Moderate Poison

posted at 12:44 am on October 14, 2009 by

Commenting on the idea of General David Petraeus as the only potential presidential candidate who could unite the Republican party, Allahpundit says:

Among the major Republican candidates, the only one who truly excites the base is Palin, yet she’s sufficiently poisonous to moderates at the moment that Bob McDonnell won’t even take her up on her offer to campaign for him in Virginia while sitting on a nine-point lead. 

I’m sure Petraeus would receive an eager and respectful hearing from both Republican and independent voters, if he decided to pursue a career in politics. (Democrats would haul those disgraceful “General Betray Us” signs out of storage, and begin inventing imaginary racist quotes they could post online, citing each other as reliable sources.) I find the classification of Palin as “poisonous to moderates” debatable, however.

Allahpundit didn’t pull this description out of thin air – various polls show her doing much better among conservatives than moderates, and of course liberals hate her the way that creepy little kid and long-haired girl in “The Grudge” hated anyone who came into their haunted house. A recent Pew Research poll gives Palin a 62% approval rating among moderate Republicans, which is a little north of poisonous, but far below her 85% rating with conservatives.

Opinions among the broader electorate are harder to judge, especially when we’re less than a year into the current president’s term… and discussing a private citizen, who last expressed her feelings about elective politics by starting a Facebook page, and racking up 925,000 supporters. She has some work to do with independent and moderately liberal voters, but there’s no reason to declare her task impossible in advance. Note that Allahpundit astutely qualifies his toxicology report by saying she’s “poisonous to moderates at the moment.” Things change in the world of politics, sometimes very abruptly.

Why should Palin be such a hard sell for moderate voters? After all, she was tapped as a running mate by the most moderate moderate to ever moderate his way to a crushing electoral defeat, John McCain. She’s clearly much more conservative than he is, but are we supposed to believe the people who adore McCain’s maverick centrism will completely disregard his… shall we say… moderate endorsement of Palin, and treat her like a radioactive wolverine? What did she ever say, or do, to send these enlightened, open-minded moderates stampeding for the hills? Her style isn’t “divisive” or confrontational, unless we are meant to conclude that strong criticism of the radical Barack Obama automatically infuriates middle-of-the-road types… in which case they seem more like a herd of sheep than a wise company of level-headed independents. All of the superficial reasons cited for Palin’s alleged inability to connect with moderate voters are exactly the kind of trivia they’re supposedly able to think beyond.

When we speak of moderates, there are really three distinct groups under discussion: liberal Republicans, conservative Democrats, and true independents. The truly independent voter should, I think, be strongly disposed to reject an incumbent for poor performance. Someone who could vote for Bush in 2004, then Obama in 2008, should be extraordinarily eager to hear new ideas, when the current occupant of the Oval Office clearly isn’t taking care of business. Conservative Democrats should be less than eager to re-elect a leftist radical, especially since he seems keen on turning the Reagan Democrat states into economic disaster areas.

Liberal Republicans would actually be the hardest of the three moderate groups for a serious conservative to win over, given their long-standing distaste for the right wing of their own party, but they might be willing to jump onto a campaign headed for victory. They were certainly quick to bail out of the Straight Talk Express, despite their ostensible love for John McCain. If Sarah Palin ran against Obama and looked like a winner in the last months of the campaign, she shouldn’t be surprised to see some fawning op-eds from people like Peggy Noonan, as they suddenly discover a luminous aura of energy and charisma around her. That’s what courtiers do. “Moderation” can dissolve in the frantic scramble for relevance. Anyone who could swoon over the “superior judgment” of the guy who filled his administration with tax cheats, 9/11 conspiracy morons, and NAMBLA supporters will have no trouble revising their opinion of the “seemingly very nice middle-class girl,” if she’s up six points over Obama in the October 2012 polls.

How does Sarah Palin improve her standing among moderates? By talking to them. A true moderate can hardly define themselves through stubborn closed-mindedness. Palin’s book sales suggest people are interested in hearing what she has to say. Her writing and speeches show that she’s gotten better at saying it. Of course, not having to shamble along with the zombies of the McCain campaign helps with that. Everything I’ve seen of Palin since the end of the 2008 campaign is remarkably consistent with the performance that brought the house down at the Republican National Convention. That speech was intoxicating, not poisonous.

