Showing posts with label the undefeated. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the undefeated. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2011

'The Undefeated' heads north to Alaska

The Sarah Palin documentary “The Undefeated” has been shown in Alaska, but never on the big screen. That's due to change Monday, as the theater version of the two-hour film will be screened in Palin country, according to a report in the Mat Su Valley Frontiersman:
Sponsored by the Valley Republican Women’s Club, the Alaska screening also includes a meet-and-greet event with the movie’s creator and producer, Stephen Bannon, from 4 to 6 p.m., Sunday at Colony Inn in Palmer. Tickets are $50 each or $75 per couple and include a light meal and a chance to speak one-on-one with Bannon.

“I’m looking forward to coming to Alaska,” he said Thursday by phone from Washington, D.C. He said this trip to Alaska will be a relatively quick since he is planning to spend Thanksgiving at Fort Campbell, Ky., with his daughter, a recent West Point graduate.

Bannon said when the movie was originally released, the theatrically company that distributed the film didn’t have any screens in Alaska.

“We’ve been actually trying to do this since August,” Bannon said.

Past Valley Republican Women’s Club president Julie Gillette said she met Bannon on Facebook before seeing the film. After watching “Undefeated” on pay-per-view at a friends’ house, Gillette said she contacted Bannon again and told him how much she’d enjoyed the movie and that she hoped he’d have a chance to come to Wasilla and show the movie someday.

“It’s fantastic to have the filmmaker here with the film,” Gillette said Friday.

While Bannon’s in Alaska, he said he also plans to record his weekly radio show here, which airs on KABC AM in Los Angeles.

[More]
The movie plays at 6PM Alaska Time Nov. 21 at the Wasilla Alaska Club Theater. Suggested donation is $5 and seating is limited to 150 people.

- JP

Friday, October 7, 2011

Sarah Palin, the Medium, the Message and the Future

How time can work for Gov. Palin rather than against her.
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If Sarah Palin had decided to contend for the GOP nomination, could she have secured it and gone on to defeat Barack Obama in the 2012 general election? Although most of her supporters are convinced she would have accomplished both tasks, my opinion is not likely to be a popular one among my brother and sister Palaniste.

Don't get me wrong. I was one of the first to recognize that Gov. Palin is a remarkable woman, and her political instincts are nothing less than exceptional. I've been blogging for her for three years. Now that she's taken herself out of the running, I'll probably write her name in on my ballot come November. But this isn't my first political rodeo. I've been a student of American politics since the 1960 battle for the White House over half a century ago. One of the more illuminating lessons of that historic election was uncovered in analysis of audience reaction to the Kennedy-Nixon debate. Those who watched on television were convinced that JFK was the clear winner, while those who listened on radio were equally sure that Nixon won it hands down.

Four years after Kennedy's eventual victory (which was won by just 0.1 percent of the popular vote, 49.7 percent to 49.6 percent), communication theorist Marshall McLuhan's book, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, was published. In it, he coined the phrase, "The medium is the message," meaning that the form of a medium embeds itself in the message, creating a symbiotic relationship by which the medium influences how the message is perceived. Sarah Palin's message, which should be what matters most, has been overshadowed and greatly distorted by the master media manipulators of our age.

Most Americans, including likely voters, don't know much, if anything at all, about Sarah Palin's record as a city councilwoman, mayor, oil and gas commissioner and governor up in remote Alaska. Indeed, many believe that the entirety of her political experience consists of the partial term she served as governor before she was scooped up and deposited on the national political stage as John McCain's running mate in 2008. Though the media at first dutifully outlined her political resume, before the RNC convention had even wrapped up, it had faded into the background and was soon forgotten. All the talk was about an unmarried daughter who was expecting a child.

And so Sarah Palin hit the campaign trail and went where the geniuses who ran the McCain-Palin effort off a cliff told her to go for media interviews. Never in U.S. electoral history had a vice presidential candidate been grilled on foreign policy issues as Sarah Palin. Despite the fact that Russia and Alaska are in such close proximity, have many cultural ties and are trading partners, the takeaway from the media was that Gov. Palin could "see Russia from her house," something she never said. But that punch line from a weekly television comedy show became the measure that her take on U.S. foreign policy was to be judged by a public that was barely paying attention. Never mind that whenever the Russians test our air defenses with their Tu-95 "Bear" Bombers, as they still do to this day, it is always done in the skies within sight of the 49th state's coastline. But the medium is the message.

And so it went for the rest of the 2008 campaign. That which the left proposed, the media eagerly disposed, and the first woman to be elected governor of Alaska was reduced to a caricature of herself. She who governed mostly as a centrist on social issues was transformed into an evangelical theocrat. She who worked with both political parties in Alaska's best interests became perceived as an extreme right wing ideologue. The media kept hammering away at Sarah Palin in this manner for three full months, shaping the perceptions of most voters -- at least when the media even bothered to report distort her governing philosophy and issue positions. Most of the time, the media focus was on far less substantial matters, including her daughter's stormy relationship with the ne'er do well father of the governor's grandson, a wardrobe she never requested nor shopped for but acquired for her family by the McCain campaign using RNC money, and other trivial pursuits, each one distorted by a media which was not only cheer leading for the Obama-Biden campaign, but also functioning as the referees on the field where the political game was played.

After the election, the media continued to chip away at Sarah Palin's image, and what had been seen for those three months of the campaign was extended over a period of three years. When her political enemies in Alaska discovered how easily they could file bogus and frivolous ethics complaints against her, they did so more than than twenty times, and the media reported each one as front page news. But when each case was summarily dismissed or decided in the governor's favor, the story was buried in the back pages, if it was even reported at all. To their credit, Sarah Palin's supporters pushed back against the lies and media distortion, but we were mostly preaching to the choir.

It was not until the summer of this year that clubs of sufficient size were fashioned that could beat down the media's Palin narrative. The first was ironically the result of the media's determination to gain access to Sarah Palin's private emails from the first two years of her time as governor of Alaska. Though salivating reporters and editors had hoped to find truckloads of dirt on the woman they knew was an existential threat to their precious Obama, what they uncovered turned out to be compelling evidence of a capable administrator who governed competently, thoughtfully and ethically. So the emails were quickly forgotten. The second club came in the form of Stephen Bannon's excellent documentary "The Undefeated." Though unabashedly a pro-Palin film, it nevertheless presents the truth about her record as a reformer who battled and defeated cronyism and corruption in her own political party. Bannon's effort is as persuasive as it is steeped in details no policy wonk can resist devouring. Many who were not favorably disposed toward Sarah Palin have become her supporters after just one viewing of this landmark film.

But there's a problem. It takes time to change widely-held perceptions. It took Richard Nixon eight full years after his 1960 general election defeat to recast himself in the image of a winner. Nixon also had several other key factors working in his favor, not the least of which was a superior political organization. That organization allowed him to defeat his rivals for the GOP nomination, a field which incidentally included Ronald Reagan. Perception and organization are two necessities Sarah Palin needs to have working in her favor to win both her party's presidential nomination and a general election. Both require a lot of time and no end of hard work. Consider that he media has taken three years to fashion its image of Sarah Palin. It will take at least that long to repair the damage that has been done to her reputation by her political enemies, and the most serious work on that front has only just begun.

The Bannon film was only released on DVD this month, which makes the timing for it to have a significant impact this election cycle less than optimal. Yes, it can change thousands of minds before the first primaries are held a few short months from now, but millions -- not thousands -- of minds need to be changed. That takes time which Sarah Palin does not have, at least not to win the present election cycle. The governor's supporters, if they take the long view, can use "The Undefeated" to win over those millions, but it will take more than a few mere months to do so. Taking the long view has the advantage of making time work in the governor's favor and not against her. But that requires no small measure of patience on the part of her troops on the ground.

