COMMENTS: 18
John McCain Adores the War and Ignores the Warriors
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Take a moment to look at his record:
In 2005 and 2006, McCain voted against expanding mental healthcare and readjustment counseling for service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, efforts to expand inpatient and outpatient treatment for injured veterans, and proposals to lower co-payments and enrollment fees veterans must pay to obtain prescription drugs.
"There was an effort to increase the budget for veterans' healthcare beyond what President [George W.] Bush had requested as part of his budget," DAV spokesperson Dave Autry explains. "The idea was to increase funding for veterans' healthcare by cutting back on tax breaks for the wealthy. The proposals were pushed by Democrats and opposed by Republicans in almost straight party-line votes."
In other words, John McCain's votes indicate he would rather give tax cuts to the rich than care for wounded veterans (Neither McCain's campaign office, nor his Senate press secretary responded to telephone and email inquiries for this story).
McCain's vote also helped defeat a proposal by Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow that would have made veterans' healthcare an entitlement program like social security, so that medical care would not become a political football to be argued over in Congress each budget cycle.
Up until recently, these votes hadn't haunted John McCain. Reporters habitually rehashed his story of heroism four decades ago without looking at his voting record in the present. But now that he's the presumptive Republican nominee for president, a coalition of veterans groups, liberal activists, and Democratic PACs have decided to target McCain over his failure to support S.22, a bipartisan effort to improve the GI Bill.
The bill, by Sens. Jim Webb, D-Va., and Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., would bring back WWII-era measures that provided vets with full college tuition along with room and board. Right now, those vets who try to use the GI Bill to attend school are eligible to receive only $1,100 a month for a maximum of three years. It is an amount that doesn't come close to covering the cost of a modern college education.
So far 57 senators have signed on as co-sponsors. But the bill remains three votes short of the supermajority necessary to kill a filibuster.
"It's time for Sen. McCain to stand up for veterans and be a leader," the chairman of VoteVets, Iraq war veteran Jon Soltz, said in a statement. "The success or failure of this bill largely rests on his shoulders. He is the de facto leader of the Republican Party. If he signs onto the bill, it will pass and become law. If he doesn't support it, he needs to explain why he doesn't."
Earlier this month, VoteVets launched an on-line video and petition drive targeting McCain. The four-minute video was produced by Brave New Films (which brought us Outfoxed and Iraq for Sale) with funds from retired Gen. Wesley Clark's WesPAC. It features four veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan testifying on the problems they've faced with the current G.I. Bill.
"When I enlisted, I was under the impression that my college would be paid for, that I would have everything taken care of," Iraq war veteran Joshua Drake says in the video.
"The current G.I. Bill is inadequate," the former Navy corpsman added. "It hasn't kept up with the cost of inflation or the cost of tuition or the cost of books ... If I could talk to John McCain, I would try to appeal to him as a fellow veteran."
On April 29, more than 100 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans held a press conference on Capitol Hill with the same message, in an effort to turn up the heat on McCain and other lawmakers.
McCain's response has been to propose his own, less expansive version of the GI Bill. Last week, he introduced a bill entitled the Enhancement of Recruitment, Retention, and Readjustment through Education Act, which is co-sponsored by Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., Richard Burr, R-N.C.
Their bill would modestly increase the amount of money available to veterans using the GI Bill from $1,100 to $1,500 a month (still less than the cost of tuition at many public universities and still for only three years). The bill would also close some bureaucratic loopholes that cause GI Bill benefits to count as income, which disqualifies many needy veterans from student loans.
In announcing his bill, McCain made no mention of the more ambitious effort being championed by Webb and Hagel or the increasing attacks leveled at him by partisan and veterans organizations.
"We have an obligation to provide unwavering support to our nation's veterans, and that is precisely what this legislation does," McCain said in a statement (he was out campaigning and did not attend the press conference announcing the bill). "Men and women who serve their country in uniform deserve the best education benefits we are able to give them."
Veterans groups were unimpressed.
"Sens. McCain, Graham and Burr are shortchanging our veterans and undermining America's heroes as they reach for the American dream," said VoteVets's Soltz. "Frankly, it hurts to have two veterans, like Sens. McCain and Graham treat us like this. We would expect that they would have more honor than that."
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Posted by: CatDad on May 2, 2008 1:08 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Most seriously wounded soldiers cannot be churned back into the war machine/combat operations....It's better to spend those billions that would be "wasted" on these costs and disability benefits on weapons, military operations....and don't forget more money to no-bid contracts to politically connected corporations...
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» RE: True "Pentagon" Patriot....
Posted by: JSquercia
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Posted by: jtoman on May 2, 2008 3:40 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He cares less about those injured and maimed by any war and wishes others to go thru what he had to endure. Yet he was a traitor to his fellow military and he will be a traitor to all America. He is not in tune with his own soul and he wants us to be in constant war for the good of the economy and a banking government that will pay him back for his injuries and he is now being paid him well. Such an a....
But America deserves him as they could care less about history or any truth anyway.
