7 DAYS: IT'S NOT MCCAIN'S AGE BUT THE AGE OF HIS IDEAS – W/ ED COX, HUFFINGTON, GREEN, CONASON
Now that John McCain last week elaborated
his economic and foreign policy views in major addresses, the weakness of his
candidacy is clear: it's not that he'll be 72 if inaugurated but has a 72
year-old agenda. If you like gunboat diplomacy and pre-Depression laissez-faire
economics, McCain is your bridge to the 19th Century.
To listen to the whole show please go here: http://premium.airamericaradio.com/clip.php?id=3378
EXCERPTS FROM 7 DAYS IN AMERICA, MARCH 30, 2008 , w/ COX, HUFFINGTON, GREEN & CONASON
ED COX: Why would McCain get more than the 10% of the Democratic vote that Bush did in 2004. "When people are looking for a person to unite the country, John McCain has always been good at reaching across the aisle: McCain/Fielgold, McCain/Kennedy, McCain/Lieberman. He's looking for solutions to real problems and he's willing to take the political risk to do that. I think he's going to play well to Independents and Democrats as well as Republicans."
While the spotlight currently focuses
on clashing Democrats, the mainstream
media has lazily bought into
the narrative that McCain is a straight-talking
maverick, just as so many
concurred that W was a compassionate uniter in 2000. But when it comes to war,
economics and ethics – as our 7 Days program
discusses [http://premium.airamericaradio.com/clip.php?id=3378] – the Republican nominee is now no
straight-talker and no maverick.
*War. Remember John Mitchell's famous aphorism in the
Nixon era, "watch what we say, not what we do." It describes exactly the
divergence between McCain's speech to the Los Angeles World Affairs Council and
his unstinting cheerleading for starting and continuing our unilateral blunder
called Iraq.
"The United States cannot lead by
virtue of its power alone," he said in L.A. "We have to strengthen our global
alliances as the core of a new global compact." Sounds good. But five years ago
he argued that we had to invade Iraq notwithstanding opposition from the U.N.
and many allies. With panglossian ease, he concluded, like Rumsfeld and
Wolfowitz, that we'd be "greeted as liberators" and the war would be short,
cheap, and self-financed by their oil.
Telling critics of the war "I don't
care what anybody says," McCain concludes that we may stay in Iraq 100 years.
Again we're watching someone not using facts to lead to conclusions but
conclusions to lead to facts. The fact, however, is that the war is a calamity
which has spawned more terrorism than it's squelched and has made
coalition-building far harder.
Occupations long ago used to be called
colonialism. But if McCain is selling his experience and judgment, then why
doesn't he remember that the English in India, French in Algeria, and the U.S.
in Vietnam all gussied up these dirty, deadly occupations with high-minded
rationales, and then each had to withdraw when reality set in.
Now McCain argues that we have a
"moral" obligation to stay no matter the cost. Really? Even if it required, say,
300,000 soldiers, 30,000 more amputees and wounded warriors, a decimated army, a
cost of $5 trillion and higher taxes to pay for it? And all for a country 60%
of whom believe it's ok for insurgents to kill Americans and 90% of whom want us
to get out of their country?
McCain's maniacal repetition of buzz
phrases – "the surge is
working! we are winning! surrender is betrayal! – expose him as a militarist itching for more
war-war, not more jaw-jaw, in Churchill's phrase. Yes, he served honorably and
heroically in Vietnam and has experience after decades in the Congress. But
based on his catastrophic misjudgments in the Middle East and his unwillingness
to learn much of anything from America's failures in Vietnam and Iraq, he's
flunked the so-called Commander-in-Chief test. By urging more troops and more
years, he's out-Bushing Bush. Some maverick.
*Economy. After Enron, E.coli, dangerous Chinese imports,
and mortgage fraud, one would think that even principled Republicans would agree
that at times laissez isn't fair. But not
John McCain. "His speech on the economy," wrote Paul Krugman, "was that of an
orthodox, hard-line right-winger."
Today we have a real economic crisis –
mortgage fraud leading to widespread home foreclosures leading to a credit
crisis and a near-financial meltdown. McCain's response shows perfect pitch –
for Herbert Hoover and Milton Friedman. "It's not the duty of the government to
bail out and reward those who act irresponsibly, whether they are big banks or
small borrowers." So at the same time that the Federal Reserve provides up to
$400 billion in low-interest guarantees to banks, McCain opposes anything
comparable to 2 million families about to lose their homes and some 15 million
whose home mortgages exceed their home equity.
Again, corporate welfare for the rich
and capitalism for the poor is at least an old idea, tracing back at least to
Treasury SecretaryAndrew Mellon in the 1920s and, writes Gail Collins, to banker
Mr. Potter in It's a
Wonderful Life.
*Ethics. It's surely true that McCain has been less in hock
to big corporate money than Bush and Cheney, which is not a very high bar to
hurdle. Still, a "maverick" who sells himself as a warrior against special
interest lobbyists will have a hard-time explaining why then they're running his
campaign and Senate office. The problem is not that he's literally in bed with a
female lobbyist, as the New
York Times implied without
substantiation, but in bed figuratively with many lobbyists.
