Posted on 09/16/2008 7:17:17 PM PDT by Eric Blair 2084
Just for kicks and giggles, I would appreciate it if somebody here logged on to NJ.com and told him that.
Not that I can’t handle it myself or defend Sarah’s conservative credentials on my own....but a little help from friends would be welcome.
I don’t believe populist means anti-elitist. Anti-elitist, now THAT does. Populist reminds me of Andrew Jackson, who was from the (West?) and went all over the West, leaving the northeasterners in the dust as he campaigned. The elitists might think they are aristocrats, but just holding their noses up and going to Harvard does NOT make them such.
I see it as closer to 1900. Both the Dem presidential campaign and the Republican VP candidate were "populists", but there the comparison ended
The democratic candidate was an empty headed speechifier, a lawyer and minor legislator whose claim to fame was a speech he gave to the Dem convention 4 years previously, full on sonorous and context free phrasing. The Presidency was well above his pay grade, ans if he had won his term would have been as ignominious as his later stint as Secretary of State
The Republican candidate was a outsider, former rancher, vigorous, athletic, hunter, with only two years as a Governor. But a fully rounded individual, and if the Republicans had lost, he would have succeeded in some other field.
But they won, and after he was President, they carved his head onto Mt Rushmore
The only time I have ever heard the word “Populist” applied with any meaning was about the film director Frank Capra.
Palin is a Capra Populist.
That’s why this race is so exciting.
Watch some of Capra’s old films. Abe Lincoln is actually a “character” in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
Perhaps I will. I am always willing to help set a lost soul straight.
The Sage of Baltimore pegs it -- and shows that, ironically, creationism advances the left-liberal agenda.
Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded -- here and there, now and then -- are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty. This is known as bad luck."
--"Lazarus Long" (Robert A. Heinlein)
So an Alaskan is going to look "populist" to someone from Newark, but that doesn't entitle the New Jerseyan to pull the "a populist, not a conservative" gambit.
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