Sunday, August 30, 2015

Oliver Sacks (1933-2015)

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"Oliver Sacks, the world-renowned neurologist and author who chronicled maladies and ennobled the afflicted in books that were regarded as masterpieces of medical literature, died Aug. 30 at his home in Manhattan. He was 82."

"You are an abomination. I wish you had never been born."
-- an observation made to Olliver Sacks, quoted by Emily Langer

by Ken

The death of Oliver Sacks can't have surprised anyone, least of all Oliver Sacks himself, since he had gone as public as a person can (writing in the New York Times) with the news that he had terminal cancer. But that doesn't make it any less earth-shaking. For a lot of us, an overwhelming amount of what we've come to learn about the workings (and nonworkings) of the human brain, and even the human mind (i.e., the brain in working context) have come through his prolific and deeply felt writings.

In August 2010, for example, I wrote -- in some awe -- a post called "Oliver Sacks opens a window, personally, on the condition of 'face-blindness,'" about Sack's just-appeared New Yorker piece about prosopagnosia, whose sufferers are unable to recognize faces. In the piece he made me see how this goes to the heart of the way we perceive and make sense of the world around us -- and also startled me with the revelation that his knowledge of the condition began at first hand.

Here's a bit more of Emily Langer's WaPo obit:
An Englishman who made his life in America, Dr. Sacks devoted his career to patients with rare, seemingly hopeless conditions of the nervous system. He distinguished himself both in the clinic and on the printed page and was often called a “poet laureate” of modern medicine.

His books, many of which were bestsellers, generally took the form of clinical anecdotes. A man who mistakes his wife for a hat, an artist who can no longer see in color, a hospital full of patients gloriously, but fleetingly, “awakened” from years-long catatonia: In each case, Dr. Sacks sought to uncover some wisdom, medical or moral.
Not surprisingly, the obit is mostly admiring, but Emily does cite two general, quite harsh criticisms. The one I've quoted above is buried pretty deep in the piece; we'll come back to it. Here's the other:
Dr. Sacks discomfited some readers, who maintained that he capitalized on his patients’ suffering to form handy parables. Tom Shakespeare, a British disability rights activist, called him “the man who mistook his patients for a literary career.”
Now I haven't read the source, and I don't especially care to seek it out. It's possible that in context Tom Shakespeare isn't a total nincompoop and is conjuring a trap that the kind of writing Oliver Sacks did has to guard against. It doesn't sound like that's what he meant, but let's entertain the possibility that he's not the total nincompoop this quote would make him out to be. If you were to make up a list of writers -- neurological professionals or otherwise -- who had the largest positive impact on understanding of and care for the neurologically impaired, my guess is that Oliver Sacks would occupy the top 50 positions, at a conservative estimate.

For a fuller appreciation, we're going to turn to his longtime New Yorker and medical colleague Jerome Groopman, the magazine's great writer on medical subjects. So let's turn back to the other judgment rendered about Sacks, which as it happens came from the subject's mother. Now when a man has been called "an abomination" by his mother, who further expressed the wish that he had never been born, you would think it might have a certain, um, piquancy, a certain resonance, in his life's story.

Even if you didn't know what might have produced such a judgment, I'm guessing you wouldn't have much difficulty guessing. Here's the quote again, with a bit more context:
Oliver Wolf Sacks, one of four sons in an observant Jewish family with many scientists, was born in London on July 9, 1933.

Both his parents, he said, were “medical storytellers.” He went on house calls with his father, a Yiddish-speaking family doctor, and studied anatomy with his mother, a surgeon who sought to instill in her son a love of anatomy by performing dissections with him.

She also instilled in him what he described as a sense of shame about his sexuality.

“You are an abomination,” she told him, Dr. Sacks recalled, when she learned of her son’s homosexual leanings. “I wish you had never been born.”

Dr. Sacks reflected on the exchange years later in “On the Move,” a memoir that would be his last volume published in his lifetime.

