I'm still undecided.
This may be worth a read:
Sen. McCain Wants To Be President
Check-out his unpresidential credentials
January-February 1997 Issue
By Ted Sampley
U.S. Veteran Dispatch
Citing his 5-1/2 years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam,
columnists and journalists freehandedly describe Republican Senator
John McCain of Arizona as a war hero.
Washington Post columnist George Will wrote about McCain in
1988, "He was a prisoner for 5-1/2 years. Because he was properly
obstinate, he was in solitary confinement most of that time . . .
Every day for two years, one of his guards ordered him to bow, and
then knocked him down."
Joseph Spear, an awestruck columnist who wanted presidential
candidate Bob Dole to pick McCain for vice president wrote, "McCain
is a war hero . . . He was tossed into the infamous 'Hanoi Hilton'
prison camp, where he was hung by his fractured arms for hours at a
time." Many have written columns suggesting that McCain is
presidential material and advocate his running for the nation's
highest office.
McCain obviously agrees.
Reuter's News Service reported in January that the 60 year
old McCain says he wants to be President of the United States.
McCain also thinks President Clinton, who dodged the draft
rather than serve in Vietnam, is the perfect presidential role
model. He recently told the press that Clinton "is the best
politician I have ever seen."
McCain, however, does not think so highly of the POW/MIA
families and activists who openly challenge the U.S. government's
POW/MIA policy, many of whom walked the halls of Congress during
the Vietnam War years demanding America's prisoners of war,
including POW McCain, not be forgotten.
McCain, as a member of the 1992 Senate Select Committee on
POW/MIA Affairs, took the lead in demanding a U.S. Justice
Department investigation of the POW/MIA activists and their
organizations. He accused the activists of fraud because in some of
their fund-raising literature the activists claimed the U.S.
government knowingly left U.S. POWs behind after the Vietnam War
and that some remain alive today.
McCain openly attacked the activists telling the press, "The
people who have done these things are not zealots in a good cause.
They are the most craven, most cynical and most despicable human
beings to ever run a scam." The Justice Department did investigate
the POW/MIA activists and their organizations and found no reason
to charge any POW/MIA activist.
McCain's use of the words craven, despicable and scam are
mighty powerful and poisonous words from a man who admittedly
traded "military information" to his communist captors in exchange
for better medical treatment--or who divorced the wife that stood
by him while he was a POW, after she became crippled in an
accident.
Those words are hypocritical from a man whose younger and
richer wife (she's an heir to Hensley & Co., the second largest
Anheuser-Busch beer distributor in the United States) got caught
after stealing drugs for two years from a charitable organization
of which she was president.
Editor's note: The U.S. military Code of Conduct is the
definitive code specifying the responsibilities of American
military personnel while in combat or captivity.
Article V of the Code is very specific in ordering U.S.
military personnel to avoid answering questions to the utmost of
their ability and to make no oral or written statements disloyal to
the United States and its allies or harmful to their cause. Any
willful violation of the Code is considered collaborating with the
enemy.
U.S. Navy pilot John McCain was shot down on his 23rd mission
over North Vietnam, October 26, 1967. He was released March 1973
after being held captive by the North Vietnamese for 5-1/2 years.
Within days of his release, McCain wrote the following
account of his captivity, which was published in U.S. News and
World Report - May 14, 1973:
"I think it was on the fourth day [after being shot down]
that two guards came in, instead of one. One of them pulled back
the blanket to show the other guard my injury. I looked at my knee.
It was about the size of a football . . . when I saw it, I said to
the guard, 'O.K., get the officer' . . . an officer came in after a
few minutes. It was the man that we came to know very well as 'The
Bug.' He was a psychotic torturer, one of the worst fiends that we
had to deal with. I said, 'O.K., I'll give you military information
if you will take me to the hospital.'"
McCain now says it was only a coincidence that at the same
time he was offering "military information" in exchange for special
medical treatment, his captors discovered that his father was Adm.
John S. McCain Jr., commander of all U.S. forces in Europe and
soon-to-be commander of all U.S. forces in the Pacific, including
Vietnam.
Upon learning about McCain's father, the communists, in an
unprecedented move, rushed McCain to one of their military
hospitals where he received treatment not available for other U.S.
prisoners of war.
