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Thursday, September 30, 2004

Debate Reaction

First of all, the biggest message of the night was from Bush: "You cannot lead if you send mixed messages."

The debate was about how I expected it to be. To be perfectly honest with you, John Kerry is a much better public speaker than George Bush. Bush a few awkward pauses that are probably going to translate as indecisiveness to voters, or its going to seem like he was ill prepared. He also rambled at times. However, Bush's message was simpler. Kerry often found himself on the defensive struggling to draw a common thread through his multiple positions on the issues.

Kerry was at his strongest when talking about North Korea. Clearly the Bush administration should have been paying more attention to North Korea. The problems there have escalated and it has become a major problem facing America. However, keep in mind that North Korea has been a gathering storm since long before the Bush administration held the White House. America, under the leadership of Bill Clinton, signed a nuclear treaty with North Korea which that country backed out of. North Korea was a problem that should have been dealt with long ago. Unfortunately, its a problem that has persisted during a time when America's focus has been, necessarily, elsewhere.

Kerry also made some strong statements about Bush shifting our military focus from Afghanistan and al Qaeda to Iraq. I think this shows Kerry's inability to see the larger picture. The middle east, as a region, is a place infested with terrorism and oppression. It is not a place that is friendly to the United States. By ousting Saddam Hussein and installing a democracy in his place our country is carving out a free and friendly nation from which further efforts to stabilize the region can be based. The chemistry of that whole region changes when it has at its center a free and strong (U.S.-backed), democratic nation. When Iraqi's people begin to enjoy their new freedoms their neighbors in the region will see it and begin to clamor for their own freedom. We have infected that region with the virus of freedom which will grow to infect other nations.

Bush was, of course, at his strongest while talking about the war in Iraq. Kerry continued to try and tell the American people that he would somehow convince more nations to help with our operations in Iraq. Yet in the past he has told voters that Iraq was the "wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time." How do you convince new allies to join us in a war that you have called "wrong?" How can Kerry have told us earlier that the war was "wrong" only to turn around and tell us tonight that he does not believe that the war itself was a mistake and that his only objection was to how President Bush handled it?

I also thought Bush was excellent in pointing out that Kerry has largely ignored the contributions from other nations in Iraq. Kerry began the debate by making it sound as though America was going it alone in Iraq. But the President pointed out that we are not alone there. Poland is in Iraq with us, as is Great Britain, Australia and Japan in addition to many other countries. Kerry responded by saying that, while we do have other nations with us in Iraq, that America was paying most of the cost in the war with dollars and lives. But when has it been any different? When has there ever been a UN or NATO operation that didn't consist mostly of U.S. troops and money? Whether the UN joined us in Iraq or not, America would have been providing most of the troops and most of the funding.

I also cringed when Kerry repeatedly referred to our soldiers as "kids." Yes the majority of our soldiers are young, but they are not children and it is demeaning to think of them as such. These are brave, adult men and women who made a conscious choice to volunteer to serve this great nation. They are doing so honorably and courageously and deserve better than to be called children.

Kerry's big advantage in this election is that his strategies are an unknown quantity. We have had four years to see what George W. Bush has to offer, warts and all. Kerry has the luxury of pointing to those warts and telling voters that "he can do better." So what voters have to ask themselves is, can Kerry do better than President Bush?

Campaign rhetoric aside, John Kerry is a man incapable of having a firm position on any issue. He also has a history of non-support for defense initiatives and a foreign policy made up almost exclusively of gaging the opinions of other nations before allowing his own nation to act.

Kerry is also, clearly, still struggling with his priorities. I heard Kerry say during the debate that some of the money we're spending in Iraq could have been used to fund prescription drugs for seniors. I could hardly believe my ears. Was Kerry really suggesting that he'd divert money from the war on terrorism to pay for a new social entitlement? But this is apparently what he thinks.

I ask you what is more important: Taking the fight to the terrorists who would kill innocent Americans or forcing tax payers to foot the bill for drugs for seniors?

John Kerry is not the strong leader this nation needs to lead it against the enemies that will be facing us for the next four years. President Bush is.

