are each miserable choices for President. Yet we also face perilous threats in the world, like the prospect of a nuclear Iran. Can we afford to stay home during this election?
Now
that the two parties have finally selected their presidential
candidates, it is time for a sober — if not grim — assessment of
where we are.
Not
since 1972 have we been presented with two such painfully inadequate
candidates. When election day came that year, I could not bring
myself to vote for either George McGovern or Richard Nixon. I stayed
home.
This
year, none of us has that luxury. While all sorts of gushing is going
on in the media, and posturing is going on in politics, the biggest
national sponsor of terrorism in the world — Iran — is moving
step by step toward building a nuclear bomb.
The
point when they get that bomb will be the point of no return. Iran’s
nuclear bomb will be the terrorists’ nuclear bomb — and they can
make 9/11 look like child’s play.
All
the options that are on the table right now will be swept off the
table forever. Our choices will be to give in to whatever the
terrorists demand — however outrageous those demands might be —
or to risk seeing American cities start disappearing in radioactive
mushroom clouds.
All
the things we are preoccupied with today, from the price of gasoline
to health care to global warming, will suddenly no longer matter.
Just
as the Nazis did not find it enough to simply kill people in their
concentration camps, but had to humiliate and dehumanize them first,
so we can expect terrorists with nuclear weapons to both humiliate us
and force us to humiliate ourselves, before they finally start
killing us.
They
have already telegraphed their punches with their sadistic beheadings
of innocent civilians, and with the popularity of videotapes of those
beheadings in the Middle East.
They
have already telegraphed their intention to dictate to us with such
things as Osama bin Laden’s threats to target those places in
America that did not vote the way he prescribed in the 2004
elections. He could not back up those threats then but he may be able
to in a very few years.
The
terrorists have given us as clear a picture of what they are all
about as Adolf Hitler and the Nazis did during the 1930s — and our
“leaders”and intelligentsia have ignored the warning signs as
resolutely as the “leaders”and intelligentsia of the 1930s
downplayed the dangers of Hitler.
We
are much like people drifting down the Niagara River, oblivious to
the waterfalls up ahead. Once we go over those falls, we cannot come
back up again.
What
does this have to do with today’s presidential candidates? It has
everything to do with them.
One of these candidates will determine
what we are going to do to stop Iran from going nuclear — or
whether we are going to do anything other than talk, as Western
leaders talked in the 1930s.
There
is one big difference between now and the 1930s. Although the West’s
lack of military preparedness and its political irresolution led to
three solid years of devastating losses to Nazi Germany and imperial
Japan, nevertheless when all the West’s industrial and military
forces were finally mobilized, the democracies were able to turn the
tide and win decisively.
But
you cannot lose a nuclear war for three years and then come back. You
cannot even sustain the will to resist for three years when you are
first broken down morally by threats and then devastated by nuclear
bombs.
Our
one window of opportunity to prevent this will occur within the term
of whoever becomes President of the United States next January.
At
a time like this, we do not have the luxury of waiting for our ideal
candidate or of indulging our emotions by voting for some third party
candidate to show our displeasure — at the cost of putting someone
in the White House who is not up to the job.
Senator
John McCain has been criticized in this column many times. But, when
all is said and done, Senator McCain has not spent decades aiding and
abetting people who hate America.
On
the contrary, he has paid a huge price for resisting our enemies,
even when they held him prisoner and tortured him. The choice between
him and Barack Obama should be a no-brainer.
Thomas Sowell is a Senior Fellow at The Hoover Institution at Stanford University in California. He has published dozens of books on economics, education, race, and other topics. His most recent book is Economic Facts and Fallacies, published in December 2007.