Palinophobes hate first, ask questions later

  • Jonah Goldberg
  • Jonah Goldberg
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Slate magazine is just one of the countless media outlets convulsing with St. Vitus' Dance over that demonic succubus Sarah Palin. In its reader forum, The Fray, one supposed Palinophobe took dead aim at the former Alaska governor's writing chops, excerpting this sentence from her book:

"The apartment was small, with slanting floors and irregular heat and a buzzer downstairs that didn't work, so that visitors had to call ahead from a pay phone at the corner gas station, where a black Doberman the size of a wolf paced through the night in vigilant patrol, its jaws clamped around an empty beer bottle."

Other readers pounced like wolf-size Dobermans on an intruder. One guffawed, "That sentence by Sarah Palin could be entered into the annual Bulwer-Lytton bad writing contest. It could have a chance at winning a (sic) honorable mention, at any rate."

But soon, the original contributor confessed: "I probably should have mentioned that the sentence quoted above was not written by Sarah Palin. It's taken from the first paragraph of 'Dreams From My Father,' written by Barack Obama."

The ruse should have been allowed to fester longer, but the point was made nonetheless: Some people hate Palin first and ask questions later.

My all-time favorite response to John McCain's selection of Palin as his running mate was from Wendy Doniger, a feminist professor of religion at the University of Chicago. Doniger wrote of the exceedingly feminine "hockey mom" with five children: "Her greatest hypocrisy is in her pretense that she is a woman." The best part about that sentence: Doniger uses the pronoun "her" -- twice.

Just this week, a liberal blogger at the Atlantic who has dedicated an unhealthy amount of his life to proving a one-man birther conspiracy theory about Palin's youngest child (it's both too slanderous and too deranged to detail here) shut down his blog to cope with the epochal, existential crisis that Palin's book presents to all humankind. The unselfconsciously parodic announcement seemed more appropriate for a BBC warning that the German blitz was about to begin, God Help Us All.

Indeed, some of us will always be sympathetic to Palin if for nothing else than her enemies. The bile she extracts from her critics is almost like a dye marker, illuminating deep pockets of asininity that were either unnoticed or underappreciated.

In fairness, just as there are people who hate Palin for the effrontery she shows in daring to draw breath at all, others love her with a devotion better suited for a religious icon.

Sarah Palin is neither savior (that job has been taken by the current president, or didn't you know?) nor is she satanic. She is a politician, a species of human like the rest of us.

I'm fairly certain that if you read many of her public-policy positions but concealed her byline, many of her worst enemies would say "that sounds about right," and some of her biggest fans would say "that sounds crazy." But most people would say that her views are perfectly within the mainstream.

I'm happy about the books she's selling thanks to the controversy over her, but that doesn't mean I think these controversies are justified. Palin holds no public office and, as of yet, is not running for one. But The Associated Press assigned 11 reporters to "fact-check" her book, while doing nothing like that to fact-check then-candidate Obama's or Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's no doubt riveting book.

As it stands, my sense is that Palin is good for the Republican Party but not necessarily great. She generates enthusiasm among, and donations from, the base. But she also turns off many of the people the GOP needs to persuade and attract. That could change with this book tour, and I hope it does. Whether she's ready or qualified for the presidency is another matter. But the presidency is a long way off, and besides, that's what primaries are for.

Tribune Media Services Jonah Goldberg is an editor at National Review Online.

JonahsColumn@aol.com

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COMMENTS (56) | Add Comment

Name One Major Policy Position Held By Sara Palin. Just One! She is An Empty Headed Pretty Face. If She EVER Had The Guts To be Interviewed On A REAL Show Such As " Meet The Press" Or "Face The Nation" She Would Get Humiliated. She Knows It, Her People Know It. So She Sticks To Fox News And Right Wing Radio Where The Toughest Question She Gets Is "So, Sara, Is Obama A Radical Or A Socialist, Or A Radical Socialist? She Appeals To A VERY Narrow Segment Of The Voters, But Is Unappealing And Unliked By A Majority of Americans. She Could NEVER Win A Nationwide Election And Even The GOP Isn't Stupid Enough To Want To Find Out. I Predict Within 12 Months Sara Palin Will Have Her Own TV Or Radio Show On Fox Where She Can Work Alongside Such Scholars As Glen Beck, Sean Hannity And Steve Doocey. It Couldn't happen To A More Deserving Person.

baseballed (11/21/2009, 12:51 PM )


One simple column on Palin, and it generates over 50 responses. The undisputed fact is Palin is engaging. Most Americans are not engaged enough. Many don't even know who the vice-president is, let alone being able to form an informed opinion of the state of the union. So the fact that Palin is engaging means she has the ability to get people involved.

I cannot say that I know her well. All I know is most Alaskans liked her as a mayor and a governor. I am sure she is not perfect, but so is everyone else. But if more than half of Alaska thought of her well, I am compelled to see what she has to offer. This is objective thinking. And I think we will all serve ourselves well if we just try hard to look at Palin objectively.

mario-streamwood-iL (11/21/2009, 10:10 AM )


La Palin's pep squad also tend to be the ones who berated President Obama for having the diplomacy to bow to the Emperor of Japan, claiming it put America is a position of "subservience." Any culture that makes a national celebrity out of a woman of such little consequence as Sarah Palin should bow to an older and wiser culture.

Notice in Goldberg's essay there's another little crack about Obama being a "savior." If there's anything conservative Republicans have liberal Democrats beat at, it's hero worship: to them, Sarah Palin is the Second Coming of Ronald Reagan (who died for our sins).

IronmanCarmichael (11/21/2009, 9:34 AM )


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