When McCain says indignantly that "he's
never betrayed the public trust," he's conveniently forgetting about his
improper conduct in the Keating Five scandal. But that 20-year-old episode alone
should not be enough to tarnish him now. His work since then on McCain-Feingold
and against Jack Abramoff deserves praise. But there are other current examples
of helping those who help him in give-to-get politics, as when the FCC chair
reprimanded him for interfering in a proceeding on behalf of a big donor and
patron. Shades of 5 percenters in the Truman years.
*Social Security.
John McCain also, like George W. Bush, wants to go back to private security
accounts to partly replace Social Security. Actually, America before 1937 used
such a private system to take care of the elderly, with the result that
one-third of them were poor before FDR created the current Social Security
system, but only one-tenth now.
Since the idea of private accounts
recently failed in a then-Republican Congress and the country, it is unclear why
McCain chooses to champion an idea last in place when he was born.
This Fall, when there's one Democratic
nominee to explain the age of McCain's ideas, even an admiring media will have
to explain why a presidential candidate would argue for more war, more
foreclosures, less social security, and less taxes on the super-rich. His bio
ads can refer back to his heroic war record all they want in order to avoid the
main issue in 2008 – viz., when it comes America needing a modern
21st century leader in our interdependent world, McCain =
McCain't.
Article Links:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/02/25/080225fa_fact_lizza
To listen to the whole show please go here: http://premium.airamericaradio.com/clip.php?id=3378
EXCERPTS FROM 7 DAYS IN AMERICA, MARCH 30, 2008 , w/ COX, HUFFINGTON, GREEN & CONASON
ED COX: Why would McCain get more than the 10% of the Democratic vote that Bush did in 2004. "When people are looking for a person to unite the country, John McCain has always been good at reaching across the aisle: McCain/Fielgold, McCain/Kennedy, McCain/Lieberman. He's looking for solutions to real problems and he's willing to take the political risk to do that. I think he's going to play well to Independents and Democrats as well as Republicans."
COX: How can McCain continue to defend such a
catastrophic mistake as Iraq -- we invaded to get rid of Saddam and now he's
gone? "Our presence is necessary to ensure peace in the Middle East.
Just take a look at East Asia. Without our presence in
Japan and Korea, they would be going at each other and Japan would be
nuclearized. Our presence there, which has been for 50 to 60
years, is necessary to keep the peace in East Asia."
COX: Does it matter much politically
that right-wing talk radio dislikes McCain. "It's not going
to erode the Republican base. The issues that they are talking
about are small ball compared to the big issues of National Security that John
McCain is focused on."
CONASON: How persuasive was Cox's
argument that McCain would do better than Bush with Democrats?
"He does have a point, but it points out the central contradiction of the
McCain camp. Everything about McCain that Democrats like is something that
suppresses his voting base in the Republican Party -- and you can see the
demonstration of that in the fund raising numbers right now.
McCain can't literally raise money. The Republicans are
simply not opening their check books for him." HUFFINGTON: "We need to
update our images of him. This is a man who was himself tortured
but has embraced torture!. He has completely gone back on his
immigration plans. He has now recanted on his position on Bush's
tax cuts and has said he wants to make them permanent. What is actually left of
the old John McCain for Democrats to like?"
HUFFINGTON: How does McCain survive politically
on the war issue aftger following Bush's failures in Iraq?
"Well the amazing thing is how he's so far ahead in the polls on this
issue. The problem is really with the Democrats.
They have a message problem. McCain's message is very
simple and it's working. McCain's message is: Stay with me, we are
going to win together. And the Democrats are all over the map --
the worst thing is that they promised to get us out when they got elected in
'06 and instead we had a surge."
CONASON: Why do the the mainstream media adore
McCain? "He is tremendously charming to people in the media.
I've interviewed him, I know why reporters like him, but that has
resulted in placing him on a kind of pedestal above his fellow
Republicans. He was seen as several cuts above the rest of the
Republican field and was treated accordingly. This is why his
campaign survived." HUFFINGTON: "The media coddling of
McCain will continue unless we do a much better job than we've been doing with
unmasking McCain. But I think it can be done because the facts and
the evidence are on our side."
CONASON: Doesn't McCain look like a hypocrite
when he is condemning lobbyists while his campaign is being run by
them? "The reason this story might be of interest to people is
that they don't know anything about it. They have heard so much
about McCain the straight shooter that for them to find out that he's enthralled
to lobbyists would be news. There's a rich story here that goes
way past the alleged girlfriend who was exposed by the NY
Times."
HUFFINGTON: Was it fair for Sen. Leahy this
week to tell Clinton to quit the race? "I don't think it's
appropriate. What is appropriate is to ask her to refrain from
comments like her response the Rev. Wright situation. She can stay
in the race and have a great campaign, but stop making those comments."
- FILED UNDER: Host Posts, John McCain
- March 30, 2008








Frist
on the first.. I'm sure the rest of you will be along any day now.
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By gt6April 1, 2008 - 9:36amI would have been along a LOT faster but ...
It takes FOREVER for the page to upload ... I can feel the gray hairs moving in it takes so goddamned long!
"Bitch may be the new black but black is the new President, bitch."
Tracy Morgan, SNL
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By Pookie2112April 1, 2008 - 10:03am