Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Their Hatred of Palin is Not About Energy Policy: It's About Trig

I continue to be amazed at the unvarnished vitriol aimed at Sarah Palin. In Salon today, not a fringe publication, the "popular culture" writer Cintra Wilson launches a demagogic diatribe--complete with Viagra jokes and which uses the f-word--that is so over the top it is past Jupiter. And yes, the temerity of the Palins to have Trig is a focus. Wilson writes:

Sarah Palin is a bit comical, like one of those cutthroat Texas cheerleader stage moms. What her Down syndrome baby and pregnant teenage daughter unequivocally prove, however, is that her most beloved child is the antiabortion platform that ensures her own political ambitions with the conservative right. The throat she's so hot to cut is that of all American women.
In other words, SHE DIDN'T ABORT! I HATE HER!

Wilson continues with more of the same class and eloquence:
Sarah Palin and her virtual burqa have me and my friends retching into our handbags. She's such a power-mad, backwater beauty-pageant casualty, it's easy to write her off and make fun of her. But in reality I feel as horrified as a ghetto Jew watching the rise of National Socialism.

She is dangerous. She is not just pro-life, she's anti-life. She is the suppression of human feeling and instinct. She is a slave to the compromises dictated by her own desire for power and control. Sarah Palin is untethered from her own needs and those of her family, which is in crisis, with a pregnant daughter, a son on the way to Iraq and a special-needs infant.
Gee, from what I can see, Palin is a happy woman with a loving family. And perhaps that is what provoked such rage. This column says a lot about Wilson and nothing about Palin. Poor thing.

Wait: There's more. Apparently the Democratic Party of South Carolina thinks the same thing (without the f-word). From the story:
South Carolina Democratic chairwoman Carol Fowler sharply attacked Sarah Palin today, saying John McCain had chosen a running mate "whose primary qualification seems to be that she hasn't had an abortion."
Slimy, slimy, slimy.

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Thursday, September 04, 2008

More on "Why They Hate (and Love) Her"

I continue to be interested in our discussion about Governor Sarah Palin and why she generates such strong emotions. Before the extent of her effect became clear, I wrote:

As I ponder all of this, I think McCain/Palin versus Obama/Biden vividly reflects the cultural divisions that are tearing our society apart more starkly than any election in my memory.
I think it is fair to say that subsequent events validated that view--and isn't it interesting how much of this involves bioethical themes, human exceptionalism, and the growth of anti-humanism I have been warning about?

That also seems to be Jonathan Last's take over at the First Things blog. Last, who used to edit my Daily Standard pieces, also thinks, as I do, that Trig's birth is a major cause of the bitter antipathy toward Palin we have seen in some quarters. But Last looks more deeply into our collective ID--if that is the right term--than I did, also mentioning her religiosity and, more emphatically, The Palins' fecundity. From his piece:

The Palin family's five children would have been unexceptional forty years ago, but today constitute something of a fertility freak show. They're the type of people for whom the epithet "breeder" was invented...

Why the worry about this? First, there's the fact that few of Palin's tormenters can understand the fact of her large, traditional family. That is certainly not the way in which they have structured their lives.

Second, there is the left's long-standing concern about overpopulation, which has become a staple of modern environmentalism, beginning with Paul Ehrlich's 1968 best-seller The Population Bomb. Ehrlich preached a Malthusian near-future in which hundreds of millions would perish by famine as the world’s unchecked population growth spiraled to infinity...

But [despite being wrong] Ehrlich's prognostications never fell far out of favor, particularly with environmentalists who take it as an article of faith that the planet is already overcrowded. To them, the prodigious Palin family is surely seen as taking more than its fair share.

I think these factors are also why so many people love her. In any event, something has to explain the depth of vituperation and adulation she has aroused--and the "experience" and energy issues aren't of the kind that stir such strong emotions. Last has given us an interesting analysis to chew over. Check it out.

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