John McCain unwittingly planted some seeds
of irony last year that have now sprouted. At the time, summer 2015,
McCain openly bemoaned the xenophobic demagoguery of Donald Trump. Trump
came to Arizona, McCain's state, to do some rabble-rousing among white
racists, towing behind him as a stage prop the father of a person
murdered by an undocumented (aka “illegal”) immigrant. [1]
These are the comments that irked the schoolyard bully Trump, prompting him to denigrate McCain for only being called a hero for being “captured,” making McCain a “loser” in Trump's eyes. (As Trump avoided the draft, and certainly didn't volunteer, he was never in any danger of capture and possible Loserhood himself. It was mostly the poor and other lower economic classes who were subjected to impressment into the U.S. military to attack Indochina. McCain was descended from a military family and entered the U.S. Naval Academy to pursue a career as a navy officer, later finding politics more to his taste.)
Now here are some
excerpts from an article in a haute bourgeois U.S. publication that ran
in July of last year. I have highlighted certain phrases:
McCain, who is eighteen years older than Graham, sounded like a proud father. “Lindsey said this is a moral test for our party. He put on a very strong performance,” McCain said. “Of course, Lindsey was one of the eight of us who negotiated immigration reform. Lindsey never backed away from it.”
McCain, who had a testy relationship with Senator Marco Rubio, another member of the Gang of Eight who is running for President, couldn’t resist adding, “Rubio backed away from it.”
I noted that Rubio, like many other Republican politicians, has been hard to follow on the issue and no longer supports the compromise approach that the Gang of Eight took in 2013: combining a pathway to citizenship and tough new border measures in a single bill. McCain licked his finger, held it up in the air, and laughed.
“You know that old song from before you were born?” McCain said, speaking of the Bob Dylan classic “Subterranean Homesick Blues.” “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.” [2]
Indeed.
So McCain, who hops on the Trump
bandwagon, laughed at Rubio as someone who, like a weathervane,
points in whatever direction the political winds are blowing. Note
that McCain's political compadre Graham, and the Bushes, and
Mitt Romney, and many other prominent Republicans, have publicly
disavowed Trump. And McCain said Amen to Graham's call to resist the
demagoguery of Trump. Not just as a political necessity, but as a
“moral test.”
Read my previous essay, just below,
about McCain, and see if you can spot more ironies. [“John McCain Has No Pride.”]
As they say in those English-speaking
isles across the Atlantic, Cheers!
1] Trump and his ilk have been
raising a terrible stink about two murders committed by non-citizens
present in the U.S. without permission. Given that there are an
estimated 11 million such people here (out of an estimated population
of 315 million), no one should be shocked if some of them commit
murder. There were 16,121 homicides in the U.S. in 2013, according to the CDC. (Over two-thirds of the homicides were committed with
firearms, by the way.) Doubtless the vast majority were the crimes of
U.S. citizens. But of course racism and xenophobia are impervious to
rational thought, so this is a case of, in the immortal words of
Ronald Reagan, “facts are stupid things.”
Or in the satirical stylings of
comedian Steve Colbert, “truthiness” trumps mere truth. Because
emotions are stronger than reason, feelings are more vivid, thus
“truer,” than facts, which are intellectual abstractions. You
could say that much of the problems of humanity are rooted in this
basic structural and existential fact of the mind/psyche. We have
(some of us, anyway) rational capability, but it is very hard to be
rational, to live guided by reason.
2] “John McCain Has a Few Things to Say About Donald Trump,”
New
Yorker,
July
16, 2015.
The new
logo for the Republican Party. (Replaces the elephant, an
intelligent, brave, loyal creature unjustly besmirched by involuntary
association with the Gang Of Plunderers.)
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