July 18, 2007
Props to the Senator for Arizona
I have made no secret of my opinion of Senator John McCain. His tendency toward statism demostrated by his sponsorship of McCain/Fiengold and his sponsorship of the failed McCain/Kennedy amnesty bill remove him my consideration as a possible candidate for president. I am not however, so blinded by my opinion that I cannot and recognize and acknowledge when he gets one right.
Senator McCain's statement to the Senate this morning was inspiring, courageous and forthright and I applaud him.
Mr. President, we have nearly finished this little exhibition, which was staged, I assume, for the benefit of a briefly amused press corps and in deference to political activists opposed to the war who have come to expect from Congress such gestures, empty though they may be, as proof that the majority in the Senate has heard their demands for action to end the war in Iraq. The outcome of this debate, the vote we are about to take, has never been in doubt to a single member of this body. And to state the obvious, nothing we have done for the last twenty-four hours will have changed any facts on the ground in Iraq or made the outcome of the war any more or less important to the security of our country. The stakes in this war remain as high today as they were yesterday; the consequences of an American defeat are just as grave; the costs of success just as dear. No battle will have been won or lost, no enemy will have been captured or killed, no ground will have been taken or surrendered, no soldier will have survived or been wounded, died or come home because we spent an entire night delivering our poll-tested message points, spinning our soundbites, arguing with each other, and substituting our amateur theatrics for statesmanship. All we have achieved are remarkably similar newspaper accounts of our inflated sense of the drama of this display and our own temporary physical fatigue. Tomorrow the press will move on to other things and we will be better rested. But nothing else will have changed.You can read the whole statement here.
Posted by: Stephen Macklin at 07:06 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
1
Damn. I'm no fan of his either, at least not of his politcs, but that's a hell of a forthright, truth to power" speech.
"My" Senator, Dick Durbin, was of course one of the minstrels starring in this Dog & Pony show. Would that I could trust my fellow Illinoisans to vote him out of office!
"My" Senator, Dick Durbin, was of course one of the minstrels starring in this Dog & Pony show. Would that I could trust my fellow Illinoisans to vote him out of office!
Posted by: langtry at July 18, 2007 10:52 AM (HtB0h)
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