Talking Points Memo compiled McCain’s repeated promises to run a clean campaign with the worst of his smear tactics. . . Hold onto your hats as McCain demonstrates the old saying, “do as I say, not as I do.”
Tag Archive for 'hypocrisy'
There’s something about an election year that brings out the audacity of politicians to utter what they’re really thinking sans filter. After the recently volley of pundits and candidates and administration officials releasing utterly absurd sound bites, I’ve concluded our political leaderships thinks we’re stupid.
Last month, John Goodman (who helped develop McCain’s health care policy plans) commented on an easy, cost-free solution to the problem of lack of insurance nationwide
‘So I have a solution. And it will cost not one thin dime,’ Mr. Goodman said. ‘The next president of the United States should sign an executive order requiring the Census Bureau to cease and desist from describing any American – even illegal aliens – as uninsured. Instead, the bureau should categorize people according to the likely source of payment should they need care.
‘So, there you have it. Voila! Problem solved.’
Semantics could reframe the debate on health care policy if the government only had to concern itself with citizens that are denied needed care. Under such terminology, the availability of acute, rather than preventative care would matter most.
Unfortunately for Goodman, the quality, equity, and accessability of emergency care is under fire in this country with growing waits, staff shortages and emergency room closings. But changing the language would make the numbers more palatable.
Next, Americans are angry that Congress is set to hand over $700+ billion to Wall Street after it bungled its business. 55% of Americans are against such a bail out. Last week, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson released his proposed bail out of the Wall Street wunderkind, just 2 1/2 pages in length, which included a statement that would elevate him to a status beyond American law or scrutiny.
Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.
Today, testifying before the Senate banking committee Paulson defended the statement saying it would have been “presumptuous” of him to define what sort of oversight this proposal needed if activated.
We gave you a simple, three-page legislative outline and I thought it would have been presumptuous for us on that outline to come up with an oversight mechanism. That’s the role of Congress, that’s something we’re going to work on together. So if any of you felt that I didn’t believe that we needed oversight: I believe we need oversight. We need oversight.
So writing in a clause allowing you to act with impunity, answering to no one, that’s just plain humble? Really? Did the Bush administration think Congress was just going to push their legislation on through, while handing over the keys to the kingdom? Americans have dealt with 8 years of an administration ignoring the law, so giving any one individual a free pass would be insane. I guess the Bush administration hoped the $700 billion figure would shock and awe us so, that we’d turn a blind eye to the assault on the Constitution.
My personal favorite, though, is the the McCain campaign’s categorical refusal to allow Palin to speak unscripted in live interview formats that would allow American voters the opportunity to hear her speak about her opinions on the issues. Today, Palin met with a variety of world leaders, but the pool cameras were only allowed to film about 30 SECONDS of a handful of those meetings. Originally, journalists were refused all access. Those 30 seconds were granted only after news outlets threatened to not cover Palin’s activities at all.
Since being announced as the VP candidate by McCain, Sarah Palin has sat for 2 interviews — one with Charlie Gibson of ABC, the other with Sean Hannity of Fox News. A CBS reporter assigned to Biden estimates that he’s completed more than 80 interviews since Obama announced his running mate.
This refusal to let her speak for herself has to make you wonder, what are they hiding? The hiding isn’t helping the McCain campaign; Palin’s approval ratings have dropped 12 points in two weeks among independents. Andrea Mitchell and Rachel Maddow discussed this tactic, likening it to how totalitarian regimes in other parts of the world treat the media. That Palin remains inaccessible, unwilling to discuss her positions, which are often out of touch with mainstream America, can’t be helping her approval ratings. . . It’s, dare I say, elitist, to think that a viable candidate would and could deny the public access to a thorough vetting of her ideology.
Deservingly, Campbell Brown called for the McCain campaign to “Free Sarah Palin!,” not just because voters have a right to get to know her before casting a ballot, but because it’s sexist to hide her away as if she can’t fend for herself. The McCain campaign and its surrogates have been slapping “sexist” stickers on their opponents and media channels, anyone who dares criticize Palin. It’s the ultimate act of hypocrisy that they’re sheltering “the girl” from the rough and tumble vetting McCain, Obama, and Biden survived on the campaign trail.
More so than any other election in recent memory, Americans are paying attention. It means that the blogosphere rumbles, the main stream media eventually gets around to reporting, and American households are discussing the antics of the power class in America.
When looking at the kind of sound bites and stories covered in the media, you can’t help but notice that the power elite doesn’t have a very high regard for the people that put them there.
I preface this labeling of hypocrisy by saying Bon Jovi is my favorite band, and I count Jon Bon Jovi as one of of my heroes when it comes to the philanthropic pursuits he (and his wife) support.
From PRnewswire on March 25th:
Bon Jovi has again selected NativeEnergy, a leading provider of high quality carbon offsets and climate crisis solutions, as the official carbon offset provider for its international Lost Highway Tour. Working directly with NativeEnergy, Bon Jovi has calculated and offset the carbon impact its 2008 world tour will have on the climate; offsetting more than 5,000 tons of carbon dioxide from the six-month tour…
“Through NativeEnergy we are making an investment in renewable energy projects that we hope will result in efficient alternatives to power our tours in the future,” says Jon Bon Jovi. “Until then, we want to help those who are seeking solutions to a problem we can’t afford to ignore.”
The press release and Jon’s frequent use of the word “we” implies that he speaks for the Bon Jovi collective, not just himself. Global warming BAD; we’re doing what we can.
That night, Richie Sambora gets picked up for a DUI, while driving a HUMMER. How is that remotely an environment-friendly choice of a vehicle? They spend more time NOT on tour than on tour. Sigh.
The US quietly informed British courts that US law enforcement has a right to kidnap foreigns who are accused of crimes in the United States. Apparently extradition hearings are just courtesies to the peons in the rest of the world who think the international law applies globally, inclusive of the US. Check out Leppard’s article “US Says It Has Right To Kidnap British Citizens.”
[Alun Jones QC, representing the US government] said that if a person was kidnapped by the US authorities in another country and was brought back to face charges in America, no US court could rule that the abduction was illegal and free him: “If you kidnap a person outside the United States and you bring him there, the court has no jurisdiction to refuse – it goes back to bounty hunting days in the 1860s.”
He cited the case of Humberto Alvarez Machain, a suspect who was abducted by the US government at his medical office in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1990. He was flown by Drug Enforcement Administration agents to Texas for criminal prosecution.
If senior members of the Bush administration were kidnapped and flown to Europe to stand trail for war crimes. . . do you think Bush would complain? Just saying that turnabout is fair play.
Am I alone in thinking it’s incredibly arrogant for the American government to hold itself to an entirely separate standard from the rest of the world? Our environment is failing in part due to the disproportionate amount of pollution the US pumps into the atmosphere, groundwater, and oceans. We should be jumping at every opportunity that keeps our planet lush and green for future generations to enjoy. Instead, per usual, we’re expecting the rest of the world to turn their backs on the American refusal to curb the use of a toxic chemical, while the rest of the developed world has managed move towards the elimination of pesticide methyl bromide. The US uses more of the ozone-depleting chemical than THE REST OF THE DEVELOPED WORLD COMBINED. Can protecting big business really be more meaningful than protecting a planet that billions of people live on?
Am I alone in my outrage?






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