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Palin is Not the Answer
Reason Magazine online ^ | July 10, 2009 | cathy young

Posted on 07/10/2009 12:37:29 PM PDT by dr_who

Sarah Palin's announcement of her resignation as governor of Alaska may be the end of her political career or, as some speculate, the real beginning. What seems clear is that Palin is not conservatism's new hope but its dead end. In recent days, this has been amply confirmed by the arguments of Palin defenders, focused less on her presumed merits than on her presumed injuries at her enemies' hands.

Thus, Ross Douthat, the new conservative voice at the New York Times, hails Palin as Everywoman—living proof you can aspire to the White House without an Ivy League degree—and deplores her abuse by the political and media elites based on her "gender and social class." The message to other non-elite women with political ambitions, Douthat sums up, is: "Your children will go through the tabloid wringer. Your religion will be mocked and misrepresented. Your political record will be distorted, to better parody your family and your faith."

Yet Douthat admits that Palin's "missteps, scandals, dreadful interviews and self-pitying monologues" tarnished her role as a spunky common woman challenging the elites. But in that case, how much of the harsh treatment was due to prejudice and how much to Palin's own failings?

Yes, Palin has been the target of extremely vicious attacks (though the notion that no other politician has endured comparable nastiness would amuse Bill and Hillary Clinton). Her left-wing feminist foes have been especially rabid, mocking her in startlingly misogynistic language—"Republican blow-up doll" was one of the milder epithets—and denouncing "her pretense that she is a woman." The bizarre theory that Palin's youngest child, Trig, is really her grandson is still afloat in the gutters of the Internet.

And yes, this hostility has an element of snobbery. Former New Republic editor in chief Andrew Sullivan, currently a blogger with a bad case of Palin Derangement Syndrome, recently posted a catalogue of Palin's sins that included "white trash concupiscence."

Yet, such revolting extremes aside, some of the unpleasantness has been self-inflicted. Palin agreed to be John McCain's running mate knowing her teenage daughter was pregnant and single. (Of course, if Chelsea Clinton had been the expecting unwed mom, not one unkind word would have crossed the lips of Rush Limbaugh or Ann Coulter.) Nor was she particularly eager to shield Bristol Palin from the spotlight.

And then there's the matter of Palin's fitness for the second-highest office in the land. I say this as someone who initially hoped she would be an inspiring standard-bearer for conservative/libertarian feminism, a model of a woman who had it all and was a winner, not a victim.

It's not just the "liberal elites" that found Palin clueless; so did many in her own camp. Indeed, Douthat concedes she has to "bone up on the issues" if she is to have a political future. Those who believe Palin held her own debating Joe Biden forget that the McCain camp had requested a less-challenging format for that debate, with follow-up questions limited.

Palin critics on the right—George Will, Peggy Noonan, David Frum—have been slammed by the Palinistas as "haters," elitists threatened by a political star without proper intellectual credentials. Yet these same conservatives have been devout admirers of Ronald Reagan, hardly a product of the Ivy League.

Some of Palin's followers see her as the second coming of Reagan. But Reagan, despised as a "dunce" by his liberal detractors, had extensively read, written, and talked about the key issues of his day. While not an intellectual, he was a man of ideas. Palin is not known to harbor those. Her appeal is described in terms of "speaking from the heart" and exemplifying the virtues of faith and family—which is ironic, given the usual conservative derision of emotion-based liberal politics. Shortly after Palin's nomination, former George W. Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson suggested that her choice to bear a child with Down's Syndrome rather than have an abortion was an adequate substitute for a political philosophy.

If Palin does have a philosophy, it is the flip side of the class-and-culture warfare of which she has been a target. In fact, it was Palin who fired many of the volleys in this war—extolling the moral superiority of small towns and rural areas and calling them "pro-American parts of the country," mocking people who had traveled abroad as spoiled kids with rich parents.

