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The "P" in "POW" Does Not Stand for "President"

Posted by ZP Heller, The Real News Network at 11:12 AM on September 5, 2008.


McCain is hellbent on playing the POW card to the bitter end.

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If the Republican National Convention revealed anything it’s that John McCain is hellbent on overplaying his POW card to the bitter end.  In the last few months alone we’ve seen the McCain campaign overuse McCain’s POW story to justify everything from his healthcare policy to forgetting how many houses he owns, from cheating at the Saddleback forum to his love of ABBA.  Each time McCain and the GOP invoke his past in vain they diminish the story’s potency and cheapen its respectability.  Such a political ploy compelled fellow former POWs like Dr. Phillip Butler to come forward and declare that this experience does not qualify McCain to lead, which Brave New PAC featured in its recent video that received over 190,000 views in the last few days.

Even the corporate media have grown weary of McCain trotting out his POW story. Andrew Sullivan channeled Joe Biden to dub McCain, “A noun, a verb, and POW.”  And Newsweek’s Howard Fineman said, “I think they are going to it way too many times.”  These pronouncements ought to have served as a cautionary sign for the McCain campaign, considering how deeply enamored the media has been with McCain throughout this election.  But judging from the RNC this week, McCain and the GOP just can’t help themselves.

While the Democrats made economic populism the central theme of their convention, the Republicans used their convention primarily to pay tribute to McCain’s military record.  On Tuesday night, the single charged moment in President Bush’s otherwise uninspired, unconvincing televised speech came when he referred to McCain’s POW past.  “Fellow citizens,” Bush said. “If the Hanoi Hilton could not break John McCain’s resolve to do what is best for his country, you can be sure the angry left never will.”  

When the crowd applauded, two things became clear: 1) Republicans are willing to stoop so low as to depict the left as merciless Vietcong captors (ironic, considering it was Republicans like Bush and McCain who approved of torturing suspected terrorists); and 2) The Republicans can’t make this race about issues because they would lose.

A raging class war?  Rising unemployment?  Soaring gas prices?  Unaffordable healthcare?  A recession brought on by an unpopular war?  These are all crises courtesy of Bush and backed by McCain, who has virtually voted lockstep with the president.  Why bring up these subjects when you could be playing on your audience’s sympathies by touting your nominee’s time in a Vietnamese prison over thirty years ago?


For all the talk of candidates needing “experience” in this election, the only real experience the GOP is concerned with is McCain’s POW past.   That’s why Sarah Palin made the ludicrous claim that “there’s only one man who’s ever really fought for you,” and that it’s a long way from “a six-by-four cell in Hanoi to the Oval Office.”  That’s why John McCain devoted most of his speech last night to recounting his tale of woe, which we already heard during the video tribute that played only ten minutes earlier.  And that’s why McCain drew the rather obvious comparison that Obama doesn’t have “the scars” that he has.  
The reality is that as terrible as McCain’s experience may have been, that alone does not qualify him to be president.  As Dr. Butler says, “The prisoner of war experience is not a good prerequisite for a president of the United States.”  And by telling and retelling his POW story, by exploiting it for political gain, McCain dishonors those who have served our country and renders his own experience meaningless.

Digg!

Tagged as: vietnam, republicans, gop, economy, minnesota, george bush, john mccain, pow, st. paul, sarah palin, hanoi hilton

ZP Heller is the editorial director of Brave New Films. He has written for The American Prospect, AlterNet, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and The Huffington Post, covering everything from politics to pop culture.


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Have him work the VA Hospitals
Posted by: weathered on Sep 5, 2008 11:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and see the dividends of death for Oil & Israel. That's where you find our POW's.

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Than why didn't he vote......
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Sep 5, 2008 12:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once again, those POW experiences must have been clouding his judgment as he forgot that he did not vote to condemn the US torture, oops I mean those "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" as they are currently referred. It is also the reason that he has voted against increased pay for the active troops that are over there!

REMEMBER: POW STATUS DOES NOT QUALIFY ONE TO BE A PRESIDENT!

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POW = President?
Posted by: modeler on Sep 5, 2008 2:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gimme a break,served my time as one, no qualification for the job of president evident. Biding time, escaping, serving more time, planning next escape and so on. Running a country takes more than that. The poster dumb and dumber says the whole truth about the present and the would like to be president of the Repugnican gang.

