Thursday, February 7, 2008

Unity, Not Conformity

With a fair dose of humility and strategic dabs of humor John McCain delivered a stirring address at the National Conservative Political Action Committee gathering in Washington today. Now the presumtive GOP nominee, McCain was well received as he polished his conservative credentials before the crowd while not abandoning the independent-minded approach to public life that has characterized his years in the spotlight.
His remarks set the right tone and his delivery was well paced and heartfelt yet devoid of sentimentality. Always somewhat ill at ease at playing to the crowd, McCain seems incapable of being patronizing. Here are some of the highlights of his remarks:
I am proud to be a conservative, and I make that claim because I share with you that most basic of conservative principles: that liberty is a right conferred by our Creator, not by governments, and that the proper object of justice and the rule of law in our country is not to aggregate power to the state but to protect the liberty and property of its citizens.
My record in public office taken as a whole is the record of a mainstr eam conservative. I believe today, as I believed twenty-five years ago, in small government; fiscal discipline; low taxes; a strong defense, judges who enforce, and not make, our laws; the social values that are the true source of our strength; and, generally, the steadfast defense of our rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, which I have defended my entire career as God-given to the born and unborn.
Often elections in this country are fought within the margins of small differences. This one will not be. We are arguing about hugely consequential things. Whomever the Democrats nominate, they would govern this country in a way that will, in my opinion, take this country backward to the days when government felt empowered to take from us our freedom to decide for ourselves the course and quality of our lives; to substitute the muddled judgment of large and expanding federal bureaucracies for the common sense and values of the American people; to the timidity and wishful thinking of a time when we averted our eyes from terrible threats to our security that were so plainly gathering strength abroad.
I know in this country our liberty will not be seized in a political revolution or by a totalitarian government. But, rather, as Burke warned, it can be "nibbled away, for expedience, and by parts." I am alert to that risk and will defend against it, and ta ke comfort from the knowledge that I will be encouraged in that defense by my fellow conservatives.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

My prayers went unanswered today, Mitt gave himself a "pink slip". McCain hardly won me over with his less than inspiring speech. But I must admitt he was a little more humbling than I expected. Perhaps he will stop pandering to the left and represent the values of a true conservative. It needs to be noted that Huckabee decided to skip CPac and visiting the destruction of his home state in order to be on the Tyra Banks Show --- Amazing!!!

Anonymous said...

Obama will destroy McCain. Maybe John could beat Hillary.