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John McCain



Dernière mise à jour : 1/11/2008

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Sexe : Male
Ville : Phoenix
Région : Arizona
Pays: US

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mardi, juillet 29, 2008 
"'Just tell me one thing Barack Obama has done that you admire,' I asked a prominent Democrat. He paused and then said that he admired Obama's speech to the Democratic convention in 2004. I agreed. It was a hell of a speech, but it was just a speech. On the other hand, I continued, I could cite four or five actions -- not speeches -- that John McCain has taken that elicit my admiration, even my awe." -- The Washington Post's Richard Cohen


"Obama The Unknown"
Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
July 29, 2008

"Just tell me one thing Barack Obama has done that you admire," I asked a prominent Democrat. He paused and then said that he admired Obama's speech to the Democratic convention in 2004. I agreed. It was a hell of a speech, but it was just a speech.

On the other hand, I continued, I could cite four or five actions -- not speeches -- that John McCain has taken that elicit my admiration, even my awe. First, of course, is his decision as a Vietnam prisoner of war to refuse freedom out of concern that he would be exploited for propaganda purposes. To paraphrase what Kipling said about Gunga Din, John McCain is a better man than most.

But I would not stop there. I would include campaign finance reform, which infuriated so many in his own party; opposition to earmarks, which won him no friends; his politically imprudent opposition to the Medicare prescription drug bill (Medicare has about $35 trillion in unfunded obligations); and, last but not least, his very early call for additional troops in Iraq. His was a lonely position -- virtually suicidal for an all-but-certain presidential candidate and no help when his campaign nearly expired last summer. In all these cases, McCain stuck to his guns.

Obama argues that he himself stuck to the biggest gun of all: opposition to the war. He took that position when the war was enormously popular, the president who initiated it was even more popular and critics of both were slandered as unpatriotic. But at the time, Obama was a mere Illinois state senator, representing the (very) liberal Hyde Park area of Chicago. He either voiced his conscience or his district's leanings or (lucky fella) both. We will never know.

And we will never know, either, how Obama might have conducted himself had he served in Congress as long as McCain has. Possibly he would have earned a reputation for furious, maybe even sanctimonious, integrity of the sort that often drove McCain's colleagues to dark thoughts of senatorcide, but the record -- scant as it is -- suggests otherwise. Obama is not noted for sticking to a position or a person once that position or person becomes a political liability. (Names available upon request.)

All politicians change their positions, sometimes even because they have changed their minds. McCain must have suffered excruciating whiplash from totally reversing himself on George Bush's tax cuts. He has denounced preachers he later embraced and then, to his chagrin, has had to denounce them all over again. This plasticity has a label: pandering. McCain knows how it's done.

But Obama has shown that in this area, youth is no handicap. He has been for and against gun control, against and for the recent domestic surveillance legislation and, in almost a single day, for a united Jerusalem under Israeli control and then, when apprised of U.S. policy and Palestinian chagrin, against it. He is an accomplished pol -- a statement of both admiration and a bit of regret.

Obama is often likened to John F. Kennedy. The comparison makes sense. He has the requisite physical qualities -- handsome, lean, etc. -- plus wit, intelligence, awesome speaking abilities and a literary bent. He also might be compared to Franklin D. Roosevelt for many of those same qualities. Both FDR and JFK were disparaged early on by their contemporaries for, I think, doing the difficult and making it look easy. Eleanor Roosevelt, playing off the title of Kennedy's Pulitzer Prize-winning book, airily dismissed him as more profile than courage. Similarly, it was Walter Lippmann's enduring misfortune to size up FDR and belittle him: Roosevelt, he wrote, was "a pleasant man who, without any important qualifications for office, would very much like to be president." Lippmann later recognized that he had underestimated Roosevelt.

My guess is that Obama will make a fool of anyone who issues such a judgment about him. Still, the record now, while tissue thin, is troubling. The next president will have to be something of a political Superman, a man of steel who can tell the American people that they will have to pay more for less -- higher taxes, lower benefits of all kinds -- and deal in an ugly way when nuclear weapons seize the imagination of madmen.

The question I posed to that prominent Democrat was just my way of thinking out loud. I know that Barack Obama is a near-perfect political package. I'm still not sure, though, what's in it.

Read the Op-Ed HERE.
Mary Supports Our Troops!
Mary Supports

 
I will be voting Republican in November.
With that said, it is my humble opinion that if John McCain, does not kick it up a few notches and start acting like he really wants to win this election, then he is just gonna hand it to Obama in November!
 
