JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
I admit my defending her is about a defensive reaction based on partisanship more than anything else. I don't really want to defend her that much, honestly. I just get my hackles up when people get too over the line about it. Calling her nasty names and all that. It's uncalled for, for anyone.
I really don't like her much, and I cringe when she speaks now. I don't want her to get the nomination. I don't believe she will win either. I actually think that many are correct in the assumption that her winning the nomination is a win for Obama. I don't think this country is likely to elect her.
The only point I have tried to make is that it's irrational that people are so hateful of her if they really think she is no threat whatsoever. It doesn't matter how people spin it, that makes zero sense to me.
But I'm rapidly loosing interest in the subject, and any desire to defend her.
That's about what I was thinking. I didn't see anyone really defending Palin as a serious and desirable candidate for national political office (or even as being a good journalist or any such), but merely nibbling about the edges of the criticism--especially the irrelevant remarks about her.
Mostly what I see is them trying to explain away her worst excesses. This is similar to how I see reasonable conservatives trying to make the Tea Party sound like a reasonable movement that reflects their own thinking rather than "a right-wing reactionary movement, one whose themes (jingoism, militarism and a cult of victimhood at the hands of sundry nefarious betrayers) are as old as the John Birch Society." [That was such a nice turn of phrase by a writer from The Nation I had to borrow it. Credit Peter Rothberg.]