The death of George McGovern on the eve of the presidential candidates' foreign policy debate underscored a momentous political reversal spanning four decades. McGovern's nomination for president in 1972, a consequence of the Democratic Party's recoil against the Vietnam War and the riotous convention four years earlier, made the country uneasy about his party regarding national security. Four decades later, however, voters may be more ambivalent about America's world role than at any time since the 1930s.
Hence the sense of tediousness Monday. The candidates - who do not differ all that much about foreign policy, although they constantly pretend otherwise - sort of argued for 90 minutes about matters concerning which most voters do not care very much, although they occasionally pretend otherwise.
Forty Octobers ago, McGovern's slogan was "Come home, America," and he lost 49 states. Today, his slogan probably summarizes the foreign policy thinking, to the extent there is any, of at least a plurality of Americans, and perhaps a majority. Which is why Barack Obama thrice insisted he is hot for "nation-building" here at home. And about 35 minutes into the supposed foreign policy debate, Mitt Romney pirouetted into praise of Medicaid reforms in Arizona and Rhode Island, and then professions of love for teachers. In a time when consensus is elusive, the candidates agreed on the imperative need to do something to lower Americans' standard of living by making imports from China more expensive.
Obama explained that he waged a war of regime change in Libya not, as he said at the time, because of a humanitarian responsibility to protect Libyans from Moammar Gaddafi, but rather because Gaddafi "had more American blood on his hands" than anyone then living.
So this war actually was a delayed response to the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
Romney has said he wants somehow to give Syrians "who share our values" - Syria's Jeffersonian caucus? - heavy weapons "to defeat Assad's tanks, helicopters and fighter jets." In the debate he spoke of organizing "responsible parties within Syria" but without America being "drawn into a military conflict," and without enforcing a no-fly zone.
Deploring the "rising tide of chaos" in the Middle East, Romney vows to "move the world away from" Islamic extremism. Such promises have a distinguished pedigree. Woodrow Wilson said: "I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men!"
Russia is a third-world country with an extraction economy - it extracts oil, gas and minerals from the ground and caviar from sturgeon - but Romney says it is our "number one geopolitical foe," although he says the biggest threat to America is a nuclear Iran. Both candidates agree that preventing a nuclear Iran is worth a fourth (counting Libya) U.S. war in that region. Romney thinks America should have "a military second to none," which it will have until the next dozen or so largest militaries merge.
The remarkable fecundity of the George W. Bush administration rolls on. Its domestic policy of incontinent spending enkindled the most potent protest movement - the tea party - since the overlapping movements against the Vietnam War and for civil rights legislation. And Bush's foreign policy helped to move the nation in McGovern's direction.
President George H.W. Bush hoped his Gulf War against Iraq would banish the "Vietnam Syndrome," which made Americans hesitant about military interventions. His son's intervention produced an Iraq Syndrome that we should hope will be more durable than its Vietnam predecessor, which McGovern nurtured.
McGovern was the second major-party nominee with a Ph.D., which he earned at Northwestern University under Arthur Link, the foremost biographer of the first such nominee, Woodrow Wilson. Like Wilson, McGovern was a minister's son. Wilson brought moral zeal to "the war to end all wars." McGovern's anti-war passion - in September 1963 he became one of two senators (Oregon's Wayne Morse was the other) to oppose U.S. involvement in Vietnam during the Kennedy administration - was honorably acquired in the next great war: He flew 35 missions over Germany, where half the B-24 crews did not survive and suffered a higher fatality rate than the Marines on the Pacific islands.
In 1917, Wilson inserted America into the whitewater rapids of world politics. In 1972, McGovern prematurely suggested retrenchment. Four decades and 10 presidential campaigns later, however, the nation is near a semi-McGovern moment. Both of today's candidates seem to know this.
Email George Will at georgewill@washpost.com.
George Will / Voters now seem ready to 'come home' - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Commentary
1-877-773-7724
SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
George Will / Voters now seem ready to 'come home'
Posted: Thursday, October 25, 2012 12:01 am
George Will / Voters now seem ready to 'come home'
The death of George McGovern on the eve of the presidential candidates' foreign policy debate underscored a momentous political reversal spanning four decades. McGovern's nomination for president in 1972, a consequence of the Democratic Party's recoil against the Vietnam War and the riotous convention four years earlier, made the country uneasy about his party regarding national security. Four decades later, however, voters may be more ambivalent about America's world role than at any time since the 1930s.
Hence the sense of tediousness Monday. The candidates - who do not differ all that much about foreign policy, although they constantly pretend otherwise - sort of argued for 90 minutes about matters concerning which most voters do not care very much, although they occasionally pretend otherwise.
