The $5 Million Man?

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If the latest report pans out, Ron Paul has leaped out of the asterisk box in the GOP campaign. His largely online funding, if verified, would put him on a par with McCain. Money quote:

Observers close to the campaign are revealing – with some astonishment – that donations to the campaign in recent weeks have pushed the total up to perhaps $4 or $5 million. "That’s a huge number at this stage," says one observer. "That starts to put him in a position where he can compete – state by state, anyway – with the major candidates."

I’d credit the Internet, wouldn’t you? Stay tuned for confirmation. If it holds up, it means he’s in this race for a good while yet – which is good for philosophical diversity in the GOP.

(Hat tip: Radley. Photo: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty.)

Watching the Romney Pivot

No sooner do I predict that Romney will alter his position on Iraq depending on – what else? – his political interest, than he goes and does exactly that. It’s not much of a step, because he’s still appealing to the base. But it’s an early first distancing from the extreme positions of Giuliani and McCain on endless occupation of the Muslim Middle East:

"Our objective would not be a Korea-type setting with 25-50,000 troops on a near permanent basis remaining in bases in Iraq," the former Massachusetts governor told the Associated Press.

"I think we would hope to turn Iraq security over to their own military and their own security forces, and if presence in the region is important for us than we have other options that are nearby," Romney said.

He aims to please … whoever he needs to.

This Is What A Martyr Is

The Islamists might want to take a look at the life of one Father Ragheed Ganni, a Chaldean Catholic priest, in Iraq:

They killed him on the Sunday after Pentecost, after he had celebrated Mass in his parish church, dedicated to the Holy Spirit, in Mosul.

They killed him together with three subdeacons who were with him – Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho, and Gassan Isam Bidawed. The assailants led Bidawed’s wife away, and struck down the four men in cold blood. Then they placed vehicles loaded with explosives around their corpses, so that no one would dare to approach them. It was late in the evening before the police in Mosul were able to defuse the explosives and collect the bodies…

His testimony is that of an enthusiastic faith. The target of a series of threats stretching back to 2004, he witnessed the pain of relatives and the loss of friends, and yet he carried on to the very end remembering that there was meaning to be found in that suffering, that carnage, that anarchy of violence: it was to be offered up.

After an attack on his parish, on Palm Sunday last April 1st he said: "We empathise with Christ, who entered Jerusalem in full knowledge that the consequence of His love for mankind was the cross. Thus while bullets smashed our church windows, we offered up our suffering as a sign of love for Christ".

"Each day we wait for the decisive attack”, he said just weeks ago, "but we will not stop celebrating mass; we will do it underground, where we are safer. I am encouraged in this decision by the strength of my parishioners. This is war, real war, but we hope to carry our cross to the very end with the help of Divine Grace".

May he rest in peace.

Quote for the Day

"Anyone wishing to show respect for Jimmy and his family is asked to wear or display red, white and blue ribbons as he would not have wanted black."

That’s part of a statement issued by the family of Jimmy Summers, from Bourbon, Missouri, whose death in Iraq on a rescue mission was commemmorated in this poignant window view from a Dish reader last week.

“The Terror of a Romney Presidency.”

Jon Chait begs to differ with Josh Marshall, and I tend to side with Chait:

To me, Romney’s phoniness is exactly why I’m not terrified of the prospect of him as president. I see him as a competent, moderate-minded manager who has decided his only chance of being elected is to masquerade as a whacko.

The drawback to Romney is also what he has going for him. The Christianists need to be careful. Once he’s gotten out of them what he needs, why do we think Romney would pursue the Christianist position in office? If he wins, it will be despite evangelicals, not because of them. He’s going nowhere in South Carolina. A chameleon can change color back, remember? (Think: the Clintons and the gays.) I’d also bet that if Romney gets through the primaries, and the question isn’t moot by then, he could easily pivot against the war and the surge – much more easily than McCain or Giuliani. Remember: he aims to please. Whomever he needs to.