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Governor Palin is Still Alley Cat Smart [C4P's John Smith on Sarah Palin's recent "head fake"]
conservatives4palin.com ^ | September 28, 2011 | John Smith

Posted on 09/29/2011 4:34:38 AM PDT by RonDog

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Governor Palin is Still Alley Cat Smart
Posted on September 28 2011 - 8:23 PM - Posted by:

Guest Submission by John Smith

“And therefore those skilled in war bring the enemy to the field of battle and are not brought there by him”- Sun Tzu

Everyone is getting all wee-weed up lately about Sarah Palin’s supposed indecision about a run for President, especially after her interview last night with Greta. Some here are nearly suicidal. Others are begging for people to have faith and keep their powder dry. For my part, I’ll just offer a simple statement: Sarah Palin has already decided to run for President.

Suppose that you, like me, believe that she believes what she says. Phrases like ‘I’d rather sleep well than eat well’ and ‘a ship in harbor is safe, but that’s not why the ship is built’ aren’t empty slogans. They’re words that capture the essence of a life lived so far. In this world, Sarah remains UNDEFEATED if she tries but fails to win. She only is defeated if she fails to try for fear of failure. Simply put, for someone like me, Sarah running makes perfect sense. Sarah not running would be tantamount to her saying ‘all those things I’ve said and done . . . never mind, THEY were right about me’. Could you see her doing that? Could you see yourself basically ‘refudiating’ so much of what is exemplary and good about your life so far.

Now, suppose that you are like Joe McGinniss. You believe that Sarah Palin is evil and manipulative. She only cares about the money. She only cares about her brand. She’s using her supporters, especially those O4P folks who have put their lives on hold chasing a false dream. When the rubber meets the road, she’ll pass. That sounds really convincing sometimes, especially if you say it enough and even more especially if you say it after an interview like Sarah had with Greta. There’s just one tiny flaw with the theory: If you believe all of that, then it makes more sense for Sarah to run. If she’s all about the money, then “alienating” an employer who pays her a million dollars a year makes no sense. If she’s all about the “brand,” then she’ll keep more of her followers by running than by not running.

In other words, in all of this talk about whether Palin will run or not, one question is NEVER asked: Does Palin have more to gain (or lose) by running or by not running? The reason that question is never asked is because, no matter your frame of reference when it comes to “analyzing” Sarah Palin, the conclusion would be the same: She’s running. She’s always been running. She has more to lose by NOT running. And, she is playing this “to be or not to be” game for a political reason that I will articulate presently:

Everyone knows that if (when) Palin runs, she will run a grassroots campaign. She will rely on deep enthusiasm among an often underestimated group of supporters and a lot of small donations to drive her campaign. Win the nomination, and the deeper pockets will come along for the ride. That pretty much was her strategy in Alaska in her run for governor in 2006. But, the beginning is the tricky part. Like 2006, she has to strike hard and fast this time in order to diminish the organizational and monetary advantages that the so-called frontrunners have.

Think of this like Blitzkrieg. The opposition is on two flanks. One or both has more resources and more immediate access to resources. How do you win? You plan well, and, when the time comes, you strike hard and fast. That’s what she’s set up. Three months ago, Sarah was facing a two front war, with Mitt Romney (the Russia of the race) on one flank and his ally Michelle Bachmann on the other flank. Why commence the battle on that field and at that moment?

As I wrote in my previous submission about Sarah being “alley cat smart” she knew that it would be tough enough to beat Romney one on one. A two-front war would be infinitely more difficult. So, she baited Perry in to neutralize Bachmann. Perry has done just that. At the same time, I suspect that she knew her friend well enough to know that he’d (a) neutralize himself and (b) be the perfect crony capitalist foil when the time comes.

And so it was that everything was in place for an entry into the race about 10 days ago, right after Perry’s debate meltdown. Yet Sarah did the oddest thing: She not only didn’t enter the race (or give strong indication that is her intention) but also gave last night an interview to Greta that dropped a lake full of water on the Palin for President fire. Why? Doesn’t she realize that the first state filing deadline is October 14? Doesn’t she realize that she’s been giving us all of these “announce by” dates, first the end of August, then the end of September, and then that talk about November with Hannity a few weeks ago? And, why does she have all these paid speeches early next month, including one in South Korea on October 11? Why? Why? Why?