While eschewing "victim feminism," Palin has enthusiastically embraced "victim conservatism": the grievances of cultural traditionalists who feel trampled and disdained by the more educated and influential (and often, more affluent) segments of American society. Like the "oppressed groups" of the left, these traditionalists have some valid complaints but channel them into a destructive ideology of polarization and resentment.

Such a zeal can energize the base—but also fatally split it and alienate the unconverted.

Most likely, Palin will be back. But if conservatives expect her to be their warrior princess in shining armor, they are courting defeat.

Cathy Young is a Reason contributing editor and a columnist at RealClearPolitics. She blogs at cathyyoung.wordpress.com. This article originally appeared at RealClearPolitics.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cathyyoung; conservatism; elitistgop; gopcoup; hatinpalin; palin; palin2012; palinresignation; reasonmagazine; waronsarah
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To: counterpunch
Reagan was NEVER a member of the pack of losers calling themselves the Libertarian Party.
"Now, I can’t say that I will agree with all the things that the present group who call themselves Libertarians in the sense of a party say, because I think that like in any political movement there are shades, and there are libertarians who are almost over at the point of wanting no government at all or anarchy. I believe there are legitimate government functions." --Ronald Reagan

41 posted on 07/10/2009 12:53:06 PM PDT by Mojave (Don't blame me. I voted for McClintock.)
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To: dr_who
'What's a "Vishy"? Perhaps you're really referring to"

Yeah, and that too. Could also be Fishy Republicans, only with a French accent.

42 posted on 07/10/2009 12:53:57 PM PDT by OldDeckHand (No Socialized Medicine, No Way, No How, No Time)
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To: OldDeckHand

Reason is a libertarian mag


43 posted on 07/10/2009 12:54:08 PM PDT by misterrob (A society that burdens future generations with debt can not be considered moral or just)
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To: dr_who
The author is trying to make a reasoned argument.

And failing miserably. George Will, Peggy Noonan and David Frum are the "right"?

44 posted on 07/10/2009 12:54:50 PM PDT by Mojave (Don't blame me. I voted for McClintock.)
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To: dr_who
Palin has enthusiastically embraced "victim conservatism" . . .Like the "oppressed groups" of the left, these traditionalists have some valid complaints but channel them into a destructive ideology of polarization and resentment.

Mainline Republicans see 1960s Marxist-Alinsky street rabble-cum-Rat Party (formerly the traditional, patriotic Democratic Party) attacking a Party member who's not "one of them" and their response?

"Run away! Run away!"

Mainline Republicans don't have the guts to confront the Rat Party's tactics.. or is it something else?

Rockefeller still rules? A generation ago it was the Goldwater supporters outside the Republican mainstream were "purveyors of hate." Now, a slight improvement, we're purveyors of polarization and resentment.

Nelson Rockefeller according to Stuart Spencer (Rockefeller's public relations head) said, "We had to destroy Barry Goldwater as a member of the human race."

We have to destroy Sarah Palin as a member of the human race?

45 posted on 07/10/2009 12:54:59 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: dr_who
Douthat concedes she has to "bone up on the issues" if she is to have a political future

This seems to be the biggest complaint against her. It just doesent seem to me like that would be such a hard thing to do. I just dont get all the animus from "this " side of the aisle.

46 posted on 07/10/2009 12:55:28 PM PDT by Nonstatist
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To: counterpunch
"Alrighty. You forgot the /s"

I thought the baby and communist jabs were self-evident, but the point is taken. Sarcasm tags always, from here on out.

47 posted on 07/10/2009 12:55:30 PM PDT by OldDeckHand (No Socialized Medicine, No Way, No How, No Time)
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To: meandog

There is retreating and there is maneuvering.


48 posted on 07/10/2009 12:56:10 PM PDT by SolidWood (Sarah Palin: "Only dead fish go with the flow!")
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To: pissant

Hunter/DeMint 2012


To your knowledge is Hunter making any preps for the 12 primaries? If so are you free to share any? What is he doing at the present time, consulting, speaking, etc?


