CAMPAIGN WATCH“Republicans owe Hillary our gratitude. She has road-tested several versions of attacks on Obama that don’t work... The overall lesson to take away from the Democratic primary season so far is that big charges against Obama backfire on the accuser... If Obama can be defeated, it will not be with a meat cleaver but with a surgeon’s scalpel. This is difficult in a national campaign in which the public, almost of necessity, must be communicated with by slogans. But Obama is the master [of] responding to blustery charges with wry, dry irony. The Republicans must systematically make a hundred tightly argued, irrefutable critiques of very specific examples of Obama’s policy being wrong for at least 60 percent of America.” — Tony Blankley
POLITICAL FUTURES“[I would] caution Republicans against overlearning the lessons of Mrs. Clinton’s defeat. A general election differs from a primary in various ways. The electorate is broader, including Republicans and lots more independents. They’re actually choosing the president, so they may pay closer attention and be more inclined to skepticism of Obama’s airy rhetoric and messianic self-presentation. And the candidates are wholly unrestrained by concerns for party unity. McCain also is not a Clinton, with all the baggage that goes along with that name. None of which is to say that Obama would not be a formidable foe, only that he will face a different set of challenges in a general election, and his success in the primaries is no guarantee of success in the general election. Here is a statistic for Obama to ponder: Roughly 50% of all major-party nominees go on to lose the general election.” — James Taranto
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“Mark Alexander’s article, ‘What Dogs Hear,’ was excellent. I am still wondering what the American people are hearing because I, like you, do not get what he is going to do. He reminds me of the Pied Piper and folks are mesmerized by his tune. He offers ‘change,’ but it will not be what people want in the end.” — Lucas, Texas
“After reading Mark Alexander’s essay, ‘What Dogs Hear,’ first I laughed, then I cried, then I growled.” — New Paltz, New York
“The trouble is that people aren’t really hearing anything that’s being said. If they were truly listening they would realize that is all double speak! And a lot of hype and promises that no one can keep. To me it’s all blah blah blah! The man will fool them and when they realize what’s happened they won’t understand how it happened! They will have been hoodwinked.” — Columbus, Ohio
“Barack Obama scares me. The fact that so many in our country are so willing to allow him to be their ‘savior’ is a commentary on the level of their understanding and comprehension of the way things are and the way things are supposed to be. Obama’s ‘rock star’ influence may very well lead to an entire country having to face, at the very least, four years of his inability to say anything, while saying so many words. Heaven — please help us!” — Midlothian, Texas
THE LAST WORD“In 1999, Buckley was interviewed for ‘Nightline’ by Ted Koppel. ‘Mr. Buckley, we have 10 seconds left,’ Koppel said at the end. ‘Could you sum up in 10 seconds?’ Buckley replied, simply: ‘No.’ In the days ahead, no one will find it easy to sum up Bill Buckley’s extraordinary legacy. His output was so prodigious and his range so immense that he routinely made the rest of us ‘feel like hopeless underachievers,’ as I wrote in a column four years ago. Today Buckley’s astonishing, history-changing output comes to an end. His life and his life’s work will resonate for many years to come.” — Jeff Jacoby
Veritas vos Liberabit — Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus, et Fidelis! Mark Alexander, Publisher, for The Patriot’s editors and staff. (Please pray for our Patriot Armed Forces standing in harm’s way around the world, and for their families — especially families of those fallen Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen, who granted their lives in defense of American liberty.)