Tag: John McCain

  • Meghan McCain: budding author and budding Republican

    Sen. John McCain never claimed to have invented the Internet or even to have used it that much.

    But his daughter Meghan has blogged her way to a book deal said to be in the “high six figures,” according to The New York Observer.

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    In her book, she’ll “explore what it means to be a progressive Republican in the party today” according to a news release from her publisher, Hyperion Books, a division of the Disney Company.

    McCain will also “delve into what it means to love the Republican Party, while not always fitting in.”

    A 24-year-old Columbia University graduate, McCain blogs for the online The Daily Beast.

    She also has her own blog, McCainBlogette.com, on which she first posted comments and photos during her father’s presidential campaign.

    McCain is the oldest of the four children of John McCain and his second wife, Cindy Hensley McCain. (John McCain also has three children from his first marriage.)

    Meghan McCain has been an enrolled Republican for only a year.

    She voted for Democrat John Kerry in 2004, and she’s to the left of her father (and many other Republicans) on a variety of social issues, though she shares his views on the Iraq war.

    She supports same sex-marriage and a woman’s right to choose.

    And she’s taken on conservative commentator Ann Coulter. “I find her offensive, radical, insulting, and confusing all at the same time,” McCain wrote on The Daily Beast.

    McCain has urged Republicans to follow the Democratic lead and become Internet savvy and Twitter effective.

    She’s also profiled young Republicans such as 27-year-old Illinois Congressman Aaron Schock, a “TMZ hottie” who could represent the future of the party.

    In addition, she has defended herself after conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham made comments about her weight.

    “I am a size 8 and fluctuated up to a size 10 during the campaign,” McCain wrote. “It’s ridiculous even to have this conversation because I am not overweight in the least and have a natural body weight. But even if I were overweight, it would be ridiculous.”

    In negotiating a book contract, McCain was represented by her father’s literary agent, Philippa “Flip” Brophy, the president of Sterling Lord Literistic.

    This will be Meghan McCain’s second book, following My Dad, John McCain, a children’s book published last year by Simon & Schuster.

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    • #1.   myra 04.14.2009

      EVERLASTING

      Selling Planet Earth in Exchange for a Utopia? What’s the Catch?

      Humans sold planet Earth for peace, but little did they know peace would come at such a high cost.

      A long time ago, Humanity sold planet Earth to a group called the Evers in order to gain peace and a virtual utopia for themselves and for future generations. However, the cost of this paradise turns out to be too much for some to deal with and the humans soon find themselves ruled cruelly by the very beings who offered them salvation and at one point given them so much hope.

      Humans that were originally treated with high regards, made to feels special, are now being treated as animals, some humiliated and shipped away to some unknown fate…each being told what they could or could not do, under the guise of it being in humanities best interest.

      With a feeling of dread, a small group declares war on the more advanced Evers in hopes of returning things to the way they should be…to the way they had been. John and his make-shift crew of humans and hybrids (half human/half Ever) must not only find a way to break free of the mistakes of the past and find out the disturbing secrets that the Evers have hidden away, but they must also deal with their own personal issues and learn to live, grow, and deal with each others’ emotional issues of love, regret and fear.

      Will man give up youth and perfect health to live in the past? And will John take the chance of restoring Earth to its former state even though there’s a good chance his life-threatening disease can return?

      Publisher’s Web site: www.eloquentbooks.com/Everlasting.html

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    • Citigroup, Goldman Sachs recruit former Congressional aides to gain access

      April 15, 2009 at 12:52pm

      In the past year, top bailout recipients including Goldman Sachs and Citigroup have dispatched dozens of former congressional staffers and ex-government officials to lobby their former bosses on the financial rescue package.

    • Lawsuit against Skull and Bones renews mystery about Geronimo’s remains

      The descendants of Geronimo, the Apache chieftain whose skull is rumored to be part of the initiation rite of Yale’s Skull and Bones Society, filed a lawsuit Tuesday demanding the return of his remains.

      The lawsuit, which named Yale’s oldest and most powerful secret society, the university and the U.S. government, was brought by 20 members of the legendary warrior’s family on the 100th anniversary of his death.

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      Three members of Skull and Bones, including George W Bush’s grandfather, Prescott Bush, are said to have dug up the remains when they were stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma during World War I, and taken them back to the society’s headquarters at Yale, called the Tomb.

      The society, whose membership includes three U.S. presidents, including two Bushes, supposedly makes new members kiss the Chiricahua Apache’s skull as part of their induction.

      “It’s been 100 years since the death of my great-grandfather in 1909. It’s been 100 years of imprisonment,” Harlyn Geronimo said outside of court in Washington D.C.

