Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts

Thursday, May 8, 2008

McCain is the huh?


Best Metaphor Ever



Primary Results: Should Clinton Get Out of the Race?

Video courtesy The Young Turks. (Check them out.)

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Friday, March 7, 2008

McSame As Bush

The blog D-Day reports on Bush's endorsement of John W. McCain. I imagine McCain was wondering the entire time if there was some way he could get un-endorsed. His life really sucks. And I don't mean, just having to stick his nose into George W.'s pit and take a big wiff while the camera's whir and click.

(Some of us DFH's are intentionally calling St. John, John W., to draw attention to how similar the volatile lad is to George W.

Yes, we know his actual middle name is Sidney. Not as much fun. *grins*)

D-Day

This Bush/McCain press availability is hilarious. The press keeps asking over and over again "Mr. President, is this the worst endorsement that John McCain would ever want" and he got his back up and now he's practically shouting back at the press corps. McCain tried to talk and Bush cut him off. The press pissed him off and now he's yipping like a stray dog. McCain kept saying "I'll appear at events when it fits with the President's heavy schedule," and I'm sure that schedule will suddenly fill up. This was awful.

Brian Williams and Tweety Matthews tried to put the best spin on this, calling McCain a "warrior" and saying how committed he is to his country (not like those softie DemocRATs). But you can't really put a spin on this display.

Bush was all about pulling McCain under his wing, saying that "there's not going to be any change in Iraq and in fighting terror" if McCain comes to power. I'll go a step further, there wouldn't be ANY change. McCain wants to revive the "Just Say No" campaign and continue the Drug War. He's just as just as anti-science as Bush, blaming vaccinations on the rise of autism in the face of all available evidence. His economic policy includes more tax cuts and privatization of Social Security, which is at odds with his own website that's trying to hide the similiarities. His healthcare "plan" won't cover anybody and would amount a big tax increase on employers. He leads a privileged life thanks to his heiress wife and uses his charitable donations to benefit friends and family. And his campaign is suffused with lobbyists (always has been) and would continue corporate control of government.

McCain's negatives HAVE to be goosed. He's an unprincipled politician with a long Senate record full of inconsistencies. That has to become the conventional wisdom in the populace, if not in the media.

This independent expenditure campaign is brilliant and they're putting a million dollars into it.



This break in your regularly scheduled Clinton-Obama Celebrity Deathmatch, has been brought to you courtesy of me, "Doc" Wendel, reminding you the actual battle is against John "McSame" McCain and the Republicans.

Hey look... an uncommitted Super-delegate!

Ah. I was only kidding.

It's Friday. Leave work early and have some fun.
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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Video: McCain 08 - Like Hope, But Different

If you missed the original Will.I.Am Obama video, here it is.

See it first.

This here's the McCain sort of parody but not, version. Heh.



Obama. Clinton. Whatever.

McCain is toast.

NOTE: Nothing in this post should be construed as an endorsement of either Democratic candidate for president. It is an article with facts and opinions about politics. I have not made up my mind, and GNB is not endorsing any candidate until there is a clear nominee. I intend to add this to all my political posts from now till we have a nominee.

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Thursday, February 7, 2008

Buh-Bye Mittens


Mitt Romney. photo Stephen Crowley/The New York Times.

Mitt Romney Withdraws From Campaign.

That's it on Romney.

Mitt Romney of Massachusetts withdrew from the presidential race this afternoon.

The New York Times

“This is not an easy decision for me. I hate to lose,” Mr. Romney said. “If I fight on in my campaign, all the way to the convention, I would forestall the launch of a national campaign and make it more likely that Senator Clinton or Obama would win. And in this time of war, I simply cannot let my campaign, be a part of aiding a surrender to terror,” he said during the conference. Members of the audience shouted, “No!” as Mr. Romney spoke.

Mr. Romney did not endorse John McCain in his speech. The two have clashed during this campaign over who is the real conservative.

Mr. Romney faced a series of enormous challenges in the campaign, not the least of which was trying to reconcile the moderate political views he espoused as the governor of Massachusetts, a liberal state, with the more conservative views he championed on the campaign. That tension – and his decision to change positions on a number of emotionally-charged issues, including renouncing his past support for abortion rights – led his rivals to continually lambaste him as a flip-flopper.

Then there was the question of his Mormon religion. After the candidacy of Mike Huckabee, a former Baptist preacher, exploded in Iowa, where it was fueled by evangelical voters, Mr. Romney was moved to give a major speech in Texas defending his faith and denouncing the rise of secularism.

