Posted on 08/28/2018 3:46:39 AM PDT by markomalley
Since the news broke of Sen. John McCains passing on Saturday night, tributes to the man, and his full life of public service, have been rolling in from all corners of the political spectrum. In testament to the respect he commanded even from his political opponents, two former rivals in presidential contestsBarack Obama and George W. Bushwill be among those to eulogize the senator at a service in his honor.
While those who knew him better and shared the heavy burdens of leadership with him will speak for the country, I feel compelled to add this small token of gratitude for how his example of statesmanship and courage impressed just one family.
My parents immigrated to the United States in the late 1980s and settled in Silicon Valley, California, where I was born. I grew up in Palo Alto, among the people who would, in the next two decades, become recognized around the country as the cream of the tech world, although they already saw themselves as such back then.
They were clever, rich, and privileged; a new American elite who had been granted every advantage. Yet they saw patriotic attachment to the country that had given them everything as unsophisticated at best and jingoistic at worst.
During McCains first presidential run in 2000, I was too young to be substantively involved in politics. Yet all in my family noticed what a contrast this manson and grandson to admirals, born into prestigeprovided to the detached, global-citizen class of Palo Alto. McCains first and most important allegiance was always as an American. No association has ever meant more to me than that, he said, when conceding the election of 2008.
McCain represented an older American elite, a better one, that still considered privilege synonymous with the duty of service. Few families have taken that duty more seriously than the McCains, with their cross-generational ethos of service to country, inside and outside the military.
Others have and will continue to write about McCains heroism in Vietnam, his accomplishments as senator, and the many achievements of his rich life. But to our little family of brand-new Americans, he was a shining example of a servant leadership class, who did not take the blessings this magnificent country had bestowed on them for granted. He showed us the highest standard of what it meant to be an American.
Over the years, most people can point to political and policy disagreements with the original maverick. He was, like his hero Theodore Roosevelt, the man in the arena, and just about all of his colleagues and rivals had to climb into that arena to meet him at some point or another.
But only the vicious and dishonest could ever doubt that McCain made his many important decisions with the best interests of his country, as he saw them, at heart. If every public servant shared his patriotic intentions, the country would be a far better place, and it is poorer for having lost one of its finest.
Never has a political slogan so perfectly captured the ethos of the man running: Country First. From the age of 17 to his passing at almost 82, McCain put his country first, and for those decades of faithful service, we, his fellow countrymen, should show our deepest gratitude.
McCain said of himself when he came back from captivity and torture in the Hanoi Hilton, I wasnt my own man anymore, I was my countrys. Your country thanks and honors you, Senator McCain, and it will miss you.
Capt. Eddington of “In Harm’s Way” comes to mind when thinking of his time in the military.
Is it me or is the non-stop fawning over him becoming tiresome? I don’ remember such hullaballoo over President Reagan, though I do remember the massive lines with people of all colors waiting to pay their repects to him. Somehow I don’t predict that for the Senator.
I once read that during the Communist rule in Poland, people would make a point of taking their evening walk when the Communist run TV news was broadcast. When the MSM/Democrat/RINO combine perform their week long mourning ritual and Trump bashing, real Americans should follow the lead of the Poles under the Communist yoke and ignore it.
Sorry Inez. I did not vote for McCain the last two times he was up for reelection. I did not vote for Senator during both of those elections. I figured, the liberals were going to reelect McCain anyway, why should I waste my time voting for him.
It will be great when we no longer have to read or hear that Godawful name (mccain) every 2 minutes.
He’s dead, gone, and soon to be buried. He was one of the worst senators in American history and a traitor to Arizona, the republican party, and the American people - repeatedly.
I’d like to have a roll of toilet paper with his name on it just so I could wipe my ass with it repeatedly.
They have been goofy of late.
You can check my posts and see that I hated McCain as much as the next guy, but he did not not start the Forrestal fire. The missile that started the fire came from a plane on the other side of the deck.
I can’t even stand to watch t.v. this week. McCain’s death pre-empted one of my favorite Fox shows, Greg Gutfeld. Also Jesse Watters. LOL!
I’ll stick to Netflix or Crave, or, better yet, take a walk as my doctor wants me to do. ;)
I stand corrected, Kevin. He’s still a RAT-loving POS, IMHO.
Since FR does not offer an edit feature for our postings, I’ll do my corrected repost here:
“..When the pack of low-life, slimly RATs suck up to a POS like this, it speaks VOLUMES of what he really was.
The real heros were the ones that died trying to put out the fire to save the USS Forestal....”
“I cant even stand to watch t.v. this week. McCains death pre-empted one of my favorite Fox shows, Greg Gutfeld. Also Jesse Watters. LOL!”
Apparently McCain resorted to his true self in the immediate aftermath, though. Once escaping his plane he watched the proceedings in a safe place on closed-circuit TV rather than helping. He was also quickly airlifted off the ship to the exclusion of others before the fire was out and all the dead had been recovered, presumably because of the status of his father and grandfather. McCain was a guy who whenever given the chance to do the right thing did the wrong thing. He was despicable and this lionization of him among certain circles is sickening.
I’m not turning the TV back on til he’s in the ground and salt on the grave.
Judge Jeanine too?! You ‘re right, no kidding. We’ll be subjected to this for a while. *sigh*
The toilet paper idea? Immediately trademark it. Add Jane Fonda ... don’t know how to do it but include hated people on all sides. ;)
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