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September 08, 2008
The answer is, "Yes."
Bill Kristol didn't leave many out when he offered his heartfelt gratitude at the improved Republican chances in this fall's presidential sweepstakes --- Barack Obama for picking Biden over Clinton as running mate, John McCain for picking Sarah Palin. But mostly he thanked the liberal press for ruthlessly attacking Palin. By doing that they giving her the largest exposure of all four candidates with a huge dollop of sympathy to go along with it.
By the end of the week, after Palin's tour de force in St. Paul, the liberal media were so befuddled that they were reduced to complaining that conservatives aren't being narrow-minded enough. Thus, Hanna Rosin--who has covered religion and politics for the Washington Post, and has also written for the New Yorker, the New Republic, and the New York Times--lamented in a piece for Slate: "So cavalier are conservatives about Sarah Palin's wreck of a home life that they make the rest of us look stuffy and slow-witted by comparison." I suppose it was ungenerous of conservatives, in our broad-mindedness and tolerance of human frailty, to have let Ms. Rosin down, just when she was counting on us to bring out the tar and feathers. But she gives us too much credit when she suggests we make the liberal media look stuffy and slow-witted. They do that all by themselves.
For instance, what in the world can she be thinking when she refers to "Sarah Palin's wreck of a home life"? The only "domestic irregularities" (to use Ms. Rosin's loaded term) she cites are "two difficult pregnancies--Palin's with a Down syndrome baby and now her unmarried teenage daughter's." The second of these is a situation that the young woman and her family seem to be dealing with appropriately by their own lights. "Bristol and the young man she will marry are going to realize very quickly the difficulties of raising a child, which is why they will have the love and support of our entire family," the Palins said. But what is "irregular" about bringing to term a Down syndrome child? Is Rosin suggesting--without having the courage to say so--that Mrs. Palin should have aborted the baby? Is it upsetting to her to have a prominent woman choose not to do so?
I believe the answer to that last question is, yes it is very upsetting for liberals when a prominent woman chooses not to have an abortion. She sets an example they can't bear to look at. She refuses to be the victim, and liberals find that very upsetting. Who does she think she is?
Posted by Tom Bowler at 07:13 AM | Permalink
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