Sunday, April 13, 2008

BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO-- BUT THE BOSTON GLOBE FINALLY DUMPS JOHN W. McCAIN

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This morning's Boston Globe published an editorial, The Expediency Express, that goes in two directions. A newspaper that has already been relatively wary of McCain's hype machine-- relative compared to arch fluffers in the national press-- has finally quit him. And that same newspaper (which endorsed him just a few months ago) has given itself a pass for whatever role it played in the creation of the Myth of St McCain.

The editors start out by repeating the conventional wisdom the media blindly buys into: "the core of John McCain's appeal as a candidate has always been his reputation for taking positions that offend special interests." This is part of the myth and a serious examination of his record shows that not only "always" take positions that offend special interests, but that 99% of the time he is the faithful servant of special interest and a special fave of Washington corporate lobbyists, who have funneled many millions of dollars into his political career. He does talk a good game though. Newspapers are supposed to see through the hype, not exacerbate it. "This newspaper," they continue, "endorsed McCain in the Republican presidential primary late last year because-- to quote ourselves-- he 'actually levels with voters even at significant political expense.'" Even a superficial look at his so-called maverick tendencies will show that he never makes any "significant political expense," but instead makes a showy break with the GOP Establishment on issues where they are backing an ideological policy gigantically unpopular with the general public. He has voted the GOP line more faithfully than the majority of Republican senators and when he does make his infrequent breaks, he does it for maximum political advantage to the cause he loves most, McCain myth creation. Even as they break with him, the Globe seems unable to grasp that.

Instead they see him as a flip flopper. "But as his quixotic candidacy grew into the Republican nomination, McCain's 'straight-talk express' started going off the rails."
In 2001, McCain criticized President Bush's tax cuts with their lopsided tilt to the rich. More recently, he has called for extending them. The author of an amendment in 2006 banning torture by US officials, this year he backed Bush's veto of legislation banning torture by US intelligence agencies. The onetime proponent of comprehensive immigration reform now goes along with strictly punitive approaches. In 1998, McCain called for a $1.10 increase in the tax on cigarettes. Last year, he opposed a 61-cent increase in that tax.

The flip-flop on the tobacco tax is typical of the Arizona senator's willingness to trim his sails. In 1998, McCain was such a supporter of raising the tobacco tax to fund a campaign to reduce smoking by youths that industry advertisements blasted the measure as the "McCain Tobacco Tax Bill." McCain accused the tobacco companies of having "sacrificed the truth and our children to their greed." The industry managed eventually to kill the bill when backers failed to get enough Senate support to block a filibuster.

Children would also have been the beneficiaries of last year's smaller hike in the tax: it was to support a major expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program. Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama both favor the increase.

Asked last fall why he opposed the 61-cent tax hike, McCain suggested the government should not rely for children's health funding on an activity - smoking - that it hopes to discourage. He did not even acknowledge that the bigger tax itself would help to curb tobacco use. A true straight-talker would have simply admitted that in Republican primaries he did not want to be in the position of supporting a tax increase of any kind. Back in his 2000 presidential campaign, his advocacy of the bigger tobacco tax hike hurt him in the South Carolina primary, which George Bush won after McCain had handily defeated Bush in New Hampshire.

Taking positions with an eye toward Republican voters explains why McCain now backs the Bush tax cuts he once opposed, no longer favors sweeping immigration reform, and supported a Bush veto of the bill banning torture by intelligence agencies. The maverick has had a makeover.

YouTube citizen journalists, Valley Girl and Newtonusr, have a clearer vision of McCain myth-making than corporate media giants. Watch their latest commentary on how the McCain Machine has defiled the memory of a great Democrat, John F. Kennedy, in an attempt to pass McCain's narrowly partisan record off as somehow part of the mainstream.

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3 Comments:

At 9:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Talk about The Terrible-Tempered Mr. Bang's desire to maintain an American Colonial Presence in Iraq for 100 years and more:

Has anybody considered the possibility of the mosque explosion in Iran yesterday having been a deliberate setup by American agents provocateur on letters de cachet from His Fraudulency's Great Within seeking an excuse for expanding the Iraqi Theatre of ur-RAHOWA Operations into Iran?

 
At 11:36 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

you mean ANOTHER deliberate setup by American agents provocateur...
seeking an excuse for expanding the Iraqi Theatre...SHOCKING!

 
At 7:24 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

And who does he propose pay for everything? Upper class without children? WE ARE NOT THE ONES NEEDING ALL OF THESE GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS. Never thought I'd say it, but Hillary is looking better every day.

 

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