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Sen. John McCain dies at 81

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John McCain, who shed a playboy image in his youth to become a fighter pilot, revered prisoner of war and both an independent voice in the Republican Party and its 2008 presidential nominee, died on Saturday, little more than a year after he was told he had brain cancer. He was 81. McCain's office said in a statement "Senator John Sidney McCain III died at 4:28 p.m. on August 25, 2018." He announced on July 19, 2017, that he had been diagnosed with a glioblastoma, an aggressive type of brain tumor. Earlier this week his family announced he was discontinuing treatment.

"With the Senator when he passed were his wife Cindy and their family. At his death, he had served the United States of America faithfully for sixty years," McCain's office said in the statement. In his 36 years in Congress, McCain became one of the country's most respected and influential politicians, challenging his fellow lawmakers to reach across the aisle for the good of the country, and often sparring with reporters with a biting if self-deprecating wit. On a variety of issues, torture, immigration, campaign finance, the Iraq War, McCain was often known as the moral center of the Senate and of the Republican Party.

Last year, in his last act of defiance, McCain returned to the Capitol less than a week after his cancer was diagnosed to cast his vote on the Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act the biggest legislative achievement of President Barack Obama, the man who defeated him in the 2008 election.


McCain first voted in favor of debating the bill, giving his fellow Republicans hope that their long-sought goal of repealing Obamacare was in sight. McCain then dashed those hopes by casting the decisive vote against repeal. Before the vote, McCain denounced the rise of partisanship in a heartfelt speech from the Senate floor on July 25, 2017. "Why don't we try the old way of legislating in the Senate, the way our rules and customs encourage us to act?" McCain said. "Merely preventing your political opponents from doing what they want isn't the most inspiring work."

But in recent months, the man who had been a mainstay on Capitol Hill for more than three decades was noticeably absent. He missed a White House ceremony on Dec. 12, 2017, in which President Donald Trump signed the annual defense bill into law, one of McCain's signature achievements. A statement issued the following day by the senator's office said he was at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland receiving treatment for the "normal side effects of his ongoing cancer therapy" and looked forward to returning to work as soon as possible. McCain's life was punctuated by wild highs and lows, from the horrific conditions he endured for nearly 2,000 days as a prisoner of war to subsequent professional successes that brought him to the forefront of American politics. Over the course of his career he rallied against pork-barrel spending and went against his own party's president, George W. Bush, on strategy for the Iraq war. He earned a reputation as a party maverick by advocating campaign finance reform, lending his name to the bipartisan McCain-Feingold Act of 2002, and supporting overhauling the nation's immigration system over the years.

But the pinnacle of his political career came in 2008, when he clinched the Republican nomination for president, only to lose to Obama amid the global financial meltdown and dragged down by Bush's low approval ratings. His contentious choice for a running mate, Sarah Palin, the governor of Alaska at the time, was also believed to have contributed to the loss, and is still seen by some as a tarnish on his reputation.

But long before then, McCain was a Navy brat who had little interest in being studious.
John Sidney McCain III was born on Aug. 29, 1936, to a prominent naval family steeped in patriotism. Both his father and grandfather were four-star admirals, with his father, John McCain Jr., advancing to commander in chief of Pacific forces during the Vietnam War. While McCain followed in his family's military footsteps, he did so with his own flair: When he graduated from the Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1958, he was ranked 894th of 899 graduates. In a speech to midshipmen at his alma mater in October 2017, McCain joked about his abysmal academic performance. "My superiors didn't hold me in very high esteem in those days," he said. "To be honest, I wasn't too thrilled to be here back then, and I was as relieved to graduate fifth from the bottom of my class as the Naval Academy was to see me go." After graduation, McCain volunteered for combat duty in the Vietnam War and, as a lieutenant commander, got orders to ship out in 1967. He narrowly escaped death in July of that year, when, while preparing for a routine bombing mission, an explosion on the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal engulfed his plane in flames, killing 134 men on board. Only three months later, on Oct. 26, 1967, McCain's plane was shot down over North Vietnam. Both of his arms and his knee were broken, and McCain was knocked unconscious and taken as a prisoner of war.

That began a five-and-a-half-year nightmare inside a prison where Vietnamese soldiers, upon learning that McCain was the son of an admiral, set out to use him for propaganda purposes. They tortured and beat him, but McCain refused an early release, denying communist North Vietnam a propaganda victory, and followed a code of conduct that POWs must be released in the order they were captured. When the war ended in 1973, McCain finally returned to a hero's welcome. In 2008, he spoke passionately about the patriotism he maintained while imprisoned in Hanoi. "I fell in love with my country when I was a prisoner in someone else's," he said in accepting the Republican presidential nomination.

