October 3, 2008

Clueless in St. Louis

For Senator John McCain and soulmate AK Gov. Sarah Palin, success means merely not being a total, unmitigated disaster.

And not being a total, umitigated disaster involves 90 minutes filled with vacuous talking points, tortured syntax, and "folksy" superficialities presided over by the least conscientious or effective debate moderator in recent memory, Gwen Ifill.

No follow-up questions, no effort to keep either participant to addressing the initial inquiries, and very little, if any, "debate." E.g., if you have to explain Achilles' heel, then by all means, do it.

Last night's encounter between Palin and Delaware Senator Joe Biden was, for the most part, a mighty tedious affair.

Even so, it had its entertaining moments, and we learned that Sarah Palin evidently favors a "living Constitution," complete with evolving standards pursuant to the role of the vice president:
We know what a vice president does. And that's not only to preside over the Senate and will take that position very seriously also. I'm thankful the Constitution would allow a bit more authority given to the vice president if that vice president so chose to exert it in working with the Senate and making sure that we are supportive of the president's policies and making sure too that our president understands what our strengths are.
Reading that again, who knows what the hell she is talking about. Apparently Gwen Ifill was puzzled by this as well and asked:
Do you believe as Vice President Cheney does, that the Executive Branch does not hold complete sway over the office of the vice presidency, that it it is also a member of the Legislative Branch?
Palin replied that the founding fathers [sic] allowed "through the Constitution much flexibility there in the office of the vice president" and that "Yeah, I do agree with [Cheney] that we have a lot of flexibility in there."

Needless to say, Sarah Palin is no Dick Cheney. But that she claims to see the vice presidency through the same lens as does Dick Cheney should comfort no one. Especially Dick Cheney, who surely must be privately appalled at the addled performances of his prospective successor.

But, as with the balance of Palin's rehearsed and notated verbiage, no details, no specifics, and, most importantly, no substance.

We also learned that when it comes to the current state of the economy, it's Wall Street bankers who are the victims:
It is a crisis. It's a toxic mess, really, on Main Street that's affecting Wall Street. And now we have to be ever vigilant and also making sure that credit markets don't seize up. That's where the Main Streeters like me, that's where we would really feel the effects.
We were also treated to Palin's unique scientific method with respect to climatology. Asked "what is true and what is false" about the causes of the Earth's changing climate, Palin said, while acknowledging "there are real changes going on in our climate":
I don't want to argue about the causes. What I want to argue about is, how are we going to get there to positively affect the impacts.
Which naturally begs the question, if you don't determine the causes, how are you going to "get there to affect the impacts"? An amazingly dumb response.

Then there was EYE-RACK. What is Palin's plan for an exit strategy?

"I am very thankful that we do have a good plan." That was about it. Faced with Biden's observations that the U.S. has trained 400,000 Iraqi troops and that country has billions of dollars in the bank and it's about time they stepped up to the plate, Palin called that "a white flag of surrender." Nice sound bite, but not much of a riposte.

According to Palin, the Iraqi administration still can't govern its own people and its security forces still can't secure them, yet "the surge worked ... the surge works" despite Iraqi self-governance and security being the surge's objectives.

And "our commanders on the ground," predicted Palin, will decide when the Iraqi government is effectively governing. That's the military's latest mission, apparently, as political scientists.

That Sarah Palin is incoherent is bad enough. That she's not even aware of her incoherence is disturbing, to say the least.

Best of all, Palin promised "huge blunders" from a Palin-McCain administration. Good to know, and good to remember on Nov. 4.

As for Joe Biden, there was much post-debate criticism on the part of the paid punditry for his "speaking the language of Washington" and so forth. Well, what do those critics expect? Somebody has to state the record, which necessarily involves facts and figures, when somebody else is standing there blathering party platitudes that only infer and allude to misstated and misrepresented facts.

Thankfully, however, this debate is over and Sarah Palin can return to her role as bumbling sideshow and comic relief. Oh, and there is at least one holdover from the current Bush administration from which the Palin-McCain ticket will not allow us any escape: "nucular."

But Palin's debate performance, as generally non-disastrous as it was, will do nothing to improve John McCain's declining fortunes.

10 comments:

  1. We also learned that when it comes to the current state of the economy, it's Wall Street bankers that are the victims:

    It is a crisis. It's a toxic mess, really, on Main Street that's affecting Wall Street. And now we have to be ever vigilant and also making sure that credit markets don't seize up. That's where the Main Streeters like me, that's where we would really feel the effects.


    I think you're reading too much into it. So, she misspoke. Ninety minutes worth of talk, and she mixes a sentence up. Big fucking whoop. It's definitely easy to cherry pick a transcript after said fact.

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  2. The point is she doesn't seem to be understanding what it is she is reciting. The impression I get is that she has not spent any time actually thinking about what it is she is saying.

    But she has spent the last few weeks absorbing her coaching, and she did a halfway decent job of regurgitating some of it last night.

    I'm actually sympathetic toward her predicament, but she should have turned down McCain's offer in the first place.

    She's not ready for this.

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  3. She misspoke for ninety minutes. She did not provide a single original thought the entire time she stood there. Even her winks seemed contrived, sort of like McCain's goofy smiles that would (formerly) pop up at the weirdest times.

    The thing is, she did a lot better than I thought she would. I watched the debate expecting to have a difficut time understanding anything she said and laughing out loud. There was still much gibberish, but my amusement was reduced to chuckling.

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  4. She did not provide a single original thought the entire time she stood there.

    None of them do! They repeat the same tired old bullshit every damn time. The next McCain/Obama debate will more of the same from their first debate.

    These "debates" are about as useful as tits on a bull.

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  5. Beats watching your ace starter give up a grand slam home run.

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  6. She gives bullshitters a bad name. I was barely paying attention, and was a bit foggy after finishing my sixpack. But I still managed to detect that she tends to stake out antipodal positions in a single breath, at least when she bothers to take a position. In addition to repeating pro-Griswald/anti-Roe, there was pro drill/anti Co2, regulate Wall Street but not business, pro gay/pro "tradition", pro team player/pro maverick... I passed out before the FP section, but assume the trend continued.

    I don't know if this tendency is an amateur approximation of nuance, a conflict between rote regurgitation of the party line and genuine feeling, or a reflection of American ambivalence on these issues. But it annoys the hell outta me.

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  7. my sixpack

    You're supposed to be her constituency, Joe.

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  8. Smarter people than me (I?) articulate the PoMo quality of Palinmania:

    She gets too meta with her answers, wanting to explain - "I’m going to talk straight to the American people and show them my etc."; "I’m the new energy" - the symbolism of herself. For the apotheosis of Republican anti-intellectualism she’s determinedly postmodern, embedding the essay about her novel into the story as she tells it.

    And.

    There's no question about her most purely Palinesque moment: it came when she took up the subject of her own bobbing and weaving and declared that she might not be answering the questions, as you hoity-toity elitist media types have been known to do, because she was trying to deliver the good ol' "straight talk" that Joe and Josephine Sixpack are out there hollaring for. It was a moment of absolute self-parody that also nailed what her base loves her for: a celebration of political spin and dishonesty that redefined these things as unvarnished, cracker barrel frankness.

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  9. Speaking of self-parody:

    "On the split screen, when Biden is speaking, Palin looks like she's brimming with ideas she's just waiting to express." -- Ann Althouse

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  10. Smarter people than me (I?) articulate the PoMo quality of Palinmania

    She is more Dada than PoMo

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