Okay, so he doesn’t go as far as saying McCain is Hillary in drag, but he gets pretty close. While it’s only a web ad (why??) ad, the point is clear and true. Bravo. Spread it around.

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  1. FozzieBear says:

    Tammy, I haven’t surfed-by these digs in a while, but I’ve already come to the same conclusions about McNasty/McAmnesty/McArrogant/McTraitor[to his party] — and intend to do my part tomorrow here in IL toward getting a better man in that big white mansion in November [and I ain’t be talkin’ ’bout the Obamassiah, either]. Hey, are you aware of Dr. Jack Wheeler’s recent column, “How the Clintons Will Destroy John McCain”? HERE. Things could get VERY INTERESTING if John-Boy gets the nomination.

  2. pat_s says:

    FYI

    Scurrilous lies about McCain debunked by JAMES H. WARNER, McCain’s fellow P.O.W.:

    First, I should say that I have great respect for Senator McCain, even though I am at odds with him on many issues and have remained distant from his campaign.

    We have no evidence that Sen. McCain received special treatment. Since he was as thin as the rest of us, if he did, it was not in the form of decent food. It is alleged that he was taken into Hanoi and put up in a hotel with prostitutes. This is an improvement on the allegation spread during the 2000 campaign that he was given a Vietnamese woman to live with him in his cell, an allegation that led me to ask why, if he was my friend, didn’t he ask if she had a sister? Even when he was in solitary confinement, he was constantly in contact with others. Further, we always knew about movements within the camps because the Communists simply were not competent at preventing us from gaining intelligence. Men who were in the camps with him agree that they are not aware of a single night that he spent out of his cell.

    I may not agree with John McCain on some policies. However, I will go to my grave remembering the American officer who helped organize men to defy an enemy who wish to deprive us of religious observance. Even today I cannot hear the Battle Hymn of the Republic without tears as I am still moved by the courage of the singers and the leadership of John McCain.

    James H. Warner is a retired attorney. He served as a domestic policy advisor to President Ronald Reagan from 1985 until 1989.

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