Mr. McCain has decided to run as a former POW and a maverick, a maverick's
maverick, rather than Mr. Bush's best friend, and that's understandable, but
how can he not address the $3 trillion that got burned up in Iraq so far?
It's real money, it could've paid for a lot of windmills, a high-speed rail
line in Ohio, some serious R&D. The Chinese, who have avoided foreign wars
for 50 years, are taking enormous leaps forward, investing in their economy,
and we are falling behind. We're wasting our chances.
The Republican culture of corruption in Washington hasn't helped.
And a former mayor of a town of 7,000 who hired a lobbyist to get $26
million in federal earmarks is now running against the old-boy network in
Washington who gave her that money to build the teen rec center and other
good things so she could keep taxes low in Wasilla. Stunning. And if you
question her qualifications to be the leader of the free world, you are an
elitist. This is a beautiful maneuver. I wish I had thought of it back in
school when I was forced to subject myself to a final exam in higher
algebra. I could have told Miss Mortenson, "I am a Christian and when you
gave me a D, you only showed your contempt for the Lord and for the godly
hardworking people from whom I have sprung, you elitist battle ax you."
In school, you couldn't get away with that garbage because the taxpayers
know that if we don't uphold scholastic standards, we will wind up driving
on badly designed bridges and go in for a tonsillectomy and come out missing
our left lung, so we flunk the losers lest they gain power and hurt us, but
in politics we bring forth phonies and love them to death.
I must say, it was fun having the Republicans in St. Paul and to see it all
up close and firsthand. Security was, as one might expect, thin-lipped and
gimlet-eyed, but once you got through it, you found the folks you went to
high school with -- farm kids, jocks, the townies who ran the student
council, the cheerleaders, some of the bullies -- and they are as cohesive
now as they were back then, dedicated to school spirit, intolerant of
outsiders, able to jump up and down and holler for something they don't
actually believe. But oh Lord, what they brought forth this year. When you
check the actuarial tables on a 72-year-old guy who's had three bouts with
cancer, you guess you may be looking at the first woman president, a
hustling Evangelical with ethics issues and a chip on her shoulder who, not
counting Canada, has set foot outside the country once -- a trip to Germany,
Iraq and Kuwait in 2007 to visit Alaskans in the armed service. And who
listed a refueling stop in Ireland as a fourth country visited. She's like
the Current Occupant but with big hair.
If you want inexperience, there were better choices.
(Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion" can be heard Saturday nights
on public radio stations across the country.)
C 2008 by Garrison Keillor. All rights reserved. Distributed by Tribune
Media Services, Inc.


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