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Liz Smith | 09/04/2008 9:45 am

Liz Smith: Governor Palin and Her Merry Men!

“There is something about a national convention that makes it as fascinating as a revival or a hanging. It is vulgar, it is ugly, it is stupid, it is tedious, it is hard upon both the higher cerebral centers and the gluteus maximus, and yet it is somehow charming.”

This was said by the critic H. L. Mencken who died several decades ago. But he was right then and right now.

I enjoyed the hell out of the Democrats’ get-together and once it got started, I liked a lot about the Republican Convention on Wednesday night, even though I could take or leave Mitt Romney who seemed to just be auditioning once again for himself to be president. (I don’t think we can get rid of this guy.)

You might be surprised, but I was absolutely blown away by the speeches of both Mike Huckabee and Rudy Giuliani – yes, and when the governor of Alaska finally presented herself to the American people, I couldn’t rip my eyes off of her either. (She is easily one of the most fascinating public characters in all of American politics, past and present.)

Huckabee scored as his always-irresistible self with good humor and a manner that makes you like him no matter what he is saying. His ending anecdote about the school teacher who refused to give her new students desks, making them sit on the floor and guess what they had to do to “earn” them, was just priceless. (The desks were then brought in by veterans still in uniform and the children were told that the desks had been “earned” for them by the actions and valor of these men.) It was heartwarming and super patriotic.

And though I never cared much for Guiliani in his mayor of New York days, socially he is a knockout – brilliant at public speaking without a note, great on his feet, charming, funny, witty, intelligent. He is a great dinner companion, although I could have done without his inevitable evocation of 9/11. Most of his speech extolling John McCain’s considerable virtues and citing Barack Obamas’s weaknesses seemed very effective to me.

I found Gov. Palin a little unnerving in her self-possession, her poise, her certainty and her indelible toughness. This shows through her attractive demeanor and rightly so. It is obviously the way she is – hot, young, dynamic wife and mother, a self-satisfied probably deserving governor who has accomplished a lot, huge attractive family (they are off-limits for the press to criticize but nevertheless the GOP is using them for PR like crazy), a newly adopted anti-Washington, blame-the-media stance. She almost makes the fact that she is a woman and possibly going to be a “first” a non-issue. In her case, being female hardly matters.

Barring some future-revealed “negative,” she certainly seems to be the galvanizer John McCain needed. Perhaps she will help redefine the Republican Party. She certainly helped the GOP bring itself together Wednesday night in rare form. I always believed that eventually even the deep-dyed right would rally behind McCain. I am not surprised that now the radical conservatives and the wild maverick contingents have all come together. They have no choice.

Nevertheless, having enjoyed the GOP in action using the democratic process and admiring John McCain in spite of everything, I have to personally say I could never vote for people who would:

1. Make the Supreme Court go ultra-right and conservative for two decades.
2. Have no plan for universal health care.
3. Have no stated realistic ideas that I can discern for economic recovery beyond tax breaks for the rich.
4. Want to deny women the right to choose.
5. Seem to be actually advocating, encouraging and applauding teen pregnancy.
6. Don’t believe in science and evolution.
7. Insist on bringing God into our misadventure in Iraq. And want to insist on that chimera, “victory.” 
8. Deny global warming.
9. Have a significantly flawed and reluctant energy program.    

And, yes, I can bear to be taxed for the good of the nation. Yes, I can. And while I agree with the Republicans that HOPE isn’t a program, I’m still going to have to vote for hope, given the list above. So, sue me. 

P.S. Once and for all, couldn’t we retire “God bless you and God bless America”? There must be some other benediction, or original way to sign off.  

Click here to read my column in the New York Post.