Read following news excerpts that chronicle McCain and his
associations:
"Nhan Dan today published answers to questions by one of its
correspondents made by a U.S. air pirate detained in North Vietnam.
"He is Lt. John Sidney McCain . . ." Hanoi VNA International
Service in French - November 9, 1967
"To a question of the correspondent, McCain answered: 'My
assignment to the Oriskany, I told myself, was due to serious
losses in pilots which were sustained by this aircraft carrier due
to its raids over North Vietnam territory and which necessitated
replacements. From 10 to 12 pilots were transferred like me from
the Forrestal to the Oriskany . . . upon arrival near the target,
our formation, with six bombers, would mount the attack according
to the following order: I would be number three, and the chief of
the formation, number one. Each pilot would have to approach the
target from a different direction, the choice of which would be
left to him.'" A November 9, 1967 declassified Department of
Defense document
"A meeting which will leave its mark on my life: My meeting
with John Sidney McCain was certainly one of those meetings which
will affect me most profoundly for the rest of my life. I had asked
the North Vietnamese authorities to allow me to personally
interrogate an American prisoner. They authorized me to do so. When
night fell, they took me--without any precautions or mystery--to a
hospital near the Gia Lam Airport reserved for the military.
(Passage omitted) The officer who receives me begins: I ask you not
to ask any questions of political nature. If this man replies in a
way unfavorable to us, they will not hesitate to speak of
"brainwashing" and conclude that we threatened him. (Passage
omitted) "This John Sidney McCain is not an ordinary prisoner. His
father is none other than Admiral Edmond John McCain, commander in
chief of U.S. Naval forces in Europe." Written by "prominent"
French television reporter Francois Chalais - January 1968
"Reds Say PW Songbird Is Pilot Son of Admiral
. . . Hanoi has aired a broadcast in which the pilot son of
United States Commander in the Pacific, Adm. John McCain,
purportedly admits to having bombed civilian targets in North
Vietnam and praises medical treatment he has received since being
taken prisoner." Saigon-UPI, June 4, 1969
"The English-Language broadcast beamed at South Vietnam was
one of a series using American prisoners. It was in response to a
plea by Defense Secretary Melvin S. Laird, May 19, that North
Vietnam treat prisoners according to the humanitarian standards set
forth by the Geneva Convention." The Washington Post - June 5, 1969
"Dr. Fernando Barral, a Spanish psychiatrist residing in
Cuba, returned from the Democratic Republic of Vietnam . . . he
brought back some journalistic news: an interview with a North
American pilot captured in the DRV after bombing Hanoi on 26
October 1967. The meeting between him and the pilot took place in
an office of the Committee for Foreign Cultural Relations in Hanoi.
The pilot interviewed is Lt Cmdr John Sidney McCain, son and
grandson of American Navy Admirals . . . "In the course of the
interview, on various occasions he showed that knowledge of the
language, saying some words, dates, and so forth in Spanish, or
[using it] when he thought the interpreter was seeking the
corresponding French word. "Naturally, from the beginning this
established a more direct communication between us, and more than
one question or my response was made directly in Spanish." Havana
Granma - January 24, 1970
"Let me emphasize that there were many, many fine women who
supported what they knew their husbands believed in. My wife,
Carol, was one of those and I am proud of her." U.S. New and World
Report - May 14, 1973
Editor's note: In 1980, McCain's personal life soured. He
divorced Carol, who had been seriously injured and crippled in a
motor vehicle accident, and married Cindy Hensley, whose father Jim
is an Arizona "beer baron."
"Republican Sen. John McCain reported a net worth of at least
$830,705 but possibly as much as $1.2 million or more, excluding
personal residences . . . McCain listed his wife, Cindy, as the
source of most of his assets. . . the bulk of McCain's assets
consisted of stock in three Glendale firms - Hensley & Co., a
beer distributorship headed by his father-in-law; Western Leasing
Co., which leases trucks and equipment; and Eagle Enterprises,
which invests in real estate and stock." The Phoenix Gazette - May
19, 1987
"So why has Sen. McCain, R-Ariz., gone to unprecedented
lengths to block reform of the Senate campaign finance system? Why
does he oppose letting this important matter even come to a vote?