Perhaps the answer is suggested best in something George Bernard Shaw once wrote: “You see things, and you say ‘Why?’ But, I dream of things that never were, and I say ‘Why not’?” Listen to this clip from an interview with Bob & Mark on November 6, 2008. Listen to Sarah talk about grassroots and about needing the mood of the country to reveal itself in the 2010 elections. Think about the new media. We often hear Sarah talk about an “unconventional campaign.” Perhaps the more appropriate description is a “revolutionary campaign,” a campaign the likes of which we never have seen and which Sarah has spent about three years envisioning and amending as conditions changed.

Here, the doubting Palinsta may interject: ‘That’s all well and good . . . why hasn’t she announced yet?’ The answer: Because until last night THEY were expecting an announcement by the end of September or first few days of October. Ooooh! The light bulb goes on. Everything crystallizes. The tactics become clear. And, here is what I expect to see over the next two weeks:

Sarah Palin will announce that she is running for President by October 9. I don’t know how she’ll do it. I don’t know where she’ll do it. She may do it in one of those speeches before her trip to South Korea. Personally, I’d announce on October 6. Let the media scramble to get to the speeches on October 7 and 8 and then turn the South Korea speech into an “all eyes on Palin” moment. Yes, she could announce later, but I’d like to think she doesn’t plan to waste that trip to South Korea. As a non-candidate, next to nobody in the country will cover it. As a candidate, everyone will cover it.

It is as a moment like this that I remember more Sun Tzu: “Engage people with what they expect; it is what they are able to discern and confirms their projections. It settles them into predictable patterns of response, occupying their minds while you wait for the extraordinary moment- that which they cannot anticipate.”

Sarah has set that up. After last night, what is the last thing in the world they’d expect her to do in the next 10 days? Is it, perhaps, to go relatively dark and then pop out with a surprise announcement, maybe something like a tweet that simply says #GAMEON?

At this point, I’d be remiss if I didn’t interject three quick comments:

1. While I am speculating that she will announce later next week, it is entirely possible that she may wait an extra week until after the trip to South Korea but before the first filing deadline on October 14. This is, however, not what I expect for reasons previously articulated.

2. If Sarah announces before the trip to South Korea, then I do not expect her to participate in the October 11 debate. While logistically it would be feasible for her to get back just in time to attend, I doubt that she would be expected to attend under the circumstances. I would expect her first debate to be the CNN debate on October 18.

3. I don’t care whether Christie runs or not. If he doesn’t run, then that’s fine. If he does run, then he’ll hurt Romney and Perry a lot more than he’ll hurt Sarah. I keep saying this is why she keeps saying “the more, the merrier.”

Oh, by the way, I have not ignored the possibility that I could be wrong about all of this (and in the process more wrong about this than I’ve been about anything else in my life). Perhaps THEY are right about her, even though I think she’d rather die than admit this. Perhaps she sincerely has other reasons like family not to run, even though I think that “staying safe” is not why Sarah does what she does.

Ok, never mind . . . she’s running. She’s always been running. The indecision isn’t genuine; it’s feigned. The tactics may confound because they’re unconventional, but the strategy always has been obvious. “All warfare is based on deception.” “Every battle is won or lost before it is fought.” Everything is in place. She has occupied their minds with the mixed signals, and the extraordinary moment is upon us. They should have been able to anticipate it, but Sarah isn’t playing their game anymore. She’s playing her game. Still doubt me? Just look at how she approached the 2006 Alaska governor’s race (and her entry into that race), and then remember yet again that “the past is prologue” and that Sarah remains, as Tony Knowles once observed, “alley cat smart.”



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: cain; notrunning; obama; palin; palin2012; perry; romney; sarahpalin; shellendorsecain
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To: RonDog
299 posted on Friday, September 30, 2011 3:59:30 PM by RonDog: That is a VERY good point, dm! Governor Palin has scheduled MANY “religious” events. And, that's a VERY GOOD thing, IMHO!”

Thanks, RonDog...

I used to be a reporter in Iowa, I still have many contacts up there (especially in the Dutch Reformed world of northwest Iowa and Pella), and I've been able to see from an internal perspective some of the ways Gov. Palin has been mobilizing the key Christian conservative constituency in that state — people who would not be expected to be natural supporters of a woman from a Pentecostal background.

Later on in the primaries and caucuses, Gov. Palin will be able to rely on her natural consistency of Southern fundamentalists, charismatics, and pro-life Roman Catholics, but Iowa's Christian conservatives will be strange territory for her in many ways and would be in many ways a much better fit for someone like Rep. Bachmann who is from a traditional confessional denomination (in her case, the Wisconsin Synod Lutherans, at least until learning of the WELS position on Roman Catholicism).

