Why I like Sarah Palin ...

ViRedd

New Member
A Decent Pick

Libertarians could do worse than Sarah Palin

Radley Balko | September 10, 2008

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is certainly one of the more interesting and controversial characters to emerge in the national political scene of late.

Sen. John McCain's (R-Ariz.) selection of her to be his running mate was widely reported to be last-minute, a compromise choice when advisers and party insiders expressed concern over his preferred pick, independent Sen. Joseph Lieberman. The pick smacked of desperation, and it seems clear now that McCain's camp didn't have time to vet Palin in the way it might have liked.

But it may ultimately go down as a serendipitous oversight—and provide guidance to future candidates to eschew the overly risk-averse vetting process and be willing to take chances—to look outside the Beltway establishment for political talent. Palin wowed the GOP convention last week, may have united the party, and won begrudging praise from the very punditocracy and media elites she skewered in her speech.

If Palin helps McCain get elected, he'll of course have no regrets about having selected her. But it's worth wondering whether if McCain's campaign had vetted Palin more thoroughly, she'd have made the cut. I suspect not.

It's now been widely reported that McCain's biggest selling point on Palin—that she's been a trailblazer on pork-barrel spending, one of McCain's pet issues—was off-base. Palin did eventually oppose the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere," but only as of late last year, only after initially supporting it, and only after the two Alaska politicians most associated with the bridge—Republican Sen. Ted Stevens and Republican Rep. Don Young—were under federal investigation. Palin then still took the money for the bridge, she just diverted it to other projects. This was hardly political courage.

Over the course of her brief career, Palin has also had no qualms about working with Young and Stevens to procure federal dollars for local projects—at least until she was savvy enough to realize that public sentiment had turned sour on the process. Under Palin's stewardship, Alaska still leads the nation in per capita spending on federal pork projects, and under her tenure as mayor, the town of Wasilla raked in $26 million in federal earmarks.

Now, you could argue that a governor or mayor who's able to deftly game the earmark system to the advantage of her constituents is only doing what's expected of her. The problem, of course, is that McCain introduced Palin as a maverick reformer of the earmark process—someone who risked her career to fight waste and abuse and to take on Alaska's GOP establishment. That simply isn't true.

But perhaps Palin has learned from the experience. She is at least on the right side of the issue now. And as a libertarian, there's plenty I like about Palin. I don't agree with many of her culturally conservative positions, but she has for the most part declined to enshrine those views in public policy. Her lack of experience doesn't bother me much at all. Washington's in desperate need of fresh blood and fresh ideas, not the promotion of another five-term senator who's found a permanent home in the Beltway morass.

But what I like about Palin should bother McCain. Palin actually has staked out unorthodox positions on a number of interesting issues, and they're issues that McCain and the Republican base that has embraced her would probably find troubling. Palin's taken a lot of heat, for example, for her (relatively loose) ties with the Alaska Independence Party, an organization that favors a vote on whether the state should secede from the union.

Palin has also been friendly with the state's Libertarian Party. Palin's willingness to engage pro-liberty, deeply anti-federal political organizations—even fringe ones—is refreshing. But it's wholly at odds with John McCain's "country first" nationalist fervor.

Palin was also one of just three governors in the country to issue a proclamation in support of "Jurors' Rights" day, an event sponsored by the Fully Informed Jury Association, which encourages the doctrine of jury nullification. Nullification is an idea abhorred by tough-on-crime conservatives.

Palin also comes from a state whose constitution has one of the strongest privacy provisions in the country. Alaska's traditional reverence for privacy and personal autonomy is reflected in a number of issues that would likely be at odds with the national Republican Party—or at least the Bush administration—including a rejection of the Real ID Act, and the de facto decriminalization of marijuana.

Palin supported both the Iraq War and the surge, but in the past she has said she also supports a defined "exit strategy," an approach explicitly rejected by McCain, who has said we may well be in Iraq for decades.

Palin's persona thus far seems to be more in the tradition of Alaska's frontier, individualistic conservatism than John McCain's Weekly Standard-style national greatness conservatism. It's a philosophy that's skeptical of government, instead of what Repubilcans stand for now, which is to embrace government, so long as Republicans are running it.

Of course, John McCain is still at the top of the ticket. If he's elected, it will be his policies and philosophy that determine public policy, not Palin's. And there's the strong possibility that Palin's views will morph during a McCain administration to align more with his—indeed, on foreign policy that seems to have already happened.

But of all the aspiring politicians McCain could have boosted into the national spotlight of a presidential campaign, he could have done a lot worse than Palin. If she manages to hold on to her more individualist, limited-government instincts, she'd be a welcome force in a party that has generally abandoned its "leave-us-alone" constituency—thanks in no small part to the man at the top of the ticket. She's certainly a world away from Joe Lieberman, McCain's reported favored pick.

