He apologized for the unintentional burning of some copies of the Koran. Unbelievable and disgusting. If we can't dump this incompetent come November, it may be all over for this great nation. 2012 is indeed a watershed election year.
Wise up, conservatives. Don't hang back because Romney is not a true conservative. He isn't, of course: he's a wishy-washy, flip-flopping pretty boy. He's going to get shot up like hell in the crossfire from the Tea Party and the Occupy-X malcontents. But he's electable and better than Obama. He's the best we got.
Politics is a practical business. It is always about the lesser of evils, except when it is about the least of evils. It is not about being ideologically pure. It is about accomplishing something in a concrete situation in which holding out for the best is tantamount to acquiescing in the bad. Political choices are forced options in roughly William James' sense: he who abstains chooses willy-nilly. Not choosing the better amounts to a choice of the worse.
Each of the Republican contenders has drawbacks. But any of them would be better than Obama. Even Ron Paul.
Never forget: Le mieux est l'ennemi du bien. (Voltaire) "The better is the enemy of the good." The thought is perhaps better captured by "The best is the enemy of the good." In an imperfect world it is folly to predicate action upon perfection. Will you hold out for the perfect spouse? Then you will remain alone. And if you yourself are less than perfect, how can you demand perfection in others?
Meditation on this truth may help conservatives contain their revulsion at their lousy choices. Obama, who has proven that he is a disaster for the country, got in in part because of conservatives who could not abide McCain.
To expect perfection in this fallen world is to succumb to the sort of pernicious utopianism that characterizes leftists.
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