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Desperate McCain Tries to Play Terror Card One More Time

By Ira Chernus, Tomdispatch.com. Posted July 31, 2008.


War and terrorism have replaced social issues in the conservative culture wars.
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All agree that this is (or should be) the year of the Democrats. But with candidate Barack Obama still leading, on average, in national polls by only about two to five percentage points, depending on the day, and the media proclaiming "oil" now a "Republican" issue, there's certainly a long way to go to that prospective Democratic victory on November 4th. Still, in retrospect, this last week may be seen as the one in which Senator McCain's campaign concluded that this might not only be the year of the Democrat, but of the Obamacrat as well, and went for the jugular.


Gallup polling, for instance, shows Obama making small but significant gains in every kind of state (red, purple, and blue) over the last two months. At the same time, Obama's world tour -- the one McCain and the neocons practically egged him into taking, with all those online tickers showing just how many days since he had last been to Iraq -- left the McCain camp in full and bitter gripe mode. In the imagery of advisor and former Senator Phil Gramm, they had become a campaign of "whiners." Meanwhile, the Berlin bounce finally showed up in the polls.


While Obama was wowing the Europeans, McCain managed to get an offshore-oil photo-op in the Gulf of Mexico wiped out by a somehow overlooked advancing hurricane. Instead, he ventured into a grocery store aisle in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, prepped on rising food prices, where he met a "shopper planted by the local Republican Party" and experienced an unfortunate "applesauce avalanche." (The Daily Show version of this is not to be missed.) Not surprisingly, by week's end he was decisively skipping the "issues" and heading for "values" -- that is, directly for the throat in the style which Republicans have, in recent years, made their own.


Earlier in the week, he had practically declared his opponent treasonous for supposedly putting his political campaign ahead of victory in Iraq -- "It seems to me that Obama would rather lose a war in order to win a political campaign ... " -- and launched a classic Republican campaign attack on Obama's "character." His latest ad, which attacks Obama for supposedly going to the gym rather than visiting wounded American soldiers in Germany, typically ends: "McCain, country first." (Versus ... uh ... Obama, country last?)


It's not exactly surprising that candidate McCain headed for what he hoped was potential "values" and "character" pay dirt (emphasis on "dirt") in tough times. As Ira Chernus -- canny TomDispatch regular and author of Monsters to Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin -- points out, it may be his only chance. The question is: Will it work?


Will "character," the culture wars, and security fears help elect the most woeful Republican candidate since Bob Dole -- and in a country that not only increasingly doesn't think much of Republicans, but has never cared to vote old? (Ronald Reagan was the exception to this rule, always running young and vigorous, whatever his age.) McCain, in a golf cart being piloted by 84-year-old George H.W. Bush, actually looked older than the former president. And, gee, you might go for the jugular early, too, in a year in which the Republicans don't even control the political machinery of the state of Ohio.


Now, let Ira Chernus take you on a magical mystery tour of the strange world of American "values," American "values voters," and a mainstream media that values the value-voter story above all else. -- Introduction by TomDispatch editor, Tom Engelhardt

War Meets Values on Campaign Trail

Will the Big Winner of 2008 Once Again Be a Conservative Culture-Wars Narrative?
By Ira Chernus


While the Iraq war has largely faded from our TV screens, some 85% of all voters still call it an important issue. Most of them want U.S. troops home from Iraq within a couple of years, many of them far sooner. They support Barack Obama's position, not John McCain's. Yet when the polls ask which candidate voters trust more on the war, McCain wins almost every time.


Maybe that's because, according to the Pew Center for the People and the Press, nearly 40% of the public doesn't know McCain's position on troop withdrawal. In a June Washington Post/ABC poll, the same percentage weren't sure he had a clear position. When that poll told voters that McCain opposed a timetable for withdrawal, support for his view actually shot up dramatically. It looks like a significant chunk of the electorate cares more about the man than the issue. Newer polls suggest that McCain's arguments against a timetable may, in fact, be shifting public opinion his way.


McCain's Only Chance: Values-plus Voters


Pundits and activists who oppose the war in Iraq generally assume that the issue has to work against McCain because they treat American politics as if it were a college classroom full of rational truth-seekers. The reality is much more like a theatrical spectacle. Symbolism and the emotion it evokes -- not facts and logic -- rule the day.


