Once Elected, Palin Hired Friends and Lashed Foes
WASILLA, Alaska - Gov. Sarah Palin lives by the maxim that all politics is local, not to mention personal.
So when there was a vacancy at the top of the State Division of Agriculture, she appointed a high school classmate, Franci Havemeister, to the $95,000-a-year directorship. A former real estate agent, Ms. Havemeister cited her childhood love of cows as a qualification for running the roughly $2 million agency.
Ms. Havemeister was one of at least five schoolmates Ms. Palin hired, often at salaries far exceeding their private sector wages.
When Ms. Palin had to cut her first state budget, she avoided the legion of frustrated legislators and mayors. Instead, she huddled with her budget director and her husband, Todd, an oil field worker who is not a state employee, and vetoed millions of dollars of legislative projects.
And four months ago, a Wasilla blogger, Sherry Whitstine, who chronicles the governor's career with an astringent eye, answered her phone to hear an assistant to the governor on the line, she said.
"You should be ashamed!" Ivy Frye, the assistant, told her. "Stop blogging. Stop blogging right now!"
Ms. Palin walks the national stage as a small-town foe of "good old boy" politics and a champion of ethics reform. The charismatic 44-year-old governor draws enthusiastic audiences and high approval ratings. And as the Republican vice-presidential nominee, she points to her management experience while deriding her Democratic rivals, Senators Barack Obama and Joseph R. Biden Jr., as speechmakers who never have run anything.
But an examination of her swift rise and record as mayor of Wasilla and then governor finds that her visceral style and penchant for attacking critics - she sometimes calls local opponents "haters" - contrasts with her carefully crafted public image.
Throughout her political career, she has pursued vendettas, fired officials who crossed her and sometimes blurred the line between government and personal grievance, according to a review of public records and interviews with 60 Republican and Democratic legislators and local officials.
Still, Ms. Palin has many supporters. As a two-term mayor she paved roads and built an ice rink, and as governor she has pushed through higher taxes on the oil companies that dominate one-third of the state's economy. She stirs deep emotions. In Wasilla, many residents display unflagging affection, cheering "our Sarah" and hissing at her critics.
"She is bright and has unfailing political instincts," said Steve Haycox, a history professor at the University of Alaska. "She taps very directly into anxieties about the economic future."
"But," he added, "her governing style raises a lot of hard questions."
Ms. Palin declined to grant an interview for this article. The McCain-Palin campaign responded to some questions on her behalf and that of her husband, while referring others to the governor's spokespeople, who did not respond.
Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell said Ms. Palin had conducted an accessible and effective administration in the public's interest. "Everything she does is for the ordinary working people of Alaska," he said.
In Wasilla, a builder said he complained to Mayor Palin when the city attorney put a stop-work order on his housing project. She responded, he said, by engineering the attorney's firing.
Interviews show that Ms. Palin runs an administration that puts a premium on loyalty and secrecy. The governor and her top officials sometimes use personal e-mail accounts for state business; dozens of e-mail messages obtained by The New York Times show that her staff members studied whether that could allow them to circumvent subpoenas seeking public records.
Rick Steiner, a University of Alaska professor, sought the e-mail messages of state scientists who had examined the effect of global warming on polar bears. (Ms. Palin said the scientists had found no ill effects, and she has sued the federal government to block the listing of the bears as endangered.) An administration official told Mr. Steiner that his request would cost $468,784 to process.
When Mr. Steiner finally obtained the e-mail messages - through a federal records request - he discovered that state scientists had in fact agreed that the bears were in danger, records show.
"Their secrecy is off the charts," Mr. Steiner said.
State legislators are investigating accusations that Ms. Palin and her husband pressured officials to fire a state trooper who had gone through a messy divorce with her sister, charges that she denies. But interviews make clear that the Palins draw few distinctions between the personal and the political.
Last summer State Representative John Harris, the Republican speaker of the House, picked up his phone and heard Mr. Palin's voice. The governor's husband sounded edgy. He said he was unhappy that Mr. Harris had hired John Bitney as his chief of staff, the speaker recalled. Mr. Bitney was a high school classmate of the Palins and had worked for Ms. Palin. But she fired Mr. Bitney after learning that he had fallen in love with another longtime friend.
"I understood from the call that Todd wasn't happy with me hiring John and he'd like to see him not there," Mr. Harris said.
