Brodner's Cartoon du Jour: Winston McCain
April 9, 2008
Yesterday and today we've seen the now routine spectacle of Petraeus and Crocker coming to Washington to tell Congress and the rest of us to butt out of their war-thing. Surprisingly, Congress, even the Republicans, yesterday shouted back, 'Hell no!'' This from Dowd today: "They arrived on the heels of the Maliki debacle in Basra, which made it stunningly clear — after a ceasefire was brokered in Iran — that we’re spending $3 trillion as our own economy goes off a cliff so that Iran can have a dysfunctional little friend. Not good news, given Ahmadinejad’s announcement that his scientists are putting 6,000 new uranium-enriching centrifuges in place."
And there sat McCain, strapped to this war. Here's our film about that. Click on Winnie to watch.
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Churchill also became famous for being taken prisoner during the Boer War, but unlike McCain the indomitable Sir Winston managed to escape, returning home at a young age to be celebrated as a national hero. Unlike John McCain or our President (for some reason Bush has some delusion of thinking himself to be Sir Winston like—merely think about Churchill in terms of the military where he was in three wars on three different continents—Bush the grounded wingless pilot hiding out in the reserves so as to avoid combat—in this sense Bush is more of an actor than Reagan) Churchill had a plethora of talents—he could in fact drink, as well as express his mind with such a degree of credibility and clarity so as to win himself a Nobel Prize in literature and he wasn't really a slouch with a paint brush either (Churchill was in fact that embodiment of the artist that Hitler had dreamed of becoming in his youth)—yet these were things of leisure, things done in the background of a rather long and impressive career as a statesman and yet done with such a passion so as to be awarded the Nobel Prize in literature seems to describe to me the kind of character we are speaking of when it comes to Churchill.
When Churchill gave his speech at the start of the Battle of Britain it was to embolden the hearts and minds of the English people to not yield; his tiny island of England after all stood all alone to face off against a military giant that in a mere 35 days had conquered Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, France and Poland and nearly took England too after the near fatal defeat at Dunkirk—it was a true testament of will during that Battle of Britain where an out gunned and out manned British army as well as the entire population of England used their wits and guts to stave off defeat and for 5 years Sir Winston was truly the voice of the British empire—in this sense of defending the British Isles from invasion it would seem that our present leadership and the good POW McCain have more in common with Churchill's opponent—the twisted and perverted Adolph Hitler.
I agree with Brodner 100% in his depiction of McCain and his brief description of the US and American leadership in regards to our involvement in Iraq (as that of a fantasy)—especially McCain's thinking in regards to Iraq and Vietnam (for McCain it may well be a chance to get even).
Brodner has made an excellent caricature to boot. I think that using a small film such as was made on the New Yorker as an excellent aid to expressing the ideas contained in a work of art—maybe that will catch on. Because it was really amazing to watch Brodner think with his pencil.
"One may dislike Hitler's system and yet admire his patriotic achievements. If our country were defeated, I hope we should find a champion as admirable to restore our courage and lead us back to our place among the nations" [From 'Great Contemporaries', 1937]