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SARAH PALIN TO ATTEND PREMIERE OF THE UNDEFEATED AT PELLA OPERA HOUSE IN IOWA
Victory Films ^ | Saturday June, 25, 2011

Posted on 06/25/2011 6:47:53 AM PDT by Bigtigermike

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (June 25, 2011)– Victory Film Group VictoryFilmGroup.com and ARC Entertainment announced today that Governor Sarah Palin and her husband Todd will attend the premiere of The Undefeated at the historic Pella Opera House on Tuesday June 28 at 5pm Central Time in Pella, Iowa. Immediately after the showing, Victory Film Group and ARC Entertainment will host a traditional Iowa cookout to thank the Pella Opera House and the people of Pella.

In accepting the invitation to attend the premiere, Sarah Palin stated, “We are very excited to visit historic Pella and its opera house and look forward to seeing the finished film for the first time with fellow Americans from the heartland.”

Responding to the Palin’s announcement that they will attend the Iowa premiere, Larry Peterson, Chairman of the Board of the Pella Opera House said, “We look forward to hosting Governor Palin and her husband, Todd, at our beloved opera house as we welcome them to our community.”

“We are incredibly excited about Governor Palin and her husband Todd’s attendance at a location that speaks to the basic core values of The Undefeated,” said Stephen K. Bannon, the writer and director of the film.

“We are delighted that Governor Palin and her husband Todd have accepted our invitation to join us at the Iowa premiere of what we believe is a truly moving and extraordinary film,” said Trevor Drinkwater, CEO of ARC Entertainment, the film’s worldwide distributor.

The film begins its national rollout exclusively in AMC Theatres in 10 cities the week of July 15th. The film will debut in Dallas, Denver, Oklahoma City, Orlando, Atlanta, Orange County, Phoenix, Houston, Indianapolis, and Kansas City, with plans to take it nationwide in additional markets thereafter.

The Undefeated features leading prominent political commentators Mark Levin, Tammy Bruce and Andrew Breitbart as well as conservative activists Kate Obenshein, Sonnie Johnson and Jamie Radtke. Additionally, the film features interviews with Alaskan civil servants, elected officials and advisors who were involved in Alaskan politics during Governor Palin’s tenure.

The Undefeated, which was written and directed by Stephen K. Bannon and produced by Bannon and Victory Film Group co-founder Glenn Bracken Evans and Dan Fleuette, chronicles Sarah Palin’s rise from obscurity to national prominence.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Military/Veterans; Miscellaneous; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: 2012president; bachmann; iowa; movie; obama; palin; sarahpalin; theundefeated; undefeated
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To: WVNan

Somebody didn’t grasp semiotics in communication class. Not the most auspicious kickoff symbol, is it?


121 posted on 06/25/2011 6:50:41 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: darrellmaurina

It is a conservative area. The Pella opera house certainly is quintessential small town America. And it is in Iowa!

I just hope I get the email saying I have 2 tickets.


122 posted on 06/25/2011 6:51:17 PM PDT by HereInTheHeartland (2008 was about words; 2012 will be about numbers)
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To: darrellmaurina

I’m not complaining, just very curious about how these things come about. How did I get pinged to a thread I haven’t posted on and regarding a topic for which I’m not on any ping lists? I’m not quibbling about it, only curious. Anyway, thanks for the ping...I think.


123 posted on 06/25/2011 6:55:53 PM PDT by lonevoice (Where the Welfare State is on the march, the Police State is not far behind)
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To: darrellmaurina

Thank you for that insight.


124 posted on 06/25/2011 6:59:17 PM PDT by gov_bean_ counter (JMO but I reserve the right to be wrong...)
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To: darrellmaurina
However, I think Palin’s handlers understand the importance of the Dutch vote in Republican Party politics in Iowa — especially in the conservative Christian wing — and this Pella event is intended to help introduce her to that constituency.

Sarah doesn't have any handlers, which contributes to her appeal. She makes her own plans and decisions, with Todd's input.

