Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Joan Ganz Cooney | 08/29/2008 2:19 pm

Joan Ganz Cooney: The Choice of Palin Is Simply Irresponsible Updated 8/30, 2:06 PM

Joan Ganz Cooney

Update:

Just to set the record straight, I’d like answer those who favorably compare Sarah Palin’s experience to Barack Obama’s. 

First, by contrast to Ms. Palin, he, in his childhood and adolesence grew up in the most racially diverse state in the union, Hawaii, and in one of the poorest foreign countries on the planet, Indonesia, both of which experieces gave him a world view very few American children are priviledged to gain.  After graduating from Columbia, he went to Harvard Law School and was elected President of the Law Review, an honor that goes only to those at the very top. Subsenquently he moved to Chicago, one of the nation’s largest cities, as a community organizer and as a teacher of constitutional law at the University of Chicago. For years, he was exposed to the multitude of  problems faced by urban America.  After serving in the State Senate for 7 years, he was elected to the  U.S. Senate  4 year ago  where he has served on the Foreign Relations  committee.

Yes he has been running for the office of president for the past 18 months but his performance as the executive in charge of a huge, hard-fought, successful national campaign during which he beat one of the most formidable families in politics today is no small thing and speaks very well of his ability to manage large, complex national efforts. 

As one blogger asked, can anyone imagine Sarah Palin at this time running a prolonged  Republican primary campaign and banishing say, the Bush family?  I have no doubt she is a competent governor of Alaska but that is simply too small a playing field to be a springboard to the vice presidency and a heartbeat away from the Oval Office.

*********

The choice of Palin is simply irresponsible. McCain has a 50 percent chance of being president and he puts a heartbeat away from the presidency a 44-year-old who has been governor of the least populated state in the union for less than two years. And that’s the extent of her experience. What on earth does she know about anything to do with governing a huge country or about foreign policy? Her debate with Biden should be very interesting.

To think, as I’m sure they do, that former Hillary supporters can be wooed to their ticket by adding a pro-life, lifetime NRA member surely ranks as one of the dumbest political moves in many years. I will be very surprised if Obama doesn’t get a significant bump in the polls just from this news.

But then when it comes to politics, nobody knows anything.

Read more about: mccain, New, Politics, Sarah Palin

170 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Elizabeth Bennett
I think there are two different babies. Sarah Palin’s seventeen year old daughter is five months pregnant. I think that disqualifies her from being the mother of the baby born just five months ago. But it does present some interesting additional questions about our mom of the year, Governor Palin.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 12:25 pm
cookie Barra
Another rumour bites the dust. Her daughter is 5 month preggers, keeping the child and marrying the father. http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN2944356420080901?feedType=RS
By cookie Barra on 09/01/2008 1:41 pm
Sherry S
With McCain’s age and past health problems—his vice presidential choice is very important as the person who might end up running the country! I do NOT want an inexperienced (only 2 yrs as governor) person (male or female)doing that. McCain’s irresponsible choice has made me and many other females change our decision to vote for him.
By Sherry S on 09/01/2008 12:21 am
cookie Barra
Sherry, You are a smart female and hopefully others will also see that this ticket has much to be concerned about. My only hope is that we as females take the high road and only discuss the experience issues and not stoop to lowbrow remarks about Sarah’s vocie, attire and hairdo. Those sexist remarks only objectify her and they make me recall the vile things said about Hillary, Nancy and others.
By cookie Barra on 09/01/2008 2:13 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
No, let’s talk about McCain’s hairdo instead. I thought the combover was so last century. Am I wrong? Can we at least get this guy to a decent hair stylist?
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 6:07 pm
Deni G
It’s easy to stray from important issues and get lost in shock jock radio gossip. To those who are interested. This is Obama’s response to all the stories regarding Palin’s children: “I have said before and I will repeat again: People’s families are off limits,” Obama said. “And people’s children are especially off-limits. This shouldn’t be part of politics. It has no relevance to Gov. Palin’s performance as a governor and/or her potential performance as a vice president. So I would strongly urge people to back off these kinds of stories. You know my mother had me when she was 18 and how a family deals with issues and teenage children, that shouldn’t be a topic of our politics.” He also vows to fire any campaign staffer that stokes this story

