Friday, October 17, 2008

John McCain: Unbalanced, Unglued And Unfit

Over the past two weeks, we’ve witnessed the coming apart of a once-proud man. Whether in his rambling, often incoherent answers during Wednesday night’s debate or his stump speeches that seem to be little more than words dashing around in search of a thought, John McCain is coming unglued, to a trained professional eye and to a casual observer alike.

For whatever reason, as the campaign dwindles to a few remaining days, McCain is in more than political trouble: He is in serious psychological trouble.

A psychiatrist friend noticed it during the second debate.

If he didn’t end up practicing psychiatry, he wanted to be Flapping Lips Wolkowitz, a drummer who is the last living exponent of Chicago Ashkenazi Klezmer blues music. So, he sometimes calls himself Flapping Lips when not treating patients.

“There’s something wrong with McCain,” Flapping Lips tells me after the town hall. “Did you see how he just wandered around the stage? That’s a common sign of confusion in the elderly, usually when they know where they are but aren’t sure why they’re there. ”

In Florida, another friend who’s not a medical professional spots the same problem in McCain. Pete is a decorated Viet Nam vet who now lives in Florida. I find an e-mail from him in my mailbox this morning where he speculates on what McCain has become – and why.

“Maybe it's the dragons still haunting his psyche from 66-months of North Vietnamese captivity. Or it’s the ghosts of a revered military father and grandfather whose accomplishments he could never quite match. Perhaps his cold-hearted abandonment of his first wife and children still disturb him. It might even the demons of his unbridled ambition – remember that he first ran for president in 1992 – that are driving him mad.

“Whatever the causes of the ghosties and ghoulies and things that go bump in his night, one thing is certain: They all showed up at Wednesday’s debate and keep reappearing every time he stands up before a campaign crowd.

“I no longer loathe the man; I pity him. He has become a sad final chapter in his own life. I hope in retirement he finds some peace. Thursday night he convinced an entire world that he is completely unfit for the office he seeks.”

Frustratingly Stable Race

It’s easy to understand how McCain may have become unhinged. Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll today shows Obama attracting 50% of the vote while McCain is stuck at 46%. These figures reflect a remarkably stable race where, for 22 straight days, Obama is enjoying a four-to-eight point advantage.

The same tracking poll reveals that voters trust Obama more than McCain on seven of 10 key issues, most notably the economy which outweighs all other concerns this election by a wide margin. McCain is more trusted only on abortion, immigration and Iraq – and then by percentage points that are within the margin of error.

More critical to McCain is that he cannot seem to shake Obama’s commanding lead in the Electoral College, with most state-by-state estimates putting Obama comfortably over 300 votes; 270 are needed to be elected president.

This also explains two things.

First, it is why Obama spent much of yesterday cautioning supporters against complacency, reminding them of what happened in the New Hampshire primary and that the only poll that counts is the one Nov. 4. Second, it explains why McCain is sounding increasingly like a desperate man trying to hang on to the last lifeboat rowing away from a sinking ship.

Discombobulated Party

McCain became the candidate more by default than by being the champion of Republican values and beliefs; no one knows what those are any more anyway. While a powerful, well organized block in the GOP, the evangelical right isn’t large enough to nominate a Mike Huckabee, but it is just large enough to block Mitt Romney with his demon Mormon beliefs from winning. Rudy Guiliani spent his entire, brief primary campaign as a punch line, thanks to Joe Biden. Fred Thompson was the Great White Hope until he actually entered the race and turned out to be a dud.

So, a discombobulated party ended up nominating McCain because he was the last one standing, not because anyone really thought he’d be a great candidate let alone a great president.

Besides, the party figured it was John’s turn; the GOP is notorious for picking presidential candidates from the first in line of waiting possibilities.

It would be a shame if finally getting his turn means John McCain has been pushed over the edge entirely, ending his career unbalanced, unglued and unfit.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Poor John. Waited all his life to be president and it's ruining him instead. I think your friend Pete's observations are right on.

Anonymous said...

John is the goat. The GOP knew they couldn't win so John was sacrificed. His career is essentially over. He's too old to run in 2012 so a lose in 2008 will not taint a future run; there won't be one. Likewise, I think this is why Palin was chosen. No way she'll be on the ticket in future races. Too much baggage. And she is unlikely to remain in politics anyway. So they filled a ticket and went through the motions, protecting anyone that *might* run in the future.

