eisenhower, leadership, McCain, military
In Politics on October 10, 2008 at 12:30 am
McCain’s service record – particularly his status as a prisoner – is irrelevant when it comes his ability to lead.
Comparing two Republican war heroes, McCain and Eisenhower, one can see significant differences. McCain was a bomber jock who got shot down and spent time in Hanoi. While perhaps heroic, that experience did little to prepare him for the need to balance issues and deal with nuance as president.
McCain’s quickness to jingoism and brashness highlight this trait. For example, the claim that we will bring our troops home “in victory” has one small problem. But McCain has not defined what victory is. These are the words of a fighter jock who views the world – and the state of affairs – as a battle, not a war.
Eisenhower, not a POW, had substantial experience in managing a large bureaucracy – the US Military in World War II. That experience was quite useful in governing a country. While I may not agree with much of Ike’s record, he did some important stuff – like turn a recession around (1958) by creating a vision for the future (the Interstate highway system). McCain hasn’t suggested anything like that to help us dig ourselves out of our hole. Instead, McCain is spending (like Bush) without a plan or a clear vision.
Both were Republicans. Both were war heros. But only one had the experience to be president on day one – and it isn’t McCain.
McCain, Obama, racist, uppity
In Politics on October 9, 2008 at 12:17 am
Am I the only one who thinks that McCain/Palin treat Obama like he was an “uppity n***er?” When I was growing up in the South, that was the extremely derogatory remark used to describe African-Americans who thought that they had a place in white society. That, along with “oreo,” seemed to sum up most of the white establishment’s view of people who were ambitious enough to work hard to cross the old, vile racial barrier.
Certainly, the many comments about Obama not “being one of us,” or “sharing your background,” or being “that one” are calculated to play that racist chord. McCain’s disdain for Obama also seems to be based, in part, in this vile attitude. Unfortunately, although many in our society are past that, the racism still lives – and prospers – in the hearts of people like McCain.
And why did Cindy McCain not shake the hand of Michelle Obama? Racist?
McCain once referred to Vietnamese as “gooks,” voted against MLK day in Arizona, and has done little to dispel any evidence of a racist past (and present).
Since McCain’s wealth comes from Anheuser-Busch, we should all boycott A-B products – lets put our money where our mouth is!
anheuser-busch, arizona, beer, budweiser, McCain, Obama
In Politics on October 8, 2008 at 12:14 pm
It is time to boycott Anheuser-Busch products. A-B (the makers of Budweiser, etc.) makes the products that are sold by Cindy McCain’s family (the person responsible for the 7 houses and 12 cars).
The McCain’s treatment of the Obamas in last night’s debate was shameful. The “that one” comment, the snub by Cindy of Michelle – these are signs of the racist white establishment of the past.
Everyone who cares should, immediately, boycott all Anheuser-Busch products – and their racist distributor!
debt, finance, lying, McCain
In Politics on October 8, 2008 at 11:40 am
McCain is now saying he’s going to “buy up the mortgages.” Where is he going to get the money? Particularly since there will be a spending freeze on anything that isn’t military (ok, that’s only the great majority of our budget).
Now McCain (live) is saying he’s going to balance the budget? How? With an endless war at $10b/month? Buying up TRILLIONS in bad debt? McCain’s numbers are so far from reality that they are RIDICULOUS! He’s either lying or simply cannot add.
McCain needs to be tried for perjury – he’s lying to the American people!
economy, iraq, McCain, oil, palin, patriotism, republican, war
In Politics on October 6, 2008 at 11:14 am
The GOP has a public face that stands for economic growth, solid energy policy and peace. They took a surplus from Clinton, turned it into the biggest deficit on record – while keeping everyone looking the other way with a financial shell game; took a legitimate threat and turned it into a failed imperial war – all while ignoring the real underlying threat; and had an energy policy that encouraged – and basically rewarded – over-consumption and irresponsible energy use – and when the quails came home to roost – tried to blame that on the “market.”
The Bush/Cheney years have now cost us more – in lives, money, confidence and our standing in the world – as the 9/11 attack has. McCain was basically a cheerleader for this policy. This wasn’t Reagan’s principled approach (whether or not I agreed with the principle), but instead a financial grab on the American people hiding behind jingoism and false patriotism.
The problem is that real patriots died in Iraq because of these falsehoods; real patriots are losing their life savings because of these falsehood; and real patriots cannot find jobs because of these falsehoods. But as long as the GOP (or Party of God – wait, isn’t that what Hezbollah means?) waives the flag in our faces, they seem to get carte blanch when screwing us from the other end.
