Ace states:
A poster at Hot Air just raised a good point about the McCain staff smear thing: this is a guy who instantly went on the attack against his own party when they brought up Jeremiah Wright as an issue, but won't go to bat while his veep choice gets attacked by people who worked for him.
McCain has always felt "dishonorable" when taking the side of Republicans. This is, I think, why he would not call Obama and the Democrats out on Fannie Mae/CRA: Because to do so would have put him firmly on the side of his fellow Republicans.
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However, this comment shows later:
There's a reason why McCain couldn't go after the Freddie/Fannie thing any more than he did.
Rick Davis ran an organization that was a PR front for Fannie and Freddie. He made $30,000 a month doing basically nothing but putting ads in newspapers. After that folded, Freddie Mac kept his firm on the payroll, just to have access to McCain. The New York Times ran the story immediately when McCain ran the ads attacking Frank Raines and Jim Johnson. McCain had to drop it or end up making Rick Davis the issue in the middle of the campaign.
McCain filled his campaign with lobbyists. That was the first and biggest mistake he made.
*****
Palin brought to his campaign interest, visibility, money, volunteers, fight, passion, and the only freakin' chance to get within reach of the Presidency. Who drew crowds? Palin. Who connected with regular voters? Palin. Who reinforced the platform of reform and real change? Palin.
McCain OWES it to her to defend her not now but yesterday. The report (as I understand it but that could be yet another smear) that he would not let her speak at the concession speech because his staff didn't want her to is a sad reflection of his leadership. The campaign was over and he still listened to his handlers advice? Ridiculous.
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It's the non-con careerist shits with pretentions sneering at the flyover girl who -- GASP! -- actually believes in stuff. (Not God but... Winning. Public service. Could you believe her naivete!)
*********
Must be some sort of combination of the hatred and terror they feel in her presence. After all, back in her home state they were the exact sort that she brought low once she rose to prominence. They don't want to risk seeing that level of housecleaning on the national stage; therefore they must do all within their feeble, flailing power to ensure that she does not return.
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This is an extraordinary, welcome opportunity to draw distinctions between RINOs and conservative Republicans - an opportunity that we would not have had if McCain had somehow won the election. Don't get me wrong. I'd have preferred the lesser evil of a McCain presidency to the greater evil of an Obama one. But since that's off the table, we have a chance to finally rid the party of these back-stabbing, politically spineless losers.
Let McCain be McCain, indeed, and he and the rest of the reach-across-the-aisle folks can take a walk. Now that the election's over, I'm done holding my nose.
A poster at Hot Air just raised a good point about the McCain staff smear thing: this is a guy who instantly went on the attack against his own party when they brought up Jeremiah Wright as an issue, but won't go to bat while his veep choice gets attacked by people who worked for him.
McCain has always felt "dishonorable" when taking the side of Republicans. This is, I think, why he would not call Obama and the Democrats out on Fannie Mae/CRA: Because to do so would have put him firmly on the side of his fellow Republicans.
*******
However, this comment shows later:
There's a reason why McCain couldn't go after the Freddie/Fannie thing any more than he did.
Rick Davis ran an organization that was a PR front for Fannie and Freddie. He made $30,000 a month doing basically nothing but putting ads in newspapers. After that folded, Freddie Mac kept his firm on the payroll, just to have access to McCain. The New York Times ran the story immediately when McCain ran the ads attacking Frank Raines and Jim Johnson. McCain had to drop it or end up making Rick Davis the issue in the middle of the campaign.
McCain filled his campaign with lobbyists. That was the first and biggest mistake he made.
*****
Palin brought to his campaign interest, visibility, money, volunteers, fight, passion, and the only freakin' chance to get within reach of the Presidency. Who drew crowds? Palin. Who connected with regular voters? Palin. Who reinforced the platform of reform and real change? Palin.
McCain OWES it to her to defend her not now but yesterday. The report (as I understand it but that could be yet another smear) that he would not let her speak at the concession speech because his staff didn't want her to is a sad reflection of his leadership. The campaign was over and he still listened to his handlers advice? Ridiculous.
********
It's the non-con careerist shits with pretentions sneering at the flyover girl who -- GASP! -- actually believes in stuff. (Not God but... Winning. Public service. Could you believe her naivete!)
*********
Must be some sort of combination of the hatred and terror they feel in her presence. After all, back in her home state they were the exact sort that she brought low once she rose to prominence. They don't want to risk seeing that level of housecleaning on the national stage; therefore they must do all within their feeble, flailing power to ensure that she does not return.
**********
****
This is an extraordinary, welcome opportunity to draw distinctions between RINOs and conservative Republicans - an opportunity that we would not have had if McCain had somehow won the election. Don't get me wrong. I'd have preferred the lesser evil of a McCain presidency to the greater evil of an Obama one. But since that's off the table, we have a chance to finally rid the party of these back-stabbing, politically spineless losers.
Let McCain be McCain, indeed, and he and the rest of the reach-across-the-aisle folks can take a walk. Now that the election's over, I'm done holding my nose.
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