The same is true of the task of building an effective campaign organization. Time was working against the organizational effort being made on the governor's behalf, but only to the extent that 2012 has been the target. Organize 4 Palin has done work which is no less than heroic, but no matter how unconventional a Palin presidential campaign may be -- if there is still to be one -- it must regardless abide by certain conventions. If O4P takes the long view, it can harness the latent power of the grassroots to take control of the Republican Party's basic electoral building blocks. Precinct captains and county chairmen currently control this structure, one which gives them access to voter lists and the other war materiel of electoral combat. By forging alliances with local TEA Party groups, O4P can rebuild the GOP infrastructure in a manner which will be favorable to a future Palin presidential run. It's amazing how many precinct and country party posts go uncontested, which leaves them ripe for the picking. It is similarly not a daunting task to get oneself made a delegate to the party's local, state and even national conventions. This is the sort of work which has to be done to wrest control of the Republican Party away from the politics-as-usual types who wield its power today. Again, if the goal is, say, 2016 or 2020, it is very doable.

Though I take Gov. Palin at her word that family considerations were primary in her decision not to run for president this time around, I have to believe that image and organization were at least secondary reasons of consequence. If her supporters look ahead, keep their feet on the ground and do the legwork, they can not only change the media-shaped public perception of her to that which is told by her true story, but they can also make the Republican Party a much more Palin-friendly organization. The lessons of this electoral cycle can be valuable learning for Sarah's Army. Like a freshman year at a war college, her troops can come away from their experience fully armed and ready for battle. But it will require them to get the stars out of their eyes and see the nuts and bolts of basic political construction and how they can be used to build a formidable political organization.

Sarah Palin is no Richard Nixon, and that's to her credit in many ways. But if Tricky Dick could make himself into a winner after a humiliating defeat and years later into a elder statesman after the biggest political scandal in American history, it should be no problem for Sarah and her supporters to correct her image in the eyes of the majority of voters. Remember, Nixon managed to change his own image after the media had made him into a political pariah. In four years' time, with her supporters using the media resources available to them to make an electorate much more receptive to her message and remaking the Republican Party into one that fights for her rather than against, I'd be willing to wager that she would have a difficult time saying no to a Draft Palin movement. Consider that the perceptions and concerns of some of the family members can also possibly change over a period of years. In the meantime, she will be doing her part to change hearts and minds. If her supporters can do the same, perhaps it will be history in the making. If the medium is indeed the message, why not use the media, including such powerful resources as "The Undefeated," to make the message her message?

- JP

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

‘The Undefeated’ Goes North to Alaska

“We're going to make that announcement here in the next week.”
*
In an interview for The Victory Sessions, filmmaker Stephen K. Bannon told Sarah Palin's brother Chuck Heath, Jr. that he's bringing his documentary film to Alaska for a Wasilla screening:


We're reminded of the Steve Allen song, “This could be the start of something big,” which was such a big deal that it replaced the theme music for the “Tonight Show” back in the day when Allen was the host.

The entire Chuck Heath, Jr. interview is well worth a listen, and you'll find it on The Victory Sessions website.

- JP

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 375

“Ring of Power” Edition
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Jim Funkhouser, at Tea Party Tribune:
“The seductive nature of the Ring of Power from the movie ‘Lord of the Rings’ is the perfect metaphor for all the evil that percolates up from the cauldron of slime that is Washington D.C... No one relinquishes power. They even switch political parties in their eighth decade ala Arlen Specter to maintain their slimy grip. The act of surrendering power is such a foreign notion to politicians that when it actually happens it isn’t perceived as the selfless act that it is; it is instead derided and ridiculed as too strange to be noble... Power is what most people want, and what all politicians crave, so it actually makes sense for the few who demonstrate the strength of character to relinquish it to be hated for their selflessness. Care to guess who I’m cleverly alluding to? Her initials are Sarah Palin. McCain needs to recognize that his political story, such as it is, is over. America can no longer tolerate a corrupt two-party/one ideology system. In 2012 we need a real choice, and as of right now the only alternative being offered is coming from the lowly hobbits of Middle Earth, and their ring bearer, Mama Grizz.”
Janne Mrydal, ND State Director, Concerned Women for America:
“I’m pretty convinced. The way she’s talking, in Iowa, in New Hampshire… I just can’t see she’s doing what she’s doing unless she’s getting in.”
Paul Burka, at Texas Monthly, a magazine well to the left of center:
“She’s going to have to time her entry into the race perfectly. But I think she’s the only Republican who doesn’t have to build an organization. It’s there, waiting for her, in Iowa, in New Hampshire, in every state. About those polls that say she can’t win: Many Republicans believe that the country is turning away from Obama, that he will not be electable come November of 2012, and whoever gets the GOP nomination wins. They may be right. I think Palin is playing her cards very smartly. She has the biggest following of any Republican, by far. She has 100% name identification. She is a free agent. I think she’s intent upon running, and I think Rick Perry had better watch out.”
William A. Jacobson, at Legal Insurrection:
“All the enlightened conservative pundits who bashed Palin endlessly over Revere now will denounce Obama’s historical ignorance, right? I know, I’m talking to myself again.”
Eric Olsen, at Gay Patriot:
“So the Lightbringer claimed during his rehash that Abraham Lincoln founded the Republican Party… Ummmm…dude? You’re wrong. Now, MoDo? Eric Boehlert? Daily Beast? Any idea when might we expect your flurry of articles talking about what a ‘fool’ and an ‘idiot’ The Chosen One is, as you were so quick to do over Palin’s entirely accurate remark? Of course, we all know that anything the Mocha Messiah says is Gospel, so I’ll just go ahead and assume the MSM has checked out...
Mark Whittington, at Associated Content:
“Maher should actually be glad that Palin will not be in the same room as him. He strikes one as the sort of person who would find being hit by a girl on national TV a humiliation that would be impossible to be borne.”
Lloyd Marcus, Tea Party activist, at American Thinker Blog:
“Sarah Palin inspired her typical (yet extraordinary) level of excitement and attendance at our Tea Party Express V national bus tour rally in Manchester, NH. I overheard a national reporter commenting to two of our staff members, ‘Yeah, Palin draws a crowd but they are all missing teeth.’ I was furious! I wanted to say, ‘How dare you? You arrogant jerk!’ I held my tongue as a representative of Tea Party Express. After attending over 200 tea parties on six national bus tours, I can assure you the majority of the attendees are extremely well informed, educated, articulate and patriotic Americans. They are not stupid rednecks as the reporter's comment implied. Unfortunately, the snobby reporter's view of the tea party is shared by the liberal Obama sycophant media. At our Tea Party Express rally in Providence, RI, a former Marine and his adult son stood in the rain and wept along with others as I sang ‘God Bless the USA’. We embraced as brothers in our love for the greatest nation on the planet... And yet... the consensus of the left and liberal media is the Tea Party is white ignorant violent racists.”
toma29, at Useful Info Nation:
“TIME visionary Mark Halperin sees racism in Palin remarks about ‘blank’ check... Liberalism is a mental disorder.”
Bradley Hennenfent, M.D., at BradMD.com:
“I saw The Undefeated via Comcast Cable's On Demand service, and it was excellent. I rate it 10 Stars. One cannot help but feel that they have finally met an honest, ethical and hard working politician in Sarah Palin. Interestingly, the undeserved vilification of Sarah Palin is nearly beyond comprehension, and it was a brilliant move showing all of that at the beginning of the movie. Sarah Palin essentially stars as Jimmy Stewart in ‘Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,’ except it's actually true, and you will feel the same warmth in your heart as you did when watching Jimmy Stewart. Everyone should see this movie.”
Sissy Willis, via Twitter:
is on record in 2008 e-mails expressing her general opposition to certain vaccine mandates
Adrienne Ross, at Motivation Truth:
“After Rick Santorum and Michele Bachmann chewed out Governor Perry for the Texas mandate that young girls be inoculated with Gardasil, Governor Palin also took on this issue in her post-GOP presidential debate interview with Greta Van Susteren. [Tuesday], some looking to accuse Governor Palin of supporting the same practice in Alaska, took to their laptops--ill-informed though they were. Michelle Malkin takes them to task for what she calls ‘a really, really stupid attack on Palin.’ (Aren't they all?)”
Christopher Schoppa, at the Washington Post:
“Political Bestsellers — Sept. 11, 2011... The list swells to 15 this week, a mix of new titles... and older ones, as Sarah Palin’s most recent title mixes it up with Jon Stewart’s...”
Tina Hemond, at Degrees of Moderation:
“it is clearly too early to call a permanent front-runner, as fortunes in the polls, come and go between September and the Debates of November and December, mere months before the first primary and caucuses in 2012. This leaves room for additional candidates, a la Ronald Reagan, to enter the fray. Immediately following the debate, Sarah Palin weighed in on the debate and the performance of the current candidates, on Fox News with Greta Van Susteren... Asked and answered at least a thousand times, Palin continues to hold that her entry (or non-entry) into the 2012 field will be a time of her own choosing, not dictated by the media. However, the run-down on all candidates and the overall impression during her analysis was that she was readying to take to the field, as to timing of an announcement that is for Palin to decide. As a strategy, it may prove to be brilliant... As the front runners so often take so many hits, and then begin to slide in the polls, a late entry not only picks up support from those candidates who no longer can sustain a campaign (too early), and /or those top tier candidates who are less appealing than at first glance. This is especially true if one is in third place in polls after several debates, having not announced any intentions.”
John Kuddes, in a letter to The Kansas City Star:
“Maybe if our current president had Palin’s experience, he could accomplish more than merely voting ‘present,’ and blaming everybody else for challenges inherited, created and exacerbated.”
Patrick S. Adams, at Patrick's World USA:
“An army sits in their camps keeping their powder dry, cleaning their rhetorical weapons and preparing for a massive boots on the ground grass roots operation with air support from the more technologically savvy among us who can post youtube videos and blog posts that will get the message out to the American people. That army awaits their marching orders. To make this happen, they need Governor Palin to give them the go... Contrary to what the media says, the Palin army is not a fan club. This is our lives. There are people who are suffering because of what the Obama administration is doing. This ain't no party. This ain't no disco. This ain't no foolin' around. The American dream is at stake. People's livelihoods are at stake. People's children's futures hang on the outcome of the 2012 elections. For the diehard Palinista, removing Obama is not enough. Changing the way business is done in Washington is also a key component to that. We've spent decades frustrated by the inability to beat city hall. Now we have a shot to do it, and it can't be done without her.”
Exit Quote - Thomas Jefferson:
“Power is not alluring to pure minds.”
- JP

