Sarah Palin: A Horror.

(Disclaimer: Very long post of 1147 words and counting. Please be advised to either a) keep scrolling and find a picture of broccoli underneath or b) wait until later when I post another garden picture, if you’re not at all interested in one college kid/feminist/eco-freak’s take on the Republican VP pick.)

I am in the most unfortunate position of having found the only group of people on campus that doesn’t care to talk about politics. Maybe not the only group, but indeed one of the few. I’ve heard a lot about Governor Sarah Palin the last few days, but absolutely no comments from the group I am most often with, try as I might to introduce the subject. Thus, Sunbeam Soapbox is going to have to deal with some of my political discussions and leanings.

My first impression of Palin as McCain’s choice of running mate was, “Huh. He picked a woman. This race is truly historic in every way now.” It amazes me that no matter which of the two candidates are voted in, the new Presidency will have broken out of the “old boy’s school” form of politics. There will either be a black man or a woman as vice presidency. Wow!

I’m also impressed by the idea of a mother in charge of a country. While motherhood is not a career I aspire to, I can respect how much dedication and patience it takes. Men in our society tend to have dropped the ball on fatherhood, and leave all parenting to the mothers, so that politicians have no idea about parenting. And government can benefit from the experiences of parenting I’m sure.

That said, the more I learn about Palin, the more I am horrified by her as a choice of running mate.

Now let’s step back a moment. First, a little bit about my political leanings: Yes, I lean to the left. Yes, I am a registered Democrat (though I’m not entirely sure if I agree completely with them—I just wanted to be able to vote for the primary). However, I think we can benefit from having a wide variety of parties and people/politicians that are open to new ideas and can form a more perfect Union from the varying ideologies. There are very few things I believe to be “evil” (I saw a shirt today that said “Ban A Republican”; I highly disagree that one party or the other should be banned or blamed or held as bad), and the Republican party seems to be stepping away from those platforms that I believe unacceptable.

The first platform I hold entirely unacceptable is this: holding the life of a fetus with more respect than the life of the woman carrying the fetus (/parasite). I am, as they say insultingly, pro-abortion. (Or pro-choice. Whatever floats your boat—I just want abortion procedures to stay safe and legal.) Most especially in cases of rape or incest, even so when the woman’s world is not conducive to bringing up a child in, and acceptable when all other methods of birth control have been exhausted and there is still a parasite growing in her. Yes, I am not a mother in any sense of the word, can you tell? Some women just aren’t mothers, and forcing them to be shows a deep lack of respect for half of the entire population. (As well as their unwanted children. I highly doubt we want unwanted children around. That just creates more problems.) That we still can’t respect people in general horrifies me.

And, of course, our lovely new VP candidate won’t even allow into her mind abortions in the case of rape or incest. I can’t even begin to find words for how disturbing that is.

The second thing I believe strongly in and can’t believe others disbelieve, is the existence of global warming. Now, I’m not here to tell politicians to TAKE MORE ACTION to counter global warming; I believe the process of politics at the moment can’t handle the problem of global warming and therefore go on in my own way and join movements of people that work to create change within their society, not government. But I want the politicians to stay out of my way, not make more problems. This Governor of Alaska favors drilling in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. I didn’t even think that was POSSIBLE for the Governor of Alaska. I like to compare it to the idea of opening drilling along the California coast: I can’t imagine someone from California, someone who enjoys our coasts, that would favor drilling there.

Of course, they exist too. The mind boggles.

These aren’t the only reasons I worry about Sarah Palin as VP, however. These are only the issues I stand immobilized on.

I dislike that, because she is also a woman, she is supposed to attract the disillusioned Clinton supporters. I hope that all Clinton supporters with half a brain stay home rather than vote, if they dislike Obama that much: these two women are night and day. Yes, Republicans, you heard me right: one woman does NOT equate another. Woman aren’t a different species and do have separate personalities, just as men do. This just goes back to the reproductive rights argument— my god! We haven’t gotten anywhere have we! Women STILL are treated as subhuman! I need to brush up on my feminist movements.

As for her daughter’s current pregnancy proving that the youngest is Palin’s: so, uh, am I really the only person who still cringes when she thinks of poor kids with uncles/aunts only a few months older than they? as well as teen pregnancy? I am really anti-teen-pregnancy. To the point of nausea when thinking of the subject. Palin’s attitude, though, is almost as if we’re endorsing it. What ever happened to good ol’ no sex before marriage?!

(That was a joke, sorta.)

I read somewhere else that pushing your daughter into the spotlight is a really bad way of proving that your kid’s your kid. Read that argument for yourself.

We’ve opened a floodgate of information to a person I’ve never heard of before, and everything I learn worries me. Maybe I read too much from the more left-leaning press. But I can’t believe some of the things I’ve heard. I can’t believe that makes her a good candidate. I’ve heard people say, “I like her”, but not qualify why. Not even, “Oh, just a gut reaction” (which is most of my reasoning for supporting Obama instead of Clinton). I want to figure out what makes her likable, because I sure can’t figure out why in the world she was picked for VP.

