McCain Drops in
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
DIGG THIS
This morning
I awoke and sat here at my word processor and tried to remember
what it was that was supposed to make this day special for so many
New Hampshire Republicans.
Oh, yeah! Right.
John McCain is favoring us with a visit. In my mind’s ear, I hear
the voice of Danny Kadingo, a reluctant Marine in Vietnam, skipping
around the mess hall as he heralded the pending arrival of some
self-important member of the brass.
"The general
is coming today, today! The general is coming, hooray! Hooray!"
Hey, is this
a big deal or what? McCain is coming to New Hampshire. To Saint
Anselm College on the outskirts of Manchester, the state’s largest
city. It is such a big deal that none of us is allowed to drive
over there or park our cars anywhere near the place. To get to the
McCain rally, you’re supposed to drive over to a mall parking lot
a few miles away and take shuttle bus over to the college. And for
a 9 a.m. rally, you’re supposed to arrive at that mall parking lot
at 6:30 a.m.
Imagine that!
Two and half hours before the event you have to be there in the
mall parking lot at the break of dawn. Wait for the bus. Wait to
get over there. Get there and wait for McCain’s arrival. Wait to
notice how old he looks. Wait to notice that wife Cindy does not
look as young as she does on television. Wait to see which Boston
or network newsperson or camera guy is going to block your view.
Then, finally, listening to all the rhetoric, waiting for a single
sensible thought and remembering the story Ronald Reagan used to
tell about a kid opening a closet on Christmas morning and cheerfully
digging through the pile of manure he found there in the expectation
that, "There’s got to be a pony in here somewhere!"
Listening to
McCain, will anyone hear a thought or a summons to a thought? Will
it be scary? You might recall the musical non-thought he attempted
to sing when he said, "Bomb, bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran."
"There’s
going to be more wars," McCain said matter-of-factly. There
is? Great! Vote for McCain in the expectation of more wars. How
many? Pick a number. Just be at a rally on Election Night, cheering
for a McCain-Palin victory.
"Four
more wars! Four more wars!"
But today’s
rally is like the Thirty Years War. From the time the McCaniacs
arrive at the mall parking lot to the time they get back to it will
be like, what, six hours? What is this supposed to be, the Super
Bowl? Will there be instant replay in case McCain fumbles a line
on the way to the end zone? Will there be Frito Lays commercials?
How about Bob Dole pitching Viagra? How about Bob Dole pitching
Elizabeth Dole, the senator from North Carolina?
"Sure,
how far do you want me to throw her?"
That’s okay,
Bob. I think the voters of North Carolina will take care of that.
But back to
New Hampshire. All those hours to listen to McCain say nothing we
haven’t heard him say already – over and over again. He is not going
to reinvent himself now, not with less than two weeks until Election
Day. Even Nixon didn’t do that. And who can remember how many times
there was a "New Nixon" to disbelieve between 1952 and
1968? Hubert Humphrey was rightly contemptuous of a man so hollow
and so plastic he could reinvent himself repeatedly to advance his
political ambitions. The procession of new Nixons brings to mind
a song country singer Tanya Tucker recorded some years ago:
"Don’t
Believe My Heart Can Stand Another You."
Anyway, all
these hours spent waiting for Sen. Goodguy. It reminds me of what
Sam Goldwyn supposedly said when first offered the chance to make
a movie of Margaret Mitchell’s "Gone With the Wind."
"Who the
hell wants to see a movie about the Civil War? And the goddamn losers,
fer Crissake!"
This time McCain
is coming with Secret Service, augmented by local police and campus
security and, perhaps, the Arizona Desert Patrol. It was easier
to see McCain in April of ’07. It was easier to see Obama just last
month. It was probably easier to see Elvis. It’s still easier, perhaps,
to hear Billy Graham. I would bet it was easier to see and hear
Jesus. Ask Bob Dole. He was there. He remembers.
Now I will
do a lot for my country and even for my checkered career. But my
days of "Hurry up and wait" are over. I am not going to
skip my morning coffee, leave my warm, semi-comfortable apartment
before dawn to go and stand and wait at a parking lot to wait for
a bus to take me to a campus to wait to see and hear John McCain.
Been there, done that.
That’s the
advantage of experience. I think I’ll wait for the "Saturday
Night Live" version.
October
22, 2008
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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