In fact, the Pew Center survey found that only about a quarter of those who say they'll vote for McCain base their choice on issues at all. What appeals to them above all, his supporters say, is his "experience," a word that can conveniently mean many things to many people.


The McCain campaign constantly highlights its man's most emotionally gripping experience: his years of captivity in North Vietnam. Take a look at the McCain TV commercial entitled "Love." It opens with footage of laughing, kissing hippies enjoying the "summer of love," then cuts to the young Navy flier spending that summer of 1967 dropping bombs on North Vietnam and soon to end up a tortured prisoner of those he was bombing.


McCain believed in "another kind of love," the narrator explains, a love that puts the "country and her people before self." Oh, those selfish hippies, still winning votes for Republicans -- or so McCain's strategists hope.


Obama agrees that the symbolic meanings of Vietnam and the "love generation" still hang heavy over American politics. The debate about patriotism, he observed, "remains rooted in the culture wars of the 1960s ... a fact most evident during our recent debates about the war in Iraq."


Obama is right -- sort of. The so-called culture wars have shifted away from social issues to war, terrorism, and national security. The number of potential voters who rate abortion or gay rights as their top priority now rarely exceeds 5%; in some polls it falls close to zero. Meanwhile, Republicans are nine times as likely as Democrats, and far more likely than independents, to put terrorism at or near the top of their most-important list. And Republican voters are much more likely to agree with McCain that Iraq is, indeed, the "the central front in the war on terrorism."


Sociologists tell us, however, that the "culture wars" so assiduously promoted by conservatives are mostly smoke and mirrors. Despite what media pundits may say, the public is not divided into two monolithic values camps. Voters are much less predictable than that. And few let values issues trump their more immediate problems -- especially economic ones -- when they step into the voting booth. The almighty power of the monolithic "values voters" is largely a myth invented by the media.


Yet, the "culture war" story does impact not only debates about the war in Iraq, as Obama said, but all debates about national security. Beyond the small minority who are strict "values voters," there are certainly millions of "values plus" voters. Though they can be swayed by lots of issues, they hold essentially conservative social values and would like a president who does the same. This time around, it's a reasonable guess that they, too, are letting war and security issues symbolize their "values" concerns. Put in the simplest terms: They are the McCain campaign's only chance.


So just how much of a chance does he really have? At this point, only two-thirds of those who say they trust him most on Iraq plan to vote for him. That means less than 30% of all voters are solidly prowar and pro-McCain. But another 12% or so who do not trust McCain on Iraq say they'll vote for him anyway, keeping him competitive in polling on the overall race. Most of them are surely part of the huge majority who, whatever they think of his Iraq specifics, trust McCain most to protect us from terrorism and see him as the person most desirable as commander-in-chief. (There's that "experience" again.)


The crucial voters are the 10% to 20% who want troops out of Iraq soon, won't yet commit to McCain, but "trust him" most to do the right thing on Iraq and terrorism. They are choosing the man, not the policy position, on the war. A lot of them fall among the 5% to 20% -- depending on the poll you pick -- who won't yet commit to either candidate.


McCain can swing the election if his campaign can only convince enough of them to vote with their hearts, or their guts, for the "experienced" Vietnam war hero, the symbol of the never-ending crusade against "Sixties values." So he and his handlers naturally want to turn the campaign into a simple moral drama: Sixties values -- or the nation's security and your own? Take your pick.


Obama's American Values


Could that "values" script get a Republican elected, despite the terrible damage the Republicans have done -- and for which voters blame them -- in the last eight years? Many Democrats apparently think it might. They're afraid, says Senator Russ Feingold, that "the Republicans will tear you apart" if you look too weak and soft. That's why the Democratic Congress, weakly and softly, continues to give the Bush administration nearly everything it wants when it comes to funding the war in Iraq, as well as eavesdropping on citizens at home. And the Democratic presidential candidate now goes along, with little apology.


The Obama campaign recognizes the larger "values" frame at work here. Look at the commercial its operatives made to kick off the general election campaign. In it, Obama says not a word about issues. He starts off by announcing: "America is a country of strong families and strong values." From then on, it's all values all the time.