Publié par Mary Supports Our Troops! le mardi, juillet 29, 2008 - 6:20
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The Immortal Danimator
Daniel Gilfillan

 
John Mccain is a better man than most. A better man than about 98% of the U.S. population infact. The problem is that either him or his PR campaigners don't understand the kind of approach needed to infatuate a population that's so infused with trite celebrity culture. If Mccain actually understood how cow eyed and non-analytical most people are, he would be speaking in the same platitudes and large sweeping rhetoric that Obama does, except only in a Conservative fashion. Obama is a man so insecure, so vapid, so unsure of himself, so lost in his own celebrity status, that he gives these cotton candy speeches that somehow captivate the majority of news media. Why? WHY I ASK!!! Because he's accidentally tapping into the inherent lack of intellect that's prevalent in the population. I'm begging you John Mccain, I want you to win so badly it hurts. You NEED to start studying strategies of reasoning that are able to pierce through the vapid candy shell that covers most of America. You NEED to study social patterning, neuro-linguistic programming (or NLP as fashionable professors refer to it), you NEED to WIN! If America is truly the last best hope for the modern world, to bring humanity past what it's currently capable of, if America is the great social experiment that has the potential of unlocking the mysteries of the human condition, you HAVE TO WIN! Great empires DO NOT LAST. For the sake of ALL OF US you MUST be able to beat Obama, or we may not be able to recover as a species.

 
Publié par The Immortal Danimator le mercredi, juillet 30, 2008 - 5:44
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Melissa

 
AMEN! A speech is JUST A SPEECH! What has he DONE?
 
Publié par Melissa le mercredi, juillet 30, 2008 - 5:46
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Sarah

 
I am voting MCCain all the way!
One Republican in Oregon
Sarah
 
Publié par Sarah le mercredi, juillet 30, 2008 - 5:54
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Daddy's Girl

 
McCain already has my vote as well.... but like Mary said, you must show more passion... especially in my demographic... Good luck.

 
Publié par Daddy's Girl le mercredi, juillet 30, 2008 - 5:54
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terry
TERRY SPRY

 
I will be not be voting for obama! come nov. he shows too many of libreal ways. he may be born AMERICAN CITIZEN, but his ideas and values are instilled in him from living abroadtill his pre teen years. he is way too liberal! he shows dictatorship leadership. and another reason , is I am a spouse of a troop and he disses themlike they are second hand citizens. without our troops our country would be under terriost rules. they keep us safe. they are our heros above all polititians.the quiet small town taxpayers will come out in groves come nov. we will voice obama out !
 
Publié par terry le mercredi, juillet 30, 2008 - 6:34
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Lauren

 
Experience is vital when it comes to handling the sever problems that our country is, and will continue to face. Speeches are great, but the president of the US must be able to provide backing to their words.
I am confident McCain can do this, but he must work to get more publicity in order to win the November elections!
 
Publié par Lauren le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 5:38
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Bob

 
He may be unknown in some respects, but I found the comparisons to FDR and JFK interesting. Not bad company. I also agree with the good points about McCain, I supported him in 2000 and 2004.


But I gotta admit I have a good feeling about Obama. The biggest problem with Washington is Washington and we need new blood in there. Not just at the executive level, but all throughout. This includes the party "Machines" on the left and right. The guy who shows me he can stand up to the status quo of the party politics will get my vote.


I don't dislike McCain, but I must say this last week with his negative ads and trivial attacks it makes him look like a puppet of the party.


Tell me about drilling for oil while we also develop wind power. Take an obhective position on immigration despite what the party platform is. Call out the pork barrell spenders in both parties. That's how you can get my vote Senator McCain.

 
Publié par Bob le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 3:57
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S.C. :) P=NP God is my president..nothusseinobama

 
God Bless America
 
Publié par S.C. :) P=NP God is my president..nothusseinobama le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 5:23
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persøna incognita

 
I truly admire Sen McCain’s integrity, sincerity, honesty, transparency, humility and his selfless dedication to our country. Lately, I’ve come to realize that Obama’s positions are based on ideology rather than a true understanding of the issues. Our chief executive needs to put forth great effort, not big ideas. I hope that others will realize that ideas are simply not good enough credentials for president.

 
Publié par persøna incognita le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 5:24
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Daisy Princess
Dawn Shaw

 
I am Clinton supporter that is disappointed with the way the country is going and will be headed if Obama wins. I have turned to McCain for answers and he has delivered. It's all about the experience. Obama doesn't have it.

 
Publié par Daisy Princess le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 5:51
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morning40oz~NeoRadical

 
My favorite part of your commentary is not only the pregnant pause upon your question, but the inability to actually point out something admirable that Barack Obama has actually done. I would agree that Barack Hussein Obama is an eloquent speaker. Words? Just words? I would have to answer a definite yes. He reminds of a proverb I once heard: Empty wagons make plenty of noise. It strikes me that his retractions and "what he meant to say" are about the equivalent of putting lipstick on a pig. I have told you before Senator McCain, I thank you for your service to our country. I don't believe we could ever thank our veterans enough. You have my full support.

 
Publié par morning40oz~NeoRadical le mardi, août 26, 2008 - 5:53
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