Right Wing Nation
Senator McCain has not spent decades aiding and abetting people who hate America. - Thomas Sowell

Right Wing Nation

Interesting Poll

July 15th, 2008 at 6:29 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

First, a note to the idiot: A simple search on my blog will reveal that I don’t take polls very seriously. That’s just so you don’t make an ass of yourself again. Oh. To search the blog, scroll down to the search box, and type in poll, or click here (nobody can accuse me of not being helpful, particularly to the mentally challenged).

So as a point of interest only, here are the results of this AOL straw poll:

Total voters: 38,316

Obama: 10,495 (27%)
McCain: 27,821 (73%)


That’s A Lot Of Critters

July 11th, 2008 at 9:07 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

McCain has 22 pets:

  • 2 dogs
  • 1 cat
  • 2 turtles
  • 3 birds
  • 1 ferret
  • 13 fish

McCain leads among pet-owners, too.


Reality Check For MDS Sufferers

July 5th, 2008 at 7:20 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Andy Roth at Club for Growth did an interesting study. He looked at 162 Senate votes, and tabulated how frequently Senators voted with Harry Reid. Senators Coburn and DeMint came in at the top, voting the least frequently with the deranged Reid, at 28.4% and 29%, respectively.

Guess who came in at number three?

John McCain, who only voted with Harry Reid 32.4% of the time.

What’s most interesting about this is that some of the “real conservatives” whom pundits suggest McCain should choose for the VP slot have voted with Harry Reid significantly more frequently than McCain. Brownback, for example, voted with Reid 45.7% of the time, Sessions 43.2%, Cornyn 46.3%, and Thune, a solid conservative 50% of the time.

My suggestion for MDS sufferers is that they start looking at actual data instead of relying on their impressions, or what the pundits tell them. Deaf ears, I know, but I can try.


Vets Respond

June 30th, 2008 at 3:20 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

to that assclown, Clark:

Senator McCain “hasn’t held executive responsibility.”
FACT: McCain commanded, and revitalized, the largest squadron in the U.S. Navy.

Senator McCain’s military leadership doesn’t count, because it wasn’t a “wartime Squadron.”
FACT: McCain volunteered to serve in Vietnam and upon his return, endured months of physical rehabilitation in order to continue his military career and command a squadron.

Senator McCain “hasn’t been there [war] and ordered the bombs to fall”
FACT: McCain flew twenty-three combat missions in Vietnam in order to drop bombs on the enemy. He was also “there” for 5 ½ years as a Prisoner of War.

“I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be President.”
FACT: If serving your country, volunteering for combat, resisting the enemy, and receiving seventeen decorations for service does count for anything, then why are you on television, speaking as an “expert” on national security matters? Your personal attacks came not from a General with respect for the uniform, but from a political operative dispatched to attack the military background of a political adversary.

On behalf of Vets for Freedom—and thousands of veterans and troops still serving—we urge you to apologize to Sen. McCain for your comments. We also urge you to apologize to generations of veterans who served our country in uniform. Service matters—anytime, anywhere. We await and appreciate your response.

They’ll be waiting a long time, I predict. More at the link.


Cavorting With Hermann Goering

June 30th, 2008 at 1:01 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

And I quote:

At least John McCain knows how to handle himself in the presence of the enemy.

Here.


Uh, Come Again?

June 12th, 2008 at 4:07 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

So far, so good:

The Co-Chairs of University of Iowa Students for Hillary have just sent out a Facebook message imploring the group’s members to vote for John McCain

but then they jump the rails:

or, if that’s too hard to stomach, presumptive Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney.

McCain or McKinney? I’m having trouble wrapping my brain around this one. Or is the point “anybody but Obama”?

The letter attacks the media, Obama campaign workers in Iowa, and Obama, and claims Obama didn’t actually win the nomination but was “appointed by the Rules and Bylaws Committee of the DNC.”

“John McCain is an honorable man,” the letter states. “He is good personal friends with Hillary Clinton. He is qualified to be president. We do not agree with him on everything, and this is why we urge you to strongly support Democrats up for re-election to congress.”

“Barring a DREAM TICKET scenario or a scenario in which HILLARY WINS THE NOMINATION, which we see as unlikely at this time, we endorse John McCain for President,” it continues. “We will not campaign for John McCain, but we will vote for him, and urge others to do the same.”

Okay. I guess.


Good News?

May 30th, 2008 at 7:46 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Hat tip to Allah for this possible bit of good news. Until just a few days ago, we got lots of speculation about the VP choice from pundits, but zippo from McCain. Then, there was the story that McCain was seeing Crist, Romney, and a slew of others. Now (if the story is accurate), Culvahouse (McCain’s VP man) is in Alaska (and I doubt very much that he’s there to see Stevens).

Is McCain considering Palin?

I had been pretty undecided, but I’ve been gravitating toward her lately. Cheplick makes a case for Palin as VP here, and although I disagree with a few of his points, I agree overall. And follow Allah’s links, if you want to know more about her.

Nothing about this on VP Watch yet, though.

Crossposted at Blogs4McCain


Goodness

May 24th, 2008 at 1:48 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

This is what I would call an unhappy Democrat (there are 566 comments, so you probably won’t want to read them all, but cruise through some of them to see how unhinged some of these people are).


Lady With Guts And Sense

May 24th, 2008 at 7:15 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Sarah Palin just produced a good reason to put her on the McCain ticket:

The state of Alaska will sue to challenge the recent listing of polar bears as a threatened species, Gov. Sarah Palin announced Wednesday.

She and other Alaska elected officials fear a listing will cripple oil and gas development in prime polar bear habitat off the state’s northern and northwestern coasts.

Palin argued that there is not enough evidence to support a listing. Polar bears are well-managed and their population has dramatically increased over 30 years as a result of conservation, she said.

Climate models that predict continued loss of sea ice, the main habitat of polar bears, during summers are unreliable, said Palin, a Republican.

The rest of the article is the usual idiotic pseudo-scientific babble from enviromorons.


Damn

May 23rd, 2008 at 3:06 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I missed the McCain conference call.


Well, Of Course

May 22nd, 2008 at 11:53 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Don Surber sez:

The Minnesota Department of Transportation admits that Republican Sen. John McCain was right about that bridge collapse.


Advice For Democrats

May 21st, 2008 at 1:48 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

If you want to win in November, you need to produce a lot more of these “he’s too old” ads. It’s a great idea; keep them coming.