125 posted on 06/25/2011 7:10:26 PM PDT by Virginia Ridgerunner (Sarah Palin has crossed the Rubicon!)
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To: Bigtigermike
Bigtigermike: “People know ABOUT Palin for over 2 years but very few choose to KNOW Palin and what she has accomplished if it doesn’t come out of the mouth of a leftist media rag or PDSer troll who supports somebody else but refuses to acknowledge it.”

Not sure who you're referring to as the “PDSer troll,” but as for me, I look forward to learning a lot more about Sarah Palin. If the election were held today I'd vote for Palin over Bachmann or Cain, and definitely vote for her over any of the other declared Republican candidates, but I don't make my decisions on candidates quickly or without a great deal of research.

My candidate was Huckabee. Most of my reasons for supporting him would also apply to Sarah Palin; they share very similar if not identical positions on the issues I care the most about. The one exception is that Huckabee had years of experience as governor of Arkansas, but there is no other conservative social issues candidate in the race right now who has significant executive experience.

The military service of her son is a huge positive to me as well. I also like the idea of voting for a conservative woman candidate as a way of proving to the Democrats that they don't have a monopoly on “women's issues.” There are some things that a conservative woman candidate or conservative minority candidate can do in politics which a conservative white male candidate cannot do as effectively.

By the time of the Missouri primary, I expect that I will know a great deal about Palin’s experience in the Alaska oil industry and as mayor of Wasilla. I'm not going to climb on her bandwagon until I know for sure it's the right thing to do, but that definitely doesn't mean I'm opposed to her. On the contrary, I think there's a better than even chance I'll be voting for her if the current list of candidates stays the same.

126 posted on 06/25/2011 7:12:10 PM PDT by darrellmaurina
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To: wtc911
"Iowa? What happened to jury duty? With Todd? What happened to the mandatory fishing?"

Peremptory challenges removed her? "mandatory" fishing means they have to fish their lease in an opener. When the opener closes, they go home. If they don't have another opener for a few days, that will give her time to go to Iowa and back. Relax. I'm sure she just forgot to tell you this time.

127 posted on 06/25/2011 7:23:05 PM PDT by redhead (Don't bother to impeach the miserable SOB, ARREST him!)
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To: darrellmaurina

Very interesting analysis. I do not believe this is an accidental situation, just an astute politial move.

The rest of the Republican foeld is going around debating and getting “exposure” for name recognition, whihc Governor Palin already has.Instead of joining the Republican RINO circus, she is busy securing community support across the nation.She is way ahead of the standard “game.”


128 posted on 06/25/2011 7:23:11 PM PDT by Candor7 (Obama . fascist info..http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/05/barack_obama_the_quorintessentia_1.html)
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To: lonevoice
Sorry, lonevoice... I intended to “ping” the people who posted on this Sarah Palin thread or the other one with the same Pella announcement. Don't know what happened if you weren't one of those people. My guess is I made a typo.

Why the ping?

I think there is a very good chance that Palin is planning a quite effective way to mobilize the conservative Christian vote in Iowa. That's a good thing in my opinion and I think it deserves attention... even if it's totally unplanned, doing this in Pella was a **REALLY** good idea.

To put it mildly, the Dutch talk to each other and make decisions based on personal recommendations. Convincing a couple of hundred Hollanders in Pella to become strong Palin supporters will pay off **BIG TIME** — not only in Pella but also in Northwest Iowa, in West Michigan, and numerous other places where the Dutch are a significant part of the Christian conservative segment of the Republican Party.

Since Bachmann, Cain and Palin are all trying to present themselves as the social issues conservative candidate, getting strong support early on from the conservative Christian community is critical. It's especially important in Iowa, and getting Dutch Reformed support for a social issues candidate in the Iowa Republican caucuses is just as important as getting Southern Baptist support in Alabama or Georgia.

129 posted on 06/25/2011 7:30:11 PM PDT by darrellmaurina
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To: RegulatorCountry

Decidedly not. Laughably funny. Or pitiful, not sure which.


130 posted on 06/25/2011 8:00:44 PM PDT by WVNan
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To: redhead

Track is also working the nets for the fishing business. I’m sure Dad is still teaching him and helping him when he’s home, but able to get away for a short time.


