Some elections are routine, some are important, and some are
historic. If Sen. John McCain wins this election, it probably will go
down in history as routine. But if Sen. Barack Obama wins, it is more
likely to be historic — and catastrophic.
Once the election is over, the glittering generalities of
rhetoric and style will mean nothing. Everything will depend on
performance in facing huge challenges, domestic and foreign.
Performance is where Obama has nothing to show for his political career, either in Illinois or in Washington.
Policies he proposes under the change banner are almost all
policies that have been tried repeatedly in other countries — and
failed repeatedly in other countries.
Politicians telling businesses how to operate? That's been
tried in countries around the world, especially during the second half
of the 20th century. It has failed so often and so badly that even
socialist and communist governments were freeing up their markets by
the end of the century.
The economies of China and India began to take off into high
rates of growth when they got rid of precisely the kinds of policies
that Obama is advocating for the United States under the magic mantra
of change.
Putting restrictions on international trade in order to save
jobs at home? That was tried here with the Hawley-Smoot tariff during
the Great Depression.
Unemployment was 9 percent when that tariff was passed to
save jobs, but unemployment went up instead of down and reached 25
percent before the decade was over.
Higher taxes to "spread the wealth around," as Obama puts it?
The idea of redistributing wealth has turned into the reality of
redistributing poverty, in countries where wealth has fled and a lack
of incentives has stifled the production of new wealth.
Economic disasters, however, may pale by comparison with the
catastrophe of Iran with nuclear weapons. Glib rhetoric about Iran’s
being "a small country," as Obama called it, will be a bitter irony for
Americans who will have to live in the shadow of a nuclear threat that
cannot be deterred, as that of the Soviet Union could be, by the threat
of a nuclear counterattack.
Suicidal fanatics cannot be deterred. If they are willing to
die and we are not, then we are at their mercy — and they have no
mercy. Moreover, once they get nuclear weapons, that situation cannot
be reversed.
Is this the legacy we wish to leave our children and
grandchildren, by voting on the basis of style and symbolism, rather
than substance?
If Barack Obama thinks that such a catastrophe can be avoided
by sitting down and talking with the leaders of Iran, then he is
repeating a fallacy that helped bring on World War II.
In a nuclear age, one country does not have to send troops to
occupy another country to conquer it. A country is conquered if another
country can dictate who rules it, as the Mongols once did with Russia,
and as Osama bin Laden tried to do when he threatened retaliation
against places in the United States that voted for President Bush. But
he didn't have nuclear weapons to back up that threat — yet.
America has never been a conquered country, so it may be very
hard for most Americans even to conceive what that can mean. After
France was conquered in 1940, it was reduced to turning over some of
its own innocent citizens to the Nazis to kill, just because those
citizens were Jewish.
Do you think our leaders wouldn't do that? Not even if the
alternative was to see New York and Los Angeles go up in mushroom
clouds? If I were Jewish, I wouldn't bet my life on that.
What the Middle East fanatics want is not just our resources
or even our lives, but our humiliation first, in whatever sadistic ways
they can think of. Their lust for humiliation has been demonstrated
repeatedly in their videotaped beheadings that find such an eager
market in the Middle East.
None of this can be prevented by glib talk, but only by
character, courage, and decisive actions, none of which Obama has ever
demonstrated.
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. 94305. To find out more about
Sowell, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. His
Web site is www.tsowell.com.
© 2008 Creator's Syndicate Inc.
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