| “I’m John
McCain and I approve this lie”
Going by the campaign TV ads approved by John McCain, you’d think
that his opponent is responsible for high gas prices, will raise
your taxes, associates with terrorists, wants sex education taught to kindergartners, and called Sarah Palin a pig. (Nonpartisan web sites FactCheck.org and Politifact.com examine the truthfulness of ads from both campaigns.)
The whoppers aren’t confined to McCain's advertising. The candidate
continues to make misleading statements in interviews and at campaign
rallies.
Iraq
John McCain testily told Time Magazine in August that “Iraq is a peaceful
and stable country.”¹
Jurisprudence
At the Saddleback Church forum on August 16, Pastor Rick Warren asked
John McCain, “Which existing Supreme Court justices would you not
have nominated?”
“With all due respect," he answered, "Justice Ginsburg, Justice Breyer, Justice
Souter and Justice Stevens.” (But Senator McCain actually voted to confirm Ginsburg, Breyer and Souter. He wasn't a senator when Stevens was nominated.)
A Little White Lie Heard Round the World
McCain Stands Up Letterman
Los Angeles Times, Matea Gold, September 25, 2008
Looks like the long-friendly relationship between John McCain and David
Letterman is on the skids. The late-night comedian was none too pleased
that the Republican presidential nominee bailed on an appearance Wednesday
on the “Late Show” so he could return to Washington to deal
with the economic crisis, particularly because he found time to give an
interview to CBS News anchor Katie Couric along the way.
McCain was supposed to make his 13th appearance on Letterman’s
show, but he backed out late Wednesday afternoon, saying he was suspending
campaign activities to focus on getting a financial bailout plan through
Congress.
During the taping of the show, Letterman told the audience that McCain
had called him personally to apologize for standing him up and said he
was rushing to the airport.
“I’m more than a little disappointed by this behavior,”
Letterman said. “We’re suspending the campaign. Suspending
it because there’s an economic crisis, or because the poll numbers
are sliding?”
The audience applauded.
“You don’t suspend your campaign,” he added. “Do
you suspend your campaign? No, because that makes me think, well, you
know, maybe there will be others things down the road—if he’s
in the White House, he might just suspend being president. I mean, we’ve
got a guy like that now!”
Then in the midst of interviewing MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann, Letterman
learned that the GOP candidate was about five blocks away at CBS News
headquarters, preparing for an interview with Couric.
Incredulous, Letterman interrupted his chat with Olbermann to show the
audience a live shot on the internal CBS news feed of McCain getting touched
up by a makeup artist as he waited to talk to Couric.
“He doesn’t seem to be racing to the airport, does he?”
Letterman said, shouting at the television monitor: “Hey John, I
got a question! You need a ride to the airport?”²
Why Sarah Palin for Veep?
Sarah Palin had served as the mayor of a town of 5,000 people and for
21 months as the Governor of Alaska when John McCain picked her to be
his running mate. CBS 60 Minutes’ Scott Pelley noted, “The
criticism of Governor Palin is that she was a brilliant marketing choice
for the campaign, but she’s not well versed on the economy or foreign
affairs….Is it true you only met her a couple of times before you
selected her?”
“I’d only known her a few times but a couple of times,”
McCain said. “But I had watched her very carefully. I had followed
her career.”
“How’d you make that decision?”
“Well, I based it on what’s the best for the country. I looked
at her record. I looked at her.”
Too many regulators?
John McCain told a Tampa rally on September 16: “Too many firms
on Wall Street have been able to count on casual oversight. And there
are so many of these regulators that the responsibility for oversight
is scattered, unfocused and ineffective."³
The assertion of an overabundance of regulators is pure fantasy, and
John McCain knows it, since few people were more involved in diminishing
regulatory agencies’ budgets and power than he and fellow Senator
Phil Gramm (who was McCain’s official economic advisor until his
recent “nation of whiners” remarks. The two have been close
for years; McCain chaired Gramm’s short-lived presidential campaign
in 1996.) As reported in Mother Jones:
In the 1990’s, as chairman of the Senate banking committee, Phil
Gramm routinely turned down Securities and Exchange Commission chairman
Arthur Levitt’s requests for more money to police Wall Street; during
this period, the SEC’s workload shot up 80 percent, but its staff
grew only 20 percent. Gramm also opposed an SEC rule that would have prohibited
accounting firms from getting too close to the companies they audited—at
one point, according to Levitt’s memoir, he warned the SEC chairman
that if the commission adopted the rule, its funding would be cut. And
in 1999, Gramm pushed through a historic banking deregulation bill that
decimated Depression-era firewalls between commercial banks, investment
banks, insurance companies, and securities firms—setting off a wave
of merger mania.