But this is your key to victory. Seriously. You really need to beat us over the head with this meme:

Jim Geraghty has this right, although he left one out: once may have been an anomaly, twice a mistake, three times suspicious, and four times is a strategy. A Democratic candidate running against Jack Kingston in Georgia who supports Barack Obama ridiculed John McCain’s military service in a campaign appearance yesterday. Bill Gillespie called McCain a “self-promoter” who came from “Navy royalty” who didn’t earn his way through his military career

This is a great idea. Make sure you play this one to death in Ohio and Pennsylvania. While you’re at it, since Kerry’s not doing anything other than windsurfing with his beret on, why don’t you have him coordinate with some of his fake veteran pals and Code Pink and put on some kind of Winter Soldier repeat, this time focusing on McCain. And get Kerry to put on his uniform and make a few ads ridiculing McCain’s service. Oh. And make sure you recycle lots of these. Lots.

That’s how you win in November, guys.


Confused, Or Just Stupid

May 20th, 2008 at 3:35 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Obama is producing ads for McCain now:

If I had needed a reason not to vote for Obama, that would have given me one — the very best one.


The Video

May 19th, 2008 at 3:29 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

McCain on Obama’s crap:

And if you haven’t seen this, it’s hilarious (good idea not to have anything in your mouth or you might choke):


Rare Red Meat

May 19th, 2008 at 1:41 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

McCain on Obama’s latest panty-waisted idiocy:

Before I begin my prepared remarks, I want to respond briefly to a comment Senator Obama made yesterday about the threat posed to the United States by the Government of Iran. Senator Obama claimed that the threat Iran poses to our security is “tiny” compared to the threat once posed by the former Soviet Union. Obviously, Iran isn’t a superpower and doesn’t possess the military power the Soviet Union had. But that does not mean that the threat posed by Iran is insignificant. On the contrary, right now Iran provides some of the deadliest explosive devices used in Iraq to kill our soldiers. They are the chief sponsor of Shia extremists in Iraq, and terrorist organizations in the Middle East. And their President, who has called Israel a “stinking corpse,” has repeatedly made clear his government’s commitment to Israel’s destruction. Most worrying, Iran is intent on acquiring nuclear weapons. The biggest national security challenge the United States currently faces is keeping nuclear material out of the hands of terrorists. Should Iran acquire nuclear weapons, that danger would become very dire, indeed. They might not be a superpower, but the threat the Government of Iran poses is anything but ‘tiny”.

Senator Obama has declared, and repeatedly reaffirmed his intention to meet the President of Iran without any preconditions, likening it to meetings between former American Presidents and the leaders of the Soviet Union. Such a statement betrays the depth of Senator Obama’s inexperience and reckless judgment. Those are very serious deficiencies for an American president to possess. An ill conceived meeting between the President of the United States and the President of Iran, and the massive world media coverage it would attract, would increase the prestige of an implacable foe of the United States, and reinforce his confidence that Iran’s dedication to acquiring nuclear weapons, supporting terrorists and destroying the State of Israel had succeeded in winning concessions from the most powerful nation on earth. And he is unlikely to abandon the dangerous ambitions that will have given him a prominent role on the world stage.

This is not to suggest that the United States should not communicate with Iran our concerns about their behavior. Those communications have already occurred at an appropriate level, which the Iranians recently suspended. But a summit meeting with the President of the United States, which is what Senator Obama proposes, is the most prestigious card we have to play in international diplomacy. It is not a card to be played lightly. Summit meetings must be much more than personal get-acquainted sessions. They must be designed to advance American interests. An unconditional summit meeting with the next American president would confer both international legitimacy on the Iranian president and could strengthen him domestically when he is unpopular among the Iranian people. It is likely such a meeting would not only fail to persuade him to abandon Iran’s nuclear ambitions; its support of terrorists and commitment to Israel’s extinction, it could very well convince him that those policies are succeeding in strengthening his hold on power, and embolden him to continue his very dangerous behavior. The next President ought to understand such basic realities of international relations.

Speaking of, the answer to my question (the one I didn’t get to ask on the conference call). More rare red meat:

“There should be no confusion, John McCain has always believed that serious engagement would require mandatory conditions and Hamas must change itself fundamentally – renounce violence, abandon its goal of eradicating Israel and accept a two state solution. John McCain’s position is clear and has always been clear, the President of the United States should not unconditionally meet with leaders of Iran, Hamas or Hezbollah. Barack Obama has made his position equally clear, and has pledged to meet unconditionally with Iran’s leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the leaders of other rogue regimes, which shows incredibly dangerous and weak judgment.” —Tucker Bounds, spokesman John McCain 2008

And yet more:

After The Palestinian Election, John McCain Said In A Statement That “Hamas Is Not A Partner For Peace So Long As They Advocate The Overthrow Of Israel.” “In the wake of yesterday’s Palestinian elections, Hamas must change itself fundamentally - renounce violence, abandon its goal of eradicating Israel and accept the two-state solution. These elections are evidence that democracy is indeed spreading in the Middle East, but Hamas is not a partner for peace so long as they advocate the overthrow of Israel.” (Office Of U.S. Senator John McCain, “Sen. McCain Reacts To Palestinian Election,” Press Release, 1/26/06)

From Davos, John McCain Says Hamas Must Renounce Its Commitment To The Extinction Of The State Of Israel. CNN’S BETTY NGUYEN: ” All right, let’s shift over to the global front. The Bush administration is reviewing all aspects of U.S. aid to the Palestinians now that Hamas has won the elections. And I do have to quote you here. A State Department spokesman did say this: ‘To be very clear’ – and I’m quoting now – ‘we do not provide money to terrorist organizations.’ What does this do to the U.S. relationship with the Palestinians?” MCCAIN: “Well, hopefully, that Hamas now that they are going to govern, will be motivated to renounce this commitment to the extinction of the state of Israel. Then we can do business again, we can resume aid, we can resume the peace process.” (CNN’s “Saturday Morning News,” 1/28/06)

CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux: “Straight Talk For Hamas By U.S. Senator John McCain.” SEN. JOHN MCCAIN: “Hopefully that Hamas, now that they are going to govern, will be motivated to renounce this commitment to the extinction of the State of Israel. Then we can do business again.” CNN’S SUZANNE MALVEAUX: “Straight talk for Hamas by U.S. Senator John McCain.” (CNN’s “Live Saturday,” 1/28/06)

Somebody’s the alpha dog in this race, and it ain’t Obama.