Forty Octobers ago, McGovern's slogan was "Come home, America," and he lost 49 states. Today, his slogan probably summarizes the foreign policy thinking, to the extent there is any, of at least a plurality of Americans, and perhaps a majority. Which is why Barack Obama thrice insisted he is hot for "nation-building" here at home. And about 35 minutes into the supposed foreign policy debate, Mitt Romney pirouetted into praise of Medicaid reforms in Arizona and Rhode Island, and then professions of love for teachers. In a time when consensus is elusive, the candidates agreed on the imperative need to do something to lower Americans' standard of living by making imports from China more expensive.
Obama explained that he waged a war of regime change in Libya not, as he said at the time, because of a humanitarian responsibility to protect Libyans from Moammar Gaddafi, but rather because Gaddafi "had more American blood on his hands" than anyone then living.
So this war actually was a delayed response to the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
Romney has said he wants somehow to give Syrians "who share our values" - Syria's Jeffersonian caucus? - heavy weapons "to defeat Assad's tanks, helicopters and fighter jets." In the debate he spoke of organizing "responsible parties within Syria" but without America being "drawn into a military conflict," and without enforcing a no-fly zone.
Deploring the "rising tide of chaos" in the Middle East, Romney vows to "move the world away from" Islamic extremism. Such promises have a distinguished pedigree. Woodrow Wilson said: "I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men!"
Russia is a third-world country with an extraction economy - it extracts oil, gas and minerals from the ground and caviar from sturgeon - but Romney says it is our "number one geopolitical foe," although he says the biggest threat to America is a nuclear Iran. Both candidates agree that preventing a nuclear Iran is worth a fourth (counting Libya) U.S. war in that region. Romney thinks America should have "a military second to none," which it will have until the next dozen or so largest militaries merge.
The remarkable fecundity of the George W. Bush administration rolls on. Its domestic policy of incontinent spending enkindled the most potent protest movement - the tea party - since the overlapping movements against the Vietnam War and for civil rights legislation. And Bush's foreign policy helped to move the nation in McGovern's direction.
President George H.W. Bush hoped his Gulf War against Iraq would banish the "Vietnam Syndrome," which made Americans hesitant about military interventions. His son's intervention produced an Iraq Syndrome that we should hope will be more durable than its Vietnam predecessor, which McGovern nurtured.
McGovern was the second major-party nominee with a Ph.D., which he earned at Northwestern University under Arthur Link, the foremost biographer of the first such nominee, Woodrow Wilson. Like Wilson, McGovern was a minister's son. Wilson brought moral zeal to "the war to end all wars." McGovern's anti-war passion - in September 1963 he became one of two senators (Oregon's Wayne Morse was the other) to oppose U.S. involvement in Vietnam during the Kennedy administration - was honorably acquired in the next great war: He flew 35 missions over Germany, where half the B-24 crews did not survive and suffered a higher fatality rate than the Marines on the Pacific islands.
In 1917, Wilson inserted America into the whitewater rapids of world politics. In 1972, McGovern prematurely suggested retrenchment. Four decades and 10 presidential campaigns later, however, the nation is near a semi-McGovern moment. Both of today's candidates seem to know this.
Email George Will at georgewill@washpost.com.
Posted in Commentary on Thursday, October 25, 2012 12:01 am.
Similar Stories
Most Read
Opinion Home
Editorial Cartoons
Commentary
Editorials
Letters
Recent Polls
Your Lawmakers
Connect with us
Doug and Susan Walker live on one of the shortest streets in Somers Point. In fact, their house is one of only three homes on Warwick Avenue, a one-block street off Ocean Avenue that dead ends at the wetlands. But they also have one of the long... More »
SEARCH PROPERTIES
Place A Classified Ad »
By Tim Spell, Motor Matters More »
SEARCH CARS+
Place A Classified Ad »
Most of the nation’s casino markets have finally recovered from the recession, propelling revenue from slot machines and table games to near-record levels in 2012, according to a new report on the economic health of the gambling industry. More »
SEARCH JOBS+
Place A Classified Ad »
PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD IN PRINT
AND ONLINE TODAY »
Browse Classified Categories
Place A Classified Ad »
Featured Businesses
Add your business here »Foschi Studio
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-3044
Raff's Recycling
Cape May Court House , NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-7406
Permanent Makeup by Amy
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-2769
Skelly's Hi Point Pub
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-641-3172
Captain Andy's Marina
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-0916
Citywide Towing
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-517-3871
Fish Finder the
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-264-0918
Cape Regional Medica...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-463-2000
Schooner Island Marina
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-8900
Thompson Marine & En...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-927-2415
Carl “Luke” Roth of ...