People sincerely interested in hearing both sides of the political argument aren’t going to judge Palin by a comedy skit, or Katie Couric interview, from four years ago. It doesn’t mean they’ll stack copies of Going Rogue into a giant pyramid, like Xerxes’ seat from 300, and carry her into Washington on their backs… but at this point, it’s equally ridiculous to say that she doesn’t have a fighting chance with them, if she wants to take it. There certainly isn’t anything “moderate” about the man she would be running against.

Blowback

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Palin is toxic only because the leftist puppetmasters have deemed her to be so and some weak minded wishy washy Republicans have decided to cede that point, even though as you point out, her actual record is not that of an extremist.

She’s not a right wing demagogue…she’s a common sense conservative who applies the law to her decisions.

I’d really like it though if we the people could decide for ourselves who to choose and not let the media puppetmasters tell us who’s acceptably unassuming and “moderate” enough to be our candidate.

powerpro on October 14, 2009 at 1:36 AM

Awesome. Palin/Zero 2012

Mr. Wednesday Night on October 14, 2009 at 2:15 AM

Dear Madam or Sir Zero,

This was an excellent start. I surely hope that you will continue to devote attention to Sarah’s efforts over time, and I also hope that she will entertain the notion of hiring you in some important capacity if she becomes serious about a run for the Blighted House.

The dubious media will always be against her, and she will likely always make moves that are unusual for a politician, but that is constantly refreshing to the electorate… if she can demonstrate consistency through them. That would indicate a constancy of character that would be attractive precisely to the moderately moderates that are otherwise so easily swayed by SNL skits and attack ads. She has a spine. If she also has a demonstrably unerring direction, then she can rise to the highest office in the land, displacing lesser souls.

Myno on October 14, 2009 at 3:06 AM

As always, spot on!

gary4205 on October 14, 2009 at 3:15 AM

She will win them over by being herself: a fiscal conservative and believer in a strong military, and a constitutionalist on judicial appointments. She did quite well in Alaska with Indies.

And, she will try to get government out of the way so people can grow and be their best.

She came of age during Reagan, and that is basically what she believes.

Sapwolf on October 14, 2009 at 3:21 AM

Summing up: the Republican Party ceded the election, talking point by talking point. The only strong words came from Palin in the Republican effort. And she was thrown under the bus for not ceding all the talking points, behaving herself. Sit down, be quiet, let John cede the talking points. If John’s staff was bedeviled by Palin’s family being exposed as actually quite normal to most voters, not the Better-Homes-N-Gardens covergirl that they’d hoped for, that was their mistake. It was more sellable than they imagined.

Certainly politics involves negotiation, exchange of votes. It beats tyranny as in dictat. Politicians bargain with other politicians in the Capitol, it’s how the game it played. Likewise, some of the ceding of points, ideals, seems more like capitulation. Palin should stick with her schtick, cede less, and she’ll most likely find that a lot of mainstream voters prefer a commitment from a leader, some real flavor, rather than a bland hodge-podge of mediocrity.

Robert17 on October 14, 2009 at 8:55 AM

If Sarah Palin ran against Obama and looked like a winner in the last months of the campaign, she shouldn’t be surprised to see some fawning op-eds from people like Peggy Noonan, as they suddenly discover a luminous aura of energy and charisma around her. That’s what courtiers do.

You nailed this one, that’s for sure.
Excellent post Doc, as always.

beachgirlusa on October 14, 2009 at 9:37 AM

I love me some Doc Zero!

gryphon202 on October 14, 2009 at 9:59 AM

Doc, I can’t find fault with anything you wrote, but still I’m skeptical. Reagan served two full terms as CA governor, and still even then it took him nearly a decade to win over his own party for a presidential nomination. And that was in an earlier pre-Bork era when the media actually pretended to be honest.