By Deni G on 09/01/2008 4:18 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
All right then, Deni. I will stop complaining about the poor judgment that led John McCain to comb his hair in that peculiar dated manner. As for Sarah Palin’s daughter, I just bet people are lining up to throw showers for her. I am not worried about her. Barack was cool to say that. Still, if I were Sarah Palin’s daughter, I would prefer to have my mother helping me plan the wedding and decorate the nursery than run for Veep. But not my family.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 6:22 pm
cookie Barra
ELIZABETH He can’t raise his arms over his head and Cindy obvioulsly is not helping. A stylist maybe? Whose team has the worst hair? I say the Republcans. Who in thier right mind would ever want to run for any public office. Unless they have the armadillo gene.
By cookie Barra on 09/01/2008 6:55 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
I have known about his broken shoulders for a long time, but presidential candidates typically travel with hair people, so I don’t see why he has any excuse. Maybe it is a mistake to get a makeover in the middle of a hurricane; it looks bad. But maybe later on. I am still worried that the levies may yet go in New Orleans. Even more worried that the police state that Minneapolis is turning into is a sign of things to come. So his hair is pretty far down on the list. It is hard to run for public office. At some point reporters turned into stalkers and paparazzi, when the National Enquirer mindset merged into the MSM. I do suspect that the most able people are usually people who choose not to run.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 7:03 pm
Deni G
Oh well darn, I was going to make several amusing remarks about the hair…but then you went and wrote this and there is much to be concerned about…still … “Maybe it is a mistake to get a makeover in the middle of a hurricane” that has to be one of the true gems of the day. perhaps he was gettin’ all spiffied up for his new “partner” and “soul mate” cause she “completes him” doncha know? What is this a presidential campaign or a reality dating show? talk about airy fairy , touchy feely dialogue!
By Deni G on 09/01/2008 8:33 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
It does have an icky How to Marry a Millionaire kind of feel to it, doesn’t it? Maybe the makeover can happen now that appears that Louisiana is out of immediate danger. Already she seems to have ditched the beehive for her campaign stops over the weekend. Actually I think the gem of the day was Cindy McCain saying “Now is the time to take off our Republican hats and put on our American hats.” Like these are mutually exclusive concepts! [I know she meant well; it just sounded funny.] Meanwhile, Amy Goodman is in jail in St. Paul for having the temerity to suggest to officers arresting her producers that these were journalists an not rioters or lawbreakers of any kind. http://www.democracynow.org/ The police state around the RNC perseveres even as the RNC is on hiatus.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 10:17 pm
Deni G
Democracy Now! Host and Producers Arrested at Republican Convention “I was down on the convention floor interviewing delegates when I heard that two of our producers had been arrested,” said Goodman. “I ran down to Jackson and 7th Street, where the police had moved in.” Goodman said that when she ran up to find out what was going on, she was also arrested. “They seriously manhandled me and handcuffed my hands behind my back. The top ID [at the convention] is to get on the floor and the Secret Service ripped that off me. I had my Democracy Now! ID too. I was clearly a reporter.” Goodman, who was released after being charged with a misdemeanor, said that Salazar had been hurt in the face, while Kouddous had been thrown up against a wall and hurt his elbow.

By Deni G on 09/01/2008 10:56 pm
Deni G
St. Paul Police Conduct Mass Preemptive Raids Ahead of Republican Convention AMY GOODMAN: As we interviewed Jon Stewart at the Minneapolis airport next to baggage claim, we got a text message that Democracy Now! videographer, filmmaker Elizabeth Press, who had arrived before us… she was in a house with I-Witness Video, and somehow the group was surrounded by police. That was the last details we had… And we raced off. … The raids and detentions have targeted activists planning to protest the Republican National Convention, as well as journalists and videographers documenting police actions at protests… MICHELLE GROSS: I was sitting there …with other legal people… And I was literally just sitting there drinking some water and relaxing, when, you know, these Ramsey County Sheriff’s Department people came blazing in, screaming “Get on the floor! Get on the floor!” and waving guns at everybody in their faces. And they basically—at the time, I quickly thought and opened up my video camera and hit my record button and started recording the scene. Then, because they were, you know, waving guns in my face, of course, I had to hit the floor, but I kept my camera recording the whole time. AMY GOODMAN: Gross was held for forty-five minutes, then released. But when she returned home, she found her home and car had been broken into and all her documents thoroughly searched. The National Lawyers Guild and Communities United Against Police Brutality filed an emergency motion Sunday asking Judge Mark Wernick to grant “injunctive relief to prevent police from seizing video equipment and cellular phones used to document their conduct.”

By Deni G on 09/01/2008 11:02 pm
Dona Howlett
I totally agree……………children should be off-limits. But it does concern me that the role of Mother is a hard one. While she’s dealing with an infant with downs-syndrome and a pregnant teenage daughter plus 4 other children. Something has to suffer……The roll of VP is a big one………….time consuming. Where is she going to have the time to do both justice. It’ not a 9 to 5 job………. She’s making this choice……….If they should win. Then I would expect her to give her best in her job as VP……I don’t think she could possibly do this under the circumstances of her life at the present time. Then she would be cheating the American Public.
By Dona Howlett on 09/01/2008 5:02 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
Did anyone notice that the Minneapolis police arrested dozens of people for “conspiracy to plan protests?” They were not actually doing anything illegal and so were cited and released. I think this is unconstitutional. See http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/30/us/politics/30arrests.html?scp=5&sq=po… and http://www.startribune.com/politics/27695244.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEy… I know the first day of the convention has been rained out by Gustav. What is amusing is that the very demonstrators who were arrested are now getting a platform on C-SPAN with the hurricane collapsing the RNC. But this is outrageous. These people were fulfilling their patriotic duty in showing up to protest peaceably. Police harassment and false arrests are not very American. In fact just a few weeks ago we were complaining that the Chinese government was doing the same thing.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 09/01/2008 6:44 pm