“We are all creatures of our upbringings, our cultures, our times,” he wrote. “My mother did not mean to be cruel, to wish me dead. She was suddenly overwhelmed, I now realize, and she probably regretted her words or perhaps partitioned them off in a closeted part of her mind. But her words haunted me for much of my life and played a major part in inhibiting and injecting with guilt what should have been a free and joyous expression of sexuality.”
Now, as promised, here's the beautiful piece Jerome Groopman put up this afternoon on the New Yorker website:

Oliver Sacks, a dear colleague of mine at The New Yorker and in the world of medicine, was an inspiration to me and to countless physicians. A great deal will be said in the coming days about Oliver’s unique literary output -- masterful books including “An Anthropologist on Mars,” “Awakenings,” and “The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat.” But we should remember that he also embodied in his medical practice a kind of ideal approach -- creative, sensitive, and large-hearted -- to his many patients. He was an extraordinary and exemplary doctor.

Neurology is often depicted as a discipline of great detachment. Sacks, who was eighty-two when he died, trained in the field before the advent of the CT scan and the MRI. He learned to observe his patients in extreme detail, calling on his professional training and uncanny perception to make meticulous analyses of motor strength, reflexes, sensation, and mental status; in doing so, he arrived at a diagnosis that might locate a lesion within the anatomy of the brain or spinal cord. And yet, because medical technology had only gone so far in those days, once this intellectual exercise was completed, there was often very little that could be done to ameliorate most neurological maladies.

Sacks showed that it was possible to overcome this limited perspective. He questioned absolutist categories of normal and abnormal, healthy and debilitated. He did not ignore or romanticize the suffering of the individual. He sought to locate not just the affliction but a core of creative possibility and a reservoir of potential that was untapped in the patient. There was case history, for instance, of a color-blind painter who lost all perception of color discovered he could capture the nuances of forms and shapes in hues of black and grey with great mastery.

As both a physician and as a writer, Oliver’s two great themes were identity and adaptation. Illness, he made plain, need not rob us of our essential selves -- and this was something he exemplified in his final months, as a he continued to write remarkable essays even as cancer began to sap his strength and overwhelm him. Sacks understood our frequent ability to adapt, and emphasized that the capacity for someone to adapt to a particular condition -- amnesia, blindness, deafness, migraines, phantom-limb syndrome, Asperger’s syndrome, and countless other conditions -- cannot be known from the outset. These concepts grew from his study of zoology and evolution at Oxford. He similarly saw in medicine a great diversity among individual patients, and the inherent uncertainty of the outcome of a particular disorder. These unknowns gave hope to patients guided by the right doctor -- a hope he captured in his description, in “Awakenings,” of catatonic-seeming encephalitis patients at Beth Abraham Hospital, in the Bronx, who had been written off as “locked in” and then revived, at least provisionally, by drugs like L-Dopa.

Sacks was a contrarian who refused to compromise this approach to the sick and the suffering. He resisted the powerful current of modern practice that seeks the generic. He rejected a monolithic mindset, and retrieved the individual from the obscuring blanket of statistics. This put him outside of the academy, exiled to chronic-care institutions. Through his writing, Sacks ultimately received recognition for advancing a unique form of clinical scholarship that was largely abandoned: the study of the single person within the context of his own life. Ever the acute observer, his case histories confirmed that under a single diagnostic term was a spectrum of human biology. No two patients are ever the same, he emphasized. When examining patients on the autistic spectrum, for example, he highlighted, and informed the public about, individuals with the capacity to draw precisely from memory, the capacity to make calculations nearly at the speed of a computer, or the ability to listen to a piece of music and reproduce it on the piano.

Sacks made house calls, not only in California and New York where he practiced, but globally, visiting Dr. “Bennet,” a surgeon with Tourette’s syndrome in rural Canada or the autistic artist Stephen Wiltshire on a tour of Europe. In these visits, he practiced what might be called the medicine of friendship, showing genuine interest and respect to people who are often shunned. This was the therapeutic intervention when neurology lacked effective pills or procedures.

This did not mean Sacks was a Luddite. He was an avid reader of scientific journals, fascinated by scientific advancements in imaging the nervous system at work. He engaged in dialogue with Nobel laureates and lab scientists about the nature of consciousness, providing what they lacked -- the insights of a naturalist, a field worker.

Sacks also embodied an attribute that can be lost after people become famous: a boundless generosity of spirit. He encouraged young doctors and scientists to record their experiences and communicate them in prose, celebrating their endeavors rather than seeing them as a form of competition or threat. I believe his intense curiosity and boundless energy moved him to want to learn from the succeeding generation, as great teachers do.

