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Posted Monday, September 15, 2008 5:27 PM

ALTER: Are McCain's War Wounds Really to Blame for His 'Computer Illiteracy'?

Andrew Romano

Last Friday, I posted an item called "Obama Plays the Age Card (Again)" that was critical of Chicago's efforts to portray McCain as unfit to occupy the Oval Office simply because he's not yet a fluent computer user. As I wrote at the time, the Obama camp's "Still" ad exaggerated some of McCain's past statements and ignored others in a subtle attempt to paint the Arizona senator as not only "out of touch" but senile. In an update added later that day, I noted that there might be another reason--beside incuriosity--why McCain isn't yet maintaining his own MySpace page: his war wounds. In 2000, the Boston Globe reported that "McCain’s severe war injuries prevent him from combing his hair, typing on a keyboard, or tying his shoes," while Forbes Magazine later added that even though "McCain is an inveterate devotee of email" who is "regarded as the U.S. Senate’s savviest technologist," "the injuries he incurred as a Vietnam POW make it painful for McCain to type" so "instead he dictates responses that his wife types on a laptop." Now my NEWSWEEK colleague Jonathan Alter asks an important question: if McCain's war wounds are really to blame for his computer "illiteracy," why didn't anyone on the campaign say so? His report:

On June 16, I spoke at length with Mark Salter on the subject of McCain and the computer. He said McCain had a PC on his desk and often borrowed the BlackBerrys of others and was working at getting better on the computer. The point he was making was that McCain misspoke when he said he was "computer illiterate" in January in an interview with YahooNews. At no time did Salter say that McCain's war wounds, which mostly prevent him from lifting his arms above his head, had any connection to his slowness at adapting to the computer. You can be sure that if this were a factor, Salter would have mentioned it.

When McCain returned from Vietnam, his service in the Navy required him to type reports. There is nothing in any of the medical records released by the McCain campaign that suggests in any way that McCain had trouble typing.

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The McCain campaign should release any such records if they exist. Otherwise, McCain's campaign should be asked why it would attempt to exploit the senator's genuine suffering during the Vietnam War to protect McCain from an embarrassing charge related to his inexperience with computers.
 

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Member Comments

Posted By: ik.nha.tun@gmail.com (October 6, 2008 at 4:30 AM)

From "Fact Of The Matter"

http://www.need4trth.blogspot.com

Senator Obama has never deceived us into thinking that 'CHANGE' comes easy. I remember in one debate Senator Clinton mockingly, saying to Senator Obama About the Special Interest, "What do you think, the special interest is just going to go away?" We found this week that that's true enough. This week we learned that even though John McCain was speaking against Greed, Corruption, Special Interest, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, He even introduced a a Propaganda ad where he tried to tie Franklin Reines former CEO of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to Barack Obama.

That one slid off like butter slides off Teflon. Then, it would seem CARMA had a lesson for McCain about Lying so freely. The NY times and Newsweek printed a story tying Rick Davis, McCains Campaign Manager to...

FREDDIE MAC AND FANNIE MAY UP UNTIL ONE MONTH AGO.....

Two reports tonight, one from the New York Times, and the other from Newsweek, contradict John McCain's statement this week that his campaign manager Rick Davis had no involvement with mortgage giant Freddie Mac for the last several years. The Times reports:

One of the giant mortgage companies at the heart of the credit crisis paid $15,000 a month to a firm owned by Senator John McCain's campaign manager from the end of 2005 through last month, according to two people with direct knowledge of the arrangement. The disclosure contradicts a statement Sunday night by Mr. McCain that the campaign manager, Rick Davis, had no involvement with the company for the last several years. Mr. Davis's firm received the payments from the company, Freddie Mac, until it was taken over by the government this month along with Fannie Mae, the other big mortgage lender whose deteriorating finances helped precipitate the cascading problems on Wall Street, the people said...

...On Sunday, in an interview with CNBC and The New York Times, Mr. McCain responded to a question about Mr. Davis's role in the advocacy group through 2005 by saying that his campaign manager "has had nothing to do with it since, and I'll be glad to have his record examined by anybody who wants to look at it."