In view of that history it’s hard to believe Palin can convince enough people so fast, particularly after the very bad coverage of her during the election. The media still reports Tina Fey’s exaggerated caricature as Palin’s actual positions (e.g. seeing Russia from her window). And, as far as I know, the swing voters actually believe it.

We also don’t know what Palin’s political ambitions are, if any. If she does seriously seek office, she’ll have to explain to the public why she didn’t serve her term as governor, and that will be a hard case to make.

My view of Palin is that she is an admirable person with a lot of strengths and a real political gift. However, she does have some baggage which the traditional media would be all too happy to pounce on and emphasize in any national political campaign. Just remember last year how many reporters were dumpster diving in Wasilla vs. how many were looking into Obama’s Chicago connections. So I’m very skeptical, but I admit I would be very pleased to be wrong on this!

jwolf on October 14, 2009 at 10:10 AM

Palin/Petraeus — that would get the libs all wee-wee’d up, huh?

Great writing again, Doctor.

publiuspen on October 14, 2009 at 12:06 PM

But but David Letterman doesn’t like Palin!

Dhuka on October 14, 2009 at 12:42 PM

Excellent analysis, as usual, Doc.

I had the privilege of watching Sarah speak prior to the 2008 Disgrace, er, Election, and she was a positively riveting speaker. Mostly just because I can understand what she says and it makes sense. Maybe that’s why they hate her.

DrRansom on October 14, 2009 at 1:33 PM

Good lord, Doc.

People don’t like her because they’ve been made to believe she’s stupid. They throw “extremist” on there at the end because they want to look good in front of their self-righteous liberal buddies.

I don’t think you’re reading this situation very well.

TheUnrepentantGeek on October 14, 2009 at 3:43 PM

Doctor Zero well done essay Sarah needs all the help she can get.

Clyde5445 on October 14, 2009 at 9:01 PM

You know that people are desperate to stop Sarah Palin when they are willing to turn to potentials who may not even be Republican – like Petraeus.

I’ll take some vindication here – a few glasses full thank you. Don’t know how many “moderates” have said I’m letting my emotions get the best of me by putting my eggs into the basket of a woman who “absolutely can’t get moderate votes!”

Hehe.

Well – I’m not as crazy as MODERATES who would put their eggs into the basket of a man who’s barely ever endorsed the Republican party and who, for all we know – could be a complete Colin Powell on the issues.

Yes I’ll have that glass of vindication now!

HondaV65 on October 14, 2009 at 9:37 PM

Just know that Sarah Palin and Liz Cheney will be a formidable force outside of DC. where Michele Bachmann feeds the Canon that brings down this Fascist Govt.
Give me my choice back, you do not own it, I DO!!!

hawkman on October 14, 2009 at 9:47 PM

Excellent analysis, Dr. Zero.

Spot on.

Norwegian on October 14, 2009 at 10:02 PM

Speaking rationally about Palin will not put you in APs good graces… Maybe if you threw in a few kind words for the fat chick… Ms. McCain…

CC

CapedConservative on October 14, 2009 at 10:08 PM

Sarah Palin is perhaps the greatest exemplar of the genius of Middle America that I’ve seen in my lifetime. There is something in every gesture and phrase and quirky idiosyncrasy that speaks to us in our own peculiar dialect and something in her family struggle that we all instinctively feel a kinship with.
The oh so fashionable glitterati on the coasts look down their noses and sneer at us the same way they look down on her and there is an instant connection that quietly bonds us together.
Sarah Palin is at the crossroads of her life, and perhaps ours as well. The battered expectations that the media and the entertainment/propaganda world have created for her, and the powerful bond of sympathy that lies just under its surface, are an asset for her future that could propel her to a surprising success that might very well shock the world.
Think about this; the greatest orators throughout history have been those who came into the room wounded and battered, and then quietly delivered the performance that no one expected. Lincoln at Cooper Union comes to mind, but others have done the very same and gone on to capture the imagination of their times and crystallize a moment in history. Sarah Palin is someone whom we desperately WANT to see succeed because we see our own redemption in the shining possibility of her stunning upset success.
Like the dowdy looking housewife who walked shyly on stage last summer in that British amateur talent show, and blew the entire world away with a voice and a talent that nearly moved mountains, Sarah Palin has that ability. Very soon Sarah Palin will also have that opportunity.