Over the past years, Oliver revealed a part of his life that was once considered a debility and disorder -- his sexual orientation. The demeaning of this part of his person, he believed, was the cause for his descent into amphetamine abuse. Drugs may well have killed him decades ago, before his contributions to medicine and writing. It was clinical work, caring for others with competence and compassion, that proved therapeutic for the doctor, giving him the strength to break the powerful grip of drug use. After decades of celibacy, Oliver shared the last eight years of his life with the writer Billy Hayes.

In May, after I had reviewed “On the Move: A Life,” his autobiography, he sent me a letter about what he wanted to accomplish in the time left to him. “In whatever time remains,” he aimed to “pull together another book of case histories–some large … some small, even miniature.” Every dimension of the patient was meaningful in his thinking.
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Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Newly retired Denver Broncos' guard John Moffitt looks forward to not having to carry that 319-pound bulk around

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"Everybody, they just don't get it and they think it's crazy. But I think what I was doing is crazy."
-- now-former NFL offensive lineman John Moffitt,
in
a phone interview with the Associated Press

by Ken

Two observations about the sudden retirement of Denver Broncos third-year guard John Moffitt:

• It may be that the writings of the Dalai Lama and Noam Chomsky are not conducive to an NFL player's gung-ho attitude.

• The head that the Sporting News at least put on the AP report, "John Moffitt walks away from NFL, $1 million," is problematic.

As if the Denver Broncos didn't have enough troubles, with head coach John Fox put out of commission by his sudden heart surgery, now comes the phone call from his home in Seattle in which Moffitt, acquired from the Seattle Marriners in preseason after he failed to win a starting guard position there, informs them that he isn't returning to the team following its bye week -- or to professional football.
"I just really thought about it and decided I'm not happy. I'm not happy at all," Moffitt told The Associated Press in a phone interview from Seattle. "And I think it's really madness to risk your body, risk your well-being and risk your happiness for money."
Moffitt insists that "anytime I played this game, I gave my heart to it and I'm a person that does thing with his heart," but that "I don't care about the Super Bowl" anymore. "I don't need the Super Bowl experience. I played in great stadiums and I played against great players. And I had that experience and it's enough."

The AP report is filled with numbers. We're told that the Broncos, after putting Moffitt on the reserve/left team list Tuesday, "when they activated center J. D. Walton from the physically unable to perform list . . . have five days to formally release Moffitt, who left more than $1 million on the table, including about $312,500 for the remainder of this season and $752,500 in non-guaranteed salary in 2014," from the "four-year contract for nearly $3 million" he signed "after Seattle made him the 75th overall draft pick in 2011." We're told too that he "made about $1.8 million before taxes in his 2½ seasons in the NFL."

The problem with those numbers is that non-guaranteed salary for next season, the final season of his four-year contract. It's kind of hard to "walk away from" nonguaranteed money because nonguaranteed money in the NFL isn't money. It's talk. What that $752,500 means is that if when the time comes we still want you, we'll consider paying you as much as $752,500, or maybe we won't -- why do you think we pay all those lawyers?"

Moffitt says he's not grumbly over limited playing time with the Broncos. (He only played in two games this season.) He says there are more important things to him than the money he's passing up.
"I've saved enough. It's not like I'm sitting here and I'm a millionaire," he said. "That's what I kind of realized. I'm sitting here and I got to this point and I was like, what is the number that you need? How much do you really need? What do you want in life? And I decided that I don't really need to be a millionaire.

"I just want to be happy. And I find that people that have the least in life are sometimes the happiest. And I don't have the least in life. I have enough in life. And I won't sacrifice my health for that."
Ah, won't sacrifice his health, eh? We all know how violent playing the NFL has become, with those bodies growing bigger and stronger and faster every year, all aimed at each other in collision mode. It's not a prescription for good health.
Although Moffitt never had a history of concussions, he acknowledged all the blows he sustained in practices and games concerned him.

"I'm not trying to be the poster boy for 'Oh, I thought I should leave because of concussions.' I'm just saying, it's a valid point," Moffitt said. "I love the game and I respect the game and everybody who plays it knows what they risk and I knew what I risked when I played, and I'm no longer willing to risk it."
And then comes the kicker: "Moffitt majored in sociology at Wisconsin and said his world view was really shaped over the last couple of years when he began studying the writings of the Dalai Lama and Noam Chomsky."

