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Politicians and Heritage

02 Apr 2008 10:20 pm

[Jon Henke]

Steve Benen is mulling John McCain's recent emphasis on his biography and family background, saying McCain "seems to be the first candidate in recent memory to make family history highly relevant to his campaign." Benen points to Ed Kilgore, who "can't recall any major speech by a president or presidential candidate that was devoted so thoroughly to the subject of the speaker's ... Family Heritage." Mostly, it's just the sort of speculative psychoanalysis that derives from cynicism about opponents.

But....really?

Just a couple weeks ago, Barack Obama gave this speech...

I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas. I was raised with the help of a white grandfather who survived a Depression to serve in Patton's Army during World War II and a white grandmother who worked on a bomber assembly line at Fort Leavenworth while he was overseas. I've gone to some of the best schools in America and lived in one of the world's poorest nations. I am married to a black American who carries within her the blood of slaves and slaveowners - an inheritance we pass on to our two precious daughters. I have brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, uncles and cousins, of every race and every hue, scattered across three continents, and for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible.
Barack Obama and his supporters have spent more than a little time talking about Obama's heritage. As well they should. It's an interesting and powerful story.

And what about Jim Webb? As Rolling Stone put it...

Webb is so white he wrote a book about it; Saunders quickly realized Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America could become the rare campaign book voters might actually read, one that doesn't pull punches. In its opening pages, Webb lists the slurs by which his people are known: "Rednecks. Trailer-park trash. Racists. Cannon fodder." ... [Webb] considers poor white Southerners victims of the "monstrous mousetrap" they themselves built for African-Americans. "The Southern redneck" he writes, has become the "veritable poster child of liberal hatred and disgust . . . the emblem of everything that had kept the black man down. No matter that the country-club whites had always held the key to the Big House . . . at the expense of disadvantaged blacks and whites alike.

During Webb's 2006 Senate campaign (disclosure: I worked against him for a couple months), The Washingtonian pointed out that Jim Webb "traces his aggressiveness to heritage, a theory spun at length in his quasi-autobiographical 2004 book, Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America. “Born Fighting” is also his campaign slogan ... Webb traces his own warrior bloodline to the Revolutionary War, and during a recent campaign visit to southwest Virginia took time out to show his wife and her daughter the grave of his great-great-grandfather, whose Confederate headstone Webb obtained from the Veterans Administration."

For gods sake, Jim Webb even gave a speech "to honor" the Confederate soldiers for their "courage and loyalty", adding that "there truly were different perceptions in the North and South about those reasons, and that most Southern soldiers viewed the driving issue to be sovereignty rather than slavery." Can you even begin to imagine what would be said if a prominent Republican politician had done all that?

So, John McCain talks about his own background and military service. Big deal. Settle down. There aren't deeper meanings and ulterior motives behind everything a Republican says. Sometimes a campaign speech is just a campaign speech.

Comments (25)

Not that there was ever any reason to take seriously anything written by Steven Benen, but that is just another reason not to.

Does anyone really think before they write stuff like that?

And I agree, Obama's story is powerful and interesting.

Not for nothing, but if you're a governor running for President, and your name is the same as that of the last President from your party, a speech about the relevance of your family heritage to your campaign is superfluous.

McCain's lineage is impressive, but one wonders if his grandfather at least might have regard a career in politics as a step down from the Navy.

Zathras: Presumably, anything would be a step down from a combat command in the WWII Pacific.

Mr. Henke used to work for a racist who was named George Allen.

It's sad that he is allowed to post here.

But it is up to decent people to expose these sad facts.

Any person who works for a man who called a person of color a "macaca" should slink off into obscurity.

Mr. Henke obviously does not share that point of view.

Go back and watch the "macaca" video. If it does not make you sick to your stomach, you are not paying attention.

Mr. Henke used to work for a racist who was named George Allen.

It's sad that he is allowed to post here.

But it is up to decent people to expose these sad facts.

Any person who works for a man who called a person of color a "macaca" should slink off into obscurity.

Mr. Henke obviously does not share that point of view.

Go back and watch the "macaca" video. If it does not make you sick to your stomach, you are not paying attention.

Grovel, boy, grovel!

Can you even begin to imagine what would be said if a prominent Republican politician had done all that?

Um, wasn't Webb Secretary of the Navy under Reagan? Doesn't that qualify as a prominent Republican politician? Or was this speech delivered after he switched parties?

When McCain was shot down over Hanoi, according to his own account, his captors boasted that they had "captured the crown prince." (His father was CINCPAC at the time.) He said some came into his hospital room asking about life in the US, and assumed he must be part of the "ruling elite", since his father was of such a high rank. "They have no idea how our democracy works," McCain wrote.

