You misinterpret me.
That's a pic of good old Hanoi Jane, darling of the left. LCDR McCain was shot down by either (he believed) a SAM or antiaircraft fire, like the guns Jane is posing next to.
Nope, sorry, not hate. I have great respect for the man who flew A4 bombers over North Vietnam when they were getting easy to shoot down. Hanoi Jane didn't shoot down any, but did have fun on her 'fact finding' tour.
Not so long ago, John McCain ran for president with his running mate Sarah Palin. They were not treated very well. They were abused by the left and the press, but I repeat myself. Remember the tee shirts, 'Palin is a c#nt'?
And now...the Democrats want to adopt LCMD McCain (I think he was promoted) as a voice of rationality in this age of Trump.
No, not hate. Cynicism.
[edit: LCMD should be LCDR. My bad. There is no such thing as LCMD. I believe he got a promotion during his stay in the Hilton. Maybe someone could google it]
The 'darling of the left'? Setting aside the fact that she was lambasted as a patsy or worse by voices from all over the political spectrum, and has many times admitted that she was an idiot for allowing herself to be used to cause pain to American servicemen and their families - I would wager that half the registered Dems in this country were born post-Vietnam and probably wouldn't recognize Ms. Fonda if she was standing next to them in line at the CVS.
And re your Palin rant - As a political independent and ofttimes fan of the Senator, I thought that John McCain's acceptance of Palin as his running mate was one of the worst political moves he ever made - an opinion he publically admitted to sharing earlier this year, both in his last book and the HBO documentary For Whom the Bell Tolls. Yes, on numerous occasions Ms. Palin's hypocrisy and ignorance have been exposed by the press - and she has almost always warranted the unfavorable coverage.
In contrast, Senator McCain, while far from perfect, was clearly a decent human being, passionate and dedicated to his beliefs but also capable of honest self-reflection and mutual respect for those of different political stripes. Someone who put love of country over party or petty ideology.
The kind of person who wouldn't use the occasion of the death of a respected elder statesman to try to sow discord and division.
The bar for respected elder statesman has dropped to guy who did a lot of shitty stuff but is now dead, so none of it happened. See: Nixon. If you want to know about McCain's character, look up what the Reagans and Ross Perot thought of his treatment of his first wife. Or you could read Make-Believe Maverick and learn about the privileged son and grandson of admirals, who got multiple passes on behavior that would have grounded any pilot without his connections.
He was not a nice or principled man, and he helped create the awful state we're in.
Are you saying his torture changed him into a better man? It didn't. He treated his wife really badly after he came back (really, look it up), and even his supposed principled stands were just noise. He opposed torture, but also voted for bills that enabled it. He made a show of voting against the bill to gut Obamacare, then voted for other bills that had the same provisions.
It is hate and there's simply nothing else to say but YOU'RE AN @SSHOLE.
Ignore his entire political career if you want, this man was a hero. While both democratic & republican presidents (Clinton & Dubya) found ways to avoid Vietnam, McCain went. And fought valiantly. And when captured, was offered early release because of his father--which he repeatedly declined. He endured torture for YEARS and stayed strong.
RIP Senator McCain. You will not be forgotten, nor overlooked by jerks looking to make cheap political points.
"It is hate and there's simply nothing else to say but YOU'RE AN @SSHOLE. "
Any hate I have is not for the late Senator. I don't hate the guy. I'm just not thrilled about the way the left/media will, in the coming weeks, endlessly compare the Elder Statesman Senator McCain to the horrible person we have as our (duly elected and that ain't gonna change) President.
Sarah Palin was criticized because she was running for VP and is a trashy moron. Remember when Trump insulted McCain and all prisoners of war? Remember when Trump pretended he had an ouchie on his foot to get out of serving in the military? Republicans treat those in the military like shit and are happy to send them to their death yet wrap themselves in the flag. Future generations will be disgusted by your actions.
Your comment relegates you to the Fish category of posters - nothing meaningful - a word salad of right winger grievances.
It is always a bit perplexing to me why people go out of their way to take one event (e.g. the death of a US Senator) to drag up pretty much irrelevant history of an unrelated event in a transparent attempt to get others to pay attention to them.
It is obvious you do not know or understand pretty much anything about John McCain. I was never a supporter of his politics and disagreed with his stance on many issues. Yet, it was easy to separate those feeling and recognize his hardships and sacrifices he made in the service to his country.
Unlike yourself, John McCain never dwelled on the mistakes and failings of others in an attempt to score political points. He long ago moved past the conflicting view points of the anti-war sentiments of those against the Vietnam War.
