Sunday, October 19, 2008

Please go away, Sarah Palin.

I can’t take it anymore. I’ve avoided blogging about politics until now but I am so offended by this election campaign that I have to write this.

Her rallying cry “you folks, you just get it!” summarizes everything wrong with the way McCain is allowing his campaign to be run. It is divisive, inflammatory, and intellectually deadening. It encourages people to cheer wildly in favor of their unexamined fears. It takes those fears, which are legitimate and deserve to be discussed openly and analyzed deeply, and encourages people to harden themselves around them. “You just get it!”means “hey people, you can claim to have moral and political conviction and you don’t even have to be able to explain what it is!” It is a rallying cry which encourages people to be complacent and self-righteous.

Elections are an invaluable opportunity for the country to engage in productive conversations that help us all think more sharply about where we stand on matters of critical domestic and foreign policy. How can we accept the nutritionless garbage we are being fed in this campaign? Why do we take seriously a candidate for the number 2 position in the country who stands up in the one and only vice presidential debate and says openly that she doesn’t want to give direct answers to the debate moderator’s questions?! Why are we wasting our time listening to irrational, McCarthyesque challenges about who is more “Pro-America”? We are squandering an important time to examine qualifications and policy plans, and it is our duty as voters to do so.

We are at a critical point in the history of the US. Our moral authority has crumbled, our military successes are patchy at best, and our economic dominance is severly eroded. We need the smartest minds of the century – on both sides of the party line – to guide us into a safe and productive future. I feel cheated by the offensively inadequate ticket the republicans have put to us, and I am baffled that 40% of the country finds it acceptable.

I am reminded of the anecdote my father tells to explain how the obnoxious pretensions of art school culture in New York in the 70s compelled him to drop out of Cooper Union. He said he was in class one day for a group critique. One of his classmates walked in the door, late, swaggered over to the board at the front of the room and pinned up a plastic baggie of feces. He said, “This is a crap I took this morning. It is art. Analyze it.” My father walked out.

This is the way I feel about the republican campaign in 2008, except I don't want to walk out -- I want them to walk out. A president is only as good as the people around him and, in my opinion, McCain has made an unforgivable mistake in appointing this bad joke to be his closest political associate. You can dress it up in lipstick and let it make some feminist-sounding comments about high heels and mom-power, but anyone who doesn’t recognize what’s been pinned up to the board is kidding themselves.

5 comments:

Daniel said...

Dear Eva,

The thing is, it's all about job creation, so that health care can shore up the fungible commodities and molecules in our economy. Mavericky. MAVERICKY!

Sarah Palin

Anonymous said...

Amen sister.
Well written.

Plus, imagine explaining my accent to my MPhil supervisor here at Cambridge. An Alaskan childhood is currently the bane of my first-impression existance.

-T-

Scott said...

I don't want Sarah Palin to go away! Here's why.

http://nymag.com/news/politics/powergrid/51406/

David Frum (anti-Palin conservative): “The people who defend her have already given up any serious thought of Republicans’ wielding governmental power anytime soon,” Frum says. “They have already moved to a position of pure cultural symbolic opposition to a new majority. The people who criticize her do so because we have some hope that we could be in contention in 2012, and there’s some risk that she could be the party’s nominee, and she’d probably lose—and even if by some miracle she won, she’d be a terrible president.”

I'm perfectly happy having Sarah Palin as the "pure cultural symbolic opposition" of rump Republicanism.

Anonymous said...

The republicans had their chance to nominate ron paul and blew it. So now they have to live with it. They all laughed at him in the debates.

Unknown said...

As a Republican scrambling for all the self-respect I can in this campaign, I confess that the high point of my opinion of Gov. Palin (that's how we Republicans prefer to refer to her, you'll note)was her introductory remarks on the day of her nomination. Oh, and her "delightful" appearance on SNL (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/20/arts/television/20watch.html?scp=1&sq=Sarah+Palin+SNL&st=nyt).

I've been imagining the good it would do the campaign if they whisked her away for an afternoon of closed-door conversation with Margaret Thatcher. Sort of Caribou Barbie meets . . . the genuine article.