It’s About Time

May 19th, 2008 at 10:38 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Politico:

n a delicious piece of irony, many dispirited Republicans, devastated by Tuesday’s special election loss in Mississippi, now believe their savior to be John McCain — a not-so-constant conservative many of them also have long intensely disliked.

And speaking of, you’d think from reading this that McCain has been inviting Dems for weeks to conference calls, and Michelle has been pleading all this time and just now got an invitation — except that there were no Dems invited until last week’s call, and apparently, she’s been sitting there waiting for an invitation to appear in her inbox.

If he’s willing to take questions from hostile liberal bloggers, why not take some from conservative bloggers who represent substantial readerships with dissenting views on how best to make this country “safe, prosperous, and proud?”

He does. If she had done her homework, she would know all she had to do was join the mailing list and she’d get an invitation. That’s how all of us got them. But she didn’t do her homework, and now she’s whining about it.

Put on your big girl pants, Michelle. It’s your fault you didn’t get invitations, not McCain’s, not ours, just yours.


The Complete Text

May 18th, 2008 at 10:21 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

McCain at the NRA convention.


McCain At NRA

May 17th, 2008 at 7:35 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

More about it later — it’s Saturday, remember? Errands day. Scott’s roasted pork sandwiches day. Prince Caspian day. And I’m sorry to say, neighborhood yard sale day.

Link: sevenload.com


Thank God For That

May 17th, 2008 at 7:12 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Hat tip to Don Surber for the latest idiocy from the Huckleberry. While speaking at the NRA Convention, he heard a noise, and made a “joke,” except it wasn’t funny (even the attempt at humor escapes me, and to judge from the dead silence in the audience, the NRA members), and actually, fairly offensive.

During a speech before the National Rifle Association convention Friday afternoon in Louisville, Kentucky, former Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee — who has endorsed presumptive GOP nominee John McCain — joked that an unexpected offstage noise was Democrat Barack Obama looking to avoid a gunman.

“That was Barack Obama, he just tripped off a chair, he’s getting ready to speak,” said the former Arkansas governor, to audience laughter. “Somebody aimed a gun at him and he dove for the floor.”

What a moron — then, everything that has ever come out of his mouth since he crawled out from under his rock in Arkansas has been stupid. Can we stop this idiotic talk of putting him on the ticket now? And how did this blithering idiot ever get elected in the first place? Oh wait. This is Arkansas, the same state that elected Clinton. That’s how he got elected.


Dear Democrats

May 16th, 2008 at 12:51 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Please, please, please keep these ads coming! Lots of them! Please!

Just in case you haven’t seen it, here it is:


McCainBlogette Vids

May 16th, 2008 at 12:45 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Meghan McCain has a youtube channel.


2013: The Ad

May 15th, 2008 at 4:06 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL


The Call

May 15th, 2008 at 4:00 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I didn’t play secretary this time, so for a run-down, check out Fausta (where’s Hugh’s summary?) And not to echo Beth, but I’d like to address the idiot on the telephone.

First, since the speech was the topic of the call, and the idiot’s question, the whole thing is here, if you haven’t read it, or didn’t see it this morning. And before I address the idiot, let me address the speech.

The topic at first seems odd for a campaign speech. McCain’s speech was about what it would be like after four years of his presidency, not a standard topic for a campaign speech. I watched it, and you could tell that it threw people at the beginning, although that changed. I wondered myself.

But I listened. And I went from thinking it odd to finding it brilliant. In this speech, McCain played off Obama’s nebulous hope and change rhetoric, and grounded it in the concrete. Much of his speech was unrealistic (then, I’m a cynical old coot), but it was specific. There were no empty buzz phrases or rhetoric, just a list of accomplishments. It drew a start contrast between his administration and Obama’s (the Mad Irishman has laid it out here).

But on to the idiot, who referred to this part:

By January 2013, America has welcomed home most of the servicemen and women who have sacrificed terribly so that America might be secure in her freedom. The Iraq War has been won. Iraq is a functioning democracy, although still suffering from the lingering effects of decades of tyranny and centuries of sectarian tension. Violence still occurs, but it is spasmodic and much reduced. Civil war has been prevented; militias disbanded; the Iraqi Security Force is professional and competent; al Qaeda in Iraq has been defeated; and the Government of Iraq is capable of imposing its authority in every province of Iraq and defending the integrity of its borders. The United States maintains a military presence there, but a much smaller one, and it does not play a direct combat role.

She wanted to know why McCain had changed his mind and “set a timetable” for withdrawal. Seriously. I’m not making that up. Ask Beth.

McCain said she obviously had not heard or understood his speech (that was a lot nicer than I would have been), so he explained it to her quite clearly. When he was done, she asked, as if she hadn’t heard a word he had said, “But why 2013?”

And he explained that 2013 would be the year after four years of a McCain presidency, again, much nicer than I would have been.

When the message went out with the number and passcode, it stated that the topic of the call would be the speech. Did she not read it? She certainly hadn’t read or heard it, and she was incapable of understanding it when it was explained to her. Beth thinks she’s from the DNC. I think she’s just an idiot.

And Kate Shepard talks way too fast. Slow down. I didn’t understand a word she said except for the last four or five.

On the last call, I was dealing with a barfing dog the whole time. I had a question this time, but didn’t get it in soon enough. I emailed it. When I get an answer, I’ll post.


Another Day

May 15th, 2008 at 1:56 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

another conference call with McCain. More after the call.


Obama’s Cultural Hurdle

May 14th, 2008 at 11:47 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Jacksonian realism is based on the very sharp distinction in popular feeling between the inside of the folk community and the dark world without. Jacksonian patriotism is not a doctrine but an emotion, like love of one’s family. The nation is an extension of the family. Members of the American folk are bound together by history, culture and a common morality. At a very basic level, a feeling of kinship exists among Americans: we have one set of rules for dealing with each other and a very different set for the outside world.

Walter Russell Meade, The Jacksonian Tradition

When Obama and the Obamamaniacs objected to wrightgate, arugulagate, and bittergate, claiming that they were “distractions” and not “issues,” they demonstrated that they are unaware of Obama’s achilles’ heel. Obama’s fundamental problem is not political, but cultural. Hillary and her handlers know this; Obama and his disciples do not.

