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View Full Version : Who Is John McCain, and What Is He Doing to the Republican Party?




m72mc
02-17-2008, 11:50 AM
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_xtrabigg_080215_who_is_john_mccain_2c_.htm


Like many other long-time Republicans, I am concerned about the future of the party, as well as the direction that its leadership seems to want to drag this country. The Republican Party Establishment is apparently immune to logic and reason. Therefore, they will be willing to continue their path to political suicide by refusing to acknowledge what Ron Paul has been warning about at every debate: the party is shrinking, and is in danger of losing power and relevance.

Unless its leadership is willing to embrace new ideas and new members, the once Grand Old Party will be relegated to the dustheap of history, like the Whigs, Federalists and other once-major parties that refused to face reality and change, and rapidly moved from dominance to extinction.

"Who is John McCain? And what is he doing to the Republican Party?" Like many long-time Republicans, I have been asking myself this question quite a bit lately.

Now, a little disclosure: I have been asking the same Question about George W. Bush ever since the beginning of his first term. The George Bush that ran on a limited-government, fiscal responsibility, low-taxes, a strong military and a non-interventionist foreign policy platform in 2000 rapidly evaporated under a cloud of neo-con inspired smoke and mirrors. His actions since 9/11 have given us bigger government, increasing debt and defecits, a tax shift that lowered taxes only for the wealthy and corporations, a dangerously weakened (but well-funded) military, and a U.N.-inspired interventionist foreign policy that emphasizes nation-building and pre-emptive war on fabricated evidence!

With the media and the party bosses all but canonizing John McCain as the party's nominee, this is shaping up to be a massive rout of the Republican Party this fall. When you couple the leadership of the ticket by a hopelessly out-of-touch-with-the-electorate John McCain with the high number of Republican Congressional incumbents not running, what comes increasingly into focus is a huge Democratic Party takeover of two of the three branches of government.

Just like Ron Paul warned of the collapse of the dollar early on in the election, his warnings of the collapse of the party are similarly going unheeded by party bosses. Ron Paul is no Nostradamus, but he can read the signs and interpret the facts as well as anyone (apparently better than the rest of the Republican field!). People are staying away from the Republican Party in record numbers in the primaries, and the only growth in membership and support the party has seen in over a decade is from Ron Paul supporters- and they are being insulted, marginalized, and openly denigrated by the Party leadership and their flacks in the media.

The push to nominate the prototypical Washington Insider John McCain is a both a symptom, and a prime example of what is wrong with the Republicans. Here is a man whose central issue (continuing the war in Iraq) is vehemently opposed by at least 70% of the American electorate. Couple that with his lack of even a rudimentary understanding of economic issues (the number ONE concern of most voters), and you can see where this train wreck is going. His outreach to both 'moderates' adn 'conservatives' should give many pause, as it seems to indicate a lack of a firm political policy, other than one of election-time expediency.

It is dangerous for party leadership to ignore those in the party who dissent with its new-found 'orthodoxy' of Corporatism and War-Mongering - two policies that are antithetical to traditional Republican Party principles, and anathema to the electorate in general.

While not garnering a majority of electoral support, Ron Paul has shown a relatively steady and significant amount of core support. More importantly, he addresses the current glaring weaknesses in the party by offering a grassroots organization second to none in the Republican party, an energized and enthusiastic core of supporters who (contrary to the Mainstream media and 'conventional wisdom') are more educated, quite adept at both mobilization of electoral ground troops, and are more diverse in every respect- be it race, gender, economic standing, geographic location and even IDEOLOGY than the Republican Party's current base.

Given this situation, it is ridiculous that the Republican Party establishment would not even offer token support or even RECOGNITION to the Ron Paul wing of the party, amazingly ignoring the fact that it can use all the help it can get regarding support, fundraising and outreach to new members.

