Entries Tagged as '2008 Presidential Race'

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Obama to inherit dangerous times

A tale of two unique U.S. presidential candidates has ended, and one of them – Barack Obama – will inherit, along with the White House, what has been called the most dangerous of times.
Against that general backdrop, it should be noted that we also face the best of times in terms of the positive changes [...]

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Both candidates could learn from Taiwan’s environmental policies

TAOYUAN COUNTY, Taiwan — As one inhales the fresh air in this island’s many nature reserves and parks, it is hard to imagine that the environment looms as a major concern. But, then, before the widespread global realization that the era of climate change was upon us, most people around the world – except those [...]

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Some issues for the candidates to address

SAN FRANCISCO — What does one do when the excitement of a presidential race dies down, when no surprising, new or inspiring perspectives seem to emerge, when larger-than-life issues such as economic turmoil threaten to restrict the prospects of change – in short, when campaign fatigue sets in?
Certainly, that is not the case, many of [...]

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Even this shall pass away

The staggering economic turmoil of recent months has left people around the world scratching their heads, worrying more than they have in almost a century and often blaming the United States. These are, no doubt, troubling times, but they are hardly the worst that could occur. Further, I have every expectation that we – in [...]

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

What about Iraq’s delayed casualties?

Among the issues that Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama and Republican standard-bearer John McCain should take up in this week’s presidential debate is the tragedy of delayed casualties from the U.S.-led intervention in Iraq.
Most Americans are familiar with the official Iraq toll – as of this week, 4,169 U.S. dead, along with a several hundred [...]

Monday, September 15th, 2008

2 respected statesmen offer advice for next president

WASHINGTON — Huddled around tables in a private Georgetown garden, we waited for the main event, the reason that we had given up our evening: the promise of a bipartisan discussion on the major foreign-policy issues facing the United States.
Mere weeks before, I had written a column expressing the need for such an approach in [...]

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Focus on what’s important to the nation

The rare moment of national unity that Hurricane Gustav delivered, with the usual politicking on pause, reminded me of another time, when Americans more commonly joined together in a bipartisan manner.
It should not take the potential drowning of one of the United States’ most storied cities – or other crises, at home and abroad – [...]

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Foreign-policy issues await new president

Now that both the Democratic and Republican presidential-campaign teams have a strong component of foreign-policy expertise, how will they use it?
They had better act quickly, because time is short. During the few months before Election Day, voters should demand that the presidential contenders address the international challenges facing the United States with clarity and [...]

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Every presidential candidate should dust off his passport

Whether Barack Obama’s multi-nation, overseas tour amounts to a political stunt – as critics claim – or not, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president and U.S. senator from Illinois is moving in the right direction. So far, foreign-policy issues have played a pitifully small role in the campaign. To those who believe that discussing Afghanistan, [...]

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

Candidates must push language skills

TAMPA, Fla. — The U.S. presidential candidates could learn a lesson from the history of the Ybor City neighborhood, once known as the Cigar Capital of the World. The district’s multicultural background – which dates from its establishment by businessman Vicente Martinez Ybor and others in the mid-1880s – underscores the importance of foreign-language training [...]