My 3 Top Choices and Why
By pilgrim Posted in 2008 — Comments (53) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
Before I reel off the names of the people who are my top 3 choices for POTUS I first want to explain the why part. I choose among the candidates, based on their speeches, papers, and interviews, who could be POTUS and have a conversation with the leader from another country the way that Pres. Reagan conversed with Mikhail Gorbachev.
The conversation I am referring to took place on the morning of October 16, 1986. From the CNN website you can read the entire transcript of these talks. In this post I just want to provide a piece of it.
Secretary General Gorbachev: We know that you plan to deploy SDI. But we do not have such plans. And we cannot assume an obligation relative to such a transition. We have a different conception.
Secretary of State Shultz: I would like to mention also the third question, which we included because you emphasize it so much. This is the situation which would exist until the time when the conditions indicated above were realized. The question is: what general understanding can the parties reach relative to the restrictions imposed by the ABM Treaty on activity related to creating a long-range strategic defense?
The President stated to you and the whole world that he will not renounce the SDI program. You do not agree with that. But as I understand it, you recognize his problem and that he is trying to meet your concern half-way.
Secretary General Gorbachev: But I think that I am even helping the president with SDI. After all, your people say that if Gorbachev attacks SDI and space weapons so much, it means the idea deserves more respect. They even say that if it were not for me, no one would listen to the idea at all. And some even claim that I want to drag the United States into unnecessary expenditures with this. But if the first ones are right, then I am on your side in this matter, but you have not appreciated it.
President Reagan: What the hell use will ABM's or anything else be if we eliminate nuclear weapons?
Secretary General Gorbachev: Absolutely right. I am for that. But the point is that under the ABM Treaty the parties do not have a large-scale antimissile defense, and you want to deploy such a defense.
President Reagan: But what difference does it make if it is not nuclear weapons? What difference whether it exists or not?
On the other hand, you know that even in this situation we will not be able to guarantee that someone will not begin to make nuclear weapons again at some point.
Secretary General Gorbachev: Mr. President, you just made a historic statement: What the hell use will SDI be if we eliminate nuclear weapons? But it is exactly because we are moving toward a reduction and elimination of nuclear weapons that I favor strengthening the ABM Treaty. In these conditions it becomes even more important. As for your arguments about the madman who decides to resort to nuclear weapons, I think that we will be able to solve that problem, it is not that serious.
President Reagan: It appears that the point is that I am the oldest man here. And I understand that after the war the nations decided that they would renounce poison gases. But thank God the gas mask continued to exist. Something similar can happen with nuclear weapons. And we will have to shield against them in any case.
Secretary General Gorbachev: I am increasingly convinced of something I knew previously only second-hand. The President of the United States does not like to retreat. I see now that you do not want to meet us half-way on the issue of the ABM Treaty, which is absolutely essential in conditions where we are undertaking large reductions in nuclear arms, and you do not want to begin negotiations on stopping nuclear testing. So I see that the possibilities of agreement are exhausted.
[...]
Secretary General Gorbachev: It is a shame, Mr. President, that you and I do not have enough time to discuss humanitarian issues. We have concrete ideas on this which we simply are not going to have time to discuss. I have to say that people in the Soviet Union are very concerned about the human rights situation in the United States. There is one other important subject. This is the importance of mutual information in our day. The situation now is this: the Voice of America broadcasts around the clock in many languages from stations you have in various countries in Europe and Asia, while we cannot present our point of view to the American people. Therefore, to achieve parity, we are forced to jam Voice of America broadcasts. I propose the following: we will stop jamming Voice of America and you will be able to broadcast what you consider necessary to us, but at the same time you will meet us half-way and help us lease, from you or in neighboring countries, radio stations that would allow us to reach the American people with our point of view.
President Reagan: The difference between us is that we recognize freedom of the press and the right of people to listen to any point of view. This does not exist in your press. Today in Washington there will be a press conference, and Americans will see it, and newspapers will publish the text of it. It is not that way in your country. Your system envisions only a government press.