But Gramm’s most cunning coup on behalf of his friends in the financial
services industry—friends who gave him millions over his 24-yeqar
congressional career—came on December 15, 2000….As Congress
and the White House were hurriedly hammering out a $384-billion omnibus
spending bill, Gramm slipped in a 262-page measure called the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act…written with the help of financial industry
lobbyists.
The act, he declared, would ensure that neither the SEC nor the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) got into the business of regulating
newfangled financial products called swaps—and would thus “protect
financial institutions from overregulation” and “position
our financial services industries to be world leaders into the new century.”
It didn’t quite work out that way. For starters, the legislation
contained a provision—lobbied for by Enron, a generous contributor
to Gramm—that exempted energy trading from regulatory oversight,
allowing Enron to run rampant, wreck the California electricity market,
and cost consumers billions before it collapsed. (For Gramm, Enron was
a family affair. Eight years earlier, his wife, Wendy Gramm, as CFTC chairwoman,
had pushed through a rule excluding Enron’s energy futures contracts
from government oversight. Wendy later joined the Houston-based company’s
board, and in the following years her Enron salary and stock income brought
between $915,000 and $1.8 million into the Gramm household.)
But the Enron loophole was small potatoes compared to the devastation
that unregulated swaps would unleash. Credit default swaps are essentially
insurance policies covering the losses on securities in the event of a
default. Financial institutions buy them to protect themselves if an investment
they hold goes south. It’s like bookies trading bets, with banks
and hedge funds gambling on whether an investment (say, a pile of sub
prime mortgages bundled into a security) will succeed or fail. Because
of the swap-related provisions of Gramm’s bill—which were
supported by Fed chairman Alan Greenspan and Treasury secretary Larry
Summers—a $62 trillion market (nearly four times the size of the
entire US stock market) remained utterly unregulated, meaning no one made
sure the banks and hedge funds had the assets to cover the losses they
guaranteed.4
McCain’s assertion that there are “so many regulators”
is equally absurd when applied to the oversight agency for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise
Oversight. The Wall Street Journal reported, “James B. Lockhart
III has spent the past two years telling almost anyone who would listen
that the obscure federal agency he heads needed more power to do its job.”5
Cold Shoulder on Warming
McCain Leaves Rivals Out
Los Angeles Times, Maeve Reston, May 15, 2008
As he rolled out his plan to combat global warming this week, Republican
John McCain jumped at the opportunity to remind voters that he’d
flown nearly to the ends of the earth to view the effects of global warming.
But apparently he wasn’t willing to give that same credit to his
Democratic rivals.
When a reporter in North Bend, Wash., asked McCain why the average voter
concerned with climate change should support him over Hillary Rodham Clinton
or Barack Obama, his reply was tart. “I have been involved in this
issue for many, many years,’ the Arizona senator said. “They
have never, to my knowledge, been involved in legislation, nor hearings,
nor engagement in this issue,” he said, adding that he’d “traveled
around the world and seen the impacts of climate change.”
What he didn’t mention was that on two of those trips, Clinton
was there alongside him. She joined him on a 2004 congressional delegation
to Svalbard, a group of Norwegian islands in the Arctic, and on a 2005
trek to Alaska and Canada’s Yukon Territory, where they viewed shrinking
glaciers. McCain mentioned both trips in his speech but not the New York
senator.
And McCain enjoyed the support of his Democratic rivals in the Senate
chambers too. Clinton and Obama co-sponsored global warming legislation
proposed by McCain and independent Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut.6
R. King, Editor
October 14, 2008
© 2008 PinocchioMcCain.com
Contact us
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¹ Time Magazine, interview with Michael Carney and James Scherer,
August 27, 2008
² Los Angeles Times, Matea Gold, September 25, 2008
³ Los Angeles Times, Michael Finnegan and Noam N. Levey, September
17, 2008
4 Mother Jones, David Corn, July/August, 2008
5 Wall Street Journal, James R. Hagerty and Damian Paletta, July 25,
2008
6 Los Angeles Times, Maeve Reston, May 15, 2008
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What could a president who graduated 5th from bottom of his class mean for America? Visit 5thfrombottom.com.
Who is the most corrupt president in U.S. history? Visit MostCorrupt.com.

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