Nick Gillespie | January 7, 2008
Get
(re)acquainted with
incoming reason mag editor Matt Welch
(reason archive here; personal blog
here) and scarf down a free
lunch next week at a Cato Insitute book forum:
McCain: The Myth of a Maverick
BOOK FORUM
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
12:00 PM (Luncheon to Follow)Featuring the author, Matt Welch, Editor-in-Chief, Reason Magazine, and Lance Tarrance, Jr., Former Senior Strategist, McCain for President.
The Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20001John McCain is one of the most familiar figures in American politics, a figure with great appeal to many. However, his concrete governing philosophy and actual track record have been left unexamined. Matt Welch's new book McCain: The Myth of a Maverick gives a flesh-and-bones political portrait of a man onto whom people project their own ideological fantasies. It is the first realistic assessment of what a John McCain presidency might look like. Welch lays out the root cause of the senator's worldview: his personal transformation from underachieving youth to war hawk, in which he used the "higher power" of American nationalism to save his life and soul. Please join us to discuss this new work on the day that New Hampshire decides the fate of Senator McCain's enduring aspiration to attain the presidency.
Cato events, unless otherwise noted, are free of charge. To register for this event, please fill out the form below and click submit or email events@cato.org, fax (202) 371-0841, or call (202) 789-5229 by noon, Monday, January 7, 2008. Please arrive early. Seating is limited and not guaranteed. News media inquiries only (no registrations), please call (202) 789-5200.
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Fricking McCan't! Why can't the broke bastard blow away. He's sucking up all the independent votes.
It appears that while the symbol of Nick Gillespie's authority
was the leather jacket, Matt Welch will be representing his
hegemony by the wearing of dark sunglasses.
I guess his future's so bright, he's gotta wear shades.
Dear Viet Cong,
Couldn't you have at least done one thing right? Jeeze, guys, you
kill thousands of POWs and you let this guy go? What's the
deal?
--Everyone
Is the mythos of his maverickism that false? Would libertarians
really fall over themselves to have any of the other non Paul
candidates in office before him?
Maybe I missed the big issue that turned him into a pariah? Could
someone fill me in?
yeah, both of those issues are annoying, but I still think he
and Thompson are the only republicans besides Paul I could pull the
november ballot handle for.
Atleast he understands the need for civil liberties and cuttting
government spending...
um,
Editor of Reason.tv, I believe? Should find it here.
Between Hillary and McCain, I could maybe vote for him, but it
would be difficult. Limiting political speech is a huge black mark
in my book...
LIT,
I'm not getting down on Paul, I was just trying to imagine a
circumstance in which I would vote for McCain, and that'd be the
closest.
I still think he should have took the coward's way out in Vietnam,
however...
By the way, one of my all time favorite Welch posts:
"How Ever Do the Handcuffed Suicide Pactists Manage?"
"The Constitution is not now and has never been a suicide pact,
even back when the country was truly vulnerable to foreign
invasion, like, oh, when the thing was written. On the contrary,
it's arguably the best democratic defense mechanism known to man.
If liberty and security were at zero-sum odds, the world would
still be disgraced by Ceausescu, Husak and Honecker. And if rights
and ethics were handcuffs, America would have been hauled off to
prison decades ago."
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/111837.html
Oh, and I still laugh when I think about that link to George Will's
"Thanksgiving Death Porn".
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/107573.html
Is the mythos of his maverickism that false?
Well, yeah. He's a frickin' Senator beloved by the mainstream
media. Nothing about that is consistent with being a
"maverick."
Hell, on his signature issues he teamed up with leading Democrats.
Since when is getting into bed with the Other Party a sign of
maverickosity?
What is with the photo? Reminds me in one of the scenes from
"All The Presidents Men", when Redford, defining supercool for the
70s, pulls the moves on some housewife non babe to get some key
info to save America.
I don't know about the sun glasses. In Washington the only dudes
who wear sunglasses on a consistent basis are FBI and Secret
Service agents. Not a good image for editor in chief of a magazine
decated to liberty to have.
Since when is getting into bed with the Other Party a sign of maverickosity?
MSM maverick. He bucked his own party once or twice!
Kinda. OOOoooooohhh!! It gives me the soundbite my producer/editor
wants! I just wet 'em!
America's Future:
That was goddamn disgusting. And not funny.
Whatever McCain is, however a bully and an authoritarian Republican
he is, he doesn't deserve that shit.
Whoever you are, go fuck yourself. Seriously.
"If liberty and security were at zero-sum odds, the world would
still be disgraced by Ceausescu, Husak and Honecker. And if rights
and ethics were handcuffs, America would have been hauled off to
prison decades ago."
Of course we still are disgraced by the likes of Castro and the
Kims and Mugabee and any number of other horrible regimes. Yeah, we
don't have Honecker or Ceausescu anymore but they managed to hang
on for about 50 years and enslave millions. Nothing lasts forever
and they certainly had a pretty good run while it lasted. There is
nothing that says that liberty and ethics are guarenteed or that
people who have the will and the firepower can't take away your
liberty and life if they choose to do so.
"And if rights and ethics were handcuffs, America would have been
hauled off to prison decades ago."
I wasn't aware that the US was so ethical. Not to go all leftwing
on people but the last time I read the history books, the US has
done things like defeated and interned any Indian tribes that got
in its way, kicked the crap out of Mexico on dubious pretenses,
fought and won some nasty insurgencies in places like Central
America and Philippines using tactics that I doubt Welch would
approve of, won a World War by carpet bombing and eventually atomic
bombing the enemy and won a cold war in no small measure by
cooperating with some really nasty people who happened to share our
dislike of communists. Not that the US doesn't have its good
qualities, it does. But the idea that the US has been some paragon
of international virtue is monumentally wrong. The US got ahead in
no small measure by winning wars and knocking the living snot out
of anyone who got in our way. I suspect Welch knows that and is
simply being disingenuous.
I comment on this because it is one of those stupid statements that
Reason staff seem to often make that sound good but make absolutely
no sense when you think about them. If Welch objects to McCain's
view on the war on terror, that is his right and he ought to
elucidate why. But stop insulting people's intelligence by claiming
that America is some paragon of "rights and ethics" in dealing with
its enemies.
Is that a picture of Matt Welch or John McCain?
And does Reason.tv really need its own editor? One guy should be
able to run the mag, the "tv" stuff, and go on Bill Oreilly.
I have like 8 jobs!
Is that a picture of Matt Welch or John McCain?
I believe it's Illya Kuryakin. McCain is just a pseudonym for
Illya's archenemy Sebastian Moran.
John -- Odd that you're getting exercised about a 2005 blog post
that had nothing whatsoever to do with John McCain.
At any rate, managing "to hang on for about 50 years" is not my
definition of "stability" (nor is getting dragged through the
streets after being shot in the head). I happen to believe -- and
it's just that: belief --that dictatorial regimes are
inherently *un*stable, and weak, making the fabled "tradeoff
between liberty and security" a worse-than-false choice. Liberty,
and liberalism, creates *more* security, long-term, than
authoritarianism.
As for "the idea that the US has been some paragon of international
virtue," that's really not anything I said, though on balance I
think it has been more virtuous than most countries in history.
(Not a high bar to jump, certainly.)
Matt,
That photo of you is much nicer than that one Nick posted of Brian
when his latest book was released.
Sounds like fun, and I wish I could have been there today. I'll
have to console myself with a trip to Manchester tonight for the
McCain rally!
Seriously -- I like the surge. I like trying to win in Iraq. I'd
rather America did not abandon those Iraqis who dared to try to
build a democracy in the Middle East. So I like McCain.
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