Now McCain is quite likely to be the next president, and he's making his descent from a line of accomplished military officers a part of his campaign.

Apparently McCain now believes our democracy works just the way his Vietnamese Communist captors did.

Um, wasn't Webb Secretary of the Navy under Reagan? Doesn't that qualify as a prominent Republican politician? Or was this speech delivered after he switched parties?
Webb was not active in politics when he gave this speech. When he got involved in politics again, he ran as a Democrat.

Shit. Macaca was Henke's greatest contribution to the campaign.

And it's why McArdle invited him to blog.

When McCain tells people he's descended from Robert the Bruce, he'd better hope they've never seen Braveheart.

What no one seems to have mentioned is the bit where Obama says "for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible".

What does this actually mean? If he is saying that in no other country in the world would it be possible for someone of mixed race or one foreign parent to run for the highest elected office, this is complete rubbish.

If he is saying that in no other country in the world is it possible to be US president this is true but utterly trivial.

As a non american I genuinely don't understand the point being made here. Can some American readers enlighten me?

What no one seems to have mentioned is the bit where Obama says "for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible".

What does this actually mean?

Cac, in no other country on Earth could his claimed race (he is bi-racial, he claims to be black this time) instead of his (lack of) accomplishments propel him to the verge of the presidency.

It's all about how he makes you feel, CAC. How do you feel about his sincerity, his honesty, his nobility, his humanity, and so on. For God's sake, you're not supposed to think!

mkultra - thanks to your comments, for the first time in my life, I feel proud to be an American. And God damn the Atlantic for letting Henke blog here. That's in the Bible.

brooksfoe - you actually rate less of a response than mkultra. Clearly McCain doesn't agree with Communists, though, or you'd support him more.

I never think before they write stuff like that.
I think Obama's story is amazing.

Actually, the North Vietnamese assumed McCain's family was wealthy because his father and grandfather were admirals. They kept asking how many corporations they owned. It doesn't usually work that way in the US military.

McCain could have left prison and torture at any time after mid-1968. He declined to do so in order to uphold the military code of honor.

The Vietnamese Communists believed that the United States was a class-based society composed of elites and proles, in which the higher political ranks were descended from ancestors who had also held high political rank.

When McCain said "they have no idea of how our democracy works," he was boasting that the United States was not a class-based society of inherited privilege, but an egalitarian meritocracy. When he now instead argues that he is worthy of the presidency because he is descended from generations of high-ranking military officers, he is arguing for a class-based vision of an American society based on inherited privilege -- precisely the kind of society McCain's Communist captors believed the United States to be.

Let's make this even clearer.

McCain ridicules his Communist captors for saying they had "captured the crown prince". After all, the US doesn't work that way, right? Just because McCain's father is CINCPAC doesn't mean he's some kind of inherited nobility, destined for high political office.

Over 300 POWs walked out of the Hanoi Hilton in 1973. Only one of them is now a candidate for the presidency of the United States. Which one? "The crown prince." When we vote for John McCain, whose understanding of American society are we vindicating?

Brooksfoe:

When the North Vietnamese learned that the pilot they had captured with two broken arms and a broken legs was the son of a high-ranking admiral, they offered him early release as a token of "goodwill." McCain refused and adhered to the POW code, and told his captors he would only go if every POW captured before him was released as well. For sabotaging their PR coup, the North Vietnamese beat him severely.

If you cannot understand the meaning of this incident, then I submit that your "understanding of American society" is based on nothing more than Stalinist propaganda. Physician, heal thyself.

When he now instead argues that he is worthy of the presidency because he is descended from generations of high-ranking military officers, he is arguing for a class-based vision of an American society based on inherited privilege --

When Hillary now instead argues that she is worthy of the presidency because of her experience being married to a high ranking political officeholder, she is arguing for a class-based vision of an American society based on inherited privilege.

I wonder, if it was a Kennedy who cited his or her family's contribution to and sacrifices for this great country, would you have said anything about class and inherited privilege? What productive work has Patrick, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend or Joseph Kennedy done that, in a true meritocracy, would have merited their political positions? Even with the advantage of family connections and a BA from Harvard, Townsend had to settle for the University of New Mexico for law school, ranked 68th by US News.

It seems that there are more politically active Democrats who are members of the lucky sperm club than Republicans. But then most of the proponents of the inherited privilege known as affirmative action are also on the political left.

Inherited privilege? You mean Chelsea's well paying job in the financial trades? You mean Alexandra Pelosi's career as a documentary film maker? You mean Kwame Kilpatrick, son of a sinecure holding congresscritter? Richard Daly Jr.? Anderson Cooper, liberal journalist and Vanderbilt heir?