Perhaps it's because he is a prime beneficiary of the special
interest funding of congressional elections. "McCain raised over
$2.5 million for his 1986 election . . . more than $760,000 of his
campaign funds came from political action committee (PACs) . . .
especially disturbing are the contributions to McCain's campaign
coffers from PACs outside of Arizona." The Phoenix Gazette -
December 8, 1987
"While Sen. John McCain's wife and father-in-law were
investing with Charles H. Keating, Jr. in a shopping center, McCain
was helping Keating battle federal regulators who questioned his
operation of Lincoln Savings and Loan . . . [photo caption]
Documents show that Sen. John McCain's wife, Cindy, and
father-in-law, James W. Hensley (second from right) are the largest
investors in Fountain Square Shopping Center. Their partnership is
managed by subsidiaries of American Continental Corp., run by
Charles H. Keating, Jr. (right). But John McCain contends there was
no conflict in his helping Keating battle federal regulators." The
Arizona Republic - October 8, 1989
"Sen. John McCain had more than a constituent relationship
with Charles H. Keating, Jr. prior to 1987 . . . the McCains -
sometimes with their daughter and baby sitter - made at least nine
trips at Keating's expense from August 1984 to August 1986 aboard
either Keating's American Continental Corporation's jet or
chartered planes and helicopters owned by Resorts International.
Three of the trips were for vacations at Keating's luxurious
retreat in the Bahamas." The Arizona Republic - October 8, 1989
"McCain, in a radio talk-show appearance last week condemned
disclosures of his family's ties to Keating as "irresponsible
journalism." The Arizona Republic - October 17, 1989
" . . . both in telephone conversations with reporters and on
a live radio talk show, the Republican senator was far from calm.
He was agitated. Angry. And the way he dealt with unpleasant
questions was to bully the questioners . . . 'You're a liar,'
McCain snapped Sept. 29 when an Arizona Republic reporter asked him
about business ties between his wife, Cindy McCain, and Keating . .
. 'That's the spouse's involvement, you idiot,' McCain sneered
later in the same conversation. 'You do understand English, don't
you?' ". . . Not content with just bullying reporters, McCain tried
belittling them: 'It's up to you to find that out, kids.' . . .
McCain wasn't talking to liars. He wasn't talking to juveniles. The
senator was talking to two reporters." The Arizona Republic -
October 17, 1989
"Employees at Hensley & Co., a $100 million
Anheuser-Busch distribution firm, also say that during McCain's
first campaign for Congress, some workers were pressured into going
door-to-door in neighborhoods to hand out McCain election pamphlets
. . . Hensley employees say they must take the checks to work,
where they are collected by supervisors. I asked one person if
employees were assured that all contributions were voluntary . . .
'no way,' I was told. 'And my (spouse) and I aren't even registered
(to vote). That's what makes us so mad." The Arizona Republic -
November 1, 1989
"As a 100 percent, service-connected, disabled ex-prisoner of
war, I sought help from John McCain when he was a member of the
U.S. House of Representatives and I needed help in regard to a
claim for back service-connected disability compensation. I did so
because I thought that as an ex-POW himself he could relate to my
problem. When I could not reach him via letters to his office, I
wrote to his home address. That was a very enlightening experience
. . . my letter, addressed to the congressman, was opened by his
wife, Cindy. She didn't like what she read, so she wrote me a nasty
letter. Apparently John McCain isn't even capable of communicating
on a one-to-one basis with someone who was a POW and returned from
his experience in far worse physical condition than John McCain
returned from his experience . . . M. "Shane" Schoenborn." The
Phoenix Gazette - November 4, 1989
"Reporters also 'discovered' that the senator's wife and
father-in-law invested $359,100.00 in one of Mr. Keating's projects
in 1986 . . ." The Phoenix Gazette - November 13, 1989
"The liquor case is particularly intriguing as it resulted in
criminal charges against Marley's subordinates, James and Eugene
Hensley. If the last name sounds familiar, it's because James is
papa to Cindy McCain, who is wife of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who
is infamous lately as a member of the Keating Five . . . Marley
also has been a shadow figure in the 1976 slaying of Republic
reporter Don Bolles. Bolles wrote extensively about Marley's lucky
past. And about how the Hensleys (Marley's managers) bought Ruidso
Downs racing track in New Mexico. He wrote about Eugene Hensley
spending five years in federal prison for a skimming scam. And
about the Hensleys selling their track to a buyer linked with
Emprise Corp. And about Marley's liquor ties with Emprise . . . one
of Bolles' final dispatches appeared as Marley was about to become
a member of the Arizona Racing Commission - the agency that
regulates racetracks, including those run at the time by Emprise .