      “The spirit is wandering until a proper burial has been performed. The only way to put this into closure is to release the remains, his spirit, so that he can be taken back to his homeland in the Gila Mountains, at the head of the Gila River.”

      The suit contends that Geronimo’s descendants are entitled to his remains and funerary possessions under the 1990 American Indian Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

      The Geronimo family is being represented by Ramsey Clark, who was attorney general under President Lyndon Johnson. “In this lawsuit, we’re going to find out if the bones are there or not,” Clark said.

      The latest support for the claim that Geronimo’s remains had been swiped by members of the powerful clandestine society was uncovered two years ago by a researcher at Yale. It’s a June 1918 letter from one Bonesman, Winter Mead, to another, F. Trubee Davison:

      “The skull of the worthy Geronimo the Terrible, exhumed from its tomb at Fort Sill by your club . . . is now safe inside [the clubhouse] together with his well worn femurs, bit & saddle horn.”

      Another account alleges that Prescott Bush was one of the grave robbers. But at least until now, no member of the society has ever come forward to answer questions.

      We’ve written before about how Sen. John McCain tried to broker a meeting in the mid-1980s between George H.W. Bush and one of his Arizona constituents – a former Apache chieftain name Ned Anderson seeking the return of the remains.

      Bush, however, wasn’t interested, and the matter was dropped, according to Alexandra Robbins, author of Secrets of the Tomb. A 2006 appeal for the skull’s return, this time to George W., from Harlyn Geronimo, also went unanswered, according to a report by the Associated Press.

      For all the intrigue, some believe the whole thing is a story concocted by drunken frat boys.

      “It’s all a bunch of poppycock,” said Towana Spivey, a Geronimo expert, a Chickasaw, and director of the Fort Sill National Historic Landmark Museum told the Washington Post. “He’s still buried where he was originally.”

      Spivey says he is so certain because the Apaches deliberately misled outsiders as to the location of the grave, and a description of the tomb the Bonesmen allegedly found doesn’t match Geronimo’s.

      Of course, Skull and Bones could clear up the controversy, if it wanted, by sending out its skull for forensic testing, said Garrick Bailey, professor of anthropology at the University of Tulsa and former member of the board that oversees the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

      “You should be able to tell whether or not it’s that of an elderly Native American male,” Bailey told the Hartford Courant. “Geronimo was one of the great iconic figures of American Indian history, particularly as it relates to the spirit of resistance. If I was his descendant, I would be appalled that the question lingers.”

      Yet those questions are what give a secret society its grasp on the imagination. The order, founded in 1832, has always been a favorite topic of conspiracy theorists because of its closely held secrets and its powerful membership.

      In the 2004 U.S. Presidential election, both the Democratic and Republican nominees were members. George W. Bush wrote in his 1999 autobiography: “[In my] senior year I joined Skull and Bones, a secret society; so secret, I can’t say anything more.”

      When asked what it meant that both he and Bush were Bonesmen, former Presidential candidate John Kerry said, “Not much because it’s a secret.”

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      • Citigroup’s Pandit plays game of musical chairs with feds

        February 25, 2009 at 1:46pm

        Vikram Pandit is still working out a rescue plan that would turn over as much as 40% of his bank to the U.S. government. The question is whether he will manage to hold onto his job – and whether he will want to.

      • Candidate Obama is now president-elect

        Winning decisively in the swing states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida and Virginia, Barack Obama was elected the 44th president today – the first black American ever chosen for the office.

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        Obama and his family took the stage at Grant Park in Chicago just before midnight EST.

        “Hello Chicago!” he declared. “If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.”

        Republican candidate John McCain conceded the race at 11:15 p.m., graciously pledging to work with Obama “to help him lead us through the many challenges we face.”

        Obama’s acceptance speech echoed the theme of inclusion he offered four years ago, at the Democratic convention that nominated John Kerry as its candidate.

        “We have never been just a collection of individuals or a collection of red states and blue states,” he said. “We are the United States of America.”

        He addressed those who did not vote for him: “I will be your president too,” he said.

        And he spoke to those beyond America’s borders: “Our stories are singular but our destiny is shared.”

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        • Obama convenes economic advisers, calls for swift action on economy

          November 7, 2008 at 4:37pm

          In his first news conference as president-elect Barack Obama laid out the top priority of his first 100 days: A package of spending that he hopes will stimulate economic growth and aid a struggling middle class.

        • Rashid Khalidi’s web of connections includes McCain, as well as Obama

          Social networks can be tricky things, as John McCain found out this week.

          The Republican presidential nominee and his team have lately been hammering Barack Obama for his association with Rashid Khalidi, an internationally known scholar, critic of Israel and advocate of Palestinian rights.