To bad. You all deserve what you get. After all you still VOTE in some democracy. Right??
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» RE: j_toman@hotmail.com
Posted by: patfr
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Posted by: solrev on May 2, 2008 6:04 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: JSquercia on May 2, 2008 6:16 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AS they have admitted recruiters routinely LIE
to get enlistments
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Posted by: HughScott on May 2, 2008 8:39 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because of that background, bad-mouthing U.S. military personnel and veterans is against my nature. For that reason last year, I defended the patriotism of General Petraeus after MoveOn.org (which I belong to) labeled him General "Betrayus." I have since changed mind.
Petraeus is a politician, not a patriot. The same goes for John McCain. My reasoning is simple. Real patriots speak the TRUTH about their country and not what the White House tells them to.
Hugh E. Scott, lifelong registered Republican and ARDENT Obama supporter.
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» RE: AL patriotism
Posted by: Opinionator
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Posted by: Quannah on May 2, 2008 9:15 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And as an aside... a soldier died yesterday in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, something this administration and the MSM deems not newsworthy in itself. But this soldier was on his 7th deployment... 7TH DEPLOYMENT! Between Iraq and Afghanistan.
We need to stop this madness.
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Posted by: willymack on May 2, 2008 10:22 AM
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Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 2, 2008 10:49 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just like GW Bush, he was born into a wealthy and privileged family, and was also a very mediocre playboy student. It would be unfair to claim that all children of wealthy families are incredibly incompetent and yet are given positions of authority that they are completely unsuited for, but, yes, it's been known to happen.
". . .at the US Naval Academy, he gained a reputation as a ladies' man, complained that he was picked on by his commanding officer, and graduated 894th out of 899 in his class.
His father was a four-star admiral in the US Navy, as was his grandfather. The first Admiral McCain was commander of all US carriers in the Pacific during World War II, stood at attention on the USS Missouri when the Japanese surrendered, and died of a heart attack four days later. The second Admiral McCain was CINCPAC of all US forces in Vietnam. A McCain ancestor served on George Washington's staff during the Revolutionary War, and after the family had relocated to Mississippi several McCains fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. His mother, a wealthy oil heiress, has been described as "the Auntie Mame of Navy wives."
During the Vietnam war, his plane was shot down, and he was captured, imprisoned, tortured, and forced to sign false statements. However:
"Nobody sane questions that McCain went through hell in Vietnam, or belittles his torture and abuse. For his military service, McCain won the Silver Star, Bronze Star, Legion of Merit, Purple Heart and Distinguished Flying Cross. But other American prisoners of war who cooperated with their Vietnamese captors to a lesser degree than McCain faced prosecution for violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and were given less than honorable discharges."
That's not unlike Bush, who got a silver spoon deferment to the Texas Air National Guard, and managed to get away with snorting a lot of coke and pounding a lot of whiskey while going on extended leave - not quite the same level of dereliction, tho.
His more recent political career highlights include trying to pressure federal regulators to let his savings & loan crook buddies off the hook in the 1980s. His "maverick" reputation is soley due to his staged attacks on Clinton for bills that Republicans wanted anyway - case example being the 1996 Telecon Act, which he very publicly opposed.
Bogus prosecution of fraud as a precursor to running for higher public office? What about his more recent behavior?
"He has been a solid supporter of most of the Bush-Cheney agenda, from the PATRIOT Act to the war in Iraq to his opposition of gay marriage and legal abortion. He briefly questioned whether the nation could afford Bush-Cheney tax cuts for the wealthy, but has since said that in retrospect he thinks it stimulated the economy...
Practically speaking, the difference between GW Bush and McCain is little. They have different images, but their actual policies would be almost identical.
The same, by the way, goes for Hillary Clinton and Barak Obama. Different images, similar sponsors - except that Barak Obama is somewhat more populist in his approach and in his funding sources, while Clinton caters and panders more to the big money lobbyist crowd. Gas tax breaks... ye gods. How about free movie tickets? Free beer? Maybe auction off a few seats on McCain's Sweet Talk Express? Lap dances and complimentary whiskey for all the reporters (yes, for both the men and the women - don't ask who will be doing the dancing)? The downward spiral continues...where will it end?
Gamblers and bookies are salivating over this one, let me tell you. . .
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» RE: McCain is a spoiled brat turned political opportunist - just like GW Bush
Posted by: Opinionator
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Posted by: kentigereyes@yahoo.com on May 2, 2008 12:15 PM
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Posted by: sp00n67 on May 2, 2008 1:28 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: mcartri on May 2, 2008 4:15 PM
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» RE: Why Would Anyone Expect McCain to do the Right Thing?
Posted by: CatDad
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Posted by: madmax427 on May 4, 2008 9:40 AM
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We are ONLY discussing the Candidates that have been approved by the 'Powers that Be', have ALLOWED Us to 'chose' from!
Until WE CHOSE Our OWN candidates, NOTHING will 'Change' or get Better!
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Posted by: Dark Night on May 6, 2008 12:17 AM
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