. . the story dispatched Marley's appointment. Two months later, a
car bomb killed Bolles." The Phoenix Gazette - January 4, 1990
"Bradley J. Funk, an antique dealer linked to the 13-year-old
Don Bolles murder case through his family's former ownership of
dog-racing tracks, has died of a heart attack, authorities said
Jan. 2 . . . Bolles, 47, a former investigative reporter with the
Arizona Republic, died June 13, 1976, about 11 days after a
dynamite-based bomb blew up beneath his car . . . in his last
statement before lapsing into unconsciousness, he mentioned the
Mafia, John Adamson and Emprise Corp., a Buffalo, N.Y. company with
a far-flung sports empire which once included ownership of the
Boston Bruins hockey team and the former Cincinnati Royals
basketball franchise . . . now known as Delaware North Cos.,
Emprise was convicted in 1972 of a federal charge of conspiring to
hide Mafia interest in a Las Vegas, Nev., casino . . . Emprise and
the Funk family were partners in six dog-racing tracks in the state
and the Prescott Downs horse track, and Bolles had ripped their
operations in print." Arizona Business Gazette - January 5, 1990
"McCain's involvement with Keating . . . when reporters
called him with questions last year about previously unknown ties
to Keating, an investment by wife Cindy McCain in a Keating
shopping center and trips to Keating's Bahamas home, McCain went
into a rage." The Arizona Republic - April 29, 1990
"Cars, homes and bank accounts of 18 people, including eight
state legislators, were confiscated in a civil racketeering lawsuit
that paints a portrait of lawmakers eager to sell their influence
for as little as $660 and as much as $750,000 . . . Richard
Scheffel, another lobbyist indicted but not targeted in the civil
racketeering suit, is reputed to have been paid $20,000 to identify
and approach lawmakers interested in trading votes for money . . .
in a bid to establish his professional credentials with Stedino,
Scheffel is reported to have boasted that '(U.S.) Sen. John
McCain's father-in-law gives money to politicians through him' . .
. Bauer, in his report, said Scheffel claimed that 'each January he
receives $30,000 from the local Anheuser-Busch distributor, Jim
Hensley,' adding that Hensley also supplied him with names of
people to list as contributors." The Phoenix Gazette - February 6,
1991
". . . Bob Delgado, executive vice president for Hensley. He
also pointed out that Scheffel was a lobbyist for Anheuser-Busch
Inc. and not Hensley & Co . . . Hensley & Co. has a
pattern, according to state campaign filings, of registering key
executives as lobbyists." The Phoenix Gazette - February 9, 1991
"Hensley & Co., a Phoenix-based beer distributor, rewards
its drivers and sales people with parties at Phoenix Greyhound Park
. . . 'It's been an excellent motivator for us to use for incentive
contests,' said Dave Daulton, assistant vice president at Hensley."
