Sarah Palin's Intelligence (or Lack Thereof)
I had never heard of Elaine Lafferty before yesterday, but apparently she's a recovering left-wing journalist now consulting for the McCain campaign as an adviser to McCain's running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. She took me on for questioning Governor Palin's intelligence:
It's difficult not to froth when one reads, as I did again and again this week, doubts about Sarah Palin's "intelligence," coming especially from women such as PBS's Bonnie Erbe, who, as near as I recall, has not herself heretofore been burdened with the Susan Sontag of journalism moniker. As Fred Barnes—God help me, I'm agreeing with Fred Barnes—suggests in the Weekly Standard, these high-toned and authoritative dismissals come from people who have never met or spoken with Sarah Palin. Those who know her—love her or hate her—offer no such criticism. They know what I know, and I learned it from spending just a little time traveling on the cramped campaign plane this week: Sarah Palin is very smart.
The "Susan Sontag of journalism moniker?" Inapt, inept, and poorly written. While Lafferty seems to think that Sontag, an influential essayist and writer, should be my role model, she's way off base. Sontag is perhaps most famous for writing: "The white race is the cancer of human history." (Partisan Review, Winter 1967, p. 57.)
This is not a philosophy with which I concur, nor is it one with which I should like to be associated. It's as racist, overwrought, and incorrect as any rash generalization about race could possibly be.
I find high irony in the coincidence that as this former editor of Ms. magazine and self-proclaimed Democrat dissed me, I was simultaneously E-mailed by a PR firm (Gehrung Associates), offering up an interview with a former high school acquaintance of Governor Palin that read as follows:
Ashlyn Kuersten, an associate professor of political science at Western Michigan University specializing in women in law and politics, has a little more insight into Sarah Palin than the average Joe Plumber: They attended the same high school only two years apart.
"My mother is very involved in beauty pageants," Kuersten says. "Plus, it's a small school, maybe 100-people school, so everyone knew everyone. She was a basketball player; I was cheerleader. We grew up together."
Kuersten's current work focuses on the difference between male and female candidates and she has a few thoughts on her old friend.
"Sarah changes the debate. She brings a lot of bling and chrome, but virtually nothing of substance. She doesn't know a lot about politics, it's more important to the American public that she looks like she does than what she has to say. We're not holding her accountable the way we hold male politicians accountable. She's unable to articulate much about her policy on oil or name a Supreme Court decision she disagrees with besides Roe. vs. Wade.
"She has made it nearly impossible to get women on a national ticket in the future; she's there because of how she looks. Female governors have been serious, knowledgeable and well educated and they haven't gotten nearly as much press as Sarah Palin. She's undone everything Hillary Clinton accomplished, all the strides women have made in politics and turned it into a beauty pageant."
So much for Ms. Lafferty's agreement with Fred Barnes's statement that those who "know her, love her or hate her," think Sarah Palin is smart. Professor Kuersten, who grew up with her, avows otherwise.
Ms. Lafferty (who also worked as the U.S. correspondent for the Irish Times of Dublin), I have one thing to say to you, lass: Get a grip.
Tags: presidential election 2008 | Sarah Palin
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Reader Comments
Ease up on Elane
Elane Lafferty is a consultant for the McCain campaign as an adviser to Palin. She gets payed good money to make Sarah Palin look good, and she has done a decent job given the enormity of the task. Resorting to personal attacks against Lafferty doesn't do anything to answer the question of whether Palin has a lick of intelligence.
PS- Cindy-- Palin is intelligent but not knowledgeable? Thats a fine trait if you're a n'er do well playing poker or a person trying to get a job in middle management. But a head of state!? I think being knowledgeable is one of the prerequisites.
Knowledge v. Intelligence
I find criticisms of Sarah Palin's intelligence absurd. While there may be legitimate criticism of her present knowledge of national and international political issues, having knowledge is not the same thing as being intelligent. Knowledge pertains to what you have previously learned, while intelligence deals with a person's capacity to learn.
Based upon her performance as Alaska's governor, I think Gov. Palin IS an intelligent person who is capable of getting things done. Anyone who steps into the office of president or vice president will have to "learn the ropes" of the job. Personally, I don't think Sen. Obama has enough experience to be considered qualified for the presidency. At the time he declared his candidacy, he had only been a US senator for two years--the same length of time that Sarah Palin has been governor of Alaska.
palin
i didn't think i could dislike someone more than i dislike hillary clinton--then sarah palin showed up. ugh. what a joke.
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