As a final point, if I could write this much in half an hour for my first paper due Friday, I would be done in an hour. Why, why, why does the writing fail me in my academics?!!

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8 Responses to Sarah Palin: A Horror.

  1. Rebee says:

    I noticed a lot of people had the whole “I don’t like her” gut reaction about Clinton and the whole “I like him” gut reaction about Bush. I’m not saying that means anything, but what I’m saying is I don’t like gut reactions when it comes to politicians.

    That said, I also don’t care about politicians personal lives – whether they’re married, who they’re married to, what religion they are, how old they are, what race they are, what gender etc. I don’t think this matters when compared to their political opinions, economic wisdom, and cultural understanding – which is an opinion you seem to share, thank goodness.

    So, when I first heard about the VP choice, it didn’t even register that she’s a woman. I like things about McCain and things about Obama, and so I’m thinking this: McCain could do SO much better. I respect him too much – I feel sorry for him for this choice (I believe a lot of it was political pressure to show that Republicans aren’t stodgy old white men, rather than trying to attract Clinton supporters – and, it IS still true that this is going to be a groundbreaking election and pave the way for similarly diverse, future elections).

    We’ll see, I suppose.

    Holy dinosaur, it’s 6:51 in the morning. D:

  2. Rebee says:

    One clarification now that it’s 7:23 and I’ve had some coffee. The reason I don’t like gut reactions isn’t because I think they’re always false, but it’s because I believe we’re just trying to tell ourselves what we want to believe. People tend to have a positive gut reaction about certain people who they WANT to like and a negative gut reaction about certain people who they DO NOT want to like. I think political leanings, race, gender, and other factors have to do with this, and I don’t think it’s fair. I believe you should judge a candidate on their position, not on how they look or what your gut reaction tells you.

    And if your gut reaction and their position match, all the better! :D

    Okay, I’m done now – I realized I didn’t say what I meant clearly. As usual. :P

    ps – I’m also not attacking you when I’m saying this – but I never did understand the “negative gut reaction” when it comes to Clinton. I didn’t like her as a candidate but that was because I didn’t like her positions. No hard feelings? :)

  3. Caroline says:

    I so, so, SOOOOOOO agree with you, Stephanie, re: Sara Palin. I, too, am a democrat (although my 18th was 11 days after Oregon’s Primary, oh, the humaintiy) and I’m not going to vote for McCain just becuase Palin wears a skirt. I, personally, don’t understand how ANY woman who has given birth to a child NOT be against abortion. I totally agree with your points about unwanted children. And if we make abortion illegal, that is NOT going to end all abortions – and an improper abortion can lead to the death of a woman. (I guess, though, giving birth comes very easily to a woman with 5 kids).
    I really, really hope that people actually study the canidates and think about their decisions before they vote. (My mother is a Clinton supporter, and there is NO WAY she’s is voting for McCain/Palin, despite the fact that Palin is female).
    So, way to go, Stephanie, I totally agree with you!

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  5. Stephanie says:

    Rebee: I would say “I don’t care about their personal lives”, except that their are aspects of their personal lives that demonstrate their leadership abilities. A mom of five? Should definitely know diplomacy. A pregnant mom of four who was leaking fluids before getting on a long flight so that she could drive an hour to her country hospital? Making a poor choice. Anyway, that really doesn’t have a lot to do with it, but there ARE aspects that make sense as having to do with capabilities. And I agree with you that his choice probably had more to do with the “stodgy old white men” idea than attracting Clinton supporters, much as the media tried to spin it otherwise (really, media? really?).

    That’s a good interpretation of gut reactions. I will keep it in mind in the future. And just for clarification, as I told Rebee earlier — definitely no hard feelings between us.

    Caroline: This is the part I find especially important: “And if we make abortion illegal, that is NOT going to end all abortions – and an improper abortion can lead to the death of a woman.” I don’t get how other people don’t get this. Anyway, that’s why I said I’m for abortions because I want them to be SAFE. Especially if I ever get pregnant.

    Thanks!

  6. Sara says:

    I’m not sure of the exact dates, but her daughter is 5 months pregnant. Count back, depending on when the kid was born in April (I think that was the month), it could be her daughter’s second.

    Just sayin’. And it does sort of feel like he is trying to “replace” Clinton, which, to my thinking, is kind of insane. A female Democrat has much more in common with a male Democrat than female Republican.

  7. Stephanie says:

    Sara: I wondered the same thing myself. :/ I don’t understand how the daughter being pregnant now means she wasn’t pregnant earlier. Still scary. 17 years old and with two children 13 months apart?!? Ewww.

    (But you know how creeped out I am by people our age/younger and their babies… how STUPID!)

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