Forget Republican and Democrat. Obama’s cultural problem cuts across party lines. And unless he first wakes up and realizes the problem exists, then credibly fixes it, he has no chance in November.

In the last hundred years, no candidate has won the White House without the Jacksonian vote. Clinton operative Begala said as much, but negatively, when he said, “Obama can’t win with just the eggheads and African-Americans. That’s the Dukakis coalition. He carried 10 states.” Of course, the nutroots were in an uproar about the statement, but not even primarily because they perceived it as an anti-Obama comment. They objected for the same reasons Obama has the problem.

The Great Cultural Divide in the United States is between the Jacksonians and the Cosmopolitanists (perhaps the only major flaw in Meade’s excellent exposition of the rise of the Jacksonians in the United States is that he contrasts the Jacksonians — a cultural group — with Hamiltonians, Wilsonians, and Jeffersonians — political philosophies; I choose the term Cosmopolitanist to describe the largely urban and academic anti-Jacksonian cultural group, represented by the chattering classes). For a hundred years, the Cosmopolitanists have despised the jacksonians and have predicted their demise, yet the Jacksonians have become the dominant American culture. As Meade correctly states:

Urban, immigrant America may have softened some of the rough edges of Jacksonian America, but the descendants of the great wave of European immigration sound more like Andrew Jackson from decade to decade. Rugged frontier individualism has proven to be contagious; each successive generation has been more Jacksonian than its predecessor. The social and economic solidarity rooted in European peasant communities has been overmastered by the individualism of the frontier. The descendants of European working-class Marxists now quote Adam Smith; Joe Six-pack thinks of the welfare state as an expensive burden, not part of the natural moral order. Intellectuals have made this transition as thoroughly as anyone else. The children and grandchildren of trade unionists and Trotskyites now talk about the importance of liberal society and free markets; in the intellectual pilgrimage of Irving Kristol, what is usually a multigenerational process has been compressed into a single, brilliant career.

The new Jacksonianism is no longer rural and exclusively nativist. Frontier Jacksonianism may have taken the homesteading farmer and the log cabin as its emblems, but today’s Crabgrass Jacksonianism sees the homeowner on his modest suburban lawn as the hero of the American story. The Crabgrass Jacksonian may wear green on St. Patrick’s Day; he or she might go to a Catholic Church and never listen to country music (though, increasingly, he or she probably does); but the Crabgrass Jacksonian doesn’t just believe, she knows that she is as good an American as anybody else, that she is entitled to her rights from Church and State, that she pulls her own weight and expects others to do the same. That homeowner will be heard from: Ronald Reagan owed much of his popularity and success to his ability to connect with Jacksonian values. Ross Perot and Pat Buchanan in different ways have managed to tap into the power of the populist energy that Old Hickory rode into the White House. In both domestic and foreign policy, the twenty-first century will be profoundly influenced by the values and concerns of Jacksonian America.

Obama and his worshippers are essential, even prototypical Cosmopolitanists. Like all Cosmopolitanists, they insulate themselves by living and associating only with other Cosmopolitanists; this is essentially what Bernard Goldberg calls the liberal bubble. Cosmopolitanists not only despise Jacksonians; they fear them. This fear is the real root of the Cosmopolitanist love for gun control, although that’s another topic for another article.

Obama’s cultural problem is that he is a Cosmopolitanist. He not only has a cultural disconnection with the American character; he fears and despises it. We saw this with bittergate and arugulagate. We saw this with the “Why I don’t wear an American flag lapel pin” statement, and the pathetic attempts later to spin it away. Obama is out of touch, and it appears that he doesn’t even realize it.

Cosmopolitans don’t even have a basic understanding of Jacksonian America. This is why when they run Cosmopolitanists and lose, as Cosmopolitanists always do, they always speak of “learning to speak to” Americans, or “learn to talk about values with” Americans. If they had even the most superficial understanding of Jacksonians, they would realize how fruitless such ploys are.

Jacksonians divide the world into those within the community and those without, where the community is both geographical and cultural (Meade goes into this in great detail; if you haven’t read it, I suggest you do). Jacksonians also have a sixth sense, if you will, that allows them to tell whether someone is from the community or not. Cosmopolitanists are absolutely outside the community, and to use a cliché, a Jacksonian can smell a Cosmopolitanist a mile away, no matter how he phrases what he says.

As Michael Barone points out, we are seeing the Jacksonian/Cosmopolitanist split in the Democratic primary race.

In reviewing the maps of the Democratic primary results, in Dave Leip’s electoral atlas, I was struck by the narrow geographic base of Barack Obama’s candidacy. In state after state, he has carried only a few counties—though, to be sure, in many cases counties with large populations. There are exceptions, particularly in the southern states with large numbers of black voters in both urban and rural counties. But overall, the geographic analysis has pointed up to me a divide between Democratic constituencies—a divide as stark as that between blacks and Latinos or the old and the young—which has not shown up in the exit polls. It’s a division that helps to explain the quite different performances of Obama and Hillary Clinton in general election pairings against John McCain.

[ . . . ]

But looking at these electoral data suggests to me that there’s another tribal divide going on here, one that separates voters more profoundly than even race (well, maybe not more profoundly than race in Mississippi but in other states). That’s the divide between academics and Jacksonians. In state after state, we have seen Obama do extraordinarily well in academic and state capital enclaves. In state after state, we have seen Clinton do extraordinarily well in enclaves dominated by Jacksonians.

Academics and public employees (and of course many, perhaps most, academics in the United States are public employees) love the arts of peace and hate the demands of war. Economically, defense spending competes for the public-sector dollars that academics and public employees think are rightfully their own. More important, I think, warriors are competitors for the honor that academics and public employees think rightfully belongs to them. Jacksonians, in contrast, place a high value on the virtues of the warrior and little value on the work of academics and public employees. They have, in historian David Hackett Fischer’s phrase, a notion of natural liberty: People should be allowed to do what they want, subject to the demands of honor. If someone infringes on that liberty, beware: The Jacksonian attitude is, “If you attack my family or my country, I’ll kill you.” And he (or she) means it. If you want to hear an eloquent version, listen to

Sen. Zell Miller’s speech endorsing George W. Bush at the 2004 Republican National Convention. The academic who hears the Rev. Jeremiah Wright declaiming, “God damn America,” is not unnerved. He hears this sort of thing on campus all the time. The Jacksonian who watches the tape sees an enemy of everything he holds dear.