In fact, if you actually understood the dynamics of the times, you would be well aware of how he viewed those that protested. He accepted Fonda’s repeated apologies for her actions when she was in early 20’s. For example, when speaking of Jane Fonda’s actions in Hanoi years later, he clearly stated that while she was not one of his favorite people, she was fully entitled to express her opposition to the war in the fashion that she did. Think about your comments and compare them to McCain…McCain has a dog in the hunt but says let go of the past - you who have done nothing, try to resurrect divisive political thoughts from more than 40 years go. What does that say about you?
John McCain never really signed up to the vitriol of hate for Jane Fonda. He generally considered her to be a minor player in the anti-war movement. It is well documented that he had far greater issues with people like David Ifshin, Bill Clinton, Ted Kennedy, and John Kerry.
Ifshin, a campus protest leader who visited North Vietnam in December of 1970 to promote a “People’s Peace Treaty” calling for an end to the war. While he was there, he recorded a speech attacking the US war actions which was later broadcast as propaganda directed at American troops, including POW John McCain.
The short version of the story of their relationship is that Ifshin came to regret giving that speech, and eventually became active in Democratic party politics. He and McCain met in the mid-1980s — at an AIPAC conference and became friends. Ifshin died of cancer in 1996, and McCain delivered a eulogy at his funeral, saying that Ifshin had “always felt passionate about his country,” and “always tried to do justice to others.”
The history of how McCain’s legacy of bridging divides can perhaps be best understood by his efforts to help Clinton, Kerry and Kennedy reconcile with Vietnam. This all occurred despite McCain's own disabling injuries from years of torture in a Hanoi prison, and at a time when the political wounds of that conflict were still raw.
Your comments have nothing to do with recognizing or acknowledging John McCain’s passing. You resort to hateful rhetoric long since discredited. I leave you with a question:
Why is it that guys like you who never served in combat always seem to have such definitive views about military service and who is patriotic or who is not? You speak from the frame-of-reference of someone who knows nothing first-hand - you say things that you read or heard but nothing you offer is based on experience, the lessons one learns from living events real time and the introspection one gets from “walking the walk.”
the fact that he lost his battle to a horrible disease, and the fact that Trump made some rather stupid, offensive comments about McCain, made me just a tad more sympathetic with McCain than I had been, prior to McCain's illness. McCain didn't want Donald Trump attending his funereal, and I didn't blame him for that.
Like Boston's Mayor, Tom Menino, who stopped his medical treatments for his prostate cancer (which had metatastisned) because he knew he wasn't long for this world, McCain stopped his medical treatment for his brain cancer (glioblastoma), because he knew he wasn't long for this world, either.
any warm fuzzies for his politics, but my father-in-law succumbed to the same kind of cancer five years ago, and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone. Treatment for it on the latter phases is a cruel joke, apparently intended only to prolong the suffering while the last pennies are squeezed out of the estate.
I was in Ireland when Ted Kennedy died. We were staying very near the US Embassy in Dublin, and my MIL wanted a picture of the half-mast flag. At first the guards yelled at my husband, but, when he explained, they adjusted the lighting so he could get a good shot.
Facebook spat up that picture this morning - part of their Your Memories of ... "9 years ago". That's when we realized it was nearly the same day.
Condolences to the family but I've met my share of politicians and celebrities and found McCain to be a very angry man. I regretted donating to him. He admitted to a "short temper."
Bob Dole, Newt Gingrich and I'll throw in two Democrats, Joe Biden and locally Steve Lynch, some of the nicest guys you could meet.
The media fawning over McCain has everything to do with his jealousy and hatred for Trump and the "thumbs down" on the repeal of disastrous Obamacare which McCain had promised to repeal. He was jealous that Trump succeeded where McCain failed twice for President so he changed his mind on repeal to deny Trump another victory.
As for comparisons with Ted Kennedy, the treatment of their first wives is where the discussion begins. Out of respect, I won't get into his Naval service but ask anyone who served with him.
A man who violated his marriage vow of not committing adultery while his wife died from cancer? That's rich; Gingrich style.
McCain was at least not a ditto man. He did vote against the GOP's health gut bill. But then did he do that based on his personal experience of the potential devastation of a major health crisis? He also voted for what may amount to the worst law of this century so far: the bill that guts the Federal budget, pours billions more into the hands of oligarchs and now gives the party of the rich a rationalization for cutting or destroying Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. If the part of the plutocrats get away with that action then they will be the party of death; gutting the social and medical care for the elderly will lead to earlier deaths as we age. McCain's hand will be on that one.
