Still looking for evidence of McCain’s ‘new thinking’
In a column that has very little to do with John McCain, Newsweek’s Fareed Zakaria added this praise for no apparent reason. (via Kevin Drum)
Political ideologies do not exist in a vacuum. They need to meet the problems of the world as it exists. Ordinary conservatives understand this, which may be why — despite the urgings of their ideological gurus — they have voted for McCain. He seems to understand that a new world requires new thinking.
Now, Zakaria didn’t offer any examples to bolster this assertion, and I have a hunch I know why — because there are no examples.
Where is this “new thinking”?
As Kevin put it:
Whatever else you can say about McCain, “new thinking” pretty clearly isn’t part of his appeal. On foreign policy, he’s for the status quo squared. His only real problem with George Bush is that he hasn’t been militaristic enough. And on domestic policy he’s practically famous for not paying attention to much of anything beyond his two or three pet issues. If running for president requires him to embrace Jerry Falwell, swear fealty to supply-side tax drivel, and repudiate his own immigration plan — well, he’s perfectly willing to do it. As near as I can tell, he really doesn’t care enough about any of this stuff to think it’s worth standing up against.
Personally, I think the Republican electorate did a pretty good job of choosing the least repellent of the candidates they were offered. But they sure didn’t do it because John McCain was the candidate of fresh ideas. Where did Zakaria come up with that?
It’s a reminder of one of the more disconcerting aspects of the media’s coverage of McCain. Reporters tend to praise him for characteristics that don’t exist in reality. As the general election phase unfolds, it’s a trend to keep an eye on.
Danp
says:You kind of have to feel sorry for Republicans who voted for McCain because he was “the least repellent of the candidates they were offered.” How were they to know he was going to discard his old principles (or those they thought he posessed) and replace them with theprinciples of the most repellent candidates offered? Maybe by “new thinking”, Zakaria meant principles McCain had never embraced before.
petorado
says:McCain’s new thinking on capturing terrorists who attack us, as posted on Atrios, “it appears that McCain will chase Osama bin Laden to the gates of hell, unless of course those gates are in Pakistan.”
“New Thinking,” politically tortured logic, same thing.
Ohioan
says:In Zakaria’s defense, the context is that 9/11 fearmongering (Guiliani, Romney) and brown-skin-bashing (Romney, Huckabee) failed for conservatives, and hence only “moderate” Republicans on those 2 issues stand a chance. He was probably referring to new thinking WITHIN the Repub party…
I would dispute the fearmongering part – Zakaria doesn’t expect McCain to say “If you elect Obama, the terrorists win”, but I do. However I agree with him on the immigration part – this is the biggest failure of conservatives in the past year, and we are justified in celebrating the fact that it is certain to be a non-issue for the rest of the year (McCain could flop-flop on immigration, but I doubt it)
Tom Cleaver
says:As the general election phase unfolds, it’s a trend to keep an eye on.
These otherwise-unemployable halfwits are going to have to be whacked and whacked hard and often to get them to do their job. No provocation should be too small to give them a taste of Louisville Slugger. The Right got them potty-trained, now it’s our turn to house-train them.
Lance
says:McCain.
The independents who vote for him think he’s ‘authentic’.
And then they think he’s not really for all the conservative policies that he’s promised to support.
Do you have to be particularly dumb to be an independent?
Danp
says:Ohioan (3): “McCain could flip-flop on immigration, but I doubt it.”
Which position do you think he is unlikely to flip-flop on? The one where he co-sponsored a bill with Kennedy on comprehensive immigration reform? Or the position where he promised it would never come up, and he would never vote for it if it did?
Joey (bjobtts)
says:…
From Glenn Greenwald:
A week of petty though typical attacks on Obama produced nothing
The most interesting and potentially most significant aspect of Obama’s convincing win last night is that it came after a week in which — really for the first time — he was targeted from all political and media corners with a relentless stream of the strain of petty though toxic trash which has dominated our political discourse and elections for decades now. And it didn’t really seem to have any impact at all.
