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Desperation Makes for Dangerous Politics

by: t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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John McCain at a campaign rally in Westerville, Ohio, October 19. (Photo: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images North America)

    As America moves into the final days of the 2008 presidential campaign Senator McCain and his surrogates are desperately seeking any message that will resonate with the American people. The problem is that their desperate actions are resulting in dangerous and ugly politics.

    Senator McCain hails himself as a maverick - a visionary and independent man who breaks from the politics of the past. Actually, McCain and his supporters are simply pandering to the conservative right and the fringe elements of America. They are not "reaching across the aisle" or "seeking consensus." His campaign is not building bridges to move the country forward; it's building bridges to nowhere. McCain and his surrogates have turned to fear mongering through racist innuendo as Senator McCain attempts to become America's 44th president.

    On Sunday, October 19, on "Meet the Press," Gen. Colin Powell, a centrist Republican, offered a well-thought-through and eloquently articulated endorsement of Senator Barack Obama. General Powell clearly explained that Senator McCain's selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin for vice president raised his concerns about McCain's judgment. General Powell also spoke about the troubling nature of the personal attacks on Senator Obama, based on false intimations, and that: "Over the last seven weeks, the approach of the Republican Party has become narrower and narrower." He also said he became "concerned" that "in the case of Mr. McCain, he was a little unsure how to deal with the economic problems."

    When asked by Tom Brokaw if race played a factor in his decision, General Powell said that he had pondered a decision for months, and that he had told Obama, "I'll give you all the advice I can, but I'm not going to vote for you just because you're black." For some reason, conservatives such as Limbaugh and George Will cannot take General Powell at his word. In an effort to dismiss General Powell's endorsement as less than substantive and provoke old racist fears, Limbaugh and Will both pointed to race as the basis for General Powell's endorsement. Limbaugh said Powell's decision was "totally about race." Will stated that the Powell endorsement, "adds to my calculation - this is very hard to measure - but it seems to me if we had the tools to measure we'd find that Barack Obama gets two votes because he's black for every one he loses because he's black, because so much of this country is so eager, a) to feel good about itself by doing this, but more than that to put paid to the whole Al Sharpton/Jesse Jackson game of political rhetoric."

    Is George Will suggesting that Barak Obama has an inherent advantage in this election because he is African-American? I've always admired George Will's intellect even though I've disagreed with his politics. This statement makes me wonder; what America is he living in? What poll data is he not looking at? That's an utterly stupid assessment.

    In California, a Republican group in San Bernardino County distributed a newsletter that depicted Senator Obama on a fake $10 food stamp along with images of a watermelon, ribs and a bucket of fried chicken. On an official state Republican Party web site in Sacramento County, Republicans posted a series of violent anti-Obama images and statements. Senator Obama was depicted in a turban and paired with images of Osama bin Laden, with a caption that read: "The only difference between Obama and Osama is BS." Below that were the words "Waterboard Barack Obama!" This goes right to General Powell's issues with the false intimations that Obama is Muslim.

    Senator McCain has stated that Hamas endorses Senator Obama, "I think it is very clear who Hamas wants to be the next president of the United States ... I think that the people should understand that I will be Hamas' worst nightmare!"

    This libelous, slanderous and inflammatory rhetoric has turned dangerous. At a recent McCain campaign rally, when McCain asked, "Who is Barack Obama?" a supporter screamed "terrorist"! In Pennsylvania during a speech by Sarah Palin, one supporter screamed "kill him" in reference to Obama.

    While it is clearly understood that Senator McCain is not responsible for the actions of his supporters and those who endorse him, we do expect a man claims to break from the politics of the past to soundly and clearly disassociate himself from these tactics. Senator McCain should repudiate and disavow those engaged in this behavior in the same manner Senator Obama was forced to repudiate and disavow Reverend Wright. Instead, McCain uses Sarah Palin to spread the most vicious of the attacks. At a rally in Denver, Palin said, "This is not a man who sees America as you see it and as I see America - our opponent, though, is someone who sees America, it seems, as being so imperfect that he's palling around with terrorists who would target their own country." All may be fair in love, war and politics, but the rhetoric of desperation should at least be based in fact and not place the well-being of your opponent in peril.

