Monday, August 27, 2018

John McCain Has Left the Room

And entered into his just reward, aka The Void. 

Insert boilerplate hagiography here:







  John McCain made the supreme final sacrifice and clung onto life until the very end of the Hamptons and Martha's Vineyard seasons, so that the well-rested Ruling Establishment can all gather for one of this year's premier social events - his "full dress" funeral at Washington's National Cathedral. No need to interrupt their vacations or even waste their waning beach days on their eulogies, because these were all efficiently and professionally written long before McCain's demise.

He was such a selfless hero, in fact, that he even seemed to schedule death for the precise anniversary of Senate colleague Ted Kennedy's demise nine years ago. These men were so bipartisan they even shared the same disease. This coincidence has already taken on the status of miracle in Corporate Media World. Bipartisanship is not only neoliberal pro-capitalist propaganda, it has expanded itself right down to the deeply cellular level, and is probably even a sub-atomic particle. 

Margaret Thatcher, who herself was elevated to centrist sainthood by the media-political complex upon her passing, was only touching the tip of the sadistic iceberg when she proclaimed that "there is no alternative" to the rich sucking the life out of the poor. The rich are not like you and me. They literally control life and when they're on their own death-beds, they're not dying like other people and gasping for air. They have nobly decided to "discontinue medical treatment."

The McCain funeral promises to be every bit as over-the-top bipartisan and self-congratulatory a spectacle as Kennedy's and every bit as air-kissingly schmoozey as Tim Russert's. I am hoping against hope that when Michelle Obama gives George W. Bush another one of her carefully choreographed redeeming hugs, it will be presented by the Corporate Media Borg as a split-screen image showing a scowling Donald Trump playing golf. That way, the professional Mourning Class can bask in the glow of their bipartisan superiority and cry their crocodile tears like the reptiles they are.

Make no mistake. They'll be plastering on the hagiographic excess the same way that John McCain once accused wife Cindy of plastering on the makeup "like a trollop, you Samantha Bee word!"  

Yes. They are all Samantha Bee words, every last war-mongering, money-worshipping one of them. They are feckless dealers in death who save their greatest sorrows for their fellow purveyors of death, destruction, and violence.

So let us all join Hillary Clinton in raising a glass to her good drinking buddy John as he tumbles into The Void. Because no matter how hard we might try, the Celebration of His Life will be unavoidable for the better part of this coming week. It probably won't be as bad as Ronald Reagan's sendoff, but it will be bad nonetheless.

It comes as no surprise that Hillary's own spontaneously calibrated outpouring of grief for McCain was centered around booze. The woman who drowned her electoral loss sorrows in numerous glasses of Chardonnay even made a special (and obviously pre-recorded) cable TV guest appearance on the Morning After of the void-entering to reminisce about downing vodka shots with John McCain as part of a drinking contest in Estonia.



 Why not? Bragging about her bipartisan alcoholic prowess was one of her main campaign themes to show how authentically and bipartisanly barbaric she is. It was a real feather in her cap when McCain (a never-Trumper till the end, except the parts about giving him money for war and staying mute about the tax breaks to billionaires) obligingly called her "One of The Guys." Hillary saw McCain's  masculinization of her as one of the high points of her career.

As a matter of fact, NBC's "Meet the Press" made the hawkish Clinton-McCain friendship one of the highlights in what can only be the first of many fond remembrances. One clip showed (who else) Tim Russert interviewing John and Hillary in 2006 and as much as endorsing one another for president.

Typical of the alcoholic sub-genre of The Narrative is the glowing piece on the CNN website, in which the consumption of booze becomes the hallmark of a patriot. The prose is as purple as the facial spider veins of late-stage cirrhosis:
 Both politicians managed four shots of vodka; the rules were unclear, but Hillary -- McCain's one-time political rival -- was declared the winner, according to the restaurant proprietor (though in her own account, Clinton said they "agreed to withdraw in honorable fashion," rather than name a winner). 

 That image sums up the humanity and character of the late Senator McCain, who will be mourned deeply on both sides of the political aisle. He embodied a more moderate brand of conservatism -- one that could separate politics and friendship -- that now feels distant and very much missed.
No wonder America is going down the tubes. Not only, as Shakespeare noted, is Hell empty and all the devils here. We are being ruled and regaled by a bunch of drunken incestuous neocon neoliberal reptiles who simply refuse to die even when they're dead. 

Calling the Bipartisan Shots Against the Backdrop of Predatory Capitalism


8 comments:

Leo Noel said...

Lest we forget the unbridled glee Maverick McCain showed when a federal judge overturned Radical Obama's addendum to the Fair Labor Standards Act that doubled the threshold for overtime pay from $23k to $47k.

Jay–Ottawa said...

Thought for today: Everything is relative (h/t Einstein).

In the old days there were a few good guys in the Republican Party. For instance, Everett Dirksen and Richard Lugar. Sure, there were others. Once in a while they could come up with a clean vote, a class act, or at least a magnanimous gesture. We don't see much of that from either side of the aisle anymore.

Overall, however, those good Republicans favored the elites, not the majorities who voted them into office. McCain may be the last of that sometimes gallant breed.

Today's Republicans (along with most Democrats) from top to bottom are 100% bought, and many routinely carry on in a style consistently bigoted, coarse and boorish. Trump of course surpasses all in this spirit and incites more of the same from others high and low.

