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Angus
09-25-2008, 08:19 PM
The 'lost' Palin files
Posted on Thursday, September 25, 2008 3:03 PM ET

By Jim Popkin, NBC News Senior Investigative Producer

When federal judges in San Francisco ruled in 2002 that reciting the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools was unconstitutional because it included the phrase "under God," Sarah Palin was not amused. Palin, who at the time was Mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, quickly drafted a terse letter to the editor of a San Francisco newspaper.

“Dear Editor,” Palin wrote in 2002. “San Francisco judges forbidding our Pledge of Allegiance? They will take the phrase ‘under God’ away from me when my cold, dead lips can no longer utter those words,” Palin wrote.

“God Bless America,” she concluded.

Hundreds of notes and letters
Palin’s letter to the editor is one of hundreds of personal notes and letters written by the former Mayor, and obtained this week to NBC News and others. The documents shed light on the management style--and personality--of the small town mayor turned vice presidential candidate.

There are few headline grabbers in the lot. Even Palin’s Pledge-of-Allegiance rant was a commonly held view at the time. (The U.S. Supreme Court later overturned the ruling on technical grounds. But not before Palin pushed through a city resolution stating that the Wasilla City Council “shall continue to recite America’s Pledge of Allegiance, in its entirety, including and especially the words, ‘…one nation, under God…”)

While hardly earth shattering, Palin’s personal missives can be revealing.

Consider the letter to Mike Doogan, then a columnist for the Anchorage Daily News.

Doogan had written in the paper on March 5, 2002, that lawmakers were considering moving the state legislature to Wasilla. “Now, I disrespect Wasilla as much as the next guy, but this seems a little extreme,” Doogan quipped. “Isn't being a blight on the landscape enough shame for Wasillians?”

Palin couldn’t resist. Two days later, she wrote a personal letter that simply said:

“Dear Mr. Doogan: Why do you do what you do to Wasilla?”

She signed it, “Respectfully, Sarah.”

Dear Senator Stevens
Several other letters in the old files further confirm Palin’s close relationship with Senator Ted Stevens, who was the state’s go-to lawmaker for the congressionally approved pet spending projects called earmarks. Palin wrote to Stevens at least three times in 2002 alone, asking for funding for a $150,000 “floatplane study” for Wasilla, an airport instrument landing system for the city, railroad depot improvements and a “Land Mobile Radio Project” for emergency responders. She got most of it, as previously reported here. “Thank you for your continued support,” she writes.

Minutiae matters
The correspondence also reveals an extreme attention to detail and a political deftness that clearly served her well as mayor. Palin wrote more thank-you notes than Miss Manners. She made sure she personally welcomed every new business owner to town. And every new baby too.

--“Dear Tracy, We heard the news! Congratulations from the City of Wasilla on the birth of your daughter,” she penned to one local resident.

--“Dear Porky, Thank you so much for the smoked salmon!” she wrote to another supporter.

--“Dear Trudy, Thank you so much for the beautiful Cyclamen plant. I appreciate you so much. God bless you,” she wrote.

--“To Allure Day Spa Staff, Thank you so much for the awesome facial that I received from Allure Day Spa a few weeks back,” she continued.

--“Dear Mr. Brittingham, Thank you so much for returning my pen to me after the Chamber meeting today,” the mayor wrote.

As the city files make clear, Palin wrote endless recommendations for local students, seemed to honor every Eagle Scout in a 200-mile radius and, as might be expected, obsessed over all things snow related. There are warnings about snow blowing and snowmachine safety, earnest letters regarding avalanche awareness and proclamations honoring sled-dog racing.

Smiley-face sincerity
Her letters are informal, even homey.

In a note to a Wasilla landscape firm thanking the owners for donating a tree, she writes, “You’re the best!” in pen and scribbles a smiley face, too.

In a letter to a businessman in Wasilla, she hand writes, “Thanks for all you do, Dude!”

The trove of old letters also makes clear how small Wasilla truly is.

“Under City of Wasilla Account 100-0074, please disconnect cell phone number 354-7676,” she wrote in 2002.

It was Mayor Palin, and not a low-level office worker, who was responsible for making sure the local phone company disconnected cell-phone service for some city workers

http://deepbackground.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/09/25/1448411.aspx

masomenos
09-25-2008, 08:35 PM
In a note to a Wasilla landscape firm thanking the owners for donating a tree, she writes, “You’re the best!” in pen and scribbles a smiley face, too.