And the "strong values" the commercial touts are not the ones that won him the nomination either. Not by a long shot. You'll find nothing about "change" or "hope" there. It's all about holding fast to the past. Nor is there a thing about communities uniting to help the neediest. America's "strong values" -- "straight from the Kansas heartland" -- are "accountability and self-reliance ... Working hard without making excuses." You're on your own. It's all individualism all the time.


Sandwiched between self-reliance and hard work is the only community value that apparently does count: "love of country."


Obama's second ad (which Newsweek described as "largely a 30-second version" of the first) features images of the candidate warmly engaging hard-hatted and hair-netted workers, all of them with middle-aged wrinkles, blue collars, and white skins. Both commercials ran in seven traditionally Republican states as well as 11 swing states. As they were released, Obama gave major speeches supporting patriotism and faith-based initiatives.


As Republican consultant Alex Castellanos put it, the Obama campaign made "an aggressive leap across the 50-yard line to play on Republican turf." Before they sent their man around the world to focus on war and foreign policy, to meet the troops in Afghanistan and General Petraeus in Baghdad, they felt they had to assure the "Kansas heartland" that he shares true American values.


And Obama's message-makers know where that mythical "heartland" really lies: not in Kansas, Dorothy, but on a yellow brick road to an imagined past. The America conjured up in his commercials is a Norman Rockwell fiction that millions still wish they could live in because they feel embittered (as Obama so infamously said) by a world that seems out of control. They prefer a fantasy version of a past America where so many, who now feel powerless, imagine they might actually have been able to shape their own destinies.


Perhaps the frustrated do cling to "guns or religion or antipathy to people who are not like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment," as Obama suggested. But his ad-smiths know that they cling far more to illusions of a secure past, when (they imagine) everyone could count on clear, inviolable boundary lines -- between races and genders, between competitive individuals in the marketplace, between the virtuous self and the temptations of the flesh, between the U.S. and other nations, between civilization and the enemies who would destroy it.


All of these boundaries point to the most basic one of all: the moral boundary between good and evil. McCain and Obama are both wooing the millions who imagine an absolute chasm between good and evil, know just where the good is (always "made in America"), and want a president who will stand against evil no matter what the cost. They want, in short, a world where everyone knows their place and keeps to it, and where wars, if they must be fought, can still be "good" and Americans can still win every time.


The Republicans have a code word for that illusory past: "experience." Their "Sixties versus security" script offers a stark choice: The candidate who clearly symbolizes the crossing of boundaries, most notably the American racial line, versus the candidate whose "experience" and mythic life story are built on the same mantra as his Iraq policy: "No surrender."


The McCain campaign is not about policies that can ensure national security by reaching out and making new friends. It's about a man who can offer a feeling of psychological security by standing firm against old and new enemies.


The Media's "Ordinary American"


Who would choose psychological security over real security? The mainstream media have an answer: "the ordinary American." Now that the "values voter" of the 2004 election has largely disappeared, the media have come up with this new character as the mythic hero for their election-year story.


It began, of course, with Hillary Clinton's primary campaign comeback -- portrayed as a revolt of those "ordinary people," who might once have been Reagan Democrats (and might soon become McCain Democrats), against the "elitists" -- or so the media story went. Her famous "phone call at 3 AM" ad suggested that "ordinary people" value a president tough enough to protect their children. As her husband once put it: "When people feel uncertain, they'd rather have somebody who is strong and wrong than someone who's weak and right."


Now the "elitist" Obama still has a "potentially critical vulnerability," according to the Washington Post's veteran political reporter Dan Balz: "Voters do not know whether he shares the values and beliefs of ordinary Americans."


Balz's colleague, Post media critic Howard Kurtz, called the second Obama commercial a "White Working-Class Pitch" designed to show that Obama is "on the side of average workers." The New York Times's Jeff Zeleny echoed that view: "One of his most pressing challenges is to assure voters that he is one of them."