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Sarah Palin: Catch 'The Undefeated' for Alaska and America’s Story

As posted on Facebook
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Catch 'The Undefeated' for Alaska and America’s Story

Steve Bannon just released a powerful film about Alaska’s history, our rich resources, and a committed team’s successful effort to tackle political corruption. Bannon’s independently financed, produced, and directed film called “The Undefeated” is now available on cable via pay-per-view and video-on-demand. I’m thankful for Bannon’s group at Victory Films for independently putting their own time and resources into documenting the work my team in Alaska did in successfully fighting corruption and enacting real reform that put local and state government back on the side of the people. Thank you to the good Alaskans who participated in the film and spoke so passionately about our state’s history, our natural resources, and our destiny as the energy contributor for America’s security.

Bannon’s film shows how on a state and local level all citizens – no matter background or party affiliation – can come together to fight the special interests and the corrupt powers-that-be that steal power from the people. Through examples of putting government-run businesses back into the private sector hands, inviting competition, reducing taxes, and blowing the doors open to force government transparency, “The Undefeated” shows that though real reform is difficult and real reformers are vilified, it is possible. The obstacles in the way of reform are why true reform is so rare, but as the film shows, it can be done and it is worth it.

This film is not about any one person. It’s about great American values – like our indomitable optimistic pioneering spirit – that will always see America through no matter how tough times are. It’s the spirit of our Last Frontier, it’s the story of how Alaskans fought corruption and won, it’s the story of the spirit of the Tea Party Movement, and it’s the story of a people’s movement for reform. I’m grateful to these filmmakers for telling the story.

Here’s more about Steve Bannon’s film and where to view it. I encourage you to watch it. I promise you it will open some eyes.

- Sarah Palin
- JP

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Scott Conroy: Palin Backers Use Film to Spread Message Ahead of Iowa Speech

"The central issue now is crony capitalism..."
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O4P volunteers are Sarah Palin's most powerful asset in Iowa, and the documentary "The Undefeated" may be their most effective organizing tool asset as they prepare for her Saturday speech in Indianola. RealClearPolitics' Scott Conroy reports that the group has been screening the film for small audiences in churches, libraries and private homes across Iowa all summer long:
Ladd Ventling, who serves as a county coordinator for the Iowa branch of Organize4Palin, told RCP that he spoke privately with Todd Palin for over 20 minutes about the volunteer group’s efforts during the visit by Alaska’s former First Couple to the Iowa State Fair earlier this month.

Ventling said that while Todd Palin did not say his wife planned to announce her candidacy, the Webster City, Iowa, native came away from the conversation convinced that she does indeed intend to get in.

“If they weren’t going to run, he would’ve said, ‘Thank you very much for what you’re doing, but you don’t have to do that,’ ” Ventling told RCP.

Polly Doolittle, also of Webster City, is another Organize4Palin volunteer who is working in conjunction with Tea Party of America in advance of Saturday’s rally in Indianola.

[...]

“We did a bigger showing in Emmetsburg last Saturday in a theater there,” Ventling said. “Everyone applauded when it was over. And people always want to stay around and chat and give us their opinion about what the movie did for them.”

Steven K. Bannon, the filmmaker behind “The Undefeated,” agreed with several of Palin’s Iowa volunteers who suggested that her successful 2006 gubernatorial run against incumbent Frank Murkowski, which the film recounts in detail, might serve as a prototype for a 2012 presidential bid.

“Alaska in mid-decade was like America today,” Bannon said. “You had a corrupt political class in cahoots with big oil. The central issue now is crony capitalism with this collusion of big business, big government, and big finance taking care of themselves to the detriment of the middle class.”
That last statement should serve as food for thought to those who have fancied that Gov. Palin would endorse Texas Governor Rick Perry rather than jump into the presidential race herself. Crony capitalism is one of the major issues TEA Party conservatives have with Gov. Perry. In sharp contrast, Sarah Palin's record is that of a reformer who fought such corruption both as an oil & gas commissioner and a governor.

Peter Singleton, O4P's Iowa state coordinator, says the organization has “done dozens and dozens of screenings,” and plans to do many more, mostly to small audiences of 6 to 20 people. the group's plan to increase the frequency of the showings in the first-in-the nation caucus state Iowa during the weeks after Gov. Palin’s keynote address Saturday.

- JP

Monday, August 29, 2011

'The Undefeated' Screening Tuesday Night in Northern Colorado

From the Longmont Republican Women website:
*

One night only in Boulder County!

THE UNDEFEATED

A new feature film about Sarah Palin
and all who are rebuilding the nation through conservative ideals…

WHEN: Tuesday, August 30th, 7:00 p.m.
WHERE: The Bertolin Barn
11965 Wasatch Road
Longmont, CO 80504
WHY: To see what a difference
one person (you!) can make!

Sponsored by the Longmont Republican Women (LRW) and the Boulder County Republicans (BCR) ------ Cost: $5
There will be concessions available.

CLICK HERE TO RSVP NOW:
Only 150 seats available!
Bring your friends!

CHECK IN OPENS AT 7:00 P.M. FOR RESERVED SEATS,
7:20 FOR UNCLAIMED SEATS
ONLY 150 SEATS AVAILABLE!
Program starts at 7:30
with a message from LRW President, Peg Cage and BCR Chairman, Joel Champion


- JP

KETK: 'The Undefeated' draws a crowd in Tyler

Film's run in Tyler continues Monday & Tuesday
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Stephen Bannon's documentary "The Undefeated" came to East Sunday, where Times Square Cinema in Tyler sold every available ticket and them some:

Times Square decided to add an additional theater to accommodate the crowd, and that one almost filled up too.

The film has been shown in 14 cities across the country so far.

Tyler is the third Texas town to show the film, including Grapevine and Houston.

Palin hasn't announced she's running for the presidency just yet, but has plenty of east Texans backing her already.

They'll be two more showings of the movie -- Monday at 7 p.m. --- and Tuesday at 2:30 p.m.

"The Undefeated" will also be available on pay per view September 1 and on DVD October 4. KETK's story and video package is here.

h/t: Dan

- JP

Friday, August 19, 2011

'The Undefeated' screening in Birmingham, AL Aug 25th

From Rainy Day Patriots:
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The Rainy Day Patriots, 101.1 WYDE The Source's Lee Davis and Dr. Gina Loudon along with The Tea Party Youth and Alabama's Organize for Palin group bring the "The Undefeated" to Birmingham. Suggested Donation $12 Each Go here,enter in amount(s) in $12 increments in "Other" field. We will hold your tickets at door for you.