Note also that Obama has won primarily caucus states, and Hillary, primary states: Where the elite decide, they vote Obama. Where the people decide, they vote Hillary. Hillary and McCain both appeal to Jacksonians, and this is why Hillary would be a far more formidable Democrat opponent for McCain.

Because of the Democrats’ byzantine method(s) for translating votes into delegates, Obama is running slightly ahead of Hillary (I think — everybody’s counts differ from everybody else’s, but everybody seems to agree on this), even though Hillary has won most of the primary states, and most of the counties. I will put my head on the chopping block here and assume that Obama will be the nominee.

Obama and the Cosmopolitanists, to judge from what they way, hold a mistaken idea that running against John McCain will be more or less the same as running against Hillary. It will not. Obama will have a much more difficult race when his audience is the entire United States, and not just Democrats.

Barone:

Of course, the real Jacksonian in this race is John McCain. He is descended from Scots-Irish fighters who settled in Carroll County, Miss. Former Sen. Trent Lott, who once worked as a fundraiser for the University of Mississippi and therefore knew the folkways of elite types in his state very well, once told me that he had relatives who had known McCain’s relatives in Mississippi. “They were fighters,” he said, as best I can remember his words. “They would never stop fighting you. Those people would never stop fighting.” Obama gives the impression, through his demeanor and through his statements on Iraq, that he would never start fighting. That appeals enormously to voters in the academia and public-employee enclaves of America, who want to deny honor to our warriors and arrogate it to themselves (think of those bumper stickers that call for spending Pentagon dollars on teachers). Clinton and, more convincingly, McCain give the impression that they will never stop fighting until they have achieved victory (Clinton in Denver, McCain in Iraq).

Although Hillary and McCain may both appeal to Jacksonians, they are not the same. Hillary is an outsider, although she is an outsider who shares some Jacksonian values and understands Jacksonians. McCain is a Jacksonian. If Obama is to win the election, he must convince Jacksonians not to vote for one of their own, and vote for a Cosmopolitanist instead.

West Virginia is surely the most thoroughly Jacksonian state in the Union, and Hillary beat Obama 67-26 (CNN). West Virginia is the best barometer for how Jacksonians will vote, and Obama would do well to pay close attention. Hillary is the Jacksonian shadow of McCain, and a 41-point loss in West Virginia is not good news for Obama. Even the usually stuck on stupid LA Times realizes this. Will Franklin has an interesting article about this, from a slightly different perspective, and Bob Krumm also touches on it, and even the liberal Juan Williams acknowledges it.

The oblivion to Jacksonians and Jacksonian values is already hurting Obama. Cosmopolitans react to empty charges of racism with guilt; it is ineffective on Jacksonians, and often provokes anger. See The Other McCain or Dan Riehl for two examples. And claiming that “American” is a code word for some kind of redneck racism, as Harold Meyerson does here, will only anger and alienate Jacksonians from Obama.

In fact, that is Obama’s problem. He does not share the values of Jacksonian America. None of the methods that so effectively manipulate Cosmopolitanists works on Jacksonians. He is starkly Cosmopolitanist — and that has nothing to do with his race, but his culture and values. Focusing solely on “issues” — and I use sneer quotes because culture and values are not only an issue, but a fundament, perhaps the fundamental issue — will do nothing to endear Obama, and outsider, and therefore, distrusted, to jacksonians. In the past, Democrats have always tried to con Jacksonians by trying to make the Cosmopolitanist look like a Jacksonian (John Kerry in his duck hunting photoshoot, for example). But that’s always a failure, because a Cosmopolitanist can never pass as a Jacksonian. As Meade says:

Attempts to mask Hamiltonian or Wilsonian policies in Jacksonian rhetoric, or to otherwise misrepresent or hide unpopular policies, may succeed in the short run, but ultimately they can lead to a collapse of popular confidence and the stiffening of resistance to any and all policies deemed suspect. When misguided political advisers persuaded the distinctively unmilitary Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis to put on a helmet and get in a tank for a television commercial, they only advertised how far out of touch with Jacksonian America they were.

Just as they do when they discuss “how to talk to” Americans.

Obama’s problem is that he doesn’t know anything about the essential American or the essential American’s values, other than the sneering redneck stereotypes Cosmopolitans gleefully cast about (see bittergate). And I see no easy solution. The cultural divide is far to wide and deep, and Jacksonians are far more savvy than Cosmopolitanists realize. But if Obama is to win the White House, he can only do it by crossing the divide.

Crossposted at Blogs4McCain


Eerie

May 9th, 2008 at 4:26 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I could have written every word of this Rasmussen video report on McCain’s VP choice.


Heads Up, Team McCain

May 9th, 2008 at 12:51 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I agree with Andy McCarthy that Salter’s response to Obama’s “offense” is excellent — mostly. Salter says:

It is important to focus on what Senator Obama is attempting to do here: He is trying desperately to delegitimize the discussion of issues that raise legitimate questions about his judgment and preparedness to be President of the United States.

Yes, but that’s not the most important thing he’s trying to do — wait, strike trying, he’s done it. Again. Let’s look at the events.

Ahmed Yousef, political adviser for Hamas, said that Hamas supports Obama.

McCain pointed out that Hamas supports Obama — which is exactly what Yousef said.

Obama responds:

“This is offensive, and I think it’s disappointing,” Obama told Blitzer, when asked his thoughts about McCain’s comments that the terrorist organization Hamas wants Obama to be president. “Because John McCain always says ‘I am not going to run that kind of politics,’ and to engage in that kind of smear is unfortunate, particularly because my policy toward Hamas has been no different than his.

Stop right there, because he just did it. Do you see what he’s done? He’s changed the topic, from “Hamas supports Obama” to “My policy toward Hamas,” which is completely irrelevant to the issue. And Blitzer, of course, lets him get away with it, because he’s got his face planted so far up Obama’s rectum he probably didn’t even notice.

If this were only one example, it wouldn’t be worth much attention. But it’s not. This is what Obama does: Rather than answer a question, he skillfully changes the topic, and answers that. In the two Democrat debates I watched, he did exactly the same thing on every single question he was asked. He didn’t answer even one question. He essentially substituted another question, and answered that.

And they let him get away with it. Hillary let him get away with it. Edwards let him get away with it. The moderators let him get away with it. All of them let him get away with it.