Conservative are at least honest about trying to help their children. Liberals talk about equality while working hard to make sure that their own offspring have unfair advantages.

CAC, the non-american,
Well, let's look to UK, France, Germany, Holland, etc, etc, etc. You know, the great colonizers, exploiters, imperialists and slave traders of yore, who's populations have been inter-racial & mixed for at least as long as the US. Much, much longer in most. So.....
Please list for me the various existing, prior, or candidates of mixed-racial heritage standing for top leadership positions in those socially & morally superior nations ?
I do believe that's what he means, though he dare not speak it out loud.
Mike

What productive work has Patrick, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend or Joseph Kennedy done that, in a true meritocracy, would have merited their political positions?... Inherited privilege? You mean Chelsea's well paying job in the financial trades? You mean Alexandra Pelosi's career as a documentary film maker? You mean Kwame Kilpatrick, son of a sinecure holding congresscritter? Richard Daly Jr.? Anderson Cooper, liberal journalist and Vanderbilt heir? - Bozoer Rebbe

So you also agree with the Vietnamese Communist analysis of American society?

McCain refused and adhered to the POW code, and told his captors he would only go if every POW captured before him was released as well. For sabotaging their PR coup, the North Vietnamese beat him severely. - Publius

There were many POWs held in Hanoi for years who resisted torture. (One of them was Air Force Col. Ted Guy, who doubts that McCain was ever actually tortured after his initial captivity. But let's leave that alone; I take McCain at his word.) There were POWs who, like McCain, ended up recording propaganda messages for the North Vietnamese because they could no longer resist the mistreatment they were getting. There were also POWs who came to believe that the US's participation in the Vietnam War was morally wrong, and who recorded or wrote statements to that effect, which the North Vietnamese then naturally used as propaganda. There were POWs whose ideological conversion went so far as to involve condemnation of American war crimes and imperialism. Some of these viewpoints were sincere; others were motivated in part by the rewards offered by North Vietnamese captors, and by the threat of mistreatment against those who held out. McCain, obviously, was motivated in part by the fact that had he accepted early release, he would have been reviled by his family and his comrades, and would never have had a career in the military or in politics. But obviously society rewards courage and punishes cowardice, and the fact that people who act courageously count on such rewards should not detract from the fact of their courage.

That is not what I am talking about, though. What I am talking about is the fact that John McCain appears to have a complicated and guilty relationship to the question of class privilege in American society, and to the ways he has benefited from it. (Let's put it this way: McCain graduated near the bottom of his class in Annapolis and, during flight training and his early career, crashed two aircraft and flew a third through power lines in Italy. He nevertheless received a string of prestigious assignments.) When he was confronted with the evidence of his class privilege by Vietnamese Communists, he reacted with fury. Today, in his campaign, he appears to be boasting of the very privileges he once denied having. To me, it looks like the man has some issues.

"What productive work has Patrick, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend or Joseph Kennedy done that, in a true meritocracy, would have merited their political positions?... Inherited privilege? You mean Chelsea's well paying job in the financial trades? You mean Alexandra Pelosi's career as a documentary film maker? You mean Kwame Kilpatrick, son of a sinecure holding congresscritter? Richard Daly Jr.? Anderson Cooper, liberal journalist and Vanderbilt heir? - Bozoer Rebbe

So you also agree with the Vietnamese Communist analysis of American society?

A broken clock is still correct twice a day. Blind dogs sometimes find what they are looking for. And the idea that powerful people will grease the skids for their kids is hardly a newsflash, so it hardly means that the Vietnamese Communists had great insight.

More to the point I was trying to make. It is precisely the hypocrits on the American left, those who condemn class privilege, that benefit from it the most. Just to clarify, I believe that there are many elites with some overlapping. Not all the members of these elites (financial, media, politics, entertainment, business) start out wealthy, but once they get into the club they rake it in. Look at the Clintons. Look at the mansions Obama and his pastor live in. Limousine Liberals, Tenured Radicals, Gulfstream NGOs, they're all the same. Do as I say, not as I do.

Of course in socialist and communist countries the elites not only use their positions to accumulate power and wealth and pass that on to their offspring (most of China's millionaires are children of Party cadres), they have much more power to entrench their own interests since they control everything.

You know, while I'm not a McCain supporter (although I will vote for him over either Obama or Clinton), I think what he's saying is different than what brooksfoe is trying to portray. Essentially, he is arguing that he comes from a tradition of service to country. He is saying that this is something that should be considered in choosing whether or not to vote for him. This is different from Clinton's lies about her "experience" in the White House, which is a direct attempt to use family, class and position in her favor. And the American public (and liberal media, notably) have seen through this BS on her part.