[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Elon Goes "DARK MAGA" - Joins Trump ON STAGE! Media Melt Down Ensues

The Truth About the Memphis Belle (No Hollywood)

JD Vance ENDS CNN Dana Bash’s Career LIVE on Air

Hell Let Loose - MOATS with George Galloway

Important Message: Our Country Our Choice

Israel is getting SLAUGHTERED in Lebanon, Americans are trapped | Redacted

Warren Buffett has said: “I could end the deficit in five minutes.

FBI seizes Diddy tape showing Hillary Clinton killing a child at a 'Freak Off' party

Numbers of dairy cow deaths from bird flu increasing to alarming rates

Elites Just Told Us How They'll SILENCE US!

Reese Report: The 2024 October Surprise?

Americans United in Crisis: Mules Carry Supplies to Neighbors Trapped by Hurricanes Devastation in NC

NC STATE POLICE WILL START ARRESTING FEDS THAT ARE BLOCKING AIDE FROM OUTSIDE SOURCES

France BANS ARMS SALES To Israel & Netanyahu LASHES OUT At Macron | Iran GETS READY

CNN Drops Bomb on Tim Walz, Releases Blistering Segment Over Big Scandals in His Own State

EU concerned it has no influence over Israel FT

How Israels invasion of Lebanon poses risks to Turkiye

Obama's New Home in Dubai?,

Vaccine Skeptics Need To Be Silenced! Bill Gates

Hillary Clinton: We Lose Total Control If Social Media Companies Dont Moderate Content

Cancer Patients Report Miraculous Recoveries from Ivermectin Treatment

Hurricane Aid Stolen By The State Of Tennessee?

The Pentagon requests $1.2bn to continue Red Sea mission

US security officials warn of potential threats within two weeks, ramped-up patrols.

Massive Flooding Coming From Hurricane Milton

How the UK is becoming a ‘third-world’ economy

What Would World War III Really Look Like? It's Already Starting...

The Roots Of The UK Implosion And Why War Is Inevitable

How The Jew Thinks

“In five years, scientists predict we will have the first ice-free Arctic summer" John Kerry in 2009


(s)Elections
See other (s)Elections Articles

Title: For Working Moms, 'Flawed' Palin Is the Perfect Choice (Stupid is as Stupid Does)
Source: washingtonpost.com
URL Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy ... 008/09/11/ST2008091101260.html
Published: Sep 11, 2008
Author: Marc Fisher
Post Date: 2008-09-11 12:15:56 by Destro
Ping List: *Treasonous Neocon Alert*     Subscribe to *Treasonous Neocon Alert*
Keywords: Palin
Views: 154
Comments: 12

For Working Moms, 'Flawed' Palin Is the Perfect Choice

By Marc Fisher

Thursday, September 11, 2008; Page B01

Eight working mothers from the Virginia Run development in Centreville went together to the Palin- McCain rally yesterday because Sarah Palin is "just like us." This is something new. Nobody ever accused Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan of being just like us.

"She justifies what we do every day," said Beth Tweddle, who works in sales and carried a sign she drew herself, saying "We [heart] Pit Bull Palin." Tweddle was already a McCain supporter, she said, "but Sarah just energizes us and got us out here because she does what we do, she lives like we do."

We don't live in an age of looking up to authority anymore. We don't cotton to the idea that there are people who are our betters. In this time of "American Idol," bedroom bloggers and the belief that experience, knowledge and education don't necessarily mean a whole lot, Palin is a symbol, a statement that anyone can make it if he or she really tries.

Karla Rupp, a real estate agent, went to see Palin on behalf of her three children, especially the one who has multiple disabilities and is in a nursing home. Val Lewis couldn't stay away -- "that's how empowering it is to have Sarah up there. I have four children; she has five. And we get it done."

The crowd, which I counted at 8,000 but which police estimated at 23,000, gathered at Van Dyck Park in Fairfax City represented votes for John McCain but passion for Palin. McCain knew it; he led the audience in a chant of "Sar-ah! Sar-ah!" Still, did the man who might be the next president know that hundreds would start streaming out of the park as soon as Palin finished speaking, leaving a noticeably sparser audience to hear from the top of the ticket?

Just a couple of weeks ago, the Republicans wielded "celebrity" as an insult. No more. They have seen Barack Obama's electric effect on audiences, and they have trumped him, at least in a way. Obama may still draw larger crowds and inspire followers with a message of hope and change. But the governor of Alaska is winning people over with empathy, which the dictionary says means "understanding and entering into another's feelings," and with something even more direct: a sense that her experience is that of the average American family's.