And although Mr. Romney, a former management consultant, ran what many described as a textbook campaign, he never really recovered after failing to execute the original strategy of winning the first two contests in Iowa and New Hampshire, and using those wins to build momentum. Iowa went to Mr. Huckabee, and New Hampshire to Mr. McCain, who tried to paint himself as a straight talker to contrast with Mr. Romney’s flexibility.
This leaves only Mike Huckabee between John McCain of Arizona and the Republican nomination.
The New York Times

Mr. Huckabee has proved this year to be an articulate and affable candidate, and his surprise showing in winning a half-dozen Southern states on Tuesday was one reason that Mr. Romney bowed to what was inarguably the inevitable and quit.

But Mr. Huckabee is a candidate with some shortcomings – in particular, his lack of experience in foreign affairs – and, more significant, not much money to soldier on. What is more, Mr. McCain has a big lead in delegates coming out of Tuesday night, and under party rules, Mr. Huckabee would have tough job catching up even if he had the money to do so.

The question now for Mr. McCain is how far he needs go now in reaching out to conservatives who have been wary of him – if not flat out opposed to him – given his history on issues like easing immigration restrictions and changing campaign finance laws. Mr. Romney was arguably Mr. McCain’s greatest threat on the right and his greatest impetus for moving right; now that he is gone, some of the motivation for moving right is gone.

Mr. McCain, who will address the Conservative Political Action Committee later in the afternoon, has a slightly different task now. He cannot win a general election without having the unambiguous support of conservatives around him – especially going up against a Democratic Party that is so, to borrow a phrase from Barack Obama, fired up and ready to go.

But the extent to which he emphasizes conservative positions could complicate his effort to win over the moderate and independent voters who have so long been drawn by Mr. McCain and is one of the reasons why many Democrats view him as the toughest candidate the Republicans have.
It may take a few more contests to settle Huck's hash, but it's a done deal as I see it.

Gear up for McCain.

Now if only it were this clear for the Democratic Party.
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Thursday, January 3, 2008

McCain Says We Could Stay In Iraq 100 Years


John McCain in a Townhall meeting in Derry, NH.

Q: President Bush has talked about our staying in Iraq for 50 years -- " (cut off by McCain)

McCain: "Make it a hundred."

Q: "Is that ..." (cut off)

McCain: "We've been in South Korea ... we've been in Japan for 60 years. We've been in South Korea for 50 years or so. That would be fine with me. As long as Americans ..."

Q: [tries to say something]

McCain: "As long as Americans are not being injured or harmed or wounded or killed. That's fine with me, I hope that would be fine with you, if we maintain a presence in a very volatile part of the world where Al Queada is training, recruiting and equipping and motivating people every single day.

Update: That's Joe Lieberman on stage with McCain. Seriously.

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

McCain out by the end of the month?

With just $2 million in the bank, undisclosed debts, a campaign burning cash at a rate of more than $3 million a month and the recent layoffs of more than half its staff, the McCain campaign is reading its obituaries in the comments of some observers.


Well, unless he... i dont know what.. he will be out of money by the end of the month.

I guess risking the lives of 200 guys just to prove your political point wasnt a good idea.

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

The Moment


It Was The Week Of April 1st...Yes APRIL 1ST, 2007

Everybody experiences the moment at some point in their lives.

You realize the job's goin' under the moment you go to cash your paycheck and the fucker bounces.

The relationship's done the moment you find the gift box of freaky Vickie undies under the bed with a note from "Dave". Your name? Glen. :(

The car is finished the moment you see orange flames dancing in the dashboard air vents.

The Moment --the moment you know something important is over, is a helluva thing. A "wow" moment. In politics though, it's a mixed bag. It can be a toast-clinking, schadenfreude-fest, like the Gingrich and Livingston sexual, self-immolations at the height of GOP Clinton hysteria. It can be plain, old, flaming wreck on the road shoulder rubbernecking like the Dukakis "Big Helmet" photo-op gaffe. And then, you have the kind where even if you don't necessarily like the politico/victim, you may respect him. He may have even been at some point been a halfway honorable person who fought through some serious difficulties in his life.

Senator John McCain of Arizona is one such fellow, and his "moment" came ironically enough during the week of April 1st of this year.

You probably remember it well--it was the week he strolled through a "safe "marketplace in Baghdad with “100 American soldiers, with three Blackhawk helicopters, and two Apache gunships overhead.”

It was also the week McCain said "There are neighborhoods in Baghdad where you and I could walk through those neighborhoods today"

That week...was John McCain's "moment" in this Presidential election, almost certainly his final bite at that electoral apple. It ended him as a contender, as a voice of so-called truth-telling, and as a serious voice on the war--a subject that a man of his pedigree should have owned outright. I mocked him rather harshly in a post that week, using the altered pic of that fateful walk shown at the top of this post, matching it to a rather mean-spirited song parody that summed up what a lot of people were thinking upon seeing him get it so willfully wrong:

Sung to the tune of Glen Campbell's "Galveston"

Charlatan, a Char-la-tan...
My menda-ci-ty's a' showin'.
I know my legacy I'm blowin'...
And still I run...though I'm a Char-la-tan.

