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“Unfit for High Office”

Josh Marshall on the meaning of this political moment:

One of the interesting aspects of this campaign is watching the scales fall from the eyes of many of John McCain’s closest admirers among the veteran DC press corps. I’m not talking about the freaks on Fox News or any of the sycophants at the AP. I’m talking about, let’s say, the better sort of reporters and commentators in the 45 to 65 age bracket. To the extent that the press was McCain’s base (and in many though now sillier respects it still is) this was the base of the base. And talking to a number of them I can understand why that was, at least in the sense of the person he was then presenting himself as.

But over the last … maybe six weeks, in various conversations with these folks, the change is palpable. Whether it will make any difference in the tone of coverage in the dominant media I do not know. But it is sinking in.

All politicians stretch the truth, massage it into the best fit with their message. But, let’s face it, John McCain is running a campaign almost entirely based on straight up lies. Not just exaggerations or half truths but the sort of straight up, up-is-down mind-blowers we’ve become so accustomed to from the current occupants of the White House. And today McCain comes out with this rancid, race-baiting ad based on another lie. Willie Horton looks mild by comparison. (And remember, President George H.W. Bush never ran the Willie Horton ad himself. It was an outside group. He wasn’t willing to degrade himself that far.) As TPM Reader JM said below, at least Horton actually was released on a furlough. This is ugly stuff. And this is an ugly person. There’s clearly no level of sleaze this guy won’t stoop to to win this election.

And let’s be frank. He might win it. This is clearly a testing time for Obama supporters. But I want to return to a point I made a few years ago during the Social Security battle with President Bush. Winning and losing is never fully in one’s control — not in politics or in life. What is always within our control is how we fight and bear up under pressure. It’s easy to get twisted up in your head about strategy and message and optics. But what is already apparent is that John McCain is running the sleaziest, most dishonest and race-baiting campaign of our lifetimes. So let’s stopped being shocked and awed by every new example of it. It is undignified. What can we do? We’ve got a dangerously reckless contender for the presidency and a vice presidential candidate who distinguished her self by abuse of office even on the comparatively small political stage of Alaska. They’ve both embraced a level of dishonesty that disqualifies them for high office. Democrats owe it to the country to make clear who these people are. No apologies or excuses. If Democrats can say at the end of this campaign that they made clear exactly how and why these two are unfit for high office they can be satisfied they served their country.

Comments (8)

1

Too bad Obama is not willing to fight as dirty. And that is why the 44th President will be John S. McCain.

Maybe we should have nominated Hillary afterall.

Posted by Cato the Younger Younger | September 10, 2008 9:04 AM
2

You can't convice people. Most people are morons and once they see something like that they take a lot of convicing that it is different.

Posted by Original Monique | September 10, 2008 9:14 AM
3

What we need is consistency of message. John McCain is a liar and his presidency would be four more years of Bush. People need to be hammered with it again and again. Just as people start to accept lies as the truth if they are repeated enough, so too can we reinforce the truth by repeating it.

Posted by Greg | September 10, 2008 9:22 AM
4

@1 - That's the spirit! When the going gets tough, f**k it!

I hate McCain's tricks as much as you do, but I'd much rather take this gamble. I'm hoping the Republicans' bounce will fade away in a couple of weeks after the new wears off of Palin. Then when Obama wins, it will be because he fought fair and he can truly be a dignified president.

Maybe I'm eternally optimistic, but I'm trying to keep my chin up.

Posted by Georgia Guy | September 10, 2008 9:25 AM
5

Obama doesn't need to fight dirty, Cato. It's not dirty to tell the truth. It's not dirty to run ads calling him on his specific lies. Or to ask him why his running mate poses with a 49-star flag.

Posted by Fnarf | September 10, 2008 9:27 AM
6

I'm not a regular commentator on Slog, but I read it obsessively and comment often enough. Now, though, I'm launching a one-man campaign to get Slog to do this:
every time Official Slog writers post article about McCain and Palin's sleazy, dishonest campaign tactics, they should (must? oughta?) end the post with a tag:
"Click here to donate to Obama."

There's one way Obama can win: outrage from his base, which leads to more money.

Please Dan, Christopher, Eli, Erica, Charles, and everyone else. Do us all a favor and close with a link to Obama's donation page. (if you're really tech savvy, you could figure out how to track the donations generated by Slog, then boast how you helped, not just complained).

Posted by Lose-Lose | September 10, 2008 9:55 AM
7

I agree with #6. That's a great idea.

Posted by Greg | September 10, 2008 9:57 AM
8

its time to feminize McCain before he tries it on Obama. "Hiding behind Palin's skirts" is a good place to start.

that's not fighting dirty any more. fuck the high road.

Posted by max solomon | September 10, 2008 9:59 AM

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