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What the Media Going Bonkers
over Palin's "Going Rogue" Tells
Us
By Dave Andrusko
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comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
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When I cranked up the computer
this morning and typed "Sarah
Palin" into the Google News
search engine, there were about
18,000 "hits" covering the
period of the previous 18 hours.
Today, of course, is the
official unveiling of the former
pro-life GOP vice presidential
candidate's memoir Going
Rogue. I purchased my copy
at 10:30 a.m.
The Washington Post has
three stories (which take up
almost the entirety of the front
page of the "Style" section),
two snarky op-eds which compete
for the "honor" of trashing the
former Alaska governor most
maliciously, and a curmudgeonly
column by the self-important
media columnist Howard Kurtz.
Other prominent newspapers have
their say--mostly "No!"--about
her 413-page book, which became
a best-seller based on
pre-orders months before it was
published.
I
could devote the next couple of
thousand words to giving you a
sampling of the torrent of
deeply personal insult, but why
bother? Let me instead try to
figure out what's going on. What
is it about Sarah Palin that
brings out the absolute worst in
people who don't require a lot
of provocation to be ugly in the
first place?
Is it tooting our own horn to
say that it begins with her
strongly pro-life position? I
think it is self-evident that
while the Establishment Media
would have loathed Palin anyway,
what changed distaste and
disdain into loathing was her
unapologetic support for our
cause. (The hysteria over her
willingness to stand up publicly
for life is intertwined with
resentment over the simple fact
that all this attention was
going to the "wrong" kind of
woman--a.k.a. someone who was
not a pro-abortion feminist.)
This gets very complicated, if
you think about it very long.
Palin invited being drawn into
the media's crosshairs because
she was both a mother and a
governor who potentially could
be the vice president of the
United States. If that sounds
wildly out of step with
21st-century America--dissing a
woman for having both a family
and a prominent career--it tells
you how much many commentators
hated having her on the
Republican presidential ticket.
Then, Palin compounded her
offense by carrying a baby she
knew had Down syndrome to term.
Instead of hailing her for her
strength, courage, and pluck,
almost the entire Media
Establishment went after her
hammer and tong (They
piously inquired how could she
be a good mother to her other
children, let alone be vice
president, if she made the
"mistake" of not aborting this
child. The section in Going
Rogue where Palin talks
about what went through her
heart and mind when she learned
that "Trig" would have Down
syndrome is amazing reading that
makes you admire the Palin
family immensely.)
If that weren't bad enough,
Palin's unmarried teenage
daughter, Bristol, had become
pregnant. When this became known
(as Palin writes in Going
Rogue), "I was amazed at how
many liberal pundits seemed
floored by a pregnant teenager,
as if overnight they'd all snuck
out and had traditional-values
transplants. The talking heads
began to parrot one line: 'If
Sarah Palin can't control her
own daughter, how can she serve
as vice president?'"
What they couldn't understand,
and never will be able to
understand now or ever, is that
none of us is so foolish as to
believe that our own families
are not susceptible to making
the same mistakes everyone else
makes. Our unmarried daughters
can get pregnant and pro-life
women can contemplate having
abortions. And they don't get
pregnant on their own.
Palin writes that when the news
about Bristol's pregnancy broke,
"The tone some reporters (and
many bloggers) seemed to want to
set was one of
'hypocrisy'"--which is for many
of the chattering class the only
"sin." That we sometimes--or
even many times--fall short of
our aspirations is not
hypocrisy. It is reflection of
something with which pro-lifers
are thoroughly familiar: the
human condition.
I have skimmed a small part of
Going Rogue and, like
you, I have followed Palin's
career since she was chosen to
be Sen. John McCain's running
mate. That I admire the heck out
of her does not mean that I
think she was incapable of
making mistakes or that she
didn't make mistakes during the
campaign.
Referring to her interview with
CBS's Katie Couric, Palin
writes, "I have had better
interviews ... I choked on a
couple of responses, and in the
harried pace of the campaign, I
mistakenly let myself become
annoyed and frustrated with many
of her repetitive, biased
questions."
But that Palin is human, like
all the rest of us, seems to
activate the worst impulses not
only in the usual suspects, but
also in some whose hostility you
wouldn't expect. Why?
The condescending media
stereotype of Palin as a
hopelessly out of her league
lightweight was set in stone
following her interviews with
ABC's Charles Gibson and
(especially) Couric. This gave
free rein to bash her
unmercifully, and by extension
all of us who attended the
"wrong" schools and who
regularly fail to be invited to
the "right" parties.
(Am I exaggerating? Is this the
same "whining" that her critics
hammer her about? The full fury
of a legion of reporters and
commentators and bloggers say
things about her and her family
that they wouldn't say about
Nidal Hasan. If she responds,
Palin is "whining." If she
doesn't, of course, she is a
wuss. Palin can't win. But I
digress.
While Palin's defenders --and
even some of her more
sober-minded critics-- often
mention the blatant sexism at
work, the assault on her is
equally driven by classism. When
I skimmed some of those 18,000
hits this morning, again and
again I read about how
scandalous it was that a
one-term governor could have the
audacity to even think
about running for President.
How dare she! After all, Palin
is "not one of us," a trespass
for which she can never, ever be
forgiven.
Speaking of audacity, how about
the audacity of a one-term
senator, who seems to have given
his full attention to the Senate
for about a year before he began
running for President? While
Harvard-educated Barack Obama is
constantly touted as our first
Mensa president, what stands out
is that without a Teleprompter,
he is dazzlingly inarticulate.
The Associated Press,
once upon a time a nonpartisan
source of straight-shooting
news, went after Going Rogue
as if there were no tomorrow.
Eleven reporters assisted the
main writer in fact-checking the
book. (This obviously reminds us
of CNN "fact-checking" a
Saturday Night Live sketch that
ever-so-mildly criticized Obama.
Wonder what that tells us.)
Palin supporters have refuted
the charges, but that is not the
point. Think back to the way the
media treated Obama's two books.
Did anybody "fact-check" them,
or were they too busy writing
(as did the New York Times
of Dreams from My Father)
that Obama's "appreciation of
the magic of language and his
ardent love of reading have not
only endowed him with a rare
ability to communicate his ideas
to millions of Americans while
contextualizing complex ideas
about race and religion"? Ah,
yes, the "complexity" of it all.
Well, worrying about double
standards seems a particularly
unproductive use of our time. A
far better use would be reading
Going Rogue. |