    There are other signs of desperation in the McCain campaign. In the final presidential debate, Senator McCain played his trump card, his ace in the hole. He invoked the image of "Joe the Plumber." A hard-working plumber in Ohio who wants to buy his own plumbing business but can't because of Senator Obama's tax policy. The only problem is that in his haste to score points, Senator McCain failed to thoroughly vet "Joe," the same way he failed to thoroughly vet Governor Palin. "Joe the Plumber," who is actually Joe Wurzelbacher, is not licensed in Ohio as a plumber (therefore, he's a guy who does plumbing, not a plumber), owes $1,200 in back taxes and is further away from owning his own business than Russia is from Governor Sarah Palin's back yard.

    In a desperate attempt to demonstrate leadership and appear presidential, Senator McCain announced that he would suspend his campaign and fly back to Washington, DC, to work on the Wall Street bailout plan, saying, "We must meet - until this crisis is resolved." McCain senior strategist Steve Schmidt said the campaign suspension would include pulling McCain's television ads and halting fundraising, and that his vice-presidential running mate, Sarah Palin, would not participate in campaign events either. None of this came to be. Two days later, when the media and public would not take the bait, Senator McCain was off to Mississippi to participate in the first debate - and oh, by the way, an agreement on the bailout plan had not been reached.

    If Senator McCain plans to run this country the same way that he has run his 2008 presidential campaign, he leaves the American people with a lot of questions to answer. His management of this campaign has proven to be irresponsible at best and reckless at its worst.

    While watching CNN before the final presidential candidate debate, William "Bill" Bennett, neoconservative and former secretary of education under Reagan, was asked, "What do you need to see from Senator McCain during this debate?" Bennett answered, "I want to see the fighter pilot John McCain." Well, that's who we have been seeing.

    Depending on which reports you read, Navy aviator and now Republican nominee for president Senator John McCain crashed four or five planes, (three or four in training and one in combat) between 1960 and 1967. At least one of those crashes was caused by his own irresponsible and reckless behavior, as his own words reveal:

    McCain, 1999 (p. 159): There were occasional setbacks in my efforts to round out my Navy profile. My reputation was certainly not enhanced when I knocked down some power lines while flying too low over southern Spain. My daredevil clowning had cut off electricity to a great many Spanish homes and created a small international incident.

    It's that same "daredevil clowning" and reckless behavior that he demonstrated in the Navy that has made its way into his campaign. These desperate actions are resulting in dangerous and ugly politics. It is very important to pay attention to what a candidate does to get elected. The behavior he/she demonstrates while campaigning provides insight into how he/she will govern. It also demonstrates what that individual will do to get reelected. None of which America can afford.

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Comments

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"daredevil clowning", just

"daredevil clowning", just what we need in a president.

I saw one rabid McCain

I saw one rabid McCain supporter saying it would be good for Obama's grandma if she passed away before election day, in case he wins/ What exactly does that mean. If something should happen, the Republican party might be even more marginalized than it may be after election day. Let's hope not. Personally most of the crazies are probably flabby nerds/ Let's hope so

There doesn't seem to be any

There doesn't seem to be any bottom to the barrel that holds these racist comments, threats, warnings. This is America in 2008? I am ashamed of my countrymen.

Our country is sick. It's

Our country is sick. It's been so one sided for so long, almost half the country believes in lies. When McCain or Palin or Bush come on the tv, I have to switch the channel because I am so sick of their greed for power and stupidity and seeing their faces. They do not represent the country I believe in. Our country needs a lot of healing.

Leon has provided a fine

Leon has provided a fine summary of the last desperate hours and desperate tactics by this make-believe maverick and his unqualified running mate. Just one more addition to the above ... in the final debate, McSame went out of his way to praise all his supporters, and did not even acknowledge that his campaign seems to be trying on petticoat fascism as its fashion statement in the last two weeks. But if the garb fits, he and Sarah must wear it and bear it. $150,000 in high-end clothes still adds up to nothing more than that, petticoat fascism manufactured from the dark fabric of fear and ignorance.

