Showing posts with label mike metroulas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mike metroulas. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Mike Metroulas: Palin and the 'Conservative Intelligentsia' Backlash

The Sarah Palin who spoke at the 2008 RNC convention can win in 2012
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Mike Metroulas, libertarian contributor to Big Journalism, comments on the fallout from the recent Politico hit piece on Gov. Palin:
A recent Politico piece focusing on a “conservative intelligentsia” backlash against Sarah Palin playing identity politics gleans this nugget from George Will:
Asked if the GOP would remain the party of ideas if Palin captures the nomination, Will said: “The answer is emphatically no.”
I think self-government and individual liberty are grand ideas. Principled and limited governance is a grand idea. I’m not sure what ideas Will thinks will be lost here, but in my estimation, the federal government does not exist as some sort of symposium for over-intellectualizing or a platform for one party to promote their own agenda. Sure, that’s where we’ve been for a very, very long time (around 220 years), but wanting to scale that back is one of the best ideas I’ve ever heard. That’s what Palin brings to the table. Her current media appearances are not indicative of how she would govern, nor are they indicative of how she would conduct herself on the campaign trail.

The piece also quotes the Manhattan Institute’s Heather McDonald as saying:
“She is living up to the most skeptical assessment of her.”
I’m not so sure. The most skeptical assessment of her was that she was an absolute ignoramus whose 15 minutes of fame would be over right after Obama won the election, and we’d never hear from her again. To the chagrin of many, that didn’t happen.

The piece goes on to state:
For now, however, Palin’s appeal is largely rooted in the sympathy she’s gleaned from her loudly voiced resentments toward the left, the news media and the GOP establishment.
I don’t buy this for one second. Any wars of words she has engaged in recently have had little to do with her appeal, they have only served to galvanize her most ardent supporters, while possibly turning off other people. This is sloppy because she is not actually campaigning, nor can we say with any certainty that she is going to.

The media’s hysteria over Sarah Palin’s nomination threw her entire identity, both political and personal, into the deepest recesses of the American psyche. Painting Palin merely as a sympathetic figure, as this Politico piece does, is to deny her real appeal completely, which revolves around a genuine impulse in America that yearns for a much-needed pruning of our federal government. Much of the electorate is way beyond caring what the “conservative intelligentsia” or the GOP establishment has to say. Many Americans are more interested in what people like Sarah Palin have to say.

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- JP

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Sarah Palin, Operation Demoralize and Wishful Thinking (Updated)

Hinderaker demonstrates how not to win in 2012
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Clinical Law Professor William A. Jacobson has a lesson for lawyer John Hinderaker: don't let the DMC's (Democrat/Media Complex's) scare tactics bully you into turning your back on one of the leading potential GOP presidential candidates.

Hinderaker, based on just two dubious polls sponsored by media outlets hostile to Sarah Palin, has folded up his spine and abandoned any pretense of support for Gov. Palin as the next Republican presidential nominee. We say "pretense" because neither Hinderaker nor his fellow legal eagles at Power Line have been among Sarah Palin's staunch supporters. That blog is not included on the roll of Palin-friendly websites at reference site The Book of Sarah because overall, PL has been more unfriendly than friendly to the alpha female of the Grizzly Bears.

Prof. Jacobson schools Hinderaker by simply pointing out that whether the GOP standard bearer for 2012 is Sarah Palin or some other Republican, the treatment of that candidate by the DMC will be the same, i.e. demonization:
You can throw Palin under the bus if you want, but what will you do when the next candidate faces blistering false accusations which drive negatives high after a mainstream media feeding frenzy?

Why not let the political and primary process work itself out. We do not even know if Palin is running, or if she will garner enough Republican support to win.

There is an insatiable mainstream media hunger to demonize and marginalize potential Republican nominees. Feeding that beast in the wake of the Tucson shooting is not the way to win in 2012.
Indeed, Hinderaker has taken the two DMC-sponsored polls at face value, loaded interview questions and all. But in another post, Jacobson calls attention to a third poll, one which which shows Gov. Palin down by 10% among registered voters and only 6% among voters who marked their ballots in 2010. These results are all the more remarkable, given that survey was conducted by Democrat pollsters Greenberg Quinlin Rosner, who have Democracy Corps on their client list, and given the intensive media invective against Gov. Palin both before and after events unfolded in Tuscon. The poll was conducted over the four days following the shootings, and the anti-Palin hysteria began literally just minutes after. As the professor observes:
Considering the beating Palin took in the media during the days in which the poll was being conducted, being down 10% is much better than would have been expected.
In both of his posts, Jacobson advises that Republicans, including conservatives, should let the primary process -- and not the Democrats and their obedient media -- decide who our presidential candidate will be in 2012.

As for us, we've never seen so many weak knees and spineless serpents in our lives as what we have seen not only in the GOP, but among the ranks of those who consider themselves conservatives as well. One would think that someone smart enough to earn a law degree would have enough sense not to fall for the DMC's opening gambit this early in the chess game.