49 posted on 07/10/2009 12:56:34 PM PDT by deport
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To: dr_who

cathy young: “Its true that she has been attacked viciously by the Left and by members of her own party in terms I couldn’t repeat in front of my mother. But somehow I can’t resist the urge to pile on. Given the chance to defend her against these irrational and vicious attacks by her and my common enemy I can’t do it. If I speak up for her, they might come after me next.”


50 posted on 07/10/2009 12:56:51 PM PDT by marron
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To: WilliamofCarmichael

The RINOs are still bitter and clinging to a time when there was more of them.


51 posted on 07/10/2009 12:57:15 PM PDT by darkangel82 (I don't have a superiority complex, I'm just better than you.)
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To: dr_who

I’m not even going to bother reading it, but yes she is.

Palin 2012.


52 posted on 07/10/2009 12:57:48 PM PDT by Gator113 (I live in "one of the largest Muslim countries in the world." Imam Obama told me so.)
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To: Mojave

Palin has a lot of critics on the right, and for a number of reasons.
The one thing the 3 you mention all have in common is a respect for the English language.

What you are doing here, of course, is promoting a logical fallacy — guilt by association — by attempting to discredit all Palin critics on the right by associating them with a few critics you dislike. Of course this is circular logic in the first place, because your reason for disliking them is primarily because of their criticism of Palin.

Perhaps you should start trying to defend Palin’s merits instead?


53 posted on 07/10/2009 12:57:49 PM PDT by counterpunch (In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem. Government is the problem.)
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To: counterpunch
I don’t see any ‘hate’ here. Just a well reasoned argument. But of course Palin’s defenders can’t be reasoned with.

If you read her biography on Wikipedia, she wanders from campus to campus conducting "gender studies" seminars.

So much for offering "reasoned arguments"...

54 posted on 07/10/2009 12:58:31 PM PDT by Snickering Hound
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To: dr_who

Take a breath...you’ll need it. Palin is not just a person, she is an idea. One that is lost on the sell out Republicrats.


55 posted on 07/10/2009 12:58:59 PM PDT by Earthdweller (Harvard won the election again...so what's the problem.......?)
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To: Snickering Hound
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathy_Young

A feminist that hates Sarah Palin? I’m shocked.

Worse than just a feminist. From the wiki bio: ... gender issues and feminism ... she taught a 3-week gender issues course at Colorado College.

So Cathy's a diesel dyke, deeply depressed and confused about her own gender, patently insane, yet somehow she possesses some mysterious wisdom about what's best for conservative voters, Sarah Palin, and America overall.

56 posted on 07/10/2009 12:59:01 PM PDT by meadsjn
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To: counterpunch
Palin has a lot of critics on the rightUnnamed, naturally.

You and Andrew Sullivan don't count.

The one thing the 3 you mention all have in common is a respect for the English language.

Is that why they parrot Democrat talking points?

57 posted on 07/10/2009 12:59:48 PM PDT by Mojave (Don't blame me. I voted for McClintock.)
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To: counterpunch
What you are doing here, of course, is promoting a logical fallacy — guilt by association — by attempting to discredit all Palin critics on the right by associating them with a few critics you dislike.

Those were the exact parties named in the Losertarian article. Try reading more slowly.

58 posted on 07/10/2009 1:01:14 PM PDT by Mojave (Don't blame me. I voted for McClintock.)
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To: dr_who

“Yet these same conservatives have been devout admirers of Ronald Reagan, hardly a product of the Ivy League.”

Hardly an appropriate comparison: they worked for Reagan after he’d proved himself and have become Reagan snobs (no arrows, I’m a complete Reagan fan myself).

Colonel, USAFR


59 posted on 07/10/2009 1:01:44 PM PDT by jagusafr (Kill the red lizard, Lord! - nod to C.S. Lewis)
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To: dr_who

It is becoming abundantly clear that the most vocal criticism of Sarah Palin is originating from the lesbians and gays of both parties, .


60 posted on 07/10/2009 1:03:12 PM PDT by meadsjn
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