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The Palin Problem
Townhall.com ^ | 9/26/08 | Kathleen Parker

Posted on 09/26/2008 3:24:39 AM PDT by acsuc99

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To: acsuc99

I wish the same standards were applied to Obama and his fellow gaffe machine, Joe Biden. What exactly makes Palin out of her league?


81 posted on 09/26/2008 5:05:52 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: Aussiebabe

Actually McCain has a law degree which is generally considered an advanced degree.


82 posted on 09/26/2008 5:10:37 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (Bomb Liechtenstein!)
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To: july4thfreedomfoundation
She is not a person that I would want as VP or as President.

Palin is the best that America has to offer?

83 posted on 09/26/2008 5:12:47 AM PDT by Afronaut (It's 1984)
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To: acsuc99
In addition to her syndicated column, Parker is director of the School of Written Expression at the Buckley School of Public Speaking and Persuasion in Camden, South Carolina. She previously ran her own public relations company and is a past instructor of editorial writing and advanced feature writing at the University of South Carolina College of Journalism and Mass Communications. She is a member of USA Today's Board of Contributors, writing regularly for the paper's op-ed page.

Parker's column focuses on social issues related to family, children and gender. Having grown up in Florida with four stepmothers and a variety of siblings -- half-, step- and whole -- Parker says, "I know of what I speak." She lives in Camden, South Carolina with her husband, son and a variety of pets.

Sounds like another case of vagina envy ala Peggy Noonan. She just can't stand the fact that this "rube" is actually the VP candidate.

84 posted on 09/26/2008 5:13:11 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: acsuc99

Wow. Or rather, meow.


85 posted on 09/26/2008 5:14:32 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: acsuc99

Remember last year Parker declared Hillary Clinton “well qualified” to be president. I’ve read whatever she’s written with a grain of salt since then.


86 posted on 09/26/2008 5:14:40 AM PDT by driftless2
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To: PreciousLiberty
Advanced degrees focus on one narrow discipline.

I will comfortably assume by making this statement that you do not have an advnaced degree. Of course you are not running for President so that does not matter

An advanced degree in the form of a Masters degree is a much deeper look at a broad field - for instance business, finance, engineering, agriculture. The real focus comes with a PhD - which indeed is far more than a President needs.

However, the level of complexity of the problems currently faced are not to be made simpy via "gut feeling". It helps to understand that problems have many layers.

Education teaches you how to analyze problems. AAn advanced degree will help you focus on particular field, but it also helps with thinking in general.

Simply put, Palin does not strike me as a person who spends as much time thinking as I would want the POTUS to spend.

The degree thing is a proxy for that - the current POTUS doesn't appear to think enough either.

87 posted on 09/26/2008 5:15:17 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (Bomb Liechtenstein!)
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit
Actually McCain has a law degree which is generally considered an advanced degree.

I don't believe that is correct. All the education bios I've seen for McCain only mention that his is a Naval Acad grad. They do not mention any masters or doctorate degrees. I'd be happy to be proven wrong so if you have a link that shows the law school he attended and year please post.

88 posted on 09/26/2008 5:16:58 AM PDT by The Hound Passer
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To: Afronaut

Are Obama and Biden the best America has to offer?


89 posted on 09/26/2008 5:17:43 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: acsuc99

Hey Kathy, can I get you a saucer of Milk??

Pray for W, McCuda and Our Troops


90 posted on 09/26/2008 5:19:44 AM PDT by bray (Drill Congress!!)
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To: Question_Assumptions
They said all of this about Reagan... just an actor... not a deep thinker... can't communicate (yes... they actually said that), dumb, uneducated, "B" grade actor... Palin is more like Reagan than anyone since Reagan... and Reagan's son said that! That is why the elite in both parties hate her... they know she is real and she is better than they are!

LLS

91 posted on 09/26/2008 5:20:10 AM PDT by LibLieSlayer (GOD, Country, Family... except when it comes to dims!)
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To: Aussiebabe
Some people with bachelor degrees have 100% more common sense than at lot of PhD’s or people with MBA’s.

I agree with you on this. I know a lot of really stupid PhDs. But, common sense and a little bit more what is needed when faced with an extremely complex financial problem. Or multi-layered and ancient foreign policy issues.