"She's just as flawed as we are," Tweddle said. "It's not the fact that she's a woman but the way she does it all. And let me tell you: There're more American parents with unwed pregnant teenaged children than American parents with Harvard grads. She's real."

For hours, I walked through the crowd talking to people, mostly women. Again and again, I heard variations on this idea: "She's more like us than Obama, McCain or any of the others," as Rupp put it. "She knows what we go through."

Think of whomever you consider the greatest presidents, and odds are, they were about as far as you can get from being like the rest of us. They tend to have come from wealth, power, fame, the pinnacle of our education system or all of the above. FDR could speak to the pain Americans felt in the Depression, and no one especially cared that he had never personally felt such strain. Reagan could inspire Americans to believe that the nation had a higher purpose, and his celebrity and Hollywood roots only made him that much more admired.

Palin is connecting because, like a reality TV show's most sympathetic contestant, she puts front and center the inexperience, imperfection and pain that most professional politicians work so hard to hide. McCain can't quite tell the story of the pain and sacrifice he experienced as a prisoner of war? No problem. Palin will express the emotions that he can't. That's what mothers do.

"Being a mom is tough, and being a mom and working is really tough," said Carol Buro, who could spare only an hour before she had to pick up her daughter from kindergarten in Vienna. She went to the rally anyway, because she just had to see Palin. "I was going to vote for McCain, but I wasn't very excited. I felt he was a little too political -- saying things because that's what people want to hear. Now I'm just so proud of Sarah. You know, we've all been through a lot. And she's seen some tough times, and she's stood up for what she believes in."

Most people I spoke to readily conceded that Palin lacks experience with or knowledge of many important national and foreign issues. But, as Allison McGarvey, a teacher who lives in Stafford County, said, Palin is "a courageous woman, and what she doesn't know, she can learn quickly. Let's face it, no president knows all the issues. Anyway, I don't see how a candidate can pick one stand and just stick to it. The world situation changes every day. It's their moral and ethical background that's important."

In this hyperdemocratized society, the national conviction that anyone can succeed is morphing into a belief that experience and knowledge may almost be disqualifying credentials.

Like many at the rally, Victoria Robinson-Worst sees Palin's lack of experience as an asset. "I know people who have experience who are totally incompetent," said Robinson-Worst, who lives in Loudoun County, designs wedding flowers and raises two children. "And I know people who have no experience who step in and get it right. I mean, women can do amazing things."

This is where culture wars, identity politics and self-suffocating academic theories of deconstructionism have led us: Authority is suspect. Experience is corrupting. Ignorance is strength?

Next will be "war is peace." Or have we already heard that one?

Join me at noon today for "Potomac Confidential" athttp://www.washingtonpost.com/liveonline.


Poster Comment:

A) I do not support Obama.

B) I wrote a thesis once for political science on the Bruce WIllis movie "Armageddon' where I noticed this trend where this notion of the everyman knowing more the experts rides in to save the day. The movie had NASA as a bunch of bumblers who turn for help to Texas oil drillers - blue collar and no collar types - who they send out into space to save the day.

This is type of notion is fostered by political machines on both the left and right wing - but mostly the right wing these days.

Since the political dialogue has been dumbed down for the lowest common denominator, that is why I imagine our politicians speak to us like we are third graders - calling those we fight wars against as the 'Bad Guys' and pushing absurd notions of reality and other such simplistic characterizations. Subscribe to *Treasonous Neocon Alert*

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: brukeman1 (#0)

Like many at the rally, Victoria Robinson-Worst sees Palin's lack of experience as an asset. "I know people who have experience who are totally incompetent," said Robinson-Worst, who lives in Loudoun County, designs wedding flowers and raises two children. "And I know people who have no experience who step in and get it right. I mean, women can do amazing things."

This is where culture wars, identity politics and self-suffocating academic theories of deconstructionism have led us: Authority is suspect. Experience is corrupting. Ignorance is strength?

Next will be "war is peace." Or have we already heard that one?

"We have oil. We have Putin - all that Russians think they need." - Vladimir Dubin, senior researcher at the Moscow-based Levada Centre.

Destro  posted on  2008-09-11   12:16:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: burkeman1, All, *Treasonous Neocon Alert* (#0) (Edited)

Just a couple of weeks ago, the Republicans wielded "celebrity" as an insult. No more. They have seen Barack Obama's electric effect on audiences, and they have trumped him

Is that not funny how the Republicans turn on a dime? They cursed at Obama for being a celebrity and now they have no problem with celebrity Palin.

Also, hats off to Jon Stewart's 'Daily Show' which showed the GOP convention delegates holding posters that read 'Service' since that was an early McCain talking point and that night attacked Obama for his service as a 'community organizer'. Was it not papa Bush who wanted Americans to perform service to the community and be one of these '1,000 points of light'?

