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Whoopi Goldberg | 09/04/2008 5:30 pm

Whoopi Goldberg: Sarah Palin 'Is a Very Dangerous Woman'

Whoopi Goldberg
I just have to talk about Sarah Palin’s speech a little bit. She gave a really amazing speech, very strong, very strident and it gave the Republicans everything they wanted to hear. They know that she’s a tough chick and she’s a babe and she’s a mom and all those other wonderful things we should be celebrating — the first time I think we’ve ever celebrated all of these things in a woman. Maybe Hillary Clinton wasn’t such a babe but she was defiantly strident and strong and people lost their minds and said how rough she was and how male she was, but I guess if you do it with a smile it makes it a little easier.

But here’s my point, I thought the speech in its body was energizing for Republicans, as I said, and sent them the message they wanted to hear, but what I heard was a lot of meanness and snideness and some inaccuracies and some dismissive talk to community organizers and other people’s adversities. She sort of mentioned the idea after Rudolph Giuliani did — and Rudolph Giuliani is a bonehead to start with, but that’s neither here nor there — but I thought once she began her discussion about community organizers and that they don’t have real responsibilities … I guess I can’t say I don’t know where she’s been living, because she’s been living in Alaska and maybe they don’t have community organizers there but they do in Chicago. Anyone who leaves their gig from school and goes to the people who most need help, that seems to me an admirable American way of thinking. It used to be in America that you helped people if you could, you organized them you made sure their rent was paid, made sure they had heat and all those other things and that helps to build character. If you want to become a politician you can at least say, "I understand how people live, I understand what happens when people lose everything and this is how we can work on it."

I also found it really bizarre when Palin said there was only one person who has fought for your rights, dismissing Joe Biden’s work offhand. She then said some politicians have talked about their light adversities, and I thought, “What are you talking about? Are you talking about being a black man in America? That’s a light adversity? Or maybe the fact that Joe Biden lost his wife and baby daughter and nearly lost his two sons — that wasn’t adversity enough? Do you have to be left in a box in Vietnam to count for something?" If that’s the only kind of adversity that counts then she’d be right.

I also thought that this idea of America first coming from her was kind of strange because she was one of the people who wanted to secede from the United States. She was part of a campaign to secede Alaska from the United States of America. So I’m glad she’s back, putting America first. I also thought it was disingenuous for her to open with her record on the Bridge to Nowhere. When she was running for governor in 2006, she was all for the bridge and once she won she was against the bridge, this was also a woman who wanted books banned. I just find it extraordinary. She feels that her governorship qualifies her to be the VP. She has no foreign policy experience, she doesn’t have very much experience with anything but Alaska, and being governor, as we know, is not necessarily a carte blanche to being president. We just came through eight years with former Gov. Bush and that didn’t work so well.

So now we come to this other thing that I don’t understand: The idea that her daughter’s pregnancy is a family affair makes absolute sense to me because I think that it is a family matter. But I find it interesting that if this girl was Chelsea Clinton or black she probably wouldn’t have been treated the same way. When a black teenager gets pregnant she’s a welfare mother. When this teenager, when this nice white-lady-girl-teenager gets pregnant, it’s an Evangelical Christian choice. She’s unwed, and so how do we balance that? I guess the spin is the way to do it. We’re also sort of sitting around and listening to people talking about the anti-female aspect of this. I don’t think this has been anti-female at all. If anybody can talk to having anti-female bias at all, I would think it would be Hillary Clinton.

There was a feeling I had today that it’s no longer about who’s qualified — and I guess maybe it’s never been about who’s qualified – because, truly, nobody is qualified to be president until they’ve been president. Because it’s one thing to run a town or run a state that has some people in it, but it’s not a big city. It’s not like New York. Maybe there are great qualifications that you have for that, but in the United States of America, if you’re going to be president or vice president you’re supposed to be able to look at these things and say, "What’s best for the country?" Not, "What do I think my religious beliefs are?" Because you can only live with your own religious beliefs; you can’t ask other people to bend to them. So I find the spin a little tough to take. I find the spin tough to take having gone through this myself, with a young daughter who got pregnant. There is no privacy, there is no family issue here. This is about spin. And what I wanted her to say was, “This was not the way I hoped this would be. This is not what I wanted for my daughter, but this is the choice she has made.” But I guess if you say that this is the choice that she has made, you have to say that choice is important. Maybe it’s me, maybe I misinterpreted everything she said, but I don’t think so. Though we shall see. We shall see what John McCain has to say and what Sarah Palin has to say and, as time goes on, we’ll find out really where she’s coming from. I think it’s going to be a whole new kettle of fish.