I think he showed that tonight.

Other debate reactions from around the blogosphere:

Patriot Paradox
Ace Of Spades
Allah
Hugh Hewitt
Evil White Guy
INDC Journal
Instapundit (click and scroll)
In Search Of Utopia
Outside The Beltway
Protein Wisdom
Right On Red
Politburo Diktat
Spoons Experience
Wizbang

Comments

Avatar for Amy

Is it just me or does Kerry have no real plan, other than saying that he can do better? The only thing I recall him talking about (prior to this debate) was a new medical system that he wanted to spend 90 million (or was it billion) on. Maybe his campaign saw some numbers drop when he started talking numbers, and that is why he doesn’t talk about his plans on exactly how he is going to do better. I even looked at his website to see if there were any clear answers there - nothing. Either he has no idea what he is going to do or he is just not wanting to tell us for fear of losing the election (which if the polls are any indicator, that is going to happen anyway).

Amy on September 30, 2004 at 08:10 pm
Avatar for John

I disagree that the Bush Admin. was asleep at the switch over N. Korea. Bilateral talks had been tried. Bush dropped them after the N. Koreans were found to be violating the agreement they made before Clinton agreed to a bilateral format.

The Bush Admin. decided that if would talk to NK only in the presence of others, so that there would be more pressure to prevent NK from breaking another agreement. As Bush suggested tonight, it’s easy for NK to blow off one country; they can’t do that to five.

You can disagree with the policy, of course, but it was a deliberate policy, not one that happened by accident, when nobody was paying attention.

Colin Powell has something to say about China’s involvement today....

John on September 30, 2004 at 08:10 pm
Avatar for Chad Evans

Good analysis as usual Rob.  You and I seem to agree with the final conclusion, but we cannot be further apart in our analysis of specific topics discussed tonight.  Perhaps that’s the difference between North Dakota and Texas.

Chad Evans on September 30, 2004 at 11:10 pm
Rob
Rob
17183 comments
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Amy -

Even if Kerry had put forth a plan last night, would it have mattered?  His history of muliple stances on national security is so long we can’t believe anything he says.  Bottom line, Bush’s policies to keep this country safe are known to us already.  Kerry’s are unknown so we have to judge him by his history, which is not good.

Chad -

Thanks.  We have some different perspectives but the conclusion is the same.


The war against illegal plunder has been fought since the beginning of the world. But how is… legal plunder to be identified? Quite simply. See if the law takes from some persons what belongs to them, and gives it to other persons to whom it does not belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime. Then abolish this law without delay … If such a law is not abolished immediately it will spread, multiply and develop into a system.

Frédéric Bastiat, The Law

Rob’s recently listened-to songs:

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Rob on October 1, 2004 at 04:10 am
Avatar for Amy

Rob - Very true. I just find it hard to believe that the Democrats have made such a miserable choice of a presidential candidate. There were so many others that had more leadership and fewer flaws. How did this guy manage to fool so many people? I see him as no challenge for Bush. During the part of the debate that I watched (I tuned out after about 45 minutes to an hour… sick of listening to Kerry say nothing… and Bush needs to do more briefing before the next one and eliminate “umm” and “uhh” from his vocabulary) I did find the look of annoyance on Bush’s face (while Kerry was speaking) amusing.

Amy on October 1, 2004 at 08:10 pm
Rob
Rob
17183 comments
Send a private message

You are so right that the Democrats could have nominated a better candidate.  Both Joe Lieberman and Dick Gephardt were better candidates, but both were pro-war.  The Democrats couldn’t nominate them because they had to appease their anti-war base.


The war against illegal plunder has been fought since the beginning of the world. But how is… legal plunder to be identified? Quite simply. See if the law takes from some persons what belongs to them, and gives it to other persons to whom it does not belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime. Then abolish this law without delay … If such a law is not abolished immediately it will spread, multiply and develop into a system.

Frédéric Bastiat, The Law

Rob’s recently listened-to songs:

robport.gif border=0

Rob on October 2, 2004 at 08:10 am
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