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November 2-8, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/28/08 at 11:55 AM
Politics is a nasty business, and both sides are
guilty. Yet, I can honestly say that the sheer viciousness that I’ve seen
toward Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican vice-presidential nominee, in
the course of merely a few weeks since her sudden emergence on the national
stage, truly seems unprecedented.
I
tend to think like a historian; so, at one point amid the onslaught of terrible
attacks on Palin, I thought to myself that someone ought to start filling a box
with examples simply for the sake of history.
Much
like has happened with George W. Bush, it will be impossible for future
historians to fully convey the level of white-hot hatred toward this woman. And
that’s without her having enacted a single policy on the national level. She’s
completely innocent of having even had the opportunity to do anything to hurt
her detractors.
I
would like to share only a few examples as a prelude to trying to explain what
I believe may be the underlying motivations coming together against Palin:
South
Carolina Democratic Chairwoman Carol Fowler, whose husband formerly led the
national party, stated that Palin’s only qualification as John McCain’s running
mate “seems to be that she hasn’t had an abortion.”
Indeed,
the fact that Palin chose to bring to term a baby with Down syndrome — proving
that she truly walks the walk as a pro-lifer — has infuriated liberals.
Compared to the “Retarded Republican Babies” T-shirts for sale on the Internet,
comedian Bill Maher seemed good-natured. He joked that the newborn “looks a lot
like John Edwards,” the Democratic senator who recently made headlines for cheating
on his wife.
In
a rant against Palin’s “outrageous” pro-life views, comedienne Sandra Bernhard
warned the governor that she better watch herself, lest she be “gang-raped by
my big black brothers.” In a comedy skit, “Saturday Night Live” had a pretend
reporter ask if Sarah Palin’s husband, Todd, was guilty of incest with his
daughters.
Slate magazine, on the same day, ran two depictions of
her: One as an uptight fundamentalist, and the other, scantily clad with a
whip. The Chicago
Tribune ran a piece on the latest
case of a nude depiction of Palin. The Tribune ventured to a tavern on the city’s north side,
where artist Bruce Elliott painted a large nude “portrait” of Sarah Palin.
Given that the governor wasn’t available to pose, Elliott tasked his daughter,
who served as the model while he painted. The work now hangs above the bar,
where it has become a huge attraction to local celebrities. Elliott boasts of
the work: “[People are] coming to take pictures with their camera phones. The
photo is all over the place.”
Elliott
admits to an impish interest in Palin: “I find her bizarrely fascinating, even
though I pretty much despise everything she stands for.”
Think
about this contrast: Todd Palin was parodied on “Saturday Night Live”
exploiting his daughters, which, of course, no one has ever suggested is true.
Here, this man in Chicago is in fact exploiting his daughter. The first is
fiction; the second is fact. And the one common thread in both cases is the
shared purpose of ridiculing Sarah Palin and her family.
When
not vilified for being pro-life or being attractive, Palin is being attacked
for her “Neanderthal faith,” as one critic described it. Her past membership in
a Pentecostal church has been caricatured unfairly and often brutally, from
sources from the The
Washington Post to the Associated
Press, as if she spends her Sundays baying at the moon from a church pew.
The
shots at Palin rise all the way to the halls of Congress. On Sept. 10, Rep.
Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) took offense at Palin’s dig at Barack Obama as a
community organizer. Rather than simply responding, Cohen went right over the
top. He fired back that “Barack Obama was a ‘community organizer’ like Jesus,”
whereas “Pontius Pilate was a governor” — like Sarah Palin.
Joseph
Epstein, at the Weekly
Standard, described the effect
Palin has on women who are her political opponents.
“They
don’t merely dislike her, the way one tends to dislike politicians whose views
are not one’s own; they actively detest her. When her name comes up — and it is
they who tend to bring it up — their complexions take on a slightly purplish
tinge, their eyes cross in rage. ‘Moron’ is their most frequently used noun,
though ‘idiot’ comes up a fair number of times; ‘that woman’ is yet another
choice. A wide variety of adjectives, differing only slightly in their
violence, usually precede these epithets.
“Liberal
men don’t show the same fervent distaste for Governor Palin. … They don’t take
Sarah Palin so personally, so passionately, as their liberal female
counterparts do; the element of anger isn’t there.”
Indeed,
leading Democratic blogs don’t just disagree with her politics: They go after
her hair, her fashion sense, her accent.
But the heart of the problem many of
these women have with Palin seems to be abortion. Gloria Feldt, former
president of Planned Parenthood, openly decried Palin for allegedly forcing
her unwed teenage daughter, Bristol, to not abort the baby in her
womb. “She probably feels powerless right now,” lamented Feldt, in reference to
Bristol. “Because of her family’s attitude, she probably doesn’t feel that she
has a choice.”
Ah,
yes. If only the Palin family had the proper attitude toward unborn human life.
Keep in mind that the likes of Feldt angrily protest when they are called
“pro-abortion” instead of “pro-choice.” Well, Feldt’s statement is
pro-abortion.
I
must say that I saw all of this coming from the moment that John McCain
announced that Sarah Palin was his running mate. I had already known about
Palin’s choice to bring to term a child with Down syndrome, of which she and
her husband had been informed last December, prior to the little boy’s birth in
April. Like other pro-lifers, I was ecstatic with the example.
Just
as many more people from the “pro-choice” side were not pleased at all; quite
the contrary, many of them were enraged, furious. We are hearing from those
people now.
I’m
losing track of all the sources, from pro-choice feminists to off-their-rocker
libertarians, who are openly condemning Sarah Palin for not aborting that
child.
The
estimate of the number of children with Down syndrome aborted when prenatally
diagnosed is astounding: 90%. There is something particularly vicious about
that massive denial and destruction of innocent, harmless infants. In order to
countenance it, you have to get meaner and darker than you otherwise would be.
Consider
that in Palin’s biggest speech, delivered at the Republican National
Convention, with tens of millions of Americans watching closely, Palin paused
to say that she hoped that she could use her position to fight as an advocate
for children like her newborn son, Trig: “Children with special needs inspire a special love. To the families of
special-needs children all across this country, I have a message: For years,
you sought to make America a more welcoming place for your sons and daughters.
I pledge to you that if we are elected, you will have a friend and advocate in
the White House.”
There’s
no question that Sarah Palin’s hope for those unwanted children, expressed in
that speech, was a line in the sand — not just politically, but spiritually,
against darker forces in an ancient battle between good and evil.
When
Barack Obama voted against protecting babies accidentally born alive during
abortions, it was after hearing testimony about a Down syndrome baby allowed to
die after an abortion attempt at Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Ill.
That’s
what Sarah Palin is up against. It may be bitter guilt that is fueling the
breathtaking viciousness that we are witnessing against this woman, wife,
mother, governor and genuine special-needs advocate from Alaska.
Author Paul Kengor is professor of
political science at Grove City College.
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