Unfortunately, it appears the Republican Party elite, rather than looking out for the good of the party or even the good of the COUNTRY, merely wish to maintain their OWN power base, even if it is detrimental to the party or the country in general. These elites continue to see the electorate in terms of the old 'Left/Right' paradigm, and expect the voters to be easily manipulated by the polarizing rhetoric that has served it so well for the last 20 years.

To thier detriment, this election has shown, if nothing else, that the Liberal/Conservative paradigm has shifted to a more three-dimensional battleground, where voters are looking for a deeper meaning in the candidates and are turned off by the empty rhetoric that has fueled so many past electoral victories. To think John McCain can suddenly become a unifying candidate is ludicrous on it's face, given his chameleon-like strategy of shifting, adjusting and changing not only his rhetoric, but also his historic positions and record of voting in the Senate.

It should be interesting to see just how the Republican Party treats the Ron Paul delegates to the convention, as well as their treatment of the Candidate himself. If they refuse to allow the Ron Paul delegates the access accorded other delegates, and attempt to marginalize him or even refuse to allow Ron Paul to address the convention, they will expose themseles as a closed party- unwilling to accept dissent or new ideas and members. That will probably be the last nail in the coffin of what was once the dominant party in American politics.

A party that refuses to accept change and turns its back on its roots has essentially sacrificed it's future by denying its roots, merely in order to futilely and cynically think it can manipulate the present political reality in it's favor.

Even more frightening than the Republican Party's future prospects is Dr. Paul's analysis of America's economic situation. Ron Paul is the Ranking Member - Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade and Technology and is arguably the most well-read and informed of all the candidates on economic matters. He doesn't rely on 'advisors' as John McCain does to feed him talking points about what is happening in the economy. Financial traders and business leaders enjoy Rep. Paul's regular grilling of the Fed Chairman in testimony before his committee.

Voters watching the last debate saw Ron Paul ask John McCain a very basic question about Presidential economics and the role of a key extra-constitutional advisory group, the Working Group on Financial Markets.
The only thing scarier that the look of utter confusion and bewilderment on Senator McCain's face as he attempted to comprehend the question, was his answer (or lack thereof!)!. Rather than responding to the question, he rattled off a laundry list of his friends in the Banking and Investment industry, saying he would rely on their advice. He never even answered the question put to him (which the moderator failed to point out), and it certainly wasn't the answer of a man well-versed in economics. Instead, it appeared to be the desperate scrambling of a candidate who didn't understand the question, and felt he could bamboozle the audience with a canned non-response. It apparently worked with the moderators, who failed to perform their most basic function of pressing the candidates for answers, and quickly moved on to the next question!
The Senator is even on the record as saying ecocomics is not his strong area of understanding! Not a great thing to mention when the economy is now the NUMBER ONE concern of the electorate!

Like many other viewers, at that point I asked myself: "Is this the man I want running the country?" Not surprisingly, I have been asking myself that question repeatedly lately, after watching John McCain expound on topics big and small, and seeing him come up with ideas and positions that cause me to scratch my head and wonder if he is REALLY this out-of-touch, or whether he is just relying on his 'handlers' to (mis)manage his campaign. He seems constantly to try to steer the discussion toward the ongoing wars in Iraq and, Afghanistan, the push for war with Iran, and the nebulous 'War on Terror'.

While that topic may be his biggest area of expertise, unfortunately for him and the Republican Presidential aspirations in 2008, McCain's positions are diametrically opposite of those of the majority of Americans, who are weary of both the never-ending war, and it's downward drag on the economy and Americans' rights and freedoms.

If this scenario continues to play out, the only votes John McCain will get in the general election are from the hard-core Bush supporters whom he strangely seems to be embracing, and those who would rather vote for Satan than a Democrat. Not a pretty picture for either John McCain or the Republican Party.