Angry? You bet. I’m angry because of the false patriotism offered by McCain/Palin (note that I am not refuting McCain’s war hero status – but instead his “Country First” falsehood – the only apparent thing is that the country will be screwed first). I’m angry because people seem to be drinking this like Jim Jones’ Kool-Aid. And I’m angry because it’s my country, too, and I hate seeing it torn apart by these folks.
economy, iraq, losers, McCain, oil, palin, republican, republicans
In Politics on October 6, 2008 at 10:08 am
I realized this morning that the Republicans are doing their best to become the “teflon party,” blaming all of the country’s woes on the Democrats. While in normal times, this can be viewed as normal politics, this time around, with the two crises that we’ve seen this year – oil and the economy – this really needs to stop.
George W. Bush was a man who was supposed to understand oil. The Republicans were a party that was supposed to bring economic security and stability to our land. Both failed miserably.
During the recent oil run-up, with a President and Vice President who are supposedly expert in natural resources, we were blindsided by a near 100% run up in the price of crude oil. The culprit according to them? The “market.”
During the even more recent economic crisis, with a President and Vice President who are supposed to be of the party of economic growth, we were blindsided by what is beginning to look like a depression. The culprit according to them? Two years of a non-Republican majority in congress. What about the prior six years? The years that turned a surplus into a record deficit? Where is the mea culpa?
Lately, they’ve been quiet about Iraq and Afghanistan. Why? Because the party of security has clearly screwed that up, too. Peace? Hah. Afghanistan is in flames – and if anyone convinces you that Iraq’s thousand-year old conflict will be resolved by a few more months of the surge – I’ve got a bridge to nowhere to sell you. Again, abject failure.
And where has John McCain been on this? Oil? The answer is “drill baby drill” – maybe we can put off the crisis for our kids. The economy? Nowhere – with nothing – a hollow call for more regulation. And Iraq? Well – please define “victory” to me – and how we’re going to get there – and don’t forget Afghanistan!
fundamentalist, gop, McCain, pog, republicans
In Politics, Religion on September 3, 2008 at 2:51 pm
Does the Party of God (the GOP) really think that we’re that dumb? I’m listening to Orrin Hatch qvell over this trailer-trash VP candidate.
McCain isn’t “change.” Palin isn’t “change.” They’re all tools of the right-wing nutcase fundamentalists. I hope that their god comes quickly and scoops them up and takes them to the next life… someone needs to.
The Party of God – the American Taliban!
age, generation, McCain, Obama, race, racism
In Politics on August 27, 2008 at 9:36 am
Noticing the 50+ crowd (of which I’m a member) complain about the upstart Obama campaign – and watching the news reports of how these folks are, if not flocking to, at least in some numbers joining, the McCain camp, I can’t help but wonder about a couple of things.
First, is this – the generation who never trusted anyone over thirty – now the generation that never trusts anyone under sixty? After all, there does seem to be a feeling of “it’s our time” among this crowd that smacks of a bit of ageism.
Second, is all this talk about experience and age just cover for the racism that many of these folks feel? Remember, these are the folks who championed civil rights – but never had any meaningful black friends. These are the folks that fear black neighborhoods, but don’t know what to do about it. These are the folks that broke cultural boundaries with their art and music, but run from the next wave – Rap and Hip-Hop – which broke cultural boundaries for the next generations.
If Obama was 60 instead, we may have a clearer picture of whether this is race or age… but to me, the underlying distrust in this country can, nearly always, be brought down to race and religion.
Delray, Early-Bird Special, Manchurian Candidate, McCain
In Politics on April 19, 2008 at 8:14 am
Every time I see John McCain on television, I think about my time in Florida, surrounded by the geriatric crowd. Sure, they make him up from the front – a little rouge to make the cheeks look healthy, a touch-up here and there, etc.
But when you catch a glimpse of him from behind, you see a guy who should be waiting for a bus in Delray Beach, Florida. Someone who, if is “plumbing” still works, will get casseroles brought to him nightly, someone who drives a white Grand Marquis – and peers through the space between the dashboard and the top of the steering wheel.
I’m sure that Washington’s restaurants are bracing for the onslaught of 4pm diners – after all, even state dinners will be early-bird specials. Certainly, McCain will win the “Wal-Mart Greeter” vote – but the rest of us? No.
The other thing is that McCain spent a few years in Hanoi. No doubt, he was a military hero – but have you seen the Manchurian Candidate? Watch the first one… and ponder the possibilities.
Is this what we want for President?