Fortunately, Big Journalism's Mike Metroulas is made of sterner stuff than the three sisters at Power Line. Metroulas, a libertarian whose grad school studies were focused on Intellectual History, sees the DMC meme that Gov. Palin is political toast for what it is: wishful thinking:
As of now, if she wants it, it is hers. Of course, that may change, but a Palin run for the nomination would unleash a grassroots fury of support unseen on the right for a Republican presidential nominee in recent memory, and her detractors know it. Why else would much of the mainstream media be scrambling so often to convince independents that Palin isn’t viable? Plus, many of these people just do not like Palin and what she stands for, which is a pragmatic, principled view of government and fierce American individualism. Mainstream media types generally prefer theorizing about complex strategies and solutions to problems that were most likely created by over-theorizing in the first place. It’s how they were trained in academia and sometimes they just can’t help it. However, life isn’t complicated, and Sarah Palin knows it.

[...]

The core question I’d like answered is this: What is the purpose of this witch hunt if it’s not to rile people up against Sarah Palin? If she’s so damn irrelevant, then this effort can’t be political, can it? Lambasting her on national television, saying she is responsible for murder is inexcusable and it’s personal. Even so, if some whack job did take something Keith Olbermann spat out one night while in one of his hysterical fits and acted on it, Olby would not be culpable. Sarah Palin would agree with this, even if she knew that the person was influenced by Olbermann’s rhetoric. By the standard created for Palin in the Tucson case, Olbermann would be responsible. The problem, of course, is that the standard is completely bogus to begin with, a mere attempt to destroy Palin, with no basis in fact whatsoever. That’s where the “purport” comes into play in Palin’s statement; it’s all a hypocritical, theoretical lie. Did Palin talk about how evil Giffords is? No. Did she call Giffords the “Worst Person in the World” or say she was an accessory to murder? Why didn’t the media go after Chris Matthews or Olbermann or Ed Schultz? Aren’t they pretty abrasive?

Palin’s accusers in this case think rhetoric is powerful enough to influence people and yet there they are, spewing their garbage toward Palin, accusing her of the same thing they would be guilty of–under their own logic–should some loon act out violently toward Palin or any other right winger. If they are so certain that lively rhetoric is dangerous, why are they practicing it themselves? The obvious conclusion must be that they want to incite violence, right? Isn’t that a reasonable conclusion to come to when employing their logic?

Palin’s point was rock solid and her detractors played a silly game of semantics, claiming “She’s done!” along the way, all while discrediting themselves in the process, as Palin so adroitly pointed out.

She done kicked your a__es, boys and girls, all while expressing mainstream American principles that will make her the nominee in 2012, should she decide to run.
There's a scene in the first (Episode IV: A New Hope) Star Wars movie in which Luke Skywalker is curious how his mentor, Obi-wan Kenobi, was able to use his Jedi powers to dupe a Storm Trooper into allowing the two and their robots to pass through a checkpoint. Kenobi explains, "The Force can have a strong influence on the weak-minded." Like The Force (Dark side, of course) the media's narrative can have a strong influence on those with weak knees.

Update: See John Hinderaker's Weak Defense Of His Palin Political Premortem

- JP

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Mike Metroulas: What Exactly Are the Qualifications for Being President?

Palin represents an ideal that all Americans should aspire to
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Big Jounalism's Mike Metroulas keeps an eye on the leftist website Huffington Post so we don't have to shower quite so often. In one recent HuffPo piece that caught his attention, Barbara Walters asked Oprah if Sarah Palin is qualified to be president, a question Oprah declines to answer:
Walters takes this as a “no” from Oprah. The Oprah has spoken.

I’m not exactly sure that Oprah is the person to ask regarding anyone’s qualifications to be president. She broke out of her apolitical shell to endorse Barack Obama, a man with very few qualifications. The one thing he is supposed to be is something really special … “the One” as Oprah called him. That may or may not be true, but does being “special” qualify one to be president?

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Some would reject wholly that the president needs to be “special.” There can be “special” presidents, yes, but that status is only earned after actually achieving something special in office, not beforehand based upon trendy sentiment. Palin is considered “special” also, but this does not qualify her to be president. However, Palin is “special” is a way different than Obama: she is not part of the American political elite. Palin the outsider understands that in America, politicians should be servants of the people, not “special”, like kings and queens, or in present-day America, vapid celebrities better known for their brand than their accomplishments.

Obama can light up a room with his smile and rhetoric. So can Palin. Palin will dust a caribou from 150 yards. Obama boasts a J.D. from Harvard Law. Palin has a Bachelor’s degree and successfully juggles 5 kids and a busy lifestyle. Obama is in the most demanding job on earth. Inspiration, adventure, education, and practical knowledge are very essential things for human beings. These accomplishments all qualify for our attention.

The media’s general disdain for the organic Palin and fawning over the academic Obama has really created quite a backlash. We pedestrian Americans with everyday educations and experience start suspecting they don’t feel too highly of us. The thing about Palin is that she is college educated and she does all those primitive activities scorned by the elite. Palin represents an ideal that all Americans, not just women, should aspire to: self-sufficiency based partly on education but mostly on plain old pragmatism. They are both worthy.

For the benefit of America, the presidency of the early 21st century America should be dominated by people who most express the general ideals of American libertarianism and promote content of their character over identity politics, no matter with which of the two major parties they are aligned. The person right now who best fits that description and is poised to ride that wave is Sarah Palin.

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- JP