~ This one time showing of the documentary on Sarah Palin "The Undefeated" is Thursday August 25th at 7 pm.

~ Limited Seating - 200 tickets will be sold one day only - Thursday the 18th from 12 noon - 7 pm at WYDE Location here.

~ Volunteers are needed to help us with the event on Thursday August the 25th, 6pm and at the end of show. (Show starts at 7pm)

~ Send an email to zan@rainydaypatriots.org with "volunteer for event" in the subject line.

- JP

Saturday, August 13, 2011

'The Undefeated' will be screened in Tyler

August 28, 29 and 30
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According to the newsletter of the Texas chapter of Organize 4 Palin, Stephen Bannon's Palin documentary will be shown in Tyler at the end of the month. There will be three screenings, one each on Sunday, Aug 28 (at 4:30 pm), Monday, Aug 29 (at 7:00 pm) and Tuesday, Aug 30 (at 2:30 pm), all at Tyler's Times Square Cinema.

The newsletter has full details on the two Texas road trips, one from Dallas and the other from Houston, to see Gov. Palin in Waukee, Iowa. There are also links to join O4P, to donate to the organization, and to navigate to the group's social media websites.

- JP

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 350

“Halo” Edition
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Mark America:
“The latest alleged ‘savior’ of America is Rick Perry, but once again, this is largely a manufactured sentiment of the LSM... Meanwhile, Sarah Palin is in Iowa, and... she threatens to swoop in and suck the thin political oxygen out of the GOP primary race... This approach certainly leaves the field in turmoil, left to wonder when Palin will drop the hammer and crush some of the less popular candidates. It’s an open secret among many now loosely in the Michele Bachmann camp that in some sense, while well-liked among Tea Party Republicans, she’s become a sort of place-holder for people who would prefer to support Governor Palin. This suggests that a high-stakes, well-placed announcement by Sarah Palin could very well overwhelm the latest ‘savior,’ whomever that may be. Sarah Palin’s in the cat-bird seat, and she knows it. She’ll likely jump in when she sees the best moment, likely surprising everybody, and this possibility has the remainder of the field sweating, leaving the savior of the moment wondering when his halo will evaporate too.”
Mark America:
“It seems as though more and more Texans are getting involved in supporting Sarah Palin every day.”
Peter Grier, at The Christian Science Monitor:
“Sarah Palin and her One Nation bus tour are making a surprise trip to Iowa... Pure genius. Somewhere Rick Santorum is sitting in a hotel room with his face in his hands. It’s the lagging candidates who’ll really feel the tire tracks of the bus tour... Plus, SarahPAC has posted a new one-minute Palin video that makes pretty much every other Republican contender’s commercials look underproduced... The sound track is Palin’s speech at the 2008 GOP convention. The overall impression it leaves is that Michele Bachmann is a good speaker, Michele Bachmann is a former tax attorney, Michele Bachmann is a tea party favorite, but Sarah Palin is still way better at lighting people on fire with words.”
Scott Conroy, via Twitter:
“Last Palin observation: she's clearly been studying up/anticipating questions she'd get. Was prepared like a candidate.”
Giacomo, at Godfather Politics:
“The first major Republican debate took place [Thursday] night in Iowa. Eight candidates attended and exchanges shots at each other and at Obama and Democrats. But were there any clear winners? ... perhaps the two winners of the debate were the two Republicans who did not attend and have as yet not declared their official candidacy – Rick Perry and Sarah Palin. The two not-as-yet declared possible candidates received as much attention in the media as the 8 declared candidates who did show.”
Chris Of Rights:
“Our GOP nominee will be one of Romney, Perry, or Palin, and you can bet the farm on that.”
Andrew Malcolm, at Top of the Ticket:
“Just up the road from Des Moines is Ames, where the straw poll means nothing and everything at the same time... Nothing because it has no binding value on anyone to do anything; it just gives the media something to get excited about in mid-summer. Everything because success or failure in just a few thousand PR ballot totals will catapult or doom some of the lesser-known candidacies. Palin is not participating, but she will return to Iowa over Labor Day to keynote a tea party rally and -- who knows? -- perhaps see if there's still room in the Republican nominating race for someone with executive experience like, say, a former governor with a documentary movie coming out to wider release then. Palin said she was pleased that her friend Rick Perry, the governor of Texas, was presumably entering the nomination contest [Saturday] during a speech to online conservative writers in Charleston, S.C. ‘I appreciate that he is willing to jump into this arena,’ she added. Hmmm, ‘this’ arena? Meaning the one she's in too? Without saying so?”
Jim Hoft, at Gateway Pundit:
“Sarah Palin stole the show at the Iowa State Fair...”
Cameron Joseph, at Ballot Box, The Hill's campaign blog:
“Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin hasn't announced her 2012 plans, but she stole the show at the Iowa State Fair on Friday. Palin and her husband, Todd, had a private lunch with supporters — including longtime Iowa fundraiser Becky Beach — on the fairgrounds, then walked over to admire the life-size ‘butter cow’ sculpture, stopping along the way to take photos with fair-goers. While many presidential candidates had already appeared on the fairgrounds Friday, she was the only one who drew such a thick throng of onlookers and supporters, along with a clutch of media coverage.”
Amanda Coyne, at Alaska Dispatch:
“August and state fairs have, in the past, been very good to Sarah Palin of Alaska.”
Dan Riehl, at Riehl World View:
“While always open to the idea of one day supporting Sarah Palin for President, since 2008, I've gone back and forth on whether or not I thought it was smart for her to run next year. Re-visiting my thoughts yesterday, what with Palin's appearance in Iowa, not only am I convinced she should run, she needs to run and, regardless of one's preferred candidate, all Conservatives should encourage her to run and welcome her into the race, assuming she does... Beholden to no one, without fear, or restraint, Palin articulates today's conservatism in a prudent, positive and cogent manner... If you believe in conservatism and that it can win national elections in America, as I do, Sarah Palin's abilities to both speak out fearlessly and plainly for conservatism, while generating increased media interest in, not just herself, but the other candidates and the primary as a whole, would be of significant benefit for all on the Right.”
Tony Lee, via Twitter:
“Joe Trippi said from what he has seen on the ground, if Sarah Palin were an official candidate in Straw Poll she'd walk away with it.’”
Michael Moriarty, at Big Hollywood:
“The divine promise of the United States hasn’t been extinguished. Our homeland’s flame still burns brightly in our hearts if no longer in the torch of Our Lady In The Harbor. The Eastern Seaboard candidates of both parties seem corrupt, tarnished or not ready to run. Sarah Palin is not running as a candidate. She is walking slowly, steadily and carrying a big stick called The Truth. Many of us know the essentials of what that is but hear it most clearly from Sarah Palin. That’s the breath of fresh air we need. Clarity! And the triumphantly Lincoln-like grace of simplicity.”
Michael Anifant, at a screening of “The Undefeated” in Plainville, CT:
“Obviously, she’s not a shrinking violet.”
Smitty, at The Other McCain:
“After the next Wisconsin recall election, and after more debt crisis, Sarah reduces the risk that the Left can reconstitute itself by using hatred of her as a rallying cry. Also, while a few other GOP candidates are not necessarily bad for cover, letting the herd thin itself a bit, and letting the Left expend its energies against them, is not a bad thing. Too, part of the problem with what Progress has done to America is that people have been reduced to an infantile impatience... Sarah is showing massive amounts of patience, letting the game unfold at a medium pace. The Left is forced to recycle its talking points, excrete them, and re-consume them, enjoying the taste of its Progress all the while. And then she takes the occasional, well-aimed shot from the inexpensive high ground of her FaceBook page. While certainly a violation of the Holy Narrative, her poise and control of situation is a stark contrast from the spineless impotence of her purported superior, the incumbent. Lay by your dish, Olbermann; get stuffed, Matthews; get bent, Maddow. Ya got nothin’, and neither does BHO.”
Exit Quote - Dan McKinnon:
“Be aware that a halo has to fall only a few inches to be a noose.”
- JP