As for the future, Moffitt says --
he's looking forward to speaking his mind on the radio and in podcasts he's going to produce. He said he has plenty of opinions to share on everything from philosophy to politics, although he has less to say about sports.
How interested the world will be in those non-sports opinions remains to be said.

But one plan he has seem likely to be realized. He "wants to go on a diet now that he doesn't have to maintain his 319-pound physique."

Moffitt says of his football life that he's "thankful for the whole experience.
Moffitt said he'll miss playing in games and goofing around with the guys, but he's glad the rest of his NFL life is over.

"Once you tear away all the illusions of it, it's hard work. And it's dangerous work. And you're away from your family. And it's not good for families. It's very tough on families," he said.

Moffitt is also glad to leave the league on his terms.

"I'm ready to go to work and start doing other things right now," Moffitt said. "So, it's a smoother transition and I'm still young enough to start a career and my body's healthy and I'm good. I look at it as a great start to life, you know?"
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Friday, August 23, 2013

How happy for the NFL that ESPN has decided -- entirely of its own free will -- not to pile onto the league's violence problem

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HuffPost reproduced this series of tweets from Sports Business Journal's John Ourand in which both the NFL and ESPN proclaim their innocence of collusion in ESPN's sudden withdrawal from collaboration with PBS's Frontline investigation into the NFL head-injury mess.

by Ken

I suppose it's possible to believe it's possible that ESPN suddenly withdrew yesterday from its collaboration with PBS's Frontline on an investigation into the concussion-and-head-injury mess confronting the NFL without any consideration of its business relationship with that same NFL. Which is to say it's possible to believe that ESPN only just came to this realization, contained in the statement it issued yesterday following PBS's announcement that the collaboration with ESPN is kaput:
Because ESPN is neither producing nor exercising editorial control over the Frontline documentaries, there will be no co-branding involving ESPN on the documentaries or their marketing materials. The use of ESPN's marks could incorrectly imply that we have editorial control. As we have in the past, we will continue to cover the concussion story through our own reporting.
Hey, these things happen. I can certainly understand ESPN's concern that "the use of ESPN's marks could incorrectly imply that we have editorial control." Sure, that concern seems to have come on rather suddenly, especially after what the Frontline statement described as "a collaboration that has spanned the last 15 months and is based on the work of ESPN reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and Steve Fainaru, as well as FRONTLINE’s own original journalism."

For the record, here's how the Frontline people characterized yesterday's development:
rom now on, at ESPN’s request, we will no longer use their logos and collaboration credit on these sites and on our upcoming film League of Denial, which investigates the NFL’s response to head injuries among football players.

We don’t normally comment on investigative projects in progress, but we regret ESPN’s decision to end a collaboration that has spanned the last 15 months and is based on the work of ESPN reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and Steve Fainaru, as well as FRONTLINE’s own original journalism.

Over that time, we’ve enjoyed a productive partnership with ESPN’s investigative program, Outside the Lines, jointly publishing and co-branding several ground-breaking articles on our respective websites and on their broadcast. We’ve been in sync on the goals of our reporting: to present the deepest accounting so far of the league’s handling of questions around the long-term impact of concussions. This editorial partnership was similar to our many other collaborations with news organizations over the years.
If it only now dawned on the ESPN people that the use of ESPN's marks could lead people to believe that the network had editorial control over the film, then it needed to act promptly, however belatedly.

And it would be malicious to suggest otherwise, as HuffPost reports some nasty fellows at the New York Times have been doing:
Citing two unnamed sources described as having "direct knowledge of the situation," James Andrew Miller of the New York Times reported that the NFL pressured ESPN to pull out at a lunch meeting of top officials from both sides. . . .

