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MilesAustinforMVP
09-04-2008, 11:43 AM
Why the media should apologize



By ROGER SIMON (http://www.politico.com/reporters/RogerSimon.html) | 9/4/08 12:15 AM EST

http://images.politico.com/global/080904_palin_simon.jpg
Sarah Palin gave a really good speech. Why go beyond that, asks Simon.
Photo: AP


ST. PAUL, Minn. (http://search.politico.com/results.cfm?subject=St.+Paul+%28Minnesota%29) — On behalf of the media, I would like to say we are sorry.

On behalf of the elite media, I would like to say we are very sorry.

We have asked questions this week that we should never have asked.

We have asked pathetic questions like: Who is Sarah Palin (http://search.politico.com/results.cfm?subject=Sarah+Palin)? What is her record? Where does she stand on the issues? And is she is qualified to be a heartbeat away from the presidency?

We have asked mean questions like: How well did John McCain (http://search.politico.com/results.cfm?subject=John+McCain) know her before he selected her? How well did his campaign vet her? And was she his first choice?

Bad questions. Bad media. Bad.

It is not our job to ask questions. Or it shouldn’t be. To hear from the pols at the Republican National Convention this week, our job is to endorse and support the decisions of the pols.

Sarah Palin hit the nail on the head Wednesday night (and several in the audience wish she had hit some reporters on the head instead) when she said: “I’m not a member of the permanent political establishment. And I’ve learned quickly, these past few days, that if you’re not a member in good standing of the Washington elite, then some in the media consider a candidate unqualified for that reason alone.”
But where did we go wrong with Sarah Palin? Let me count the ways:

First, we should have stuck to the warm, human interest stuff like how she likes mooseburgers and hit an important free throw at her high school basketball tournament even though she had a stress fracture.

Second, we should have stuck to the press release stuff like how she opposed the Bridge to Nowhere (after she supported it).

Third, we should never have strayed into the other stuff. Like when The Washington Post recently wrote: “Palin is under investigation by a bipartisan state legislative body. … Palin had promised to cooperate with the legislative inquiry, but this week she hired a lawyer to fight to move the case to the jurisdiction of the state personnel board, which Palin appoints.”

Why go there? What trees does that plant?

Fourth, we should stop making with all the questions already. She gave a really good speech. And why go beyond that? As we all know, speeches cannot be written by others and rehearsed for days. They are true windows to the soul.

Unless they are delivered by Barack Obama, that is. In which case, as Palin said Wednesday, speeches are just a “cloud of rhetoric.”

Fifth, we should stop reporting on the families of the candidates. Unless the candidates want us to.

Sarah Palin wanted the media to report on her teenage son, Track, who enlisted in the Army on Sept. 11, 2007, and soon will deploy to Iraq.

Sarah Palin did not want the media to report on her teenage daughter, Bristol, who is pregnant and unmarried.

Sarah Palin thinks that one is good for her campaign and one is not, and that the media should report only on what is good for her campaign. That is our job, and that is our duty. If that is not actually in the Constitution, it should be. (And someday may be.)

The official theme of the convention’s third day was “prosperity,” but the unofficial theme was “the media are really, really awful.”

Even Mike Huckabee (http://search.politico.com/results.cfm?subject=Mike+Huckabee), who campaigned for president this year by saying “I am a conservative, but I am not mad at anybody,” discovered Wednesday night that he is mad at somebody.

“I’d like to thank the elite media for doing something,” Huckabee said, “that, quite frankly, I didn’t think could be done: unify the Republican party and all of America in support of John McCain and Sarah Palin.”

And could that be the real point of the attacks on the media? To unify the Republican Party?

No, that is simply the cynical, media view.

Though as Lily Tomlin says, “No matter how cynical I get, it’s just never enough to keep up.”

I couldn’t resist that. For which I am sorry.


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0908/13143.html

bbgun
09-04-2008, 12:04 PM
If this was an attempt at humor, or a way to dodge responsibility for a week's worth of overt sexism and shamelessly turning an innocent 17-yo into a political football, then ...

http://img297.imageshack.us/img297/9903/failry4.jpg

Sasquatch
09-04-2008, 12:24 PM
Fifth, we should stop reporting on the families of the candidates. Unless the candidates want us to.

Sarah Palin wanted the media to report on her teenage son, Track, who enlisted in the Army on Sept. 11, 2007, and soon will deploy to Iraq.

Sarah Palin did not want the media to report on her teenage daughter, Bristol, who is pregnant and unmarried.

Sarah Palin thinks that one is good for her campaign and one is not, and that the media should report only on what is good for her campaign. That is our job, and that is our duty. If that is not actually in the Constitution, it should be. (And someday may be.)
:hammer:


Her stance would be less hypocritical if she didn't conspicuously stage her pregnant daughter and boyfriend at every opportunity to project the image of a wholesome family. Mom is using her kids as a political prop to advance her career every bit as much as the media is using them to question her suitability for the position.

MilesAustinforMVP
09-04-2008, 12:33 PM
What I think is more interesting is that she gave her daughter the opportunity to have an abortion, yet she wants to take away the right to choose from every other American family. Just shows her hypocrisy. But forbid the media to report on that.

bbgun
09-04-2008, 12:34 PM
Eat it, haters.

http://www.nationalreview.com/images08/pic_palin_9-4-08.jpg

Jarv
09-04-2008, 12:35 PM
:hammer:


Her stance would be less hypocritical if she didn't conspicuously stage her pregnant daughter and boyfriend at every opportunity to project the image of a wholesome family. Mom is using her kids as a political prop to advance her career ever bit as much as the media is using them to question her suitability for the position.

Kinda like the "US" interview of Obama and Michelle of "Why he loves her". Most all politicians do this with their family.

MilesAustinforMVP
09-04-2008, 12:36 PM
Kinda like the "US" interview of Obama and Michelle of "Why he loves her". Most all politicians do this with their family.

They do. But Palin does it at every opportunity she gets. She even brought her youngest daughter to Mississippi on the eve of the Hurricane for a photo op.

bbgun
09-04-2008, 12:45 PM
They do. But Palin does it at every opportunity she gets. She even brought her youngest daughter to Mississippi on the eve of the Hurricane for a photo op.

I'm embarrassed for you. Do I need to post the photos of John John and Caroline romping in the Oval Office? Or Hillary dragging Chelsea to Bosnia, Ireland, and other overseas locales? Or the Obamas and their daughters grinning from ear to ear on the cover of People Magazine? Only a hate-filled moron would object to candidate's family showing up at a convention and enjoying the festivities.

zrinkill
09-04-2008, 01:09 PM
This is funny coming from a gutter politics poster like this guy.