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 349

“The Cure” Edition
*

Patrick S. Adams. at Patrick's World USA:
“In forging a winning coalition, there is a large and growing swath of voters that can be courted... If I had to give you an honest rough estimate... I'd have to tell you that there are about 25 million Americans either unemployed or underemployed. That's a lot of voters. Will all those people vote for Sarah Palin? No. Should they all vote for Sarah Palin? Yes. Ronald Reagan created 16.1 million jobs between 1981 and 1989. Now ask yourself, is something like this possible again if a President Palin removes regulatory burdens for businesses, reforms the tax code, reforms entitlements, repeals Obamacare and opens up energy drilling and exploration (where our real wealth is currently stored)? You friggin betcha it is. It's time to get the message out to the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs and homes because of the moronic policies of our leaders in Washington that if they channel their anger and their desire to restore America the right way, they can be a driving force behind ending the Obama sickness that has befallen our great nation. The cure for Obama sickness is Sarah Palin.”
Kunta Evans, at Random Alien Musings:
“Dear Sarah... I don't pretend to elevate you to an unreasonably high status...I simply see that you are uniquely equipped to lead us during a time perhaps like no other.”
Anthony James, at Tea Party Tribune:
“What really makes Sarah Palin so very special is that she really doesn’t want to go to Washington DC for the next four years to set about the Herculean feat of undoing the savage damage which the current administration will leave in its rancid wake. It’s just that she, like so many of us, understands that either she will do it or the very great chance exists that it will not get done. At the very least, it will not be done as well or as quickly as she would do it, and time is very much of the essence here. While it is not likely, I sincerely hope that Sarah Palin reads this... If you’re reading this Sarah, please run.”
Nicole Coulter, at Conservatives 4 Palin:
“Governor Palin herself has stated that she will announce her decision in either August or September. So, we’re looking at less than seven weeks maximum; but it could be any day now, right?”
James York, at American Thinker:
“Over the last three years, many Washington soothsayers have taken note of Mrs. Palin's consistent conservative credentials... while simultaneously and dismissively marveling at her nonchalant attitude toward conventionality. They often bemoan the ‘brazen’ way that she causes seismic shifts in the political terrain with the prose of a mere commoner (death panels), and I suspect they wince at the prospect of her next tweet or note. By now, the elites are numb to the feelings of shame, guilt, and awkwardness that have accompanied their endless attempts to molest the Palin family, but they are not yet accustomed to the sting of damaged pride. They despise intellectual humiliation more than almost anything, yet they continually do things that make their foolishness glaringly apparent. While no one should be surprised at the political prowess of the once-chief executive of the geographically largest state in the Union, many will continue to underestimate her and, in repeatedly writing her professional obituary, will ultimately pen their own.”
David Bozeman, at Net Right Daily:
“She could speak volumes about being on the receiving end of meanness, but she possesses the gall to fight back... If Sarah Palin is mean, this lowly foot soldier in the conservative movement says give me more.”
Andrew Malcolm, at Top of the Ticket:
“Now comes word that Sarah Palin will bring her famous, extremely patriotic ‘One Nation’ bus tour to the Heartland this week, allegedly for a visit to the Iowa State Fair... Palin's not scheduled to speak at the fair. Palin doesn't need no schtinking fair to speak. She's got her Facebook page with nearly 3.25 million fans listening. And her podium over at Fox. And the political celebrity can pretty much set up wherever she wants to park her political bus, and the crowd and media will flock over, even though she has yet to declare her intentions about a presidential candidacy. The latest leg of Palin's bus journey just happens to coincide with the arrival of a gazillion media people and a bunch of GOP presidential candidates for the Ames Straw Poll, just to the north of Des Moines up I-35. Thursday night there's a nationally-televised Republican debate on the Fox News Channel.”
PassCode Creative, via Twitter:
“humbled by the response 2 ‘Always Proud’ full credit goes to - her vision and message that r resonating: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBoS1mZZRZ4"
Tony Katz, at Pajamas Media:
“According to The Iowa Republican.com, former Alaska Governor and 2008 Vice-Presidential candidate Sarah Palin will be coming to Iowa on Friday. Craig Robinson, editor and publisher of The Iowa Republican.com, says that Palin’s reason for coming is, ‘Obviously, to make an impact on the field. She’s creating a bookmark that allows her to keep her options open for getting in to the race.’ PJTV is covering the Straw Poll, and all the action throughout Iowa. Be sure to check PJTV.com for video updates, and The Tatler for the latest breaking news from Iowa.”
Reuters:
“Tea Party activists interviewed by Reuters voiced most enthusiasm for former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, who has been coy as to whether she will run.”
Jack Hunter, at Charleston City Paper:
“Prejudices and perceptions aside, The Undefeated leaves one with the impression that Palin is just as qualified to be president as the current one, flaws and all. I’ve never adored Sarah Palin and I’ve never abhorred Sarah Palin, but I’ve always been amused by those who do. This brings us to one of the most interesting parts of The Undefeated: the opening segment. This crude, somewhat paranoid, and downright cruel barrage of liberal criticism of Palin should be enough to make anyone, Left or Right, cringe. If the Left thinks Palin supporters are absurd, liberals should observe their silly selves when in full Palin-hatred mode — which is what The Undefeated allows us to do. Why the Left logically hates Palin becomes no clearer from this collage of liberal venom, just as why the Right loves Palin is made clear by the conservatives featured in the movie.”
Hollywoodland, at Big Hollywood:
“George Lopez, the left-wing comedian who recently made headlines after threatening to move to Canada should Governor Sarah Palin become president... is now just another unemployed statistic in his precious Obama’s failed economic ‘recovery.’... Lopez has floated the idea of entering politics. We at Big Hollywood look forward to that.”
Michael Gryboski, at Moore Common Sense:
“Back in November 2008, not long after the John McCain–Sarah Palin ticket failed to make it to the White House, an arsonist attacked a church. It was not just any place of worship, it was Palin’s home church in Wasilla, Alaska... Thankfully no one was hurt, however the arsonist remains at large. In the months leading up to the presidential election and the arson incident at the church, liberals in the media launched an intense campaign against Palin. Some of their remarks were valid criticisms; many of them were personal attacks. Among the anti-Palin army of journalists, columnists, commentators, and writers was Eugene Robinson. The examples of his opposition to Palin during the 2008 campaign were numerous.”
Matt Hadro, at NewsBusters:
“It's no secret that CNN's Jack Cafferty possesses a deep-seated loathing of Sarah Palin, and now that she may run for the Republican presidential ticket the grumpy CNN contributor has one more thing to grumble over.”
Mark Whittington, at Yahoo! News:
“Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin weighed in on the Standard & Poor's downgrade of American debt with a Facebook post that was a combination of an ‘I told you so’ and analysis of the problem, and a proposal for some solutions. In the post, Palin points out she warned the AAA rating of American public debt was in jeopardy as early as December 2010. With a slap at President Barack Obama's intellectual pretensions, she added, ‘One doesn't need a Harvard Law degree to figure this out!’ Indeed, Palin, whose college career has caused sniffing among intellectual snobs, has been proven more right than the Ivy League elite about the financial crisis that faces the United States, such as when she warned about the dangers of quantitative easing... Palin has yet to announce her intentions for the 2012 election. But it seems she is developing an agenda fit for a presidential candidate.”
Exit Quote - Dwight D. Eisenhower:
“There is nothing wrong with America that faith, love of freedom, intelligence, and energy of her citizens cannot cure.”
- JP

Team Sarah Planning Gatherings to View 'The Undefeated'

The opportunity to change hearts and minds couldn't comes at a better time
*
When "The Undefeated" becomes available on Pay Per View September 1, Team Sarah plans to have a number of gatherings at members' homes to watch Stephen Bannon's Sarah Palin documentary. Team Sarah, which is a project of The Susan B Anthony List, sees a golden opportunity in the release to PPV to increase the film's audience from thousands to hundreds of thousands.