Yet Kennedy had his flaws as well. They are enumerated by Ted haters all the time. I cried the entire weekend following his death. I am glad to have been part of the people who passed his coffin to say good bye.
So perhaps our public grief is not for the actual person but for what we saw in the person.
that McCain died almost nine years to the day that Ted Kennedy did even relevant to his death?
We're talking about a man, who after a lifetime of serving his country in many ways, finally succumbed to a very bad disease. To trivialize
his death with the "almost nine years after Ted K died" statement is just disrespectful.
Adam, this is not directed at you personally. I know you are only repeating what the MSM has been saying.
McCain and Kennedy were both the elder statesman for their parties. They both where highly respected, yet controversial figures. The fact the died of the same thing on almost the same date is interesting, even if it doesn't mean anything.
Maybe that is true of Kennedy. It is not true of McCain. He was not highly respected by his party. I think many people make the mistake that he was because he was so often the media's go to guy for things.
is that neither one of them had the good sense or decency to resign when they got the bad news. "Senator for Life" isn't a good look anyone claiming the mantle of elder stateman in a democracy. I didn't like it when Kennedy did it and my opinion of McCain is not improved by my realization that he did it too.
It's a coincidence because they had the same job. If two employees at the same 100-person company died around the same day on the calendar from the same thing, then that would be a coincidence too.
Stop trying to cast headline news as some sort of sacred obituary.
What his life would have been if we hadn't fought that stupid war in the first place. RIP John. I'll always remember when you said "I hate war" in one of your 2008 debates.
Sen. Ted Kennedy's request comes just five years after the Massachusetts legislature changed its succession law to require a special election instead of gubernatorial appointment to fill congressional vacancies – a change Kennedy supported.
---
As I noted on the 65 year old fireman (mandatory retirement birthdate) arrested on the Expressway on his last night of work, many of these politicians with no mandatory retirement, stay far too long. Who could forget ancient, longtime Democrat and KKK leader Sen. Robert Byrd shouting for his wife "Irma" in a confused, rambling manner on the Senate floor on C-SPAN?
At age 81, McCain could have yielded and endorsed another "maverick" but clung to the job. The AZ Governor will appoint a staunch conservative.
Before falling ill, his pal Ted Kennedy fought to require a special election to replace a Senator so the Republican MA governor at the time couldn't make the appointment. They forgot to change the law back to Governor's appointment when Deval Patrick was elected so we got Sen. Scott Brown (R).
As Democrat MA gubernatorial nominee and BU President Dr. John Silber once said, "when you're ripe, it's time to go."
someone with so litttle cognitive ability describe himself so well in so few words. You are indeed ripe, Fish. Now fuck on off like you’ve so eloquently quoted someone as describing.
It's actually painful to read your posts. Not because I disagree, which I do, but because I see them as so beyond the pale of what normal posts should be.
Ted Kennedy is dead in the ground. Obama has disengaged. Move on.
Good luck to you. I hate almost everything you post but still feel really bad for you.
Comments
Sorry, LCDR McCain
I I never realized I should feel sorry for you
A man who served his country for decades in so many ways has died and the first thing that comes to your mind is hatred.
Nope.
You misinterpret me.
That's a pic of good old Hanoi Jane, darling of the left. LCDR McCain was shot down by either (he believed) a SAM or antiaircraft fire, like the guns Jane is posing next to.
Nope, sorry, not hate. I have great respect for the man who flew A4 bombers over North Vietnam when they were getting easy to shoot down. Hanoi Jane didn't shoot down any, but did have fun on her 'fact finding' tour.
Not so long ago, John McCain ran for president with his running mate Sarah Palin. They were not treated very well. They were abused by the left and the press, but I repeat myself. Remember the tee shirts, 'Palin is a c#nt'?
And now...the Democrats want to adopt LCMD McCain (I think he was promoted) as a voice of rationality in this age of Trump.
No, not hate. Cynicism.
[edit: LCMD should be LCDR. My bad. There is no such thing as LCMD. I believe he got a promotion during his stay in the Hilton. Maybe someone could google it]
No, it's pretty clearly hate
The 'darling of the left'? Setting aside the fact that she was lambasted as a patsy or worse by voices from all over the political spectrum, and has many times admitted that she was an idiot for allowing herself to be used to cause pain to American servicemen and their families - I would wager that half the registered Dems in this country were born post-Vietnam and probably wouldn't recognize Ms. Fonda if she was standing next to them in line at the CVS.
