Saturday, July 12, 2008

The Pattern Continues

The carpetbagger lays it out so clearly here -- the press is covering up for McCain and going after Obama. It soesn't take much of a mental experiment to conclude that if the Mccain adultery story was reversed, Obama would have hell to pay. For Golden John: crickets and tumbleweed. This is the sam thing that happened regardiing Boy George and the National Guard, drunk driving, and sweetheart Texas Rangers deal -- no digging, no priority, and and no followup.

There are lies in McCain's book that have been now documented. How much more obvious can it be? This is clear proof that the MSM is covering for the old man.

The Los Angeles Times did some solid investigative reporting and published a very damaging item yesterday on John McCain’s personal background, which is of course a key part of his campaign. We learned that McCain turned his back on his wife after she was seriously injured in a car accident, committed adultery, and left the mother of his children when he found a younger, wealthier woman.

Worse, we also learned that McCain didn’t tell the truth about this in his own memoir. McCain insisted that he was separated from his first wife before he began dating his second wife. That’s not true. McCain also insisted he’d been divorced for months before remarrying. That wasn’t true, either. (In fact, the LAT reported, “McCain obtained an Arizona marriage license on March 6, 1980, while still legally married to his first wife.”)

Clearly, this is the kind of salacious story reporters just love. A presidential candidate, running on his personal background, is found to have a messy past. The story has sex, drama, and fairly obvious lies — everything a news outlet needs for wall-to-wall coverage. What does this tell us about McCain’s character? Will voters care about a conservative Republican’s adultery? What will the “family-values” crowd say? How do we reconcile McCain’s untruths with his alleged proclivity for “straight talk”? Will the revelations hurt McCain in the polls? It’s the kind of story the media can obsess over for months.


Not so much.

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