This is important because Obama will be debating McCain, both in the press and on stage. The Democrats (as well as the moderators) let him get away with it every time he did it. McCain cannot. McCain needs to hold Obama’s feet to the fire, and not let him change the subject. I suspect that if he does, Obama’s answers won’t be nearly so polished and impressive. There must be a reason he always does that, after all.


More Whining

May 9th, 2008 at 10:42 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Flopping Aces notices that the Obamination is whining again:

Barack Obama chastised John McCain Thursday for engaging in “smear” politics, and defended himself from critics who question whether he is capable of being commander-in-chief, during a wide-ranging interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer — his first sit-down since the Indiana and North Carolina primaries.

It’s called speaking truth to asshatery, Obama. Let’s review, shall we?

During an interview on WABC radio Sunday, top Hamas political adviser Ahmed Yousef said the terrorist group supports Obama’s foreign policy vision.

“We don’t mind–actually we like Mr. Obama. We hope he will (win) the election and I do believe he is like John Kennedy, great man with great principle, and he has a vision to change America to make it in a position to lead the world community but not with domination and arrogance,” Yousef said in response to a question about the group’s willingness to meet with either of the Democratic presidential candidates.

So there it is. McCain said Hamas liked you — he didn’t say a damned thing about whether you liked them. Your response is what’s known as a strawman. A whiny strawman. McCain is right, and you’re a whiny little bitch — a whiny little bitch who hasn’t said a syllable denouncing Hamas’s love for you and support for your candidacy. And you missed a chance to claim you were being “swiftboated.” Remember, Obama, play the victim as much as you can.


A Contrast

May 9th, 2008 at 10:01 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Blue Star Chronicles notes that John McCain has released his military records to the public. John Kerry promised to release his, but still has not done so.

john_mccain_45.jpg


Classy Lady, Classy Campaign

May 8th, 2008 at 1:13 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Cindy McCain gets it, even if some slobbering unhinged bloggers don’t. On negative campaigning:

We’d rather not win than to have to do that. That’s not worth winning for. This is about being a leader and a person that can be a good example for our children, and a good role model. There’s many, many, many more things to this job than just being the president. You are an example. You have to — you have to be better than that. You have to be.

Hat tip to Don Surber, who reads MSNBC so you don’t have to.


Heh.

May 8th, 2008 at 11:45 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

From Blue Crab Blvd, this unsurprising look at the exit polls in Indiana and North Carolina:

Forget the horse race numbers for a moment: if the surveys are accurate, the polarization within the Democratic Party has reached critical levels. Nearly six in ten Obama supporters in Indiana say they would be dissatisfied if Clinton were the nominee — that’s (I believe) the high percentage of Obama supporters who have ever said that.

In both IN and NC, two thirds of Clinton supporters say they’d be dissatisfied if Obama were the nominee — I believe that’s the highest number recorded for that question, too.

The percentage of Clinton voters who say they’d choose McCain over Obama in a general election is approaching 40% in Indiana. Put it another way: in North Carolina, less than HALF of folks who voted today for Hillary Clinton are ready to say today that they’d definitely vote for Obama in a general election.

I hate to say I told you so, so instead, I’ll say pass the popcorn!


Comment Of The Day

May 7th, 2008 at 3:55 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

One of those “keyboard alert!” comments, from HotAir:

Paul supporters; they won’t want to support him when they find out the Republican convention is the same weekend as the International Star Trek convention

Good article, too. I was going to post something very similiar, but I’m way behind . . .


I Don’t Care Who You Are

May 6th, 2008 at 1:41 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

This is funny (Onion video).


Romney VP? Uh, No

May 3rd, 2008 at 4:11 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I’m stumped by those who want McCain to pick Romney for the ticket. I’m not bashing Romney. I like Mitt, always have. But I don’t see what he would bring to the ticket.

The first problem is something I’ll call the Romney Fickle Factor. This isn’t a reference to Romney; it’s a reference to those Republicans who flip-flop on their support for Romney. If you check out Red State or Hot Air or just about any of the big Republican blogs and scroll through the archives, you’ll see that the same people who trashed him when he was running are now saying he’s the best choice for VP. In fact, the only non-candidate blog I know of that has remained constant in their support of Romney is National Review (if you recall, they endorsed him). Then there’s that weird, irrational Dobson thing. When Romney was running, Dobson liked him. Now that Mitt has dropped out, Dobson is saying “we” won’t vote for McCain if he puts Romney on the ticket (if you can explain the logic there, you win a gold star).

Romney would bring a number of issues to the race that McCain does not need. Do we really want to have a replay of the Mormon debate? And with Mitt on the ticket, it would be a lot louder and nastier than it was during the primary race. Then there’s the flip-flop debate, which again, would be a lot louder than it was before if Romney is on the ticket. Romney’s healthcare plan didn’t come up much during the primary race, but now that it’s threatening to bankrupt the state, it will, and it won’t be pretty. McCain doesn’t need that.

That leads us to another problem: McCain has several powerful strengths, and putting Romney on the ticket would undo some of them, because Romney is weak on some of those issues. Flip-flopping, for example (and no, I’m not dragging up the issue for discussion). You can call McCain many things, but a flip-flopper or a panderer is not one of them. I don’t think Romney is a flip-flopper or a panderer, but he seems to be to many, many people.

A McCain-Romney ticket would be all about Romney. The press would be all Romney, all the time, and they’d pick him apart like they never did in the primary race. It would definitly be one of those “you ain’t seen ugly yet” moments.

Here’s another strength Romney would undo. McCain is the alpha dog in the race, and make no mistake, while this may not be a political issue per se, it will resonate. Let me quote this article from Lisa Shiffrin on NRO:

One problem Romney has, which I was acutely aware of the other night, is that he comes off just a bit too effete. He is smart and thoughtful. But each time John McCain said something that was smirky or a direct lie, (the business about timetables) [not a lie, by the way], after trying to correct it, Mitt’s natural inclination was to shoot a plaintive look at the questioners, as if to signal that he and they both knew that McCain was misbehaving. This was entirely redolent of the behavior of the teacher’s pet, who always knows the right answer, looking for authority to back him up in an argument with the class bully. But if you are president you have to be the authority, and you had better be able to slay the dragon right there and then, without looking to some offstage authority figure to nod in agreement that you are right. This little bit of body language reinforced whatever it was that McCain’s people meant recently when one of them was quoted saying, “Mitt Romney is the kind of guy that John McCain used to beat up at school.” (That’s a paraphrase.)

