Rolling Stone's cover story is a scathing expose of John McCain's entire history and his self-proclaimed "Maverick" status.
Here's the article:
Make-Believe Maverick
If we can push this article into the headlights of the TM, get them to cite it, get the video to go viral, and get the un-committed to read it, it will be a job well done.
The piece is a compilation of many of the facts about John McCain that we are already familiar with here. But this is the first current article that puts the entire history of John McCain and his false status as a "Maverick" and "War Hero" together for all to read. As the author, Tim Dickenson states - It's about time we "vet" John McCain.
This is not a short read. The cover story is also accompanied by a video:
The piece is divided into sections covering John McCain's early history as a member of the Washington elite, with "insider" status, his military history, and his reinvention of himself as an outsider, his involvement with Keating, and his dangerous personality flaws and temperament.
Elite background
McCain spent his formative years among the Washington elite. His father -- himself deep in the throes of a daddy complex -- had secured a political post as the Navy's chief liaison to the Senate, a job his son would later hold, and the McCain home on Southeast 1st Street was a high-powered pit stop in the Washington cocktail circuit. Growing up, McCain attended Episcopal High School, an all-white, all-boys boarding school across the Potomac in Virginia, where tuition today tops $40,000 a year. There, McCain behaved with all the petulance his privilege allowed, earning the nicknames "Punk" and "McNasty." Even his friends seemed to dislike him, with one recalling him as "a mean little fucker."McCain was not only a lousy student; he had his father's taste for drink and a darkly misogynistic streak. The summer after his sophomore year, cruising with a friend near Arlington, McCain tried to pick up a pair of young women. When they laughed at him, he cursed them so vilely that he was hauled into court on a profanity charge.
Not a top gun - they dub him "Bottom Gun"
In the cockpit, McCain was not a top gun, or even a middling gun. He took little interest in his flight manuals; he had other priorities."I enjoyed the off-duty life of a Navy flier more than I enjoyed the actual flying," McCain writes. "I drove a Corvette, dated a lot, spent all my free hours at bars and beach parties." McCain chased a lot of tail. He hit the dog track. Developed a taste for poker and dice. He picked up models when he could, screwed a stripper when he couldn't.
In the air, the hard-partying McCain had a knack for stalling out his planes in midflight. He was still in training, in Texas, when he crashed his first plane into Corpus Christi Bay during a routine practice landing. The plane stalled, and McCain was knocked cold on impact. When he came to, the plane was underwater, and he had to swim to the surface to be rescued. Some might take such a near-death experience as a wake-up call: McCain took some painkillers and a nap, and then went out carousing that night.
In a section called "Violating the Code" his time as a POW is discussed in detail, and the author moves on in other sections to demonstrate how McCain used his POW history to promote himself.
McCain's pursuit of power, and his early billing as an insider, is well documented, along with his predilections for "pork".
As the Navy's top lobbyist, McCain was supposed to carry out the bidding of the secretary of the Navy. But in 1978 he went off the reservation. Vietnam was over, and the Carter administration, cutting costs, had decided against spending $2 billion to replace the aging carrier Midway. The secretary agreed with the administration's decision. Readiness would not be affected. The only reason to replace the carrier -- at a cost of nearly $7 billion in today's dollars -- was pork-barrel politics.Although he now crusades against wasteful military spending, McCain had no qualms about secretly lobbying for a pork project that would pay for a dozen Bridges to Nowhere. "He did a lot of stuff behind the back of the secretary of the Navy," one lobbyist told Timberg. Working his Senate connections, McCain managed to include a replacement for the Midway in the defense authorization bill in 1978. Carter, standing firm, vetoed the entire spending bill to kill the carrier. When an attempt to override the veto fell through, however, McCain and his lobbyist friends didn't give up the fight. The following year, Congress once again approved funding for the carrier. This time, Carter -- his pork-busting efforts undone by a turncoat Navy liaison -- signed the bill.
His hotheadedness, his infidelities, his sexism, and his push for the war in Iraq - all are here:
Privately, McCain brags that he was the "original neocon." And after 9/11, he took the lead in agitating for war with Iraq, outpacing even Dick Cheney in the dissemination of bogus intelligence about the threat posed by Saddam Hussein. "There's other organizations besides Mr. bin Laden who are bent on the destruction of the United States," he warned in an appearance on Hardball on September 12th. "It isn't just Afghanistan. We're talking about Syria, Iraq, Iran, perhaps North Korea, Libya and others." A few days later, he told Jay Leno's audience that "some other countries" -- possibly Iraq, Iran and Syria -- had aided bin Laden.
A month after 9/11, with the U.S. bombing Kabul and reeling from the anthrax scare, McCain assured David Letterman that "we'll do fine" in Afghanistan. He then added, unbidden, "The second phase is Iraq. Some of this anthrax may -- and I emphasize may -- have come from Iraq."
The final section covers his flip-flops - on torture, on drilling and on regulation.
The closing statement:
Throughout the campaign this year, McCain has tried to make the contest about honor and character. His own writing gives us the standard by which he should be judged. "Always telling the truth in a political campaign," he writes in Worth the Fighting For, "is a great test of character." He adds: "Patriotism that only serves and never risks one's self-interest isn't patriotism at all. It's selfishness. That's a lesson worth relearning from time to time." It's a lesson, it would appear, that the candidate himself could stand to relearn."I'm sure John McCain loves his country," says Richard Clarke, the former counterterrorism czar under Bush. "But loving your country and lying to the American people are apparently not inconsistent in his view."
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