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Dissolving the Palin Prejudice (No Barf Alert)
Huffington Post | December 15, 2009 | Stephen H. Dinan

Posted on 12/17/2009 1:35:33 AM PST by militanttoby

Over Thanksgiving, I was hiking with my brother-in-law when he commented that he only knew two kinds of people: those who loved Sarah Palin and those who hated her. Nobody was in the gray zone. While I didn't consider myself a "hater," I also knew that she had triggered intense reactions in me when she joined the Republican ticket. After Obama's victory, the fear of her becoming President subsided along with the negative charge, but I had to confess to a lingering prejudice beneath the surface.

One week later, I bought her autobiography, Going Rogue. Why? To dissolve my own prejudice and to better understand how we as a culture can go beyond the extreme political polarizations that have so paralyzed our country. What I know from years of psychological and spiritual explorations is that whenever we judge or fight something in the world, there is an aspect of ourselves that we are battling against. In creating walls of separation in the world, we reinforce them within ourselves, which is ultimately to our detriment.

I truly believe that everyone has their divine role to play in the world, even those with very different politics, beliefs, and values. While I have held that truth, though, I still had a visceral reaction to Palin - a sure signal that some work remains.

So reading Going Rogue was something of a test for myself - could I find the place of appreciation, respect, and even love for Sarah Palin?

What I found is that it wasn't really that hard, actually, simply by taking the time to meet her on her own turf rather than through sounds bites, spin, and polarized media battles. Reading someone's personal memoir is an intimate journey into their inner sanctum, and I developed a real appreciation for Sarah in reading the book. Aspects of her that seemed coarse, simplistic, or combative during the campaign were revealed to be a product of frontier values and growing up in a culture that is faced with subzero temperatures and constant tests of survival.

Her journey from high school basketball captain to Governor revealed itself as an impressive triumph of hard work, resiliency, and willingness to challenge the status quo. Many of the most caricatured and vilified aspects of her history turned out to be lopsided depictions and sometimes gross misrepresentations.

For example, while her belief in God is deep and sincere, she wasn't fanatical about it or dismissive of others. I found a real appreciation for the spiritual depths she went to when first faced with having a Down's syndrome child. Her ultimate celebration of the beauty and perfection of that child, a child that 90% of people would have aborted according to statistics, was profoundly moving and it led hundreds of thousands of special needs children to feel championed through her campaign.

On other fronts, her pro-development views on energy and oil did not exclude a deep love for the environment and even an appreciation for alternative energy and reducing our carbon footprint. She wrote in moving terms about her husband's indigenous ancestry and connection with the natural world, as well as the devastation wrought by the Exxon Valdez spill. Despite being pro-business she was heroically willing to face down the oil industry when it was corrupting the government of Alaska, a kind of bravery we need more of on both sides of the aisle.

Perhaps the most moving aspect of the book is the way in which she never waivers in her family commitments throughout the political journey. She passes up an opportunity to contest a Senate seat in order to manage her son's hockey team. She breast feeds in front of a taken-aback lawmaker. Team Palin is a part of every campaign and a constant presence in her official roles. Her family is at the center of her life in a way that feels whole and balanced, which is both impressive and commendable as we all seek to balance competing demands on our time.

In reading the book, I started to see a lot more of myself and my upbringing in Sarah. I too had grown up in a frozen land - Northern Minnesota - a place of unpretentious, middle-class, hardworking people who believe in personal responsibility and straight-talking integrity. We, too, had our sled dog races, subzero temperatures and a spirit of camaraderie to make it through. I began to see her political values as a natural extension of those tough-minded virtues, enabling her to take on daunting tasks and succeed at each level of life.