It's sad really. The Republicans have turned on McCain repeatedly and he just takes it. He was stabbed in the back in 2000 and he just rolled over. And he endoresed Bush and worked hard to get him elected. What thanks did he get? That's when John McCain ceased to exist. I don't know who the wrinkly old man is that's running now, but it isn't John McCain. And he isn't going to win.

Cash Mundy said...

The American Conservative has an article saying he's probably
brain damaged, and that even George Will has doubts about him. Those Paleo-conservatives are quite a different thing from the neocon cabal.

kate loving shenk said...

I find it odd that John McCain referred to the Kennedy Assassination NOT as an assassination but as an intervention.

Please read this:

http://open.salon.com/content.php?cid=30001

Anonymous said...

Scary thought, or frightening reality? I'll go with the latter. And this is why:

My father was a POW of the Germans during WW2. As an American fighter pilot over France following D-Day, his P-47 Thunderbolt was shot down while he was strafing an armored brigade. He was severely brutalized and would have been executed if not for a Jewish doctor who said he must be turned over to the Gestapo in Paris for interrogation.

He was tortured by the Gestapo for two weeks and left for dead one night as they fled Paris to avoid Patton's forces and the free French troops with Patton who were extracting their full measure of revenge.

He was never really in charge of his anger the rest of his life, and was declared 50% disabled by PTSD by the VA. His behavior for most of my memory hinged between totally inexplicably erratic actions or a detachment from reality that could only be described as "other-worldly".

But he came across to almost everyone outside his immediate family as controlled, fun, warm, and with a fair degree of charm - but it was all an act of extraordinary scope. His saving grace was his very large inheritance.

When he died he virtually left my Mother penniless. It was a very sad story.

And nobody reminds me more of him than John McCain.

Maybe it is part and parcel of the fighter pilot mentality, or the mistreatment at capture, but I'd prefer not to find out the hard way.... so we damn sure better keep old John out of the White House.

The failure to heed a clear warning often has dire consequenceses for all.

Cany said...

Thoughtful post, and this, below, is exactly what I have concluded in different words:

"So, a discombobulated party ended up nominating McCain because he was the last one standing, not because anyone really thought he’d be a great candidate let alone a great president."

A member of LDS could not be elected in this country right now, and perhaps not for a while because of their involvement in CA's prop 8. While the RCs are likewise involved, they don't seem to take such a hit for it. This is sort of strange insomuch as many on the hard religious right see both groups as decidedly unChristian (as so clearly evidenced by Palin's minister, for instance).

It does my heart no good to see a man drowning in his own making, as McCain is. I clearly do NOT want him in the White House due not only to his positions (and certainly Palin), but because of his temperment.

I don't trust either of those two (let alone Todd Palin) anywhere near the nuclear football.

The most important issue now is seeing the downticket majority in congress is dem. With a same party pres and congress, we actually CAN get some things done.

God help them all, I certainly would never want to be a federally elected official right now. They have such a mess on their hands.

But Obama and his steady hand has a calming effect, and many are deeply attracted to him personally, intellectually and behaviorally.

I view him as a live saver to a drowning country.

Anonymous said...

My father also was a POW during WWII captured by the Nazis. However, his time in prison camp was short compared to many others but he must have wondered whether he would get out alive. It was very cold and they were made to stand in line outside (the only clothes they had been allowed were their undershorts) and wait to take a cold shower. There was one blanket for two men so at night they would wrap it around their feet so that they wouldn't freeze and sleep with their arms around each other.

I know that McCain and others went through terrible things in the camps - torture and deprivation. I wonder if what we have allowed today in terms of torture matches all of that. It is wrong. Dad was liberated but very ill with blood poisoning. When he finally came home he would not talk about the camp except for what I told you in this comment.

He began drinking more and had an alcohol problem most of his life which destroyed his and mom's marriage. I think a lot of it had to do with his war experience. I noticed the same things that your friends did in terms of McCain's behavior during that second debate. Not only did he wander, make strange facial expressions and at one time laugh at Obama while he was speaking but he often interruped him.

Much of it seems rather juvenile and since I cared for some years for my aunt who declined into Alzheimer's, McCain's behavior reminded me of stages that she went through. Thank you for your articles.