I think Gov. Palin knows Iowa is going to be difficult for anyone from a background like hers, I think she is trying to make sure she's the consensus Christian conservative candidate in that state, and I think she realizes that she has to do very well in Iowa among Christian conservatives to have a realistic shot at the Republican nomination.

What's unclear to me is whether how much of what is going on to appeal to Iowa's unusual Christian conservative demographic is being deliberately planned by Gov. Palin, how much of it is being done by her supporters who know Iowa much better than she does (that's no criticism, it's just the reality of how politics works, and if anything it's a compliment to her for having competent people decide to back her), or perhaps how much of it is pure coincidence that worked out very well for her.

The South Korean situation, by contrast, is one which Gov. Palin likely knows very well from her own charismatic background as well as being a staple of conservative political discourse about the end results of communism and capitalism. If that wasn't planned, I'll be surprised. But who knows? Gov. Palin’s campaign simply isn't following the standard rules of American politics and I am not convinced any of the pundits on the outside really understand what she is doing.

I, for one, definitely don't want to be on the list of the media she periodically attacks for “making things up.” My guesses are guesses, and while I think there's a good chance they're right, I make no claim that they're anything but guesses as to her plans.

Whatever Gov. Palin decides about running, I hope she decides on it soon.

301 posted on 10/01/2011 8:34:14 PM PDT by darrellmaurina
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To: darrellmaurina
Very powerful analysis, Darrell.

I think that God "began a good work" in Governor Palin, and He will "carry it on to completion." :o)

302 posted on 10/01/2011 10:51:33 PM PDT by RonDog
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To: RonDog
Thanks, RonDog... I'm not excited by any of the current Republican candidates, and while Gov. Palin carries significant baggage as well, it's obvious that her entering the race would be a game-changer.

I am not currently a Gov. Palin supporter, but I could see myself becoming one. Personally I wish Gov. Huckabee were running, but he's not, and many of the same conservative Christian values and experience as a governor that are why I supported Gov. Huckabee apply also to Gov. Palin.

The focus needs to be on defeating President Obama, first and foremost. It's our race to lose at this point. There are things we as Republicans could do to lose the race, or to make a victory hollow by electing a RINO.

Why is that prospect of a hollow victory so dangerous? It's because our second priority must be building a national consensus (which includes victory margins so large that it ensures widespread Congressional support) to make huge cuts in our spending without gutting the Department of Defense.

One huge benefit of Gov. Palin is she has a long history of being a “bomb thrower” who refuses to “go along to get along.” Our national deficit problem is now so serious that extreme actions are going to be needed to fix the problem, and if the person we elect as president doesn't have enough political capital to place at risk by antagonizing huge numbers of Democrats, liberals, and their political backers, our newly elected Republican candidates are going to get thrown out on their rear ends when the economy continues to collapse.

The worst-case scenario would be gutting our military as part of a compromise deal. It's true that the Department of Defense is a huge part of the budget, but in reading some of President Nixon's campaign material from the 1972 election, he pointed out that for the first time ever, non-defense spending had become greater than military spending in his first term. That means it's been less than four decades since our country's budget priority was **STILL** national defense. The Constitution specifies very few things that the federal government should be doing, but defending the country is one of them, and we are at risk in the current budget chaos of forgetting why we have a government.

Obviously there is waste and inefficiency in the Department of Defense. I live and work outside Fort Leonard Wood and I see examples all the time. However, the fact remains that we wouldn't have most of our American freedoms without a strong military, and Clinton-style cuts in the Department of Defense are a recipe for disaster.

303 posted on 10/03/2011 5:55:13 AM PDT by darrellmaurina
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To: RonDog

The day Palin announces her candidacy is the day I’ll believe she’s running.


304 posted on 10/03/2011 6:00:43 AM PDT by Fresh Wind ('People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook.' Richard M. Nixon)
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To: buffaloguy

Guess Willie Brown ain’t so smart after all.


305 posted on 10/06/2011 9:44:06 AM PDT by tuckrdout ( A fool vents all his feelings, but a wise man holds them back. Prov.29:11)
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To: tuckrdout

Let’s wait and see what happens.


306 posted on 10/06/2011 10:54:58 AM PDT by buffaloguy
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