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Obama's Usama-Centric View of Jihad

Imagine the post-Usama world -- that Utopian realm which emerges after President Barack Obama orders the Pentagon to rupture U.S. relations with Pakistan, and sends planes and troops into the lawless tribal borderlands of Waziristan, easily snatching al Qaeda leader Usama bin Laden from his subterranean condo and putting him on trial at The Hague.

Now what happens?

Sen. Obama has campaigned for president under the assumption that for the past seven years the Pentagon and the CIA have barely, or rarely, attempted to capture the world's most-wanted man. Of course, our military and intel community have all been distracted by Iraq and by spying on innocent Americans at home, so we lacked the resources to go after Usama. Sen. Obama believes that once we bring the troops home from Iraq, nabbing the terror mastermind will be a cinch, and peace will be upon us.

Let's say he's right, and we get Usama. Is that the end of al Qaeda?

Does Sen. Obama believe that Usama is the only jihadist smart enough to lead the decentralized terror network? Once he's safely in prison (no doubt serving 20-years to life) will our nation will again be safe?

What if there's another leader, or dozens of others? What if we get Usama but the terror attacks don't stop? Senator, do you know the definition of the word 'decentralized'?

Presumably, he would go after the new leader of al Qaeda, put him in jail, then pursue his replacement, and so on.

Sen. Obama's Usama-centric view of jihad fails to comprehend that radical Islam is not a personality, it's an ideology, a worldview, a movement. As a Muslim martyr in suicide sportswear prepares to trigger his package, distributing his entrails and hot shrapnel over a crowded marketplace, he doesn't shout "Usama Akbar!" He shouts the name of his bloodthirsty God, proclaiming Allah's greatness in the slaughter of the innocents. Capturing or killing Usama won't stop this terror.

Sen. Obama utterly fails to comprehend what we're fighting -- a "nation" without borders, a kingdom without a king, and a fighting force without medics whose best "soldiers" almost invariably die the first time they do battle.

We should, and eventually will, get Usama. But that's not a plan for fighting jihad. It's a tactic in an overall strategy...a strategy which Sen. Obama has failed to develop or reveal.
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Sarah Palin: Is She Meaner Than Jesus?

During a CNN.com panel Thursday at the Republican National Convention, the discussion turned to Gov. Sarah Palin's use of sarcasm to attack the Democrat duo facing off against her and John McCain. As a member of the panel, I was asked if Gov. Palin's speech was too mean to reflect a "Christian attitude".

My colleague on the panel, Asma Hasan, author of "Why I Am a Muslim," is a self-described "religious person," recently-registered Republican and Hillary supporter, who noted, "I did think she [Palin] was a little mean."

Upon further reflection, away from the glare of TV lights, I'm wondering if a better question might be: Is Sarah Palin meaner than Jesus?

In chapter 23 of Matthew's gospel, Jesus goes off on a rant against those who "exalt themselves."

Speaking directly to his adversaries he accuses them of hypocrisy for running around proclaiming rules for others to live by, and boasting of their own good behavior, while they slam the door in the face of those others. He says they work hard to make converts to their way, and then they make their followers "twice as much a child of hell" as they are. (v. 15)

That's not a very "Christian" thing to say, Jesus, is it?

But Jesus isn't done yet. He accuses his opponents of focusing on small matters while ignoring what's really important -- "straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel!" (v. 24)

If I didn't know it was Jesus talking, I'd think that was sarcasm. I wonder if he's like that because he was homeschooled?

But wait, there's more. He nails them for putting on appearances that don't match their inner character: "you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence." (v. 25)

He calls them "blind guides"and says "you are like whitewashed tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within are full of dead people's bones and all uncleanness." (v. 27)

That's not very nice either. It's kind of "unappealing," don't you think?

His diatribe reaches a crescendo with this ultimate smack down: "You serpents, you brood of vipers, how are you to escape being sentenced to hell?" (v. 33)

Jesus, of course, is not trying to destroy them, he's trying to teach them the error of their ways and to win some of them over to his way. He could have just stopped at verse 12: "Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted."

But to do surgery, you usually need a scalpel. Sarah Palin's gentle jabs at Barack Obama pale in comparison to the way Jesus "owned" the scribes and Pharisees. That's not to say that Gov. Palin never has, or never will step over the line and wind up on Mean Street. But let's put to rest this idea that you can't express brutal truth, even with sarcasm, and still be a follower of Jesus.
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McCain Speech: Whispering Warrior Redefines 'Old Fogey'

(St. Paul, Minnesota) -- From my Everestine perch 123 yards above the floor of the Xcel Energy Center, John McCain appeared roughly the size of an Oompa Loompa. His voice, far from the measured cadences of Barack Obama, often got lost among the shouts and cheers.

Sen. McCain speaks near a stage whisper at times. It's the kind of voice that gets you to lean in.

The world of the mainstream media will little note what he said here, but history will remember what he did here. John McCain redefined what it means to be a septuagenarian.

It struck me about halfway through the speech that most elderly people that I know cling to the past, reminisce about "the way it was" and look with bemusement or disgust at the many changes which have transformed our world.

This old man comes from a different breed of fogey. His speech was replete with calls for specific change in the way government operates...from killing pork barrel projects, to transforming our energy policy, to equipping a new generation of workers for the technologies that have reshaped our lives.

He's not the codger who scoffs at cell phones, internets and iPods. He's the sage who sees in these technologies the jobs of the future, and the betterment of our lives.

Rather than getting stuck in his ways, Sen. McCain seems willing to re-invent everything but his principles.

Rick Warren, the pastor of Saddleback Church where Sen. McCain turned the tide and kindled the passion of the base, is known for saying, "Methods are many, principles are few. Methods always change, principles never do."

Thursday night in St. Paul, Americans saw a whispering warrior with principles like still waters that run deep, who has lived enough to realize life is a river that never stands still.

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