McCAIN
DELIBERATELY MISLEADS
The McCain ad I saw here in Denver
yesterday said . . . “Obama: Ready to raise your taxes, but is he ready to
lead? I’m John McCain and I approved
this message.” How far
John McCain has fallen. This ad is
grossly deceptive, at best. Obama stands
ready to LOWER most people’s taxes, not raise them. (See the difference?)
BUT SO FAR, HE HAS A GET-OUT-OF-JAIL-FREE
CARD
Maureen Dowd in yesterday’s New
York Times:
Too
Much of a Bad Thing
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: August
24, 2008
WASHINGTON
My mom did not approve of men who cheated on
their wives. She called them “long-tailed rats.”
During the 2000 race, she listened to news
reports about John McCain confessing to dalliances that caused his first
marriage to fall apart after he came back from his stint as a P.O.W. in Vietnam.
I figured, given her stringent moral
standards, that her great affection for McCain would be dimmed.
“So,” I asked her, “what do you think of
that?”
“A man who lives in a box for five years can
do whatever he wants,” she replied matter-of-factly.
I was startled, but it brought home to me what a powerful get-out-of-jail-free card McCain
had earned by not getting out of jail free.
His brutal hiatus in the Hanoi Hilton is one
of the most stirring narratives ever told on the presidential trail — a trail
full of heroic war stories. It created an enormous credit line of good will
with the American people. It also allowed McCain, the errant son of the admiral
who was the commander of U.S.
forces in the Pacific during Vietnam
— his jailers dubbed McCain the “Crown Prince” — to give himself some credit.
“He has been preoccupied with escaping the
shadow of his father and establishing his own image and identity in the eyes of
others,” read a psychiatric evaluation in his medical files. “He feels his
experiences and performance as a P.O.W. have finally permitted this to happen.”
The ordeal also gave a more sympathetic cast
to his carousing. As Robert Timberg wrote in “John
McCain: An American Odyssey,” “What is true is that a number of P.O.W.’s, in those first few years after their release,
often acted erratically, their lives pockmarked by drastic mood swings and
uncharacteristic behavior before achieving a more mellow equilibrium.” Timberg said Hemingway’s line that people were stronger in
the broken places was not always right.
So it’s hard to believe that John McCain is
now in danger of exceeding his credit limit on the equivalent of an American
Express black card. His campaign is
cheapening his greatest strength — and making a mockery of his already dubious
claim that he’s reticent to talk about his P.O.W. experience — by flashing the
P.O.W. card to rebut any criticism, no matter how unrelated. The captivity
is already amply displayed in posters and TV advertisements.
The Rev. Kirbyjon
Caldwell, the pastor who married Jenna Bush and who is part of a new
Christian-based political action committee supporting Obama, recently
criticized the joke McCain made at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally encouraging
Cindy to enter the topless Miss Buffalo Chip contest. The McCain spokesman
Brian Rogers brought out the bottomless excuse, responding with asperity that
McCain’s character had been “tested and forged in ways few can fathom.”
When
the Obama crowd was miffed to learn that McCain was in a motorcade rather than
in a “cone of silence” while Obama was being questioned by Rick Warren, Nicolle
Wallace of the McCain camp retorted, “The insinuation from the Obama campaign
that John McCain, a former prisoner of war, cheated is outrageous.”
When
Obama chaffed McCain for forgetting how many houses he owns, Rogers huffed, “This is a guy who lived in
one house for five and a half years — in prison.”
As Sam Stein notes
in The Huffington Post: “The senator has even brought
his military record into discussion of his music tastes. Explaining that his
favorite song was ‘Dancing Queen’ by Abba, he offered that his knowledge of
music ‘stopped evolving when his plane intercepted a surface-to-air missile.’
‘Dancing Queen,’ however, was produced in 1975, eight years after McCain’s
plane was shot down.”
The Kerry Swift-boat attacks in 2004 struck
down the off-limits signs that were traditionally on a candidate’s military
service. Many Democrats are willing to repay the favor, and Republicans clearly
no longer see war medals as sacrosanct.
In a radio interview last week,
Representative Terry Everett, an Alabama Republican, let loose with a barrage
at the Democrat John Murtha, a decorated Vietnam War veteran who is the head of
the House defense appropriations subcommittee, calling him “cut-and-run John
Murtha” and an “idiot.”
“And don’t talk to me about him being an
ex-marine,” Everett
said. “Lord, that was 40 years ago. A lot of stuff can
happen in 40 years.”
The real danger to the McCain crew in
overusing the P.O.W. line so much that it’s a punch line is that it will give
Obama an opening for critical questions:
While McCain’s experience was heroic, did it
create a worldview incapable of anticipating the limits to U.S. military power in Iraq? Did he fail to absorb the
lessons of Vietnam,
so that he is doomed to always want to refight it?
Did his captivity inform a search-and-destroy, shoot-first-ask-questions-later,
“We are all Georgians,” mentality?