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

starry Nite
Sarah Palin- is so scary that I started to do research and not only is she a conservative she is a liar. She did not sell her jet on ebay. It was not even her idea to sell it. It sold not at a profit but a loss. She did not perform well as mayor and is not doing a bang up job as Govenor,. .She is not knowledgeable about foriegn policy- she is not well educated- McCain is not well and I don’t want her as president. I watched McCain speak by satelite to the AARP convention and he was terrible -just a bunch of “my friend” and I know how to get things done- . No specificity. Obama who critics chide for being overly ambitous- has a plan. But the most ominous thing I discovered was that the “community organizer” and the “divided we fail.org” are viewed as more government by conservetives or I should say extremists.. . These are marxist with socialistic policies -hince tax the rich give to poor according to them.. I am afraid it will be the uneducated poor who will vote for McCain - because they feel that McCain can keep them safe from terrorist.. Ticket should read Palin /McCain. - McCain is not well- Sarah will run the country- OMG
By starry Nite on 09/06/2008 11:09 pm
georgia fatwood
I am afraid”……let’s not say “uneducated”…..there are plenty of 50/60/30/80/90/20 year old high school non-graduates around here who can feed a family of twelve plus in-laws out of the woods and creeks and gardens and hayfields….. by their wits and determination and beliefs….. “I am afraid”…..of the “unenlightened”…Just as scared of the unenlightened rich as the unenlightened poor…….now…..whose fault is that? Which one scares you more? Which child left behind? Yours? I see that you are a newcomer to this site….Lemme tell you …it’s a full time job…..I mean trying to sift out the truth…you will find that there are diligent and brilliant women here working at it every day……and they’re all trying to keep us up to speed from every angle….I am grateful for this because I grew up in the days of one phone call every other day from a good friend, a letter or two every other week in the mail box,and maybe a second or third hand copy of the “big” newspaper dropped off on my back porch along with a bag of home grown vegetables….Can you imagine how things have changed? I can….. Also, on this site, I have watched a whole bunch of women get their “voice”. Started out really timid and are now people to be counted on for a great viewpoint……..If you care to, you can click on someone’s little picture and get a whole rundown about their comments/views…..Of course, if you are a savvy computer person, you know this already…I’m just trying to catch on…and this is the only place I go….they( the people who post here) send me to other great sites I can dip into…..and then come right back….. So…talk back…talk more…It’s going to be a great contest for hearts and minds…..Do you have cable and/or satellite? Big trouble if you do…I mean trying to keep up…..
By georgia fatwood on 09/07/2008 12:07 am
Karen S.
The McCain campaign has admitted to a ban on most press interviews for Palin. If McCain doesn’t have confidence in her ability to handle the press, how does he expect voters to have confidence in her ability to be a Vice President?
By Karen S. on 09/07/2008 12:08 am
Elyse Beaudaux
The “Draft Sarah Palin for Vice President” began as an online petition drive in February 2007, when Palin had been Governor for only two months. It’s not surprising that the 21-year-old blogger who initiated the campaign was a student at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs. That’s the home base of religious right extremist James Dobson of “Focus on the Family.” Dobson’s followers dominate the town of Colorado Springs, and many of his supporters serve as faculty members at the U.S. Air Force Academy. The Air Force Academy is the most extreme example, but the religious right has also made critical inroads into West Point and the Naval Academy. For more information about this scary scenario, click here: http://www.csindy.com/gyrobase/PrintFriendly?oid=oid%3A17667 CHATTERBOX Sarah Palin, Web Invention How a college junior put Alaska’s governor on the map. By Timothy Noah, Slate.com Posted Friday, Aug. 29, 2008, at 1:52 PM ET According to both the Aug. 29 Anchorage Daily News http://www.adn.com/front/story/339587.html and the June 13 Colorado Springs Gazette, Sarah Palin became John McCain’s vice presidential candidate http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4191/is_20080613/ai_n27938598 largely through the machinations of someone even younger and less experienced than herself. From the Anchorage Daily News: The hype can probably be traced to the Web site of a 21-year-old college senior* majoring in political science at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs. Adam Brickley, a political buff who will graduate in May, started a “Draft Sarah Palin for Vice President” last year and has relentlessly promoted the idea ever since. http://palinforvp.blogspot.com/blog Brickley has never been to Alaska or met Palin. But while researching potential vice presidents, he stumbled on Palin and thought she would be a good No. 2 to just about all of the major Republican candidates in the race at the time. … The “Draft Palin” movement picked up momentum in more mainstream media, including a column last summer by Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard. http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/013/851orc… Others followed, including talk over the past couple weeks from conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh. [Actually, Limbaugh’s been chatting up Palin since February 2008; http://www.zimbio.com/Sarah+Palin+for+Vice+President/articles/5/McCain+P… Brickley created his blog in February 2007, during his junior* year, a mere two months after Palin assumed the governorship. Click to see him talk up Palin this past May on YouTube.] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ly36R4fb-c According to his blog Brickley (aka “Elephantman”) supported Rudy Giuliani in the primaries, http://palinforvp.blogspot.com/2007/02/faq.html . According to his “Blogger” profile, Brickley’s interests include politics, Zionism, and “fighting socialism.” http://www.blogger.com/profile/04584746741195370549 ZoomInfo http://www.zoominfo.com/Search/PersonDetail.aspx?PersonID=1083925308 adds that he’s a leader in University of Colorado-Colorado Springs College Republicans and the founder of a political blog called ConservaGlobe; http://conservaglobeusa.blogspot.com/ He made dean’s list; and he receives a $7,500 Ronald Reagan College Leaders scholarship annually from the conservative Phillips Foundation. http://www.thephillipsfoundation.org/index.php?q=node/23368 At the moment, he appears to be interning http://palinforvp.blogspot.com/2008/08/we-did-it.html for a young conservative commentator on TownHall.com named Matt Lewis. http://www.mattlewis.org/Bring_Matt/mattbio.cfmWE DID IT!!!!!!” crows Brickley’s latest entry on the Draft Sarah Palin blog. “I’ll have a lot more later, but needless to say I am positively elated.” http://palinforvp.blogspot.com/2008/08/we-did-it.html Clarification, Sept. 2, 2008: The Anchorage Daily News’ characterization of Brickley as a “college senior” was incorrect. Brickley graduated this past spring. (Return to the sentence.) http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&id=2198949#B Timothy Noah is a senior writer at Slate. Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2198949/ Copyright 2008 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC
By Elyse Beaudaux on 09/07/2008 12:41 am
starry Nite
Georgia Fatwood- I enjoyed reading the post from DeBurco- she is so well informed and many others such as Lorraine- Marjorie C ,Bella Mia and Lynn do a good job of resisting input.
By starry Nite on 09/07/2008 2:33 am
Greta Kraten
To return to the subject line, from a number of digressions, what is ‘scary’ about Sarah Palin is that the beliefs she espouses and the behaviour she manifests are mainstream in the small town America that she embraces. Whoopi, the observation you make that she runs a rally like the Bund, is astute. Americans can’t remember to forget, but the Nazi Bund was very popular and very pervasive in small town America. My maternal grandfather ran a chapter out in Idaho, where Sarah Palin was born, and the roots and conviction of Nordic purity intertwined with weird literal creeds of crackpot Christian theology goes back to pre-Revolutionary America. This was a country populated by, among other things, religious nuts who are threatened by the education and who are motivated to role by the age of Enlightenment. That is Sarah Palin. She is a small town zealot and good Nazi Mom. She works on basic instinct and shares the same high morality as the men who run her church. If you listen to her speak without a careful script in front of her, it is painfully apparent that she may have finally succeeded in getting a college degree after skipping around to five universities, but she obviously took ‘gut courses’ and managed to learn next to nothing. She is a popular simpleton who empowers others who feel that dull burr of resentment that they are being made fun of when someone uses a word that they don’t understand. She is also sadly typical of women who try to rationalize their biological process as making them superior because they mother. This is all nonsense, just as men who try to rationalize their legacy of aggression and brutality as ‘hunters’ are embracing their weakness rather than trying to take it to a higher plane by using their brains. The real scary thing about Palin is the man who chose her, Manchurian Candidate McCain. This is a presidential candidate whose decision making process poles from one extreme to the other in an instant. He is a crap-shooting gambler. “Won’t let me have Leiberman - I’ll give them what they want then, I’ll give them Palin.” I can see Putin playing McCain just as he played GW, like a bass fiddle. What escapes me as a German in America is how come more of the American Public doesn’t appreciate the obvious depth and humanity of Joe Biden. He is not a genius, but he is a man who has obviously worked at expanding his knowledge and intellect and seem an admirable human who reaches out to those without power. Obama is brilliant, and his choice of Biden shows that he is also not scared of appointing intelligent people who may exceed his knowledge in certain areas. What a contrast to this crowd of elderly men with rich second wives waving their little flags spastically while balloons rained down on them like the Lawrence Welk
By Greta Kraten on 09/07/2008 9:07 am
Sylvia Horais
Well done, Greta.
By Sylvia Horais on 09/07/2008 9:36 am
Bonita Caracciolo