[T]he New York Times reported that the NFL began pressuring ESPN after the trailer for the documentary was released on Aug. 6. The trailer shows people discussing players suffering from dementia and brain disease as a result from playing professional football. The NFL is being sued by thousands of former players claiming that the league hid information linking football-related head trauma to brain injuries.
Frontline Deputy Executive Producer Raney Aronson-Roth told James Andrew Miller "that ESPN executives had for more than a year understood the ground rules of the collaboration: Frontline would keep editorial control of what it televised or put on its Web sites, and ESPN would have control of everything it televised or posted on the Web." She also said --
that until last Friday, there had been no hint of trouble between Frontline and ESPN. She said that Frontline had worked “"in lockstep" with Vince Doria, ESPN's senior vice president and director of news, and Dwayne Bray, senior coordinating producer in ESPN's news-gathering unit.
As to that lunch meeting, here's what the Times's Miller reported:
Last week, several high-ranking officials convened a lunch meeting at Patroon, near the league's Midtown Manhattan headquarters, according to the two people, who requested anonymity because they were prohibited by their superiors from discussing the matter publicly. It was a table for four: Roger Goodell, commissioner of the N.F.L.; Steve Bornstein, president of the NFL Network; John Skipper, ESPN's president; and John Wildhack, ESPN's executive vice president for production.

At the combative meeting, the people said, league officials conveyed their displeasure with the direction of the documentary, which is expected to describe a narrative that has been captured in various news reports over the past decade: the league turning a blind eye to evidence that players were sustaining brain trauma on the field that could lead to profound, long-term cognitive disability.


If Patroon's current main dining room isn't to your taste, the Aretsky's Patroon website announces: "We are very excited to present a sneak peek of our new look, coming soon."

To prove that the lunch had nothing to do with ESPN's decision, the NFL points out, as noted in the tweet above, that it was scheduled several weeks ago, and at ESPN's request:
Greg Aiello, a spokesman for the N.F.L., said Friday morning that the lunch meeting was requested by ESPN several weeks ago. "At no time did we formally or informally ask them to divorce themselves from the project," Aiello said. "We know the movie was happening and the book was happening, and we respond to them as best we can. We deny that we pressured them."
There is, you'll note, no discussion of the "combativeness" of the lunch meeting, as James Andrew Miller characterized it base on the characterizations of those two anonymous rats, who know perfectly well that they're not allowed to talk about . . . you know, this stuff.

It's understandable that the NFL doesn't like people talking about . . . you know, this stuff. The league knows perfectly well that it has a critical violence problem. It also knows that:

(1) Its fans like violence, especially in the sanitized way it comes to them on their TVs, which makes it look sort of like Road Runner cartoons.

(2) Given the size and strength to which all those bodies colliding on the field have grown, there may not be any realistic way of dialing down the violence level enough to bring those brain injuries down to an acceptable level.

And anyways, can't the NFL commissioner just have a friendly -- and maybe occasionally feisty (possibly a few drinks were drunk?) -- lunch with a few high-level broadcasting buddies without a federal case being made of it?

By the way, Front Line has scheduled League of Denial (do you suppose it really took much persuasion to persuade the ESPN honchos, who after all are business partners of the NFL, that they don't want to be associated with a production bearing that title?) for October 8 and 15.

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For a "Sunday Classics" fix anytime, visit the stand-alone "Sunday Classics with Ken."

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Monday, March 03, 2008

ANOTHER RELIGIOUS NUT BUSH APPOINTEE RESIGNS IN DISGRACE-- NO, NOT THE PLAGIARIST, ANOTHER ONE

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March started off with a bang for the Bush Regime. One of their religious-nut operatives, Tim Goeglein, got caught plagiarizing and, on being exposed by an alert blogger, resigned. The Regime said his actions -- multiple plagiarism (dozens of instances)-- was "unacceptable." OK, fine. But ... um, no one resigned over outing a CIA agent or lying us into war with Iraq. No one resigned for botching the reconstruction of New Orleans or for the lack of oversight and the loss of billions of dollars to corrupt defense contractors. Something's out of sync.

Goeglein worked for Bush for 7 years "as a liaison to social and religious conservatives, an important component of the president’s political base. Mr. Goeglein was influential in decisions on a range of questions important to that constituency, including stem cell research, abortion and faith-based initiatives." He was a flack for Pat Robertson before going to work for Rove and then Bush.

So that was Friday and it was all over the newspapers and on TV. But a day before another religionist-right loon working for Bush also resigned. And this one seems much more off the deep end. Meet Daniel Cooper, Department of Veterans Affairs Undersecretary for Benefits. Problem with Cooper is that the veterans weren't getting their benefits... lots of them. He wasn't plagiarizing; he was proselytizing... for his evangelical cult.
Cooper has been under fire for using his office to proselytize for evangelical Christianity ever since he appeared in a 2004 fundraising video for Christian Embassy, which carries out missionary work among the Washington elite as part of the Campus Crusade for Christ.
 
