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Liz Smith | 10/10/2008 8:45 am

Liz Smith: John McCain, How Old Is 'Too Old'? … Conservative Queens: Sarah Palin vs. Ann Coulter

© Shutterstock
“McCain was better than I expected. He was quick and focused. His humor worked. How many 72-year-olds speak that fluently?”

That’s conservative pundit Tucker Carlson, writing on Tina Brown’s new website, The Daily Beast. 

Yikes! And this guy is on McCain’s side, or at least he’s not for Obama. I don’t know what world Mr. Carlson inhabits where it’s a big surprise to find a 72-year-old who “speaks fluently.” This is the most stupid and insulting remark I’ve heard, in a political season packed with them.

Being 72 is not “old” in our current era. It just isn’t. John McCain’s age is an issue because of his health history and the fact that he is seeking the No. 1 stressful job on earth, one that ages even the most youthful and vibrant of men. (Only a year into the presidency, the Commander in Chief inevitably looks ragged, as if the aging process has ominously accelerated.)  

So, while I am certainly not in McCain’s corner, his health — should he become president — is a worry. His actual age, the number, is not what disturbs us. I remember being 72 very well!

——————————

P.S.  Tucker Carlson was once part of the MSNBC all-boy, frat-house anti-Hillary Clinton pack. He and Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews, Joe Scarborough and the late Tim Russert. They all had a merry time excoriating Sen. Clinton and wondering night after night during her campaign, “When will she get out?” Hillary fought on and lost narrowly to Barack Obama. She did not immediately concede the race; spoke vigorously to her supporters, complimented Barack on the strength of his campaign and hinted that she wasn’t through yet.

When the live studio pick-up resumed at MSNBC you never saw such a group of dumbfounded men. I’ve always suspected that Hillary, whatever else might have been on her mind, knew that her “fans” at MSNBC would be frenzied and sleepless with worry that night. She was more than entitled to that little revenge.

——————————

Thinking of Sen. Clinton leads invariably to thoughts of Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican Party’s new messiah. (It was “cultish” when Democratic admirers worshipped Barack Obama, but now that the conservative right has a glitzy, crowd-grabbing celebrity on its hands; please, go ahead, burn incense and chant!)

I am listening, watching and trying to find the secret of  Gov. Palin’s appeal. She is attractive and hardworking and energetic; obviously a multitasker deluxe. But the charisma and genuine charms her fans insist she possess escapes me. I think one reason Tina Fey’s impression of Gov. Palin has been so remarkably successful is that it doesn’t stray far from the reality. Palin looks like a B-actress on movie junket, with her winks, catchphrases and endless smiling. Her warmth? It’s an icy blast. Perhaps her more natural qualities are hidden, or perhaps they were natural before everybody told her how great she was and to keep it up, do it more, play to the balcony — in China!

I cannot help comparing her to — no, not Hillary Clinton — but to conservative provocateur Ann Coulter. (Let’s stay on the same ideological plane.) For all her wacky, over-the-top statements, Coulter is a really intelligent woman who believes what she says. But she also gets the humor in her own outsize persona (black cocktail dresses for morning interviews, spike heels and femme-fatale eye makeup).   Ann Coulter doesn’t make me feel I should look for the wind-up key in her back, or the implanted computer chip. And sometimes, yes, sometimes underneath her crazy, button-pushing rhetoric, Coulter makes a point. I have yet to see Palin make a point convincingly. And Coulter knows her stuff; she reads. You’d better be on your toes if you decide to go at it with Ann. I’ve never seen her caught in a “gotcha” moment. Though her opponents are often left with mouths agape.

Look, when exactly do you think Sarah Palin first heard the name Willam Ayers (the so-called former domestic terrorist who sat on several reputable Chicago boards with Obama, many years after Ayers ended his militant career)? I’d say about two weeks ago. Now Palin can’t stop dropping his name at anti-Obama rallies that are disturbing in their incendiary tone — like lynch mobs. Shouts of “Kill him!” "Treason!” and “Traitor” have been audience reactions to the new Palin/McCain strategy. John McCain showed a flicker of distress after one of these remarks. Palin kept grinning.

