Sunday, September 07, 2008

Moose Droppings

Frank Rich distills the potent argument against Palin pretty well:

We still don’t know a lot about Palin except that she’s better at delivering a speech than McCain and that she defends her own pregnant daughter’s right to privacy even as she would have the government intrude to police the reproductive choices of all other women. Most of the rest of the biography supplied by her and the McCain camp is fiction.

She didn’t say “no thanks” to the “Bridge to Nowhere” until after Congress had already abandoned it but given Alaska a blank check for $223 million in taxpayers’ money anyway. Far from rejecting federal pork, she hired lobbyists to secure her town a disproportionate share of earmarks ($1,000 per resident in 2002, 20 times the per capita average in other states). Though McCain claimed “she has had national security as one of her primary responsibilities,” she has never issued a single command as head of the Alaska National Guard. As for her “executive experience” as mayor, she told her hometown paper in Wasilla, Alaska, in 1996, the year of her election: “It’s not rocket science. It’s $6 million and 53 employees.” Her much-advertised crusade against officials abusing their office is now compromised by a bipartisan ethics investigation into charges that she did the same.

How long before we learn she never shot a moose?


Alaska, despite the claims of many of its inhabitants to be a bastion of rugged individualism, seems to be more of a classic welfare state, enabled by dysfunctionally inbred state politics and a population happy to hold out its collective hand for its annual windfall check. Usually people are not nearly as mavericky as they think they are, and Alaskans in general, and Palin and McCain in particular, prove that rule. They're mavericks like I'm a power forward for the Lakers.

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