"The Palin family gets upset at personal issues," he added. "And at our level, they want to strike back."
Through a campaign spokesman, Mr. Palin said he "did not recall" referring to Mr. Bitney in the conversation.
Hometown Mayor
Laura Chase, the campaign manager during Ms. Palin's first run for mayor in 1996, recalled the night the two women chatted about her ambitions.
"I said, ‘You know, Sarah, within 10 years you could be governor,' " Ms. Chase recalled. "She replied, ‘I want to be president.' "
Ms. Palin grew up in Wasilla, an old fur trader's outpost and now a fast-growing exurb of Anchorage. The town sits in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley, edged by jagged mountains and birch forests. In the 1930s, the Roosevelt administration took farmers from the Dust Bowl area and resettled them here; their Democratic allegiances defined the valley for half a century.
In the past three decades, socially conservative Oklahomans and Texans have flocked north to the oil fields of Alaska. They filled evangelical churches around Wasilla and revived the Republican Party. Many of these working-class residents formed the electoral backbone for Ms. Palin, who ran for mayor on a platform of gun rights, opposition to abortion and the ouster of the "complacent" old guard.
After winning the mayoral election in 1996, Ms. Palin presided over a city rapidly outgrowing itself. Septic tanks had begun to pollute lakes, and residential lots were carved willy-nilly out of the woods. She passed road and sewer bonds, cut property taxes but raised the sales tax.
And, her supporters say, she cleaned out the municipal closet, firing veteran officials to make way for her own team. "She had an agenda for change and for doing things differently," said Judy Patrick, a City Council member at the time.
But careers were turned upside down. The mayor quickly fired the town's museum director, John Cooper. Later, she sent an aide to the museum to talk to the three remaining employees. "He told us they only wanted two," recalled Esther West, one of the three, "and we had to pick who was going to be laid off." The three quit as one.
Ms. Palin cited budget difficulties for the museum cuts. Mr. Cooper thought differently, saying the museum had become a microcosm of class and cultural conflicts in town. "It represented that the town was becoming more progressive, and they didn't want that," he said.
Days later, Mr. Cooper recalled, a vocal conservative, Steve Stoll, sidled up to him. Mr. Stoll had supported Ms. Palin and had a long-running feud with Mr. Cooper. "He said: ‘Gotcha, Cooper,' " Mr. Cooper said.
Mr. Stoll did not recall that conversation, although he said he supported Ms. Palin's campaign and was pleased when she fired Mr. Cooper.
In 1997, Ms. Palin fired the longtime city attorney, Richard Deuser, after he issued the stop-work order on a home being built by Don Showers, another of her campaign supporters.
Your attorney, Mr. Showers told Ms. Palin, is costing me lots of money.
"She told me she'd like to see him fired," Mr. Showers recalled. "But she couldn't do it herself because the City Council hires the city attorney." Ms. Palin told him to write the council members to complain.
Meanwhile, Ms. Palin pushed the issue from the inside. "She started the ball rolling," said Ms. Patrick, who also favored the firing. Mr. Deuser was soon replaced by Ken Jacobus, then the State Republican Party's general counsel.
"Professionals were either forced out or fired," Mr. Deuser said.
Ms. Palin ordered city employees not to talk to the press. And she used city money to buy a white Suburban for the mayor's use - employees sarcastically called it the mayor-mobile.
The new mayor also tended carefully to her evangelical base. She appointed a pastor to the town planning board. And she began to eye the library. For years, social conservatives had pressed the library director to remove books they considered immoral.
"People would bring books back censored," recalled former Mayor John Stein, Ms. Palin's predecessor. "Pages would get marked up or torn out."
Witnesses and contemporary news accounts say Ms. Palin asked the librarian about removing books from the shelves. The McCain-Palin presidential campaign says Ms. Palin never advocated censorship.
But in 1995, Ms. Palin, then a city councilwoman, told colleagues that she had noticed the book "Daddy's Roommate" on the shelves and that it did not belong there, according to Ms. Chase and Mr. Stein. Ms. Chase read the book, which helps children understand homosexuality, and said it was inoffensive; she suggested that Ms. Palin read it.
"Sarah said she didn't need to read that stuff," Ms. Chase said. "It was disturbing that someone would be willing to remove a book from the library and she didn't even read it."
"I'm still proud of Sarah," she added, "but she scares the bejeebers out of me."