And re your Palin rant - As a political independent and ofttimes fan of the Senator, I thought that John McCain's acceptance of Palin as his running mate was one of the worst political moves he ever made - an opinion he publically admitted to sharing earlier this year, both in his last book and the HBO documentary For Whom the Bell Tolls. Yes, on numerous occasions Ms. Palin's hypocrisy and ignorance have been exposed by the press - and she has almost always warranted the unfavorable coverage.
In contrast, Senator McCain, while far from perfect, was clearly a decent human being, passionate and dedicated to his beliefs but also capable of honest self-reflection and mutual respect for those of different political stripes. Someone who put love of country over party or petty ideology.
The kind of person who wouldn't use the occasion of the death of a respected elder statesman to try to sow discord and division.
That is, not a hateful shit-stirrer.
I'm not supposed to do this
The bar for respected elder statesman has dropped to guy who did a lot of shitty stuff but is now dead, so none of it happened. See: Nixon. If you want to know about McCain's character, look up what the Reagans and Ross Perot thought of his treatment of his first wife. Or you could read Make-Believe Maverick and learn about the privileged son and grandson of admirals, who got multiple passes on behavior that would have grounded any pilot without his connections.
He was not a nice or principled man, and he helped create the awful state we're in.
Personality change
Sitting in a hole being tortured for years can do that to you.
About those bone spurs ...
Not sure what you're implying
Are you saying his torture changed him into a better man? It didn't. He treated his wife really badly after he came back (really, look it up), and even his supposed principled stands were just noise. He opposed torture, but also voted for bills that enabled it. He made a show of voting against the bill to gut Obamacare, then voted for other bills that had the same provisions.
It is hate and there's simply
It is hate and there's simply nothing else to say but YOU'RE AN @SSHOLE.
Ignore his entire political career if you want, this man was a hero. While both democratic & republican presidents (Clinton & Dubya) found ways to avoid Vietnam, McCain went. And fought valiantly. And when captured, was offered early release because of his father--which he repeatedly declined. He endured torture for YEARS and stayed strong.
RIP Senator McCain. You will not be forgotten, nor overlooked by jerks looking to make cheap political points.
Jeebus, Mike, gather your wits.
"It is hate and there's simply nothing else to say but YOU'RE AN @SSHOLE. "
Any hate I have is not for the late Senator. I don't hate the guy. I'm just not thrilled about the way the left/media will, in the coming weeks, endlessly compare the Elder Statesman Senator McCain to the horrible person we have as our (duly elected and that ain't gonna change) President.
Lookit...this is UHub. I've upped my standards.
Up yours.
Sarah Palin was criticized
Sarah Palin was criticized because she was running for VP and is a trashy moron. Remember when Trump insulted McCain and all prisoners of war? Remember when Trump pretended he had an ouchie on his foot to get out of serving in the military? Republicans treat those in the military like shit and are happy to send them to their death yet wrap themselves in the flag. Future generations will be disgusted by your actions.
Jane Fonda probably saved thousands of GI lives
As did all early opponents of the misguided Vietnam war.
The optics weren't good but she was right in opposing the war and anything that led to the US getting out saved GI and Vietnamese civilian lives.
It was a mistake. Admit it and move on and respect those that opposed it in good faith. And respect those that fought it in good faith.
To dmcboston...
Your comment relegates you to the Fish category of posters - nothing meaningful - a word salad of right winger grievances.
It is always a bit perplexing to me why people go out of their way to take one event (e.g. the death of a US Senator) to drag up pretty much irrelevant history of an unrelated event in a transparent attempt to get others to pay attention to them.
It is obvious you do not know or understand pretty much anything about John McCain. I was never a supporter of his politics and disagreed with his stance on many issues. Yet, it was easy to separate those feeling and recognize his hardships and sacrifices he made in the service to his country.
Unlike yourself, John McCain never dwelled on the mistakes and failings of others in an attempt to score political points. He long ago moved past the conflicting view points of the anti-war sentiments of those against the Vietnam War.
In fact, if you actually understood the dynamics of the times, you would be well aware of how he viewed those that protested. He accepted Fonda’s repeated apologies for her actions when she was in early 20’s. For example, when speaking of Jane Fonda’s actions in Hanoi years later, he clearly stated that while she was not one of his favorite people, she was fully entitled to express her opposition to the war in the fashion that she did. Think about your comments and compare them to McCain…McCain has a dog in the hunt but says let go of the past - you who have done nothing, try to resurrect divisive political thoughts from more than 40 years go. What does that say about you?
