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Most Recent Posts Governor offers Orwellian spinPosted Oct-14-08 14:15:20 PDT http://www.adn.com/opinion/view/story/555236.html
Palin vindicated? Sarah Palin's reaction to the Legislature's Troopergate report is an embarrassment to Alaskans and the nation. She claims the report "vindicates" her. She said that the investigation found "no unlawful or unethical activity on my part."
Her response is either astoundingly ignorant or downright Orwellian.
Page 8, Finding Number One of the report says: "I find that Governor Sarah Palin abused her power by violating Alaska Statute 39.52.110(a) of the Alaska Executive Branch Ethics Act."
In plain English, she did something "unlawful." She broke the state ethics law.
Perhaps Gov. Palin has been too busy to actually read the Troopergate report. Perhaps she is relying on briefings from McCain campaign spinmeisters.
That's the charitable interpretation.
Because if she had actually read it, she couldn't claim "vindication" with a straight face.
Palin asserted that the report found "there was no abuse of authority at all in trying to get Officer Wooten fired."
In fact, the report concluded that "impermissible pressure was placed on several subordinates in order to advance a personal agenda, to wit: to get Trooper Michael Wooten fired."
Palin's response is the kind of political "big lie" that George Orwell warned against. War is peace. Black is white. Up is down.
Gov. Palin and her camp trumpeted the report's second finding: that she was within her legal authority to fire Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan. But the report also said it's likely one of the reasons she fired him was his failure to get rid of her ex-brother-in-law trooper.
That's not "vindication," and surely Gov. Palin knows it.
Gov. Palin does have a defense. She could have said: "I'm gratified that the report confirmed what I said all along, that I had the authority to terminate Walt Monegan as public safety commissioner. "I absolutely disagree that I violated state ethics law. In repeatedly complaining about trooper Mike Wooten, Todd and I were not pursuing a personal vendetta. We were trying to protect the integrity of the Alaska State Troopers from having an arrogant, almost-out-of-control law-breaker in their ranks. Because the action we were seeking was in the public interest, not purely our personal interest, there is no ethics law violation." Gov. Palin and her husband felt so passionately about Wooten because the case was so personal to them. Their passion blinded them to any other considerations.
They had no sense that the power of the governor's office carries a special responsibility not to use it to settle family scores. They had no sense that legal restrictions might prevent the troopers from firing Wooten. They had no sense that persistent queries from the governor's office might be perceived as pressure to bend state personnel laws.
Gov. Palin and her husband were obsessed with Wooten the way Capt. Ahab was obsessed with the Great White Whale. No Wooten, no peace.
Has Gov. Palin committed an impeachable offense? Hardly.
Is what she did indictable? No.
But it wasn't appropriate, especially for someone elected as an ethical reformer. And her Orwellian claims of "vindication" make this blemish on her record look even worse.
You asked us to hold you accountable, Gov. Palin. Did you mean it? Bottom line: Gov. Palin, read the report. It says you violated the ethics law. John Cleese on Palin: “Monty Python Could Have Written This.”Posted Oct-14-08 05:22:11 PDT The Mailer That Put the Final Nail in the McCain Campaign CoffinPosted Oct-13-08 17:03:44 PDT http://www.northstarwriters.com/rk007.htm October 13, 2008 The Mailer That Put the Final Nail in the McCain Campaign Coffin
Close to 100 million Americans received mailers last week, or will receive them next week, that will put the last nail in the coffin of the McCain/Palin campaign.
It wasn't sent by Barack Obama, nor by a 527 group, not by any nonprofit or even a political organization.
It didn't mention John McCain or Sarah Palin, Obama or Joe Biden. It didn't mention taxes or Iraq, gay marriage or abortion or any other campaign hot button topic.
But the mailer, personalized, received by tens of millions of Americans, perhaps 100 million, in the past week, or in the next week, is the single envelope that will have caused John McCain and many Republican incumbents to lose their seats.
I got one addressed to my youngest son on Thursday, then another addressed to me on Friday.
Then I talked to friends, members of my synagogue and fellow activists at a local fundraiser. Just about everyone had received them. The message was the same for everyone.
The first envelope I received, for my son, was a quarterly mutual fund report – where we have most of his college savings. The letter reported that since the beginning of the year, the savings were down over 30 percent – even though the fund was a "blend" fund.
The next envelope, which I received on Friday, was a quarterly report on my IRA, also down more than 30 percent.
These reports were sent out on September 30, before the market dropped an additional 19 percent. I knew the numbers I was looking at were much worse, just 10 days later.
Tens of millions of Americans, maybe over 100 million Americans, have received their quarterly statements this week for IRAs, mutual funds and 401(k)s. They're all getting a mailer that is causing much pain, much stress and an acute realization that the economic crisis has hit home.
They're probably still arriving, as I write this, for a few more days. We've seen the result in the polls. The response will grow. The pundits, if they've guessed this is about anything else, are probably wrong.
It's hard to imagine, after eight years of George W. Bush and primarily Republican rule, most Americans not concluding that the GOP and its approach to government and the economy caused their pain, their loss, their fear for the future.
It's hard to imagine McCain's campaign getting anywhere with their desperate gambits – abortion this week . . . what, terrorism next week? Or raising taxes? They saved the average family $2,000 or $5,000 in taxes over the past eight years and cost them $35,000 or $200,000 in lost retirement savings and depreciated home value.
No. The most powerful election-affecting mailer this cycle is being sent by the financial companies that so many Americans put their trust in. Those quarterly notices are all Obama needs. If he and the DSCC and DCCC congressional campaign committees are smart, they'll run ads this week referring to those notices. They'll remind the voters who discontinued the regulations that prevented financial institutions from leveraging themselves so badly – Henry Paulson. They'll remind voters who pushed for earlier deregulations – Phil Gramm, McCain's primary economic mentor.
But that's all icing on the Obama celebration cake. Obama and most of the Democrats running for Congress could probably sit on their hands, on their campaign funds, and do almost nothing, from this point on. (They don't want people to think that, of course. They want the campaign to re-double efforts.) They will still win.
These are sad times. Reality is far more powerful than any campaign words. For the neocons, the corporatists and their theocon supporters, the chickens have indeed come home to roost – and they've crapped all over almost every American.
Now. If you're an Obama or Democratic candidate supporter, go out and ask anyone you talk to and tie the mailer together with the election, if they haven't tied it together for themselves yet. Richard Feynman (1918 - 1988)Posted Oct-10-08 15:54:28 PDT There are 10^11 stars in the galaxy. That used to be a huge number. But it’s only a hundred billion. It’s less than the national deficit! We used to call them astronomical numbers. Now we should call them economical numbers. John McCain on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, 2/21/2000Posted Oct-10-08 15:52:53 PDT “Uh, I, I just have to rely on the good judgment of the voters not to buy into these negative attack ads. Sooner or later, people are going to figure out if all you run is negative attack ads you don’t have much of a vision for the future or you’re not ready to articulate it.” |