Posts Tagged ‘McCain’

Protesting too much ?

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

David Axelrod has a rather defensive interview on HuffPo today, which concerns Obama’s seeming refusal to go to Iraq again. He also brings up the lobbying issue, which they have bashing McCain with.

“What does all his experience get us?” asked Obama’s strategic guru. “What do all those visits [to Iraq] get us?” He continued: “The fact that he goes to Iraq and gets a tour apparently does little to provoke the kinds of questions that should be asked, and what Sen. Obama has been asking since the beginning. So it is not a question of longevity in government. It is a question of judgment, it is a question of a willingness to challenge policies that have failed. And he seems just dug in.”

Well, it can give you some information. One would think a candidate for president would be interested in information although this candidate seems to prefer watching ESPN on TV. As far as changing policies is concerned, it was McCain who kept telling Bush to change his policies and, when they were changed, things improved. I suspect Obama does not wish to see this as it conflicts with his theme of withdrawal regardless of consequences.

On Iran, Axelrod says:

Axelrod also lambasted McCain for accusing Obama of being naive in his willingness to meet with world leaders both friend and foe. “I guess the question is, if you had a chance to make progress on some of these issues that go to the security of our country and the world, why would you say you would never be willing to? It is an odd thing to say. What Sen. Obama is saying in essence is that we need to use all the tools in our toolbox when we are working and fighting for our security, including for aggressive diplomacy, which has been shunned by the Bush administration to our detriment.”

That, of course, ignores the issue of preconditions and preparation, which the Obama camp has been desperately spinning the past week. I don’t think they are convincing anyone. I have predicted that Obama will be hurt by YouTube and I seem to be correct.

Axelrod has been exposed as a lobbyist in Chicago, which undercuts the theme of McCain and his lobbyist friends. And, of course, the Rezko trial proceeds. We may hear some more about that, too.

Obama and You-Tube

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Obama is the young guy in the campaign for the presidency this year. McCain is supposed to be the old man. If that is true, and a lot of it is true, why doesn’t Obama understand the significance of You-Tube ? This will be the first presidential campaign since You-Tube became the universal presence that it is. In the old days of 2004, opposition research was directed at finding out things the other candidate had written and said that could be used against him. Now, the video of such incidents will be far more powerful. Obama has been saying that it is unfair for John McCain to attack him on foreign policy. This, of course, is said minutes after Obama accuses McCain of conducting “The Bush foreign policy” for another four years.

I have news for Obama. McCain won’t have to say much. You-Tube will take care of that. His people are already backing away and trying to spin this. I don’t think it will work. You Tube is too easy to use to refute his denials.

Expect to see a lot of that video this fall. The Swiftboat veterans were a minor annoyance to Kerry compared to what this will do.

Some Democrat charm

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

UPDATE #2: This was a setup from the start. Both “reporters” for HuffPo were involved and it was obviously planned.

SORT OF AN UPDATE: Over at campaign Spot, Jim Geraghty has some background on this smear. It sounds like it was fake from the start.

Today, at a Townhall meeting, a Democratic operative asked McCain if he had ever called his wife a c–t. This is an old Democrat smear that I have heard before. Huffington Post called the questioner a “Baptist minister” but he has been exposed as a former Biden campaign manager now working for Obama. Yes, let’s get rid of those “old politics”, Barry.

Privilege

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

This is so good, I can’t resist. Obama says his two opponents were “privileged” in comparison to his own early life. McCain sort of agrees. Of course, his idea of privilege might differ a bit.

I don’t begin this mission with any sense of entitlement. America doesn’t owe me anything. I am the son and grandson of Navy admirals, and I was born into America’s service. It wasn’t until I was deprived of her company that I fell in love with America. And it has been my honor to serve her and her great cause – freedom. I have never lived a day since that I wasn’t thankful for the privilege.

No doubt, Michelle would collapse in laughter if Barry ever said that.

Has Bush lost Texas ?

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Peggy Noonan has an interesting column today on the consequences of the Global War on Terror and Bush’s presidency. I don’t agree with her completely but she has some good points.

And, as always: Why do we do this when you know I am not a terrorist, and you know I know you know I am not a terrorist? Why this costly and harassing kabuki when we both know the facts, and would agree that all this harassment is the government’s way of showing “fairness,” of showing that it will equally humiliate anyone in order to show its high-mindedness and sense of justice? Our politicians congratulate themselves on this as we stand in line.

She is writing about the annoyances of air travel and the general angst of ordinary people who have had to give up some privacy for what seem like trivial benefits. A frequent guest on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show, and former Israeli security officer, comments that the TSA security system is not really a security system; it is a system to annoy people. The purpose, as he sees it, is to prove that the government is doing something to protect us.  Profiling of travellers to make the system less intrusive was rejected by the then Secretary of Transportation, Democrat Norman Mineta who was reacting to memories of the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. Less understandable is the rejection of a system for frequent fliers who could be screened and then allowed a less intrusive (and less time-wasting) security check once they had been identified by biometrics. Apparently, this would not be sufficiently “nondiscriminatory.” Even pilots must go through the entire procedure when it is obvious that, if a pilot decided (like the Egypt Air flight 990 pilot) to crash a plane in a suicide mission, he has only to do so with the controls.

Also, ground security for aircraft not in service has been exposed as a weak spot.

The TSA mess is not the only reason why people are unhappy with Bush. The political left assumes that most of the unhappiness is due to the war but I don’t agree. The left would be antagonistic no matter what was happening in the war because they are still angry about 2000. I am about 1/3 into Doug Feith’s book on the decisions that brought us to war in Iraq. He points out a fact often lost in the debate. As a consequence of the Florida vote debacle, and the Democrats’ anger, the Bush administration had only a skeleton crew until the summer of 2001. Feith was not confirmed to the #3 spot in the Defense Department until July 2001. That was true of most Bush appointees and it had a lot to do with the failure to “connect the dots” that is the subject of the 9/11 Commission Report.