To date, the film has only been shown in select theaters in a handful of cities, but in less than three weeks' time, virtually every home or conference room in the country which has access to cable or satellite television will also have access to "The Undefeated." This provides Team Sarah with a way to galvanize and mobilize its members, many of whom have been waiting for news that Gov. Palin will run for president. It also provides members with an opportunity to get their friends who are not Palin supporters to see the film. That opportunity to change hearts and minds couldn't comes at a better time, as Gov. Palin will keynote the "Restoring America" TEA Party rally in Iowa September 3.

If you're a Team Sarah member and would like to host a gathering in your home or some other location to watch "The Undefeated" on September 1, you can visit the event page on Facebook here. If you're not a a member of Team Sarah but would like to join, you can sign up here.

- JP

Saturday, August 6, 2011

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 347

“The Voice” Edition
*

Patrick S. Adams, at Liberty's Lamp:
“We know exactly where Sarah Palin stands on the issues. She talks the talk and walks the walk. She has stood firm in her position on Obamacare and Cap and Trade. More recently, she has not wavered on the issue of the debt ceiling despite the carping of moderate Republicans and whining Democrats. What you see is what you get and what you get is right for America... Sarah Palin is a voice for millions of Americans sick of the status quo business as usual politics of Washington. Hers is the articulation of everything many Americans feel and believe. She can take the hopes and dreams for our country and deliver it back to us in a beautifully spoken or written package. She can explain our frustrations to the press and to the voters. Her ability to connect with so many makes them feel that pang of total agreement when she delivers our philosophy, the American philosophy, back to us in a way that would make Ronald Reagan proud. He's the only other great communicator in my lifetime who has ever been able to do that. That says a lot about Sarah Palin, the great communicator of our time.”
Lew, at Independent Declarations:
“I have come to believe that Sarah Palin is our Ronald Reagan. In my opinion, there isn’t a Republican candidate in the mix who is tougher and more steadfast in their principles than she... Palin 2012…that’s the ticket.”
Dick Rolfe, at The Dove Foundation:
“With a sweeping score, previously unseen footage and exclusive interviews, ‘The Undefeated’ educates, entertains and challenges its audiences to take another look at someone who is much-discussed but whose story, despite all that is written and said about her, is actually largely untold. ‘The Undefeated’ is as much a history lesson of Alaska as a biography of Sarah Palin. It soon becomes apparent that the major cultural and economic breakthroughs that occurred in our 49th state between 2000 and 2008 are attributable, for most part, to the spunk, determination and common sense of Mayor and Governor Palin... This film is a must-see for anyone, liberal or conservative, supporter or critic, who really wants to know who Sarah Palin is.”
Diane Church, at The Bristol Press:
“Local conservatives and tea party members were victorious in one of their latest battles: getting ‘The Undefeated,’ a documentary about Sarah Palin... screened at the Plainville Loews AMC movie theater starting this weekend. And it was all done through social media and grassroots efforts.”
Connor Lanser, of Team Cubs:
“After doing research on Sarah Palin, I questioned my support for Barack Obama. I did more research on the parties and on the candidates. It was then that I said, ‘Mom, I’m a Republican!’ Today, I still believe in the values that Sarah Palin stands for and believes in. Today, I still believe in her. I have had the privilege of meeting Mrs. Palin several times and have even exchanged letters with her. She remains a force not only in politics, but in me! Whatever Sarah Palin decides to do, I will always stand by her!”
Jelayne Sessler, at Palin Defender:
“Compared to all other candidates and potential candidates, Governor Palin increased the debt at a much slower rate and reduced total liabilities at a much higher rate than any of her fellow governors.”
Just a Conservative Girl, at Potluck:
“Once during a big sale I was told that I was racist because I wouldn’t give a woman a coupon discount. The problem was she didn’t have the coupon. So no, I couldn’t give it to her. I was told in no uncertain terms by the manager that morning, no coupon, no discount. When I told her that my boyfriend’s skin was darker than hers she said to me that I was just some stuck up white woman who thought I was better than his black family and he was just some sort of race traitor who didn’t accept his blackness. So not only was I still a racist, so apparently was he. Who knew? ... She went on to explain to me how much of the problems really stems from conservatives. Sarah Palin in particular. I asked if her if she understood that Sarah Palin is married to man who is a minority. Eskimos are much more of minority in this country than blacks are. She completely ignored that and also wouldn’t answer me when I wanted to know what exactly Palin has ever said that leads her to believe that she is a racist. I guess being conservative is enough.”
Rob, at Joshuapundit:
“Sarah Palin was completely right... when she said that if the Tea Party really were terrorists, the president and his minions would undoubtedly want to pal around with them.”
Kufsy, at Off The Kufs:
“I like that Sarah Palin. I don't give a hoot what the liberals and elitist so-called Republicans in the Northeast say about her, either. She is always right on. The slamming of the Tea Partiers is downright silly. Liberals and the media always paint conservatives as ‘extremists’. It is like that fool Jon Stewart doing his shtick about being a ‘moderate’. Need I remind you -- and the Gallup polling backs me up -- we are a right-leaning country. 2-1 people consider themselves conservative as opposed to liberal.”
theblogprof:
“This will go down as classic Sarahcuda...”
Jim Vicevich, at Radio Vice Online:
“The Governor has your back. This is classic Palin -- a great sense of humor on the name calling from the left --but then she surprises -- and decides she’s not gunna take it anymore. Not in her defense -- but for all of us. First Palin takes a shot at Obama … and well deserved for not calling for an end to the terrorist rhetoric from the left.Then a Palin departure. the woman who has seen it all thrown at her … decides she’s mad as heck and won’t take it anymore -- for us. Leading from -- the lead. Honestly, isn’t this what you hoped your President would do -- defend Americans?”
Joe Miller:
“Sarah Palin has become one of the most effective defenders of the Tea Party.”
Steven, at Nikitas3:
“Socialists talk like they ‘care’ about everyone, but that is just a façade. In fact they are narcissists, money lovers and materialists of the first order. They care only about what they can get for themselves. And since Obama is addicted to flying around on Air Force One and playing golf and having parties like a college frat boy, that is what he does. But the Media Left have not one ounce of criticism of Obama’s terrible performance, policy-wise and personally. But then again, they are all just like him. They would kill to have all the perks that Obama has. They worship his power and prestige. They live vicariously through Obama because he is getting what all liberals secretly believe they are entitled to. Yet at the same time, these media have relentlessly trashed Sarah Palin, who has strong middle-class roots and who understands what is happening to Americans and truly feels the pain. But according to the ObamaMedia, she could never be as smart as the president of the United States. Nonsense. Palin would be a much better president.”
American Glob:
“Guess what? Obama is going on a Bus Tour of America. What an original idea! Of course, his bus tour will be totally different than Sarah Palin’s because you’re going to pay for it.”
Andrew Malcolm, at Top of the Ticket:
“Somehow, from somewhere, a bright political strategist on the president's reelection team has come up with the idea of sending Obama out in a bus on Midwestern roads in two weeks, just like real Americans, or real Americans who can still afford a short summer road trip... According to Obama Press Secretary Jay Carney, the 72-hour bus trip is not political. (Laughter) No, really... Anyway, because the bus trip is so clearly presidential, America's taxpayers will be footing the bill for the non-political, three-day Obama odyssey through politically important Midwestern battleground states. After all, taxpayers covered all the costs of Sarah Palin's successful One Nation bus tour back in June. Oh, wait. No, they didn't. Her political action committee paid for that.”
Exit Quote - 1 Corinthians 14:8, American Standard Bible:
“For if the trumpet give an uncertain voice, who shall prepare himself for war?”
- JP

