Thursday, November 6, 2008

"his rhetoric is very strongly individualist—more so than Clinton’s, I think, and definitely moreso than Bush’s"

Sandefur also gets President Obama more than many:

"Just two things. I think it’s interesting how, regardless of his ideological fixation on using the government to steal from those who earn and give to those who do not, his rhetoric is very strongly individualist—more so than Clinton’s, I think, and definitely moreso than Bush’s. Rhetoric does matter. His beliefs are very anti-individualistic in practice, but he insists in his speeches that he believes strongly in individual freedom and individual flourishing. I think that rhetoric will serve as a significant block (if used correctly by the opposition) to some of the more dramatic attacks on freedom that are to be seen in the next four years.

Second: here’s job number one for Obama: deal with Guantanamo Bay. Do it immediately. Find some way to give these people trials or to release them. A “temporary” detention center, purposely created to avoid the imperatives of American law, where people sit for seven years, is not tolerable in our Constitutional order."

However, he gets a little too frightened here:

"Of course, an Obama administration is a great day for race relations, and a sad day for freedom. It means a dramatic assault on economic liberty, an expansion of government that will make the past administration seem tame, and a federal judiciary dominated by judges who think just about anything Congress does is constitutional."

Not going to happen. Well, it certainly won't be dramatic, and make the last eight years seem tame. You'll still have plenty of money to lose in investments.

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