Over the last week, we learned that: (a) Obama is a closet socialist as evidenced by the Che Guevara picture a volunteer posted on a campaign office wall; (b) Obama’s wife, Michelle, is both self-absorbed and subversive, as she secretely hates the U.S. and will only believe it’s a good country if her husband becomes President; (c) Obama is a thief and a plagiarist; and,
(d) in one of the most repulsive screeds in memory, courtesy of National Review’s Lisa Schiffren, former Dan Quayle aide, the fact that Obama’s parents are a mixed-race couple strongly suggests they were probably Communists, because who else, besides Communists, would marry outside of their own race? She cited an equally repellent article by AIM’s Cliff Kinkaid, entitled Obama’s Communist Mentor, which “reveals” that “through Frank Marshall Davis, Obama had an admitted relationship with someone who was publicly identified as a member of the Communist Party USA.”
Most importantly of all, the guardians of our political discourse — the Chris Matthews and Howie Kurtzs and Mark Halperins and The Politicos, all of whom dwell in Matt Drudge’s kingdom — traffic almost exclusively in puerile, vapid fixations with these types of petty conflicts and substance-free controversies. They’re the decadent ringleaders of the freak show which dominates our political discourse and dictates the outcome of our elections.
Just this morning alone, Howie Kurtz’s entire column is filled with quoting the likes of The Weekly Standard, Captain Ed, Kathryn Jean Lopez and David Brooks in order mindlessly to re-circulate every slimy, small-minded attack from this week on Obama. None of them is going to change in the slightest, because slothful, empty, small-minded chatter, driven by their Matt Drudge overlords, is all they are told to do, all they’re capable of doing, and all they want to do. No matter who the nominees are, the behavior of our media stars won’t change, because it can’t.
Nor, contrary to what appears to be the unduly optimistic belief of some Obama supporters, will the sleazy right-wing noise machine change its tactics in the slightest. Immediately before I read Lisa Schrieffen’s “half black/half Jewish, red diaper baby” rant, I watched Mike Gallagher on Fox News explain, to a sympathetic host, that Sharon Stone ought to be “charged with treason” for pointing out that insufficient attention is paid to the death of Iraqi civilians.
It’s vitally important to remember that our political life is suffuse with lowlifes and hatemongers like this. Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter — the heart and soul of the right-wing — aren’t going anywhere, nor are the media-connected, Swiftboat-spewing operatives who function in the shadows and the sewers. As Digby pointed out yesterday, the Right has already created a new, extremely well-funded organization — overseen by the incomparably slimy and truth-free Ari Fleisher — preparing to unleash exactly this sort of bile. As Digby said, the Democratic primary is exceedingly polite when compared to what is coming: “Just wait until you see what Ari Fleischer and his quarter of a billion have in store for us.”
So the question isn’t whether Obama will be relentlessly pelted by the sprawling appendages of the Right-wing edifice and its media allies with the most grotesque, bottom-feeding, substance-free, personality-based attacks. Of course he will be — ones as ugly as, if not uglier than, anything we’ve seen yet.
Up until now, Obama has received relatively sympathetic treatment from the two-headed right-wing/media monster because he’s been the anti-Hillary, and hatred for her resulted in affection (or at least restraint) towards him. Once he’s no longer the anti-Hillary, but instead becomes the only thing standing between John McCain/GOP power and the White House, he’s going to be the target of all of that bile and much, much more. As the Right begins to believe that he very well might be the enemy this Fall, and they thus pressure the media to begin its attacks, this week one got a small glimpse — a tiny fraction — of what is to come. So the question can’t be whether the Right and the media will behave differently. They can’t and won’t.
