Curmudgeonly commentiousness

November 10, 2008

Beware the winking barracuda

The story of Sarah Palin and her bath towel reminded me of the first time I met, sort of, a woman who seemed remarkably comfortable with her appearance.

“That was nice,” I told the guy who was sitting in my passenger seat.

“What’s that?” he asked.

I was sitting at a stoplight several decades closer to my youth when she pulled up beside me in one of those small pickup trucks that was popular before Ford started selling four-door F-150s to the yuppies. I guess the motion of the vehicle suddenly appearing made me glance over, and there was one of the most attractive young women I’d seen.

It wasn’t lust. I’d read the articles in Playboy, and I knew the difference.

She looked over at me, caught my look, and smiled. I smiled back. The light turned green and I never saw her again.

It was more like a ‘thank you for noticing.’ At least that’s the way I chose to read it.

I never saw her again, so I never learned what lay behind the smile, but years later, I had a friend with a similar smile, with whom I occasionally went swimming in the river on hot summer afternoons. We talked about politics and our kids and such stuff.

Sarah Palin, I think, would not be such a friend. After watching her campaign performance and reading of her rise to becoming vice-presidential nominee, I think she had a different message when she came from her shower, wrapped only in a bath towel, to tell her briefers, both men, she would be “just a minute.”

I think she was making a statement. She was telling her male briefers she was not afraid or them, or subservient. Be not mislead, she seemed from my distant perspective to be saying, by my beauty queen experience and posture, or my blue-collar manner of speaking. I am as tough as you, and will, when this is over, use you up and toss you aside as easily as you will me.

This woman, nicknamed Barracuda by her high school mates, is comfortable in her own body. I like that, almost as much as I don’t like her divisive, power-hungry, “real American” brand of politics.

She and Todd are not done yet with their political career. Those who become distracted by her wink and her towel will find themselves bleeding, broken and discarded in the bushes outside the arena.

November 6, 2008

Generation Gap

An item in a Newsweek story: “At the GOP convention in St. Paul, Palin was completely unfazed by the boys’ club fraternity she had just joined. One night, Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter went to her hotel room to brief her. After a minute, Palin sailed into the room wearing nothing but a towel, with another on her wet hair. She told them to chat with her laconic husband, Todd. ‘I’ll be just a minute,’ she said.”

On MSNBC Wednesday, Andrea Mitchell referred to the story and seemed to chastise Palin for not putting more clothes on when she popped out to tell her male briefers she’d be “just a minute.”

It seems from here that says more about Mitchell than about Palin, and about and old generation more than young. Mitchell is 62, born and raised in a time when the thought of a woman clad less than neck to toenails was scandalous. Sarah Palin is 44, well aware of her appearance, equally comfortable in jeans or $10,000 gown.

In Mitchell’s time, a shapely young woman in a bath towel would have been advertising sexual favors for her spot on the ticket. In Palin’s, men who think “getting comfortable” means “let’s f—” are in for some serious disappointment.

The story, and its subsequent treatment, begs the question whether, had those same male briefers come in the room and John McCain appeared in his boxers, what would have been the response from the press on hearing the story.

October 30, 2008

Shilling isn’t only for carnies

Carnival operators have a name for people planted in the audience who jump up to volunteer to see the show, turns out they were shills for the pitch man.

Many of us are going to live to see the books telling us Joe the Plumber was on the payroll all along.

Either that, or he really is as stupid as he pretends to be, basking in his 15 minutes of fame, and McCain’s going to be sorry for bringing him up.

He doesn’t have any plumbers licenses. In Ohio, without them, he will never make anough money to buy the company. All he can do is minor service work.

And shill for a politician.

October 28, 2008

Moving back’rds

Big splash this weekend about comedian Al Franken looking real good as the next junior senator from Minnesota.

There’ve been an awful lot of folks have gone from the entertainment stage to elected politics — Ronald Reagan, Jesse Ventura, and Arnold Schwarzenegger come quickly from recent memory.

Sarah Palin, though, has an excellent chance of reversing the trend.

October 27, 2008

Fans? or supporters?

Somebody on one of the Sunday morning TV shows said Sarah Palin “has lots of fans.”

The vice president is, in fact, only one heart attack or gun shot away from becoming president.

So is that what we want for a president — someone who has lots of “fans?”

Or would we be better served with lots of trusting supporters.

October 20, 2008

Executive privilege

“John and I are asking the Obama campaign to release communications it has had with this group (Acorn) and to do it immediately.” Sarah Palin in a stump address.