Secretary General Gorbachev: But I asked a concrete question. I proposed that we can stop jamming Voice of America if you will meet us half-way and give us an opportunity to lease a radio station from you or lease or build a station in one of your neighboring countries.
President Reagan: I will consult about this when I return to the United States, and I will take a favorable position.
Secretary General Gorbachev: We are for parity in general. In the information field, for example, or in film. Almost half of the movies showing in our theaters are American. Soviet movies are hardly ever shown in the United States. That is not parity.
President Reagan: We do not have any ban on your movies. The film industry is a free business, and if someone wants to show your films he can do it.
Secretary General Gorbachev: I see that the President avoids this question and goes into talk about business.
President Reagan: Our government cannot control the film market. If you want to inundate us with your movies go right ahead. How our movies get to your country, I do not know.
Secretary General Gorbachev: It is an interesting situation, simply a paradox. In your country, the most democratic country, obstacles arise to showing our movies, while in our country, a totalitarian country, almost half the movies being shown are American. How can you reconcile this, that the Soviet Union is an undemocratic country but your films are being shown?
President Reagan: There is a difference between free enterprise and government ownership. You have no free enterprise, everything belongs to the government and the government puts everything on the market. In the United States we have private industry, and other countries have the right to sell their goods, movies and so on. You have the right to set up a rental organization in our country to distribute your movies, or to lease some theater. But we cannot order it.
Secretary General Gorbachev: One more question. There were two television bridges between the USSR and the United States recently. One involved the participation of the communities of Leningrad, Copenhagen, and Boston, and the other had Soviet and American doctors. In our country they were watched by 150 million people, but in the United States they were not shown.
President Reagan: The only thing I can answer is that the movie theaters and all belong to your government, and you show what you want in them. But our government cannot compete with private business.
But I want to tell you that your performing groups, such as the Leningrad Ballet, draw an enormous crowd in the United States, and they are shown on television too. But if you want to show other things too, please do. We have leasing companies, and theaters which show foreign films.
Secretary General Gorbachev: Mr. President, we have quite a few complaints about the United States. Here is the last question. For 30 years now you have refused to let our trade union figures enter the United States. Mr. Shultz simply does not give them visas. Where is the parity here? You know, your trade union figures come to the USSR and have interesting professional contacts and meetings with workers. But you do not let our people in. In your country, which is so self-confident, they are viewed as subversive elements.
President Reagan: I would like to look into this. Maybe I will have some proposals on the film problem that you mentioned.
Secretary General Gorbachev: Good.
This exchange is historic, and to me it marked the beginning of collapse of the USSR. Frank Kaplan wrote an article at Slate magazine where he points this out.
The Reykjavik talks finally fizzled. Gorbachev said he'd accept the zero-nukes plan if Reagan pledged not to test nuclear weapons in outer space (a crucial element of SDI). Reagan wouldn't accept that condition.However, Gorbachev returned to Moscow persuaded that Reagan—who had earlier struck him as a "caveman"—honestly had no intention of launching a first strike against the Soviet Union, and he made this point clear to the Politburo. He could continue with perestroika, which involved not just economic reforms but—as a necessary precondition—massive defense cuts and a transformation of international relations. He needed assurances of external security in order to move forward with this domestic upheaval. Reagan gave him those reassurances. Subsequent conversations between his foreign minister, Edvard Shevardnadze, and Secretary of State George Shultz reinforced his confidence.
In the last couple years of the Reagan administration, Reagan would propose extravagant measures in arms reductions. His hawkish aides would go along with them, thinking the Soviets would reject them (and the United States would win a propaganda victory). Then, to the surprise of everyone (except perhaps Reagan, who meant the proposals without cynicism), Gorbachev would accept them.
In the end, Reagan and Gorbachev needed each other. Gorbachev needed to move swiftly if his reforms were to take hold. Reagan exerted the pressure that forced him to move swiftly and offered the rewards that made his foes and skeptics in the Politburo think the cutbacks might be worth it.
