Because of the recently aired ABC interview Americans have their first beginning insight into Governor Sarah Palin. Below is a brief review of the interview.
Abortion question – Palin is not pro-life. Her position is that abortion is an issue that should be turned over to the States. Given this answer her position indicates that she would be satisfied on the abortion issue if all fifty states had the most liberal abortion laws as long as each of the states had determined the law for their state. Abortion is one issue where “States rights” as a theory isn’t acceptable. The Constitution gives the Federal Government the responsibility and role to protect life. Palin may be pro States-rights on this issue but she isn’t pro-life.
Also on the abortion issue it was interesting that Palin kept saying that “pro life was her personal opinion.” She didn’t explicitly contrast her personal opinion with what she would do in the way of public policy although the way she kept insisting that pro-life was her personal opinion one wondered what Palin public policy on abortion would be. Remember in 2004 John Kerry likewise said his personal opinion was that he didn’t like abortion although he couldn’t translate that into public policy. So the question is, will Sarah Palin translate her personal opposition to abortion into public policy. If Palin’s record as Governor of Alaska is any indication we should be slow about concluding that she would be willing to take abortion on in the public square.
Earmarks question – While Palin may be a Reformer in some sense, she clearly isn’t a Reformer on the earmarks question. She lobbied for earmarks while a Mayor. She accepted the earmark money for the Bridge to Nowhere, even if she didn’t build the bridge. Now, I understand the way Government works. I understand that politicians have a twisted responsibility to bring home the pork. I don’t like that but I understand it is the governing reality of the way things work. Therefore I am not surprised to learn that Palin tried to get her fair share (and maybe more) of the booty that was stolen from taxpayers through confiscatory taxation. What I am insulted by is the cynical attempt to try and sell to the nation that Palin is a reform politician when it comes to the pork and earmarks question. On this issue she is just another politician who operates just the same as Ted Stevens, Frank Murkowski, and all the rest.
National Security Credentials question – Would someone please tell me what the ability to see Russian territory from the State you Govern has anything to do with National security. It’s embarrassing to hear someone seriously put that forth has some kind of answer to how one is qualified on National Security questions. Also, with respect to National security issues, I am less than impressed with someone being in charge of the Alaska National guard. To be fair though, Obama doesn’t have any National security experience, and I can think of quite a number of other Vice Presidents that didn’t have National Security experience when they were tapped to be Vice President so I don’t think the lack of experience on this issue is that debilitating as it pertains to be qualified to be Vice President.
Homosexual Question — Palin was evasive on this issue and it seemed clear that she didn’t want to address the issue. Gibson tried to get her views on whether homosexuality is genetic or whether it is something that someone chooses. Palin dodged the question.
Sexist question – Charles Gibson asked whether or not it was sexist to ask a woman candidate about her ability to be Vice President given the reality that she has small children and a large family to care for. The very asking of this question indicates that there remains some sort of residue in the American psyche that a woman with a family should be spending the preponderance of her time nurturing her family. The reason that the same question is never asked of a man in the position Palin is in is because there is no residual belief that a man is supposed to be the nurturer to the family the way a mother is. The fact that Charlie Gibson can ask this question, albeit in an embarrassing and apologetic manner reveals the hypocrisy of many Christians who are flying right past this issue barely pausing to consider it. It seems that Charlie Gibson is more Christian then many Christians. At least he asked the question.
An alternative and more cynical explanation for Gibson’s “sexist question” is that by asking the question Gibson is not revealing some Christian worldview residual hangover but rather he is attempting to subtly expose the contradiction in the worldview of Palin’s social conservative Christian base. On one hand this base has long been opposed to the feminist agenda while on the other hand they are rallying around somebody who embraces substantial elements of the feminist agenda.
This reality is seen in what Palin had to say about Title IX. In answering Gibson’s “sexist question,” Palin said she was a product of Title IX. Social conservatives have consistently (and rightly) gnashed their teeth about Title IX legislation. Most have noted that Title IX legislation was an attack on the family and that its reason for being was feminist philosophy. Social conservatives have hated title IX legislation and now they are cheering and rallying behind someone who proudly proclaims that she is a product of Title IX.
