Who's Telling the Truth, Obama or McCain?

by BallyZACA | September 28, 2008 at 12:53 am
655 views | 14 Recommendations | 6 comments

Photos

Who's Telling the Truth, Obama or McCain?

Who's Telling the Truth, Obama or McCain?

see larger image

uploaded by BallyZACA

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/09/27/factcheck-org-the-muddle-in-mississippi.aspx  

According to the nonpartisan researchers at Factcheck.org (a NEWSWEEK partner), "McCain and Obama contradicted each other repeatedly during their first debate, and each volunteered some factual misstatements as well." Here's how the cookie crumbled:

  • Obama said McCain adviser Henry Kissinger backs talks with Iran "without preconditions," but McCain disputed that. In fact, Kissinger did recently call for "high level" talks with Iran starting at the secretary of state level and said, "I do not believe that we can make conditions." After the debate the McCain campaign issued a statement quoting Kissinger as saying he didn't favor presidential talks with Iran.
  • Obama denied voting for a bill that called for increased taxes on "people" making as little as $42,000 a year, as McCain accused him of doing. McCain was right, though only for single taxpayers. A married couple would have had to make $83,000 to be affected by the vote, and anyway no such increase is in Obama's tax plan.
  • McCain and Obama contradicted each other on what Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen said about troop withdrawals. Mullen said a time line for withdrawal could be "very dangerous" but was not talking specifically about "Obama's plan," as McCain maintained.
  • McCain tripped up on one of his signature issues - special appropriation "earmarks." He said they had "tripled in the last five years," when in fact they have decreased sharply.
    Obama claimed Iraq "has" a $79 billion surplus. It once was projected to be as high as that. It's now down to less than $60 billion.
  • McCain repeated his overstated claim that the U.S. pays $700 billion a year for oil to hostile nations. Imports are running at about $536 billion this year, and a third of it comes from Canada, Mexico and the U.K.
  • Obama said 95 percent of "the American people" would see a tax cut under his proposal. The actual figure is 81 percent of households.
  • Obama mischaracterized an aspect of McCain's health care plan, saying "employers" would be taxed on the value of health benefits provided to workers. Employers wouldn't, but the workers would. McCain also would grant workers up to a $5,000 tax credit per family to cover health insurance.
  • McCain misrepresented Obama's plan by claiming he'd be "handing the health care system over to the federal government." Obama would expand some government programs but would allow people to keep their current plans or chose from private ones, as well.
  • McCain claimed Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower had drafted a letter of resignation from the Army to be sent in case the 1944 D-Day landing at Normandy turned out to be a failure. Ike prepared a letter taking responsibility, but he didn't mention resigning.

Advertisement
recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
BallyZACA

Thanks Zichi -- "Let's get ready to RUMBBBBBLLLLLLEEEEE"  "In the BLUE corner is MR. COOL and in the RED corner is MR. HOT. 

Uwe Paschen
Uwe Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:23 on September 28th, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
BallyZACA

Thanks Paschen.

Barry ORegan
Barry ORegan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:30 on September 28th, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff. Guess we'll find out at election time.

SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:32 on September 28th, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff. A lot of  statements. Many they meanwhile elections have no impact on crisis, 8 years spending to much to long. Good post

merlingraycat
merlingraycat
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 10:51 on September 28th, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from