May 12, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 33 Download Now! (pdf)

 

COVER
A Hero's Life
by Ken Ringle

EDITORIAL
Right about Obama
by Matthew Continetti

SCRAPBOOK
Acknowledgments, imagined influence, etc.

ARTICLES
Disenfranchised Over There
by Hans A. von Spakovsky & Roman Buhler

Attack of the Pharmascolds
by David A. Shaywitz & Thomas P. Stossel

South Africa Plays Ball with Dictators
by Marian L. Tupy & James Kirchick

The Silent Scream of the Asparagus
by Wesley J. Smith

FEATURES
An Exceedingly Strange New Respect
by Noemie Emery

Just Like Us! Really?
by Robert Satloff

Advice for the Nuclear Abolitionists
by Henry Sokolski & Gary Schmitt

BOOKS & ARTS
Radical Revision
by Ronald Radosh

Out of This World
by Joseph Bottum

Balancing Act
by David Guaspari

Reverent Billy
by Loredana Vuoto

'Matrix' on Wheels
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
Prom Night
by Matt Labash

CORRESPONDENCE
Tribes, McCainomics, and more

PARODY
Rev. Wright on the ancient Italians


« Reporting on Thug Life | Main | Red on Red Violence »

Another Thought on McCain's Speech

Remember Gary Kasparov's op-ed in the Journal a few weeks back--the one where he said the "thought of [McCain] in the White House strikes fear into authoritarian leaders everywhere"? Kasparov also made a big deal in that piece of the need to eject Russia from the G-8. He wrote:

Russia was finally mentioned in one of the seemingly endless U.S. presidential primary debates. Mrs. Clinton, prompted by the moderator, managed to stutter out something resembling "Medvedev" when asked for the next Russian president's name during a debate in Cleveland....

Unfortunately, it was only a trivia question that served to show how far off the American radar Russia is. I would have been delighted to hear the answers to the follow up, "will you, as president, push for the removal of Russia from the G-7 since you have just said it is no longer a democratic nation?"

If the next U.S. president fails to address that question, any attempts to speak on behalf of global democracy will be hollow. In that case, for many of us around the world, change will be no change at all.

In his foreign policy speech yesterday, McCain said:

We should start by ensuring that the G-8, the group of eight highly industrialized states, becomes again a club of leading market democracies: it should include Brazil and India but exclude Russia. Rather than tolerate Russia's nuclear blackmail or cyber attacks, Western nations should make clear that the solidarity of NATO, from the Baltic to the Black Sea, is indivisible and that the organization's doors remain open to all democracies committed to the defense of freedom.

If there was any doubt that Kasparov, something of a hero of the America left for his anti-Bush comments over the last few years (see his recent interview with Bill Maher), favors McCain...yesterday's speech should put the matter to rest.

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