Finally, on this whole feminism issue, Palin went out of her way again to praise Hillary Clinton. I understand that a great deal of what Palin is saying on this issue may possibly be for public consumption in order to pick off some feminist votes and may be contrived in such a way to make it difficult for the Marxist media establishment to oppose her but when Palin starts praising Hillary Clinton, as some kind of feminist role model I just feel ill to my stomach.
God Question – Here Gibson played a YouTube segment where Palin invokes God and His plan in Iraq. I am sure Palin had been briefed and coached on how to answer this question by the McCain campaign. On this question Palin went into full spin mode and somehow tried to offer Abraham Lincoln’s comments about needing to be on God’s side as an explanation for what she was saying on the YouTube comment. The answer made no sense whatsoever but given the possible explosiveness of this issue, Gibson left her incoherent answer alone. It should also be noted that Gibson didn’t give the whole context of the Palin quote. The way that Gibson framed the quote was significantly misleading.
Leaving Wasilla In Debt Question – Gibson pointed out that when Palin became Mayor, Wasilla was fiscally healthy while when she left office Wasilla was in debt. Gibson implied that such a reality hardly gave credence to the persona around Governor Palin that she is a fiscal conservative. Palin countered that the debt was due to the new sports facility for which Wasilla voters had opted in referendum. Palin thus suggested that the debt was legitimate since the voters had voted for it. Though, I understand that this is largely accepted reasoning I fail to understand how it is fiscally conservative for an elected official to allow 65% of the community which supports a sports arena (or whatever the vote was in Wasilla for the sports arena) to pick the pocket of 35% who voted against the sports arena. Why should a majority be allowed to vote to force a minority to join them in debt? Shouldn’t elected officials protect the interest of the minority in these matters?
There is one more thing that interests me about Palin given this interview. Several times Palin interjected some phrase like, “that’s my worldview.” I wish Gibson had picked up on that and had asked her to tease out what she meant by the idea of “worldview.” That might have been interesting.
As far as Gibson is concerned he was walking a tightrope in this interview. He can’t be perceived as going directly after her, or nothing he turns up in the way of negative information about Palin will be taken seriously because people will dismiss new revelations exposed by Gibson by saying that as a member of the elite media he was just trying to destroy her. On the other hand as a member of the Marxist media he clearly wants to destroy Palin. The whole God, Guns, and Life had to drive Gibson nuts. I would also say that Gibson came across in the interview as condescending and patronizing.
Given the way that the major media treats Palin I don’t know why the campaign just doesn’t boycott them and take their message to alternative media outlets. Such a move would be a blow against the major media outlets while at the same time giving legitimacy to the alternative outlets. I believe that the alternative outlets are strong enough now that such a move could be successful.
Another note of concern about Palin has come up in light of the continued unraveling of American financial institutions. Palin has said that we need to overhaul the nations oversight and regulatory apparatus since their inadequacy has led to the recent financial meltdown. The error with Palin’s position is that she is recommending a socialist solution (more and better government financial regulation) to a problem that was created by the very thing she is offering as a solution. The reason that financial institutions are melting down is that, because of Government involvement, those running the financial institutions that are melting down never had to worry about the shady investments being made because they knew that the Government would bail them out if those questionable investments went bad. In fairness Palin did say that letting Lehman brothers go down without a bailout was solid.
Good analysis overall, Bret. Although I would say the reason Palin is not pro-life is because she doesn’t seem to hold to Christian just war theory and favors international interventionism.
I can’t agree with your take on abortion and states rights, however. Saying abortion is not a federal matter is not necessarily ceding ground to pro-abortionists. Protecting life and liberty are governmental matters, but not every governmental matter is a federal matter.
How would it be handled federally, anyway?
1. Perhaps the SCOTUS. But this is to misconstrue the function and jurisdiction of the judicial branch; “legislating from the bench” is the problem in the first place. The quixotic hope that “the right judges” will overturn a court opinion which does not have the force of universal law in the first place has not gotten us anywhere.
2. Maybe the federal Constitution. But I seriously doubt a Constitutional amendment “defining life” would ever be passed at this stage. Besides, the source of the problem is not really confusion over the scientific definition of life.
3. Unless I am missing something, the only remaining option is congress. Ron Paul has already proposed a bill that would effectively negate Roe, but has received little or no recognition or support from Christians.