McCain was first elected to office in 1982, when he won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona. Four years later he was elected to the Senate, and he was re-elected five times. He first ran for president in 2000, becoming the main GOP challenger to George W. Bush, who went on to win the nomination and the White House. In October, he reflected on his life in an interview with GQ Magazine.
"I have had the most fortunate life of anybody you will ever talk to, and I have nothing but gratitude, gratitude and joy, because I've had the most fortunate life that anybody has ever had," he said. "So I spend my time in gratitude and work as hard as I can to get done what I can get done while I can."

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...ndent-voice-gop-establishment-dies-81-n790971

 
And to think, we were all worried that if he became president, he might die of old age and we'd wind up with President Sarah Palin. Instead he made it an extra 10 years.

And with that, I now realize that worse things can and have happened to the country than Sarah Palin becoming president.
 
McCain was the one who stuck it to Dubya's super lobbyist pal a.k.a rip off artist Jack Abramoff. John probably deserves credit for that.
 
So Trump tweets his condolences to McCain's family...with a picture of himself. What a tool.

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I'm just gonna rehash what I said little more than a week ago when he made another fairly disrespectful tweet regarding Aretha Franklin's death.

The guys a narcissist. He thinks only of himself. Even when he thinks about others it's in terms of how it relates to him. For trump, everything's about him, always.

I doubt he even sees anything wrong or disrespectful about this kind of behavior. In his mind it probably goes something like "but I'm writing a tweet about someone's death. I'm writing it. So I should say how it affects me right? If I'm saying it, it's about me.".

I don't think he can help it.
 
The dickhead had the flag over the White House raised at full staff this morning. It was only lowered again to half staff this afternoon after public outrage. I don't think I've ever seen such a petty figure in public life, in any country, ever.
 
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This posthumous shit talking from the majority of the Republican Party makes me fucking sick. And all because McCain was for bipartisanship and comprise. It?s sad but it is the reason why we must never comprise with the republicans of today. Complete fucking lowlifes. The one female candidate in AZ actually suggested that he quit treatment on the day her tour started to make her look bad. Can?t get much more narcissistic. May she someday burn in hell:|

R.I.P. (not my image)
 
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This posthumous shit talking from the majority of the Republican Party makes me fucking sick. And all because McCain was for bipartisanship and comprise. It?s sad but it is the reason why we must never comprise with the republicans of today. Complete fucking lowlifes. The one female candidate in AZ actually suggested that he quit treatment on the day her tour started to make her look bad. Can?t get much more narcissistic. May she someday burn in hell:|

Kelli Ward is cut from the same narcissistic cloth as Trump. When McCain was diagnosed with brain cancer, she publicly stated he should resign and that Governor Doug Ducey should appoint her in his place. I hope that either she, or Joe Arpaio (who's also running) get the nomination to increase the chances of Krysten Sinema, a centrist Democrat, getting elected to that seat.
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This posthumous shit talking from the majority of the Republican Party makes me fucking sick.

What should make you sick is what McCain did while he was alive. Helped starve hundreds and thousands of women and children, gallivanted with and propped up terrorists, he's probably directly or indirectly responsible for the lives of over a million people. What makes me sick is how some people all of a sudden offer sympathy to psychopathic warmongers as soon as they start to die. I will never understand that. Watch, the same will happen with Dubya Bush. McCain was an enemy to the Left until he began opposing Trump, and in doing so further exposed the deception that is the Democrat/Republican voting choice. There's swamp creatures (McCain personally handed Buzzfeed the dodgy Russian dossier) and then there's patriots (Trump was right to offer the least amount of public respect expected for McCain)

NO MERCY: John McCain's First Wife Speaks Out; McCain Dumped Her After Crippling Car Wreck, Angering Ronald & Nancy Reagan

Let's harken back to 2008 to cover some important background intelligence about Sen. John McCain who has been lashing out at President Trump and others from his apparent deathbed.

McCain likes to illustrate his moral fibre by referring to his five years as a prisoner-of-war in Vietnam. And to demonstrate his commitment to family values, the 71-year-old former US Navy pilot pays warm tribute to his beautiful blonde wife, Cindy, with whom he has four children.

But there is another Mrs McCain who casts a ghostly shadow over the Senator's presidential campaign. She is seldom seen and rarely written about, despite being mother to McCain's three eldest children.