Charlatan, a Char-la-tan...
I can't stop my campaign's crashing.
Remaining integrity I'm trashing...
I'm damn near done...'cause I'm a Char-la-tan.

Helplessly, I see my fiefdom totter,
Without a care--sold my soul selfishly.
And pity poor war-whore, meeee.
All the "Straight Talk" sh*t I used to run...

Charlatan, a Char-la-taaaaaaan!...
I can't help my pro-surge lying...
'Bout who is, and who ain't dying...
'Bout a senseless war, I know deep down cannot be woooooon...
I'm a Char-la-tan! A Char-la-taaaaaaan!

(With apologies to the great Jimmy Webb)


I wasn't kind. I also wasn't alone in my derision. It was nearly universal, and was "the moment" when he stopped being taken seriously, and effectively became a two-pronged punch-line of Mr. Magoo-like myopia and Sergeant Schultz-ian willful idiocy. And with yesterday's news about the utter collapse of McCain's campaign staff, I'll be honest--on a strictly human level, I kinda feel bad for him. Via Kos:

"Things are looking pretty dismal for the once pre-ordained Republican nominee. Last week he laid off some 50 staff members. Today we find out that his two top campaign staff are out. Marc Ambinder has an in-depth look at the inside workings of the McCain campaign that led to this implosion."

But it was actually worse that that as we would find out later in the day.

"As the news was breaking, McCain took to the Senate floor not to step aside but rather to speak about his recent trip to Iraq.

The McCain campaign has had money problems of late, reporting lackluster fundraising numbers for the second quarter of the year and laying off a number of campaign staffers.

In addition to Weaver and Nelson, The Fix has confirmed that deputy campaign manager Reed Galen and political director Rob Jesmer have also resigned their positions with McCain effective immediately"


In less than 48 hours, the top five people in his campaign ran away like a crazed, rabid, killer rabbit was attacking them and tearing out their throats.

Have mercy.

It's been quite the geek show, watching the GOP candidates debase and demolish themselves, this election season. But McCain's special act of Seppuku is eminently watchable and sad as hell all at once. That Baghdad stroll was the culmination of a half-decade of flagellation of whatever dignity the man had left. A groan-inducing, and futile attempt to grab at the brass ring of the Presidency one...last...time.

Remember the hell he went through as a Navy flier in Vietnam? Reading up on it is like digging into the roughest parts of Stephen King's "Misery"--only this shit was for real. Shot down, both arms broken in the crash, shoulder rifle-butted into powder, foot and gut bayonetted. Sleep and food-deprived, and when that wasn't enough, just beaten into unconsciousness for the what-the-fuck of it. Somehow, he survived all that, his body broken like a G.I. Joe callously shattered by a child against playground asphalt. Survived and went on to the Senate, where he was a staunch conservative, yes--but one who would actually, occasionally challenge his party's status quo.

"Maverick", he would be called for those baby-steps he took away from the party dogma. But he did it juuuuust often enough to earn the ire of the truly troglodytic ballers and shot-callers in charge of the GOP. And that ire would rear it's ugly, jug-eared and empty head during the 2000 primary campaign when George Bush and his patrons in the Republican party would savage McCain in ways generally reserved for dirty fucking hippie Dems.. He was spun as a shell-shocked, loose-cannon, philandering baby-daddy of a mystery BLACK infant.

In...um, South Carolina. Yeah.

They kicked his heart out and fed it to him. The campaign was done. And McCain was damned angry about it--but he was also a pragmatist. After a few hard words at the expense of his take-no-prisoners, racist tormenters, McCain decided then and there "If you can't beat 'em, join your take-no-prisoners, racist tormenters". In a sad, pride-swallowing spectacle, from the beginning of Bush's presidency, McCain decided to suck up to the same crowd who sought to destroy him, thinking that keeping his so-called "enemies closer" (his unspoken personal strategy), shutting his mouth about transgressions he previously would've called 'em on, and embarrassingly, even vocally backing the President's every shitty, backwards policy would somehow give him cachet with that king-making/career-breaking crew of puffed-up, gangster-wonks.

Guess it sorta goes without saying, what the shittiest, and most backward of all of Bush's policies has been thus far, right? :(

McCain signed on for it...so hard that his pen pierced the paper and dug through the top of the fucking desk. Bought into it like a zealot, he did. You'd almost think that something was promised to him for that kind of support, but looking at it closely, I don't think it went down like that.