It would be easier to ban abortions and/or prosecute abortionists if there were more control and recourse at the local level. I am becoming more convinced that nullification and interposition are the most effective tactics for resisting the tyranny of our age.
Joshua,
It is true that not every governmental matter is a federal matter but this is one governmental matter that is a federal matter. Any legalization of the termination of innocent life of the born or unborn is a direct violation of our unalienable right to life which the Constitution was penned to defend. The fifth amendment guarantees due process to all of its citizens. “no person … shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
This is a case where Federal interposition would have to engage in a situation where a State allowed life to be taken without due process. It simply is not tolerable that people in North Carolina should be yoked to people in Nevada if people in Nevada are engaged in state sponsored murder. Either the North Carolina people through their representatives in Washington stop such infamous crime or people in North Carolina should secede.
Personally, I’m all for nullification, interposition, armed rebellion under lesser magistrates (even lesser magistrates from different spheres having to themselves practice interposition), Constitutional amendment, or any other means to end the slaughter that has Nazi killing Jews looking like Altar boys by comparison.
Bret,
Don’t get me wrong, I would rejoice to see the slaughter of the unborn ended, by most any way possible. I just don’t see any progress going on at the federal level since 1973. This is why I think a decentralized and more direct approach might be more effective.
Could you clarify/expand on your second paragraph comment regarding “Federal interposition?” How would the federal government go about ending abortion? Wouldn’t anything short of repeal of Roe force the matter back to lower courts and the states anyway?
My point about Federal interposition is that in a situation where a State allows abortion, the Federal government would have to practice interposition to void the sovereign State’s decision. Of course all of this is merely theoretical. This kind of federal interposition is basically what Lincoln did (w/o warrant) in invading the South and stripping from them their sovereignty on the secession issue.
I agree that there isn’t likely going to be any progress on the federal level. It is this reality that has me scratching my head about the Palin phenomenon among Evanjellyfish. Even if Palin became President upon McCain’s death in office immediately following his oath of office, a Palin presidency could never ever shove a pro life SCOTUS candidate past the US Senate. So, unless she’s willing to precipitate a Constitutional crisis she won’t be able to end abortion. It’s just nuts to vote for McCain thinking that Palin is strong on life.
I know you’re strongly pro life. I didn’t mean to imply anything other than that. Forgive me if I communicated in such a way that that could have been interpreted from what I wrote.
Bret, thanks for the clarification. I didn’t interpret what you said as impugning my pro-life views. I don’t think I would have any objection to your scenario in principle and I can see how it would be Constitutional vis-a-vis the 5th amendment (unlike the situation in 1861).
I also agree that saying “abortion is a state issue” does not resolve the matter one way or the other. 50 states that have legalized abortion are just as bad as one federal branch that has legalized abortion. An unjust law or court decision is unjust because it is contrary to God’s law, not simply because the proper procedural and bureaucratic processes were ignored.
Bret,
Very good piece. I have just a one negative comment; the rest gets a hearty Amen. I don’t see that Palin went into spin mode on her Lincoln reference. I thought she was clear that her intent was to pray that we are on God’s side. The Lincoln reference seemed legitimate and astute. It reduced to: If you have problems w/ my view on prayer regarding war, then you have problems with Lincoln’s. You don’t have problems with Lincoln’s. So you shouldn’t have problems with my view. We might say that she did two things. She told the public what she meant and then she did a reductio of those who would accept Lincoln but not her.
Again, great piece on many fronts. I particularly liked your observations on abortion.
Ron
Ron,
Did you view the Youtube piece that had Palin’s comments?
Anyway, the thing about Palin that makes me question your interpretation is her Pentecostal roots. I have some roots in Pentecostalism and those Youtube comments sounded more like Benny Hinn then they did Abraham Lincoln.
But, that being said, I hope your correct. It would be a good thing if she were somewhere between Lincoln and Hinn in her theology proper.
Thanks for visiting.
Bret
Hi Bret,
Yes, I saw the Youtube piece and after seeing only that I got the same impression. Then I saw the entire piece on one of the major networks. Her statements were very orthodox. I believe it was her pastor’s statements that led me and others to an unfair interpretation of Palin’s statements that appeared on Youtube.
Cheers,
Ron