John McCain never really signed up to the vitriol of hate for Jane Fonda. He generally considered her to be a minor player in the anti-war movement. It is well documented that he had far greater issues with people like David Ifshin, Bill Clinton, Ted Kennedy, and John Kerry.
Ifshin, a campus protest leader who visited North Vietnam in December of 1970 to promote a “People’s Peace Treaty” calling for an end to the war. While he was there, he recorded a speech attacking the US war actions which was later broadcast as propaganda directed at American troops, including POW John McCain.
The short version of the story of their relationship is that Ifshin came to regret giving that speech, and eventually became active in Democratic party politics. He and McCain met in the mid-1980s — at an AIPAC conference and became friends. Ifshin died of cancer in 1996, and McCain delivered a eulogy at his funeral, saying that Ifshin had “always felt passionate about his country,” and “always tried to do justice to others.”
The history of how McCain’s legacy of bridging divides can perhaps be best understood by his efforts to help Clinton, Kerry and Kennedy reconcile with Vietnam. This all occurred despite McCain's own disabling injuries from years of torture in a Hanoi prison, and at a time when the political wounds of that conflict were still raw.
Your comments have nothing to do with recognizing or acknowledging John McCain’s passing. You resort to hateful rhetoric long since discredited. I leave you with a question:
Why is it that guys like you who never served in combat always seem to have such definitive views about military service and who is patriotic or who is not? You speak from the frame-of-reference of someone who knows nothing first-hand - you say things that you read or heard but nothing you offer is based on experience, the lessons one learns from living events real time and the introspection one gets from “walking the walk.”
While I didn't agree with McCain's policies, overall,
the fact that he lost his battle to a horrible disease, and the fact that Trump made some rather stupid, offensive comments about McCain, made me just a tad more sympathetic with McCain than I had been, prior to McCain's illness. McCain didn't want Donald Trump attending his funereal, and I didn't blame him for that.
Like Boston's Mayor, Tom Menino, who stopped his medical treatments for his prostate cancer (which had metatastisned) because he knew he wasn't long for this world, McCain stopped his medical treatment for his brain cancer (glioblastoma), because he knew he wasn't long for this world, either.
I don’t have
any warm fuzzies for his politics, but my father-in-law succumbed to the same kind of cancer five years ago, and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone. Treatment for it on the latter phases is a cruel joke, apparently intended only to prolong the suffering while the last pennies are squeezed out of the estate.
That's cynical...
...but I know several people that were in your basic position that believe the same thing. Damn shame.
Maybe it has something to do with legal requirements to not end life with assisted suicide.
Breaking news: Scott Brown
Breaking news: Scott Brown relocates to Arizona.
They already have Kelly Ward
Kelly complained that McCain's family announced his imminent demise just to mess up the publicity for her bus tour.
Yep. The GOP has become the party of greedy and petty narcissists now.
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/politics/arizona/2018/08/25/kelli-w...
hold up
.. has become?
more like a barely-hiding-it horrible person when they get drunk. the horribleness has always been there, it just comes out alot easier now.
Kennedy
I was in Ireland when Ted Kennedy died. We were staying very near the US Embassy in Dublin, and my MIL wanted a picture of the half-mast flag. At first the guards yelled at my husband, but, when he explained, they adjusted the lighting so he could get a good shot.
Facebook spat up that picture this morning - part of their Your Memories of ... "9 years ago". That's when we realized it was nearly the same day.
McCain a very angry man
Condolences to the family but I've met my share of politicians and celebrities and found McCain to be a very angry man. I regretted donating to him. He admitted to a "short temper."
Bob Dole, Newt Gingrich and I'll throw in two Democrats, Joe Biden and locally Steve Lynch, some of the nicest guys you could meet.
The media fawning over McCain has everything to do with his jealousy and hatred for Trump and the "thumbs down" on the repeal of disastrous Obamacare which McCain had promised to repeal. He was jealous that Trump succeeded where McCain failed twice for President so he changed his mind on repeal to deny Trump another victory.
As for comparisons with Ted Kennedy, the treatment of their first wives is where the discussion begins. Out of respect, I won't get into his Naval service but ask anyone who served with him.
Praise for Gingrich?
A man who violated his marriage vow of not committing adultery while his wife died from cancer? That's rich; Gingrich style.