Lew on October 14, 2009 at 10:13 PM

“Anyone who could swoon over the “superior judgment” of the guy who filled his administration with tax cheats, 9/11 conspiracy morons, and NAMBLA supporters will have no trouble revising their opinion of the “seemingly very nice middle-class girl,” if she’s up six points over Obama in the October 2012 polls.”

I agree, but you can not count out how much George Soros has invested in destroying the United States of America

but we have a “Free and Independent Press” to warn us against any such threat.

That and John McCain…

Do I really need the /sarc tag…?

Good post Doc, as usual.

Seven Percent Solution on October 14, 2009 at 10:14 PM

How does Sarah Palin improve her standing among moderates? By talking to them.

in what respect, charlie? why doesn’t she talk to them? i, for one, look forward to the day when she begins to give interviews and holds press conferences.

sesquipedalian on October 14, 2009 at 10:16 PM

Great analysis Doctor Zero. Palin is “divisive” only because flimsy, elite, ashamed repubics want to be buddies with liberals and prove that they’re fair-minded if they agree with them. Anything to be part of the it group.

cubachi on October 14, 2009 at 10:19 PM

Palin/ will be a Zero in 2012!

Mr. Wednesday Night on October 14, 2009 at 2:15 AM

FIFY

Norman Blizter on October 14, 2009 at 10:24 PM

these liberal parasites are nothing but human debris and all i need is some industrial strength clorox bleach.

moonbatkiller on October 14, 2009 at 10:25 PM

Sarah Palin is perhaps the greatest exemplar of the genius of Middle America that I’ve seen in my lifetime.
Lew on October 14, 2009 at 10:13 PM

Then you must have sh*t for brains.

Norman Blizter on October 14, 2009 at 10:26 PM

these liberal parasites are nothing but human debris and all i need is some industrial strength clorox bleach…

moonbatkiller on October 14, 2009 at 10:25 PM

… to drink? Go right ahead.

Norman Blizter on October 14, 2009 at 10:28 PM

Poor Normie is off his meds again!

Somebody want to call the orderlie and get him back into his room. He’s twitching and wallowing in his own spittle on the floor in the patients’ lounge and the rest of the inmates are getting really scared.

Have a nice day, Sweety!

Lew on October 14, 2009 at 10:35 PM

There is no such thing as a moderate. As we say in West Virginia… You are Fir it or Again it.

Palin is a leader. Leaders LEAD, they don’t compromise or vacillate.

wildcat84 on October 14, 2009 at 10:39 PM

With all respect to Irving Kristol (R.I.P.), I think that Bill Kristol, smitten with an energetic, no nonsense Conservative, Mrs. Palin, promoted her too quickly. I remain impressed that she energized the McCain campaign my friends … Plus, she focused on the things that we all should have focused on – the redistribution of “wealth” and the fundamental transformation of our country.

When President Obama et. al. tax us to pay for a new limited group of people’s health insurance – ask him to require every member of his immediate family, all of Congress and their families, and all of his Cabinet’s/Czar’s families to go first. If it is such a terrific system – prove it by going first.

bbh on October 14, 2009 at 10:41 PM

Anyone who opposes Bambi is going to get “baggage” invented for them by the media. Might as well oppose him with the best.

LibTired on October 14, 2009 at 10:54 PM

That sure was a great speech at the convention. The Rudy/Sarah one-two punch was electric. Hmmm….

bigjack on October 14, 2009 at 10:57 PM

Doctor: I am launching the You First campaign. If the health care reforms that the Congress and the President wish to impose on us, the industrious and still employed, are so benefitial to us – they should ditch their Federal coverage and be the first to try out their plan along with every member of their families that currently benefit from the government’s largesse.

