By Aaron Goldstein on 10.4.11 @ 6:08AM
As a mathematician he would teach the incumbent a thing or two
about "simple math."
Let us assume that the field bidding to be the Republican
standard bearer in 2012 will not expand. Let us assume also that
neither New Jersey Governor Chris Christie nor Sarah Palin will
throw their hat into the ring. Let us further assume that neither
Mike Huckabee nor Paul Ryan is having second thoughts. In which
case, Mitt Romney is still the frontrunner. Yet conservatives
appear no more prepared to embrace him now than they were in 2008.
Rick Perry hasn't proved a viable alternative and Michele
Bachmann's fifteen minutes is up. Over the past week or so, with
straw poll triumphs in Florida and Illinois, Herman Cain has begun
to strike the
right chord with Republican voters and has seen his
poll numbers rise. So here are nine reasons why Republicans
should nominate Herman Cain for President.
1. He Has No Sense of
Entitlement
Cain wasn't born into a life of privilege. Yet he bore no
resentment because of it. He believed in the American Dream yet
understood he had to work hard for it. Cain set goals for himself
and made sure he had the education necessary to attain them. He
found opportunities and seized them. Cain grew up with the
knowledge that the world doesn't owe one a living. He has earned
his place in the world.
2. He Worked at Burger
King
Cain was assigned to
manage some of the least successful Burger King restaurants in the
country and turned them into the most profitable. To do this he
improved service and kept customers satisfied. It would be a
remarkable if Cain could do for the federal government what he did
for Burger King.
3. He Has Never Held Elected
Office
I am not suggesting
there isn't any honor in public service. Unfortunately, many
elected officials (Democrats and Republicans alike) use their
office in service of themselves rather than the people who elect
them. Public officials are preoccupied with re-election and such a
preoccupation doesn't lend itself towards innovation because
innovation is risky and risk can alienate a public official's
donors.
In the food service industry, Cain had to take risk and
innovate or go out of business. At the risk of sounding clichéd,
Cain thinks outside the box. He isn't constrained by conventional
political wisdom and will do what it takes to ensure this country
doesn't go out of business.
4. He Is a
Mathematician
President
Obama tells us that passing his jobs bill is "simple math." Well,
Cain majored in math at Morehouse University. He is in the rare
position of being able to tell President Obama, "I am a trained
mathematician. I have looked at your numbers and can tell you that
they don't add up."
5. He Was a CEO
Hollywood often casts businessmen as villains
and President Obama has spent a great deal of his Presidency
vilifying CEOs (unless, of course, you happen to be the CEO of a
company that got $500 million plus to manufacture expensive solar
panels nobody wanted.) Cain was a successful CEO. But he wasn't
plucked from central casting. He earned his way to the top. Cain
could tell President Obama a thing or two about what CEOs really
do.
6. He Is The Adult in the
Room
Cain is actually only
fifteen years older than President Obama. But he strikes such a
mature image that standing next to Obama he could be mistaken for
his father. In an Obama-Cain debate, President Obama would come off
like a petulant son who thinks he knows everything while Cain would
tell Obama that he has a lot of growing up to do. Frankly, as a
black man, Cain could speak to Obama with a candor the other
candidates could not get away with without being called
racist.
7. He Would Make Liberal Charges of Racism Look
Really, Really Stupid
Actress Janeane Garofalo infamously said that the Tea Party
was "about hating a black man in the White House" and was "racism
straight up." Yet Cain would end up as one of the most popular
figures in the Tea Party movement. So what does Garofalo have to
say about Cain? Here is what
she recently told Keith Olbermann:
Herman Cain is probably well liked by some of the
Republicans because it hides the racist elements of the Republican
Party. Conservative movement and tea party movement, one in the
same.
People like Karl Rove liked to keep the racism very covert.
And so Herman Cain provides this great opportunity say you can say
"Look, this is not a racist, anti-immigrant, anti-female, anti-gay
movement. Look we have a black man."
So in other words, Republicans are so racist they would nominate
a black man in the hope he will be elected President of the United
States. Gee, it doesn't get more racist than that. Left-wing loons
like Garofalo might actually believe this but they are going to
have an awfully tough time convincing people the Republican Party
is racist if they nominate Cain. If Republicans do nominate Cain it
will be because of the content of his character, not the color of
his skin.
8. The Content of His
Character
Herman Cain has
demonstrated that he is a man who carries himself with a sense of
humor, dignity, modesty, responsibility and gratitude towards the
country that allowed him an opportunity to succeed.
Does he know everything he needs to know to be President?
No. But Cain is a quick study. He possesses the diligence necessary
to turn whatever weaknesses he might possess into
strengths.
9. 9-9-9
Now you didn't think I was going to leave this out, did
you?
If implemented, 9-9-9 would represent the most significant
change to our tax system since the income tax was introduced in
1913. It would also represent a significant first step in reducing
the size of the federal government.
I leave the rest up to you.