Thursday, August 4, 2011

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 346

“Fire” Edition
*

Mark America:
“Sarah Palin seems intent upon taking up the fight against the entrenched establishment with a vigor that no other prospect of national political prominence is willing to do. This facet of Governor Palin’s attitude is what Americans have been hoping to see from any of the other presidential prospects in the GOP. Instead, what they’ve seen is an increasingly invisible and tepid lot of weakly-mumbled remarks in lukewarm defense of the Tea Party, and conservatism. This is the most significant distinction between Sarah Palin’s electability and that of the other Republican candidates: Governor Palin has the unique capability to energize crowds, move people to rally with her, and focus their combined strength on virtually any cultural and political issue. Combined with her commitment to firmly held principles, what the fire in her belly provides is the one thing the GOP needs in a candidate, perhaps more desperately than any other trait: Sarah Palin has the unrepentant will to stand up and join in the fight... Like so many of us, as a parent, and nowadays, a grandparent, she has a deep personal investment in the future of the country, and it resounds in the tone of her voice as she tells her audience that we can’t afford any more of Obama’s disastrous economic policies. She isn’t just spouting talking points. She means it.”
Robert Wiles, at US for Palin:
“As I have always kept an eye on Sarah, for she is the one I believe in when we are talking about 2012, I watch her appearances at social events, gatherings, interviews on TV and I see … I see YOU America.”
Taylor Wolken, at The Battalion:
“Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords returned to Washington, D.C. Monday, seven months after her tragic attack to cast her vote in favor of raising the debt ceiling. Her timing couldn't be better to unveil the absolutely relentless hypocrisy of left-wing media and politics... Sarah Palin was criticized relentlessly over a map depicting crosshairs over vulnerable Democrats, similar to the DNC's use of targets on Republicans. Most heinously, Giffords' attacker, Jared Loughner, was assumed by the media to be a right-wing nut job aligned with the tea party, of which only the nut job part was true. A favorite of the left, Paul Krugman crooned in The New York Times, ‘You could see, just by watching the crowds at the McCain-Palin rallies, that it was ready to happen again.’ ... It's hard to miss the irony when Giffords returned to the house, left-wingers and Democrats who refuse to use the term, ‘War on Terror,’ ‘terrorist,’ or ‘jihadist,’ to describe ‘enemy combatants,’ are using all those terms to describe the tea party congress members and their role in the debt ceiling debate... Heated rhetoric I can stand; hypocrisy, I cannot.”
Bungalow Bill, at BBCW:
“Is Sarah Palin Vs. Barack Obama the Ronald Reagan vs. Jimmy Carter of This Generation?”
Billy Hallowell, at TheBlaze:
“If you haven’t heard yet, let us be the first to inform you: President Obama is planning to set out on a Sarah Palin-esque bus tour throughout the Midwest. The purpose? To invigorate political support in some key, battleground states. A rare spectacle for a sitting president to undertake, the tour is set for the week of August 15 and will be run by the White House — not the president’s 2012 re-election campaign. Still, many of the themes being addressed will most certainly play a key role in the American public’s decision to either grant Obama a second term or send him back to Chicago.”
Fox Nation:
“Obama Copies Palin, Plans Bus Tour”
Stacy Drake, at Conservatives 4 Palin:
“Rachel Weiner, a writer for the Washington Post’s The Fix, posted a very disingenuous piece on Wednesday claiming that Governor Palin had somehow ‘disappeared’ from the debt debate. To suggest such a thing indicates that Weiner hasn’t been paying much attention to what the governor has had (on many occasions) to say bout the matter... Unlike Romney, Governor Palin has been giving her opinion about the debt debate since it became an issue in the realm of politics. Well before the debate had wall-to-wall coverage on the 24-hour news cycles, she spoke about the matter. She’s also remained consistent throughout the debate in her position. Something else Romney would have a hard time doing, on any issue.”
Christian Heinze, at The Hill's GOP 12 Blog:
“Romney leads in Vermont, but... Look at Palin. She's tied for second, and has the highest fav ratings of any.”
Thomas Costello , at International Business Times:
“It is the first real shot from Palin at a potential GOP candidate, a shot that will hurt Romney but will also excite Palin's fans that she could be nearer to a decision about running for the GOP candidacy... Her words on Fox news have given her supporters and political commentators reason to believe that she may be ready to announce her nomination for the GOP candidacy. Although Palin has said that she is still undecided whether she will run for Presidency, she has acknowledged that she will need to [decide] soon for legal reasons.”
Matt Lewis, at The Daily Caller:
“Just as Ed Rollins’ recent outbursts about Sarah Palin prompted some to speculate Michele Bachmann should dump him from her campaign, there is surely an argument that Huntsman could now reignite his campaign — and demonstrate leadership — by dumping Weaver.”
Matthew Vadum, at The American Spectator's AmSpec blog:
“Unless you think petitioning the government for lower spending is somehow akin to flying airplanes into buildings, you've got to agree with Sarah Palin​, who on this issue is a voice of sanity and common sense. As President Obama​ and his merry band of Marxists continue driving America off a cliff, Palin (and columnist Charles Krauthammer​) have been pushing back hard against the liberal talking point that Tea Party supporters are terrorists... Of course Palin, who has bigger cojones than most Republicans in Congress, is right.”
Daniel Greenfield, at Sultan Knish:
“The average American did not believe that Sarah Palin's map or talk radio caused a shooting in Arizona. But some on the right did believe it and and began seeking penance for a crime that no one outside the left believed they were guilty of.”
Tracey Porreca, at Alaskans4Palin:
“The film accomplishes what should have been done by the McCain camp in 2008 with the announcement of Governor Palin as his Vice Presidential pick - it details her record, accomplishments, and Alaska girl guts... What the film does well is galvanize Governor Palin’s conservative principles with the viewer. The film outlines how these principles have not changed with any office she has held. She has a proven track record here in the state with her staunch conservative views, yet also has always been able to ‘reach across the aisle’ and garner bipartisan support. There will certainly be some in the established Alaskan GOP who likely will not be fans of this film. Using Governor Palin’s book Going Rogue as a guide, the film calls out her political opponents on both sides of the aisle regarding the antics that stymied the State.”
Elizabeth Hawkes, at Youth for Palin:
“Rob Cunningham, founder of Volunteering4Palin, was recently interviewed by Dallas, TX, based KJM Radio, where he powerfully captures the absolute essence of ‘The Undefeated.’... Please, do yourself a favor; listen to this inspirational and educational interview - and then share this with absolutely everyone.”
Mark America:
“Compromise offers a potential good, when that’s what it is, but when it’s mere surrender dressed up as ‘pragmatism,’ you had better stand opposed to it. In this entire miserable battle, only one politician of national prominence continued to rail against these so-called ‘compromises’, and she was berated by Republican operatives and leftists in the media for her trouble. She warned and cajoled and prompted and yet, at the end of the day, they ignored her, and you. Sarah Palin stood in as William Wallace in this debate, and the turncoats in the GOP did their level best to deliver her to Edward the Longshanks. The good news is that we and she survived the engagement, but a new battle is looming. Don’t leave her on the field as she’s the only prospective presidential candidate who’s stepped onto the field without reservation. She’s defended your honor and your good name. It’s time to return the favor. It’s time to begin to rally to those who dare to put their names at risk, because such people are few, and we know who they are, so if we believe in all that we claim, it’s long past time that we at least stand up to say so.”
Exit Quote - George Orwell, via the George Orwell Centenary:
“So much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot.”
- JP

'The Undefeated': New Fire for the Dis-Couraged

"I’m no longer comfortable sitting back and letting others do battle for me. "
*
Here are some excerpts from an excellent blog post by an early Palin supporter who, for a number of reasons including the governor's 2009 decision to resign, allowed that early enthusiasm to wane. We pick up her story at the Smart Girl summit in St. Louis, where a remark by Andrew Breitbart persuaded her to go to the screening at that event last weekend of "The Undefeated."
The least I could do was sit and watch the film.

And so I did. And as I did, I found myself overcome with a very unexpected emotion: shame. As I relived her story, the relatively humble beginnings, the young mother who decided to get involved and then rose and met each challenge that came her way, the can-doer who won office repeatedly with odds stacked heavily against her, the fearless fighter who took on corruption, the wildly popular and successful Governor, the exhilarating and scrappy Vice Presidential candidate, I was reminded of all the reasons I’d admired her. And as I watched the absolute hatred and viciousness directed at her from all sides, the zeal with which many sought to take her down – yes, like the zebra set upon by the lions – I could not escape the realization that it was I who had let her down. Not personally. I am but one lowly fiscal conservative/social moderate/with libertarian leanings, far removed from her world, far from influential in any meaningful way. But I stopped standing up for her. And for the principles and values she’s fought so very hard for. I became complacent and allowed others to badmouth her and besmirch her character without so much as the slightest challenge, without any effort to persuade them to stop, take a step back, and consider any of it.