Reform Crucible
Restless ambition defined Ms. Palin in the early years of this decade. She raised money for Senator Ted Stevens, a Republican from the state; finished second in the 2002 Republican primary for lieutenant governor; and sought to fill the seat of Senator Frank H. Murkowski when he ran for governor.
Mr. Murkowski appointed his daughter to the seat, but as a consolation prize, he gave Ms. Palin the $125,000-a-year chairmanship of a state commission overseeing oil and gas drilling.
Ms. Palin discovered that the state Republican leader, Randy Ruedrich, a commission member, was conducting party business on state time and favoring regulated companies. When Mr. Murkowski failed to act on her complaints, she quit and went public.
The Republican establishment shunned her. But her break with the gentlemen's club of oil producers and political power catapulted her into the public eye.
"She was honest and forthright," said Jay Kerttula, a former Democratic state senator from Palmer.
Ms. Palin entered the 2006 primary for governor as a formidable candidate.
In the middle of the primary, a conservative columnist in the state, Paul Jenkins, unearthed e-mail messages showing that Ms. Palin had conducted campaign business from the mayor's office. Ms. Palin handled the crisis with a street fighter's guile.
"I told her it looks like she did the same thing that Randy Ruedrich did," Mr. Jenkins recalled. "And she said, ‘Yeah, what I did was wrong.' "
Mr. Jenkins hung up and decided to forgo writing about it. His phone rang soon after.
Mr. Jenkins said a reporter from Fairbanks, reading from a Palin news release, demanded to know why he was "smearing" her. "Now I look at her and think: ‘Man, you're slick,' " he said.
Ms. Palin won the primary, and in the general election she faced Tony Knowles, the former two-term Democratic governor, and Andrew Halcro, an independent.
Not deeply versed in policy, Ms. Palin skipped some candidate forums; at others, she flipped through hand-written, color-coded index cards strategically placed behind her nameplate.
Before one forum, Mr. Halcro said he saw aides shovel reports at Ms. Palin as she crammed. Her showman's instincts rarely failed. She put the pile of reports on the lectern. Asked what she would do about health care policy, she patted the stack and said she would find an answer in the pile of solutions.
"She was fresh, and she was tomorrow," said Michael Carey, a former editorial page editor for The Anchorage Daily News. "She just floated along like Mary Poppins."
Government
Half a century after Alaska became a state, Ms. Palin was inaugurated as governor in Fairbanks and took up the reformer's sword.
As she assembled her cabinet and made other state appointments, those with insider credentials were now on the outs. But a new pattern became clear. She surrounded herself with people she has known since grade school and members of her church.
Mr. Parnell, the lieutenant governor, praised Ms. Palin's appointments. "The people she hires are competent, qualified, top-notch people," he said.
Ms. Palin chose Talis Colberg, a borough assemblyman from the Matanuska valley, as her attorney general, provoking a bewildered question from the legal community: "Who?" Mr. Colberg, who did not return calls, moved from a one-room building in the valley to one of the most powerful offices in the state, supervising some 500 people.
"I called him and asked, ‘Do you know how to supervise people?' " said a family friend, Kathy Wells. "He said, ‘No, but I think I'll get some help.' "
The Wasilla High School yearbook archive now doubles as a veritable directory of state government. Ms. Palin appointed Mr. Bitney, her former junior high school band-mate, as her legislative director and chose another classmate, Joe Austerman, to manage the economic development office for $82,908 a year. Mr. Austerman had established an Alaska franchise for Mailboxes Etc.
To her supporters - and with an 80 percent approval rating, she has plenty - Ms. Palin has lifted Alaska out of a mire of corruption. She gained the passage of a bill that tightens the rules covering lobbyists. And she rewrote the tax code to capture a greater share of oil and gas sale proceeds.
"Does anybody doubt that she's a tough negotiator?" said State Representative Carl Gatto, Republican of Palmer.
Yet recent controversy has marred Ms. Palin's reform credentials. In addition to the trooper investigation, lawmakers in April accused her of improperly culling thousands of e-mail addresses from a state database for a mass mailing to rally support for a policy initiative.
While Ms. Palin took office promising a more open government, her administration has battled to keep information secret. Her inner circle discussed the benefit of using private e-mail addresses. An assistant told her it appeared that such e-mail messages sent to a private address on a "personal device" like a BlackBerry "would be confidential and not subject to subpoena."