Who is more of a mystery? Obama, who has been on the scene big-time for two years — mercilessly vetted — or Sarah Palin, who was propelled to national prominence only six weeks ago? Her vetting is stymied because any questions are considered “attacks” on her character. Ann Coulter, if she was in the same position, would welcome probing questions — “Ask me, you liberal wussy, see if you can trip me up!” I don’t think Coulter would hide behind the shield of her party, plead her femininity or use her family. Coulter thinks very little of the “elite right-wing media” but she’s not afraid of it. She would certainly not sit still while John McCain, or any man, settled in next to her at an interview in an effort to “‘splain” her remarks, as if she were Lucy Ricardo with McCain playing Ricky.

In any case, Ann Coulter sometimes makes me laugh. Sarah Palin does not.

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

Rush L
Good job. Another shinny object for the masses. Yes, keep the conversation off The economy. Whew!
By Rush L on 10/13/2008 4:28 pm
Susan B
Liz, I agree with your comments on point. Even your generous words about Ann Coulter who, her political ideology aside, strikes me as a shrew in stilettos. But I have to say, I haven’t heard that much sardonic tone from you in quite a while. You sound as fed up with all this as the rest of us. (Well, most of us.)
By Susan B on 10/10/2008 9:43 am
Meg Madison
Liz, Great post. McCain is not your typical 72 yr. old. I wish him well, but I never want to see him in the oval office. Also, Ann Coulter is so much fun to listen to even if she is my bête noir.
By Meg Madison on 10/10/2008 10:07 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
First off, I watched the wonderful “The Amazing Mrs. Pritchard” and that character does not in any way shape or form resemble our amazing Mrs. Palin if the new series is planning to do a take on her. I so enjoyed your bit re: the difference between Coulter and Palin. If the two could be compared with animals, I’d say Coulter would be a viper snake with brains; Palin would be a weasel who feigns tameness only to take big chunks out of you if you got too close. And what water is Tucker––––never could stomach him––––drinking?
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/10/2008 10:26 am
Buh- Bye
I think of Coulter more as an annoying flea. Jumping from host to host and parasitically feeding off of it.
By Buh- Bye on 10/10/2008 3:35 pm
Barbara Taylor
Most people feel our representatives in government are out of touch with us, crooked and only care about being elected again and again. Our voices are not heard in Washington or our state capitals. The majority of Americans were against the bail out. What did our government representatives do? They followed the advise of Pres. Bush(guess they didn’t learn when they followed him to Iraq) and passed the bailout. Our reps didn’t care we rose up like never before and said NO. They ignored the ‘little people’ added pork to the bail out, because they know what is best for us. And we just sit here and take it. The bail out had to be passed right away; I have not heard what Paulson is doing now. Hurry up to do nothing, great plan. Palin’s appeal, for some in this country, is she is just like them. Palin speaks to them, not at them. She has been where they have been, had the same financial and family struggles. We admire the pioneer women of the past; some how that’s how people view her. People believe now they have a voice representing them in Washington. I enjoy hearing what Ann Coulter says, but she scares me a little. Did anyone see her the other night? With her eyeliner Coulter looked like a raccoon. Boy, Coulter can hold her own with the best of them. I watched “The Amazing Mrs. Pritchard” on PBS, it was wonderful. Sorry to say Liz, when Palin came on the scene I thought of “The Amazing Mrs. Pritchard”. Sally Wainwright stated her motivation for writing The Amazing Mrs. Pritchard was the realisation that: “During the last election I found that I didn’t really want to vote for anybody because they all seemed as bad as each other. I thought it would be great fun to write an epic story with a central character who was prepared to stand up and point this out. Mrs Pritchard is bold enough, or some may say daft enough, to stand for parliament on the assumption that she can do just as badly as any of them but at least she will be honest”.
By Barbara Taylor on 10/10/2008 10:52 am