The centrist and even liberal media are as busy as conservatives propagating the idea that, to be one of the average, ordinary Americans, you have to prize (white) working-class values considered "Republican turf" since the late 1960s: individualism, self-reliance, hard work for "modest" (which means stagnant or falling) wages, faith, and a patriotism so strong that it will never surrender.


The American Everyman, the hero of this year's media story, is an underpaid worker who may very well vote Republican against his or her own economic interests, and all too often against the interests of loved ones who hope to come home alive from Iraq or Afghanistan.


What about all those Democrats who voted for Obama because he offered a vision of a new politics, a way out of Iraq, and a new path for the United States? What about all those who earn too much or too little, or have too much or too little education, or the wrong skin color, to be part of the white working class? Evidently, they are all extra-ordinary Americans; "outside the mainstream," as media analysts sometimes put it. They may represent a majority of the voters, but they just don't count the same way. They don't fit this year's plot line.


Of course it may turn out that the old melodrama of an "experienced" Vietnam hero against the "summer of love" no longer draws much of an audience, even with both campaigns and the mainstream media so focused on it. No matter how things turn out on Election Day, however, it's beginning to look like the big winner will -- yet again -- be the conservative "culture war" narrative that has dominated our political discourse, in one form or another, for four decades now. With Obama and both Clintons endorsing it, who will stand against it?


For the foreseeable future, debates about cultural values are going to be played out fiercely on the symbolic terrain of war and national security issues. The all-too-real battlefields abroad will remain obscured by the cultural battlefields at home and by the those timeless "ordinary American values" embedded in the public's imagination. It's all too powerful a myth -- and too good an election story -- to go away anytime soon.


Creating New Stories


Yet there is no law of nature that says the "ordinary American," white working class or otherwise, must value individualism, self-reliance, patriotism, and war heroics while treating any value ever associated with the 1960s as part of the primrose path to social chaos. In reality, of course, the "ordinary American" is a creature of shifting historical-cultural currents, constantly being re-invented.


But the 1960s does indeed remain a pivotal era -- not least because that is when liberal, antiwar America largely did stop caring much about the concerns and values of working-class whites. Those workers were treated as an inscrutable oddity at best, an enemy at worst. Liberals didn't think about alternative narratives of America that could be meaningful across the political board. Now, they reap the harvest of their neglect.


It does no good to complain about "spineless Democrats" who won't risk their political careers by casting courageous votes against war. Their job is to win elections. And you go to political war with the voters you have. If too many of the voters are still trapped in simplistic caricatures of patriotism and national security created 40 years ago -- or if you fear they are -- that's because no one has offered them an appealing alternative narrative that meets their cultural needs.


It does no good to complain that such working-class views are illogical or stupid or self-destructive. As long as progressives continue to treat "ordinary Americans" as stupid and irrelevant, progressives will find themselves largely irrelevant in U.S. politics. And that's stupid, because it doesn't have to be that way.


What can be done to change this picture? Facts and logic are rarely enough, in themselves, to persuade people to give up the values narratives that have framed their lives. They'll abandon one narrative only when another comes along that is more satisfying.


Democrats started looking for a new narrative after the 2004 election, when the media told them that "values voters" ruled the roost and cared most about religious faith. The result? Democrats, some of them quite progressive, are creating effective faith-oriented frames for their political messages.


No matter who wins this year's election, the prevalence of the "ordinary American" voter story should be a useful wakeup call: It's time to do something similar on a much broader scale. This election year offers an invaluable opportunity to begin to grasp some of the complexities of culturally conservative Americans. Equipped with a deeper understanding, progressives can frame their programs of economic justice and cultural diversity within new narratives about security, patriotism, heroism, and other traditionally American values.


That will take some effort. But it will take a lot more effort to stave off the next Republican victory -- or the next war -- if the project of creating new, more broadly appealing narratives continues to be ignored.

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See more stories tagged with: conservatives, patriotism, national security, culture wars, values voters, ordinary americans

Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin.

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McCain is unfit to be America's commander-in-chief, terror threat or not.
Posted by: HughScott on Jul 31, 2008 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This comment is for first-time AlterNet visitors who want the truth about Unfit McCain.