The real question is whether Obama, as he did this week, will be able to render these attacks impotent, even cause them to backfire, because they and their propagators will appear to be so ugly and small and irrelevant in light of the type of candidate he is, the rhetoric he produces, the vision to which he aspires. I have no idea whether Obama’s transcendent charisma or the historically demonstrated efficacy of low-life right-wing attacks will be more potent — I think it’s a much more difficult challenge than many Obama supporters (by virtue of understandable desire, rather than objective assessment) have convinced themselves it will be — but there probably aren’t very many priorities more important than cleansing our political process of this type of dirt and petty distraction.
What our political establishment relies on more than anything else is keeping Americans distracted away from what they are really doing and focused instead on how Mike Dukakis looks in a helmet and whether he’d want to murder his wife’s rapist; on blue dresses and penile spots; on the inspiration for Love Story and who invented the Internet; on how John Kerry looks in windsurfing tights, on how manly George Bush’s brush-clearing is, and whether Nancy Pelosi’s scarf-wearing means she loves the Terrorists. That’s how our Beltway culture remains indescribably broken and corrupt without much protest or backlash.
Rendering irrelevant these sorts of stupid, malicious, small-minded distractions could produce real substantive value. And that is what Michelle Obama herself meant as the campaign clarified her “proud” comment:
Anyone who heard her remarks. . . would understand that she was commenting on our politics — not on America itself.
Understood that way, who could argue with that? If you look at our national elections over the past three decades — the petty sideshows that dominate them, the ways they are almost entirely bereft of substance, the control which dirt-mongers and vapid media stars exert over them — what is there to be “proud” of?
After all, two of the most establishment journalists, Mark Halperin and John Harris, themselves confessed that our media covers our elections as a “Freak Show” and, worse, a low-life, right-wing dirtmonger like Matt Drudge is the most influential individual in setting their agenda and ruling their world. There are obviously hordes of people, regardless of ideology, yearning for an end to the Limbaugh/Drudge/ Chris-Matthews/Karl-Rove/Time Magazine petty, vapid dirt-mongering that infects and shapes our politics. Whether that can be achieved remains to be seen — there are a lot of extremely formidable obstacles in the way — but it’s hard to argue with those who see that as a critical priority.
– Glenn Greenwald
This is the McBush legacy to come
NonyNony
says:Ohioan –
Zakaria doesn’t expect McCain to say “If you elect Obama, the terrorists win”, but I do.
I actually expect McCain to say “If you elect Osama .. oops, I mean Obama … the terrorists win.” I expect both him and his surrogates to make that “mistake” multiple times over the next few months.
McCain could flop-flop on immigration, but I doubt it
McCain has already at least rhetorically flip-flopped on immigration, as Danp points out. His flips don’t get hammered home because his bestest buddies in our media think he’s only doing it because mean-old Republican voters are forcing him to lie to them to get nominated. You can’t expect a Straight-Talkin’ Maverick to stand up to mean old Republican voters, can you?
The independents who vote for him think he’s ‘authentic’.
And then they think he’s not really for all the conservative policies that he’s promised to support.
Do you have to be particularly dumb to be an independent?
You’re confusing “authentic” with “honest.” The “authentic” label means different things when applied to different pols, but in McCain’s case I think it means “is willing to swear like a sailor when the situation calls for it.” Or something to that effect.
OTOH – the fact that anyone can associate the label “Straight Talk” with him unironically at any level, given what you outline here, irritates me to no end. I’ve come to the conclusion that it doesn’t really mean “honest” anymore either – but instead it means something like what they seem to mean when they call him “authentic.”
IludiumPhosdex
says:Let’s not forget these comments from May of 2007 (via Think Progress, ultimately Atrios) from John McCain in an interview with Bill “No-Spin Zone” O’Reilly (emphasis from original):
The same sentiments, unfortunately, of apartheid South Africa and its apologists.
And fresh ammunition for to swiftboat the McCain campaign with, for one. (After all, McCain deserves, methinks, to be swiftboated.)