Archive for the 'His Family' category

Jesus or Obama?

Jesus or Obama? (Take the test!)

“Bitter,” oppressed people cling to God; “enlightened” people cling to teh Obamessiah.

Character Forged By Family

The latest from the McCain campaign:

Transcript of John McCain’s speech in Meridian, MS - the first stop on his “Service to America” tour:

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Meghan McCain is Interviewed by GQ

Meghan McCain

I’ve enjoyed Meghan McCain’s blog, McCainBlogette, since I first became aware of it long before we started this blog. Its not your common political blog. Meghan McCain and a few of her cohorts write about life on the campaign trail from their point of view. She gives a lot of insight into what goes on behind the scenes. She shares a lot of pictures and you can tell she adores her daddy. She looks a lot like him too, I think … but that’s beside the point.

I think she has been a real asset to John McCain’s campaign in her own way. She’s down to earth, genuine, open and a very likable young lady. I’ll resist the temptation to go into the obvious differences in personality, availability, likability, openness, etc between her and any other political daughters in the same age group or a few years older that come to mind.

She recently set down with Greg Veis of GQ and gave an interview. Here are some excerpts:

Meghan McCain arrives at the door to her apartment out of breath and wobbly in calf-high boots. It’s a seventy-five-degree February afternoon in Phoenix, and the 23-year-old daughter of the presumptive Republican nominee for president is wearing a black leather jacket over a scarf and gray scoop-neck T-shirt. I extend my hand to introduce myself, but she knocks it down and wraps me up in a bear hug.

“I’ve never had anybody fly across the country for me who I wasn’t dating,” she says. “I’m so flattered!”

Meghan deftly maneuvers Veis away from her bedroom and into a restaurant (good girl!)

Alas, the tour stops here. Meghan won’t show me her bedroom—it’s too messy, she says. Besides, she’s starving, and she really wants to take me to lunch at one of her favorite restaurants ever, Garduño’s Margarita Factory.

The kind of guys she likes

“I like bad boys for the most part,” Meghan adds. “In the past, I have liked tattooed guys who wear Converse. But I’d be open to anyone as long as you have a sense of humor. I have also dated totally normal guys who look like you, I guess—D.C.-looking guys.”

D.C.-looking guys?

“Journalist, yuppie, metrosexual guys. How’s that? You’re metro.”

“I’m an acquired taste,” Meghan says matter-of-factly. “I’m a daughter of a Republican senator. I started dating this guy, and he wouldn’t date me anymore because he found out who my dad was. He says, ‘I don’t agree with his politics.’ Isn’t that terrible? That’s why you’re dumping me? We only went on two dates, but still. Not everybody wants to go out with somebody so high-profile. If they do, they’re investment bankers. Seriously. Ugh! If you’re an investment banker, don’t hit on me. You can quote me. I’m not interested.”

She’s pretty feisty, kinda like her father

Meghan puts it more succinctly: “I’m almost incapable of bullshit. He’s the same way.”

What she thinks of Barack Obama

“He’s a rock star,” she says of the Illinois senator. “Everybody flipped out, but I think universally women find him attractive. Whatever.”

On the rumor she dated a Ron Paul Supporter

“That has been blown out of proportion in every way!” she exclaims. “What happened is that I dropped my coffee and he helped me with it and was like, ‘Do you want to go to Baja Fresh?’… Not that I would be against dating a Ron Paul supporter, but he turned out to be very strange. He collected Barbie dolls. I called my girlfriends after and was like, ‘That’s weird, right?’ ”

On the wild child gene that seems to run in her family

It’s clear that Meghan inherited her father’s devil-may-care streak.

“Yeah, he was a little rebel when he was my age,” Meghan says. “I’d rather that than if he were boring.”

John wasn’t the original McCain hellion, though. Meghan mentions her grandmother, 96-year-old Roberta McCain, who occasionally joins her son on the trail. Meghan calls her grandmother “crazy in a good way.”

“Nana drives fast,” Meghan says. “She got pulled over for doing 112 in Flagstaff about a year ago.”

You can read the rest at the GQ website.

