Thursday, 15 February 2007
Giuliani for President

It is the greatness of the United States that daunting challenges inevitably summon to the fore leaders with the steel to rise to the occasion and the grasp to raise us up with them. Leaders whose confidence and command cut through the noise and the naysayers. Leaders who stir us not only to the urgency of action but to the achievability of victory through America’s exceptional gifts.

Rudy Giuliani is such a leader. In our perilous times, his is the unique combination of vision, guts, and perseverance that we need in the Oval Office. That’s why I hope we have the good sense to make him the next president of the United States.

The 2008 election is still 21 months away, and one recoils from the prospect of so long a contest. Still, last week’s announcement that Mayor Giuliani is seeking the presidency was welcome. Our government is adrift. Vigor and course correction will have to come from outside — from a presidential campaign’s demand that we open our eyes and choose sides.

The rest is here.

Posted on 02/15/2007 10:21 AM by Andy McCarthy
Comments
15 Feb 2007
Send an emailHugh Fitzgerald

Plenty of "daunting challenges" have gone unmet by leaders who "are inevitably summoned� to the fore." For example, there have been "daunting challenges" ever since 1973, and the rise of OPEC, "daunting challenges" that remained entirely unmet by successive American governments and that at first had only to do with the enormous transfer of wealth by oil-consuming nations to oil-producing nations (some ten trillion dollars since 1973), but should have been recognized, at least by the late 1970s, was money that inevitably would go to fund a world-wide Jihad, and that funding included the campaigns of Da'wa, and of a support-system (including mosques and madrasas) for millions of Muslims who have been, over the past thrity or in some cases forty years, to settle deep within Infidel lands, behind what those Muslims have been taught to regard as enemy lines.

And to that has been added the problem, the "daunting challenge" of anthropogenic climate change that is denied, a this point, only by three kinds of people: 1) an handful of gleefully self-conscious "contrarians" of the S. Fred Singer - Lindzen - Lonborg variety, 2) gullible crackpots such as James Imhofe, whose crackpottery takes the unusual form of being "superduper"� skeptics about "scientists" -- in other words, it's a milder manifestation of conspiracy-theorists, only this time the "conspiracy" is by all these crazed leftist scientists, such as james Hansen and Kerry Emanuel and E. O. Wilson, who just want a leftist excuse to damage our truly unsurpassed and unblemished economic system and 3) the attitudinizers, the professional "conservatives" who believe that all those expressing solicitude or worry about poor Mother Nature must surely be 'liberals" with a whole agenda of "liberal" goals.

Giuliani may or may not be�just the ticket.��But the idea that�"challenges" are always met by� leaders in this country sufficient ot the task -- especially if those people are is a pleasing idea American -- is a pleasing idea, that fits this sentimental age, but one unsupported by the evidence.