Palin for VP
#1
Posted 2008-October-08, 21:08
#3
Posted 2008-October-08, 21:48
Palin.....a no-brainer in all senses of the word.
#4
Posted 2008-October-09, 01:23
#5
Posted 2008-October-09, 01:38
George Carlin
#6
Posted 2008-October-09, 06:09
gwnn, on Oct 9 2008, 02:38 AM, said:
Just curious, I hope...
#7
Posted 2008-October-09, 06:13
With a few exceptions, I thought that was a pretty good thread. Fun to read, topical, and occasionally thought provoking. There was one post by a woman from Europe that was as poignant as anything I've ever read here. There was a reply to a particularly insulting post that could serve as a model for handling such posts on forums everywhere. And there were even a few on-point comments about Ms. Palin.
#8
Posted 2008-October-09, 06:17
But after Y66's post I just want to read the whole thing.
Finding your own mistakes is more productive than looking for partner's. It improves your game and is good for your soul. (Nige1)
#9
Posted 2008-October-09, 06:26
I always prefer to have someone else tell me what I should be able to see and do.
Where does the line form for what I should think and say?
#10
Posted 2008-October-09, 06:33
Then again of course it is Uday's right to decide what kind of content he wants on a website of his company.
#11
Posted 2008-October-09, 07:28
Someone said something that I found a bit much, even for the WC. It was something like ... you're a lying racist sack of blah blah blah
By the time i noticed, the comment had been quoted a zillion times ( relevant only bec. I might have been able to edit it out ).
#12
Posted 2008-October-09, 07:31
uday, on Oct 9 2008, 08:28 AM, said:
Is there a practical difference?
#13
Posted 2008-October-09, 08:27
uday, on Oct 9 2008, 08:28 AM, said:
Someone said something that I found a bit much, even for the WC. It was something like ... you're a lying racist sack of blah blah blah
By the time i noticed, the comment had been quoted a zillion times ( relevant only bec. I might have been able to edit it out ).
So, if they had said: " Your prevarications can be disproved and their heinous nature only leads to the conclusion that your internal references leave much to be desired in terms of their referential humanity."
Could that have stayed?
(You know the old joke about the bar, the girl and the money?)
#14
Posted 2008-October-09, 08:29
#15
Posted 2008-October-09, 09:10
No warnings were issued. Sometimes I think we're all just too old to learn any new tricks.
#16
Posted 2008-October-09, 09:54
"gwnn" said:
hanp does not always mean literally what he writes.
#17
Posted 2008-October-09, 10:21
#18
Posted 2008-October-09, 13:21
vuroth, on Oct 9 2008, 10:54 AM, said:
Some of the negatives about Palin:
(1) She has very little experience. Her vaunted "executive experience" is being mayor of a small town (Wasilla population about 7,000) and being governor of a small (population-wise) state (Alaska population under 700,000) for less than two years. It's also arguable that the problems facing Alaska are pretty different from most US states since Alaska has a huge energy surplus, to the degree that Alaska charges no income tax, no sales tax, and sends a check to every resident for about $1,200 every year based on excess revenue from taxes on oil companies. In contrast, Dan Quayle had over a decade in the House of Representatives and a few years in the Senate from Indiana.
(2) Unlike Obama (who also has relatively little experience, although more than Palin), she does not have a law degree from an elite university. One could argue that Obama's educational background (law degree from Harvard) substantially improves his qualifications for a position in politics. Palin's educational background involves an undergraduate degree in journalism from University of Idaho, which it took her six years (and several transfers from one university to another) to obtain. In contrast, Quayle did have a Doctorate in Law from Indiana University.
(3) One of the good things about Palin is that she has fought against corruption in her own party. McCain talks about this a lot. However, she is currently under investigation for (guess what?) corruption based on her firing of the head of the state police in Alaska. There have also been questions raised about her charging per diem to the state while living at home and her tax returns. And she fired the Wasilla town librarian after the librarian's answer to a hypothetical question about banning books (librarian refused to ban books). In addition, Alaska receives more earmark money per capita than any other state (by far) and Palin has generally pushed for more earmark money and not less. Quayle was not really suspected of ethical issues.
(4) Certainly Dan Quayle said some dumb things. But usually he was mangling a quote, and you could tell what he meant to say (even though he botched it). He did plenty of interviews during the election. In contrast Palin is mostly kept away from the press. When she does do interviews (google her interview with Katie Couric if interested) her answers often come out gibberish. It seems clear that she just doesn't know what she's talking about which is a lot worse than garbling your quotes (Biden for example garbles a fair number of quotes too, although not as badly as Quayle).
(5) Palin takes the evangelical religious angle to an extreme degree. This is someone who believes that humans shared the earth with dinosaurs, that global warming is not caused by human activity, that creationism should be taught in schools, that abortion should be banned even in cases of rape or incest. Her minister is known as a witch hunter, having run (likely innocent, if you don't believe in witches) women out of their communities around the world. She believes in speaking in tongues and laying on of hands, and that the end of days is near and Alaska serves a special role in the end times.
(6) Currently Palin is accusing Barack Obama of being a terrorist, based on his association (living in the same community as, serving on the board of a charity with) Bill Ayers. Ayers was founder of the "Weathermen", an anti-vietnam protest group that set off pipe bombs to protest the war. So it can be considered that he was a domestic terrorist... forty years ago, when Obama was a small child. He is now a citizen of Chicago in good standing and involved heavily in education policy. He is not a particular friend of Obama's (but they do know each other). So this connection is a stretch, but perhaps you think this is "par for the course" for a presidential campaign. However, there are two things I'd note about this: first, people at Palin speeches are shouting out racist epithets and threatening to kill Barack Obama. She doesn't directly endorse this, but she doesn't say anything against it either and her "terrorist" rhetoric seems to encourage it. Second, Palin's own husband was a member of a secessionist party (the Alaska Independence Party) until quite recently, the founder of this party being a known domestic terrorist, and Sarah Palin herself was very welcoming to this party when they held their convention in her home town of Wasilla. So Sarah Palin arguably has distressingly close connection to a terrorist group.
(7) Palin has done some ridiculous things like winking at the audience during the debate. This seems rather unprofessional.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#19
Posted 2008-October-09, 13:58
(1) Until she got nominated to VP, Palin wasn't even interested in politics outside of Alaska. You can't make this up in a couple of weeks. In many decisions she would make as VP, she would completely miss the context. Or just let her advisors make the decisions, which is a democracy disaster. (Elected officials have a direct responsibility to the voters, and despite all corruption, lack of accountability and lying to their voters, they know this. Advisor don't have such a responsibility.)
(2) She is a pathological liar, she just doesn't seem to care about saying the truth. Andrew Sullivan has a (by now outdated) list at http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_...twelve-odd.html .
But I also agree with every point Adam made.
#20
Posted 2008-October-09, 13:59
uday, on Oct 9 2008, 10:10 AM, said:
No warnings were issued. Sometimes I think we're all just too old to learn any new tricks.
evidently not, for some people