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Monday, March 31, 2008
RE: The Legacy Debate
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 2:05 PM
I, like you Matt, can claim no admirals in the family, but most of what I know of the grandfathers who passed before I was born is wrapped up in the flags that draped their coffins. They were good men, veterans who served their country and loved their families, and taught my parents to do the same.

For a lot of Americans, admirals or no, those are some of the most potent family remembrances, the war stories that get passed down, the medals and folded flags passed on from generation to generation. So, yeah, I think there's connection for many Americans where their lives intersect with McCain's and admiration where they don't. It should also be noted that McCain's rather good at telling stories that hint at the family's imperfections and a persistent rebel spirit that make his legacy simultaneously more charming and less potentially boastful than it would be if it were spit-polished at every point.

For instance, his picture of his granddad in today's speech:
He was devoted to the Navy, but in personal comportment, he was anything but regulation.  He was a rumpled, informal man, who wore a crushed cap with the crown removed that the wife of one of his aviators had given him; kept his shoes off when he worked in an office; tobacco leavings were always scattered about him, as he rolled his own with one hand; possessed a mischievous sense of humor, and was unusually close to sailors and junior officers who served under him, and revered him.  They called him, “Popeye;” his family called him, “Sid;” and his fellow officers, “Slew,” for reasons I never learned.
What but the flaws of great men to convince us that we too can be great? It's relatable, and Mac has a knack for painting these pictures.

I agree with Matt that McCain's personal story is stronger even than his dad's and granddad's because is speaks to what we need to know-- how he will lead. But there's no doubt that drawing the straight line from George Washington's soldiers to World War I and II's sailors, to today's Senator is a good start.

Karl Rove has said again and again that McCain has to reintroduce himself to the American public. He began today, and each speech will help us "get" McCain a little more, becoming progressively more focused on how his history predicts his future, I'd wager.

I like it so far, and it makes a very uncomfortable target for liberal fire, so to speak.





Monday, March 31, 2008
Mac in Meridian: The Speech Lefties Will Love to Hate
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 12:13 PM

McCain's full remarks are below the fold.

I struggle to pick parts I like because the whole thing is well-written and moving. If this election is to be a battle of biographies, as some are suggesting, the contrast between McCain's and Obama's biographical narratives will be nowhere clearer than this week, during McCain's "Service to America" tour. It speaks to the wonder of our great country that its borders encompass and its public life allows for these two widely divergent American success stories.

McCain's account, in Meridian today, of his family's storied martial history reaches back to George Washington and touches on most major conflicts that have, at turns, touched the shores, tortured the souls, and foretold the greatness of the United States of America.

He is a man who loves his country, is humbled by those who came before him, and who is deeply connected to the history and sacrifice that have made this country and his ascendance in it a possibility. It is clear that his grandfather's presence on the deck of a WWI cruiser led him to the dais today.

Now, there are still policy preferences and a hundred Basras, Gitmos, and McCain-Feingolds about which to argue, from the Right and Left, but the Left pokes fun at McCain's family legacy at its own peril. It is a story with which most Americans connect, and with which they associate their own fathers and grandfathers, mothers and grandmothers. And, come election time, looking insufficiently appreciative of the Greatest Generation and those it inspired is not a good move, which is why we can likely count on parts of the far Left blogosphere to keep doing it.


 
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Monday, March 31, 2008
Hillary Lagging: Country Currently More Sexist Than Racist
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 11:17 AM

Hillary's still lagging, and there can only be one reason.

1) In a conversation with two Democratic allies, she compared the situation to the “big boys” trying to bully a woman, according to interviews with them
.

2) Debra Starks has heard the calls for Hillary Rodham Clinton to quit the presidential race, and she's not happy about it.

The 53-year old Wal-Mart clerk, so bedecked with Clinton campaign buttons most days that friends call her "Button Lady," thinks sexism is playing a role in efforts to push the New York senator from the race. Starks wants Clinton to push back.

3) Hillary Clinton Portrays Calls to Quit as Chauvinism

4)
Chelsea Clinton said Saturday that she didn't realize how much sexism remained in the United States until she noticed the issue at recent campaign stops for her mother.

Dems have proudly played this primary election as an historic chance to elect a "first," no matter which one voters choose. In reality, their marketing campaign has turned out to be something along the lines of, "Vote Democratic: Find Out If You're Sexist or Racist!"

What an uplifting opportunity!

Update:
Hillary denies the NYT story about "bullying." I can't believe I believed those sexists in the first place.





Monday, March 31, 2008
Girl Hillary Hugged Goes on the Offensive
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:47 AM

Yep, she lied, says the now-grown tarmac tyke:

Emina Bicakcic, now 20 and studying to become a doctor, told The Post she stood on the tarmac at the air base in Tuzla, greeted Clinton and even had time to share the lines of verse she'd written - all without fear of attack from an unseen enemy.

"I was surprised when I heard this," Bicakcic said, referring to Clinton's assertion that she braved snipers upon landing, ducking and sprinting to military vehicles.

Other Bosnians said they had one of two reactions to Clinton's debunked action-hero account of her visit: laughter or anger.

H/t Allah.







Monday, March 31, 2008
Keep It Classy, Washington
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 8:43 AM
Cringe-inducing, but it has to be pointed out. President Bush booed while tossing the first pitch at the new Nationals Stadium. Pretty trashy on the fans' part, here, although there are cheers mixed in, too:






Monday, March 31, 2008
Link of Seagulls
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 8:35 AM

Iran-backed Shiite militants have been ordered to stop shooting and cooperate with Iraqi Security Forces by their Iran-backed chubby leader, Moqtada. Sounds like good news, but in Basra, it's hard to know what's good news what with Moqtada's fighters, rogue Iranian fighters, unknown alliances, an impossibly complex political situation, and of course, Iran, Iran so far awaaaaayyyy.