Ms. Palin and aides use their private e-mail addresses for state business. A campaign spokesman said the governor copied e-mail messages to her state account "when there was significant state business."
On Feb. 7, Frank Bailey, a high-level aide, wrote to Ms. Palin's state e-mail address to discuss appointments. Another aide fired back: "Frank, this is not the governor's personal account."
Mr. Bailey responded: "Whoops~!"
Mr. Bailey, a former midlevel manager at Alaska Airlines who worked on Ms. Palin's campaign, has been placed on paid leave; he has emerged as a central figure in the trooper investigation.
Another confidante of Ms. Palin's is Ms. Frye, 27. She worked as a receptionist for State Senator Lyda Green before she joined Ms. Palin's campaign for governor. Now Ms. Frye earns $68,664 as a special assistant to the governor. Her frequent interactions with Ms. Palin's children have prompted some lawmakers to refer to her as "the babysitter," a title that Ms. Frye disavows.
Like Mr. Bailey, she is an effusive cheerleader for her boss.
"YOU ARE SO AWESOME!" Ms. Frye typed in an e-mail message to Ms. Palin in March.
Many lawmakers contend that Ms. Palin is overly reliant on a small inner circle that leaves her isolated. Democrats and Republicans alike describe her as often missing in action. Since taking office in 2007, Ms. Palin has spent 312 nights at her Wasilla home, some 600 miles to the north of the governor's mansion in Juneau, records show.
During the last legislative session, some lawmakers became so frustrated with her absences that they took to wearing "Where's Sarah?" pins.
Many politicians say they typically learn of her initiatives - and vetoes - from news releases.
Mayors across the state, from the larger cities to tiny municipalities along the southeastern fiords, are even more frustrated. Often, their letters go unanswered and their pleas ignored, records and interviews show.
Last summer, Mayor Mark Begich of Anchorage, a Democrat, pressed Ms. Palin to meet with him because the state had failed to deliver money needed to operate city traffic lights. At one point, records show, state officials told him to just turn off a dozen of them. Ms. Palin agreed to meet with Mr. Begich when he threatened to go public with his anger, according to city officials.
At an Alaska Municipal League gathering in Juneau in January, mayors across the political spectrum swapped stories of the governor's remoteness. How many of you, someone asked, have tried to meet with her? Every hand went up, recalled Mayor Fred Shields of Haines Borough. And how many met with her? Just a few hands rose. Ms. Palin soon walked in, delivered a few remarks and left for an anti-abortion rally.
The administration's e-mail correspondence reveals a siege-like atmosphere. Top aides keep score, demean enemies and gloat over successes. Even some who helped engineer her rise have felt her wrath.
Dan Fagan, a prominent conservative radio host and longtime friend of Ms. Palin, urged his listeners to vote for her in 2006. But when he took her to task for raising taxes on oil companies, he said, he found himself branded a "hater."
It is part of a pattern, Mr. Fagan said, in which Ms. Palin characterizes critics as "bad people who are anti-Alaska."
As Ms. Palin's star ascends, the McCain campaign, as often happens in national races, is controlling the words of those who know her well. Her mother-in-law, Faye Palin, has been asked not to speak to reporters, and aides sit in on interviews with old friends.
At a recent lunch gathering, an official with the Wasilla Chamber of Commerce asked its members to refer all calls from reporters to the governor's office. Dianne Woodruff, a city councilwoman, shook her head.
"I was thinking, I don't remember giving up my First Amendment rights," Ms. Woodruff said. "Just because you're not going gaga over Sarah doesn't mean you can't speak your mind."
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
53 Comments so far
Show AllPalin has set her sights upon the Presidency, just as she set them upon the Governership - treading over Democrats and Republicans alike. Poor John McCain seems to be sleepwalking into his own redundancy.
John, watch your back!
It is said that the Sports Arena was built on land not owned by the city and the rightful owner isn't sure he wants the arena on his land. Anyone know more about this.
Here's an idea to promote more interviews with Sarah: Make a large life -sized model of Sarah. Place buttons on it which relate to probable questions. When the interview wants a question answered, he/she has just to push the appropriate button and the answer will be given! sound feasible?