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Nuke Tweety
Posted by: Direct Democracy on Sep 5, 2008 3:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Noun, verb, “Tweety” McCain was a Viet Cong collaborator.

http://www.counterpunch.org/valentine06132008.html

FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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A Noun, A Verb and POW; but not the USS Forrestal
Posted by: TruthBeTold on Sep 5, 2008 8:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There were almost 800 American POWs in Vietnam with approx 700 of them returning home, and many are still alive.

Why aren't these former Vietnam POWs all out on the campaign trail with McCain?

Were are all of the McCain supporters who survived the USS Forrestal "accident"?

Let's hear from them. Wonder why McCain has not brought these survivors aboard him campaign?

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A Noun, A Verb and POW; but not the USS Forrestal
Posted by: TruthBeTold on Sep 5, 2008 8:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There were almost 800 American POWs in Vietnam with approx 700 of them returning home, and many are still alive.

Why aren't these former Vietnam POWs all out on the campaign trail with McCain?

Were are all of the McCain supporters who survived the USS Forrestal "accident"?

Let's hear from them. Wonder why McCain has not brought these survivors aboard him campaign?

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McCain's war record
Posted by: Franny on Sep 5, 2008 10:11 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has anyone out there double checked the story of McCain's heroism in the Hanoi Hilton? According to the legend, the North Vietnamese communists begged McCain to go home because he was the son of such a brilliant naval family. What a noble enemy. Are we supposed to believe that? And then, when McCain refuse to leave, the Vietcong said shucks and let him go back to his cell. This most be the first time in the history of warfare that an enemy could not get rid of a prisoner. They could have put him on a plane and unloaded him in a third country. They could have put him on a raft and launched him into the Gulf of Tonkin. If they wanted him to leave, why didn't they do something like that? Were they afraid of him because he was such a hero? This is the prisoner who broadcast propaganda for the enemy. Hardly heroism. Just how much was he tortured? According to his own account his arms were damaged when the plane he was flying crashed. They were not pulled out of the sockets, or whatever. There must be Vietnamese who know what went on in the interogation rooms of the Hanoi Hilton. I suppose they're not talking because they finally have a way to achieve total vengeance on the United States. They can let the heroism story stand and the States will get four years of McCain and/or Palin in the White House. Revenge, indeed.

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The worst of the worst
Posted by: LazyEight on Sep 6, 2008 1:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being a POW hones two skills essential to executive office: endurance of discomfort, and avoidance of unwanted attention. McCain, under slightly altered circumstances, would face less competition from Obama, than from hundreds of Guantanamo detainees. After all, most of them have more experience in the suffering business, and (like past US presidents) never personally bombed innocent civilians.

It would be the height of tragedy (not counting the indefinite isolation from humanity and all that waterboarding) if they got locked up just to burnish their campaign credentials. Not to mention the futility of the act: being foreign-born and all (what were they thinking?).

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POW = Posturing Old Whore
Posted by: thornwolf on Sep 6, 2008 6:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John "POW" McCain whores his values, his beliefs, his political positions, whatever it takes, at the moment, in the attempt to score points with the right-wing special-interest group of the day. He can't remember from one interview to the next what he said, and surely does not even care enough to vet his own opportunistic statements.

John "Hot Head" McCain is the quintessential bag of stinky air, a flatulent posturing old whore, the perfect nominee for the Greedy Old Poopyheads party (GOP).

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But, it does stand for president.
Posted by: Gaubladt on Sep 6, 2008 5:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
President of War!

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Some War Hero!!
Posted by: Ivann on Sep 8, 2008 3:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At the risk of being out of step with all red-blooded Americans, including Obama, I am sorry but I don't buy into this "McCain is a war hero" bullcrap. Ask yourself; what was McCain doing one minute before being shot out of the sky? I'll tell you; he was involved in dropping tons of bombs on near-defenseless Vietnamese, mostly women & children. If he had been on the ground fighting hand-to-hand with the Viet Cong, I might have some respect for him. As it is, in uncontested skies, he was able to get himself shot down, losing his plane of course in the process. If his Vietnamese rescuers had shot him out of hand, it would have been more than he deserved. There must be many thousands of other ex-POWs wondering what they have done wrong not to be Presidential hopefuls

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