My developing appreciation of her formative years in the book led to a different view of the pressure cooker of national, presidential politics - I felt far more compassion for the ugly way in which she was attacked by the press, dismissed by the opposition, and muzzled by patronizing campaign bosses. She faced strong prejudices from people like myself who were scared that her more black-or-white, provincial-seeming perspective would someday be in the Oval Office. We were also worried by her folksy appeal and ability to attack Obama aggressively while appearing quite charming. The result of that reaction was a barrage of distorted stories, inflated fears, and downright misrepresentations, some of which were quite damaging to her family. After reading in her own words what she went through, I felt more compassion for her and dismay about the meat grinder that we've created for political leaders - an occupation for which we truly need our best and brightest.

Reading Going Rogue makes me understand that Sarah is not the ruthlessly ambitious and cutthroat caricature we feared; she is a woman who has befriended Democrats personally and professionally, shown real leadership in fighting corruption, and taken a more nuanced position on several issues in which she seemed far more polarizing. She seems quite sincere in her desire to serve in whatever way the universe calls for that service.

All that said, I still bristled when she launches in the final part of the book into a diatribe about what our country needs, which is strongly colored with right-wing platitudes and a self-righteous air as well as the tendency to portray liberals as the enemy rather than fellow allies in evolving our country. I would love to see more thoughtful reflections on positions and values, a deeper understanding of history, and less of the combative edge, all of which would make her a more unifying leader (and likely lead to fewer arrows back at her and her family). But that may not be her role. She is more of a super-charged Mom of the great white North, flashing into action to fight for what she sees as right, inspiring the Everyman and Everywoman to take personal responsibility for their lives and their country. She has the same qualities as a mother bear, with a fierce love that is eager to protect her cubs (or her country). If she's on your side, that can be exhilarating. But it can also reinforce the kind of partisan warfare that the book ultimately demonstrates is so destructive. My prayer is that this admirable woman can more fully embrace the idea that we all are on the same team here on planet earth. It's an all hand-on-deck moment for humanity and both conservatives and progressive values and people are needed.

Most of all, I come way from the book seeing Sarah as a woman who loves her family deeply, seeks to live a life of integrity, and wants America to be strong, successful and vibrant. While I may disagree with some of her policies and perspectives, I can better respect both her sincere patriotic intent as well as her willingness to take on hard fights in the service of democracy, in addition to her championing of the everyday people who often feel marginalized in our political process. I still would not vote for her for President, but I do respect her more as a person and as a leader of an important base of Americans.

I come away from reading Going Rogue feeling that it would be a useful act of citizenship for all those who feel prejudice towards her to read her book and meet her on her own turf in order to heal the lingering prejudices. I feel more balanced for having done so. I would also urge conservatives who hate or fear Obama to read his autobiography to better understand the man behind the political leader and thus heal their own biases.

The way I see it, healing the rift between Democrats and Republicans helps to heal the rift in our own hearts. The truth is that each party tends to champion one side of America's core values and we need both to operate in complementary and respectful ways for us to address the challenges we face. As each of us heals that prejudice in ourselves, we truly become part of the solution.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: palin
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To: BufordP
...the tendency to to portray liberals as the enemy rather than fellow allies in evolving our country.

It's tough to take seriously a literary critic who doesn't know the difference between a transitive and an intransitive verb.

41 posted on 12/17/2009 8:37:38 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: KC Burke

On the flip side of that,
I know libs who are so strongly adherent to their one hotbutton issue that they can’t concede ANY other more basic concept because it will cause the house of cards to collapse around their one issue.


42 posted on 12/17/2009 8:40:23 AM PST by MrB (The difference between a humanist and a Satanist is that the latter knows who he's working for.)
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To: Mr. Lucky

I couldn’t tell my transitive verbs from my incontinent participles. But then again, I don’t take myself seriously.


43 posted on 12/17/2009 8:51:42 AM PST by BufordP ("I've abandoned free market principles to save the free market ..." --George "Hoover" Bush)
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To: The Wizard

Indeed, the author seems to have been time-shifted to the present from the era before radical leftists threw the liberal movement over the port side of the ship.

- JP


44 posted on 12/17/2009 9:04:46 AM PST by Josh Painter ("We cannot spare this woman. She fights" - David Karki re: Sarah Palin)
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To: frposty

Not to worry. Like Sarah said in her book, her children keep her grounded.