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

Frannie Em
Joan, I really appreciate you and I love reading your posts, but I don’t think I need a housemother. I had a wonderful mother who taught me as much as she could about managing life, and at 56 I haven’t done so bad. This site is full of alternative opinions, and thank God it is. That is freedom. Everyone expresses themselves as they want to, and Liz is one of the best of them. It is a choice to be here, and I thought it was okay to have alternative opinions here, just like Liz said.
By Frannie Em on 09/04/2008 1:41 pm
Lady Gator
Frannie ……….”I don’t think I need a housemother”. Agreed and Amen
By Lady Gator on 09/04/2008 2:57 pm
joan larsen
Frannie Em — I certainly did not mean to offend you — and as you saw in my thread and in my writings here, that I am a proponent of different opinions. I have said that above. But - after saying that — I have come to think as the long-time regulars as friends. In my own life, when opinons return to you, Frannie Em or Gator, go over the line of opinion and go to a hurtful personal attack of you, Frannie Em, I do as I do with my own friends. I see nothing wrong — and everything right - in standing up for them when they have been hurt personally. When I said “house mother” it was a term of the moment as I have found that with the strong feelings of the election season, differences of opinion don’t see to be enough for some people (and I am not talking of the regulars). I - and I imagine you - are not normally around people who are into character assassinations or the distant like. A couple we know have fallen apart, unused to being pulled apart for who they are instead of what they have written. You saw an example above today. So - to reiterate - if you were badly hurt, you could count on me for being there for you, making you feel better. Most of us need someone at their side if they are bleeding - even a scratch can be painful. If by doing so, by being there is not being a friend, I have to plead guilty. For that is what MY mother taught me. Sorry, Franny Em.
By joan larsen on 09/04/2008 4:27 pm
Frannie Em
Hey Joan, You don’t have anything to apologize to me for anything. I wasn’t hurt at all. Just stating how I feel. What I have learned after 5-6 mos on this site, is that the regulars are pretty stand up people, sometimes we get mad and react, but then iron it out. Then there are others that are so angry, and feel powerless and lose sight of the purpose of this site; a place for women to come together and converse. Everyone defines for themselves what that means. I hope I didn’t offend you. You are a wonderful lady and a great addition to this site. You write beautiful passages to read, and I have learned much from you, as I have everyone. You are right, I am not normally around people who are into character assassinations (I love that word, it has two asses in it), but I figure I can take it or leave it. What I have learned, is the ones that really want to assassinate someone’s character are saying more about themselves, than they are about others. They don’t interest me that much, and I probably don’t interest them, and that is okay too. No big deal. Thank you, that was kind of you to take the time and express yourself.
By Frannie Em on 09/04/2008 7:19 pm
Frannie Em
Sorry Joan I flubbed the first line. I have to get up and down at times when I post to take care of business. Anyway, “You don’t have to apologize to me for anything.”
By Frannie Em on 09/04/2008 7:22 pm
G T
Too bad liberals, you threw your best candidate under the bus. And gave us a charming young fellow with little experience, not a sterling record of voting on issues that came up for him to decide on…No “present ” button on the desk in the Oval Office..and a guy who came out of the Chicago Daly political machine and a lawyer to boot.. Not a high recommendation for the kind of decisions that will have to be made every single day as President. For all his charm, he waffles around dithering on the brink way too much. McCain will keep Sarah Palin. as his Vice Presidentt candidate. She is just what our country needs…a woman who is smart, has integrity, faces problems head on and will stand up and be counted. You had one of those but didn’t run her for office. Im thinking Sarah and John will not do much dithering..they are focused and on track and know what needs to be done, and how to get it accomplished.
By G T on 09/04/2008 10:58 am
Sarah is White Trash
Integrity? She’s a liar and a fraud who missed a Mayoral recall election by 40 votes, is under investigation, lied about the bridge to nowhere, lied that she’d traveled in Ireland when her plane had just refuled there. Her speech last night written by Rove was also fact-checked by the Assoc Press—a lot of lies. She’s got the White Trash vote, period.
By Sarah is White Trash on 09/04/2008 11:06 am
Frannie Em
Sarah winery, Your post with the Bridge to nowhere theme was great, but now you just go back to that same old playbook. Trash trash trash a person. C’mon, you are a better writer than this.
By Frannie Em on 09/04/2008 1:44 pm
Barbara Taylor
Whatever your name is, stop using ‘White Trash’. Your insulting others in this country. Just because they don’t live in your state or don’t have your views is no reason to call them names.
By Barbara Taylor on 09/04/2008 3:20 pm
Frannie Em
Barbara Someone thought it was Winery Lifestyle with a different AKA
By Frannie Em on 09/04/2008 3:59 pm
Lady Gator
G T ——Bravo for a great post. McCain will definitely keep Sarah Palin. I have to admit that I was wondering how she would do last evening — we were in the room with several other people — all with different political views - One young man (Ron Paul supporter) said “Wow, I wish Ron Paul had someone like that on his ticket”. By the way, all of the people in the room gave her a thumbs up! I think Sarah Palin hit it out of the park. Also, did you know that the teleprompter went on the fritz — and she was totally unfazed —I truly like her spunk. I’ll put it this way — there was another thread that stated “Somewhere, Hillary is smiling”. I just bet she was!
By Lady Gator on 09/04/2008 3:08 pm
Star Lawrence
Then I guess I better haul out my feather-covered mules and hot pants…Want to fit the cruel and patronizing stereotypes, you know. This site is getting sorta tacky sometimes…
By Star Lawrence on 09/04/2008 11:22 am
Lorraine Bates
As you’ll notice, Star, many, many, many of us “regulars” aren’t taking the time to reply to whoever Ms. white trash is. There’s debate, and then there is school yard name calling, and I prefer debate.
By Lorraine Bates on 09/04/2008 12:46 pm
Star Lawrence
No mules for me? I couldn’t walk in them anyhow. Yes, I notice I am sort of out here alone—it’s so icky, tho… And on community organizers, of course, they do a lot of good. This is politics. There are more straw men out here than in a Halloween display.
By Star Lawrence on 09/04/2008 1:22 pm
Lorraine Bates
Hey - as far as the mules go, knock yourself out! I’m sure you can pull them off (I never could - big feet!).
By Lorraine Bates on 09/04/2008 1:24 pm