The real reason tag 'community service activist' was used by the GOP against Obama is that it is a code word for uppity negro because of the link to the 60s and 70s black empowerment movement and community activists - the more thy can link Obama to Al Sharpton type of community activist the better. That is also the reason Obama was called 'arrogant' - code word designed to evoke the image of an 'uppity negro' also.

"We have oil. We have Putin - all that Russians think they need." - Vladimir Dubin, senior researcher at the Moscow-based Levada Centre.

Destro  posted on  2008-09-11   12:36:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Destro (#0)

I remember the MSM piously crowing that Bill Clinton was living proof that anybody could grow up to be the Prez and that we'd better respect him or else. Sarah Palin is chosen to be a V-P and all of a sudden the MSM show their snobby asses to the nation "She wasn't vetted by WE THE MEDIA!!". Our national schizophrenia is showing and The Founding Fathers are spinning at 21,600 rpm.....

“The best and first guarantor of our neutrality and our independent existence is the defensive will of the people…and the proverbial marksmanship of the Swiss shooter. Each soldier a good marksman! Each shot a hit!”
-Schweizerische Schutzenseitunt (Swiss Shooting Federation) April, 1941

X-15  posted on  2008-09-11   12:46:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: X-15 (#3)

That is why we are supposed to be a republic and not a democracy. A democracy always debases itself to the lowest common denominator.

"We have oil. We have Putin - all that Russians think they need." - Vladimir Dubin, senior researcher at the Moscow-based Levada Centre.

Destro  posted on  2008-09-11   12:50:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Destro (#2)

Was it not papa Bush who wanted Americans to perform service to the community and be one of these '1,000 points of light'?

That's because "Poppy" worships at the altar of "The Shining One".

"The difference between an honorable man and a moral man is that an honorable man regrets a discreditable act even when it has worked and he is in no danger of being caught." ~ H. L. Mencken

Original_Intent  posted on  2008-09-11   13:03:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Destro (#0)

The movie had NASA as a bunch of bumblers who turn for help to Texas oil drillers - blue collar and no collar types - who they send out into space to save the day. This is type of notion is fostered by political machines on both the left and right wing - but mostly the right wing these days.

Well duh. A government that needs lots of experts is doing something it shouldn't be doing.

You bought The Battle of New Orleans.
We recommend: Conway Twitty

Tauzero  posted on  2008-09-11   13:37:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Destro (#1) (Edited)

A lot of people voted for Clinton or Bush because they had "regular guy" kind of demeanor, even when they knew nothing about their views or disagreed with them. Unfortunately, people don't vote so much on issues as on personalities, and Palin seems to be somebody that a lot of people like and identify with. So being an ignoramus can actually be a big plus in politics!

It's not just the soccer moms either. Pat Buchanan seems to have fallen for the Palin-Prop:

buchanan.org/blog/2008/09...ne-of-them-and-one-of-us/

All it took was talk about mooseburgers to make a lot of people forget that when Palin does talk about policy, she sounds awfully like George W. Bush, and that she's the VP choice of a guy who surrounds himself with PNAC moles like Randy Scheuenemann.

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2008-09-11   13:43:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Destro (#0)

Sarah Palin is "just like us."

the political dialogue has been dumbed down for the lowest common denominator

I doubt that thinking men and women who aren't koolaid drinkers give this "pit- bull" the time of day.

angle  posted on  2008-09-11   13:59:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Destro (#1)

"war is peace." Or have we already heard that one?

It's Bush's mantra.

angle  posted on  2008-09-11   14:03:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Tauzero (#6)

A government that needs lots of experts is doing something it shouldn't be doing.

That is so profound in its simplicity.

Tag-worthy.

A nation of mullets, ruled by inbred, moronic tyrants.

Lod  posted on  2008-09-11   16:14:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Rupert_Pupkin (#7) (Edited)

she's the VP choice of a guy who surrounds himself with PNAC moles like Randy Scheuenemann.

Take a peek at who the "guy" has surrounded himself with as foreign policy advisors:

thinkprogress.org/wonkroom/2008/03/17/mccain-advisers/

Fall in, neocons ... forward march! Unbelievable.

I'm starting to feel like Bill Murray in Groundhog Day.

Minus accident of birth .. GWB, Mgr. Hardees ... McBomb, Mgr. Burger King .. (both flunked out at Hamburger U.)

iconoclast  posted on  2008-09-12   8:03:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: X-15 (#3)

"She wasn't vetted by WE THE MEDIA!!".

an unvetted candidate would be a blessing.

Old Friend  posted on  2008-09-12   10:11:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]