That should be "response" not "answer" - and isn't that the way they do it now - trying to have a sound bite to go with every anticipated question!
heck of a job palin
I think bush has proven what happens when you bring your friends in as experts
I don't care what anyone says, didn't, doesn't or won't. To me Sarah Palin is indeed a
PIG WITH LIPSTICK.
I guess that easy perception is why the McCain-campaign is so oversensitive to the expression.
She does have her charms. Like a barracuda can aspire a certain morbid admiration as an effective killer.
Her main message is "Look how beautiful it is to be brainwashed combined with aggressively ignorant. You can even be vice-president, maybe even president - like the current brainwashed and aggressively ignorant precedent."
Here's how she may become president after McCain wins: Sarah Palin flashes her bouncy boobs to McCain - who reaches for her and goes "Aaargh...". Sarah smiles her barracuda smile and thanks god. While McCain writhes, Sarah writes her eulogy for him in her mind, prays for a while, whistles a hymn, then calls 9-11 seeing McCain lying still. Then hangs up before it's answered, thinking: "McCain lying still - nothing new there...".
I'm buying a Sarah Palin action-figure - to use for voodoo. Stick it to her.
You know, you've just made me realize something.
There IS equal opportunity in this country.
What have I been thinking all these years?
"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?" -Epicurus
The latest from CBC News Sunday (video):
Palin: Feminist Friend or Foe?
http://www.cbc.ca/sunday/2008/09/091408_5.html
real world, You been watching too much of the 700 Club. I believe in just about every conspiracy theory but that one is too nutty even for me.
POintless who wins,... we're screwed. This crap continues and we'll be tied with Israel for the #1 slot as the biggest terrorist nation on earth. AIPAC own DNC AND RNC since 1995 or there abouts. SO, they win, no matter what.
You wacky Americans are pretty funny when I'm drunk. MMMMM 18 yr old Scotch.
Your house is on fire, or as the actor Christopher Walken says in a Stephen King movie, the title of which escapes me, "The ICE is gunna break!" so get over your pettie differences and clean up your act, before someone else does it for you.
"The Dead Zone" - S. King
Thanks, What the "F". Now that the morning sun has burned away the Scottish mist, I can remember things more clearly. Martin Sheen plays a possible future President, with a strong desire to push the hot button. Love that movie. What? You want to know the name of the Scotch? Mortlach 1988.
Dante, the truth does not matter to the voters.
The only way Obama will win is in a landslide. Anywhere near close and the Supreme Court will simply declare McCain the winner.
And then the Dems can blame third party candidates rather than exposing the rigged election.
"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?" -Epicurus
Okay that explains why Pugs love her so much.
That sure goes to show that Palin is no different from Bush/Cheney. Firing people for personal and/or political reasons is the reason why our country has crumbled and is continuing to fall apart. Disgusting.
P.S.: Let's see those Palin "defenders" say that she's now a "role model" for women's leadership. Yeah, firing people for purely personal and political reasons is "good", eh?
wc--I feel also that this might be preaching to the choir, but this was in today's NY Times, so perhaps it will influence people or at least cause them to ask some more questions. And the article gives alot more specifics. Copperiverkid-thanks for your comments.
At least she just fires her enemies instead of killing them like the Clinton's did with Vince Foster.
There's no proof that Clinton actually killed Vince Foster. As a matter of fact, that conspiracy theory was proven false, asshole.
This is what intelligent Americans are up against, Frederick. Millions of brain-dead automotons unwilling or unable to think for themselves, but they charge like a bull every time they see a flag wave. The fact that they are killing themselves and dragging us down with them is lost on them, because their echo chamber has never mentioned it.
OJ was found not guilty too. asshole breath.
Thanks for proving that rightwing assholes such as yourself can't prove anything so you'll invent lies and bullshit. FOAD.
FrederickJohnson - These clowns are dumbed down versions of carl rove. Their closing argument is almost always denial.
That's true. I'm used to putting up with these clowns as I put up with bunches of them. Moderates such as myself, let alone liberals, are minority out here in South Carolina. The trick is to put them to shame for being the pathetic clowns they are.
Palin is a bully - this article makes her sound like Delores Umbridge (Harry Potter) - and Cheney like Mr Rogers by comparison!
Glad that there is finally an article that doesn't dismiss her outright because that is dangerous.
