Teflon McCain

Earlier today, Jay Weber, local right-wing squawker, posted a list over at Right View Wisconsin of Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama’s associations and gaffes that Weber feels have been overlooked by the mainstream media. Curiously enough, Weber didn’t a post a similar list for Republican presidential nominee John McCain, so I’ve done Jay Weber’s work for him.

Jay, if you happen to read this, feel free to post it over at RVW. I’ve even used your same style, so your readers won’t even know you didn’t write it!

While prepping for work this morning, I started to make a list of the types of things that would have knocked any other candidate for office out of the running. I included associations of Senator John McCain’s, as well as gaffes and mistakes he’s made.

I had to stop after 25 minutes because I just had to move on to actually going to work, but I could have continued on much longer. Folks, it’s amazing how many passes Sen. McCain has received. I know it’s an overused charge by talk show hosts, but any other candidate really would have been disqualified immediately, or mocked until their candidacy was a joke, if they had even a single one of these associations or mistakes.

I didn’t want this post to be gargantuan, so I give just the essentials. But these are all easily researched.

Associations:

Anthony T. Bouscaren. Sen. McCain served on the board of the U.S. Council for World Freedom (USCWF) with Bouscaren, who’s a known white supremacist. What other politician wouldn’t even have to answer questions about his association with a known white supremacist?

Related to the USCWF: The USCWF was founded in Phoenix, Arizona in November 1981 as an offshoot of the World Anti-Communist League. The group was, from the onset, saddled with the disreputable reputation of its parent group. The WACL had ties to ultra-right figures and Latin American death squads. Roger Pearson, the chairman of the WACL, was expelled from the group in 1980 under allegations that he was a member of a neo-Nazi organization.

Rev. John Hagee. During the Republican presidential primaries, Sen. McCain said he was “proud” to receive the endorsement of Rev. Hagee, who’s noted for his strong anti-Catholicism.

Pastor Rod Parsely: Noted for his belief that Islam should be destroyed, Sen. McCain called Parsley a “spiritual guide” before ultimately rejecting Parsley’s endorsement.

In 1998, convicted felon G. Gordon Liddy’s home was the site of a McCain fundraiser. Liddy, who served time in prison for his role in the Watergate scandal, also referred to McCain as an “old friend” when McCain appeared on Liddy’s radio show in 2007. Interestingly enough, Liddy has a rather “curious” fascination with Adolph Hitler:

When he listened to Hitler on the radio, it “made me feel a strength inside I had never known before,” he explains. “Hitler’s sheer animal confidence and power of will [entranced me]. He sent an electric current through my body.”

Sen. McCain’s running mate (and her hubby) have ties to the Alaska Independence Party, which has a stated goal of seceding from the United States.

Sen. Mccain’s got close ties to Freddie Mac through campaign manager Rick Davis, who until August was being paid $15,000 a month by Freddie Mac until last month through the firm owned by Davis. It’s being said Davis & Manafort, the firm owned by Rick Davis, had been kept on the payroll of Freddie Mac because of Rick Davis’s close ties to Sen. McCain, who by 2006 was widely expected to run again for the White House.

Gaffes: Some call Sen. Joe Biden a walking gaffe machine. Sen. McCain’s actually much worse.

In 2000, Sen. McCain is quoted as saying, “if all you run is negative attack ads, you don’t have much of a vision for the future…or, you’re not ready to articulate it.”

At a recent rally in Pennsylvania, Sen. McCain inadvertently addressed the crowd as “My fellow prisoners.”

At a campaign event in Pittsburgh back in July, Sen. McCain said when he was first interrogated after being taken prisoner in Vietnam, he named the starters on the defensive line of the Pittsburgh Steelers as his squadron-mates, despite writing in his book Faith of My Fathers that when pressed for more useful information, he gave the names of the Green Bay Packers’ offensive line, and said they were members of his squadron.

Sen. McCain has cited on numerous occasions… including a TV commercial (that is no longer online)… one particularly egregious example of “wasteful government spending” involving the study of grizzly bear DNA: “Three million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. Unbelievable. I don’t know if it was a paternity issue or criminal,” he joked, “but it was a waste of money.” The only problem? Sen. McCain voted for the study he was so fond of attacking as wasteful.

Back in 2005, McCain is quoted as saying, “I’m going to be honest: I know a lot less about economics than I do about military and foreign policy issues. I still need to be educated.”

At a campaign event in New Hampshire, Sen. McCain joked about attacking Iran, singing, “Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran.”

During a town hall in Scranton, PA in September, Sen. McCain declared that “there’s only one ethnic joke that can be told in American politics and that’s Irish jokes.” McCain then preceded to tell a joke about drunk Irish twins. Politico’s Ben Smith reported that Seamus Boyle, the president of the Ancient Order of Hibernian’s (an Irish-Catholic organization), said the joke “was really an insult to a whole nationality to be stereotyped as drunks.”

On September 24th, Senator McCain announced that he would be flying back to Washington “immediately” to concentrate on the current financial crisis on Wall Street. Though scheduled to appear on CBS’s “The Late Show with David Letterman” later that day, the McCain campaign called host David Letterman to cancel at the last minute, informing him that the Senator was “getting on a plane immediately to race back to Washington.” Stuck without a guest, the visibly annoyed Letterman chided McCain throughout his monologue, saying that McCain could simply of sent Governor Palin in his place, and questioned the “real” reason for Senator McCain’s sudden attention to his duties in Washington.

Flash forward 15 minutes later when someone informs Letterman that… not only was McCain NOT currently rushing back to Washington, but was in fact 5 blocks away (from 52nd street to 57th street) preparing for an interview with CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric.

In an interview in 1998, Sen. McCain asked, “Look, is this guy, Laden, really the bad guy that’s depicted?”

On September 18. 2008 Sen. McCain said that if he were president, he would fire SEC Chairman Chris Cox for his “betrayal of trust” leading up to this week’s financial market crisis. The only problem? The president can’t fire the SEC Chairman.

During a rally in Jacksonville, FL on September 15th, Sen. McCain adamantly reasserted that, despite the failure of yet another major financial institution, Lehman Brothers, precipitating a 500+ point plunge in the DOW, that “the fundamentals of our economy are strong.”

And this is where I had to stop…

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