To all of Congress and to the President himself, I say you first!

bbh on October 14, 2009 at 11:02 PM

Doctor Zero, another great post as always. I think she can go the route of Reagan after his first loss. She is using facebook at the moment where Reagan did weekly radio until the next election. Sarah is using FB at preseant and is expanding into other mediums. She has plenty of time to make her views known and win people to her cause, toxic is definitely not a good analogy. The basic message that she speaks is a winner all on its own, it just needs to be heard.

bluemarlin on October 14, 2009 at 11:26 PM

Congressfirst.com is now registered. I will create an actual site tomorrow morning. Please visit so that we can calibrate/calculate our collective responses to the health care reform proposals.

bbh on October 14, 2009 at 11:27 PM

oqps I meant present, it is late and my wife and I have enjoyed a bit of vino this evening.

bluemarlin on October 14, 2009 at 11:28 PM

***
SARAH’CUDA for POTUS, JOHN BOLTON for VP in 2012. An America First ticket with real Hope and Change.
***
John Bibb
***

rocketman on October 14, 2009 at 11:55 PM

I keep hearing that Palin is toxic and for the most part I was ignoring it assuning that any honest person could see that the Left is really out to get her so they lie…then today Rush Limbaugh was lied right out of part ownership of a football team and that has really given me pause… I guess I need to cogitate on these happenings for a bit but I can’t help thinking that something wicked is really coming to the US…it is not the same country I grew up in…The Hatefilled Left isn’t even hiding their devious and dishonest tactis anymore…they know half the population is either brain dead or ignornat…a condition they helped cause…think the public school system and the garbage on tv … so so sad….

CCRWM on October 15, 2009 at 12:03 AM

Dr. Zero runs HotAir. You know it. I know it.

trace_9r on October 15, 2009 at 12:45 AM

Why do I have a feeling that Doctor Zero is really …

Professor Infinity?

… as in infinite possibilities.

Yes, Dr. Zero. I agree with your analysis.

It’s time for the Republican Party to align themselves behind Sarah Palin.

Their future in 2012 is all in the hands of Sarah Palin. If Palin runs in a Third Party in that year, GOP will be truly destroyed. If Palin supports a candidate other than the GOP nominee, the same thing will happen.

TheAlamos on October 15, 2009 at 3:06 AM

Palin is toxic only because the leftist puppetmasters have deemed her to be so and some weak minded wishy washy Republicans have decided to cede that point, even though as you point out, her actual record is not that of an extremist.

She’s not a right wing demagogue…she’s a common sense conservative who applies the law to her decisions.

powerpro on October 14, 2009 at 1:36 AM

+1

Sarah Palin is perhaps the greatest exemplar of the genius of Middle America that I’ve seen in my lifetime.
Lew on October 14, 2009 at 10:13 PM

Then you must have sh*t for brains.

Norman Blizter on October 14, 2009 at 10:26 PM

Powerpro’s point made.

Leftard screams “you’ve got sh*t for brains!” if you like Palin. The only people who believe Palin is a negative are those who care what idiots like NB here say. He says “you’re racist” if you criticize Obama, so you go on the defensive to prove you’re not. Here, conservatives rush to prove they’re not sh*tbrains, as if NB’s accusation has any weight.

It’s the insult of a second grader. “Sarah has cooties! You like Sarah! You’ve got cooties!” “Do not, I don’t have cooties, I hate Sarah!”

Pointing out that NB is a sexist pig who demeans women doesn’t help, because the left has programmed everyone to think that they’re pro-women. Even if it kills them.


The response to puerile chumps like NB & his leftist cronies should be easily selected from a list like so… (two bad words)

CPL 310 on October 15, 2009 at 3:41 AM

Their future in 2012 is all in the hands of Sarah Palin. If Palin runs in a Third Party in that year, GOP will be truly destroyed. If Palin supports a candidate other than the GOP nominee, the same thing will happen.

TheAlamos on October 15, 2009 at 3:06 AM

Unless the GOP doesn’t run a candidate for Pres.

Imagine Romney or some Republican stepping aside and throwing his weight behind Palin instead. It throws away the taint of two-party politics, it lets republicans focus on smaller races, and installs a true conservative in the White House.

