McCain's *True* Character
So, McCain, Palin and the Republicans are doing everything they can to make this U.S. elections about character, instead of issues, reasoning that they will confuse voters enough to make them trust McCain's character much more than Obama's. Well, how about taking a close look at McCain's vaunted character? Read the following article and enjoy:
Judging John McCain's character
Candidate's boyish charm hides his dreary record of ethics and behaviour
by John Chuckman
McCain does a good job with the appearance of a boyishly honest man.
He puts on his quiet voice and uses his boyish (albeit now partially fossilized) expressions and, reminding me of Richard Nixon during something like his Checkers speech, sometimes glances down at his well-shined shoes, as though wordlessly to say, see what a good boy I am.
McCain's actual record of ethics and behavior is rather dreary, and it is a subject which mysteriously eludes treatment in mainline media which seem always ready to treat trivia like flag pins. There are many parallels of insensitivity, anger, aggression, limited capacities and grotesque humor with George Bush.
Judging John McCain's character
Candidate's boyish charm hides his dreary record of ethics and behaviour
by John Chuckman
McCain does a good job with the appearance of a boyishly honest man.
He puts on his quiet voice and uses his boyish (albeit now partially fossilized) expressions and, reminding me of Richard Nixon during something like his Checkers speech, sometimes glances down at his well-shined shoes, as though wordlessly to say, see what a good boy I am.
McCain's actual record of ethics and behavior is rather dreary, and it is a subject which mysteriously eludes treatment in mainline media which seem always ready to treat trivia like flag pins. There are many parallels of insensitivity, anger, aggression, limited capacities and grotesque humor with George Bush.
McCain was, quite simply, a nasty brat as a young man. There are many stories of the way he bullied others, including teachers, stories perhaps easy to make light of fifty years later, but not funny if you were his victim and, more importantly, all too similar to stories of his adult behavior.
A poor student, he always took advantage of being the son and grandson of admirals to get away with his sometimes vicious antics and failures.
Despite his favorite public act as boyish fighter pilot, he apparently remains an often nasty man in private. Many fellow politicians, including Republicans, testify to his furious, spluttering temper and the use of the most obscene words to friends and work associates with whom he is unhappy. There is also the story, related by a Republican, of his sudden physical attack on a member of the government of Nicaragua during a Congressional mission.
When McCain's being shot down in Vietnam is discussed, the fact that he was bombing civilians is almost never mentioned. He's just lucky he survived. He might well have been torn limb from limb had he been a Vietnamese pilot shot down in Texas.
How did he survive being shot down? After all, he landed in a body of water and he was hurt. A group of local villagers, and one Vietnamese man in particular, Mai Van On, left their bomb shelters and pulled McCain from the water where he would certainly have drowned otherwise.
That brave and decent Vietnamese man, whom McCain once acknowledged, died recently, a very disheartened man that McCain never showed any real sign of thanks or reciprocity. His wife has spoken to the press on this. After all, in many cultures, someone's saving your life creates a powerful bond or debt. Apparently not so, for John McCain.
Apart from some fitting communication from the man who went on to become famous, imagine how even a little money order from this well-off man could have altered the lives of those who saved him?
When McCain returned home to the wife who had waited for him for the five and a half years he was in prison, he discovered his wife had been in a terrible car accident in which she was disfigured.
Instead of compassion and loyalty, McCain started a series of affairs, ending with wealthy future wife Cindy.
He left his crippled wife to marry the money. It was a pretty shabby display, reminiscent of Newt Gingrich's telling a wife dying of cancer he was divorcing her, but it did considerably help finance his political career.
During the great savings-and-loan scandals, McCain was at the center, having got a lot of money and favors from (to-be convicted felon) Charles Keating.
McCain's second wife, Cindy, was a drug addict, by her own admission. She also stole a large quantity of drugs from a charity for which she did volunteer work to feed her habit, an act, which would earn you or me hard time in prison in Bush's America.
You do have to ask about the mental state of a woman who is said to be worth $300 million yet who steals the drugs she craves.
But Cindy got off with a slap on the wrist, thanks in part to the efforts of her husband. This law-and-order conservative, this defender of the hard line in the war on drugs, saw nothing wrong in using his influence. No insistence here that Cindy do the time that he and Bush insist on, and snigger over, for young black men caught with modest quantities of cocaine.
Cindy, in her efforts to soften her brittle Bergdorf Goodman image — or whatever expensive store it is in New York to which she regularly flies to buy racks of clothes — and connect with average Americans, also had the minor flap of being caught misrepresenting other people's recipes as her own. Integrity does not appear to be a strong McCain family value.
Recently McCain had a hard time remembering how many houses he and Cindy owned. Does anyone believe that that is the kind of personal matter someone forgets?