McPalin may seem desparate

McPalin may seem desparate but with the neocon tricksters who know how to steal an election or 2 or more, I will not give into obama sweeping the elections. As a matter of fact, it there are any exit polls and these polls indicate obama with a 10% lead in votes over McPalin, I still could see the election going to Mcpalin. With that kind of project lead and then losing, I would say that this country will see something on several orders of magnitude uglier that the riots after the Rodney King verdict that let the policemen that beat king off. Those were some pretty bad riots and most of that was just in California I think. I have a brother and a step brother who are both ultra conservative, racist and very much afraid of obama being elected. I get occasional emails with anti-liberal messaging from them. I am so sick of that, that I have started to delete them when I get them. They seem to think that what has happened in the last 8 years are either too trivial to worry about or the cause of the 'liberals'. Both are a sad case and I don't care to talk or correspond with either for now, maybe in a year or two and then it will be apprehensive conversations because I would demand of them to read too many books that explains just what in the hell there favorite criminals, w & dick, have done that they don't care about.

In Florida in retirement

In Florida in retirement communities of 20 yr veterans of our military services, the rumor is that Obama will never make it up the steps to the Whitehouse if elected. Lord only knows what great evils this countries citizens are capable of perpetrating, or great good for that matter. It surely has far too much of the former and never enough of the latter. Prepare for the worst, and hope for the best.

It is high time for

It is high time for Americans to reform their thoroughly ailing political culture. A culture in which believing in a the fair distribution of power and wealth, one which allows for all real wealth and power to be accumulated and excercised, is a liability. One in which profound cultural ignorance as well as ignorance of world history (particularly European history) is elevated to the rank of a national virtue. It is time for America to prove that is indeed qualified for the role with which history has entrusted it. It can do so by electing a leader such as Barack Obama who understands the real menaing of terms such as alliance and dialogue. Enough stupid and obsoletely "European" petty provincialism a la Sarah Palin is enough (!)

Dr. Leon is traversing

Dr. Leon is traversing familiar ground here, though lucidly of course. I think, however, that the McCain tactics have crossed the boundary into the absurd, and people are beginning to laugh at them and parody them. Public Radio had on two of the folks who do the attack ads the other day, and they all showed a right good will and a clear statement that theatre should not be confused with reality--and a sense that this time it is not. One of Sen. Obama's most attractive qualities is his level-headedness and lack of drama, and when he said during the last debate, "I think I can stand 3 more weeks", with a little smile, he gave the impression that it would in fact be easy. That's a good sign for everyone--that he answers the charges but doesn't hold grudges for what is really just comedy.

I firmly believe that McCain

I firmly believe that McCain and Palin should be tried for incitement to riot, and other charges. It should also be a race-based prosecution, which could add years to the sentence. As for palling around with terrorists, Palin hangs with the Alaskan Independence Party, which promotes the (violent, in necessary) seccession from the US. Now, THAT's a terrorist group in my mind. ~~ Lane Baldwin -- alifewithspirit.blogspot.com

There is no question that if

There is no question that if McCain and Palin head the next administration that thinking folks will have two options. Either let them have their own way and let the country be destroyed beyond any hope of recovery, or, with a veto proof Senate and Congress, have a shadow president who proposes legislation designed to rescue the country from the mess that it is now in. In other words, make the presidency as irrelevant as Congress is now. At the first opportunity, and there is no doubt that the McCain/Palin administration will willingly present a golden opportunity in the first 100 days, they need to be impeached. The only way that they can now "win" is by fudging the vote count. "It's not who votes who counts, but who counts the votes." - Joseph Stalin

"Daredevil clowning"

"Daredevil clowning" Beautifully accurate. Had the American people been passengers aboard the McCain Straight Talk Express we would have whiplash at best or pulled over for DUI (Driving Under Incompetence).

Legend tells us that if we

Legend tells us that if we change the colors we wear, our fortunes will also change. That is why a gambler who is on a lucky streak will not change his clothes. Changing clothes can also break a bad luck streak. The same is true in the presidential elections when a candidate of a different color is running on the platform of change. Most Americans are going through a period of bad luck in the stock market and in other spheres of life. A vote for Obama is a vote for a change of color and a change of bad luck. But for those that believe color and luck are not connected Obama has many inner talents that will produce the change you so desperately need. His roots are spread out which gives him the experience needed to be a leader of all people regardless of the color of their skin. So any way you look at it a vote for Obama is a change to a luck filled future.

A maverick is just a lost

A maverick is just a lost cow.

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