This from the vice-presidential candidate who, as governor, exhibited her executive experience by refusing to respond to subpoenas issued by her own state legislature.

October 3, 2008

Scary times ahead

I was wrong. Sort of. The folksy “I’ll get back to ya” really is a put-on, and she only put it on a few times.

But she entered the hall with a set of well-rehearsed statements, from the Reagan-reminiscent “Say it ain’t so, Joe, there you go again pointing backwards again” to the “Your plan is a white flag of surrender in Iraq” line that she almost couldn’t remember.

She stayed on her talking points, mostly ignored the questions and gave instead the answers she was there to give, and winked a lot.

The most substantive statement of the night was her indication that she would be a strong, activve vice president.

“I’m thankful the Constitution would allow a bit more authority given to the vice president if that vice president so chose to exert it,” she said.

But the Constitution only allows “a bit more authority” if the president wants to assign it. Otherwise, the vice president is limited to breaking ties in the Senate, and replacing the president if that person becomes unable to serve.

Sarah Palin seems to aspire to a continuation of Dick Cheney’s vice presidency of secrecy and power, provided she can be successful in “making sure too that our president understands what our strengths are.” This lady, if this and other statements she has made, and indications of her style as mayor and governor, may be taken as portents, deals from power of office, rather than power of vote. That can be a scary proposition for the rest of us.

October 2, 2008

We’re in for a show tonight

One needs to be wicked careful about calling someone stupid just because they put on a show about being common. Every now and again something creeps out of that Sarah Palin that makes you wonder, or should make you wonder, which part’s show and which part’s smarter than she’s letting on.

Like the time Katie was trying to find out about something mavericky McCain’d done and Palin said, “I’ll just get back to ya.”

What I saw was the voice change was a) she’d been embarassingly caught with no answer, or b) she’d just tweaked Couric’s and Olbermann’s chains real hard.

She did it again with the Supreme Court question. She’s from a state that is mostly hunters. There are 120, 611 registered Republicans and 73,446 registered Democrats as of Aug. 4 this year. Anybody betting she didn’t know about the Supremes making gun ownership legal couple months ago better be hanging onto their wallets.

She did it again about what newspapers she reads. She could easily have said the Anchorage Daily News or the Juneau Empire. She didn’t get to be governor, even of Alaska, without knowing at least a little about the Lower 48.

I think we’re in for a show tonight.

Of course, if it plays out that way, she’s even less qualified to be Prez than most folks already think.

September 29, 2008

These things I believe

I believe that every family has a right to a family doctor, and that as long as the employer will not provide it, in large part because the consumer does not want to pay for it, the taxpayer must expect to pick up the cost.

I believe that we need to know our enemies — how they live, what they believe — before we move in with guns, treasure and young people’s lives trying to force a way of life they will never accept.

I believe books about other cultures are written from the perspective of their authors, and the only way to really know another people is to live among them, to share their bread and drink.

I believe the American middle class is a special interest, and must have as much representation in the halls of government as the upper-level captains of industry and finance.

I believe there are wasteful earmarks such as bridges to nowhere, and valuable earmarks such as investments in a broad education for our children and entrepreneurial research into ways to provide sustainable and non-destructible energy.

I believe we need to put on our nation an international face that says we are accepting of people of varied race and ancestry; that our president must be welcomed by our allies and respected by our foes, not because we have the biggest guns, but because we have shown by example we are willing to share the planet with people who may not agree with some of the specifics of our lifestyle.

I believe that when hundreds of thousands of citizens of other nations gather to applaud our leaders, they will gather to convince their leaders to join with us in times of great stress, and when those citizens walk away from our leaders, their leaders will walk away from us

Those are the main measures by which I will chose the person to get my vote for president.

Where has all the money gone?

We’re spending $10 billion a month in Iraq and we’re about to put the economic bailout tab to more than $800 billion about $15B to Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac, $85B to AIG, and now a proposed $700B to the banking industry). We owe our soul to China, which has picked up a large portion of our national debt. Our banks are charging higher interest, denying credit, and going under.

How many things could we do to make life better for our citizens that are not going to be possible because of the greed of a few and the need to now merely save the many from extinction.

And what’s really amazing is how willing now for federal help are the very industrial leaders who until about a year ago decried socialization or federal regulation of anything! Let the market take care of it, they said.

The market place is a great place to determine what sells and what doesn’t. But there have to be some rules, like in some sports, where the game ends if one team gets behind by some preset limit, the other is declared the winner and the game stops —before the final score becomes too embarrassing to the loser.

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