Bravo Greta. I’m just praying that Americans can see through this charade with Governor Palin but, let’s face it, they put Bushie in the White House TWICE! Well, with the help of the Secy of State of Florida and the Supreme Court of the US in ‘04. I want to hear a Republican share a list of accomplishments by the Bush Administration. Just like, well, five good things they’ve done for the American people. And I mean average people. But please leave out the tax rebates. I personally was insulted by that ploy. When you have a family of 5 living out of their car because they’ve lost their home and their jobs, a few hundred bucks isn’t going to save them. Throwing the dog a bone, that’s how I saw it. Anyone?
By Bonita Caracciolo on 09/07/2008 9:53 am
jon rappleye
First I must say that I am an independent, I voted for Kerry in the last election, which i’m not sure now would have bee a much better choice? I find the comment that Palin in dangerous ridiculous when you take a look at Obama with friends like william ayer’s, rev. Wright and on and on……also to refer to the convention as a bunt rally is just plain insulting,. I ask have you seen the hysteria at a Obama rally with the outright worship and fainting women. Also get your facts straight, It was Palin’s husband who wanted to secede from the US, not Pailen and it was out of frustration with the greed of big government. I am not a religious person but I am pro life, so many have been brainwashed into believing that abortion is ok, when is taking an innocent life ok? never, maybe in Nazi Germany. Just use your common sense. Im not saying Pailen is perfect, no one is, but I know that the more the left continues to fire there insults the more disgusted I become with them.
By jon rappleye on 09/07/2008 10:21 am
Marjorie C.
Right on, jon.
By Marjorie C. on 09/07/2008 1:39 pm
Lotus Kann
Biden’s appearance on Meet the Press was awesome! On abortion rights he had the best line, I’m not going to quote verbatim, but the awesome point he made was that he too as a devout Catholic believe tht life begins at conception however it would be wrong of him to impose his views on all those who may be more devout than he. Bravo! If abortion is the issue, why should citizens who believe in God’s teaching supercede the views of those who may have different beliefs. That’s the fundamentals this great nation and that’s what the soldiers are fighting for right? to stand up for our rights. Well who gets to be included in the “our/we”. Is it only the citizens who belief in God and the Christian base? America is suppose to stand up to the rights of ALL its people not just the selected some. And the issue of The Surge and how successful it is. Its not. The various groups that make up Iraq are still sparing with one anther. I wonder if Miss Palin knows as to which groups are in Iraq, where are the Khurds and the Shittes and who else is in that country. What about the countries in the region, how do we deal with them. So we are going to get Iraq “undercontrol” and we are going to do it until we “win” (since according to all the GOPs we are so close to winning why concede/), but then what happens to the entire region. If we stay there any longer and continue to use our military force, we will end up alienating all the other countries surrounding Iraq, and so what do we do then. Continue to use our military force to strong arm the entire region? We can’t afford to spend any more of our good soldier’s lives just to “win”. What is “winning”.
By Lotus Kann on 09/07/2008 10:29 am
jon rappleye
I am not a religious person but I am pro life, so many have been brainwashed into believing that abortion is ok, when is taking an innocent life ok? never, maybe in Nazi Germany.
By jon rappleye on 09/07/2008 2:29 pm
Bonita Caracciolo
Jon, you’ve made your point and I applaud your unwavering personal position. I have never known anyone personally who has chosen an abortion and felt good about that decision. The fact is, if you wanted a vasectomy do you think that that right, that personal right, should be legislated? I know you are going to grind that “taking an innocent life” thing into dust, but it’s really none of yours or the government’s business what a woman put in a terrible position decides to do on that front. Unwanted children benefit no one and often end up abused, neglected and eventually dead. What would be your solution to that part of it? I mean, okay, so we spare an innocent life. Then what? Someone referred to this as pro birth and not pro life.
By Bonita Caracciolo on 09/07/2008 3:51 pm
jon rappleye
Thats is something that should be thought about when you make the decision to have sex. I do agree with abortion in cases of incest and rape, here the woman did not make the choice to be impregnated.
By jon rappleye on 09/07/2008 4:07 pm
Sylvia Horais
You’re certainly entitled to your point of view and if you feel that way, you should never have an abortion. However, many others feel differently. Abortion is rarely, if ever, an easy decision, and a great deal of thought and anguish goes into it. That doesn’t mean that someone has been brainwashed or that they’re a Nazi. It’s a tough issue. In my opinion, no man on the face of the earth has the right to say whether any woman should consider abortion unless that man can become pregnant and have to deal with it. No man has the right to determine what a woman does with her body or to take away her right to choose.
By Sylvia Horais on 09/07/2008 4:03 pm