I think he simply tried to cut a deal with the Devil, and didn't notice that the Devil was too busy just tryin' to keep the place hot to even care about his offer. McCain was always, in spite of his conservative bona-fides, an outsider to this crew of petro-oligarchs and longtime members of the Reaganite cocktail-weenie set.

And don't forget, his being accepted into their circle would have highlighted a glaring macho deficiency in just about everyone in that circle's résumé save for his--namely, that McCain served in the military, and they didn't. It would've given him some seriously elevated status with that bunch--and they were never gonna let that happen. But, "The Maverick" was too blinded by ambition, and the misguided thought that his lengthy service--to the GOP and country was due to be rewarded by these vipers.

So he humped it for IraqWar, Pimped IraqWar. Laid down and let IraqWar pee on his prostrate body, and yes...tossed IraqWar salad, un-asked, in the insane belief that come '08, this resoluteness-cum-masochism would pay off with a nod and a pat on the head--and who knows?--Maybe the voice of James Baker with heavy reverb and echo from on high saying "It's yer's Johnnie."

That electronically-procesed "God" voice never came. But while waiting for it, McCain did all he could--spun, lied, shaded, baited, chided, howled and railed--to support every talking point of the war, and caught a lot of hell for it. From pundits who could read the tea leaves, and in the polls where the people clearly were saying "you're out of touch, sir."

And that brings us to April Fool's Day, 2007. The moment for John McCain.

The war, three months into the surge was going worse than ever. The American people had tipped decisively into the camp of seeing the bed-shit of a war for what it was--not a faded skid-mark on the top sheet, but a mother-lovin' eat-through-the-mattress-right-through-the-box-spring-and-burn-the-finish-off-the-hardwood-floors, bed-shit of a war. The White House's P.R. campaign was in overdrive, trying to spin a ten-ton granite boulder of reality with a hummingbird's feather of lies. McCain dutifully did his part for the effort in that trip to the marketplace in Baghdad, strolling with his comrade-in-con-mannery Lindsey Graham. Bought a few rugs...nibbled a fig. Sipped a cuppa sweet tea.

"Ahhhhhhhhh."

And then proclaimed all was well, as though he'd just wandered through the Park Place Mall in Tucson, casually sampling TCBY and Cinnabons as he browsed.

Let's go back to his statements that week:
"There are neighborhoods in Baghdad where you and I could walk through those neighborhoods today."

Then...that picture was released..of the flack in the flak jacket, with 100 Army Rangers flanking him, fingers on triggers--Blackhawks and Apaches swooping overhead like hungry buzzards. It was a DAY where we lost seven troops. The first month of the last three where U.S. casualties topped the century mark--104 in April, 126 in May, and 101 in June. But that moment, came at the worst possible time for McCain. National disenchantment with the war now had no flyover states. From Albany, to Akron, to Abilene, to Anaheim, the blinders of fear fell away and people began--albeit belatedly, to see the war for what it was--a debacle. And that week, John McCain embarrassed himself, and rendered his voice on the war as reliable as the voice of the dude down by the river with the matted hair, who stinks of piss and potted meat, ranting about how near we are to the fucking end. That moment. That picture. That exposé of what his stroll entailed?--was the end of his campaign, and maybe him as a political player for all intents and purposes.

He's been Bruce Willis in "The Sixth Sense" ever since, walking along analyzing someone else's crazy problem with seeing dead people...until yesterday, when his campaign staff booked like the 400 meter relay team, and he realized "Oh shit. I'm dead people." You see, it was one thing when he was busy deluding himself and insulting his own intelligence on Bush and the war. That's a sad, personal hell that only he--with some time to think and maybe some professional help--can fix.

But in that moment, he decided to insult the intelligence of the American people. The pundits who usually hung on his every "Maverick" word, too. And not only did they not let him slide...they savaged him. Maybe worse yet, they laughed at him along with us. You have to really fuck it up--being a mega-decorated war vet, a body still showing the effects of its hideous breking at the enemy's hands almost forty years later, a senior statesman--really, really fuck it up in a big way to pull the handle and send everything he had going for him, swirling "glug-glug-glug" down the shitter.

And that's what McCain did in that moment in April.

The moment. We've all experienced it. John McCain did. He just didn't want to admit it. So his top five staffers decided yesterday to tell him. And us.

From "The Sixth Sense:"

Cole Sear: I see dead people.

Malcolm Crowe: In your dreams?
[Cole shakes his head no]

Malcolm Crowe: While you're awake?
[Cole nods]

Malcolm Crowe: Dead people like, in graves? In coffins?

Cole Sear: Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know they're dead.

Malcolm Crowe: How often do you see them?

Cole Sear: All the time. They're everywhere.





And sometimes...they're you. :(

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