Newsweek confirms the story:

Freddie Mac had previously paid an advocacy group run by Davis, called the Homeownership Alliance, $30,000 a month until the end 2005, when that group was dissolved. That relationship was the subject of a New York Times story Monday, which drew angry denunciations from the McCain campaign. McCain and his aides have vehemently objected to suggestions that Davis has ties to Freddie Mac-an especially sensitive issue given that the Republican presidential candidate has blamed "the lobbyists, politicians and bureaucrats" for the mortgage crisis that recently prompted the Bush administration to take over both Freddie Mac and its companion, Fannie Mae, and put it under federal conservatorship.

But neither the Times story -- nor the McCain campaign -- revealed that Davis's firm, the Washington, D.C. based lobbying firm Davis Manafort, continued to receive $15,000 a month from Freddie Mac until last month-long after the Homeownership Alliance had been terminated. The two sources, who requested anonymity discussing sensitive information, told Newsweek that Davis himself approached Freddie Mac in 2006 and asked for a new consulting arrangement that would allow his firm to continue to be paid. The arrangement was approved by Hollis McLoughlin, Freddie Mac's vice president for external relations, because "he [Davis] was John McCain's campaign manager and it was felt you couldn't say no," said one of the sources. [McLoughlin did not return phione calls. Can Somebody say "MCCAINS CAUGHT UP".

I DON'T WANT TO END THIS POST ON CROOKS AND LIARS....

I do want to end this on a HIGH POINT...Senator Obama is a Awesome Man READY TO LEAD An Awesome Nation. I personally believe he is a man God has raised up for our Nation at this particular time. I know my conservative right wing brothers and sisters would fight with me over this point. Just remember I also have a Biblical Seminary partial education. So if you come, please come with the facts. Remember, I believe in God and I do not see him in a box. He is CREATION in my eyes. So Yes, I believe He still uses men in history at his deemed appropriate times. Men of Character, Honor,Love, and Integrity of heart.

Time and again McCain ask this question, "...Is He Ready To Lead.." He's never asked US the American Constituency, Are we ready to lead? After all it is written, "Government for the people and by the people." To this I"m sure we would all say

YES WE CAN!!!!! YES WE CAN!!!!! YES WE CAN!!!!!!!


Posted By: ourland5057 (September 21, 2008 at 8:52 AM)

One of my students, with hands and fingers twisted from cerebral palsy, is able to type on a computer, open her email, and use software. At age 8, apparently she has the courage and will to learn these important skills that McCain has not.


Posted By: caraprado (September 21, 2008 at 6:30 AM)

From:

Head of State

http://headofstate.blogspot.com/2008/09/proposed-commercial-mac-vs-pc.html

Sunday, September 14, 2008

A Proposed Commercial: Mac vs. PC

(White background. Childlike piano music plays).

(A picture of Barack Obama appears against the background)

VO (Similar to voice of "Mac" character): Barack Obama is like a Mac.

(A picture of John McCain appears against the background)

VO (Similar to voice of "PC" character): John McCain is like a PC.

(Picture of a bank against the background)

VO: McCain likes the old economics, corporate welfare, and tax breaks for the wealthy of George W. Bush. He says "the economy is fundamentally strong."

(Quick cuts: Picture of Countrywide Branch, Picture of Bear Stearns, Picture of IndyMac, Picture of Lehman Brothers against background)

(Picture of Obama)

VO: Obama doesn't like old systems that crash.

(Picture of a mother, father, son and daughter against the background)

VO: Obama thinks that when it comes to health care, every American should have the access and support they need.

(Picture of family fades to blank background)

VO: McCain is against these health benefits for children, families and the elderly. He believes that when it comes to access and support for health, it's an "ownership society"--you're on your own.

(Picture of a woman standing against background)

VO: For women, McCain talks a good game, but he is against a woman's right to choose, would repeal Roe v. Wade, and even voted against equal pay for women.

(Picture expands to show many women standing behind her)

VO: Barack Obama believes that every woman should be paid the same for the same work as every man, and that every woman has the right to make her own choices.

(Picture of George W. Bush)

VO: Barack Obama has called for an end to the distortions, mismanagement, and failed policies of the Bush Administration that have left so many families in distress.

(Famed picture of McCain hugging George W. Bush)

VO: McCain has agreed with George W. Bush 90% of the time.

(Picture of McCain)

John McCain. Do you really want to spend another four years with the same old system?

(Music outro. Fade.)

Cite:

Head of State

http://headofstate.blogspot.com/2008/09/proposed-commercial-mac-vs-pc.html