The alternative is 4 more years of a rush to communism and totalitarianism. Any GOP candidate who isn’t a liberal RINO would know the honorable thing would be to put his weight behind her. It would earn the GOP credibility as putting principles before party, as well.

CPL 310 on October 15, 2009 at 3:44 AM

WHY are we still talking about Palin? Why? She is a LOSER. Get it? LOSER. This claptrap about how to rehabilitate her is just wasting time, energy, and effort. Can we PLEASE move and try to find a winner this time?

voxpopuli on October 15, 2009 at 4:03 AM

JOHN BOLTON for VP in 2012

Now THERE’S an idea only someone who truly hates the conservative brand could love.

voxpopuli on October 15, 2009 at 4:08 AM

People don’t like her because they’ve been made to believe she’s stupid. They throw “extremist” on there at the end because they want to look good in front of their self-righteous liberal buddies. TheUnrepentantGeek

You know that people are desperate to stop Sarah Palin when they are willing to turn to potentials who may not even be Republican – like Petraeus. HondaV65

Great analysis Doctor Zero. Palin is “divisive” only because flimsy, elite, ashamed repubics want to be buddies with liberals and prove that they’re fair-minded if they agree with them. Anything to be part of the it group. cubachi

Leftard screams “you’ve got sh*t for brains!” if you like Palin. The only people who believe Palin is a negative are those who care what idiots like NB here say. He says “you’re racist” if you criticize Obama, so you go on the defensive to prove you’re not. Here, conservatives rush to prove they’re not sh*tbrains, as if NB’s accusation has any weight. It’s the insult of a second grader. “Sarah has cooties! You like Sarah! You’ve got cooties!” “Do not, I don’t have cooties, I hate Sarah!” CPL 310

Well said by all and I agree.

beachgirlusa on October 15, 2009 at 5:29 AM

Let’s be honest here. Although they will be old, she will have to be able to overcome the Couric and Gibson interviews and the Tina Fey impressions. The Bristol unwed mother thing is also going to be a thorn in her side. If she does run, expect more Tina Fey and it will be vicious.

She has to lay the groundwork between now and then so that all that will not matter. Can she do it? I hope so because I liked her even before McCain picked her. However, if she can’t overcome those obstacles, she should stay out.

Kafir on October 15, 2009 at 6:11 AM

Thanks once again, Doc, for bringing reason to the table.

When it comes to political fortune telling far too many people apply a static approach to what is an ever-changing, dynamic environment. .

For instance, I’m doubtful that even a Ronald Reagan could have prevailed last year, given the strong desire for change that existed during the last two years or so of the Bush presidency and a Democrat candidate who so masterfully tapped into that urge to purge. Not to mention the media’s universal desire to promote such an historic candidacy.

Likewise, in 2012, it’s quite likely — based on Obama’s fast-withering numbers and the widespread disapproval of his policies, particularly among independents — the environment will be such that only a strong conservative will stand a chance of securing an electoral victory.

Indeed, it’s starting to look a lot like the 1980 Reagan-Carter scenario, if the current trends continue, where Reagan won the independents and peeled off a major slice of the right-leaning Dems.

In fact, if things get really bad with the economy, national security, and foreign affairs, and I’m afraid they will, 2012 will become an ABO race — Anyone But Obama.

All of which could be good news for Palin or any other conservative.

TXUS on October 15, 2009 at 7:14 AM

The argument amongst these “moderates” seems to be that the Republicans should only nominate a candidate that the NYT times will love.

MarkTheGreat on October 15, 2009 at 7:16 AM

Perhaps Sarah should try talking to these so-called moderate and liberal GOPers in smaller more intimate settings where they could get to know her as a person. A peson that I think has that combination of good common sense, a soupcon of pragmatism, sincerity and much charm. She is so very different from the typical jaded and insulated DC pol but these qualities might possibly be lost in the large, splashy media events.

jeanie on October 15, 2009 at 7:49 AM

While citing Reagan’s two terms may seem appropriate, do remember that Nixon had only terms as VP and, prior to that, in the House as his backing. Similarly LBJ was Speaker of the House, but his years in the House made him unready for the responsibilities of President, even after being VP under Kennedy. Having some governor experience is necessary for consideration, but lack of it is no obstacle to High Office. If Obama has proven anything, a person with NO executive experience and NO national legislative background can achieve the office of the Presidency.