Villas, NJ 08251 [Map]
609-886-8200
Eddie's Auto Body Shop
Erma, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-4613
Fioretta Llc
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-241-8628
Professional Physcal...
N. Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-9800
Richard T Fauntleroy Pc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4466
Mama Mia Of Eht
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-484-8877
Cape May County Hear...
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 [Map]
609-465-9199
Shore Orthopaedic Un...
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1991
The Boat Shop
Manahawkin, NJ 08050 [Map]
609-597-1271
Buck Tails Outfitters
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-829-2229
Sack O' Subs
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-525-0460
Sunnyland Child Care...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-4110
Rio Nails And Spa
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-463-8868
Jack Facciolo, D.O.
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-886-0800
KAS Website Design C...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-703-4696
Frank’s Jewelers
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-4252
Pier 47
Wildwood, NJ 08260 [Map]
609-729-4774
Avalon Limousine Ser...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-0008
Matt Blatt Kia
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-573-3100
Black Horse Auto Sales
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-272-1877
On a Mission
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-646-4483
Access Roofing & Con...
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
888-661-0333
Wild Styles/Boost Mo...
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-846-7030
Up The Creek Marina
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-272-9252
Bob's Garden Center
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6306
Duke O'fluke
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-926-2280
Beachcomber Coins & ...
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-1031
Boardwalk Honda
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-428-4475
Gutter Giants LLC
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
Keeper Back Bay Fishing
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-576-5998
Vip Skindeep Llc
Pleasantville, NJ 08232 [Map]
609-677-9900
Designer Consignment
Egg Harbor Twp , NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-5444
Pappy's Fishin' Stuff
Ocean City, NJ 08226 [Map]
609-398-6996
Oreck Floor Care Center
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-272-7590
...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-788-8789
Foglio's Abbey Floor...
Marmora , NJ 08223 [Map]
609-390-3876
Ventnor Heights Auto...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-823-0520
Bennett Chevy
Egg Harbor Twp., NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-0444
Maynard's Cafe
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-822-8423
Copiers Plus
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-7587
Simple Escape Spa
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-464-2313
Royal Suites Healthc...
Galloway, NJ 08205 [Map]
609-748-9900
Mouse Trap Bowling A...
Woodbine, NJ 08270 [Map]
609-861-2695
Rio Auto
Palermo, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-390-0001
Crabby's Restaurant
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-2722
Perfect Solutions So...
Northfield, NJ 08225 [Map]
609-601-5252
Surrey Beach House ...
Ventnor City, NJ 08406 [Map]
609-822-6550
Ladies Invitational ...
Absecon, 08201 [Map]
Tackle Direct
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-788-3819
Montreal Inn
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7011
One Stop Bait & Tackle
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
609-348-9450
Frankie's Pizza II
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-625-7566
Absecon Bay Sportsme...
Absecon, NJ 08201 [Map]
609-484-0409
Historic Cold Spring...
Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-898-4504
Newkirk Family Veter...
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-645-2120
Coastal Designer Outlet
Ocean View, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-624-1544
Bloomingsales
Brigantine, NJ 08203 [Map]
609-266-6667
M & S Produce Outlet
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-383-8323
English Creek Supply
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-641-6168
Up The Creek Tavern ...
Keyport, NJ 07735 [Map]
732-739-0214
Linwood Care Center
Linwood, NJ 08221 [Map]
609-927-6131
Sport Hyundai Dodge
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234 [Map]
609-646-1200
Handcrafted Cabinetr...
West Creek, NJ 08092 [Map]
609-891-0166
Dolfin Dock Inc
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1730
Atlantic Limousine, Inc
Atlantic City, NJ 08401 [Map]
800-348-3484
Mays Landing Golf &...
Mays Landing, NJ 08330 [Map]
609-641-4411
Grace Energy
Rio Grande, NJ 08242 [Map]
609-465-5545
C-Jam Yacht Sales
Somers Point, NJ 08244 [Map]
609-927-1175
Mangos Restaurant Llc
Margate City, NJ 08402 [Map]
609-487-7450
Tuckahoe Bike Shop
Woodbine, NJ 08230 [Map]
609-628-0101
JBS Solar and Wind LLC
North Cape May, NJ 08204 [Map]
609-884-7373
Find Local Businesses
Popular Categories
Sections
Services
Contact Us
Contacts By DepartmentThe Press of Atlantic City Media Group
PO Box 3100
1000 West Washington Ave.
Pleasantville, NJ 08232-3100
1-877-773-7724
609-272-7000 SubscriberServices@pressofac.com
Search
© Copyright 2013, pressofAtlanticCity.com, Pleasantville, NJ. Powered by BLOX Content Management System from TownNews.com. [Terms of Use | Privacy Policy]