I just finished investigating his "heroic" POW record. You can read a summary on my new nonprofit Web site: www.UnfitMcCain.com

The home page banner says, "Five reasons why you should not vote for Sen. McCain in 2008" -- which are:

1. He will continue President Bush's belligerent foreign policy which led to the unjustified and unending Iraq War that has killed more than 4,000 U.S. military personnel, decimated our armed forces and added mega-billions to the national debt.

2. McCain has endorsed the failed Bush economic policies that are destroying the middleclass, causing jobs to go overseas, pushing homeowners into foreclosure and endangering the future of our offspring for decades to come.

3. McCain is America's "Number One Neocon" with direct ties to Bill Kristol's rightwing extremist oganization, Project for a New American Century (PNAC), which promoted regime change in Iraq before 9/11 and wants to dominate the world with U.S. military power.

4. During the 2008 presidential campaign, McCain showed he lacked the necessary integrity to be commander-in-chief by flip-flopping on major issues -- such as torture, off-shore drilling and the 2001 Bush tax cuts that favored America's wealthiest citizens.

5. Finally, McCain distorted his POW record and exploited it for political gain.

The last reason summarizes my facts-check of "Songbird" McCain's dishonorable behavior in North Vietnam. Part of the information is based on my recent communications with a former POW.

If you agree with my findings and love America, please tell your friends and family about UnfitMcCain.com.

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam veteran, lifelong registered Republican and former McCain supporter.

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» If the fires too hot............. Posted by: carbon-based
» New Respect Posted by: carbon-based
» well-intentioned list, but Posted by: topbrick
A Vote For McCain is A Vote Against America
Posted by: bryangalt on Jul 31, 2008 4:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People: even McCain's own campaign has been running around trying to clean up after his missteps (see Alternet story McCain campaign-McCain doesn't speak for us).

A vote for McCain will almost certainly place us into WWIII, or the Great Depression-the Sequel, since he doesn't seem to understand that keeping our troops in Iraq, bombing Iran and our occupation of Afghanistan is bankrupting our nation (that in addition to giving Saudi Arabia and China all of our remaining money).

Will you feel more secure when you are in the bread line? Will you feel more secure when you are getting drafted into the military up to age 45 to fight a war in the Arab parts of our world?

If that's the case, go ahead and vote like you did the last two times, go ahead and screw the rest of us because you are too ignorant to look at what these people are doing to our nation and our security.

I recommend you watch this YouTube video too:

One Soldier's Suicide before you commit us to another president who has no moral center.

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So Sick I Could Puke
Posted by: cherylholmes on Jul 31, 2008 4:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bastard makes me so sick I could puke. I'm so sick and tired of his tired old rhetoric, lies, bullshit. He's the most disgusting man I've ever seen! Sick old bastard..condescending by calling us "my friends" shit, he no friend to anyone especially to me, watch how he struts around like a damned old fool shooting off his lying ass mouth. Does he even know what reality is? What kind of stupid bitch would marry an asshole like this, and stay married to him? I think he's even more dangerous than Bush! This country is gone with him being elected. He can't wait to attack Iran and every other nation in the world, and continue the Bush screw you legacy. People actual believe his white supremist bullshit? They really think he can keep us safe? Like Bush did? Grow up people. We're not safe because these assholes want to rule every nation and will kill every living thing to do it. They want to control every valuable natural resource and plunder the entire planet, while continuing to destroy it and US! They want to prevent any nation from going Euro because our currency is worthless because of them..they will kill everything to meet their objectives, including US citizens. They don't give a damn about anyone or anything. You have a death wish for the entire planet, keep voting Rethug. It won't take them long to destroy all of us..

