Posted by
RogueReport.com on Wednesday, April 09, 2008 2:59:59 PM
Earlier this week, MoveOn.org
posted its “10 Things to Know About John McCain” list. The list’s writer combines an interesting mix
of inadvertent humor and slander. Below,
I have posted the list in bold, with my response to why each of the points is
wrong.
I hope that this exercise does not
seem futile. I feel that it is important
to spot the fallacies in statements such as these in an election year because
we are sure to be confronted with them with increased frequency as we draw
closer to November.
Attention to detail and making critical
distinctions in debates will be vital leading up to this election. We need to be able to spot these types of
ill-informed statements and non sequiturs so that an honest, intellectual
debate may ensue. Otherwise, we will
fall into the trap of playing liberal linguistic gymnastics by using broken
logic and accusations of intolerance to put us conservatives back on our heels.
10 things you should know about John McCain (but probably don't):
- John McCain voted against establishing a national holiday in honor
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Now he says his position has
"evolved," yet he's continued to oppose key civil rights laws.
Response:
So John McCain is racist for a
position he took years ago based on valid reasoning, but the left says we're
supposed to dismiss an Obama pastor who continues to make racist tirades? Why should we excuse Obama's pastor as a product
of his environment, but not excuse John McCain for being a product of his? Race was not a big issue for an Arizona
Congressman back in the 1980s, and John McCain opposed making it a national
holiday not because of racism, but because of a loss of perspective.
McCain is on record stating that
MLK should not have a national holiday while some of the greatest leaders in
history – American Presidents such as Abraham Lincoln – do not have one. Further, McCain stated that it would cost the
country too much money to make an MLK holiday viable. So because McCain believed we had lost
perspective and because he was a hawk on finances even back then, he’s now
being labeled as a racist.
For
further reference on what a truly racist perspective looks like, see Obama's
two autobiographies - each exuding racist invective on every page.
- According to Bloomberg News, McCain is more hawkish than Bush on Iraq, Russia
and China.
Conservative columnist Pat Buchanan says McCain "will make Cheney
look like Gandhi."
Response:
Well, I really have no complaint
here. McCain said the surge was the proper solution before the Bush
Administration suggested it.
A military guy being pro military? Who would have thought. Conservatives are
peaceful too. The only difference
between conservatives and liberals is that, while liberals refuse to discuss
war, conservatives are at least realistic enough to not take war off the table
as a last resort.
Merely insinuating that McCain is a
war-mongerer without substantiating it with any evidence other than a quote
from a conservative columnist who is breaking Reagan's 11th commandment is an ignorant
and self-serving statement.
- His reputation is built on his opposition to torture, but McCain
voted against a bill to ban waterboarding, and then applauded President
Bush for vetoing that ban.
Response:
That bill sought to restrict much
more than waterboarding, and afterwards McCain explained that he did not want
to hamstring the CIA. “None of those
techniques would entail violating the Detainee Treatment Act, which said that
cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment are prohibited.”
While McCain still opposes
waterboarding, he will not take other interrogation tactics off the table. This is the same logic as SCHIP (which I will
get to in a minute). Just because you
oppose one means to an end does not mean you oppose the end. McCain still
categorically refutes the use of torture, including
waterboarding.
- McCain opposes a woman's right to choose. He said, "I do not
support Roe versus Wade. It should be overturned."
Response:
So
what? I have no complaints with this
statement. As a matter of fact, not only
do I have no complaints, but I whole-heartedly agree with it. It merely seeks in evoke the emotions of
liberals without providing any substantive debate.
From the second of conception, the
fetus has a distinct genetic existence that is separate from that of it’s
mother. Thus, the fetus is not part of
the mother's body, but a body separate and distinct from the moment of
conception.
Now that little bit about the
fetus’ distinct genetic code is a scientific fact - not just an opinion seeking
to incite the emotions of like-minded individuals.
- The Children's Defense Fund rated McCain as the worst senator in
Congress for children. He voted against the children's health care bill
last year, then defended Bush's veto of the bill.
Response:
Exactly. McCain voted against SCHIP along with the rest
of the Republican Senators. For those
that don’t know, SCHIP was a bill that would have provided universal,
government sponsored health care for children.
