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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

DeBúrca obj
I’m with you Sharon! And this Huffington Post piece is probably FAR more accurate about the true impact or lack of impact that Sarah Palin has actually had on this election than what we are being fed by the gushing media which is just looking for a new darling to help them sell more advertising, which is basically all the media is about these days anyway. Take a look: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/oliver-willis/the-other-base_b_123808.html
By DeBúrca obj on 09/04/2008 7:55 pm
Melanie B
I could not agree more! I am really looking forward to the debates now more than ever. I didn’t hear anything new or refreshing last night. Just the same old “Pull yourself up by your bootstraps” rhetoric.
By Melanie B on 09/04/2008 5:04 pm
marcia fritz
This is the Whoopi I’ve been waiting to hear from!! Palin IS dangerous,and she is mean-spirited. I have always looked up to community organizers who have compassion for the disenfranchised, & less fortunate. How dare she mock such noble souls. And I hope women will realize that she is not one of THEM; she’s one of them.
By marcia fritz on 09/04/2008 5:06 pm
James the Game
Maybe someone in the GOP will actually talk about the economy, the millons unemployed and the lack of affordable health insurance before the gavel falls to end the Republican National Convention?!
By James the Game on 09/04/2008 5:20 pm
DeBúrca obj
What can they possibly talk about on those issues? They’ve done nothing but make them worse in the last 8 years and based upon what has already been said and not said by McCain and everyone else in the party, they have no intention of addressing those issues with anything other than more of the same. All they can do is create straw men, spin the bad to become suddenly “good” and pump up the base with code words.
By DeBúrca obj on 09/04/2008 8:00 pm
Sharon Belko
James Dear Boy - Please be serious - how can the GOP talk about those issues when they know NOTHING about them - they’ve had NO example of leadership in that regard in recent history, and they have the audacity to ignore the critical things we ALL care about - their’s is a tactic of sarcasm, attack and ignorance for what really matters to this country. Poor John is really out of touch with our reality and Sarah has no concept of how to deal with what’s going on in the lower 48! I have been an Obama supporter from the git-go but Sarah’s vapidness and meanness makes Hiliary look and sound like a genius! I would really PAY to see those two debate - HRC would chew her up and spit her out in the first 10 minutes!!
By Sharon Belko on 09/04/2008 8:13 pm
Tee Zee
Not a chance James, they’ll never see past their egos.
By Tee Zee on 09/04/2008 8:24 pm
Diana T
Hey, James, Perhaps this will answer your question? Sometimes, I go to Jon Stewart and humor has to take over. Enjoy! http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=184114&title=The-B…
By Diana T on 09/07/2008 9:46 am
Dutch 163
Wow..Whoopi, you have nailed it! I watched the speech…tired to figure out why it bothered me so much..then I realized..she was plain ol’ NOT NICE! I heard as you put it “meanness and snideness” and it lacked substance. It was “full of sound and fury ,signifying nothing” to quote the Bard. the first poster had this important bit of information for us :”extremely simple view of the world and is harshly judgmental and intolerant of those who do not follow her tight right-wing agenda. I don’t even think she has ever been abroad” (actually she has been, once, to Kuwait..I have been abroad more than she has) this is one of my complaints about McCain, he is nasty (and there is plenty to back that up:google his anger issues) I do not want them representing the USA, I want someone who will be diplomatic and compassionate..someone like say…Obama and Biden. As someone else noted the “My way or the highway” attitude..both Palin and McCain..research what they do when someone crosses them! Like I said:scares me….and I do not believe that they are best for the USA
By Dutch 163 on 09/04/2008 5:20 pm
Willow K
Her speech bothered me, but what I found really scary was how the crowd ate up all that meanness and spite, they were thrilled and fired up. I was watching and thinking—is this what 1/2 (approximately) of the country believes in and likes??? Yikes!!!
By Willow K on 09/05/2008 12:48 pm
Dutch 163
willow..I agree with you..we have said it here at home, and I have friends who agree with us…can there be that many people who believe and like that?? you are right..very scary…and now the McCain campaign won’t let her be interviewed..why is that??!!
By Dutch 163 on 09/06/2008 1:52 pm
Charles Dance
Thank you Whoopi, also Kathy Douglas
By Charles Dance on 09/04/2008 5:22 pm
Mugsy Peabody
I have to rein myself in. But I have several points to make not addressed by Ms. Goldberg, who has said so much already. First, as a country woman and someone raised in a small town, I have to say, I am insulted that Ms. Kill-and-Drill Barbie tells small town people, “You are small minded and not very bright, so I’m going to feed you this line of bs and try to be amusing about it because you’re too goddamn stupid to notice that while I’m talking the corporations are stealing the farmland right out from under your tractors, and we are invading Pakistan in contravention of international law, good sense, and the will of the US citizens, but vote for us because we’re Christian.” Small town American women are bright and well educated, as are other Americans, and my cousin, who lives on the family farm in Illinois, can’t believe they would pick this nobody. Second, how flipping DARE this mean-spirited no-name tell the mothers of this country, “I haven’t really paid any attention to the Iraq war?” Frannie, how does that sit with you? Or your son? Third, I am embarrassed for the thousands of intelligent, hard-working Republican women who have done the scut work (from Sens. Hutchison and Snowe down the “chain of command) of Karl Rove and his band of merry men of the GOP who weren’t even consulted before McCain selected Barracuda Barbie over them. I hope you genuine GOP women understand now exactly how little they care what you think. (A plug here, of course, for my line of John McCain flip-flops; looks like we’ll need Palin flip-flops as well. I’m thinking of a line of McCain/Palin condoms for Republican teenagers. Be careful, though, because since they’re based on the GOP platform, they won’t hold water.) I’ll stop here, since I’m preaching to the choir. Of course since you’all are literate, and possibly city people, you don’t matter anyway. Only right-thinking NRA members who show up at church on Sunday and kill wild animals out of airplanes with assault rifles really matter.
By Mugsy Peabody on 09/04/2008 5:25 pm
Diana T
Thank you Mugsy, thank you Whoopi. I don’t think I can add anything to your post, Mugsy. You said it all. And, I too have to rein myself in; indeed, I said in another post, I feel like I’m walking around in a purple haze because I can’t believe what is happening, how people are so excited about it, and the possibility of this poster child for religious extremism actually setting up office in the White House. The dumbing down of America is working. Everywhere I have gone in Lexington today, people seem very worried and very depressed. Even my republican friends know deep down that this is a very dangerous trend that is taking place. Not to mention that the lady needs to drop her speaking voice by 3 octaves because the shrill shouting drove me nuts. I do think that Ms. Palin did reflect very well the most mean spirited and non-substantive wing of the conservative republican party. Lots of meat and potatoes and absolutely no vegetables.
By Diana T on 09/04/2008 5:49 pm
mary lou s
diana, my brothers and i cannot even agree on what facts are factual. the diverging realities of republicans and democrats are frightening. add in the divergence between millionaires and their toadies and ordinary american citizens, and you have a recipe for the fascism demonstrated by police outside of both conventions. at least ron paul’s followers had a safe place to hold their conversation. i fear for my country.
By mary lou s on 09/05/2008 11:00 pm