131 posted on 06/25/2011 8:05:52 PM PDT by WVNan
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To: darrellmaurina

Thank you for this post. It is extremely informative and perceptive. Having seen Sarah Palin in action all along the way, I would say you have hit on something quite plausible here. Evey move that Sarah makes is well thought out and designed for the most major impact possible. And the way she has done it is nothing short of remarkable. Her timing is brilliant. So what you have said here would not surprise me in the slightest.


132 posted on 06/25/2011 8:10:00 PM PDT by MestaMachine (Sarah Palin is the mirror by which evil reflects back upon itself until consumed out of existence)
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To: MestaMachine

You know, sitting here at this marvelous invention it occurs to me that the “handlers” for political figures, especially the old hands, have not considered the power of the new media. Sarah can sit in AK and research every state in the union. She can also initiate communication with local contacts in all the states who can give her the “inside” scoop on the various regions and its people. That is what I would do instead of depending on some flunky telling me what they think I should do. Knowing the people is all Sarah need to have to win.


133 posted on 06/25/2011 8:29:25 PM PDT by WVNan
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To: darrellmaurina

i think the director picked the location of the premire. Not Palin. he wanted a location that screamed this is Iowa. Plin just accepted the invitation to appear.


134 posted on 06/25/2011 8:52:02 PM PDT by unseen1
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To: darrellmaurina
This is an excellent post on many levels, worthy of the best FR has to offer.

Consider yourself highly commended!

As someone who has lived for many years in Minnesota and in Iowa, and even occasionally spoken with Dutch Reformed churchmembers on occasion, may I venture to comment?

Pella is the original center of the Dutch immigration to Iowa, and it's much closer to major statewide media (i.e., the Des Moines Register and Des Moines TV stations) than a similar event would be in other key Dutch Reformed communities such as Orange City or Sioux Center.

I hadn't known that Pella was the original center of Dutch immigration to Iowa, but I do know it is fairly close to Des Moines (50 miles or so). So if this is true, it is a brilliant example of Sarah's famous "retail" politicking at the small-town level while not denying access to the closest thing Des Moines has to MSM.

I think this is a clear effort by Palin to present herself as the conservative Christian candidate for a constituency that can do her a great deal of good, but which will need some serious convincing due to the unfortunate issues with her daughter's pregnancy, as well as due to her Pentecostal theology.

This is true of Iowa, in particular, more than other states: some will recall that in 1988, Pat Robertson finished in 2nd(!!) in the GOP primaries in Minnesota, sending shock waves throughout the establishment. Iowa is dominated by the Dutch Reformed, who value Christianity, but through the lens of heavy scholastic learning. They will want to see the Palin is "safe" theologically.

Let's just say that with a strong history of women's activism in both conservative and liberal churches (think of the roles of Dutch Reformed conservative women like Laurie Vanden Heuvel, a key opponent of the ERA ratification in Iowa, as well as Gertrude Hoeksema and Fredrika Pronk in their own smaller denominations), there won't be any bias against Palin's gender, and perhaps even some strong advocacy of putting a conservative woman into political power.

It has often been my observation that the women within Evangelical and similar households have long been "the power behind the throne" -- I would not be surprised to find that they identify Sarah as a kindred spirit. "Rugged individualism" and all that.

The Dutch Reformed have a strong history of aggressive involvement in the political sphere dating back to Abraham Kuyper, a prime minister of the Netherlands who also founded a Christian university, a Christian newspaper, and a denomination which rapidly became the second-largest Protestant church in the Netherlands. Their immigrant heirs have well over a century of aggressive Christian engagement in American secular politics — one which long predates the modern Christian conservative movement.

I didn't know this. Fascinating.

However, to say the Dutch have a tendency toward being insular and clannish is an understatement. (Don't get the Vandersomethings together to shoot me — I grew up in Grand Rapids, I'm a Calvin College graduate, and I know what I'm talking about.)

As I have been told by a Dutch co-worker: "If you're not Dutch, you're not much." Do you know if the Dutch Reformed have strong ties to Kalamazoo College or to Hillsdale College (both in Michigan)?

