Anonymous wrote:McCain had to die for liberals to suddenly realize what a fine person he was. This was the same nominee for president that Democrats vilified in 2008.
He wasn't at all a "fine person." He was, however, a cultivator of the press, and of the left--hence the "maverick" label.
He cheated on his first wife with a cheer leader and dumped his first wife and three kids from that marriage.
He called his second wife Cindy a "c*nt" in front of media when she teased him about his thinning hair.
He crashed multiple planes when in the Navy. He was totally a creature of "white privilege." He was son of an admiral and grandson of an admiral and had he not had those privileged connections he would have washed out of the Naval Academy and certainly would have washed out of flight training.
Remember the "Keating Five"? He was one of those guys--early political corruption. McCain Feingold was all about glossing over his corrupt political history for posterity, and it was and is a terrible law.
He was so petty and vindictive, that not only did he fail to invite the President of the United States--he even didn't invite Sarah Palin, his own choice for V.P. running mate in 2008. I've never heard anything about Palin that would justify failing to invite her to his funeral. Only a vindictive petty loser would do that.
What "great things" did McCain ever actually accomplish for the United States?
I can't think of one.
Can you?
What is it?