ST. PAUL - I have never met a weak woman, or a male victim in Alaska. You've
got to be tough to survive in a state that is further away from Washington
than any other, except Hawaii. In terms of the contrasts between how most
Alaskans think and what passes for reasoning by career politicians in
Washington, Alaska might as well be a colony on the moon.
Initial criticism from the Obama campaign (and his media acolytes) is that
Gov. Sarah Palin lacks experience to be vice president and, if necessary,
president. That Obama lacks experience to be president has led some pundits
to say that issue is now a wash, harming neither candidate. Not true.
There is good and there is bad experience. More importantly, there is
worldview. Obama and his running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, see America as a
nation in which government plays a primary role in individual lives. John
McCain and Sarah Palin see the individual as primary and government as a
protector of freedom that can help the less fortunate become
self-sustaining.
One can already sense the lines of attack against Palin. Why did she have a
child she knew would be born with Down syndrome? We used to call such
children "mentally retarded," before the word "retarded" became an epithet
commonly hurled by teenagers. She practices what she preaches about her
pro-life views. She had this child because she didn't want to play God.
Speaking of God, Palin is a serious, practicing Christian, unlike some in
the Democratic Party who have studied how to manipulate religious language
and imagery to dupe some churchgoers into voting for Obama. In contrast to
Obama's pastor for 20 years, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who preached hate-filled,
anti-American sermons, the sermons at Palin's former church, Wasilla Bible
Church (she now attends a church with similar beliefs called Juneau
Christian Center), were far more Bible-based and traditional. Sermon titles
dealt with personal sin, how to give God joy, assurance of an afterlife and
how to get there by serving God and others. The media will go to the
church's "statement of faith" and try to paint her as a bigot and
exclusionist for believing what Jesus said about Himself and the path to
salvation.
Watch during her debate with Joe Biden - and even before that Oct. 2 event -
for journalists to portray her as a know-nothing about foreign affairs.
They'll try a version of the pop quiz given to George W. Bush during the
2000 campaign when he had trouble naming the leaders of Chechnya, Taiwan,
India and Pakistan. Palin could score points with voters who loathe the big
media by not only answering such a question correctly, but by also asking
this one ("how is it your network pays you so much money to ask a stupid
question like that?")
Unlike the Democrats, who only talk reform, Palin has bucked her own party
to attack corruption and get things done in Alaska. Imagine a Democratic
politician doing that.
As for being the first Republican woman on a national ticket, this ought not
to be about gender, but ideology. Sarah Palin seems to have more common
sense than a lot of male politicians. That should play well with Middle
America and blue-collar voters who rely more on their own common sense than
poll-tested pronouncements by elected officials. And she wore a skirt and
heels at her introduction last week in Dayton, Ohio. That should count for
something among men and women who are tired of pantsuits.
Someone pinned "Iron Lady" on Margaret Thatcher after she became prime
minister of Britain. It was meant as criticism. Thatcher took it as a
compliment and used it to advance her conservative agenda.
Sarah Palin is going to need a moniker other than "Barracuda." I offer her
"Steel Magnolia." In the 1989 film "Steel Magnolias," Ouiser Boudreaux,
played by Shirley MacLaine, delivers one of many classic lines: "I'm not as
sweet as I used to be." While anything can happen in politics and McCain's
selection may be risky, my bet is that the pretty, pro-life, gun-toting,
hockey mom is going to pleasantly surprise a lot of people with her
toughness and common sense view of life and the world.
If I were Joe Biden, I'd be careful. This steel magnolia might reduce him to
tears. |