Naval Lawyer Delivers a Kill Shot to the Left's Uproar Over Trump's Airstrikes...
Can You Guess Which Commentator These Hollywood Actors Are Mad at Regarding How...
Jewish Parents Furious at School Over Muslim Club's Pro-Hamas Display
Trump Was Right to Slam the Brakes on Fuel-Efficiency Standards
Damning Watchdog Report Reveals 'Large-Scale Systemic Failures' Leading to Obamacare Subsi...
Tech Billionaire Drops $6.25 Billion Donation to Jump-Start Trump Accounts for 25 Million...
Time for a Midterm Contract With America
Democrats Fuel Racial Strife to Get Votes
Illegal Alien, Son Arrested for Allegedly Trafficking 75 Firearms
Man Who Set Fire To Train With Victim Inside Face 40 Years in...
Former High-Level DEA Official Charged With Narcoterrorism in Alleged Plot to Aid CJNG...
Florida Man Convicted of Attempted Murder of Two Federal Officers in ATF Raid
DOJ Settlement Forces Constellation to Sell Six Power Plants in $26.6B Calpine Merger
Trump’s Not the First to Invoke Old Laws
Panic-Stricken Climate Alarmists Resort to Bolder Lies
OPINION

What Does Obama Believe?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

We now know that there are at least two forms of religion that Barack Obama does not believe in: the religion preached by the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who baptized his children, and the religion clung to by the bitter people of Pennsylvania, whose votes he hopes will help make him president of the United States.

Advertisement

This raises a fundamental question: What does Barack Obama believe?

This is one of the two most important questions voters can ask about a presidential candidate. The other is: What sort of wisdom and courage is a candidate likely to exhibit, if elected, in carrying his beliefs into action?

There are politicians, for example, who will clearly profess certain beliefs to the voters when they are running for office and then betray those beliefs once they are elected. A recent example is Sen. Bob Casey Jr. of Pennsylvania.

Casey ran in 2006 against incumbent Republican Sen. Rick Santorum. Both candidates told the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference that if Roe v. Wade could be overturned, they supported "providing legal protection for unborn children from the moment of conception."

Casey has now endorsed Obama for president. Obama not only claims that abortion is a constitutional "right," but also as an Illinois state senator opposed a bill that would have defined as a "person" a baby who survived a late-term abortion. For life-begins-at-conception Casey to support life-doesn't-even-begin-after-birth Obama is an unambiguous betrayal of Casey's stated belief in the right to life.

Then there are those rare politicians who express deeply held beliefs that may be unpopular, but who have the wisdom and courage to stick by them without wavering even in the face of withering criticism. Ronald Reagan was one of these.

Advertisement

In an October 2003 article in Human Events, Reagan National Security Adviser Richard V. Allen explained how in January 1977 Reagan revealed a then-startling conviction to Allen about America's conflict with the Soviet Union.

"Well," Reagan told Allen, "some say that I am 'simplistic,' but I believe that many complex problems have simple answers. There's a difference between 'simplistic' and 'simple.'"

"So," Reagan continued, "about the Cold War: My view is that we win and they lose."

Reagan's conviction that the Cold War could be won -- and must be won -- was rooted in his religious beliefs. That is why, in a 1983 speech to the National Association of Evangelicals, Reagan called the Soviet Union an "Evil Empire."

In that same speech, Reagan also cited the onetime communist and religious convert Whittaker Chambers, who, Reagan said, "wrote that the crisis of the Western World exists to the degree in which the West is indifferent to God, the degree to which it collaborates in communism's attempt to make man stand alone without God. And then he said, for Marxism-Leninism is actually the second oldest faith, first proclaimed in the Garden of Eden with the words of temptation, 'Ye shall be as gods.'

Advertisement

"The Western world can answer this challenge, (Chambers) wrote," said Reagan, "'but only provided that its faith in God and the freedom He enjoins is as great as communism's faith in Man.'"

Reagan's vision was not only true, it was profoundly optimistic: Our faith beats their materialism.

Obama would never say the words Reagan said. Instead, he told the crowd at a San Francisco fund-raiser that it did not surprise him that bitter people in small towns in Pennsylvania "cling" to religion "as a way to explain their frustrations." Obama, these remarks suggest, does not embrace the religious vision that won the Cold War, but the anti-religious vision that the Cold War defeated.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement