[OFB Cafe] Time Magazine and NY Times on Sarah Palin

Fred Smith fps at xicada.com
Wed Sep 3 16:15:26 CDT 2008


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 4:23 PM, Fred A. Miller <fmiller at lightlink.com> wrote:
> [snip]
>
> Oops!! Credibility lost!! EVEN liberals know how much the Times as LIED
> recently. NO credibility there!

Maybe those dumb libruhl commies even know what an opinion piece is,
because you sure as hell don't. You can't lie about your opinion, and
the facts cited in that article are all from other sources (with
citations.)  The TIME piece is the one you could have attacked as lies
(except it isn't), since that purports to be an investigative piece on
Palin's record.

Anyway, here's some more questions to ask about Palin's background,
none of which came from the NY Times:

1: Palin Tried to Ban Books From Local Library

Thanks to Bush, the Republican Party is not strongly associated with
intellectualism. But Sarah Palin has apparently taken the conservative
derision for book-learnin' to a whole new level: Time reports that as
mayor of Wasilla, Palin asked the town librarian how to go about
banning books from the local library. News reports from the time show
that the librarian, who, strangely enough, was opposed to a tactic
commonly employed by totalitarian regimes, had her job threatened for
not giving her "full support" to the mayor.

The People for the American Way have issued a statement condemning
Palin's actions and demanding an explanation from her:

People can disagree about a lot of things, but censorship is
completely beyond the pale. Our democracy was founded on the belief
that government shouldn't tell people what kinds of books to read or
what kind of beliefs to hold. No one with that kind of history should
be anywhere near the White House. Sarah Palin needs to clarify her
stance on freedom of speech immediately, and John McCain needs to
explain why he chose a running mate with so little regard for the
Constitution.
So far the McCain campaign has been quiet about Palin's attempts to
legislate what books people should be allowed to read.

2: Palin Apparently Doesn't Put "Country First"

A central and integral part of the McCain campaign's message is
"Country First." McCain is a POW who has always put country before
personal gain, as he and his handlers have reminded the public time
after time after time. So if the vetting process of Palin was as
thorough as McCain's people (and McCain himself) have been claiming,
how is it that they missed this:

Officials of the Alaskan Independence Party say that Palin was once so
independent, she was once a member of their party, which since the
1970s has been pushing for a legal vote for Alaskans to decide whether
or not residents of the 49th state can secede from the United States.
And while McCain's motto -- as seen in a new TV ad -- is "Country
First," the AIP's motto is the exact opposite -- "Alaska First --
Alaska Always."
Lynette Clark, the chairman of the AIP, tells ABC News that Palin and
her husband Todd were members in 1994, even attending the 1994
statewide convention in Wasilla. Clark was AIP secretary at the time.
"We are a state's rights party," Clark -- a self-employed gold miner
-- tells ABC News. The AIP has "a plank that challenges the legality
of the Alaskan statehood vote as illegal and in violation of United
Nations charter and international law."
"Alaska First -- Alaska Always." Huh, I don't suppose there's an
unless-you-are-nominated-to-be-vice-president clause, is there? No,
probably not.

3: Palin's Love Affair With Earmarks

McCain, when introducing Palin on Friday in Ohio, praised her as a
champion for "reform to end the abuses of earmark spending." When it
was Palin's turn to speak, she mentioned her claimed opposition to the
famous pork barrel project, "the Bridge to Nowhere," as an example of
her tough stance on earmarks. Well, we all know now that she was
actually for the bridge long before she was against it. Apparently her
love affair with earmarks doesn't end there:

… under her leadership, the state of Alaska has requested 31 earmarks
worth $197.8 million in next year's federal budget …
But hey, it was her first shot at being governor of Alaska. Maybe
things were different when she was mayor?

As mayor of the small city of Wasilla, Alaska, Palin appears to have
made use of the system she now decries, hiring a Washington lobbyist,
Steven Silver, to represent the town.
After he was hired, the city obtained funding for several projects,
including a city bus facility that received an earmark valued at
$600,000 in 2002. That year a local water and sewer project received
$1.5 million in federal earmarks, according to Taxpayers for Common
Sense, a nonpartisan watchdog organization.

Hmmm, Steven Silver, why does that name sound familiar? Talking Points
Memo is quick to remind us:

… Silver appears to have additional ties that could further undercut
Palin's image as a squeaky-clean reformer. According to Senate
lobbying disclosure reports examined by TPMmuckraker, from 2002 to
2004 Silver listed as a client Jack Abramoff's lobbying firm,
Greenberg Traurig. On Greenberg's behalf, Silver lobbied the federal
government on "issues relating to Indian/Native American policy,"
"exploration for oil and gas" and "legislation relating to gaming
issues" -- the very issues that Abramoff headed up for Greenberg at
the time. In other words, Silver appears to have been a part of "Team
Abramoff.
So this is the breath of fresh air that McCain wants in Washington?
Earmarks aplenty and links to the infamous Jack Abramoff? If that's a
step in the right direction, I don't want to see the step in the wrong
one.

4: Palin Slashed Funding for Teen Moms

Not many pregnant teens are as privileged as Bristol Palin. And for
those who are not, Sarah Palin made things a little harder a few
months ago when she used a line-item veto to cut funding for a
transitional home for teen moms in Alaska. According to the Washington
Post:

After the legislature passed a spending bill in April, Palin went
through the measure reducing and eliminating funds for programs she
opposed. Inking her initials on the legislation -- "SP" -- Palin
reduced funding for Covenant House Alaska by more than 20 percent,
cutting funds from $5 million to $3.9 million. Covenant House is a mix
of programs and shelters for troubled youths, including Passage House,
which is a transitional home for teenage mothers.
According to Passage House's Web site, its purpose is to provide
"young mothers a place to live with their babies for up to eighteen
months while they gain the necessary skills and resources to change
their lives" and help teen moms "become productive, successful,
independent adults who create and provide a stable environment for
themselves and their families."
(It certainly doesn't sound like the teen moms were joyriding in
Cadillacs on the government's dime, but you never know.)

In classic "compassionate" conservative fashion, Palin opposes
programs that teach girls how not to get pregnant, lobbies against
their right to decide whether to have a child, then kills social
programs that exist to cushion the impact of those policies. She then
has the gall to trot out her own pregnant daughter as a symbol for
"family values."

5: Crazy Reverend, Crazy Church

>From the age of 12 and for most of her adult life, Sarah Palin
attended the Wasilla Assembly of God. Apparently, Sarah Palin's God
was a vengeful God -- one that made Himself helpful to the Bush
administration from time to time by damning critics of the president,
Democrats and other irredeemable sinners. The Huffington Post writes
that the church's preacher, Ed Kalinins:

… preached that critics of President Bush will be banished to hell;
questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would
be accepted to heaven; charged that the 9/11 terrorist attacks and war
in Iraq were part of a war "contending for your faith;" and said that
Jesus "operated from that position of war mode."
Kalinins also offered a nuanced view of foreign policy, preaching that
9/11 and the Iraq war were part of a greater struggle over
Christianity, with Jesus playing an important role as a very exacting
general:

"What you see in Iraq, basically, is a manifestation of what's going
on in this unseen world called the spirit world. … We need to think
like Jesus thinks. We are in a time and a season of war, and we need
to think like that. We need to develop that instinct. We need to
develop as believers the instinct that we are at war, and that war is
contending for your faith. … Jesus called us to die. You're worried
about getting hurt? He's called us to die.
It can't necessarily be assumed that Palin agrees wholeheartedly with
her former pastor. But in an address to the church three months ago,
Palin also used disconcertingly religious language to frame the
conflict in Iraq:

"Pray for our military men and women who are striving to do what is
right. Also, for this country, that our leaders, our national leaders,
are sending (U.S. soldiers) out on a task that is from God," she
exhorted the congregants. "That's what we have to make sure that we're
praying for, that there is a plan and that that plan is God's plan."
Considering how much flak Obama got for the statements of his former
pastor, Jeremiah Wright, this is an issue Palin needs to address.

6: McCain Picking Palin Reeks of Sexism

The McCain campaign is already doing its best to deflect all the
negative stories that are coming out about Palin by calling Democrats
sexist, and by claiming that they are the party that values women's
rights. Of course, Dems had a woman on the presidential ticket in 1984
(Congresswoman Geraldine A. Ferraro), so Republicans aren't breaking
glass ceilings here but are actually 24 years late to the party. When
it comes to sexism, it seems the party that isn't for equal pay or for
a woman's right to choose should take a quick look in the mirror
before accusing others of sexism. In fact, McCain's idea that women
will vote for the McCain/Palin ticket just because Palin has a vagina
is incredibly condescending, as Ann Friedman at the American Prospect
writes:

Palin's addition to the ticket takes Republican faux-feminism to a
whole new level. As Adam Serwer pointed out on TAPPED, this is in fact
a condescending move by the GOP. It plays to the assumption that
disaffected Hillary Clinton supporters did not care about her politics
-- only her gender. In picking Palin, Republicans are lending credence
to the sexist assumption that women voters are too stupid to
investigate or care about the issues, and merely want to vote for
someone who looks like them. As Serwer noted, it's akin to choosing
Alan Keyes in an attempt to compete with Obama for votes from black
Americans.
A candidate should be chosen because they are qualified for the job,
not because of their gender. Any hardworking woman who has been passed
over for a promotion could have told the McCain campaign that.

7: Palin Can't Even Run a Car Wash

Many politicians have a strong background in business: CEOs,
executives, business presidents, self-made millionaires, etc. The
thinking is that a businessperson is economically savvy, has executive
experience, and can make tough calls and quick decisions. Well, Palin
has some experience in the private sector: While she was mayor of
Wasilla, Palin had time to open up a car wash in Anchorage. Good for
her, nothing wrong with a little public service cushioned by some
private business while raising a family. But by the time Palin was
governor of Alaska, her business had run into trouble, as Matthew Mosk
reports for the Washington Post:

State records show the business ran into trouble with Alaska's
division of corporations business and professional licensing after
Palin became governor of the state in 2006.
A Feb. 11, 2007, letter to the governor's business partner advises
that the car wash had "not filed its biennial report and/or paid its
biennial fees," which were more than a year overdue.
The warning letter was written on state letterhead, which carried
Palin's name at the top, next to the state seal.
On April 3, 2007, the state went further and issued a "certificate of
involuntary dissolution" because of the car wash's failure to file its
report and pay state licensing fees.
The least you can accuse Palin here is of mismanagement (of a car
wash!); at worst, she was abusing her political clout by trying to cut
corners. Either way, Palin doesn't come off as the kind of executive
you'd want running your business, let along your country.

8: Lied About Foreign Travel

In an attempt to inflate her nonexistent foreign policy credentials,
Palin's spokespeople stated shortly after her nomination that she had
traveled to Germany, Kuwait and Ireland: you know, the three countries
most likely to give rise to catastrophic national security emergencies
in the next four years.

But not only is Palin's travel history unimpressive, it was also being
blatantly misrepresented. According Jim Aravosis, an Irish blogger has
just revealed that Palin was in Ireland for a brief refueling layover.

And as Aravosis argues, Palin's lack of travel experience outside of
"duty-free diplomacy" has major implications:

… John McCain, who is 72 and has had 4 bouts of cancer, (has) picked
Sarah Palin to replace him as commander in chief should he die or be
incapacitated in office.




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