Or, you can skip all the words and look at the conflict in cartoon form.

It can't be a good sign for Clinton when the Sunday-morning show wrap-ups are all titled, "Should Clinton get out?" Don't do it, Hill!

Suck. It. Up
.

Google's green hypocrisy. Priceless
.

The Bus on the bus!

McCain will see Obama's compelling biographical narrative and raise him an airfield named in his family's honor. Take that, rookie!

Another anti-war film tanks
. Do markets matter in Hollywood?

Maj. Alan Rogers died in Iraq shielding two men who might otherwise have died, giving Andrew Sullivan and the Washington Post a chance to fight over his sexual orientation. Sheesh.

Arrested for anti-Islam hate speech on a blog: Or, why regulating speech on the Internet ain't such a keen idea.

Business at Planned Parenthood is very good. Well, it does free up a lot of money when you've got no kids!

HUD Sec to resign
, at which point President Bush will announce the disbanding of HUD due to decades of producing not housing and urban development, but projects and urban stagnation. Ha, kidding. One can dream.

The last of the American muscle cars?
Environmentalists will pay for this! Pay, I tell you!







Friday, March 28, 2008
C'mon, Get Happy
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:31 AM
Be conservative!




Friday, March 28, 2008
McCain Camp: Shuler's Taken One Too Many Hits
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:19 AM
On a blogger conference call today, Steve Schmidt took on the SAVE Act question:
The comments with regard (to phone calls that he made) are false. It makes me wonder if Health Shuler had one too many encounters with a linebacker in his previous profession.
Shuler, of course, was a football player.








Friday, March 28, 2008
Video: Dean on July 1 Deadline
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 10:04 AM





Friday, March 28, 2008
Our Betters in the MSM Strike Again
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 9:50 AM

Over at the LA Times, Pulitzer Prize-winner Chuck Philips relied on documents forged by an imprisoned con man to get to the bottom of the pressing public issue of whether P. Diddy had knowledge of a 1994 attack on Tupac Shakur, which exacerbated the East Coast/West Coast hip-hop feud that eventually led to both Shakur's and Biggie Smalls' deaths.

The Smoking Gun had to inform the LA Times of their error, which led to an apology, which I guess is more than one would expect from the LA Times.

A Patterico guest-blogger (and one who knows LA and the Times well) takes you on a tour of Philips' dubious career highlights covering this story.

Meanwhile, the New York Times thinks Heidi Montag, reality star of "The Hills" fame on MTV, is...ugh, I'll just let you read it (emphasis mine):
Defying our expectations, Heidi has emerged as a kind of feminist hero this season, climbing her way to a bigger position at the event-planning company where she orchestrates Nascar parties, and refusing to acquiesce to the demands of her fianc, Spencer, that she get herself home on time. Her career-mindedness sets their relationship off course. Heidi identifies the problem with no name: a boyfriend who sits around an apartment decorated to look like an ’80s video arcade while trying to deny Heidi a real wedding with the glory of registering. Her groundswell of self-assertion begins when he insists on eloping, prompting Heidi to declare, “This isn’t, like, Spencer’s relationship and you decide what we do.”
Montag, in addition to being one of the most insufferable stars without talent of our new media age, is also the woman who expounded thusly on her decision to get breast implants:
“I woke up, and it was like Christmas: I was a nervous wreck, but I was just so excited at the same time. Spencer said, “I’m so proud of you.” It was like he was wishing me well off to school: “Love you! Bye!” But surgery is a very big deal. Right before I went in, I was like, What if I don’t wake up? Oh, this is scary. Then I thought, I don’t care. If I don’t wake up, it’s worth it. I just wanted it so badly.”
Yep, that's what a feminist looks like. There you have it. The superior fact-checking and judgment of our vaunted mainstream media. Get your subscriptions!


  






Tuesday, March 25, 2008
CBS Exposes Clinton's Bosnia Trip
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 8:09 AM
If you've been reading blogs, you've seen this, but nice to see the MSM take the ball and run with it. Turns out speaking of "sniper fire" was  nearly as bad a decision as that kerchief.







Friday, March 21, 2008
Wear Your Whiteness on Your Sleeve
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 5:14 PM
With "Typical White Person" merchandise. Ha.

Also, Glenn Reynolds makes a great point about this elevated conversation about race that liberals and Obamaphiles are deluding themselves into believing he brought us. There is a different conversation about race going on, all right:
Obama is giving us a "national conversation on race," but mostly by letting a lot of white people realize just what circulates, unremarked, in the black community.
Update: Another excellent point:
To come full circle with the quote from his speech that I found so irritating on Tuesday, if Obama sincerely believes the great national conversation on race can’t wait a moment longer, why didn’t he use the bully pulpit of being a presidential candidate to start it last year? Why now, if it’s not just a cynical attempt to distract attention from his own scandal? The obvious answer: Because to force a discussion of race then would have it made too easy for Hillary to ghettoize him as a “black candidate” before the primaries. He held off to preserve his chances. That’s fine, but contrast his approach to race with McCain’s approach to Iraq. As far back as eleven months ago, before the surge results were in and doom awaited any candidate who dared take a hawkish line, Maverick was telling audiences that he’d rather lose the election than lose the war. The issue came first, his own political ambitions came second. There’s a little character comparison worth mulling.







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