If he was indeed being honest, then almost certainly Alzheimer's has set in. More likely though, he was not being honest, trying to deflect an embarrassing question. The latest count on the houses is eight.
McCain, in 2000, told us exactly what he really thinks of the Religious Right. After all, he is known as a rather irreligious, worldly man. He did endear himself to many as he lambasted the Religious Right's nasty, inappropriate influence in American politics. But practically the next day, he was crawling around on his belly, saying he was sorry, having quickly realized what he had done to his political ambitions.
Keep reading ...
A poor student, he always took advantage of being the son and grandson of admirals to get away with his sometimes vicious antics and failures.
Despite his favorite public act as boyish fighter pilot, he apparently remains an often nasty man in private. Many fellow politicians, including Republicans, testify to his furious, spluttering temper and the use of the most obscene words to friends and work associates with whom he is unhappy. There is also the story, related by a Republican, of his sudden physical attack on a member of the government of Nicaragua during a Congressional mission.
When McCain's being shot down in Vietnam is discussed, the fact that he was bombing civilians is almost never mentioned. He's just lucky he survived. He might well have been torn limb from limb had he been a Vietnamese pilot shot down in Texas.
How did he survive being shot down? After all, he landed in a body of water and he was hurt. A group of local villagers, and one Vietnamese man in particular, Mai Van On, left their bomb shelters and pulled McCain from the water where he would certainly have drowned otherwise.
That brave and decent Vietnamese man, whom McCain once acknowledged, died recently, a very disheartened man that McCain never showed any real sign of thanks or reciprocity. His wife has spoken to the press on this. After all, in many cultures, someone's saving your life creates a powerful bond or debt. Apparently not so, for John McCain.
Apart from some fitting communication from the man who went on to become famous, imagine how even a little money order from this well-off man could have altered the lives of those who saved him?
When McCain returned home to the wife who had waited for him for the five and a half years he was in prison, he discovered his wife had been in a terrible car accident in which she was disfigured.
Instead of compassion and loyalty, McCain started a series of affairs, ending with wealthy future wife Cindy.
He left his crippled wife to marry the money. It was a pretty shabby display, reminiscent of Newt Gingrich's telling a wife dying of cancer he was divorcing her, but it did considerably help finance his political career.
During the great savings-and-loan scandals, McCain was at the center, having got a lot of money and favors from (to-be convicted felon) Charles Keating.
McCain's second wife, Cindy, was a drug addict, by her own admission. She also stole a large quantity of drugs from a charity for which she did volunteer work to feed her habit, an act, which would earn you or me hard time in prison in Bush's America.
You do have to ask about the mental state of a woman who is said to be worth $300 million yet who steals the drugs she craves.
But Cindy got off with a slap on the wrist, thanks in part to the efforts of her husband. This law-and-order conservative, this defender of the hard line in the war on drugs, saw nothing wrong in using his influence. No insistence here that Cindy do the time that he and Bush insist on, and snigger over, for young black men caught with modest quantities of cocaine.
Cindy, in her efforts to soften her brittle Bergdorf Goodman image — or whatever expensive store it is in New York to which she regularly flies to buy racks of clothes — and connect with average Americans, also had the minor flap of being caught misrepresenting other people's recipes as her own. Integrity does not appear to be a strong McCain family value.
Recently McCain had a hard time remembering how many houses he and Cindy owned. Does anyone believe that that is the kind of personal matter someone forgets?
If he was indeed being honest, then almost certainly Alzheimer's has set in. More likely though, he was not being honest, trying to deflect an embarrassing question. The latest count on the houses is eight.
McCain, in 2000, told us exactly what he really thinks of the Religious Right. After all, he is known as a rather irreligious, worldly man. He did endear himself to many as he lambasted the Religious Right's nasty, inappropriate influence in American politics. But practically the next day, he was crawling around on his belly, saying he was sorry, having quickly realized what he had done to his political ambitions.
Keep reading ...






















for young black men caught with modest quantities of cocaine.
ReplyDeleteHell! A small amount of marijuana will land them some hard time!
Great read, from Chuckman. Nice find, Mentarch.
Ahem...
ReplyDeleteI am seriously pouting that my northern stud-muffin has forsaken my old midwestern american ass.
Do I have to offer sexual favors (again!) to get you back cross-posting or what?
(shhhhh, don't let my husband see that, LOL!)
TPM: thanks.
ReplyDeleteD: sorry "boss-lady", but I've been so busy lately that I haven't had the time to blog anything decent, let alone cross-post at The Wild Wild Left (or anywhere else for that matter).
But I'm "back" now and should be able to blog on a more regulare basis.
See? No need to seduce me behind your hubby's back into cross-posting again! (hehehe)