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          In the past couple of days, McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin have likened Khalidi, the director of Columbia University’s Middle East Institute, to a neo-Nazi; called him “a PLO spokesman”; and suggested that the Los Angeles Times is keeping something sinister from voters by refusing to release a videotape of a 2003 dinner for Khalidi at which Obama spoke.

          The effort to paint Khaladi – and by association, Obama – as a friend of terrorists is clearly aimed at fanning the anxieties of Jewish voters in the swing state of Florida. But in this case, the game of guilt-by-association circles back to McCain himself, who is also part of Khalidi’s extended network.

          As first reported by Huffington Post, McCain chairs a nonprofit group called the International Republican Institute which has given almost a half million dollars to a Palestinian research center that Khalidi co-founded.

          In 1998, the Institute gave a $448,873 grant for research in the West Bank to the Center for Palestine Research and Studies, according to its tax filing.

          If Khalidi is such an unsavory character, why would a group dedicated to advancing “freedom and democracy worldwide by developing political parties, civic institutions, open elections, good governance and the rule of law,” donate money to him and his associates?

          The Center for Palestine Research and Studies was founded in 1993 by Khalidi and six others as an independent think tank for Palestinian policy and strategy. Khalidi has also served as a founding trustee.

          According to its web site, “The Center does not adopt political positions other than advocating free, democratic exchange and expression. It is fully committed to information exchange and to publishing research according to professional standards. CPRS encourages outstanding scholars in Palestinian political, strategic, and economic issues to actively participate in the current dialogue regarding the formulation of Palestinian priorities and options and to gather a range of perspectives.”

          Obama’s relationship to Khalidi, meanwhile, dates to the 1990s when the two men taught at the University of Chicago, lived in the same neighborhood and had children attending the same school. During the 1990s, Khalidi was the director of both the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago.

          At the 2003 dinner celebrating Khalidi’s departure from Chicago to go to Columbia, then-state senator Obama reminisced about meals prepared by Khalidi’s wife, Mona, and conversations that had challenged his thinking, according to an April story by Peter Wallsten at the Los Angeles Times.

          His many talks with the Khalidis, Obama said, had been “consistent reminders to me of my own blind spots and my own biases. . . . It’s for that reason that I’m hoping that, for many years to come, we continue that conversation — a conversation that is necessary not just around Mona and Rashid’s dinner table,” but around “this entire world.”

          Editors at the Los Angeles Times have refused to release the videotape citing a promise made to the source who supplied it.

          In that same story, Obama is described as a “stalwart” supporter of Israel and its security needs, who endorses a two-state solution in which Jewish and Palestinian nations co-exist – consistent with current U.S. policy.

          Khalidi traces his roots to New York, as well as the Middle East. He was born in Manhattan in 1948. His father, a Palestinian Muslim born in Jerusalem, worked for the United Nations, and his mother a Lebanese-American Christian, was an interior decorator.

          After graduating from the United Nations International School, he earned a bachelor’s degree from Yale in 1970 and a doctorate from Oxford University in 1974. Before coming to Chicago, he had taught at universities in Lebanon.

          Khalidi denies he was ever a spokesman for the PLO. He was an adviser to the Palestinian delegation during Middle East peace talks from 1991 to 1993, and often talked to reporters about the Palestinian cause, which he said led some to erroneously identify him as a spokesman.

          In an article published this spring in the Nation magazine, Khalidi denounced Israeli practices in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and U.S. Middle East policy, but also condemned Palestinians for failing to embrace a nonviolent strategy. He said that the two-state solution favored by the Bush administration (and Obama) is “deeply flawed,” but conceded there were also “flaws in the alternatives.”

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          • Muckety this! Joe Biden to Jessica Simpson

            November 6, 2008 at 5:36pm

            Many celebrities have come out in support of president-elect Barack Obama, but which singer credits Joe Biden for his existence?

          • John McCain has a long, complicated relationship with gambling interests

            In a lengthy piece today, The New York Times details John McCain’s extensive connections to the casino industry and Indian gaming.

            As a member and former chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, it’s not surprising that McCain would have many supporters in industry.

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            Yet in 2008, both Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton rank higher in campaign donations from Indian gaming organizations. According to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics, Clinton ranks second among congressional recipients (after Bill Richardson), with contributions totaling $82,375. Obama ranks 12th, with $56,100.

            McCain isn’t on the list of top 20 recipients, having received $5,000.

            The center’s analysis found that Indian tribes and the National Indian Gaming Association, the tribes’ chief lobbying group, have given $7.3 million this year to federal candidates and their parties.