Feelgood
02-17-2008, 12:10 PM
Wow great article. Too bad this will never be in the MSM. :(

abe447
02-17-2008, 12:23 PM
If nominated, John McCain will lose in the general. Conservatives won't show up unless they can be convinced that McCain is their guy. He's in a dicey situation because if he starts pandering to conservatives, he may lose some independents who like him because of his supposed "maverick" style. He needs to convince conservatives on issues like Supreme Court Justices, where one more will give the conservatives control again. Also, Republicans will attack Obama like he's never been attacked before. Hillary can't attack him too hard for fear of backlash like what happened with Bill Clinton in South Carolina.

Hillary and Obama are pretty close on the issues, so McCain can try and paint Obama as the most liberal general election candidate since George McGovern. I'm just not so sure it'll work when Obama comes back and attacks McCain on a 100 year Iraq war and the bad economy of which McCain admits he knows nothing about. Has the country moved significantly left in the past few years? I guess we'll find out in November if Obama is able to stave off these attacks from Republicans.

Elle
02-17-2008, 12:31 PM
McCain will not beat Obama in the general election. If that is what the general election comes to.

AJ Antimony
02-17-2008, 12:40 PM
Just read it, very well written!

Myerz
02-17-2008, 12:43 PM
I hope he kills it!

At this point there's no point in a 2 party system...they are one in the same.

Sarge
02-17-2008, 03:55 PM
If it is any consolation, my wife said today she will not vote for McCain. Either will I vote for him.

I got into a heated debate yesterday, with a friend of ours, while our wives went shopping.

The 15 year old single malt scotch helped the debate.

He is for McCain. He thought that Iraq attacked us on 911. This am., I showed him the attacker's were from Saudi Arabia. I also sent him the McCain bomb, bomb, bomb you tube and the 100 more years of war in Iraq.

No response yet. I am thinking it is sinking in, and he is now trying to figure out who do I vote for in this election. He is against the Dem's.

He is a very outspoken engineer, so I am waiting to see his reaction after what I sent him this am.

This year is a mess. No choices without Dr. Paul.

Keep on trying to educate those that are listening to the media for their news.

It is going to take some time to wake people up, sad to say.

westmich4paul
02-17-2008, 06:42 PM
If it is any consolation, my wife said today she will not vote for McCain. Either will I vote for him.

I got into a heated debate yesterday, with a friend of ours, while our wives went shopping.

The 15 year old single malt scotch helped the debate.

He is for McCain. He thought that Iraq attacked us on 911. This am., I showed him the attacker's were from Saudi Arabia. I also sent him the McCain bomb, bomb, bomb you tube and the 100 more years of war in Iraq.

No response yet. I am thinking it is sinking in, and he is now trying to figure out who do I vote for in this election. He is against the Dem's.

He is a very outspoken engineer, so I am waiting to see his reaction after what I sent him this am.

This year is a mess. No choices without Dr. Paul.

Keep on trying to educate those that are listening to the media for their news.

It is going to take some time to wake people up, sad to say.

This is in fact the sad reality we face and why I feel we need this march on Washington D.C. to be huge. Even well educated people it seems are really not so educated. We have allowed ourselves as a society to become so complacent that we accept anything we hear as the gospel truth without even taking the time to do a little fact checking for ourselves.

I am not knocking on your friend because we all are to blame in one way or another. My biggest fear is that before we can get enough people to wake up to what is really happening in this country it will be too late to do anything about it. I just bought a book today by Pat Buchanan titled "Where the right went wrong". I did not even get past the inside cover and I was throwing this book in the trash. It almost sounded like a Ron Paul speech about how the neo-cons have harmed this country with big spending and a foreign policy that has weakened us and unnecessary wars. I was sooo ticked. I am like why is it then he would not endorse Ron from the beginning?

Maybe I have been a sheep for too long myself. But my God why will the conservative branch of the Republican Party push Ron to the forefront? I just don't get it.

xd9fan
02-17-2008, 07:47 PM
Basically, he Is what the party turned into.....