The reasons for the quiet break with Mr. Bush: spending, they say first, growth in the power and size of government, Iraq. I imagine some of this: a fine and bitter conservative sense that he has never had to stand in his stockinged feet at the airport holding the bin, being harassed. He has never had to live in the world he helped make, the one where grandma’s hip replacement is setting off the beeper here and the child is crying there. And of course as a former president, with the entourage and the private jets, he never will. I bet conservatives don’t like it. I’m certain Gate 14 doesn’t.

I don’t completely agree here and some of the comments on the WSJ site side with me in this matter. Bush has lost a lot of Republicans when he has acted like a Democrat. The Republican Congress lost its way after Gingrich destroyed himself with personal foibles similar to those of Bill Clinton. The incumbents began to act like incumbents. They spent and earmarked and generally made themselves indistinguishable from Democrats. Bush did not veto a spending bill. I have read that this was the advice of former Speaker Denny Hastert. If so, this was bad advice.

“I think to some extent you’re seeing a liberated George Bush,” Mr. Wehner said, discussing the current spate of veto threats. “When Hastert was speaker, one of his red lines was that he did not want any spending bills vetoed. That, to some extent, restricted the range of actions that we had. It made it difficult to veto certain bills like the transportation bill and the other ones conservatives didn’t want.”

The election of 2006 ended the fantasy of permanent incumbency bought with high spending. If Republicans act like Democrats, the voters may decide they want the real thing and elect Democrats. The unhappiness of many conservatives with Bush stems from this issue. Also, we had a series of high profile scandals like Mark Foley (Who had planned to retire from Congress and the clueless RNC convinced him to run one last time.)

Then came the issue of immigration. The Wall Street Journal is unlikely to emphasize this issue in a recital of Bush’s mistakes but it was a big one. It is also the source of much uneasiness with McCain. I have previously posted my concerns about McCain and his conversion may or may not be permanent. I would be happier if he got rid of that advisor.

Of course, the State Department makes McCain look good when you see their advisors and the policies they seem to be advocating.

I don’t know how Bush will look in ten years but I think Iraq will be the least of the problems with his presidency.

The NY Times and John McCain

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

I get the NY Times by e-mail very day and usually skim a couple of articles. Today there was another hit piece on McCain and I began to read it but figured it would soon by “Fisked” and I would wait for that. Sure enough,  here it is. This was a pretty pitiful effort but even poor old George McGovern is trying to get his licks in.

I would say, ‘John, you were shot down early in the war and spent most of the time in prison. I flew 35 combat missions with a 10-man crew and brought them home safely every time.’

I’d say it’s too bad SAM missiles hadn’t been invented in 1944 but there were nine other guys in that B 17 with McGovern.

Senator Rockefeller doesn’t know this

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

Senator Rockefeller, a left wing Senator from West Virginia who never served in the military, accused Senator McCain of ” dropp[ing] laser-guided missiles from 35,000 feet in Vietnam. The fact that laser guided missiles had not been invented when John McCain was shot down in 1967 was only a slight impediment to Senator Standard Oil’s fantasy. However, in the interest of education, I thought I would offer to show Senator Rockefeller what laser guided missiles look like in action.

Enjoy.

Very good advice for McCain

Monday, March 17th, 2008

This David Frum column summarizes a lot of my own thinking about Bush. He has missed opportunities, failed to explain his policies and allowed his enemies to define him. McCain must break free. Frum overstates the decline of the conservative base but they are demoralized by the debasement of the currency and the loss of initiative by the president.

John McCain’s saving grace

Monday, March 10th, 2008

This fatuous puff piece in the Washington Post illustrates one of McCain’s best qualities; his ability to cut through BS of this sort and nail wasteful government spending. I do worry about some of his ideas, immigration and campaign finance/first amendment issues, but this crap is reassuring. At least he has the right enemies.

Bob Novak has more on this story.

Bugs and Daffy

Friday, March 7th, 2008

I had not though of this comparison before but Jeff Greenfield makes a strong case that the Obama-Hillary contest is another example of the battle between the two cartoon heroes of Warner Brothers.

Bugs is at ease, laid back, secure, confident. His lidded eyes and sly smile suggest a sense that he knows the way things work. He’s onto the cons of his adversaries. Sometimes he is glimpsed with his elbow on the fireplace mantel of his remarkably well-appointed lair, clad in a smoking jacket. (Jones once said Cary Grant was his inspiration for Bugs. Today it would be George Clooney.) Bugs never raises his voice, never flails at his opponents or at the world. He is rarely an aggressor.

That’s Obama.

Daffy Duck, by contrast, is ever at war with a hostile world. He fumes, he clenches his fists, his eyes bulge, and his entire body tenses with fury. His response to bad news is a sibilant sneer (“Thanks for the sour persimmons, cousin!”). Daffy is constantly frustrated, sometimes by outside forces, sometimes by his own overwrought response to them. In one classic duel with Bugs, the two try to persuade Elmer Fudd to shoot the other—until Daffy, tricked by Bugs’ wordplay, screams, “Shoot me now!”

“Hmmm,” he adds a moment later in a rare bit of self-scrutiny. “Pronoun trouble.”

That’s Hillary.

It works for me. I do disagree that McCain is another Daffy. He is cool with reporters and quick with a quip. Bush was cool in the debates with Gore but who will be lucky enough to get another stiff like Gore, or Carter, as an opponent again ?

Anyway, it’s an interesting analogy.