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Terrorist have taken over DC and Our Country!!!
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 31, 2008 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not afaid of the purported Cave dweller- Binny. First the attacks of 9/11 were on our soil- but not against Americans. Our citizens were killed because the MIC thought they would never be attacked here, THEY placed our citizens in Harms way- Human Shields?
The targets were those of the MIC- WTC _Financing, Pentagon- Military Might, WH- foreign Policy.
If they 'hated US for our freedoms' they would have hit targets which exemplify our way of life...Statue of Liberty, DisneyWorld, mall of America....It was Never US they intended to attack!
Granted they killed thousands of innocents, tripped up the economy for a bit...But THEY did not take away our Rights and Freedoms, did not spy on US, Lie to US, Steal our 'Treasure' ,Destroy our economy, or Kill thousands more with a propagandized war for Oil.
Waht is most amazing is that those who follow Binny have not figured out they Too have been Used.Binny & Bush's leadership are only puppet regimes for the CheneyCorp World Business Stratedgy.Binny is NOT living in a Cave, he -just like Bush, is being sheltered.Both are just Game Pieces- NOT Game Masters.
The Islamic World should wake Up and recognize they are being Used Too!binny is no hero or Jihiadist- he is a covert operative working for the Oil corps Just like W.While Binny sits comfy in some palace in Dubia, or Kuwait, or back home inSaudi Arabia- YOUR Sons & Daughters are DYING!Why would a born and raised member of the Caste systms elite give a shit about your lower strata ???
Bush & Binny.. Two Puppet Peas in a Pod!

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More of the same
Posted by: carbon-based on Jul 31, 2008 5:47 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's hard to say that domestic issues are on the front burner as many issues stem from foreign policy blunders. Money spent on Iraq, the "go it alone" attitude of Bush alienating the international community, non existent energy policy etc..etc. Terrorism falls further back into memory until the next one!

The next President has to address both front equally. McCain isn't wrong on keeping terrorism on the front burner.. The Pentagon has said we will be fighting this for generations to come and there is nothing showing that this isnt true!

Obama has shown that he believes this to be true also and in many respects differs little from McCain on foreign policy.

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» RE: More of the same Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: More of the same Posted by: carbon-based
» RE: More of the same Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: More of the same Posted by: carbon-based
» RE: More of the same Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: More of the same Posted by: carbon-based
McPain: Old Lizard Head spews more Rovien BU__! SH__!
Posted by: williameon on Jul 31, 2008 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Hanoi Candidate
He could explode at any moment!
He will do anything to get selected.
Bush is trying to cover up his Crimes against Humanity.
They will try every dirty trick in Turd Blossom’s (ROVES)
Little Black Book.
Pardon Anyone?

The Reptilians scrape the Bottom of the Barrel again.
McPain is a walking disaster.
Stand Back 500 Feet!

Add a couple more wrinkles and
He could play Prune Face in the next Batman Movie.
Our Country is falling apart and all we get is more Lies, Propaganda, Torture and Terror.
How FAUX is it?
The Newspapers are going under and lying off thousands.
There is no need for journalists anymore with a direct feed
From Propaganda Ministry in
The Black House.
There is so little information already.
Everyone is sick of reading rehashed
PROPAGANDA!
Always Homogenized to
The Lowest common Denominator.
What a Charade!
What a Hoax!
Do any of these Parrots believe a word they say?
They are Prostitutes,
Media Prostitutes

McPain/Bush
What's the difference?
Same BU__! SH__!
Same time,
Same channel.

The Reptilians house of cards is crumbling.
The People are trying to figure out what to do?
Save yourself.

Bush/Chainey are the lowest of the low.
The Meanest of the Mean.
The Greediest of the Greedy.
The Ugliest of the Ugly!
Cowardly, Arrogant, Pompous A-sholes.
IMPEACH them both!
Do a Two-fer.
For War Crimes and
Crimes against Humanity
The Penalty?
Drop them both in the Iraqi Desert with their beloved oil
and Saddam’s gun.

Surge
Purge
Update and
REBOOT!

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» You done it again willie! Posted by: thekidde
Cinzilla...
Posted by: Knowmad on Jul 31, 2008 7:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's all be thankful that the McWannabe crowd is entirely too dim to realize they have the supreme weapon of campaign terror right under their noses - or under her's actually: Cindy.

I mean, creepy or what! Now there's someone you'd never want to sit next to at the opera. The 101-Dalmatians-villian glare, savage aura of assumed entitlement and stretched-to-shiny hide are just too much for the relatively civilized to deal with.

I'd sure not want to be in 'lil Johnie's Ferragamos if he screws up much more...picture a serrated, forked tongue whipping out and taking his head off in one fell swoop.

