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What John McCain Told Me, And What It Says About How Far He's Fallen

By Arianna Huffington, Tribune Media Services
At a dinner party in Los Angeles not long after the 2000 election, I was talking to a man and his wife, both prominent Republicans. The conversation soon turned to the new president. "I didn't vote for George Bush" the man confessed. "I didn't either," his wife added. Their names: John and Cindy McCain (Cindy told me she had cast a write-in vote for her husband).

The fact that this man was so angry at what George Bush had done to him, and at what Bush represented for their party, that he did not even vote for him in 2000 shows just how far he has fallen since then in his hunger for the presidency. By abandoning his core principles and embracing Bush -- both literally and metaphorically -- he has morphed into an older and crankier version of the man he couldn't stomach voting for in 2000.

McCain's fall has been Shakespearean -- and really hard to watch for those, like me, who so admired and even loved him. His nobility and his true reformer years have given way to pandering in the service of ambition.

But a large portion of the electorate hasn't noticed the Shakespearean fall. How else to explain "The 28/48 Disconnect" -- wherein only a diehard 28 percent of voters still approve of Bush, but 48 percent say they'd vote for McCain, who is running on the "more of the same" platform?

The thing is, these voters clearly still think of McCain as the maverick of 2000, a straight shooter who would never seek the embrace of a man he couldn't bring himself to vote for, nor accept the regular counsel of Karl Rove, the man behind the vile, race-baiting attacks on him during the 2000 campaign.

And the main reason for The 28/48 Disconnect is the mainstream media's ongoing membership in the John McCain Protection Society. They too continue to party -- and report on McCain -- like it's 1999.

Look at the slack they cut him after his infamous stroll through a Baghdad market was revealed as an utter sham. "Memoirist" James Frey was eviscerated for far less. Or the slack they cut him after his repeated confusion of Sunni and Shia. Or the slack they cut him when his promise to run a "respectful" campaign ran aground on his sleazy attempt to connect Barack Obama and Hamas.

Every time McCain screws up, the media jump all over themselves to make it better, as if Grandpa had said something embarrassing at the dinner table and it needed to be smoothed over as quickly as possible.

The latest example came late last week, when the Straight Talk Express hit an oil slick and skidded off the road. In short, McCain implied that Iraq is essentially a war for oil, then tried to take it back, explaining that he was actually talking about the first Gulf War, then, when pressed, denied that he was actually talking about the first Gulf War.

And, by and large, the media gave him a pass. Chris Matthews called the original war-for-oil comment "an astounding development," but most everyone else was too busy picking over the bones of the Wright/Obama carcass to give it much play.

Interestingly, McCain's mental meltdown over the reason we invaded Iraq was prompted by a comment from a McCain supporter who said he hoped a group called "Swift Boats for McCain" would be formed to help McCain in the campaign.

The gentleman needn't worry. The group already exists. It's called "the media." And they are very well-funded, and highly motivated. The Swift Boat Media for McCain are, for instance, going to make sure that we hear a lot more about the nuances of Obama's decision not to wear a flag pin on his lapel than about McCain's ideas on a little thing like the Iraq war.

Witness the reaction to McCain's repeated declarations that he thinks we should be in Iraq for "100 years." The DNC had the gall to use McCain's own words in an ad, causing McCain to flip out: "My friends, it's a direct falsification," he said, "and I'm sorry that political campaigns have to deteriorate in this fashion."

So, to review: Using a candidate's own words against him is off limits, but making disgraceful insinuations about Hamas and Obama isn't.

But instead of nailing McCain on the "deterioration" of his ethics -- to say nothing of his logic and reasoning -- the Swift Boat Media dutifully repeated his talking points, as in an AP lead claiming, without reservation, that the DNC ad "falsely suggests John McCain wants a 100-year war in Iraq."

McCain tries to wriggle away from his "100 year" comment by saying that he wasn't talking about a hundred-year war, but a very long-term commitment of U.S. troops, like we have in Germany or South Korea. Maybe so, but the last time I looked, no one was blowing up American soldiers in Wiesbaden.

