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The Rise Of The Obamacon

Posted on June 12, 2008 at 3:17 pm

Bruce Barlett discusses the intellectual right’s fascination with the Obama phenomenon:

Francis Fukuyama, the neoconservative theorist, recently told an Australian journalist that he would reluctantly vote for Obama to hold the Republican Party accountable “for a big policy failure” in Iraq. And he seems to view Obama as the best means for preserving American power, since Obama “symbolizes the ability of the United States to renew itself in a very unexpected way.”

You can find similar sentiments coursing through the Boston University professor Andrew Bacevich’s seminal Obamacon manifesto in The American Conservative. He believes that the war in Iraq has undermined the possibilities for conservative reform at home. The prospects for a conservative revival, therefore, depend on withdrawing from Iraq. Thus the necessity of Obama. “For conservatives, Obama represents a sliver of hope. McCain represents none at all. The choice turns out to be an easy one,” Bacevich concludes.

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One Responses to “The Rise Of The Obamacon”

  1. Donna Locke writes
    June 12th, 2008 10:37 pm

    The prospects for a conservative revival, therefore, depend on withdrawing from Iraq.

    Yes. And such prospects also depend on not importing people with an agenda to overthrow you. As Tim Chavez so hopefully and PC-ly put it on his blog: Every day a Republican dies and a Hispanic voter is born. (I’ve heard and seen that sentiment with the word “gringo” where Chavez used “Republican.”)

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