            The gambling industry as a whole has contributed $12.7 million. Giving in the larger sector has been led by MGM Mirage, whose chairman, J. Terrence Lanni, is a close friend of McCain and a bundler for his campaign. Lanni has raised more than $500,000 for McCain’s presidential bid this year.

            After co-authoring the Indian gambling act and helping to fashion much of the legislation governing the gaming industry, McCain appears to distanced himself from the tribal casinos. In 2000, he was the top congressional recipient of their donations, taking in $39,400. This year, he has accepted $5,000.

            As the Times reports, McCain stopped taking tribal donations after the scandal surrounding Jack Abramoff and his lobbying activities for Indian tribes.

            However, less overt connections continue. The Times notes: “In his current campaign, more than 40 fund-raisers and top advisers have lobbied or worked for an array of gambling interests – including tribal and Las Vegas casinos, lottery companies and online poker purveyors.”

            Campaign staffers told the Times that McCain was “justifiably proud” of his record on Indian gaming.

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          • Mark Salter ‘channels’ John McCain for his biggest speech yet (Muckety)

            The prime-time acceptance speech to be delivered tonight by Republican presidential nominee John McCain has been crafted by a man described as the candidate’s best friend, as well as his Boswell.

            For two decades, Mark Salter has made channeling McCain’s voice his life’s work. He co-authored five books with the Arizona senator (and split the proceeds 50-50), including the best-selling memoir, Faith of Our Fathers. He has also been McCain’s speechwriter, adviser and closest confidante, surviving countless campaign shake-ups.

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            “The only person closer to McCain is his wife,” said former senator Warren Rudman, a longtime friend to both men.

            From the very start, McCain’s history as a former prisoner of war was part of his political brief. He was first elected to Congress as a war hero beneath the slogan “a name Arizonans are talking about.”

            But it was Salter who distilled and refined the narrative.

            “Salter has transformed his boss into a character worthy of literature, enlivening his inner conflicts and drawing out his motivations,” wrote Sasha Issenberg of the Boston Globe. “Salter has given the blunt McCain a new voice as a reflective narrator of his own actions – made evident in the “imperfect servant” line, in which our protagonist earns our trust by acknowledging his flaw.”

            In Faith of My Fathers, published in 1999 during his first presidential campaign, McCain’s release from prison became a revelatory moment:

            “I had remembered a dying man’s legacy to his son,” McCain wrote, “and when I needed it most, I had found my freedom abiding in it.”

            That theme – of discovering individual purpose through a “cause greater than self-interest” – became central to McCain’s narrative.

            Besides getting McCain better than anyone, Salter has also demonstrated “a one-of-a-kind instinct for how to craft McCain’s public image,” wrote Michael Crowley of the New Republic.

            “Over the years, he has taken the raw material of McCain’s biography and temperament and turned it into a compelling narrative that supersedes politics–one about an independent-minded war hero who celebrates courage and humility, demands individual sacrifice, and excoriates vanity.”

            A burly, chain-smoker, Salter met McCain for the first time in the mid-1980s and immediately hit it off with him.

            He had grown up in Davenport, Iowa, the son of a Korean War veteran, who apparently shared McCain’s gruff modesty. “People write about how McCain is unnecessarily modest,” Salter told Salon in 1999. “But it’s perfectly consistent with the way my father talked about his war experience.”

            Salter’s unusual life story also appealed to McCain. After a long rebellious streak working on railroads and singing in a rock band, Salter had gone to night school, ultimately graduating from Georgetown University.

            Drawn to politics, he got a job writing speeches for UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, and got to know McCain’s press secretary who invited him to do some freelance work for the senator.

            The two men immediately struck up a friendship. Within four years, Salter had been elevated to McCain’s chief of staff. Salter also eventually married McCain’s former scheduler, Diane, with whom he has two daughters.

            By all accounts, Salter is fiercely loyal. He once wrestled a critic of the senator to the floor outside his office and held him until the police came.

            And last summer, with McCain’s campaign sinking in the polls and running out of money, the senator let go his top managers. The day after the shake-up, he talked to Salter about the future. Salter assured the senator that he was “a McCain guy,” and that he would do whatever the senator wanted, according to the Wall Street Journal.

            Now, in a hotly contested election, Salter faces his greatest challenge to date – to sell his candidate as the real agent of change. The speech he reportedly labored over all summer will purportedly spotlight McCain’s moments of self-sacrifice, including his refusal of early release from captivity in Vietnam, and his decision to challenge his own party over campaign-finance reform.

            The contrast, he says, will be the “selfishness” of “self-interested” political partisans who, he argues, have risked nothing of substance in their lives.

            “Obviously I’ve got to get this one right,” he told the Wall Street Journal.