
Originally Posted by
Reverend Joe
I hate to go back a few posts, but I wanted to comment on this:
I respect your whole "women should be equal thing"; and yeah, women deserve the same respect as men; the deciding factor should be proving yourself. But like someone said earlier, I think Hillary Clinton basically proved that women can "break the glass ceiling." If it weren't for Obama, she would have been a shoe-in for president. Nobody even thought to question her eligibility for president until her campaign brought it up when she ran against Obama, and in a race against McCain, who would have doubtless have pulled as many underhanded moves as he did against Obama regarding her eligibility for president (because she was a woman, as opposed to black) it would have been easy to play the charisma card, something the Clintons have always been damn good at. It's almost a shame that she wasn't nominated, because she would have shown how much of an idiot Palin is by comparison (not that I feel too partial to Clinton, or anybody in politics, for that matter) although, to be fair, Palin would have never ended up in the limelight if Clinton had been nominated (or maybe... she would have been a good vote stealer; then again, a black man would be better, considering that Obama lost -- but I digress.)
Anyhow, I have listened to her plenty, and I don't think she's qualified. And that's not based on interviews, or plenty of other news sources I could have based my opinion on, but rather on the VP debate. She really came off as being at the level of Dan Quayle: she think's she's really smart and she's hot ****, but she's not. She should rely on her advisers a LOT more to sell herself, because she makes it painfully clear how inarticulate, if not incompetent, she is when she tries to defend a political position. She also has a bad habit of milking media attention; it makes her look desperate. The only other person who I have seen doing what she has done in the past year is Al Gore, and who the hell wants to listen to him? If a woman wants to be president, fine. But just like every man who runs, she should be qualified, and I don't see that in Palin.
Also, if you were to compare her to a good conservative president, you should bring up someone like Eisenhower, or Nixon (pre-Watergate, that is), people who actually managed to legitimately unite the nation, and lead it well. The only reason President Jellybeans ever won in such a landslide was because he played off of a movement of paranoia and craziness and reactions to the Cold War. People who have followed his model have inevitably met with very mixed results, because he is far too polarizing, not to mention that Obama won on a platform of working together (whether or not he followed up on it is debatable, but he sure as hell won.) That might not be a good sign for someone as polarizing as Palin.
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