- JP


45 posted on 12/17/2009 9:06:07 AM PST by Josh Painter ("We cannot spare this woman. She fights" - David Karki re: Sarah Palin)
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To: Josh Painter

The adoration she’s received in recent weeks is very seductive. If she veers in the direction of rock stardom then she’s doomed and a bunch of us will be very disappointed.

We know she can handle personal attacks and all that stuff but how will she handle success? She must be very satisfied with herself now.


46 posted on 12/17/2009 9:55:18 AM PST by frposty (I'm a simpleton)
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To: militanttoby

The only problem is that he/she doesn’t seem to undestand that liberals aren’t on the same team we are. They cheer the destruction of our country while we try to build us up.


47 posted on 12/17/2009 9:58:55 AM PST by chris_bdba
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To: MrB

You are so right. That is why I included consideration of finding and avoiding that hot button.

You never know what it may be but if you can isolate it and set it aside much of simple conservatism will appeal if presented in the right manner.


48 posted on 12/17/2009 10:19:03 AM PST by KC Burke (...but He has made the trains run on time.)
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To: militanttoby

Go read the comments at HuffPo and you will see that the author of this piece is whistling in the wind.

Most of the “enlightened progressives” would never question their own prejudices because (in their minds) only Conservatives have prejudices.

They think Palin’s book is a lie by a narcissist, and her political aspirations a malignant lust for power from a smalltown mayor and governor of a state with a tiny population thinking she is important enough to be President.

Of course, Obama, and Edwards, et al, are exempt from the same characterizations ...


49 posted on 12/17/2009 10:35:23 AM PST by spodefly (This is my tag line. There are many like it, but this one is mine.)
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To: AdmSmith; Berosus; bigheadfred; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...

Thanks CondoleezzaProtege. An op-ed like this an 50 cents will buy ya a cup of coffee. The usual party-line unthinking unblinking mean-spirited nastiness of the trolls of DU swills down through the comments on that page.


50 posted on 12/17/2009 4:27:52 PM PST by SunkenCiv (My Sunday Feeling is that Nothing is easy. Goes for the rest of the week too.)
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To: spodefly; markomalley; SunkenCiv

Ya’ll weren’t kidding about the comments.

Ye gods.


51 posted on 12/18/2009 1:02:38 AM PST by Ultra Sonic 007 (To view the FR@Alabama ping list, click on my profile!)
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To: militanttoby

The interesting thing to me is that a bigotted lefty admits he is bigotted and read Gov. Palin’s book in an attempt to get beyond his bigotry. That makes him somewhat of old line liberal. One that rather than calling everyone he disagrees with names, actually admitted his prejudice and tried to look deeper.

Not surprisingly, as a religious convert to the Church of the AntiCarbon, he reacted in a knee jerk way to all of the solutions that will lead to Palin beating Obama in 3 years. But we already knew most on the left are so invested in their religious beliefs that they rule out most commons sense solutions to problems, like cutting taxes to spur private sector growth and drilling for more oil and gas.


52 posted on 12/18/2009 1:07:39 AM PST by JLS (Democrats: People who wont even let you enjoy an unseasonably warm winter day)
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To: Ultra Sonic 007

Yeah, they’re quite a bunch of ignorant bigots and loons.


53 posted on 12/18/2009 6:27:39 PM PST by SunkenCiv (My Sunday Feeling is that Nothing is easy. Goes for the rest of the week too.)
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To: Bob J

*PING*

“Reading Going Rogue makes me understand that Sarah is not the ruthlessly ambitious and cutthroat caricature we feared; she is a woman who has befriended Democrats personally and professionally, shown real leadership in fighting corruption, and taken a more nuanced position on several issues in which she seemed far more polarizing. She seems quite sincere in her desire to serve in whatever way the universe calls for that service.”


54 posted on 12/24/2009 12:08:04 PM PST by CondoleezzaProtege ("When I survey the wondrous cross...")
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