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October 26, 2004

Andrew Sullivan Comes to His Senses

By Byron LaMasters

Not a shocker, but here's his endorsement of Kerry. Not a glowing endorsement, but one nonetheless from a Bush supporter in 2000. I do fear not only for America, but for both parties should Bush win next Tuesday. I fear an inevitable, bloody, gut-wrenching fight for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party, and I also fear a Republican Party out of control - with no regard for our budget deficit, and highly reliant upon religious conservative voters who will shape a dangerous social and foreign policy. Andrew Sullivan shares my concern:

And when you think of what is happening in the two major parties, the case for a Kerry presidency strengthens. If Bush wins, the religious right, already dominant in Republican circles, will move the GOP even further toward becoming a sectarian, religious grouping. If Kerry loses, the antiwar left will move the party back into the purist, hate-filled wilderness, ceding untrammeled power to a resurgent, religious Republicanism--a development that will prove as polarizing abroad as it is divisive at home. But if Bush loses, the fight to recapture Republicanism from Big Government moralism will be given new energy; and if Kerry wins, the center of the Democratic party will gain new life. That, at least, is the hope. We cannot know for sure.

Finally, I think that Sullivan makes a compelling case for voters who supported attacking Iraq from the begining. Even if you believe that Bush was the right man for responding to 9/11 and dealing with Saddam Hussein, a clear arguement can be made for a Kerry presidency. The next four years will likely present America with complex foreign policy problems where a nuanced, rather than an absolutist approach is necessary. In this ever-changing world, John Kerry is best prepared for the task. Sullivan writes:

In the essential tasks of building support for greater international help in Iraq--financially, militarily, diplomatically--Kerry is the better choice. No, other countries cannot bail us out or even contribute much in the way of an effective military presence. But within Iraq, the impact of a more international stamp on the occupation and on the elections could help us win the battle for the hearts and minds of Iraqis. That battle--as much as the one on the battlefield itself--is crucial for success. I fear Bush is too polarizing, too controversial, too loathed a figure even within his own country, to pull this off.

[...]

Kerry has said again and again that he will not hesitate to defend this country and go on the offensive against Al Qaeda. I see no reason whatsoever why he shouldn't. What is there to gain from failure in this task? He knows that if he lets his guard down and if terrorists strike or succeed anywhere, he runs the risk of discrediting the Democrats as a party of national security for a generation. He has said quite clearly that he will not "cut and run" in Iraq. And the truth is: He cannot. There is no alternative to seeing the war through in Iraq. And Kerry's new mandate and fresh administration will increase the options available to us for winning. He has every incentive to be tough enough but far more leeway to be flexible than the incumbent.


For once (on a non-GLBT issue), I completely agree with Andrew Sullivan.

Posted by Byron LaMasters at October 26, 2004 04:40 PM | TrackBack

Comments

Andrew Sullivan comes to his senses? What kind of topsy-turvy world is this!?!

Well, it's tit-for-tat, because your boy Andrew Dobbs has apparently decided to make himself a total laughingstock over at a certain silly right-wing paper in Austin.

From http://www.contumacy.org/bbs/index.pl?read=37030#37030

I Want to Write for Contumacy
Andrew Dobbs -- Friday, 22 October 2004, at 6:04 p.m.

Hey, I put together an article describing my conversion from an anti-War kid to a strong supporter of the War in Iraq. It is long and I could cut it down (if I must) but I'd like to see it printed. I could post it on here if anyone is interested or email it to them perhaps. Just let me know what I need to do to get it published or to get it considered for such.

Thanks guys.

Here is are a couple of excerpts, tell me what you think:

"The fact of the matter is that despite all the losses we face and the difficulty ahead, our success is imperative and cowardly suggestions of withdrawal are in the tradition of appeasement that allowed Hitler to plow across Europe, that let the Soviet Union spread its poisonous doctrine all the way to 90 miles off the coast of our country, that would have kept the Taliban in power in Afghanistan and Tojo in Japan. In the end, we are a part of nothing new, but something as old as the Maccabees. In the face of tyranny the weak will always fold and those who care more about liberty than comfort will continue to stand strong. Now is the time for resolve, not for defeatism."
"Despite the growing costs and the continuing difficulty, we are on the right side of history. In the face of terrorism, we refused to be cowed. In the face of a psychotic tyrant with WMDs, we stared him down. In the face of a man with no regard for rule of law, with no respect for the truth we brought certain and just punishment. And now we are presented with a struggle to stabilize Iraq that we might have the opportunity to remake the entire region. This ought to offer phenomenal hope and inspire deep resolve in the souls of all Americans- Democratic and Republican. One party seems to be well on that path already and despite my deep disagreements with them on most other issues, we can unite on the front of promoting our ideals. I promise to continue fighting in my party for what I feel to be right that some day soon a freer world might be wrought."


BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! Way to go, Dobbs! HAHAHAHAHA!!!!

Idiot.

Posted by: Huh at October 26, 2004 07:44 PM

Andrew Sullivan has always been a voice of reason in a sea of political rhetoric. His endorsement of Kerry, like his endorsement of Bush in 2000, is well-thought, honest, and sincere. Sullivan believed, as I did, that Bush in 2000 represented our best hope. That hope for less government, less spending, and social moderation was crushed over the past four years. Kerry, warts and all, may very well represent our best hopes for the next four years. There are plenty of silver linings to a Kerry administration, not the least of which is a restructuring of the power structure in the GOP. I can't vote for Kerry, but I can't vote for Bush either. That doesn't mean I'm not rooting for a Kerry victory on Tuesday.

Posted by: Adam at October 27, 2004 08:42 AM
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