Gorbachev wasn't the only decisive presence. If Reagan hadn't been president—if Jimmy Carter or Walter Mondale had defeated him or if Reagan had died and George H.W. Bush taken his place—Gorbachev almost certainly would not have received the push or reinforcement that he needed. Those other politicians would have been too traditional, too cautious, to push such radical proposals (zero nukes and SDI) or to take Gorbachev's radicalism at face value. (There's no need to speculate on this point. When Bush Sr. succeeded Reagan in 1989, U.S.-Soviet relations took a huge step backward; it took nearly a year for Bush and his advisers to realize that Gorby was for real.)
My heart swells with pride when I read this transcript, and I am so thankful our country had a President who knew how to converse and defend the USA instead of apologizing. This president knew how to explain the freedoms of a private sector capitalist system vs the tyranny of a communist system.
When I think who amongst the current crop can stand up for the USA in this manner I have reached the conclusion that they include:
1. Fred Thompson
2. Rudy Giuliani
3. Mitt Romney
That's why I put him at #3. Perhaps Mitt is over-coached and too calculating, but here are the links to my concerns about him.
Las Vegas Sun
UPI
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
...aisle 3, aisle 6, aisle 9...nt
"I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on the objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents."
-- James Madison
My list is also different:
1) Fred Thompson - the guy is very detailed and brave with his many plans to fix entitlements; he is probably one of the strongest Republicans (but not poll wise) since he antagonizes no members of the coalition, comes off well on TV, and makes an excellent counter to Shrillary and Obama the inexperienced; he has a relaxed temperament, which is usally good for a President (although he may be too relaxed for the campaign); he screams gravitas.
2) Rudy Giuliani - the guy is definitely the most experienced executive among them; you can't argue with his NYC success --I saw it; he does not tire of taking the fight to his opponents and to America's foreign enemies; he would be first on my list if I wasn't afraid the social cons would sit it out with him at the top of the ticket.
3) John McCain - the guy is a war hero; he is unflinching on the war and on spending; he also makes a great contrast with the Dems; but he is wrong on campaign finance, immigration, and "torture."
Mitt Romney is four, and Mike Huckabee is five. I didn't bother with the rest, for obvious reasons (although Hunter would be good).
McCain the POW is wrong on torture? I would love to hear from anyone more experienced. Maybe you are wrong on "torture".
Not just taken to further establish his maverick Republican status
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
to know exactly what McCain's definition of "torture" is before making that judgement. The left defines it as anything that would cause ANY kind of discomfort to the terrorists. I personally think if it came down to the ticking bomb, McCain would do the right thing, that is, use whatever means necessary to stop it. Personally, I think even Hillary Clinton would do the right thing.
McCain is wrong on torture. He thinks that any CID treatment, including blasting loud music, forcing them to stand for long periods of time, etc., is torture. That is just wrong. The only technique he comes close on is waterboarding, which while I don't believe it is torture (see my prior posts on this), it certainly comes closer to torture then anything else mentioned (like forcing someone to listen to Brittany Spears).
But I love it when people bring up McCain's background as a way to end the debate involving his stance on torture. The fact that he is a genuine military hero, and even the fact that he himself was tortured - without a doubt he was tortured by the Vietnamese - does not make him the "expert" on torture. This falacious argument is similar to the Dems chicken hawk argument, where they say that only military men can make judgments on a war; otherwise we must all keep quiet! (Tell that to Lincoln, Wilson, and FDR.)
To make an analogy, my girlfriend was watching Dreamgirls last night, and she stated several times that some of the singers were really good, and several times that other singers were really bad. And she did this all without actually being a trained vocalist herself. According to the faulty argument mentioned above, she has no right to critique these people, as she isn't a "singer," and therefore doesn't know enough to speak on this issue.
That argument is just plain silly.
1. Duncan Hunter
2. Fred Thompsons
3. John McCain
4. Mike Huckabee
Of my list Huckabee seems to have the best chance. I like Duncan, but I have given up. Same goes with Fred who is now considered Second Tier on almost all political websites. John McCain I think still has a shot. Though if Huckabee wins Iowa, and comes in third in N.H. Then goes on to take South Carolina, he will get Florida too.