In the video, Cooper says of his Bible study, "It's not really about carving out time, it really is a matter of saying what is important. And since that's more important than doing the job-- the job's going to be there, whether I'm there or not."
 
Cooper's declaration inflamed veterans who saw the number of veterans waiting for the Veterans Administration (VA) to decide their disability claims balloon to 400,000 on his watch, with the average veteran waiting six months for a decision from the government.

You want more of this? Vote for John McCain. He has one John Hagee he wants you to get to know. No doubt Hagee would be filling lots of posts for a McCain Regime were he, God forbid, to be elected in November.

Veterans groups were celebrating Cooper's long overdue departure. "He was clearly a fundamentalist Christian first and essentially a government paid missionary for his particular world view of the gospel of Jesus Christ," said Mike Weinstein, who runs the Military Religious Freedom Foundation. "The fact that he's gone obviously is good."
"Cooper was in charge of and responsible for massive injustice for hundreds of thousands of veterans who slipped through the cracks waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting for disability benefits," said Paul Sullivan, executive director of the group Veterans for Common Sense.
 
"He was fully aware that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were putting a burden on VA in 2004 and he did nothing," Sullivan added. "In 2005, he was told again. He did nothing. In 2006, he was told again. He did nothing. In 2007, when the Walter Reed scandal broke, all Cooper could do was say that he would make some marginal changes."

...More than 263,000 veterans have received treatment from the VA after returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Close to 250,000 have filed disability claims. A new book released this week co-authored by Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz estimates that 700,000 U.S. war veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan will eventually file for disability.
 
"They need to have this income," Cary said. "If it's a disabled veteran, then the spouse needs to stay home and take care of that veteran and the faster that they can move this process along, the easier it will be for that spouse to be able to go to work and provide additional income for their family."
 
Pentagon studies show about 20 percent of returning veterans (320,000 people) suffer from physical brain damage called traumatic brain injury. Government studies also show that as many 50 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans (800,000 people) suffer from the psychological injury post-traumatic stress disorder.

Congressman John Hall (D-NY), a Blue America endorsee, represents the district that is home to West Point. He was the first person who ever told me about traumatic brain injury. He told me that treating our returning vets with it is likely to increase the cost of the war by unimaginable numbers. Many members of the military whose wounds once killed them now survive but with traumatic brain injury, often caused by concussion blasts. This week Washington's state Department of Social and Health Services and the Washington Traumatic Brain Injury Strategic Partnership Advisory Council are launching a campaign to raise awareness and provide a way for people to get information about available resources. And if McCain ever becomes president with his 100 more years in Iraq and his plans for more wars in the future, his alliance with the looniest of the Christocrats, and, no doubt, a military draft, Washington will serve as a model for every state in the Union.


UPDATE: McCAIN-HAGEE SCANDAL RAGES ON

Catholics United is not satisfied with Jon McCain's non-answer about his relationship with arch-bigot and hate-monger John Hagee. They're not even asking McCain about how many jobs he'll be able to place his followers in if McCain wins in November. They just want him to publicly reject the hate-spewing Hagee's endorsement (the way Obama did with Farrakhan). McCain refuses. Catholics United has over 20,000 dues-paying members, many of whom are Republicans. Why are they so upset with McCain?
Hagee, an evangelical minister known for incendiary rhetoric, has referred to the Catholic Church as "the Great Whore," and blamed Adolf Hitler's Catholic education for his subsequent acts of genocide. Sen. McCain, who in the 2000 presidential campaign condemned "the agents of intolerance," actively sought Hagee's endorsement, and flew to San Antonio for a press event with the preacher.

Despite mounting public pressure and grave concerns raised by Catholics United and the Catholic League, Senator McCain has failed to denounce Hagee's remarks.

"John McCain's refusal to rebuke John Hagee calls into serious question his claims to straight-talk and principle," said Chris Korzen, executive director of Catholics United. "Until he clearly rejects these offensive comments, Sen. McCain risks alienating millions of Catholics and the vast majority of Americans." Catholics comprise 21% of the electorate in Texas and 26% of the electorate in Ohio.

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