I am so worried about Palin debating Biden. The expectations concerning Palin are set so low that if Palin doesn't trip on her high heels and fall flat on her face Ms American style, she will beat said expectations. One's performance is judges as much against expectation as it is on how one does compared to the other guy.
If Biden goes on Palin's lack of experience, she will, without batting an eye, say that she is mearly a VP, not nearly as important as a President and then launch into Obama's experience compared to McRaisin's. If pressed as to what she will do if McCain's assention "is only a heart beat away" she will stress McCain's experience and indicate that she will stay the course set out by her predescesser.
If Biden goes on about the fact that Palin has never met with a world leader - she will "reveal" that she has met with many State, Provincial and Territorial leaders which, in her opinion, are closer to the people than the actual leaders of the country. Palin will turn it around to make Biden look like an elitist and herself the voice of the people.
This is her strategy - I am hoping and even praying that Biden is not so assured that he can out do this hick that he falls right into her traps.
It's absolutely stunning to watch you leftwing CDer's complain about McCain/Palin. You whine,whine,whine but the only realistic way of not getting them elected is Obama. But the name Obama is never uttererd by you lefties as a legitimate candidate. why?
Oh wait...I know.... Ralphie boy Nader is your guy. He is 2% in the latest poll. Woooppeeeee!!!
Well, at least a recent pic I saw of Ralph showed he actually combed his hair.
That's a plus.
Earth to Leftists: get a clue.
Funny how rightwing motherfuckers complain about other party members but cry about their own getting nailed. You neocon nazis give reasonable and moderate conservatives a bad rap. The U.S. would be better without you rightwing nazi brownshirts giving the south and the midwest a bad name in the country and all over the world.
What a fine example of double digit IQ Democratic whore willfully ignorant fear mongering
"Get a clue"
You mean like when "leftist" got a clue and went against the status quo and paid for with liberal blood little things like
The American Union Movement
The end of legal slavery for African Americans
The Minimum Wage
The 40-hour workweek
Overtime pay
Medicaid
Medicare
Social Security
End of child suffrage
Women's right to vote
Public Education
Work Place Safety
Workman's Compensation
Unemployment Insurance
and a few thousand other issues forced onto the country of sheep (like you) by liberals willing to fight, bleed and die for so many things that better your life, that you take for granted, while you sit on your fat ass and whine how we need to "get a clue"
I'd rip you to pieces accept for the fact that I'm not into child abuse and from the words you vomit up, you are at least intellectually, if not chronologically, a child.
Grow up
Palin is subhuman scum, like her supporters, and that means you kman2.
Vote independent if you can - Mass. - Vt. - N.Y. - Ala. ect. Vote your conscience if you must.
I'm tired of these articles about Palin. She is a monumentally unqualified token woman of a candidate whose ideals and politics are repugnant and who lies with ease. A candidate chosen for her religious intolerance, with piddling experience, deep corporate ties, and an appalling lack of intellectual ability. A candidate whose very nomination is an insult to Americans. Period. Just like the last short-term governor we had in the White House.
George Bush with PMS. End of story.
Stop the references to PMS and monthlies!! It is misogynistic, childish, insulting to all women and irrelevant. I am sickened by this level of discussion on a progressive website. There are plenty of valid criticisms of policies and character.
Joe
Joe - the statement was by no means meant to denigrate women. I understand your point however. I apologize to anyone I might have offended.
Just what we need, another homocidal looting liar.
If the Religious Reich stays in power I think I'll just quit and the Evangelicals can pray
for Devine Forgiveness of America's debt. That should delight our Corporate Masters.
Did you spell homicidal wrong or are you implying that Palin is a homosexual killer, by that I mean a killer of homosexuals?
There was a 'vacancy at the top of the State Division of Agriculture' because early into Miss Sarah's reign our very good Agricultural Director, who actually is a farmer (he bought a herd of purebred Galloway cattle from us many years ago, which a few years ago he told me he still owns) and also a respected linguist who has worked with many different cultures, realized he could not function in Sarah's administration and rather than compromise his own personal ethics, he resigned.
That would be Larry DeVilbis. He had been Director for several years at that point, and after a running series of semi-competents the entire agricultural community (small but active and committed) was so pleased with the progress he was making. His May 2007 resignation was so very quiet that many of us didn't know he was gone until a little newspaper blurb announced Francie's ascendency. Oh, but she was raised on a dairy farm ! (Yeah, and got away from it as fast as she could). She is also the (wait for it) Daughter of the Woman who Babysat Miss Sarah as a child . . .
