Backlash

One thing that really bothers me about the Democratic attacks on Sarah Palin is the sneering, jeering classism. She talks like that Minnesota sheriff on “Fargo”; she went to the University of Idaho; she competed in beauty pageants; she goes hunting; she has big hair; she is from a small town in the country; she is married to an oil field worker who races snowmobiles; she has all those kids! How hilarious! How declasse!

Democrats used to be the party of the common man–of people like the Palins–but that was before they were taken over by privileged children of the Sixties and wealthy fashionistas. Republicans back then were party of the country club set. But, though Democrats still champion poor people in their rhetoric and harvest them for their votes; and though Republicans still vote pro-business, the social class dynamics are all awry from what they used to be. The so-called “New Class” of information producers–internet tycoons, teachers, media types–is our new elite, displacing the old middle class that produces tangible products, and the New Class is socially liberal.

At any rate, Democratic activists, before they get too clever in their insults, would do well to remember that folks in battleground states like Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan talk like Governor Palin. (That’s another thing: the utter rudeness! The commentators would not even call her by her title, Governor, and often didn’t even give her credit for her current job, saying she was just a “small town mayor”!)

Anyway, a backlash against this vicious treatment seems to be setting in. So says New Palin details may help, not hurt - Charles Mahtesian - Politico.com:

Fishing permit violations. A blue-collar husband who racked up a DUI citation as a 22-year-old. An unmarried teenage daughter who is pregnant and a nasty child custody battle involving a family member. 

All of this, to one degree or another, has surfaced in recent days as a result of efforts to discredit or undermine Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. But these revelations may have the opposite effect: In one sense, they could reinforce how remarkably unremarkable she is. 

So far — and it is hard to tell what the future may hold for Palin’s unexpected national candidacy — the travails of the Palin family probably seem awfully familiar to many average Americans. It is this averageness that makes her such a politically promising running mate for John McCain — and such a dangerous opponent for Democrats.

Here Michele Catalano says how she disagrees with Governor Palin on the issues. “But the last two days of mudslinging against Palin have been so extreme, they have transformed her into an almost sympathetic figure in my eyes. More important, the barbs thrown at her have made me look upon liberals with a level of contempt I have not felt since, well, 2004.”

Here a self-described leftist feminist praises Governor Palin and decries the “misogyny” of her critics.

As one TV pundit (whose name I didn’t catch) said, Sarah Palin is the candidate of those small town, religious, gun-loving folks that were the targets of Barack Obama’s condescension. There are a lot of them. They have an attitude. They used to be Democrats. And they vote.

Sarah Palin as Supermom

Some of you expressed concern that Sarah Palin is neglecting her family by pursuing a political career. Well, according to this article in the Washington Post (usually no friend to conservatives), she sounds like a Supermom. She nurses her baby (even at meetings), fired the chef at the governor’s residence so she can do her own cooking, has never paid for child-care (neither hiring a nanny or even babysitters). She still commutes from their small town home in Wasilla. Her husband and parents help out with the kids, but she is reportedly deeply engaged in motherhood.

Here she is, in a photo shot in June, doing her shopping and talking to a constituent:
Sarah Palin doing her shopping

Highlights of the GOP convention

I was finally able to stay up to watch one of the conventions. The highlight of last night’s Republican session was the extraordinary spectacle of Joseph Lieberman giving the evening’s climactic speech in favor of John McCain. Lieberman, who was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2000. Lieberman, who ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004. Lieberman, who was abandoned by his party for his support of the war when he ran for re-election to the Senate in Connecticut but who won anyway as an Independent. How the Democrats will try to punish him now, after that speech in which he threw out more red meat to the crowd than Fred Thompson did (though his speech was effective too, dramatically telling the story of McCain’s heroism in captivity). Lieberman called on disaffected Democrats to vote Republican for the first time in their lives.

The most moving part of the evening, to me, had little direct connection to politics:
The introduction of five winners of the Congressional Medal of Honor. They looked like the elderly men you see at the local diner or at church. But what they went through in combat! And what deeds of valor they performed!

Anti-Christian violence in India

Hindu mobs have been attacking Christians in India, beating believers, destroying churches, and burning some 1000 homes. A priest tells of a nun being raped. Terry Mattingly at
GetReligion
gives details and shows how the mainstream media is under-reporting and distorting the story.