In short, John McCain may have actually made a good pick this month—in spite of himself.

Radley Balko is a senior editor of reason. A version of this article originally appeared at FoxNews.com.
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
I think the left is so scared of her because, it would make the top woman in america a republican pro choice woman which threatens the very core constituancy of the democraic party



they fear her more than a John McCain presidency.
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
I think you meant pro life, big P.And I'm not afraid of her.I just see her for what she is.
I think the left is so scared of her because, it would make the top woman in america a republican pro choice woman which threatens the very core constituancy of the democraic party



they fear her more than a John McCain presidency.
That's not even an answer.
One heartbeat away ... :bigjoint:

Vi
 

ViRedd

New Member
I think you meant pro life, big P.And I'm not afraid of her.I just see her for what she is.

That's not even an answer.
Oh yes it is, Stoney. Read the article, especially the last part. Palin is a libertarian thinker ... a lot like Ron Paul. If you've read my earlier posts, before McCain picked Palin as his running mate, then you know that I wasn't supporting McCain. Like I said ... one heartbeat away. :bigjoint:

Vi
 

growingmom

Well-Known Member
she would take our choice's away Vi....women should have a choice...even in rape and insest incidence she would take our choice away.......
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
Sure...right wing evangelical nut job...we have one of those in office already.No reason for another one to be available to fill that role.
Oh yes it is, Stoney. Read the article, especially the last part. Palin is a libertarian thinker ... a lot like Ron Paul. If you've read my earlier posts, before McCain picked Palin as his running mate, then you know that I wasn't supporting McCain. Like I said ... one heartbeat away. :bigjoint:

Vi
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
She'd certainly try.I think it's time for a revolution.I'm tired of these politicians trying to impose their beliefs onto me.
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
she couldnt


even if she became pres she would have to get the sepream court justices approved by the congress or whatever


you guys are trying to scare women:bigjoint:

or are women who have been wrongly scared
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
I'm not scared, nor trying to scare women...the fact is, the republicans have taken a big steaming shit all over the constitution, and our personal freedoms.Why would Mccain/Palin be any different?Most of the supreme court justices are conservatives.
she couldnt


even if she became pres she would have to get the sepream court justices approved by the congress or whatever


you guys are trying to scare women:bigjoint:

or are women who have been wrongly scared
 

growingmom

Well-Known Member
Here here stoney..I'm with you girl... she would soo try to impose her beliefs on American women..while I believe abortion is not a form of birth control..I believe in a womens right to choose if she has a child or not...Sarah is very pretty (Vi)..but I gotta tell ya..any smart women in america i not gonna be swayed by the fact the republicans, prayed ... ( they had it planned ALL ALONG) that Barak, did not take Hillary..I will admit..he fucked up !! Hillary was his ticket..and he didn't take it..WTF was he thinking...........
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
Exactly.And their choice of Palin is an insult to the intelligence of women.
Here here stoney..I'm with you girl... she would soo try to impose her beliefs on American women..while I believe abortion is not a form of birth control..I believe in a womens right to choose if she has a child or not...Sarah is very pretty (Vi)..but I gotta tell ya..any smart women in america i not gonna be swayed by the fact the republicans, prayed ... ( they had it planned ALL ALONG) that Barak, did not take Hillary..I will admit..he fucked up !! Hillary was his ticket..and he didn't take it..WTF was he thinking...........
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
whatever it is or was the fact remains,



Sarah Palin, normal PTA mom who became a governer is now 51 days from winning the vice presidency




but besides if you differ on views, you guys think shes cool?

like i dont want obama to be pres but I do like him as a person no doubt, he cool
 

growingmom

Well-Known Member
AS IF ...we are not aware that the republican's were hopeing he would not take her..... sooo Stoney I'm curious..(and Vi..can say were hijacking)..but where do us women go now..??? I mean seriously..the republicans were hopeing Barack didn't take Hillary..and he didn't..so I'm curious what's your view girl??? where do the ladies go now ??? just asking?? I know the game sooo I'm still undecided..but I'm wondering what's your opinion???
 

Stoney McFried

Well-Known Member
I don't know her as a person, I couldn't say, but since a person's beliefs are a lot of who they are, we probably wouldn't mesh.Obama seems sincere, but I don't know him personally either.
whatever it is or was the fact remains,



Sarah Palin, normal PTA mom who became a governer is now 51 days from winning the vice presidency




but besides if you differ on views, you guys think shes cool?

like i dont want obama to be pres but I do like him as a person no doubt, he cool
 
Top