Just yesterday I asked our Farmers Market Manager if Francie has done ANYTHING since her token tour of the state following her appointment in August of 2007. We have a large and very successful Market (the Tanana Valley Farmers Market) and our Manager keep up on State Agricultural affairs. "Nope," he said. "Nada."
Sarah is on record as stating that she feels 'called' to provide Alaska as a 'place of gathering' for the True Believers at the End of Days. (Really). Guess she'll just pass out straws and they can all suck oil right out of the pipeline, because she sure isn't going to any effort to support actually growing any food for them . . .
Also, what's with the 'team t-shirts' in the photo above ? Looks like they all work in a warehouse, and the woman on the right is the bookkeeper . . .
'a former real estate agent, ms. havemeister cited her childhood love of cows as a qualification for running the roughly $2 million agency' - did that include sarah palin?
I have noticed a very distinct increase in determination of the anti-Republican/Authoritarian camp. There is certainly even greater urgency to get out the vote and sweep this criminal ruling party out.
It seems that the dumbing down of our leaders (i.e. "W" Bush and now, even more so, Palin) is what the typical US voter wants. H.L Mencken's comment, "Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public" is more true today than when he said it 70 or 80 years ago. This notion that candidates are more appealing if they are as ignorant as most Amerikans is remarkable and scary. The Rovian view that intelligence and knowledge of history are attributes that cannot be trusted has become the accepted rule. After McCain slips on the banana peel next to his grave and Palin becomes president, we'll long for the good old days when George W. Bush was president.
Bush in drag.
No, that would be Hillary. Palin is Hitler in drag.
Well it appears that there is absolutely nothing you can do about her. She can lie and be called out on her lies and yet McCain's poll numbers keep rising. Why is this so? Does truth matter anymore or is it now acceptable to win at any cost?
The majority of polls are designed to yield certain results. I have taken part in several polls lately and the questions "lead" to a particular perspective. They do not ask questions to find the people's answers ... infact try answering with "none of the above" and the answer cannot be accepted - you are required to answer it within their very narrow paradigm - or end the poll - so a different point of view in none-the-less disregarded.
Polling is too often purchased by those who use the numbers to "prove" their positiion, to be any kind of truthful representation of the public will.
This woman's record does not engender confidence. She appears to be as mean spirited regarding differing perspectives as anyone in public office could hope to be! (Calling them "Haters" no less!) Women are not so myopic that they will choose to limit their lives just for the privilege of getting a woman elected. IMHO the polls that suggest otherwise are media manipulation.
The one convinced against their will - is of the same opinion still.
Or is it a reason to not trust polls? I'm not sure. But the incessant hue and cry over poll numbers and the scarcely concealed glee by the MSM in trumpeting the numbers is a real reason not to trust the media or the Republicans taking polls.
I remain cautiously optimistic that enough of my fellow Americans are not trying to escape from freedom and will wake up in time, but it may be an embarrassingly close call.
We should definitely be suspicious of polls. Most pollsters are ruling class, and lean to the right.
Hope now slinks out of the democratic camps, ever so slowly, like deserters in the night, to the republican side. Hope, revitalizing demoralized republicans and possibly propelling them to victory. Hope, an apparition, an illusion that masks clarity, reason, and analysis, luring it's victims into uncharted waters only to abandon them in the darkness of an unknown hell.
The Sarah Pallin Story, "Sycophants Of The Oligarchy." Forward written by Dick Cheney, ghostwritten by Karl Rove. Advanced copies purchased by Bush/McCain, Sneaky Liars Inc. and Whoops-Shhhh Co.
Thanks to the Authors of this article. Also,
Thanks to the women and children (and men) of Alaska for another view:
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/9/14/103042/902/965/597033
Thanks, that was great!!!
Mordachai--
My own version of your remark was that Palin, if elected, would be
Cheney with a monthly. Either way not a pleasent thing to anticipate.
Poet
Great! Fantastic! Absurd! McCain dies in office and America's first female president will be this cross between Norma Desmond and Livia . . . aka Dickless Cheney!
The thing is. She's not as smart as Cheney. And she believes her Jesus nonsense. You make the Kool-aid, you don't drink it too!
Very true. We the intelligent people cannot stand another hour of any repug. no matter where they hail from.