In a letter to a businessman in Wasilla, she hand writes, “Thanks for all you do, Dude!”


Why do her letters read like yearbook entries?

"Vlad,

Good seein' you again bud! Isn't it awesome how close our countries are!? We're neighbors! I like you just the way you are, don't let anyone change you!

XOXOX

=)

-Sarah Baracuda"Seriously, I'm sure some people will really make fun of this and try to make it into an issue about how she's not ready to lead, yadda yadda. To me, hand written thank yous just tells me that she really cared about the people of Wasilla. She's a very "real" person and I would expect that, if elected, she would honestly care about what was happening to the people of the United States.

vta
09-25-2008, 08:50 PM
Why do her letters read like yearbook entries?

Seriously, I'm sure some people will really make fun of this and try to make it into an issue about how she's not ready to lead, yadda yadda. To me, hand written thank yous just tells me that she really cared about the people of Wasilla. She's a very "real" person and I would expect that, if elected, she would honestly care about what was happening to the people of the United States.

Maybe so, but the climate that some are trying to cultivate is an impersonal, so called analytical persona. One which characterizes any display of passion as 'shrill', and portays anyone with a clear moral thread as a zealot, incapable of analytical thinking.

ABQCOWBOY
09-25-2008, 08:59 PM
Well, I'm the first to say that Palin is probably not the polished article we see so often running for public office. She's not going to have the experience that others will have in regards to Washington Politics but I don't care about that so much. If she were running for President, I would probably worry about that a little more.

I just like her and I think she is probably honest, which is what we need IMO.

President Reagen wasn't considered very experienced when he got elected. He turned out OK in my book.

I'm for Sarah Palin.

Cajuncowboy
09-25-2008, 09:07 PM
Wow. A real person in the White House who cares about people enough to do this.

I like it.

ScipioCowboy
09-25-2008, 09:31 PM
Why do her letters read like yearbook entries?

Seriously, I'm sure some people will really make fun of this and try to make it into an issue about how she's not ready to lead, yadda yadda. To me, hand written thank yous just tells me that she really cared about the people of Wasilla. She's a very "real" person and I would expect that, if elected, she would honestly care about what was happening to the people of the United States.

As a graduate student, I took a user analysis course, which taught me the importance of knowing my audience before trying to write any type of documentation for them, regardless of what the documentation entailed. In this class, I learned a set of techniques for analyzing audiences in order to determine their specific informational needs and the level on which I should be engaging them--personal, formal, instructive, etc.

Regarding these letters, we must understand that Sarah Palin is writing to an audience that, in all likelihood, consists of voters, whom she's trying to reach personally and with whom she's trying to create a sense of relaxed familiarity.

Therefore, a more colloquial, or folksy, vernacular is appropriate.

vlad
09-26-2008, 08:36 AM
When I read this I see a nice person who would write thoughtful thank you notes.

None of that has anything to do with what's going on now. So to bash on her for it is as ludicrous as it would be to praise it as being something that would be valuable to the White House.

Issues people....issues.

canters
09-26-2008, 08:47 AM
Pathetic,,just pathetic. This is the year journalsim died.

Cajuncowboy
09-26-2008, 08:50 AM
When I read this I see a nice person who would write thoughtful thank you notes.

None of that has anything to do with what's going on now. So to bash on her for it is as ludicrous as it would be to praise it as being something that would be valuable to the White House.

Issues people....issues.

Actually, I think to show compassion and thoughtfulness for people would be an asset for anyone in the white house.

trickblue
09-26-2008, 09:21 AM
In this day and age... written communication becomes an issue and flippant...

The press is looking foolish...

Maybe they will find that golden egg eventually, but for now they are desperately grasping at straws...

Yeagermeister
09-26-2008, 09:30 AM
In this day and age... written communication becomes an issue and flippant...

The press is looking foolish...

Maybe they will find that golden egg eventually, but for now they are desperately grasping at straws...

So it's business as usual

MetalHead
09-26-2008, 01:44 PM
Pathetic,,just pathetic. This is the year journalism died.

It did not die on its own.
The left kidnapped it and then tortured and finally killed it.