This is manifest evidence of the
left's inability to make distinctions that do not serve their perception of the
world. McCain does not support SCHIP does
NOT = McCain hates babies. What it
equals is McCain favors the private sector over the government being everyone's
daddy. Enough said.
- He's one of the richest people in a Senate filled with
millionaires. The Associated Press reports he and his wife own at least
eight homes! Yet McCain says the solution to the housing crisis is for
people facing foreclosure to get a "second job" and skip their
vacations.
Response:
Once again,
McCain favors the private sector over the government. People got themselves into this crisis by
taking on mortgages they could not afford, and he believes people should work
themselves out of the crisis and not run to the government for help like a 5
year girl child who just cut her finger.
What is this statistic regarding
McCain's eight houses suppose to prove? That
McCain should start putting up the homeless in the houses he's not using? This is the epitome of a non sequitur.
Though it’s not directly relevant
to my present point, I felt it would be interesting to throw this in: The top
10 riches Senators are Democrats. That's
not a sweeping statement like, "The Senate is filled with
millionaires." That is a fact. Don’t let liberals like MoveOn.org trick you
with conclusory statements that are not supported by facts.
- Many of McCain's fellow Republican senators say he's too reckless
to be commander in chief. One Republican senator said: "The thought
of his being president sends a cold chill down my spine. He's erratic.
He's hotheaded. He loses his temper and he worries me."
Response:
This is so
blatant it does not even merit a substantive response. Once again, there are no facts here. MoveOn.org does not even identify the Senator
who made this statement.
Wasn't this supposed to be 10 things
I didn't know about John McCain, not 10 things other people have said about John
McCain?
- McCain talks a lot about taking on special interests, but his
campaign manager and top advisers are actually lobbyists. The government
watchdog group Public Citizen says McCain has 59 lobbyists raising money
for his campaign, more than any of the other presidential candidates.
Response:
Once again
the left is unable to make critical distinctions. McCain is against receiving money from special
interest groups, which opens the door to an exertion of outside influence.
However, that does not mean McCain
cannot hire lobbyists to further his OWN positions. There is a difference between being coerced
into positions by some one else and promoting your own positions through some one else.
When McCain speaks of his
insusceptibility to special interests, he means that he will not be subject to
undue influence from others seeking to promote their own agenda I instead of
his. That doesn’t mean McCain cannot
hire lobbyists to further his own positions.
- McCain has sought closer ties to the extreme religious right in
recent years. The pastor McCain calls his "spiritual guide," Rod
Parsley, believes America's
founding mission is to destroy Islam, which he calls a "false
religion." McCain sought the political support of right-wing preacher
John Hagee, who believes Hurricane Katrina was God's punishment for gay
rights and called the Catholic Church "the Antichrist" and a
"false cult."
Response:
Once again,
we can't take pot-shots at Obama for a religion he's endorsed for years, but
liberals can take pot-shots at McCain for speaking at churches where he is
courting votes?
So McCain
called Parsley his spiritual guide and Parsley made a few statements against
Islam. That isn’t the same as Wright
getting up on the pulpit spouting blatantly false conspiracy theories. Parsley’s statements have some evidence of a
rationale thought process.
Speaking of Obama's religion = not
cool.
Speaking of McCain's courting of
religious votes in an election that will be close = describes McCain's personal
views? And "Do as I say, not as I
do," screams the left!
- He positions himself as pro-environment, but he scored a 0—yes,
zero—from the League of Conservation Voters last year.
Response:
McCain
opposes drilling in the ANWR Province in Alaska.
He also cosponsored the first bill in
the Senate calling for mandatory reductions of greenhouse-gas emissions in
2003, and has also been a vocal critic of the Bush Administration’s inaction
regarding the environment.
One of the far right’s most
significant criticisms of Senator McCain is that they believe he continues to
pander to the global warming cult.
Whether he is pandering or not is up for debate. But he has proposed significant legislative
reform regarding the environment.
So my question based on those facts
is: Who gives a rat’s behind what the liberal League of Conservation Voters
says?
__________
MoveOn.org
concludes their list with the following statement: “John McCain is not who the Washington press corps make him out to be.
Please help get the word out—forward this email to your personal network.”
Ironically,
John McCain is not who MoveOn.org make him out to be, either.
COPYRIGHT 2008 JOHN M. ROGITZ