1. McCain
2. Rudy
3. Thompson
on limiting a President's power and ability to impose economic sanctions on foreign nations.
and YES vote Ending U.S. trade embargos on the country of Vietnam. makes you think that he could be like Pres. Reagan?
source
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
In a time of war, McCain is the best leader. He has the military and foreign policy knowledge, and he is steadfast and courageous.
Domestically, he can reinvigorate support for the war on terror - because he commands a great deal of trust with Americans - and build a bipartisan base of support in Congress. Reagan had the Reagan Democrats backing him on defense and foreign policy. McCain will have his McCain Democrats.
Rudy has shown he's tough as nails, and although he'd have a lot of learning to do in foreign policy, he'd have the right attitude and the strength to take the right positions and abide by them.
W.C. Fields for President!
http://www.shortenurl.com/7cxfm
#1 Rudy
#2 Fred
#3 Mitt/McCain
Recommended for the part where Gorbachev coplains to Reagan that nobody in America wants to watch government made movies.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
I imagined how some of the folks running today for POTUS would have heard the complaints and apologized profusely had they been in Pres. Reagan's spot.
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
Maybe your top 3 list is in a different order, but we have the same #1 for now.
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
Your list is just like mine, except I can not for the life of me decide between Fred and Rudy for #1.
I vote absentee in Texas. I believe our primary is the 5th of March, but could be wrong.
For now, I would say Rudy is probably my #1, but if Fred does well in the first three states, I could easily switch and be very happy with him.
I would be enthusiastic about any of those three for the general. McCain would be my fourth choice mainly because of the "Gang of 14". Although Huckabee made vast improvements in Arkansas, he is #5. I just really wish he would have challenged the Senate seat.
"It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." ~Professor Dumbledore
important, and I think many republicans ned to understand it. Guvs have to DO things, esp Southern guvs:
"Although Huckabee made vast improvements in Arkansas, he is #5."
Please gal, expand on this for the benefit of federalism understanding!
I agree with you
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
Huck's statements on abortion and the marriage amendment are NOT federalist at all.
While I would love to see abortion completely illegal and marriage be clearly defined as man and woman only, I just don't think it is the feds place to do it. It is just not the way our country was set up. And believe me, it pains me to say that in some ways. But I know it is the right way to do things.
I also have issue with his ideas for education. Great for a state level, not so much for the nation as a whole.
I hate his immigration stance and I do not trust him on the GWOT at all. He is living in a 9/10/01 dreamland, IMHO. I trust Rudy, Mitt, and Fred on judges more than him. IMO, he would appoint true squishes. In fact, I probably trust McCain more than Huck as well.
If Huck is the GOP nominee, I will vote for him, because he is better than any dem, but I won't be thrilled.
I do still hope that he would consider challenging Pryor for his Senate seat and if not Pryor, then definitely that lightweight Lincoln. AR should NOT have two dems in the Senate. That is not representative of the make-up of the state at all.
"It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." ~Professor Dumbledore
he was a good governor in order to tamp down some of the gop criticism of him based on that. I have decided that he will fall VERY SOON from contention for the presidential nomination. He may not even win Iowa.
I KNOW HE WON'T WIN SC AND WILL BACK IT WITH MONEY.
I also hope that Arkansas has a better GOP senate nomineee!
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
at his national positions that don't sit well with me.
I would need to do a bit of research to give exact figures and such, but two words sum up, IMO, what Huckabee really improved in AR.
Roads and schools. Both state level issues that need to be addressed by the people of the state. And as far as schools, while I like what he has done for Arkansas, I really don't embrace it for a nationwide policy.
Aside from I-40 being drivable now without whiplash, there have been vast improvements in the NW part of the state. Many bridges have been widened, upgraded, etc...
Purely anecdotal, but one of our dearest friends has worked in the Highway department for 21 years now and in his opinion, Bill Clinton left the state roads in a complete and utter disaster. The stories he could tell when he was a bridge inspector. Shocking in some respects, typical if you look at the stae of affairs throughout the country. Huckabee made them a priority and it shows.