McCain was at least not a ditto man. He did vote against the GOP's health gut bill. But then did he do that based on his personal experience of the potential devastation of a major health crisis? He also voted for what may amount to the worst law of this century so far: the bill that guts the Federal budget, pours billions more into the hands of oligarchs and now gives the party of the rich a rationalization for cutting or destroying Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. If the part of the plutocrats get away with that action then they will be the party of death; gutting the social and medical care for the elderly will lead to earlier deaths as we age. McCain's hand will be on that one.
Yet Kennedy had his flaws as well. They are enumerated by Ted haters all the time. I cried the entire weekend following his death. I am glad to have been part of the people who passed his coffin to say good bye.
So perhaps our public grief is not for the actual person but for what we saw in the person.
And just exactly how is the coincidence
that McCain died almost nine years to the day that Ted Kennedy did even relevant to his death?
We're talking about a man, who after a lifetime of serving his country in many ways, finally succumbed to a very bad disease. To trivialize
his death with the "almost nine years after Ted K died" statement is just disrespectful.
Adam, this is not directed at you personally. I know you are only repeating what the MSM has been saying.
It's interesting
McCain and Kennedy were both the elder statesman for their parties. They both where highly respected, yet controversial figures. The fact the died of the same thing on almost the same date is interesting, even if it doesn't mean anything.
Maybe that is true of Kennedy
Maybe that is true of Kennedy. It is not true of McCain. He was not highly respected by his party. I think many people make the mistake that he was because he was so often the media's go to guy for things.
What's also interesting
is that neither one of them had the good sense or decency to resign when they got the bad news. "Senator for Life" isn't a good look anyone claiming the mantle of elder stateman in a democracy. I didn't like it when Kennedy did it and my opinion of McCain is not improved by my realization that he did it too.
If you got to make all the rules
And pick your salary, would you quit your job?
Don't hate the player, hate the game.
I believe I just
Helped myself to a little bit of both.
Looking for order in a chaotic world?
Folks still marvel that John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died on the same day.
Day
Or that the actors who played Mrs & Mrs Keaton on Family Ties were both born on 6/21/47.
It's a coincidence because
It's a coincidence because they had the same job. If two employees at the same 100-person company died around the same day on the calendar from the same thing, then that would be a coincidence too.
Stop trying to cast headline news as some sort of sacred obituary.
God bless John McCain
And God dam his critics. Let the man and his family know that we honor his courage and service.
Worth a read.
https://www.city-journal.org/html/john-mccain-16133.html
I could cut and paste a bit, but that would detract from it.
Imagine
What his life would have been if we hadn't fought that stupid war in the first place. RIP John. I'll always remember when you said "I hate war" in one of your 2008 debates.
Which stupid war, Vietnam, or
Which stupid war, Vietnam, or Iraq?
Kennedy-McCain refusal to resign shameless
---
As I noted on the 65 year old fireman (mandatory retirement birthdate) arrested on the Expressway on his last night of work, many of these politicians with no mandatory retirement, stay far too long. Who could forget ancient, longtime Democrat and KKK leader Sen. Robert Byrd shouting for his wife "Irma" in a confused, rambling manner on the Senate floor on C-SPAN?
At age 81, McCain could have yielded and endorsed another "maverick" but clung to the job. The AZ Governor will appoint a staunch conservative.
Before falling ill, his pal Ted Kennedy fought to require a special election to replace a Senator so the Republican MA governor at the time couldn't make the appointment. They forgot to change the law back to Governor's appointment when Deval Patrick was elected so we got Sen. Scott Brown (R).
As Democrat MA gubernatorial nominee and BU President Dr. John Silber once said, "when you're ripe, it's time to go."
Rarely have I seen
someone with so litttle cognitive ability describe himself so well in so few words. You are indeed ripe, Fish. Now fuck on off like you’ve so eloquently quoted someone as describing.
Let it go, guy
It's actually painful to read your posts. Not because I disagree, which I do, but because I see them as so beyond the pale of what normal posts should be.
Ted Kennedy is dead in the ground. Obama has disengaged. Move on.
Good luck to you. I hate almost everything you post but still feel really bad for you.
Both Kennedy and McCain have Durable Mothers
Rose lived to 104.
McCain's mother survived him: https://people.com/politics/john-mccain-death-mother-roberta-proud-legacy/
She weathered the years while he was in captivity, but, damn that's gotta hurt.
Just imagine if both moms
Just imagine if both moms happened to be named "Martha".
It was nice to read what
It was nice to read what Vicktoria Kennedy had to say about John McKain.
Oh
Kay.