The New Yorker's Rick Hertzberg, a writer who hasn't drunk the "It's Still 2000" Kool-Aid, sums up McCain's Strangelovian "vision": "McCain wants to stay in Iraq until no more Americans are getting killed, no matter how long it takes and how many Americans get killed achieving that goal -- that is, the goal of not getting any more Americans killed. And once that goal is achieved, we'll stay."

The John McCain the media fell in love with in 2000 isn't on the ballot in 2008. And the proof has all but jumped up and grabbed the media by the throat: the ring-kiss of "agents of intolerance" Falwell and Robertson; the decision to make permanent tax cuts he twice voted against, saying he could not "in good conscience support" them; the campaign finance reformer replaced with a candidate whose campaign is run by lobbyists and fueled by loophole rides on his wife's jet; the hard-line stance against torture replaced by a vote allowing waterboarding; the guarded-by-a-battalion stroll through the "safe" neighborhoods of Baghdad; the use of Karl Rove as an advisor . . . and the embracing of the disastrous policies of a man he so abhorred he would not vote for him.

What will it take for the Swift Boat Media to realize that John McCain jumped the shark a long, long time ago?

========

Arianna Huffington's e-mail address is arianna@huffingtonpost.com.

(c) 2008 Arianna Huffington. Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.

This news arrived on: 05/08/2008
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Posted Comments:

05-09-2008 12:06
Thom wrote:

Change...

Obama wants Change...

Of course on the other hand, Adolf Hitler used a platform of change to get elected back in teh 1930's.

Hitler promised a stong government

Adolf rebuilt the Nazi Party, a political party at the time.

Sure Obama is a Brilliant Speaker...
Adolf Hitler was touted as a brilliant speaker!

Sure, Obama's views are popular since they were simply the views of the people repeated back at them...
Adolf Hitler's views were also very popular as they were simply the views of the people repeated back at them!

Obama has virtually promised to end unemployment.
Hitler promised to end unemployment!

Sure, Obama has huge crowds show up at his rallies to listen to him...
Adolf Hitler rallied huge crowds to support him!

Obama's primary support comes from the huge middle class who are being told everyday in the Obama supporting media that they face economic ruin without Obama.
Hitler's main support came from the middle classwho were ruined by the 29 economic depression.

Obama has blamed a single group, corporate america, for all of America's problems.
Hitler blamed a single group, jews, for all of Germany's problems.

Obama is a strong leader who has absolute control of the Democratic party.
Hitler was a strong leader who had absolute control of the Nazi Party.

Are we sure that Change under these terms is teh shange we really want?

Are we sure that the change Obama speaks of isnt't a change that merely represents repeating history?

"Be careful what you wish for, you may receive it!" The German people got what they wished for and the world suffered for it!



05-09-2008 12:03
Thomas wrote:

Change...

"Be careful what you wish for, you may receive it!" The German people got what they wished for and the world suffered for it!



05-09-2008 11:43
esbuck wrote:

McCain and the media

When will we hear the story about how McCain started the fire on the Forrestal which killed 167 people? The fuel came from his A-4, which was improperly started. Was he incompetent to fly it, or was he engaging in a prank?



05-09-2008 11:30
Kenneth wrote:

Huffington BS

Just months AFTER 911, I was at a dinner party where Arianna Huffington was overheard stating that "George Bush was the greatest thing to happen to America, especially after 911". She continued with a derrogatory remark referencing "can you imagine how that idiot Gore would have responded to this horrific event".
I find it simply amazing how Arianna and most other liberal democrats can chagne the color of their spots so easily and affortlessly when the need or desire suites them at the moment.



05-09-2008 11:00
Keith wrote:

McCain

So, it's wrong if McCain changes his views, BUT PERFECTLY okay for Sen. Clinton to change her veiws at every new poll?!? With both Obama and Clinton, you get what you want to hear at that paticular moment in time! With McCain, you get only facts, EVEN IF YOU DON'T AGREE WITH THEM! I would rather have someone who stands by what he/she believes in, then to have ANYONE who only believes in WHAT THE NEXT POLL SUGGESTS!




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