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Virtue and Sarah Palin
American Thinker ^
| 9-12-09
| Claude Sandroff
Posted on 09/11/2009 10:21:15 PM PDT by smoothsailing
September 12, 2009Virtue and Sarah Palin
By Claude Sandroff
No republic, not even our exceptional one, can survive without virtuous citizens.
On July 3 when Sarah Palin announced from her Wasilla home that she would step down as Governor, we got a glimpse of a person none of us had seen before: this remarkable woman, nothing less than a phenomenon, always unflappable now seemed wounded and shaken. Five simple words were particularly haunting: "...and it's not so comfortable."
Perhaps the most famous woman in the world, Sarah Palin relinquished state power in the simplest of settings. It was obviously not comfortable, nor easy. However we define Palin, as frontier feminist, movement conservative or middle class populist this will always stand as her finest hour. It might not have been her finest performance, but it crystallized in a moment the very essence of virtue. It was Sir Thomas More resigning as Lord Chancellor and George Washington returning to Mount Vernon. It showed how rare virtue has become in our politics. It shows why we adore Sarah Palin and why we need her. And it explains why, even without office, she has become the most important political figure in America.
Of all the attributes we fix to her, charisma, fearlessness, wit, and most recently to our delight, formidable polemicist, we should remember that she entered national life in Dayton, Ohio as the enemy of politics as usual and a champion of the politics of virtue.
She sold her state jet as governor, brought property tax relief as mayor and resigned from appointed office when necessary. We should remind her vacuous, raging, class-obsessed critics that the governorship was not the first office she "quit". Her reputation of "quitter" is one we should celebrate and demand that other politicians emulate. For she hardly quit as Ethics Commissioner of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission
for venal or trivial reasons. She quit when she found her office so ripe with corruption that she was rendered ineffective as a moral leader.
The question her political biography begs is why don't more politicians resign? Why didn't Ted Kennedy creep into a hole after Chappaquiddick? Why doesn't Robert Byrd resign, clearly too feeble to hold office effectively? Isn't fifty-four years in office enough for John Dingle? Hasn't Mark Sanders learned how to say adios? And how about Bill Clinton, and John Ensign and Charlie Rangel, and on and on.
Sarah Plain speaks quite often about the way she is "wired" for politics. This means she can appear unwearied day after day to intoxicate average Americans with a stump speech. It means too, that she takes an oath of office very seriously. If ethics reforms boomerang to neutralize her administration, she has the moral courage to step down. She swore an oath to serve her constituents, and when she could no longer fulfill its requirements she resigned. No, it was not very comfortable but it was very moving and humbling to watch. "What is an oath but words we say to God", wrote Robert Bolt in "A Man for All Seasons."
Sarah Palin and virtue and God. We should take the Governor at her word when she cites faith and family -- in that order -- as her guides in life. I try to imagine a forty-four year old woman, at the height of her power, influence and popularity finding herself pregnant. Not only pregnant but carrying a trisomic child. This was probably something not very comfortable, and certainly there was an easy way out. But Sarah Palin didn't choose it. She would say that we have more to learn from special needs children than they have to learn from us. Surely this episode and many others show we have more to learn from Sarah Palin than she has to learn from us.
Ultimately, virtue is the result of recognizing evil and ensuring that it does not prevail over good. It's a simple formulation, but who in politics is audacious enough to speak in such stark terms? Sarah Palin has, with world-shattering results.
In her first explosive Facebook entry into the health care debate, she pointed out that "death panels" were the logical consequence of the government rationing of health care. And that such rationing was "downright evil." There were health care policy wonks galore, and Medicare and Medicaid experts by the droves who offered endless technical details about the health care bill. But only Palin distilled the debate to its fundamental moral core. No mere politician can create a phrase so mythic, that a national policy debate becomes redefined almost overnight. In its moral force "death panels" will be enshrined in our political lexicon as definitively as Churchill's iron curtain was over sixty years ago.
America has always done well, when its leaders recognize and call out evil when it threatens. Ronald Reagan's evocation of the Evil Empire and George W. Bush's citation of the axis of evil stiffened our spines for the coming challenges.
Sarah Palin has too, and not a moment soon.
Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/09/virtue_and_sarah_palin.html at September 12, 2009 - 01:13:52 AM EDT
TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: palin; sarahpalin
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To: smoothsailing
“Ultimately, virtue is the result of recognizing evil and ensuring that it does not prevail over good. It’s a simple formulation, but who in politics is audacious enough to speak in such stark terms? Sarah Palin has, with world-shattering results.”
21
posted on
09/12/2009 6:45:18 AM PDT
by
reasonisfaith
(Liberals have neither the creativity nor the confidence to understand the truth of conservatism)
To: smoothsailing
"But only Palin distilled the debate to its fundamental moral core. No mere politician can create a phrase so mythic, that a national policy debate becomes redefined almost overnight. In its moral force "death panels" will be enshrined in our political lexicon as definitively as Churchill's iron curtain was over sixty years ago."
22
posted on
09/12/2009 6:47:10 AM PDT
by
newfreep
("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." - P.J. O'Rourke)
To: smoothsailing
But only Palin distilled the debate to its fundamental moral core. No mere politician can create a phrase so mythic, that a national policy debate becomes redefined almost overnight. In its moral force "death panels" will be enshrined in our political lexicon as definitively as Churchill's iron curtain was over sixty years ago. If you understand who Sarah is, her political decisions and motivations become clear. Sarah is no mere politician. And because of this she's a cypher to the decadent and morally/ethically debased.
23
posted on
09/12/2009 8:12:49 AM PDT
by
Donald Rumsfeld Fan
(Sarah Palin is our Iron Lady of the North)
To: Jeff Head
JOHN ADAMS...Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other
24
posted on
09/12/2009 8:14:14 AM PDT
by
Donald Rumsfeld Fan
(Sarah Palin is our Iron Lady of the North)
To: smoothsailing
Sarah Palin is a lady of Virtue.
Sarah aboard the USS Bunker Hill
25
posted on
09/12/2009 8:15:49 AM PDT
by
jazusamo
(But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
To: smoothsailing
26
posted on
09/12/2009 9:14:45 AM PDT
by
Turret Gunner A20
(There is not enough combined intellect in the beltway to jumpstart a moron.)
To: Donald Rumsfeld Fan
Here's his whole quote, one of my absolute favorites:
"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for the government of any other."- John Adams, Oct. 11, 1798 Address to the military
AMERICA AT THE CROSSROADS OF HISTORY
27
posted on
09/12/2009 10:17:43 AM PDT
by
Jeff Head
(Freedom is not free...never has been, never will be. (www.dragonsfuryseries.com))
To: jazusamo
Is that a Chinese ship or US it’s hard to tell, sarc.
28
posted on
09/12/2009 11:43:25 AM PDT
by
Rappini
("Pro deo et Patria.)
To: Jeff Head
She earns respect. She does not demand it. Thus she gets my vote an support. No other person in my lifetime who is running for office has ever displayed such a talent. Even when I was on Reagans security details when he was running for office he had a celebrity persona about him.
I haven’t seen this from Mrs Palin an hope I do not. We need a person back in the oval office who is human. Regardless if the cameras are running or not.
Sarah is what I perceive an consider the best thing we have had available in a long time that can set this republic back on its proper path.
Hard work an sacrifice is what made this nation and its citizens prosper. She leads by example. .
My opinion.
29
posted on
09/16/2009 4:30:20 AM PDT
by
Squantos
(Be polite. Be professional. But have a plan to kill everyone you meet)
To: AdmSmith; Berosus; bigheadfred; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...
30
posted on
09/16/2009 6:25:35 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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