Courage Matters. Does John McCain’s Book?

It’s not coin­ci­den­tal that I’m read­ing the books writ­ten by pres­i­den­tial can­di­dates. I’m grow­ing inter­est­ed in what the peo­ple who may become our lead­ers have to say as I grow more weary of what the pun­dits and the crit­ics do.

In Pro­files in Courage, John F. Kennedy wrote about the courage of Sen­a­tors mak­ing impor­tant choic­es in their polit­i­cal careers. I remem­ber feel­ing a sliv­er of dis­ap­point­ment that there was not any atten­tion paid to oth­er vari­eties of courage or sug­ges­tions at how we com­mon folk might cul­ti­vate courage in our own lives. There was also not much paid to the nature of courage.

Sen­a­tor McCain wrote the book I’d hoped Jack Kennedy would, but in doing so demon­strat­ed that he has less to say than (then) Sen­a­tor Kennedy did. Why Courage Mat­ters is chock full of inspi­ra­tional sto­ries of courage of many vari­eties, and each of these sto­ries stands on their own. Dis­ap­point­ing­ly, Sen­a­tor McCain nev­er indulges us with insight about these coura­geous acts. He does a fine job of nar­rat­ing them and high­light­ing the coura­geous parts, bring­ing home the aspects of the sto­ries and indi­vid­u­als he admires, but he nev­er goes too deep and nev­er gives us much more than a col­lec­tion of true and inspi­ra­tional stories.

Like­wise with his sug­ges­tions of how to cul­ti­vate courage in our­selves. He chan­nels Eddie Rick­en­backer long enough to tell the read­er that courage is a func­tion of our fear, the prod­uct of it rather than the absence of it. He instructs us that courage is like a mus­cle and must be exer­cised in order to devel­op. But where I went look­ing for more I found Sen­a­tor McCain’s book want­i­ng. This is no self-help book. It’s worth read­ing for some mild inspi­ra­tional val­ues, but it’s not going to change any­one’s life. I think a book about courage owes it to us to chal­lenge and transform.

But this is a book writ­ten by a mod­ern man who seeks pub­lic office for a living.I sup­pose it’s too much to ask for our lead­ers today to reveal if they are men or women of virtue. We, as a nation, are both so cyn­i­cal about and iron­i­cal­ly enough, fear­ful of our lead­ers that any evi­dence of his or her intel­li­gence, virtue of char­ac­ter, or thought­ful reflec­tion makes that can­di­date a threat. We say we want our lead­ers to be peo­ple of char­ac­ter, but none among us will vote for any­one we admire. How sad it is that even in a book about courage that a politi­cian dare not exhib­it that he might know some­thing about the subject.