Christmas letters and Cherokee homes are calling me, so I must go for now.
More later if you need it.
____________________________________________________
"It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." ~Professor Dumbledore
trying to make the point to many here that our federalist desire for a smaller federal government means that states have to do things, and that a knee jerk denunciation of governors that have to raise revenue is wrong.
Having said that, my opposition to Huck is based on his current positions for the federal government. I think he really tipped the scale this weekend with his foreign policy which will lead to a very fast fall from grace.
My main objections to many of the posts about Huck have been the poll driven stereotypical mischaracterizations of evangelicals generally.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
My reading on some of the blogs posted here about Huckabee's time as Ark governor is the criticism is not that as a governor he had to raise money. The criticism is that he obfuscated on some of these things that were easy enough to uncover. He would have got less criticism by standing on his record based on doing what he thought needed being done instead of trying to obfuscate on the record.
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
trying to make the point to many here that our federalist desire for a smaller federal government means that states have to do things, and that a knee jerk denunciation of governors that have to raise revenue is wrong.
People always throw out anecdotes about the roads as an example that tax hikes aren't so bad after all. This is the problem with that:
1) The improvements were done with *bonds*. These bonds are going to be paid off by future *federal* money and future state tax revenue. Anybody can fix the roads with future money. You don't need massive tax hikes to do that. If he blew all that money already (I have no idea), he's put the state in a position where there is no money for roads because that money has already been borrowed against and spent.
2) The gas and diesel taxes weren't the only hikes out there. If they were, he wouldn't have the reputation he does.
3) If roads were the only thing he paid for, he wouldn't have taken the state from 30th most taxed to 13th most taxed.
An opposition to the kind of tax-and-spend mentality Huck showed in AR is not a knee jerk reaction to anything.
---
Underlying most arguments against the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself. - Milton Friedman
Fred
Mitt
McCain
Rudy
Huck
Will vote for any, but only SUPPORT, i.e., give money, volunteer time, etc., to FRED!
www.fred08.com
Redneck Hippie
I still have my list Fred, Mitt & Rudy. I recently blogged a series asking people to convince me. Neil and docj (especially his linked statement) were very convincing to me. You can read them here. I think Mitt would be strong enough against terrorism and I like his other positions better, but I'm comfortable enough with Rudy (yes, even as an "evangelical socon") that I'd still happily vote for him.
==== 13 ====
than Huck! Don't you?
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
I don't trust Huck with anything. I really don't like to speak that way about a Christian pastor.
==== 13 ====
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
I trust Rudy more with judges than Huck because he'd get the job done. Since "compromise" with the dems is so important with Huck, he'd eventually cave in and nominate a "moderate", which we all know means a liberal. I fear the same thing from McCain, which is probably why they're my 4th & 5th.
Give me a strong law & order guy any day. At least they know the right way to deal with thugs.
==== 13 ====
I posted upthread links of the only problems that I have with Mitt. It's not a big deal, but I think sometimes Mitt is over-coached and too calculating in his responses.
Now there's no more oak oppression,
For they passed a noble law,
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe, and saw.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
1. Fred
2. Mitt
3. McCain
I know Huck will fall -- I just pray that it is BEFORE he wins the nomination.
I'm a single issue voter:
1) Rudy
2) Fred
3) Mitt
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
This is one of the points I've been making all along, as well as my wife who doesn't follow this stuff. Who do we want sitting down across from the modern day Gorby's?
I've believed in Fred in this department from Day #1. I have been willing to accept Rudy and Mitt, in no particular order and still think Duncan Hunter can kick some tail if anyone ever noticed him. I think McCain could be strong internationally, but not sure about sitting down at the other end of a long table.
So what does all the above mean. The choice is clearly Fred for me with some positive Rudy and Mitt feelings.
But this blog should not be condidered merely a plug for Fred, Mitt and Rudy on the most important issue of our day... national security/GWOT... but a reflection on the fact that nobody believes Huckabee is a viable candidate in this department. I'm pro-life, anti-gay marriage, fiscally conservative, prof-family, pro "Americans taking care of their own darn selves" but most importantly I care about knowing we are not going to get hit again. If I have to ignore the other issues important to me for someone who will keep the country safe (including shutting down illegal immigration- enter Fred) I will.