Once in a while McCain did something with a touch of nobility. No, not when he walked away from his first marriage, not when he voted against a Martin Luther King, Jr. Day for Arizona, and certainly not when he voted for more aggression overseas, more funding for war and more bailouts for the superrich, as with the recent tax breaks for billionaires.

To his credit in the narrrow beau geste department, there was his non cooperation with captors in North Vietnam coupled with his not agreeing to be among the first in prisoner exchanges, thanks to his father's rank as an admiral. With Senator Russ Feingold he worked seriously over time for a measure of campaign finance reform. Then there was his response to a racist at a town hall in October 2008: "No ma'am, [Obama]'s a decent family man, citizen, that I just happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues, and that's what this campaign is all about."

One can seriously wonder whether we might all have been better off––or at least not worse off––if McCain had defeated Obama in 2008. Who would have turned out to be the greater liar? Who would have betrayed his voters less than the other? Either way, would we have ended up in just about the same place as we discovered ourselves in 2016? The country's reaction to the Obama years served up Trump. Would a McCain Administration have led to something worse?

On balance, however, John McCain deserves no praise as a great public servant. Most of his life he was a tool of base endeavours and ignoble elites. The elites who benefit from such works are the ones who praise him today as he heads across the Styx. If there's anyone on the other side, lets hope they are more generous than he was on most of his days among us.

Anna Radicalova said...

Popeye McCain was one of the Keating 5. He seemed to try hard to redeem himself after that.

Popeye and Obama agreed to accept public campaign financing, then Obama broke his pledge and opted out so he could collect his golden eggs from Goldman Sachs, undermining Popeye's efforts towards campaign finance reform.

Popeye suspended his campaign to engage in bailout negotiations while Obama continued his campaign, giving lip service to putting people over Wall St then put Goldman Sachs in charge so banksters could be rewarded with trillions to invest in making themselves richer instead of making loans to help the economy recover.

Things could have ended up differently for the banksters and homeowners if Popeye had become President instead of Obama.

Erik Roth said...


To complement this piece, please also check this out:

Obit Omit: What the Media Leaves Out of John McCain’s Record of Militarism and Misogyny

https://www.democracynow.org/2018/8/27/obit_omit_what_the_media_leaves

We host a roundtable discussion on the life and legacy of John McCain, the Vietnam veteran and former prisoner of war, six-term senator and two-time presidential candidate, who died Saturday at the age of 81 of brain cancer. We speak with Mehdi Hasan, columnist for The Intercept and host of their “Deconstructed” podcast. He’s also host of “UpFront” at Al Jazeera English. He’s been tweeting in response to McCain’s death and wrote a piece last year headlined “Despite What the Press Says, 'Maverick' McCain Has a Long and Distinguished Record of Horribleness.” We are also joined by Medea Benjamin, co-founder of CodePink, which McCain once referred to as “low-life scum,” and by Norman Solomon, national coordinator of RootsAction, executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and author of “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.”


Anna Radicalova said...

After John McCain called Jimmy Carter a 'bad' President, Carter responded by saying “That’s a compliment to be coming from a warmonger.”

“I have great admiration for him – Senator McCain was a hero in the navy as I was and suffered terribly as a prisoner of war – but in almost every debate in the Senate and public TV he always makes the choice of the most violent response to any challenge to our nation.

“He wants to go to war in this country and that country, and when President Obama refrains from taking the most extreme military action that’s when John McCain compares him to me.

“I was lucky enough, when I was president, to keep our country at peace and provide peace for others. I was lucky enough to go through my four years — we never dropped a bomb, never fired a missile, we never shot a bullet.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/jimmy-carter-says-hed-rather-be-a-bad-president-than-a-warmonger-following-obama-comparison-9878567.html

Jay–Ottawa said...

Paul Street just posted an essay wherein (among many other more important matters) he describes the phases of remorse he usually goes through after trashing a politician whom many well-intentioned but low information citizens have admired for the wrong reasons. Over the last couple of days, after reading a dozen or more critical essays, here and elsewhere, about John McCain's departure and legacy, I find I'm going through the same phases as Street.

"The guilt fades in stage three. That’s when I learn that I was actually too mild about the rightward faults of the politico and/or political phenomenon I critiqued. It dawns on me that 'hey, I’m not a doctrinaire purist after all. If anything, I was too polite!'"

https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/08/29/no-remorse-reflections-on-radical-purism/

mistah charley, ph.d. said...

truly, as krishna says in the gita, humans have divine and demonic tendencies

mccain suffered much, and did a good thing once in a while

may the creative forces of the universe have mercy on his soul, and mine, if any

Erik Roth said...


Thanks much to Anna & Jay for additional insights.

Among a pathetic plethora of John McCain’s faults, though it didn’t come to pass, picking Sarah Palin as his running mate ranks as one of the most rank.
That crucial choice of V.P. by Presidential candidates, and the ability to leave that up to the party nominee (or powers that be), reveals much of what’s going on behind the scenes, and poses a serious systemic problem for our would-be democracy.
Consider just a few we’ve had foisted upon us: Richard Nixon himself, then Spiro Agnew, George H.W. Bush himself, then Dan Quayle, and Joe Lieberman, whom MaCain also favored, and finally to that list, Hillary Clinton picked Tim Kaine, and now we have Trump's holier-than-thou Mike Pence to confront upon the Donald's due impeachment.