I found the remark obnoxious (as you would expect a grown woman to) at the time. But when I watched the interaction described above, I knew what that guy meant. And the fact is, you don’t want to vote for the bully, but you don’t want to vote for the goody two-shoes either.

At the time (Mitt hadn’t dropped out yet), there was something that made me vaguely uneasy about Mitt, although I couldn’t put my finger on what it was until I read Lisa’s comment. In fact, that comment, and identifying what was bothering me, pushed me toward McCain at the time. But my point is don’t underestimate the psychological. McCain exudes strength. Mitt does not. McCain needs somebody who underscores strength, not somebody who undermines it.

And the polls just don’t support a McCain-Romney ticket. There’s this Rasmussen poll, for instance:

Thirty-one percent (31%) of New Hampshire voters say they’re more likely to vote for McCain if he selects Mitt Romney as his running mate. Thirty-nine percent (39%) are less likely to vote for McCain with Romney on the ticket.

And here’s another, from Massachusetts:

Just 34% of Massachusetts voters think McCain should select former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney as his running mate. Forty-three percent (43%) disagree. Nearly half (48%) of voters say they would be less likely to vote for McCain if Romney was on the ticket. Just 27% would be more likely to vote for the senator, while 22% said it would have no impact on their vote.

So Mitt would be a liability even in his own state. That doesn’t, to me, recommend him as a VP candidate.

I haven’t seen any real reason to put him on the ticket other than some variation of “McCain needs a real conservative,” and as often as not — no, more often than not — this comes from somebody who was jeering at Romney for not being a “real conservative” when he was still in the race. The whole argument is specious, given the damage the big government daddy state Republicans have done to the brand: This is only the most recent of a string of polls dating back to the Terry Shaivo fiasco that document how much damage the daddy staters have done. A “real conservative” would only hurt McCain, because if he wins, it will be with support from the center. And I doubt that a Romney pick would help pull centrist votes.

I do like Mitt. But I don’t see how he would do anything but hurt McCain’s chances in November.


Hear, Hear!

May 3rd, 2008 at 8:47 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

McCain on the farm bill:

I do not support it. I would veto it. I would do that because I believe the subsidies are unnecessary and I do not believe we should have tariffs against imported products.

And that’s why it’s known as the straight talk express.


I Thought It Was Obvious

April 27th, 2008 at 7:23 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

but apparently it isn’t. Glenn Reynolds gets it, though:

Note that the impact of these denunciations is to discredit those who reflexively play the race card on Obama’s behalf, and to ensure wide circulation of the ad beyond North Carolina.

Exactly. Had McCain said nothing, the only people who would have seen that ad would have been in North Carolina. Because McCain denounced it, every network has run it, it’s gone viral all over the internet, and everybody is talking about it. By denouncing the ad, McCain greatly increased the number of people who (will) have seen it, defanged the race card that the disingenuously “post-racial” Obama will play again and again in the general election, and increased his standing among voters as the candidate who takes the high road.

McCain wins all the way around.


Astounding.

April 27th, 2008 at 5:19 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Let’s see, McCain has been running races — and winning them — since 1982, yet people who have never run for office, much less run and won, seem to know much more about campaigning than he does.

I find that fascinating.


More About The Call

April 25th, 2008 at 1:41 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

I see Hugh and Ed have pretty much given the minutes (Geraghty gives his account here), which is good, because while I was on the phone, the dogs had to go out, then come back in, then go back out, etc. Here, however, was McCain’s grab-em-and-hold-em line:

I will be Hamas’s worst nightmare.

(Yeah, I did kind of go off on the commenters. I really am getting sick as hell of these young, narcissistic, self-obsessed little brats. They’re getting to be as annoying as the hippie wannabes.)


McCain Conference Call

April 25th, 2008 at 10:44 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Lasted thirty minutes, and I just got off. I’ll address a few of the issues raised in a future post, but something really needs to be said. There were three questions about the North Carolina Wright ad controversy. McCain answered. The second question pushed. McCain answered. The third question was a glitch, after McCain had left the line.

Look. Let it go.

McCain made his point very clearly. He does not think going personal is appropriate for his campaign. He said that the issue itself was worthy of discussion, but that it was the tone of the ad that made it unacceptable. I thought that was pretty clear and concise, but apparently others did not.

One more time, folks. Drop it.

You may not agree with McCain, but that really doesn’t make much difference. He’s making the decisions, and he’s not going to change his mind. You’re wasting your breath.

I happen to agree with McCain here, as I did on the “Barack HUSSEIN Obama” introduction issue. If McCain continues to take the high road, and focuses on the issues instead of personality, that’s going to help. Let’s look at the 2004 gubernatorial race in Indiana. We had the incumbent, Joe Kernan, and the challenger, Mitch Daniels. The day of (and the day after) the election, I talked to quite a few faculty — nearly all Democrats, of course. The one thing I heard most often from those who voted for Daniels — the Republican — was that they did so precisely because he ran a clean campaign, and Kernan ran a dirty, negative campaign.

McCain knows that people are going to drive this issue home, and feel free. You aren’t part of his campaign. But don’t try to push him to do it, because he’s not going to, and because he needs to keep the campaign clean and focused. And I’m 100% behind McCain on that.

So by all means, blog it, push it, drive it home. Just drop trying to change McCain’s mind. It ain’t gonna happen.


The Achilles Heel

April 23rd, 2008 at 2:25 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Identity politics, as Mark Steyn points out:

Stanley’s analysis below is correct - and dear old Nora Ephron’s sneer over at The Huffington Post about whether Pennsylvania’s embittered white men are more racist than they’re sexist or vice-versa gets things completely upside down. The embittered white men are just about the only demographic weighing these candidates on their merits. The significant proportion of women and blacks in the Democratic base for whom identity politics trumps all is what’s stopping either candidate from gaining the momentum that would have emerged in a contest between two squaresville dead European males. It’s the identity-uber-alles blocs that prevent the black guy from finishing off the feminist or vice-versa.

Identity politics could very well bring the Dems crashing down in November, precisely because so many in the Borg Queen and Obamamorons camps are there solely for personal reasons. We have those who are voting for Hillary because they have ovaries, and we have those who are voting for Obama because he’s black. Whoever gets nominated, the result will be a lot of pissed off Democrats.