The POTUS should have both. Like Mitt.

92 posted on 09/26/2008 5:20:40 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (Bomb Liechtenstein!)
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit
Education teaches you how to analyze problems. AAn advanced degree will help you focus on particular field, but it also helps with thinking in general.

Roughly half of Congress is made up of lawyers, each of which have an advanced degree. They are indeed wizards at solving problems.

93 posted on 09/26/2008 5:21:39 AM PDT by Publius Valerius
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit
You are wrong. John McCain only has the basic bachelor's degree from the Naval Academy where he came nearly last in his class. He does not have a law degree.

I don't hold that against him as there is no correlation on leadership nor how people do in their careers based on rank in their class, 20 years after graduating.

94 posted on 09/26/2008 5:24:26 AM PDT by Aussiebabe
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit
I will no doubt be flamed for my following comments, but I am welcome to them.

As you wish... another Mittbot crawling out from his hole to pipe up at negative news. Probably to crawl back in your hole the next time a news cycle is favorable to Palin.

Your faith in advanced degrees is misplaced. Bush 43, Bush 41, and Clinton had advanced degrees. Ronald Reagan had just a bachelors degree from a small midwest college.

95 posted on 09/26/2008 5:25:49 AM PDT by Chet 99
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To: Brices Crossroads

Romney would gave been an excellent selection. He was my number one pick, and Palin was my number two pick. But despite my liking of Mitt, I was thrilled when McCain picked Palin. She’s only been governor for two years, so it’s impossible to pick up the knowledge of international and national affairs in that short period of time. Especially since she hasn’t been campaigning for president, like Romney has, since she was elected. What makes her a great candidate is her instincts which are conservative. There’s no way she’d be a high tax-high spender on the economy. She’d keep the military strong. She’d keep her paws off the business of America.


96 posted on 09/26/2008 5:26:09 AM PDT by driftless2
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To: The Hound Passer

Sorry, you are right. He doesn’t have a law degree.

Still, he is an expert on Foreign Policy.

I am not sure what Palin is an expert on. What she has really focused on to know the different layers of complexity.

As mentioned, I see an advanced degree as a proxy, not a must for the type of deep experience I want the POTUS to have. Palin doesn’t do it for me like Mitt did.


97 posted on 09/26/2008 5:26:26 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (Bomb Liechtenstein!)
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit

Mitt’s problem is he had the paper credentials, but not the principles to lead.


98 posted on 09/26/2008 5:30:23 AM PDT by Chet 99
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit
Simply put, Palin does not strike me as a person who spends as much time thinking as I would want the POTUS to spend.

The Presidency is in the Executive Branch for a reason. Being President is an executive job. You are being paid to manage and make decisions. I have no idea what you mean by "thinking," in terms of the job, but the President and VP are surrounded by "thinkers" who provide them with expert advice and information, e.g., the intelligence community, cabinet officials, etc. The President must have the ability to make decisions based on the best possibile information available. And he/she must have leadership qualities.

Palin's record of executive experience and achievement, inside and outside of government, make her more qualified than Obama and Biden who have never supervised or managed anything larger than a senate staff. And even ahead of McCain's experience in the USN. The fact that Palin is a Washington outsider is a plus for me.

99 posted on 09/26/2008 5:30:44 AM PDT by kabar (.)
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit; Aussiebabe
But, common sense and a little bit more what is needed when faced with an extremely complex financial problem. Or multi-layered and ancient foreign policy issues.

Your error is to believe that the president is supposed to be a philosopher-king who will be able to unravel the most tangled problems, to 'run' the country, and to show everyone the meaning of life. This office was never meant to do this. These current--wrong--expectations have come about to the degree that people have started to immanentize the eschaton via government and to consider the president as the ultimate expression of this.

The purpose of the U. S. federal government was not to solve the problems of life but to ensure domestic tranquility and to protect the nation from domestic and foreign enemies. Except for a few specifically enumerated things, everything else was to be left up to the wishes of the states, groups of individuals, and individuals. It's time to start paring the federal government back to a pre-FDR form.
100 posted on 09/26/2008 5:31:09 AM PDT by aruanan
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