I think I like the McCain family. They aren’t dull, that’s for sure.

h/t Gone Hollywood Outside the Beltway

McCain Blogette Vlogs About Sedona

McCain Blogette

I know that so many of you really enjoyed our photo gallery from the BBQ event in Sedona for members of the media. We think you’re going to love this video. Watch for Dad being dangerous on the grill with his tongs, Mom’s humor, us rocking out in the car and of course, all the unexpected silliness. Enjoy!

Meghan McCain’s vlogs are getting a lot of attention. They are fun and give a down-to-earth insiders view of the McCain campaign. She posted a lot of photos in an earlier post from a BBQ the family had with friends in Sedona on a rare day off from the campaign trail. Its good to see them relaxed and enjoying the day.

I like Meghan’s blog for several reasons. Primarily, it gives you a real look behind the scenes and gives an inside look at what appears to be a family who really like each other. That tells you a lot about the kind of people they are and the kind of man John McCain is.

These are some pictures I liked that she had posted. The first one is from the day in Sedona and the second two are from the evening McCain won the nomination of the Republican party for President.

John McCain

John McCain

John McCain

McCain on Family, Fatherhood and Sending a Son to War

John McCain

I was interested in reading about John McCain’s views of sending his own son to war. I have lived through watching and waiting while my son served 15 months in a violent, savage neighborhood in Baghdad, Iraq and will probably have to do it again some time down the road. Since John McCain is, in all likelihood, the next Commander in Chief of the military, I want to know how he views sending our young men and women to war.

One of the reasons I’m excited about McCain’s candidacy is that I know he supports our military and will make sure our men and women do not go into battle without proper cause, support and supplies. Regardless of the politics of it, he has been willing to be open about his views of the necessity of defeating islamofascists ‘over there’ instead of waiting for another attack here with our heads in the sand.

Then there are the politics of an unpopular war, which seem to many observers to be hobbling his campaign. As a result, McCain has taken pains to give reporters at every stop his very specific assessment of the conduct of the war, which he authorized and continues to endorse. “The Bush administration made every conceivable mistake you could have made—military, political, even economic. [I would have done] the opposite of what they did, particularly having more boots on the ground, not allowing the looting, setting up a de-Baathification program immediately, and moving more quickly to form a government.”

Since almost no one in the top echelon of the Bush administration had any active military experience, I ask McCain if the president—who is commander-in-chief, after all—should be required to have some active service, perhaps even combat duty. “It would be helpful,” he says, “but I have to hasten to add that some of our great presidents did not have a wealth of military experience. Look at Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. What would be helpful is if more members of Congress served in the military so they would understand the challenges that the young men and women are facing.”

McCain’s sons are both serving the country. His older son, Jack, is currently at the Naval Academy. His younger son, Jimmy, is a Marine deployed to Iraq. McCain’s entire life has been a testament to duty. Duty and service are not about pretty words and theories, but are about action and sacrifice. Its about serving a cause bigger than yourself.

John McCain has taught his sons that duty “is serving a cause greater than you,” honor “is the ability to do the right thing when nobody else knows,” and “serving a cause greater than yourself is the most ennobling of all avocations.” And now his sons are men. Cindy McCain says: “Both of my boys are grown up, and now one is really doing what a man does—and that is going off to war.”

Its understandable that McCain is reluctant to talk about his son, Jimmy, who is currently deployed in Iraq. Considering what happened to McCain as the son of the Chief of Naval Operations while he was held in the Hanoi Hilton, I’m sure he doesn’t want his own son to be put in the position of a being a prized target for the enemy.

Still, it’s clear from watching McCain that Jimmy—and what may lie in store for him during his deployment in Iraq—weighs heavily on his mind. McCain says he won’t discuss Jimmy’s deployment, but it also seems he can’t not talk about him. So sometimes McCain will bring up his son unexpectedly, out of the blue. “You know,” McCain says, greeting the limo driver, a man he has known from past campaign trips, “my son Jimmy is in the Marines now. He’s doing great. Yes, sir, Jimmy’s doing great. Just great.”

Yeah, I understand that.

Read the article, it gives a lot of insight into the man who will be President.

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