Thursday, January 29, 2015

KATHLEEN PARKER: THEY PUT A GUN TO PALIN'S HEAD AND FORCED HER TO EMBARRASS HERSELF

I'm a couple of days late to this Kathleen Parker column, which -- preposterously -- portrays Sarah Palin as more sinned against than sinning:
When Democrats were looking for evidence of a Republican war on women, they overlooked Exhibit A -- Sarah Palin.

This isn’t to say that Palin was part of the war on women, though many Democrats would say so. Rather, she was one of the war’s most conspicuous victims -- fragged, you might say, by her own troops.

... blame for her general collapse beginning in 2008 can be placed in large part upon her own party, which used her and cast her aside.
Please explain, Kathleen.
Not that long ago, Palin was a breathtakingly attractive politician of a rare sort.... Republican strategists desperate for a running mate for John McCain who brought some razzle-dazzle saw her as the game-changer....

What Republicans didn’t know about Palin, however, did hurt them. Despite her many talents, she was “clearly out of her league,” as I wrote in September 2008....

Let’s be honest. Any man of Palin’s comparable deficits, no matter his winning ways, would have been eliminated from consideration within minutes of opening his mouth.
Um, Dan Quayle?
This doesn’t mean that Palin was incapable of becoming a formidable national politician. It only means that she wasn’t ready. She needed to do what former Texas governor Rick Perry has done. Recognizing his mistakes in 2012, Perry has spent the past two years meeting with conservative scholars for briefings on economics, health care, budgets, tax policy and so on.

Palin apparently took a different route....
So, Kathleen, what has prevented her from doing something like this in the years since 2008, even as she's labored mightily to inject herself into political debates? In fact, what prevented her from doing more cramming during the 2008 campaign? And if she didn't have the policy chops to handle the running-mate job (much less the vice presidency or, God help us, presidency), why couldn't she figure that out about herself when she was invited to be on the ticket? Why couldn't she say, "Thanks, but no thanks"? She was a grown woman. She was a fairly high-level Republican elected official, which means she ought to have known something about the job requirements of a VP candidate. There'd been some talk of her as a possible running mate for about a year. Oh, and she had an unmarried pregnant teenage daughter whom she exposed to national humiliation by taking the gig. (Yes, John Edwards and Bill Clinton exposed their kids to humiliation with their own infidelities, but they were idiots for doing that.) Was saying no never an option for Palin, if it should have been clear to her she was unprepared when the call came?

Apparently, to Parker, Palin had no agency in this situation -- Parker wonders why Palin agreed to run with McCain, then concludes that when the evil slicksters came to her with their offer (which, yes, was an appalling misjudgment on their part), she just couldn't help herself and had to say yes:
If Republican strategists had viewed Palin in 2008 as someone with talent who needed nurturing and support, she might have been ready for a national ticket by 2016. But this possibility exposes the matter of her own judgment. One wonders why Palin would accept the invitation to become McCain’s running mate, given how ill-prepared she was, not to mention that she’d just had a baby. Then again, a woman like Sarah, always the brightest star in her orbit, couldn’t resist the roar of the crowd.
They said she'd be famous! How can you say no to that?
What she didn’t count on was the stress of constant travel, performance and cramming for speeches -- or the pain of separation from her family.
She needed it explained to her that running for vice president would have these consequences?
... Imagine being the governor of a frontier state, suddenly being placed before millions of armchair critics and asked to perform without proper preparation, training or support. This is crazy-making on its face; devastating and crushing to the individual who finds herself alone on the ledge.
Yes, I can imagine it. Why couldn't she?
In the end, the story of Palin’s rise and fall is a tragedy. And the author wasn’t the media as accused but the Grand Old Party itself. Like worshipers of false gods throughout human history, Republicans handpicked the fair maiden Sarah and placed her on the altar of political expedience.

They sacrificed her.
No, because even after 2008 she didn't have to become a national embarrassment. After Dan Quayle left the vice presidency, he flirted with a couple of political runs and wrote a couple of books, but mostly he's kept a low profile. Similarly, Mike Dukakis stayed out of the limelight after he lost the presidency in '88 and his gubernatorial term ended.

Palin could have done something like that, or she could have grown up and gotten serious about politics if she wanted to stay in the game. No slicksters prevented her from doing that. But in Parker's eyes, a woman like Palin has no control over her own bad choices. If there's sexism here, it's that point of view.