Just a couple of months ago, the press was trumpeting the fragmentation of the GOP, yet the fragmentation is healing, as all but the most rabid McCain haters are coming around. When Rick Santorum endorses McCain, the “disunity” is over. The party of fragmentation is the Democrats, because fragmentation can only come out of identity politics, and pet issues for pet special interest groups. The only way unity can come out of identity politics is to run a three-headed, transgendered, multiracial lesbian, and that, I’d love to see.

Actually, what I’d love to see is the liberals getting a clue, and figuring out that their multiculturalist identity politics will do nothing but splinter them and the nation, but Democrats seem to be severely allergic to clues.

So sit back and enjoy the show, because it will only get better — or worse, if you happen to be a realistic Democrat.


Looking Up For Johnny Mac

April 23rd, 2008 at 12:32 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Bull Dog Pundit has some interesting commentary on yesterday’s primary, discussing what the primary has to say about what will happen in November. But here is what caught my eye:

What shocked the hell out of me is that Hillary Clinton [won] Montgomery and Bucks County - 2 of the 4 “bedroom counties” collaring Philadelphia.

That’s a sit up and take notice moment. So I thought I’d head over to the state election results and check those counties.

Bucks County:
62.6% - 37.4%, Clinton - Obama

Montgomery County:
50.7% - 49.3%, Clinton - Obama

Chester County:
44.8% - 55.2%, Clinton - Obama

Delaware County:
44.6% - 55.4%, Clinton - Obama

She butchered him in Bucks County, and won by a slim margin in Montgomery County. McCain could carry those two counties in November, since to a large extent, McCain and Hillary connect with the same voters. But the Bull Dog has even more interesting news:

Obama only won 7 counties - Philadelphia (a given, and a 65-35% margin was way to small), Chester and Delaware county (the other 2 “bedroom counties), Dauphin (where Harrisburg is), Lancaster (where nearly all of the Democrats are inner city minorities. And don’t get fooled. When you hear “Lancaster” you may think of the Amish, but that’s outside the city), Centre County (where Penn State is) and a small county next to it [Union County, where Bucknell University is located].

What Obama needs to worry about if he’s the nominee is that Lancaster and Dauphin county will go Republican (a lot more Republicans), and many of the Hillary voters in Chester and Delaware could easily go to McCain.

And even if Obama wins the 4 “bedroom” communities, it very well might not be a big enough margin to make up for his obvious lack of support in the rest of the state. The reason Ed Rendell, and every Democrat presidential candidate since 1992 has won PA is because they racked up big enough margins in Philly and the “bedroom counties” to make up for the rest of the state. If Obama can’t do that, he’s in deep, deep trouble.

I think Obama is in trouble now. He’s not very bright, for one thing. He makes stupid statements, and then doesn’t have the intelligence to figure out that they were stupid statements, or understand why, so he spins — and basically repeats the stupid statements. His campaign staff, being cut out of the same crowd of over-educated idiots, are no help, and he’ll continue to do this all the way up until the election.

Obama also has no guts. He’s weak, and he whines. He didn’t want to debate Hillary in North Carolina, and he didn’t want to answer questions (actually, that’s happened several times already). He may be able to get away with that running against Hillary for the nomination, but not against McCain.

Obama runs fine as long as everybody is crying and fainting and trying to touch his robe. But he gets frustrated when he’s not being venerated, and he stumbles.

Many of those Hillary voters will pull the lever for John McCain in November, mainly because McCain has all the attributes they liked about Reagan (patriotism, strong national defense, and yes, social issues like guns and abortion), and where they deeply distrust Obama

Exactly. McCain can win without Pennsylvania, but Obama can’t. I’m not saying McCain will win Pennsylvania, but if Obama is the Democrat, and if McCain campaigns hard in the right places, it’s certainly possible — possible enough that the Democrats should be nervous.

Gotta get a prescription refilled and grab some lunch.


Today’s Must Read

April 20th, 2008 at 6:17 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

PJ O’Rourke visits an aircraft carrier, and has a few things everybody needs to hear:

Some say John McCain’s character was formed in a North Vietnamese prison. I say those people should take a gander at what John chose to do–voluntarily. Being a carrier pilot requires aptitude, intelligence, skill, knowledge, discernment, and courage of a kind rarely found anywhere but in a poem of Homer’s or a half gallon of Dewar’s. I look from John McCain to what the opposition has to offer. There’s Ms. Smarty-Pantsuit, the Bosnia-Under-Sniper-Fire poster gal, former prominent Washington hostess, and now the JV senator from the state that brought you Eliot Spitzer and Bear Stearns. And there’s the happy-talk boy wonder, the plaster Balthazar in the Cook County political crèche, whose policy pronouncements sound like a walk through Greenwich Village in 1968: “Change, man? Got any spare change? Change?”

Some people say John McCain isn’t conservative enough. But there’s more to conservatism than low taxes, Jesus, and waterboarding at Gitmo. Conservatism is also a matter of honor, duty, valor, patriotism, self-discipline, responsibility, good order, respect for our national institutions, reverence for the traditions of civilization, and adherence to the political honesty upon which all principles of democracy are based.

[ . . . ]

A strange flight it is–from the hard and fast reality of a floating island to the fantasy world of American solid ground. In this never-never land a couple of tinhorn Second City shysters–who, put together, don’t have the life experience of the lowest ranking gob-with-a-swab cleaning a head on the Big Stick–presume to run for president of the United States. They’re not just running against the hero John McCain, they’re running against heroism itself and against almost everything about America that ought to be conserved.

And here’s another article you should read.


Funny Of The Day

April 18th, 2008 at 4:03 pm by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Get Off My Lawn! (titled “Why it’s a bad idea for the Democrats to attack McCain’s age” by Hotair).

A lot of ink has been spilled about the newest Democratic attacks on McCain’s age. The group AmericansComingTogether created a video ad where twentysomethings ridicule McCain’s age for 90 seconds straight. Because American voters love snarky college students insulting their war-hero elders.

Only a few seconds in, I was ready to take my walking-stick and tan the hides of those insolent whippersnappers, by cracky. And I’m only 41.

Well, I’m older than that, although I think it’s funny. And it’s going to backfire, bad. But I do relate to the walking stick. I plan to use mine to whack smartass kids.

Anyway, go read the whole thing, because this age thing really is a bad, bad idea for Democrats, and he shows you why.


Pathetic.

April 18th, 2008 at 10:26 am by rightwingprof -- Trackback URL

Not funny, at least not ha-ha funny, but shake your head with a rueful grin, downright pathetic.