John McCain to discontinue medical treatment for brain cancer
I didn't always agree with him and his positions but I will miss him when he departs the political scene. He was first and foremost an honorable man a man of courage. There are few like him in there strength and resolve to do what they perceive as right and correct.
If notified of impending release, can the prisoner negotiate- I refuse to go unless you . . . ?
I would have thought it would be- Release means walk out or get carried out.
McCain wasn't in Washington to vote since December of last year. He clung to his position for eight months so the Republican governor could not appoint a replacement.
I didn't like his "campaign finance reform"; I believed it was a violation of the First Amendment. In 2008 I voted for Romney in the Va. primary, even though he had dropped out; but I hoped that if he got enough votes, he might get back in. But after McCain got the nomination, I voted for him because I considered Obama too Socialistic.--I still respect him for his
service in the military, particularly what he endured as a POW in Vietnam. I understand that he could have been released, but he refused; it had something to do with a fellow prisoner. I have read in the Code of Conduct: "I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy." Brain cancer is a horrible thing: I
have to regret that he died that way.--I don't think it was necessary to direct that Trump not come to his funeral.--Ah, well. Someone on the radio was remarking about his not resigning from the job even though he wasn't going on to the floor and voting, and that remark made some sense.
But he deserved some respect. So let him rest in peace.
You love words as your post indicates and present your "sounds good analysis" as facts.
Your grasp on what Trump is quite superficial, not even close to what he is and capable of accomplishing..
You have the
He can't be blamed for giving up information under torture; one can only hope that he mixed it up with falsehoods to mislead them. When an American soldier is shot down and tortured by communists there is no question of what side for us to take without qualification. But neither do we go on from there to suspend all judgment about what happened since.
There is no substitute for words, i.e., rational thinking, in "practical reality". That is Pragmatism, not Objecivism. Trump's unprincipled Pragmatism relies on implicit, unacknowledged principles he has adopted -- without understanding -- to declare what "works". If his "instincts" lead to some approximately good position in "practical" reality, which they certainly often do not, it is because of some implicit more or less proper principles that he can't articulate or defend, and it doesn't take much for him to wander off even from that. This is a big problem with Trump idolatry following the 'man on the white horse' without regard to rational principles.
Trump had some approximate glimmer of what McCain was doing in exploiting his (unjustifed) reputation as a "war hero". He knows that being taken prisoner is not a value in fighting war, let alone an exemplary accomplishment, but that's all. As soon as he was publicly challenged with boos and hisses he emotionally reacted to undercut his own statement, apparently under bad advice from his advisors, because neither he nor the rest of them understood the concepts and principles required to make the essential distinctions. They could not expose the package deal promoting sacrifice as a moral criterion, used to overwhelm all other considerations. Trump backing down resulted in a strengthened false moral sanction for McCain. His "instincts" could not and did not help him or us.
Your response in the link you sent is right on
But he is able to translate his instinct into practical reality which I take any time as a substitute for words.
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