For an outsider to gain the trust of the Dutch Reformed, that outsider needs to begin early and work hard to convince lots of tall blond Dutchmen that a pretty Pentecostal from Alaska with family troubles is a good candidate. It's definitely not impossible, but it will be challenging — the Dutch, unlike some parts of American evangelicalism, are not known for their willingness to be forgiving of moral issues in the home. I know people who only two generations ago were ordered by their parents to wear black wedding dresses when premarital sexual relations resulted in a “forced marriage.”

I am not sure about the "family values" issue, seeing as how her daughter is providing for her child, and the father has rather publicly burned his bridges with the Palin family. Secondly, I think that both her decision to keep the baby, as well as Sarah's decision to bear Trig, will act as a strong advertisement to the Iowans that Sarah can be trusted.

On the other hand, once the Dutch Reformed are convinced that somebody is a good candidate, they'll work double overtime for that candidate, and in Republican caucuses in Iowa, delivering Pella and Northwest Iowa is a major step towards victory.

I think this is crucial, and is where the rubber meets the road. I was at the RightOnline conference in Minnesota last weekend, and Michele Bachmann gave a speech there. She ended up with a long (for a politician) description of Jonathan (son of Saul) and his armour-bearer against the Philistines. Jonathan said to his armour bearer, let's climb up the cliff to the stronghold, and if the Philistines see us and say, "Wait for us to come to you" then we won't attack, but if the Philistines say "Come up to us" we will take it as a sign that God has delivered them into our hands. And so it happened, and God gave Israel a great victory.

Bachmann used this as an illustration of how conservatives should not be afraid politically. It was red meat to the religious right, without sounding "too" kooky to others -- there was nothing explicitly miraculous, and to show pluck in the face of daunting odds is still a trait admired among Republicans.

But more importantly, as I remarked to the person sitting next to me, is it was very Palinesque. Bachmann is making a play for the religious right, partly to claim the now-uncommitted Huckabee voters, and partly to pre-empt Palin before Palin declares.

I wouldn't be surprised if somebody tries to get a photo of Sarah Palin in wooden shoes carrying tulips during a Tulip Time parade. There are better ways to win the Dutch vote — memorizing the Heidelberg Catechism might be a good start, or at least understanding the applicability of Q&A 1 to the life of any Bible-believing Christian regardless of denomination.

Showing up in Waterloo, Iowa to declare is the next step for Bachmann; it is a masterstroke of genius for Palin to steal her thunder by showing up for the film, yet not commit to running (and opening herself up "officially" to everyone else's fire).

However, I think Palin’s handlers understand the importance of the Dutch vote in Republican Party politics in Iowa — especially in the conservative Christian wing — and this Pella event is intended to help introduce her to that constituency. Palin’s views of Christian political activism are not those of Abraham Kuyper, but I can't think of very many other candidates in the race who stand a serious chance of getting strong support from the Dutch Reformed as an organized constituency.

That's the fatal flaw of the left's "Nuts and Sluts" scorched-earth policy against Palin: it makes it almost impossible for anyone to question her religious or conservative credentials.

Of course, I have no inside knowledge and could easily be wrong. But if Palin or her handlers didn't plan this deliberately, they sure got lucky and hit on a really good idea by accident.

Who knows? Maybe she even prayed about it first...

Cheers!

135 posted on 06/25/2011 8:58:37 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: darrellmaurina

That’s a fascinating perspective—thanks!


136 posted on 06/25/2011 9:53:06 PM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: grey_whiskers
Grey, you're absolutely spot on with a number of your comments. Some of them are things I thought about saying, but on which I decided my post was already too long.

First, on your Hillsdale and Kalamazoo College questions: there's no formal denominational connection, but yes, there are connections between political conservatives in the CRC and faculty at those colleges.

Hope College and Western Theological Seminary are RCA schools in Holland, Michigan; Calvin College, Calvin Seminary, and Kuyper College are CRC schools in Grand Rapids. In Iowa, Central College in Pella and Northwestern College in Orange City are RCA schools; Dordt College in Sioux Center is a CRC school. There are other CRC-affiliated and RCA-affiliated schools, but none of them are politically relevant to the current discussion.

Bingo on “if you aren't Dutch, you aren't much.” I'm Italian, grew up in Grand Rapids, and am a Calvin College graduate. Nuff said? I know what I'm talking about when I speak of Dutch insularity. It's possible to be accepted, but it's hard and it takes time — lots of it.

