After eight years of obstinate stupidity in the White House, the change voters should want most is a combination of common sense and common decency.
“You can’t beat brains,” JFK used to say, but this year’s debate has somehow been shifted to a mistrust of intelligence–at first by Hillary Clinton’s attacks on Barack Obama as naïve, followed by John McCain’s claims of wisdom only through suffering and now by Sarah Palin’s salty assertion of hockey-mom shrewdness.
What will be at stake in the next two months is how Americans judge the qualities of mind they want in a president. The threat of terrorism, the woes of the economy, the endangered environment require more than a sound-bite mentality and a determination to, in the most frequently used word in McCain’s acceptance speech, “fight” and respond to mindless chants of “drill, baby, drill.”
In the campaign, Barack Obama’s open-mindedness is being distorted into irresolution, but what he would bring, as conservative David Brooks noted almost two years ago, is “a deliberative style to the White House [that] will multiply his knowledge, not divide it.”
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