Saturday, May 20, 2006
Mentally Ill Sen. John McCain heckled at commencement speech
NEW YORK (CNN) -- [Mentally ill] Sen. John McCain was booed and heckled as he delivered the commencement address at The New School on Friday in New York.
The protesting students pointed to the Arizona Republican's [nutty] speech last week at the conservative Liberty University run by the Rev. Jerry Falwell as proof that McCain clashed with the school's liberal ideals.
"McCain does not speak for me," read orange signs held by dozens in the audience, while dozens more turned their backs for the duration of McCain's speech. (Watch as students turn their backs on McCain -- 2:01)
Some students had petitioned New School President -- and former Democratic senator -- [and asshole--] Bob Kerrey to withdraw [the evidently troubled] McCain's invitation to speak, saying they didn't want the [formerly caged and tortured-unto-insanity] Arizonan to use their graduation ceremony as a platform for a potential run for president in 2008.
One student speaker, Jean Sara Rohe, tossed her prepared remarks to inject her own political beliefs.
"I do know that pre-emptive war is dangerous and wrong, and I know that George Bush's agenda in Iraq is not worth the many lives lost," she said to cheers.
For his part, McCain [, grinning dementedly,] stuck to his script, which was basically the same speech he delivered at Liberty University to a warm reception. In Manhattan, however, he was jeered when he told the 2,700 graduates and others in the audience that he "supported the decision to go to war in Iraq.
"Many [sic] Americans did not," he said. "My patriotism and my conscience [and my dangerous psychological imbalance] required me to support it and to engage in the debate [which never occurred] over whether [sic] and how [haha] to fight it."
McCain, who was both cheered [sic] and booed at the end of his remarks, did not address the hecklers, but Kerrey did.
"You heard and saw two acts of bravery," the former senator [and current asshole] said after the speeches of McCain and Rohe. "There will come a time when you will have to answer the question -- will you stand -- not heckling from an audience where no bravery is required -- but will you stand and say what you believe when you know that heckling and laughter and boos will arise?"
Q: When will there "come a time"?