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McCain: The Myth of a Maverick by Matt Welch
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Matt Welch Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2008-09-16 ISBN: 0230608051 Number of pages: 272 Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Book Reviews of McCain: The Myth of a MaverickBook Review: The Maturation of John McNasty Summary: 5 Stars
John McCain is first, last, and always, a social and political chameleon.
Whatever John needs to look like, whatever John needs to say, whatever John needs to appear to be, John will be. According to the notes section in the back of the book, John McCain was thinking about being the President of the United States while he was a prisoner of war in Hanoi. It must have been nice to be so certain that you would make it back home, when so many prisoners of war did not. I wonder why the "Songbird" was so sure of his own future? And I will always wonder why John McCain single-handedly fought and eliminated the, "Bring the POW'S home/find the MIA'S movement", back in the 1990's?
I believe that John McCain picked Sarah Palin as his running mate in order to draw attention away from his own past record. McCain knew that Palin would open her big mouth and the media would be focused on her instead of vetting out John McCain. (Keating-5 for instance)
Don't illusionists usually have a pretty assistant to draw the onlookers attention away while the illusion is being performed?
Being a Maverick is an illusion.
John McCain is the, "Illusionist-Chameleon".
Summary of McCain: The Myth of a MaverickJohn McCain is one of the most familiar, sympathetic, and overexposed figures in American politics, yet his concrete governing philosophy and actual track record have been left curiously unexamined, mostly because of the massive distractions in his official biography, but also because of his ingenious strategy of talking ad infinitum to each and every access-craving media person who happens by. The more he has spouted, the less journalists have bothered trying to see through the fog.
McCain gives the voting public what it wants but can?t find -- a flesh-and-bones political portrait of a man onto whom people are forever projecting their own ideological fantasies. It is a psychological key for decoding his allegedly ?maverick? actions, and the first realistic assessment of what a John McCain presidency may look like. McCain will quickly lay out in overlapping detail the root cause of the senator?s worldview: his personal transformation from underachieving punk to war hawk uber-patriot, in which he used the "higher power" of American nationalism to save his life and soul.
As McCain wrenches himself inside-out in pursuit of the prize that eluded him in 2000, McCain will look behind the war hero, behind the maverick reformer. Journalist and pundit Matt Welch brings to this project an investigative eye and a coolly analytical mindset to provide Republicans, Democrats and Independents a picture of the man in full before they enter the voting booth in 2008.
Political Books
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