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Popularity = Young Alcoholic Sex Symbols
Posted by: PaulK on Jul 31, 2008 7:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because Senator Barack Obama is popular everywhere he goes, while Senator John McCain is lucky to get a stand-up photo-op outside a German restaurant, Obama (and not McCain) must then be negatively associated with other popular younger people such as model Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. That's what a McCain attack ad claims.

Where's the counter-advertisement that links McCain to unpopular old alcoholics? Let's see if I can think of a famous one.

How about...

Bushie!

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It truly is a sad day
Posted by: symcokid on Jul 31, 2008 8:00 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
when out of the multitude of better qualified people that would be eligible to lead this country all there is in the offing is Mac and momma's Obama. Why? Apparently because they have the money people to back them, just like every other president we have ever had.

So we're left holding the bag, one is ready to tip over and the other is feeling his way and looking for some on the job training. God help us all.

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If McCain truly wants to fight terrorism, he should start by pledging to close CIA, NSA, and
Posted by: PakiBoy on Jul 31, 2008 9:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
School of Americas.

Further, he should pledge to prosecute the members of the present and past US administrations involved in state sponsored terrorism against nations ranging from Panama, Nicaragua, to Iraq and Afghanistan.

McCain should tell the Bush administration to stop the terrorism activities against Iran.

And finally, if McCain truly wants to fight terrorism, he should pledge that under his administration US would no longer be the rogue power in the world and instead would respect the international law.

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» Pakiboy, you NAILED it ! Posted by: maxpayne
» Free Kashmir! Posted by: hurricane hugo
If you get any of those anti-Obama emails
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Jul 31, 2008 10:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Respond with this and send it out to people on your list also:http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/7/31/15933/7854

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Obama had better get real if he wants to win...
Posted by: TJColatrella on Jul 31, 2008 11:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
McCain's campaign is being run by the Karl Rove Brown Shirts...

That said it is also worrisome that Obama can't seem to get more than 6% ahead of him in national polls..if that even...

If this election is close the Republicans will steal it using Diebold and ESS..!

It's a shame Obama is not hitting hard on the issues and solutions..and is so quite in regard to the swindle by speculators of the Oil Futures Market which McCain due to all the Oil money he's taken this year alone and also Phil Gramm s up to his neck in..

Obama needs to break out and get tough and tell the truth stop worrying about pleasing Goldman Sachs who gave him so much money as did the Telecoms before he voted against the 4th Amendment...

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A two-pronged assualt (on democracy)
Posted by: willymack on Jul 31, 2008 11:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The way I see it is that mcboob hasn't a chance against Obama in a fair election, so it's gotta be "fixed" as in 2000 & 2004. One way to do this is to create the false impression that the "election" will be very close as evidenced by bogus "polls" promulgated through a neocon crontrolled press. The other is the tried and true caging lists, "lost" provisional and absentee ballots, false information as to the location and operating hours of polling stations, goons at polling areas which vote Democratic, rigged electronic voting machines, and other chicanery not yet anticipated, but certainly possible. If mcbush "wins" this one, it'll ONLY be because of fraud. If Congress and ordinary citizens stand meekly by as in the past if and when this happens, the bush years will be the "good old days" in comparison to what happens next.

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Outstanding piece
Posted by: andbobrews on Aug 1, 2008 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was an outstanding piece. Chernus provides an excellent analysis into why people would be against the war and yet still either support McCain or have greater confidence in him to shepherd us through the minefield of our own making.

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Republicans, the never ending WAR party
Posted by: james2021 on Aug 1, 2008 6:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Republican Party is now controlled by the MILITARY/INDUSTRIALIST/OIL/PHARACUTICAL/FINANCIAL complex.

Without Constant War, they cannot continue to rake in obscene amounts of money.

McBush, will continue the drumbeat set up by the Puppet masters, and he will dutifully mouth the Facist elements of our society.

Republicans do not know how to govern, they just know how to rob the average citizen blind, while waving the flag, and their crosses.

Smoke and Mirrors, Rile up the anit-gay marriage groups, the anti-abortionists, the anti-liberal anything. Preach hate, and intollerance, and the love of Money.

As the Bible says, the "love of money is the root of all evil"

Not exactly something you hear from REPUBLICANS.

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