Messages In This Digest (1 Message)
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- STEM CELLS, AND JOHN MCCAIN'S FIRST WIFE From: Stephen Meyer
Message
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-       STEM CELLS, AND JOHN MCCAIN'S FIRST WIFEPosted by: "Stephen Meyer" Stephen276@comcast.net stephen_meyer_stemcellsTue Sep 16, 2008 5:50 am (PDT)
 STEM CELLS, AND JOHN MCCAIN'S FIRST WIFE
 
 When Bill Clinton fooled around, the Republicans fought with all their
 strength to impeach him. .
 
 But when John McCain cheated on his crippled wife, the GOP nominated him
 for President.
 
 Did you know about McCain's first wife? A former swimsuit model,
 Carol McCain was tall, willowy, beautifuluntil a terrible car
 accident.
 
 Flung through the windshield of her car, Carol McCain lay on the frozen
 ground all night. Her pelvis was broken. Both legs and an arm were
 shattered, she had massive internal injuries the doctors despaired
 for her life.
 
 Fortunately for Carol, Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot took over her
 medical bills: paying for her six months in hospital-- and 23
 operations, necessary just to keep her alive. So many bone fragments had
 to be removed from her body that she lost five inches in height.
 
 Carol McCain was disabled for life.
 
 So when John McCain came home from the war in Viet Nam, how did he stand
 by the woman he promised to love and cherish till death did them part?
 
 He began cheating on her, systematically and casually, with a variety of
 women.
 
 Finally the still married McCain chose Carol's replacement, the
 movie-star-gorgeous Cindy, heiress to a fortune.
 
 He divorced Carol, married the heiress one month later, and his new
 father-in-law gave him a job as an executive at his beer
 companyand John McCain was rich.
 
 H. Ross Perot had this to say:
 
 "McCain is the classic opportunist always reaching for
 attention and glory. When he came home, Carol walked with a limp. So he
 threw her over for a poster girl with big money "
 
 "The wife U.S. Republican John McCain callously left behind",
 Sharon Churcher, Daily Mail UK, June 8, 2008.
 
 To this day, Carol remains loyal to McCain, who pays her medical bills.
 
 Now some people feel that McCain, as a former prisoner of war, is not to
 be criticized. Democrats always acknowledge John McCain's service,
 unlike the Rove-Republican attack machine and their Swift Boating
 tactics, continually smearing John Kerry's heroism in the same war.
 
 But to my way of thinking, the fact that John McCain was a prisoner of
 war does not mean we forget everything else about the man.
 
 John McCain deserves to be judged on his actions, his record, his
 positions and choices, and how his decisions will affect all our lives.
 
 First, let me state my personal bias: why John McCain's essential
 abandonment of a disabled person affects me so deeply.
 
 My son Roman Reed is disabled, a quadriplegic, paralyzed from the
 shoulders down because of a college football accident.
 
 Every day I try to do something to advance the cause of stem cell
 research, because I know it works.
 
 I have seen it. On March 1, 2002, I held in my hand a laboratory rat
 which had been paralyzed, but which walked again, thanks to embryonic
 stem cells. That was in the Reeve-Irving Research Center, University of
 California at Irvine.
 
 It has been so frustrating, these past eight years, having an
 anti-science President in the White House. The policies of George Bush
 policies are based on ideology and ultra-conservative religion, not the
 healing science our country so desperately needs.
 
 But John McCain says he is different from Bush, that he supports
 embryonic stem cell research.
 
 I don't trust him.
 
 Different from Bush? Not a whole lot. McCain co-signed Senator Sam
 Brownback's bill to put scientists in jail for advanced stem cell
 researchhe also chose Sarah Palin for his Vice President, and she
 is completely opposed.
 
 With a new GOP platform calling for a complete ban on embryonic stem
 cell research, we could be worse off than we were under Bush.
 
 McCain says one thing, and does another.
 
 McCain says he supports the disabledthen votes against the
 Community Choice Act, which would have allowed disabled folks to be
 cared for in their own homes, instead of having to be institutionalized.
 
 He likes to call himself a "maverick", reminding us that he once
 dared to opposed President George Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy.
 However, (and with McCain there is always a however) when it came time
 to gain his party's nomination, he tossed that courage out the
 window. Now he wants to make those tax cuts permanent: as the rich get
 richer, the middle class gets pushed down into the ranks of poverty, and
 the poor are increasingly on their own.
 
 He promised to run a respectful campaign, saying that he won't talk
 trash about his rivalhe just hires Karl Rove's friends to do
 it. And did you see his face when his second in command when his
 second in command went into her carefully planned speech of character
 assassination. He was giggling like a schoolgirl when Ms. Lipstick
 Pitbull trashtalked Obama.
 
 Did you notice how he first said he did not know anything about
 economics, but suddenly discovers he has all the answers?
 
 He says he believes in freedom, but his second in command wants to
 censor library books, and fired a librarian who stood up to her.
 
 McCain says he hates war, but pushed hard to get us involved in Iraq
 from the very beginning. That war cost us our economy. America went from
 being rich to being in debt. That was started by George Bush, and
 continued by John McCain, who promises more.
 
 Granted, Iraq is quieter now; if you kill enough people it will
 definitely calm things down; graveyards are not noisy places.
 
 "Maverick" McCain says he is against government wastefulness and
 corruptionso where are his speeches on the mountains of money lost,
 stolen, or mis-spent in Iraq, entire fork-lift pallets of money
 unaccounted for?
 
 He even abandoned his enthusiasm for President Bushin his
 acceptance speech he never mentioned the name of that man he once so
 publicly embraced, putting his cheek on the President's chest.
 
 As a former prisoner of war, McCain deserves respect.
 
 But when he mentions his war record, which he does at any possible
 excuse, we should remember there are other veterans, whose interests he
 routinely votes against.
 
 Like the soldiers in VA hospitals, who were recently told by the Bush
 Administration, that they can no longer be helped to register to vote.
 
 The same veterans whose care John McCain so frequently votes against.
 They also were soldiers. Their heroism also deserves recognition.
 
 Many are disabled, like John McCain's first wife. They must not be
 abandoned.
 
 We also have an estimated one hundred million citizens suffering from
 incurable disease; they must not be forgotten.
 
 We need a President who will not only look out for everyone, but also
 try to make things better: to heal the ill and injured.
 
 John McCain is not that man.
 Don C. Reed
 Sponsor, Roman Reed Spinal Cord Injury Research Act
 co-chair, Californians for Cures
 Vice President, Public Policy, Americans for Cures
 
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