There may be many eunuchs in the GOP who’ve abandoned her to cover their own political backsides. But what does that make me? In many respects, Sarah Palin is me: She’s close to me in age, a PTA Mom, a Christian, a runner, a professional, a true believer in America and the principles upon which it was founded. The difference is, she’s a fighter. And I have been…a coward. Rather than following her lead and boldly exhibiting the courage of my convictions, I allowed myself to become discouraged – DIS-couraged. I’ve rationalized this by noting that in my line of work, and considering some of the career aspirations I possess, sticking my neck out and taking a clear stand could be dangerous. I have a daughter to support, a mortgage to pay, a house to try and keep from falling down. I can’t afford to take risks like that. I need that security. But at what cost?

I alluded to this in my second SGS11 recap blog – the recurring theme about each one of us having not only the ability but the responsibility to stand up and fight for the things we hold dear. Not for fame or glory or validation. But because it’s what’s right. I’m not certain of the movie’s run-time, but I do know that for much of it, I found myself fighting back tears. Because I am ashamed – I’m ashamed of my fellow human beings who’ve made it their life’s work to tear down and destroy those who dare fight for and take pride in our great nation. I’m ashamed of my fellow conservatives who’ve abandoned one of the greatest champions for the conservative cause because it was politically expedient to do so. And I’m ashamed of myself – for not fighting like a girl. For not fighting at all.

I haven’t yet figured out what this revelation will or should translate into in my life. I only know that I’m no longer comfortable sitting back and letting others do battle for me. So, to those who question whether “Undefeated” is worth a watch, my answer is, “Yes. Unless you lack the courage.”

[More]
It's a long post, but more than worth the read. Does this story remind you of someone you know? If so, you need to get that person to a theater to see "The Undefeated."

h/t: Tami

- JP

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

More Quote of the Day Honorable Mention Part 345

“One of Us” Edition
*


Mark America, at SarahNET:
“So what should we make of this supposed victory? Well, according to Governor Palin, we shouldn’t take this victory to be all that significant. Did the Tea Party succeed in changing the conversation? Perhaps, but as she rightly points out, even modest reforms such as the idea that new bills should be placed on the Internet for 72 hours prior to votes has not been respected, despite pledges from the Tea Party freshmen to do so. One of the more interesting things to be understood from Van Susteren’s interview with Sarah Palin is her use of the word ‘we’ in the context of the efficacy of the Tea Party. This may signify something much more newsworthy for those observers tuned to nuance, because what this admits is that Sarah Palin sees herself as part of the Tea Party. In more than one instance, she’s gone out of her way to stress that the Tea Party doesn’t need a leader, in the sense of an ordinary party, in part because the movement is composed of independent-minded people, who by virtue of their character and inclination, are already leaders, each unto themselves. Tightly in line with Limbaugh’s thesis that ‘We’re all Sarah Palin, now’, this aspect is fundamental in understanding why Palin is different: She’s one of us.”
AWR Hawkins, at Big Government:
“I’m still glad McCain lost folks, and I mean it. The only good thing he would have brought to DC was Sarah Palin, and she can still get there without help from the likes of him.”
Christian Heinze, at The Hill's GOP 12:
“Despite Bachmann's meteoric rise in the race, Palin still looms larger. She continues to essentially do nothing and still ties Bachmann. How many Bachmann supporters are only backing her because Palin hasn't jumped in yet? Of course, Iowa is a lot more critical to both than Pennsylvania, and Ms. Bachmann (stepping into WSJ/NYT mode there) is doing quite well there. But Palin hasn't done anything beyond Pella in the state, and if she were to jump in, expect a surge of momentum to migrate from Bachmann to her.”
Public Policy Polling:
“The Presidential primary in Virginia depends greatly on whether or not Sarah Palin enters the race.”
Lydia Saad, of Gallup, Inc:
“Sarah Palin, Rudy Giuliani, Newt Gingrich, and Mitt Romney continue to be the most widely recognized potential candidates for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, familiar to more than 8 in 10 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. Palin, Giuliani, and Romney also enjoy the broadest popularity among all Republicans, with more than 60% viewing each favorably... On a longer-term basis, Bachmann is clearly less well-positioned today than she was in mid-July, when her Positive Intensity Score registered +21. She is also down 10 percentage points since her peak of +24 in mid-June.”
Shea Bennett, at Media Bistro:
“Sorry, Newt, But If Twitter Was A Primary, Sarah Palin Would Be The GOP Presidential Nominee”
Michael O'Brien, at The Hill's Blog Briefing Room:
“The 2008 vice presidential nominee accused Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, of sticking his finger in the wind to gauge the political currents before deciding to oppose the debt-ceiling deal that ultimately passed Congress with bipartisan support... That's a clear shot across the bow by Palin toward Romney, and could provide a glimpse of how Palin will go after the campaign's putative front-runner if she decides to make a late entry into the field. Her line of criticism echoes other Republican candidates' complaints regarding Romney during the debt-ceiling debate. Romney's refusal to weigh in specifically during the debt-ceiling debate, his opponents charge, was a dereliction, and his eventual decision to oppose the deal came after the politics of the issue had ultimately settled.”
Doug Powers, at MichelleMalkin.com:
“Romney wasn’t ‘late’ to the debate on purpose, Sarah… he merely got his finger stuck in the wind.”
John Scotus, at The Tree of Mamre:
“Palin still would not comment on whether or not she is running. However, she is very energized and seems raring to go. It is really hard to see her sitting out 2012. Given her ability to score points off of both Obama and Biden, it also seems hard to see her being defeated in the primaries. Few other people in politics have had the ability to take both the President and the Vice President to the woodshed in this way.”
Dan Conlon, at The Daily Danet:
“Sarah Palin wins the soundbite contest on Biden’s latest gaffe.”
John Hawkins, at Right Wing News:
“Calling Tea Partiers ‘Tea baggers’ is soooooo 2010. The hot new insult is calling us ‘terrorists.’ Everyone from Chris Matthews to the The Politico to members of Congress like Mike Doyle have used the insult. Of course, my thought was that if liberals think we’re terrorists, then maybe they should ask what they’ve done to make us hate them. But Sarah Palin had an even better rejoinder. ‘If we were real domestic terrorists, shoot, President Obama would be wanting to pal around with us, wouldn’t he?’ Sarah Palin: 1., ‘Tea-Partiers-Are-Terrorists’ Libs: 0”
Kingsjester:
“Cuda Shoots... With Both Barrels. She Scores!”
Ethel C. Fenig, at American Thinker Blog:
“Democrats--and their liberal enablers everywhere-- who oh so carefully, politically correctly refrain from labeling as terrorists those Muslims who gleefully bomb to maim and kill civilians but have no trouble in their spoiled, self righteous entitlement calling those who disagree with them on spending, ‘terrorists’, finally learned of terrorists in their midst from--who else?--Sarah Palin... No wonder the liberals hate Sarah Palin; she uncovered their dirty secret and is not afraid to announce it.”
Henry D'Andrea, at Politicons:
“Quite possibly the stupidest anti-palin hater on the internet, Malia Litman, just got her frivolous lawsuit thrown out by the Alaska Attorney General’s office.”
Papa Grizzly, at Rogue Warrior:
“Less than a year in office, the utter failure of the Obama Administration spawned an influential grassroots uprising called the TEA Party movement... And Sarah Palin has been there, right along side them, championing this exceptional nation of ours, encouraging activism for ‘time-tested, common sense, conservative principles,’ and raising money for TEA Party-endorsed candidates, shocking the establishment with the largest seat change in Congress since 1948 and the largest ever for any mid-term election... One clear message in ‘The Undefeated’ is this: Sarah Palin loves Alaska, Sarah Palin loves America, and Sarah Palin has a ‘servant’s heart,’ getting into politics for the ‘right reasons.’ I don’t care if you’re Democrat, Republican, Green, or Independent. I don’t care if you’re conservative, liberal, or content to be run over in the middle-of-the-road. If you care about America and if you consider yourself reasonably intelligent and fair, you must see this movie. Don’t see it because it is about Sarah Palin, see it because it is about us. It will challenge you. It will inspire you. It is The Truth on screen. I reiterate, ‘The Undefeated’ is the Most Important Documentary of Our Lifetime.”
Exit Quote - Abraham Lincoln:
“God must love the common man, he made so many of them.”
- JP