Going back further: Hoover had NO terms as governor and NONE at the National level outside of appointment, Harding had only been a Lt. Gov. and Senator, Wilson two years as Gov., Taft had been appointed as Gov. for short terms to post-Spanish-American war territories then was VP with TR and had been Sec. of War. In that line-up we have elected someone with just barely more experience than Herbert Hoover. Palin has the equivalent experience as Wilson at the State level, and he used smooth oratory to try and remove the idea that the Declaration only meant something for the short period just before the Revolutionary War. He needed no ‘rehabilitation’ and continued to spout that after he was elected President.

This means there are other templates available outside of just that or Reagan or Nixon, and limited experience in and of itself is no obstacle to nomination and winning the Presidency. Flipping that around, then, means that candidates create their own means to office and don’t use templates, save as general guidelines and feel free to dispose of those guidelines due to circumstance, personal outlook and how they view what is politically feasible. The slower pace of decades to ‘rehabilitate’ is now down to months via the Feiler Faster Thesis. As we truly do process information faster, on a personal level, that also compresses our views of politics, society and culture. Obama only adapted part-way during his campaign, and thought that a campaign organization would remain solidified and coherent (like the old Revolutionary Communists in Russia or China) and yet his contact list for political clout has now gone the way of the DoDo. Previous Communist groups in a decade had gone from ‘workers of the world unite’ to ‘do as I say or else’, thus ten months from strong political organization to ‘shut up’ for Obama… I wouldn’t be surprised to see a Stalin type figure arise on the Far and Extreme Left or at least a Trotsky type to challenge Obama in a few months.

Thus Palin takes a different route, seeking a social venue, first, which has both served as a lightning rod and a galvinizing point for critics who now try to scoff at ‘death panels’ while being unable to explain why the various bills have deep restrictions on procedures, higher costs, and put more power into the hands of bureaucrats and take it away from citizens and their doctors. With the advent of multiple, popular consverative books from large publishers, the idea that people can’t or won’t read is shown as a lie and the popularity of ideas from previous authors paves the way for trying to build on those themes presented by others.

That doesn’t mean she wants higher office. She was effective at dismantling the Republican crony system in Alaska and working with Canada on the pipeline project, and then made her own decision that her presence in the office would not help her State. If your oath has you in the position where your presence is not helping the office you are in do you stay or do you go? That is a tough one for anyone to decide who has asked for those responsibilities, and treating it as a negative demonstrates a callowness on understanding what running for high office means: you are serving the public not yourself. I thought that is what we want politicians to do for us, and not eleveate themselves over their office and be a good public servant. More of that sort of ethical attitude in DC would see the majority in both parties leaving who have done just that. You want to walk the walk, then applaud those who DO SO.

I always thought that McCain wasted his chance by not running Palin on a ground game through the mid-Atlantic, Appalachia, the NE and western Mountain states. Obama ran an air game and had no defense against a concerted, day-in and day-out ground game going through town by town, state by state in those regions. Her strength in Alaska was on the ground and it would have served them both well in the campaign. That would have diverted ACORN and SEIU minions to small town America and given an up-close and personal look at just who was helping Obama get to office. He didn’t do that and ran the campaign in a chaotic fashion unable to craft any message, hold any line and just plain work the ground for support. The blame for that rests with him, no Palin.

Only one person will decide Sarah Palin’s future: Sarah Palin. She will rely on her husband and family, church and friends to help. I thought that is what conservatives wanted? Someone who has ideals, commitment to home and family, dedication to society and wanting to serve the public, not get largesse from it. I like that in a person, even those who don’t run for high office. Those people need to be represented in the land… and the current structure of cronyism by the two party system is thrown into stark relief by her no matter what she does from here on out.

ajacksonian on October 15, 2009 at 7:56 AM

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