Monthly Archives: September 2008

Missing at Ole Miss: Debra Burlingame scores the first debate

National Review Online editor Kathryn Jean Lopez asked Debra Burlingame her opinion of last night’s debate between Senators John McCain and Barack Obama. Here is a glimpse:

Lopez: Could you ever vote for Obama? Why (not)?

Burlingame: If I could wipe out all I heard Senator Obama say in the primary season — he was then presenting himself with the more moderate positions; he now says he supports missile defense, as opposed to scrapping it — I’d take him more seriously. If al-Qaeda and militant Islamism did not exist, I would be much more comfortable with Barack Obama. He is, at best, a conventional-war commander-in-chief. His resume is so shockingly thin, he is utterly dependent on the advice of those around him. That concerns me deeply. The president has a million people competing for his ear. Without more experience in world affairs, how will he decide whom to listen to? Will he take the path of least resistance? I don’t believe I could ever vote for him because, despite his claim that Sen. McCain is about yesterday and he is about tomorrow, I think he wants to take us back to a defensive posture that would work for our enemies, not us.

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Port Authority blocking WTC memorial with ‘unnecessarily gigantic’ train station

A fully operating Path train station is to the right in this photo, behind the cement walls beyond the crane. Photo taken of Ground Zero on September 11, 2008

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has a problem. It cannot figure out how to build an unnecessary Path train station without delaying by years the building of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center. Within that problem, the Port Authority has another, as an editorial in today’s New York Daily News reveals:

The high-powered committee guiding the redevelopment of Ground Zero will decide Thursday whether to hold the Port Authority to its highest obligation: finishing the permanent 9/11 memorial by the 10th anniversary of the terror attack. And not a day later.

The panel will meet for one of the final times before the PA releases a revamped plan for finishing the project — with commitments on completion dates and price tags.

At the top of the agenda must be a rock-solid determination to meet the 9/11/11 deadline.