Though many of my Obama-loving friends down here fail to allow themselves to believe it, I am thoroughly convinced that Obama is going to win today. Obama deserves to win, he has run a far superior campaign. But since I was old enough to follow politics, I have admired and respected his opponent John McCain, and I personally think there are few individual who deserve the presidency more than him.
Few men possess the courage and fortitude of John McCain. While most people know that McCain was a POW in Vietnam, far less know that after enduring almost a year of untreated injuries and vicious torture that he was given the opportunity to go home. McCain's father was a high-ranking U.S. admiral and the Vietcong wanted propaganda, however McCain kept to the code of conduct and refused to leave unless every man that arrived before him was also allowed to leave. This decision cost McCain five year of his life, which he spent enduring solitary confinement and additional torture.
Since concluding his military career in 1982, McCain has spent the past twenty-six years of his life serving as one of the most active and productive members of the legislative branch. McCain's extensive list of activities and accomplishments include his leadership roles on the Senate Indian Affairs, Commerce, and Foreign Affairs committees; his work with John Kerry to end the trade embargo with Vietnam; his co-authoring of several bi-partisan bills including McCain-Lieberman (Environment), McCain-Kennedy (Immigration), and McCain-Fiengold (Campaign Finance); his role in authoring the present counter-insurgency plan in Iraq; his repeated opposition to any form of sanctioned torture by the U.S. government; and much much more. Furthermore, he is one of the few politicians in Washington who has actually taken the time to frequently visit places like Iraq and Afghanistan to see first hand what is happening on the ground--something that both the troops and the people of those countries deserve.
John McCain has also been a politician who has foremost served his conscious, and not his political party. I will not deny that he has catered to his electorate on some issues, however those who claim that John McCain and George Bush are one in the same have not paid any attention to U.S. politics for the past 10 years. They are quite different, and anyone who remembers the 2000 Republican Primaries or has an attention span of more than four months knows this. As for those who echo Obama's mantra about McCain's 2007 "with Bush" voting record, they should remind themselves of who actually controls both houses of the legislative branch and is authoring the legislation on which these "Bush votes" are occurring.
I was extremely excited when McCain won the primaries this year, and had high hopes for him. But this campaign has been an utter disappointment in every respect and is not a fitting end to McCain's outstanding career. In my opinion, McCain has taken some very bad advice running his campaign. Obama on the other hand has run an extremely successful campaign, having demonstrated remarkable competence and composure throughout. However, though I give Obama full credit for employing an effective and intelligent strategy, I must say that this has been the most superficial campaign that I have ever witnessed in American or Canadian politics. It has been based largely on philosophy and not policy. While philosophy is inevitably going to play a big role in politics, I would be troubled if all semblance of issue-based discussion was lost in the election process.
The way I see it, though McCain certainly deserves the office of President, Obama deserves to win this election.
I like Barack Obama, and strongly believe him to be one of the next great leaders of the United States. Ten years from now, he would probably win my vote. However, at present, he remains a junior senator who has published two autobiographies but not a single piece of legislation. For this reason, tomorrow in the voting booth, I will be choosing to focus on McCain's 26 years of public service and not the past 26 days of his misguided campaign. These years have earned my respect, my gratitude, and deserve my vote.
If Obama wins today, it is my prayer that his election will help heal some very old wounds that run deeper than any financial crisis ever could. I will be proud of what his achievement represents, and be optimistic for the future of his administration. If by some anomaly Obama looses this election, I am confident his day will come in the near future--and I look forward to it.
Few men possess the courage and fortitude of John McCain. While most people know that McCain was a POW in Vietnam, far less know that after enduring almost a year of untreated injuries and vicious torture that he was given the opportunity to go home. McCain's father was a high-ranking U.S. admiral and the Vietcong wanted propaganda, however McCain kept to the code of conduct and refused to leave unless every man that arrived before him was also allowed to leave. This decision cost McCain five year of his life, which he spent enduring solitary confinement and additional torture.
Since concluding his military career in 1982, McCain has spent the past twenty-six years of his life serving as one of the most active and productive members of the legislative branch. McCain's extensive list of activities and accomplishments include his leadership roles on the Senate Indian Affairs, Commerce, and Foreign Affairs committees; his work with John Kerry to end the trade embargo with Vietnam; his co-authoring of several bi-partisan bills including McCain-Lieberman (Environment), McCain-Kennedy (Immigration), and McCain-Fiengold (Campaign Finance); his role in authoring the present counter-insurgency plan in Iraq; his repeated opposition to any form of sanctioned torture by the U.S. government; and much much more. Furthermore, he is one of the few politicians in Washington who has actually taken the time to frequently visit places like Iraq and Afghanistan to see first hand what is happening on the ground--something that both the troops and the people of those countries deserve.
John McCain has also been a politician who has foremost served his conscious, and not his political party. I will not deny that he has catered to his electorate on some issues, however those who claim that John McCain and George Bush are one in the same have not paid any attention to U.S. politics for the past 10 years. They are quite different, and anyone who remembers the 2000 Republican Primaries or has an attention span of more than four months knows this. As for those who echo Obama's mantra about McCain's 2007 "with Bush" voting record, they should remind themselves of who actually controls both houses of the legislative branch and is authoring the legislation on which these "Bush votes" are occurring.
I was extremely excited when McCain won the primaries this year, and had high hopes for him. But this campaign has been an utter disappointment in every respect and is not a fitting end to McCain's outstanding career. In my opinion, McCain has taken some very bad advice running his campaign. Obama on the other hand has run an extremely successful campaign, having demonstrated remarkable competence and composure throughout. However, though I give Obama full credit for employing an effective and intelligent strategy, I must say that this has been the most superficial campaign that I have ever witnessed in American or Canadian politics. It has been based largely on philosophy and not policy. While philosophy is inevitably going to play a big role in politics, I would be troubled if all semblance of issue-based discussion was lost in the election process.
The way I see it, though McCain certainly deserves the office of President, Obama deserves to win this election.
I like Barack Obama, and strongly believe him to be one of the next great leaders of the United States. Ten years from now, he would probably win my vote. However, at present, he remains a junior senator who has published two autobiographies but not a single piece of legislation. For this reason, tomorrow in the voting booth, I will be choosing to focus on McCain's 26 years of public service and not the past 26 days of his misguided campaign. These years have earned my respect, my gratitude, and deserve my vote.
If Obama wins today, it is my prayer that his election will help heal some very old wounds that run deeper than any financial crisis ever could. I will be proud of what his achievement represents, and be optimistic for the future of his administration. If by some anomaly Obama looses this election, I am confident his day will come in the near future--and I look forward to it.