Thursday, September 04, 2008

Sarah Palin runs for student council vice president



At the end of my college years, I found myself having dinner with the president of the student council. We chatted as he discussed his own plans to go on to Washington and eventually, hopefully, head into elected public life himself. I can't remember all the details of the conversation, but I remember being left with a strongly depressing realization. The leaders of our nation didn't get there because they felt any special call to serve and help other people through public policy. Basically they were all previous student government members who decided to move to something bigger because winning popularity contests was what they did. And while student government no doubt helps you sense if politics is for you, isn't it disturbing to think how few members of Congress may recognize the substantive difference between legislating the U.S. government and allocating student organization funds on a college campus?

I was reminded of this last night as I watched Sarah Palin, certainly the most energetic member of the Republican party, campaign for point guard of her high school basketball team (yes, I read that posting on several newspaper sites by a Wasilla resident). I don't think her qualifications are at issue for me, but her lack of quality as a human being certainly is at issue. Her speech took what BBC reporter Justin Webb described as "parliamentary-style jabs" at the Democratic Party.

First of all, what is so wrong with being a community organizer? I know it doesn't qualify as "executive experience," but it shows a desire to help people fight for what they know they want; instead of assuming you can just tell people how to live their lives as Governor Palin seeks to do. Community organizing also demonstrates a character of community service, something sorely lacking in Governor Palin's own record, which demonstrates a history of serving her ambition and her personal vendettas. And how is Harry Reid's hatred of John McCain an endorsement of him for president? That's a good joke for a blog post but completely unsuitable to a responsible public speech. Of course, all the Republicans act a bit medieval in their tendency to boo and laugh publicly and disrespectfully (and this at a convention who lauded how nice people are in Minnesota and in "America" in general - really all I was reminded of was my own Midwestern childhood, where people are nice to you when they need you but happy to stab you in the back if it helps further their own agendas. That's not nice; that's crueler than just being rude from the start). But what I learned most about Governor Palin last night is not that she is some Reformer who is being criticized because she's a woman outside the Washington mainstream. Her cold ambition, cruel jabs, and pure partisan focus should help her fit right in with all the other Republicans in D.C., the rest of whom never figured out that serving the people of the United States of America is a bigger task than being student council president.

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image from about.com

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