Fortunately for Sarah Palin, being a conservative five-point Calvinist (which I am, by the way) is not the only way to be accepted. But you're absolutely right that people need to feel Palin is “safe” if they're going to become ardent backers and campaigners for her, as opposed to simply voting for her. Convincing a Dutch Reformed conservative to vote for a Pentecostal requires the Pentecostal to convince the voter that there's a lot of common ground on other issues.

Palin would never be allowed to join most CRC and many RCA churches unless she agreed to support infant baptism and (depending on the church) a lot of other doctrinal issues, but most conservative Dutch Reformed people have long ago gotten used to working with Roman Catholics and other conservative Protestants on the abortion issue. I don't think Rick Santorum can gain traction with the Dutch Reformed as long as there are other Christian conservative candidates in the race, which there still will be in the Iowa caucuses, but I might be surprised by how the Dutch vote in West Michigan if he's the last strongly pro-life candidate left by that time.

This is not new; it's what Abraham Kuyper taught more than a century ago and practiced in the Netherlands, that we can and should have different standards for cooperating with people in the political realm than what we insist on for church membership.

A more serious issue for Palin is that you're dead right on the strongly “scholastic” orientation of the Dutch Reformed, at least compared to typical evangelical churches. A lot of that has fallen by the wayside in the last two generations, but there was a day that the ordinary Dutch Reformed father was likely to have a copy of Calvin's Institutes on his shelf, and did the level of “heavy duty” reading that today isn't common even among the ministers of a lot of evangelical churches.

The perception that Palin is an academic lightweight will hurt her, and it would have been fatal to her a couple of generations ago with the Dutch Reformed. Today, if she has a fairly well-thought-out Christian worldview, especially if it sounds like something from Francis Schaeffer or D. James Kennedy, she'll do fine with even the most conservative among the Dutch Reformed. If she's done a lot of serious study about what it means to be a Christian politician and if her study has led her in the model of Kennedy, she could end up with a huge level of support. With the Dutch Reformed who are less strict theologically but are still conservative evangelicals and look to Tim Keller or Joel Nederhood as an example of a “good Reformed minister,” an emphasis on her personal conversion will be just as effective as it would be with any other evangelical voter.

On the family values issue, I think virtually all modern Christians today understand that children make mistakes, some of them are very serious, and there's a limit to how much their parents can be held accountable.

However, the Dutch Reformed are not Baptists or broad evangelicals; there are really important cultural differences in how problems within the family are viewed. Especially in the more conservative churches, there's an emphasis on severe punishment of sexual immorality and on evaluating fathers’ ability to lead their homes based on how their children turn out. That's entirely appropriate in selecting candidates for the eldership and diaconate, and the situation with the Palin’s daughter would likely be enough to disqualify Todd Palin from serving in any office in my own local church.

Candidates for office are a whole different story. For better or for worse, conservative Christians long ago made their peace with the fact that Ronald Reagan was a divorced movie actor running for president, and my guess is that anyone who is seriously upset about the problems in the Palin family will end up deciding that most of the other Republican candidates have far worse issues.

137 posted on 06/25/2011 10:05:33 PM PDT by darrellmaurina
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To: darrellmaurina
My gorgeous, wonderful wife was Dutch Christian Reform and we were married in the church in Holland, Michigan which survived the fires which burned many places in the Midwest when the Great Fire burned Chicago.

As we were preparing for the ceremony I must have been looking particularly grim (probably afraid my betrothed would wise up at the last moment), the minister, an unusually stern-looking man, told me to “lighten up, I looked sober as a preacher.”

138 posted on 06/25/2011 10:32:43 PM PDT by arrogantsob (Why do They hate her so much?)
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To: darrellmaurina

Thanks for the very interesting explanation. Hopefully we will soon learn what Governor Palin is really up to. She is fascinating.


139 posted on 06/26/2011 12:22:20 AM PDT by lonevoice (Where the Welfare State is on the march, the Police State is not far behind)
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To: darrellmaurina; grey_whiskers

FReepmail coming.


140 posted on 06/26/2011 4:21:02 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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