The Arizona Republic - February 15, 1991
"Don't overlook that multifaceted beer distributor Jim
Hensley, father-in-law to Republican Sen. John McCain of modest
Keating fame. According to current AzScam records, Hensley is a
financial godfather to hosts of lobbyists." The Phoenix Gazette -
March 16, 1991
"McCain, meanwhile, reported assets of more than $5.4
million, much of it held jointly with his wife, Cindy. The couple
reported holding at least $2 million in stock in Hensley & Co.,
a beer distributorship owned by Cindy McCain's father, Jim Hensley
. . . John McCain, R-Ariz., also reported at least $500,000 in
Anheuser-Busch debentures, with most of the rest of the assets
primarily in land holdings that his wife has invested in with her
family . . . last year, McCain's wealth was estimated by Roll Call
at closer to $2.9 million." The Arizona Republic - May 16, 1991
"At the time, Devereux stumbled upon Bolles' notes concerning
Charles C. Morgan, a Tucson escrow agent who took a bullet to the
head in 1977 while wearing a bulletproof vest. According to
Devereux, Morgan worked for organized crime figures . . . Devereux
says, Danny Casolaro called 'out of the blue' to ask about
laundering operations, a Tucson bank, the Bonanno family and Reagan
administration officials . . . a few weeks after that conversation,
Casolaro was found in a West Virginia motel room with his wrists
slashed. The case, initially ruled a suicide . . . The Phoenix
Gazette - March 28, 1992
"Miller blamed the car-bomb slaying on former greyhound owner
John Harvey Adamson, who has confessed to murdering Bolles; Phoenix
lawyer Neal Roberts; and the late Bradley Funk, whose family used
to race greyhounds in Arizona . . . 'this is a case of two
contracts, a contract to kill and a contract to cover up who
ordered the killing,' he said . . . Granville contended that Dunlap
plotted with Adamson to have Bolles killed in behalf of Kemper
Marley Sr., a Phoenix land and liquor baron." The Arizona Republic
- February 10, 1993
"An Oregon racing regulator who has been offered the top post
in the Arizona Racing Department thwarted in 1990 a Portland
newspaper's investigation of a possible link between an Oregon
track and an alleged organized-crime figure . . . on Friday, Gov.
Fife Symington offered Barham the position of director of the
Arizona Racing Department. Barham also would become director of the
State Gaming Agency, which regulates Indian gaming . . . the
Oregonian was looking into a possible connection between Oregon
Racing, Inc. and the Emprise Corp., which had been forced out of
Oregon because of allegations involving organized crime . . . the
Oregonian became curious about Oregon Racing after learning that
one of its early investors shared an office in Kenner, La., with
John G. Masoni, a longtime Emprise partner . . . the Oregonian said
Florida officials consider Masoni an 'associate' of the Detroit
Mafia . . . Emprise, now called Delaware North Cos., long has had
an interest in Arizona racing. At one time, the company had a
virtual monopoly on dog and horse racing in the state in
partnership with the Funk family of Phoenix . . . in the mid- '70s,
the state moved to break the monopoly in light of a 1972 felony
conviction of the company. Emprise was convicted in U.S. District
Court in California of conspiring with racketeers to hide an
ownership interest in the Frontier Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas."
The Arizona Republic - June 23, 1993
Photo caption: "Below, Charles Keating III and McCain, then a
member of the U.S. House, celebrate their August birthdays at the
Keating's beachside estate at Cat Cay in the Bahamas." The Phoenix
Gazette - September 12, 1993
"Cindy McCain, the wife of U.S. Republican Sen. John McCain
of Arizona, admitted in a series of media interviews Monday that
she became addicted to the painkillers Percocet and Vicodin. She
said that she used the drugs from 1989 to 1992 and acknowledged
that she had stolen some pills from the American Voluntary Medical
Team, a charitable organization of which she is president . . . at
one point, McCain, 40, was ingesting 15 to 20 pills a day . . . the
normal dosage for seriously ill patients is 6 to 10 a day for a
short period." The Arizona Republic - August 24, 1994
"Cindy McCain, who admitted to drug addiction this week,
faces more problems, this time involving the adoption of a
Bangladeshi baby two years ago.
"Sources confirmed Wednesday that a former employee of
McCain's volunteer medical team has accused her of demanding that
he commit perjury in adoption proceedings for her daughter,
Bridget." The Phoenix Gazette - August 25, 1994
"Her husband is Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz."
"Cindy McCain was investigated recently by the Drug
Enforcement Administration for stealing and using Percocet and
Vicodin, both narcotic painkillers from her aid organization . . .
the county attorney's report provides a window to drug dealings
within Cindy McCain's nonprofit corporation . . . Gosinski also
alleged that Cindy McCain abused her husband's office and
diplomatic privileges by transporting illegal substances overseas.
He also claimed, according to her lawyers, that Cindy McCain tried
to prevent him from providing accurate information to the DEA." The
Phoenix Gazette - August 25, 1994
"About 300 guests turned out Saturday night to celebrate the
90th birthday of Joseph 'Joe Bananas' Bonanno, retired boss of New
York's Bonanno crime family. He retired to Tucson in 1968 . . .
John McCain, R-Ariz., and Gov. Fife Symington sent their regards by
telegram." The Arizona Republic - January 17, 1995
In response to assignment:
Undecided voters