GWB for all of his flaws, has avoided another hit... but I don't want GWB, I want someone who will be even tougher. This idea that we have been on the offensive is not satisfying to me... we need to really be proactive in eliminating our enemies.
There is a reason the "hands down" issue at the debate, the mocking responses to the AP "yearbook" questions and his direct answers (sometimes short because they don't need to be long) are suddenly starting to make Fred look like the best candidate to many. No pandering, no BS, no crap... no time to waste, because our enemies are not pandering, are not full of it, and surely won't waste one minute in which they could be hurting us.
Fred all the way, Mitt and Rudy can hang around, McCain can bring up the rear. Huckabee, despite what the polls may say... does not belong at the grownup table when it comes to international relations. I used to say I would even vote for Ron Paul if I had too... at least I know where he stands.
All my talking to folks across the country this last week proves the love affair with Huck is fading. The buzz that was around Huck before his rise in the polls has shifted to Fred.
Congratulations to Mike Huckabee for liberating me from my "partisan politics." It will be a hard sell to vote Republican if he is the nominee. I hesitate to say that even Hillary would keep us safer, if nothing else, because she is going to want to prove she can hang with the big boys.
PILGRIM- This may be the most election defining issue of 2008, and you put it together so perfectly in this blog. With the roll the MSM seems to play in ignoring Fred, they also have us believing the GWOT is not a big issue any more. This still should be the #1 issue, every day, until the radicals are bye-bye. Every Fred (Romney, Rudy) supporter spread this around. As was posted earlier, we have an opportunity at Red.State to eliminate this Huck "fever" this country has for good.
Fred raised 2400 donors in 24 hours and still counting. Donate to the best candidate to slap around "the bad guys."
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
http://thehinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
www.race42008.com
www.fred08.com
1. McCain - pro-life, would be great managing the war, terrific on spending - and a legitimate hero
2. Fred - wouldn't do anything to screw up the coalition (socials, fiscals, hawks)
3. Huck - great on social issues
Out of those three, though, only McCain would have a chance in a general election.
Here's my question - if we are seriously considering sacrificing princple to win (i.e. nominate Rudy), why not pick the guy who is more conservative and has a better chance of winning a general (McCain)?
Have you read the Des Moines Register endorsement for McCain. It should be titled "If you are a Democrat and have to vote for a Republican, here's why McCain's your man". It praises him for going against the party on the '01 and '03 tax cuts; McCain/Feingold; global warming; immigration reform; closing Gitmo; etc. I don't think he's the most conservative. McCain is #5 on my list.
#1 Mitt
#2 Fred
#3 McCain
Without any consideration of electability they would be:
#1 Fred
#2 Mitt
#3 Rudy
---
Underlying most arguments against the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself. - Milton Friedman
Huck is the least electable in a general election. We nominate him, say hello to President Hussein Obama and Justice Sotomayer.
I have managed to get down to two candidates who are tied for first on my list:
.......We interrupt this post for BREAKING NEWS!!!.......
My Miami Dolphins have WON a game, defeating the Baltimore Ravens 22-16 in OT! GO DOLPHINS!!!
back to the post...........
My picks are:
Thompson & McCain
Pawlenty for VP!
1. Rudy
2. Fred
3. Mitt
John Podhoretz explains exactly why I support Rudy first, though I would be more than happy with Fred and Mitt.
"Rudy may call himself pro-choice. He may have signed legislation mandating benefits to gay couples. He may have been a supporter of gun control. He may even have endorsed Mario Cuomo for governor in 1994. These are all things he's going to have to explain and answer for in Republican debates and the like.
But more than any other candidate in the race, Rudy Giuliani is a liberal-slayer. When he rejects liberal orthodoxy, which he does often, he doesn't just oppose it. He goes to war with it - total, unconditional war."


I have a different list in order of preference but yours is good.
1. Mitt
2. Fred
3. Rudy