McCain's resurgence marks a turning point for the GOP— but this is by no means a turn for the better.



His ascendance marks the final defeat of the old GOP— a GOP that once favored limited government; limits on executive powers; a (mostly) non-interventionist foreign policy based on national interest; a strong role for local and state governments; personal and civil liberties; low taxes; a free-market economy; and opposition to the welfare-warfare state.

The new GOP, now gathered around neocon hawk John McCain, no longer represents any of these once-foundational principles. Instead, the Beltway neoconservatives have usurped the party, effectively marginalizing the last remaining elements of traditional conservatism.

(Now for some of Ryan’s notoriously accurate predictions.)

If up against Clinton, McCain, having convinced the public that only his foreign policy is in America’s best interest, will win by a comfortable margin (even though the foreign policies of the two candidates differ only in style). If, however, Obama wins the Democratic nomination, he will secure enough of the anti-war vote to defeat McCain.



But should McCain win, war with Iran would begin almost immediately, and the conflict could easily spread throughout the region. We would also see an increase of American interference in Pakistan (possibly leading to war), accompanied by the erosion of our civil and personal liberties at home.

Under a McCain presidency, there might even be some new and surprising military interventions elsewhere in the globe (say, in parts of Africa). The result of all this: more death and destruction, new alliances against the U.S., increased global instability, and the beginning of the collapse of the American economy, due to imperial overstretch.





McCain is, to quote Justin Raimondo from his article in The American Conservative, "a militant suffering from acute narcissism," who believes that it is America's manifest destiny to spread its goodness— at any cost— to all corners of the globe.