10 comments:

Victor said...

I love how, after the disaster of her Iowa speech full of gibberish - the scales have fallen off of the eyes of her once adoring conservative fans!
Read this, and smile:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/01/28/you-betcha-i-was-wrong-about-sarah-palin.html

We who saw that the conservatives and Republican's new Empress was out their proudly displaying her nekkid ignorant butt, and stupid and bigoted other parts, were told we didn't "get Sarah."

Oh yeah!
We "got Sarah," alright!!!

We got that she was a gibbering nincompoop, a moron, and a bigot.

But now, it's hard for even her most adoring and ardent former fans, to not acknowledge what we Libtards have known for over 6 years - their Empress had no clothes.

Look, she was smart enough to grift the conservatives and their rubes out of millions, I'll give her that.

But that's not exactly a daunting task, now, is it?

H.K. Anders said...

You don't have to go back as far as Dan Quayle to find a stupid male politician on a presidential ticket. You just have to go back to 2000. And thanks to the Supreme Court, that one actually got to be president, to our continuing detriment.

But with respect to Palin, I'll ask again: where have all her new right-wing critics been? What Sarah Palin did they think they were supporting all these years?

The Sarah Palin who face planted in Iowa last weekend is the same one who did her best Otis the Town Drunk impression in Denver last July.

That Sarah Palin is the same one who gave a speech sucking on Big Gulp at CPAC in 2013.

And that Sarah Palin is the same one who resigned halfway through her only term as governor of Alaska because she thought her only options were to ride out the clock doing nothing ("Kinda milk it?") or to quit. Because actually doing the job was apparently out of the question.

Palin has never been any more serious, intelligible or credible than she was on that stage in Iowa last weekend.

The only question is, what took Republicans so long to realize that. Or, at least, to acknowledge it.

Ten Bears said...

Actually she quit mere moments before the state cops were to kick in the door with corruption charges, and but a moment after she signed her executive pardon.

Ken_L said...

"Palin was a breathtakingly attractive politician"

Sorry, I never got that, in 2008 or at any time since. From day 1 she was the archetypal smartarse whose only party trick was to insult the opposition. Any Republican who wasn't a complete opportunist should have seen through her after things like the Couric interview and the "pals around with terrorists" slander.

Phoenix Woman said...

Victor, the only difference between 2008 and now is that the effects of the tanning bed have finally trumped the effects of the botox.

To wit, Sarah Palin no longer inspires boners in the majority of Republican base voters (namely, the white male ones).

Unknown said...

Palin just claimed her commitment to "service" forces her to make herself available to the party for 2016...Yes, the one who bailed and dumped her governorship for bigger bucks is now service committed.

And don't forget how she revealed Bristol's pregnancy...Everything was the liberal media's fault. Palin had concealed her own 2007-08 pregnancy from nearly everyone (including the flight crew who took her to and returned her from Texas where her contractions began) leading to rumors in Alaska that Bristol was the actual mother of Sarah's recently born handicapped child. So Sarah Palin made the revelation of her abstinence indoctrinated daughter's pregnancy hyped under the theme it was to "prove" Bristol could not have become pregnant so soon after a delivery, thereby absolving Bristol of being an unwed mother by the news that she was to be an unwed mother(!). She was not an unwed mother, just pregnant! And since some who mentioned the rumors were "liberal", everything was liberal's fault. Amazing and crazy.

Yastreblyansky said...

Speaking of Quayle--

I know tragedy, tragedy's been a good friend of mine, and I can tell you, Parker, Governor Palin is no tragedy. Au contraire.

Afritude said...

Having read Ms Parkers columns for a while, I have always detected a hint of feminism there. My suspicion is that she cant stand Palin but feels obliged to defend her "gently" from some of the very harsh but justified comments coming from men. Some of what I have seen written about Fluffhead Palin goes beyond just her stupidity through to the entry point of misogyny.

Unknown said...

Truly the lady stop mere times prior to the talk about police officers were being to be able to begin working the threshold with data corruption charges, as well as however a second right after the lady brought in the girl executive excuse.Illinois jobs

brent said...

i guess the cats out of the bag. Last night on CNN, Kathleen showed the whole world how ignorant she is. I guess a dummy can win a Pulitzer.