Marjorie C.
Barbara, Enjoyed reading your post. Of course, I agree. After 8 strait days of mind-boggling losses on Wall Street, methinks the plan ain’t working. And the politicians don’t care — they’ve got theirs. We’ll continue to pay their pensions and health care, while many of us will go without such niceties. Continue to pay them for doing absolutely nothing that matters to anyone other than themselves. Unfortunately, I don’t see the hope of anything changing… the only honest change would be if Mrs. Pritchard were elected. McCain/Palin 2008
By Marjorie C. on 10/10/2008 12:36 pm
Barbara Taylor
We need a Long John Willoughby in Meet John Doe. This country needs fresh and new with no ties to their party. A group of men and women like the Founding Fathers with vision to get the country back on track.
By Barbara Taylor on 10/10/2008 1:10 pm
Buh- Bye
Barbara you do realize that Senator Obama worked the phones thru the night to turn the “nay” votes of the black caucus into “yea” votes in favor of this foolhardy Bailout, don’t you? - This was reported on NPR. No on the Surge. Yes on the Bailout. Who has good judgment now?
By Buh- Bye on 10/10/2008 6:25 pm
Barbara Taylor
My Alias, My comment was ‘fresh and new with no ties to their party.’ This country needs candidates who govern by what is best for the country, not what is best for them to be re-elected or their party. Have you seen the movie ‘Meet John Doe’? “John Doe” philosophy starts a whole political movement.” I know it’s not possible, but a nice dream if there was a party who governed by common sense and are for the people. I was not saying Obama is fresh and new. He is just another politican saying what is necessary to get elected. Just look how Obama has changed what he is for, when he saw it would help get votes. Obama is no John Doe.
By Barbara Taylor on 10/10/2008 8:47 pm
Buh- Bye
I haven’t seen that movie, Barbara. I agree he does and says what he needs to get elected. Not impressed with him at all.
By Buh- Bye on 10/10/2008 9:03 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
…but at least she will be honest”–––something that Palin is not, she just pretends she’s got the answers, she’s just like you (meaning the crowd that’s watching her while salivating) and she spouts nonsense that is being fed to her as though it’s a message from heaven. Mrs. Pritchard was cut from very different cloth which almost got scorched because of her naiveté. And––––she was a fictional character created out of frustration.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/10/2008 11:45 am
Marjorie C.
phyllis: “…but at least she will be honest”–––something that Palin is not… How can you make that statement with a strait face? Obama honest? Biden honest? I don’t think so. This morning’s NYT : “An analysis of campaign finance records by The New York Times this week found nearly 3,000 donations to Mr. Obama, the Democratic nominee, from more than a dozen people with apparently fictitious donor information. The contributions represent a tiny fraction of the record $450 million Mr. Obama has raised. But the questionable donations — some donors were listed simply with gibberish for their names — raise concerns about whether the Obama campaign is adequately vetting its unprecedented flood of donors.” This stuff goes on and on. ACORN has state/county registrars scrambling to pick out the duplicate, inaccurate, downright phony voter registrations. If the sign ups continue to be suspect, we might have no election at all. Think Bush for three more months.
By Marjorie C. on 10/10/2008 12:54 pm
Star Lawrence
Obama was Acorn’s lawyer for awhile. He gave money from his campaign funds (that some of you contributed) to them. They are under indictment for fraud in 12 states or something like that. He not only knew Ayers from the nabes, but his campaign for Illinois office was launched at Ayers house. Sen Obama also served as chair of the Annenberg Challenge and distributed $60 million (something like that) to schools to create activist students (not teach the Rs). The two of them went around to schools together. He knew who the man was and didn’t care. And as for being “only eight years old” when the Day of Rage happened and the govt buildings were bombed by this guy—so what? No one is accusing him of going on the bombing run as a tot. What we are saying is, why didn he think this was just some nice aging rad who was trying to help children?
By Star Lawrence on 10/10/2008 2:04 pm