And yet, had events turned out differently, it would be she, rather than Cindy, who would be vying to be First Lady. She is McCain's first wife, Carol, who was a famous beauty and a successful swimwear model when they married in 1965.

She was the woman McCain dreamed of during his long incarceration and torture in Vietnam's infamous "Hanoi Hilton" prison and the woman who faithfully stayed at home looking after the children and waiting anxiously for news.

But when McCain returned to America in 1973 to a fanfare of publicity and a handshake from Richard Nixon, he discovered his wife had been disfigured in a terrible car crash three years earlier. Her car had skidded on icy roads into a telegraph pole on Christmas Eve, 1969. Her pelvis and one arm were shattered by the impact and she suffered massive internal injuries.

When Carol was discharged from hospital after six months of life-saving surgery, the prognosis was bleak. In order to save her legs, surgeons had been forced to cut away huge sections of shattered bone, taking with it her tall, willowy figure. She was confined to a wheelchair and was forced to use a catheter.

Through sheer hard work, Carol learned to walk again. But when John McCain came home from Vietnam, she had gained a lot of weight and bore little resemblance to her old self.

When McCain - his hair turned prematurely white and his body reduced to little more than a skeleton - was released in March 1973, he told reporters he was overjoyed to see Carol again.

But friends say privately he was "appalled" by the change in her appearance. At first, though, he was kind, assuring her: "I don't look so good myself. It's fine."

McCain has acknowledged that he had girlfriends during this time, without going into details.

In 1979 - while still married to Carol - he met Cindy at a cocktail party in Hawaii. Over the next six months he pursued her, flying around the country to see her. Then he began to push to end his marriage.

Carol and her children were devastated. "It was a complete surprise," says Nancy Reynolds, a former Reagan aide.

"They never displayed any difficulties between themselves. I know the Reagans were quite shocked because they loved and respected both Carol and John."

Meanwhile McCain moved to Arizona with his new bride immediately after their 1980 marriage. There, his new father-in-law gave him a job and introduced him to local businessmen and political powerbrokers who would smooth his passage to Washington via the House of Representatives and Senate.

And yet despite his popularity as a politician, there are those who won?t forget his treatment of his first wife.

Do NOT let them make a saint of bloodthirsty warmonger John McCain
https://www.sott.net/article/394349...a-saint-of-bloodthirsty-warmonger-John-McCain

John McCain - Ten reasons not to mourn him
https://www.sott.net/article/394440-John-McCain-Ten-reasons-not-to-mourn-him

'Patriot or warmonger?' Twitter puts McCain under the microscope
https://www.sott.net/article/394417-Patriot-or-warmonger-Twitter-puts-McCain-under-the-microscope
 
What should make you sick is what McCain did while he was alive. Helped starve hundreds and thousands of women and children, gallivanted with and propped up terrorists, he's probably directly or indirectly responsible for the lives of over a million people. What makes me sick is how some people all of a sudden offer sympathy to psychopathic warmongers as soon as they start to die. I will never understand that. Watch, the same will happen with Dubya Bush. McCain was an enemy to the Left until he began opposing Trump, and in doing so further exposed the deception that is the Democrat/Republican voting choice. There's swamp creatures (McCain personally handed Buzzfeed the dodgy Russian dossier) and then there's patriots (Trump was right to offer the least amount of public respect expected for McCain)
Puh-leez. Spare us your disingenuous outrage. I doubt you'd be much bothered by these allegations had they been leveled at someone like Sen. James Inhofe. Well, no, you would be bothered. At the people making the allegations.

McCain's political life reminds me of something my divorce attorney told me: you both hate this settlement, so it's probably fair. I didn't vote for McCain in 2008, but the fact that he was disliked by both the far right and far left indicates to me at least, that his actions, for the most part, probably were thoughtful and fair.
 
Puh-leez. Spare us your disingenuous outrage. I doubt you'd be much bothered by these allegations had they been leveled at someone like Sen. James Inhofe. Well, no, you would be bothered. At the people making the allegations.

McCain's political life reminds me of something my divorce attorney told me: you both hate this settlement, so it's probably fair. I didn't vote for McCain in 2008, but the fact that he was disliked by both the far right and far left indicates to me at least, that his actions, for the most part, probably were thoughtful and fair.

You assume a lot. I've been following McCain's antics in the Middle East for quite some time now. I have genuine outrage at that evil psychopath.
 
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