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SARAH! SARAH! SARAH! Gov. Palin wows her national GOP

September 3, 2008 |  9:50 pm

Alaska Governor and new Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin

ST. PAUL -- It was a passionately partisan crowd. Its 20,000+ members were eager to love her. And after recent relentless days of negative stories about Sen. John McCain's pick for a running mate, the Republicans packing the Xcel Energy Center here were feeling besieged by an alien media, as the GOP has for decades.

But tonight for the first time in its more than 16-decade history, the Republican Party nominated a woman vice president, and fell in love with her at the same time.

Whether that translates into enough votes for the John McCain-Sarah Palin ticket to win the White House on Nov. 4 will be decided in the next 61 days of campaigning. But for tonight among her own extensive family and among the GOP family assembled in this graceful old city named for a saint known for patience, Gov. Palin scored a rhetorical hat trick (a term any hockey mom would know).

At least inside the building.

We'll publish the historic speech's entire text below, along with some of the crowd's favorite lines. And here, before we describe more, are some video highlights:

Palin praised the top of the ticket for his courage and leadership. She vowed they'd reform a national capital that was once a swamp.

She delivered some pretty sharp elbows to the opposition's chin, as she did on the high school basketball court, where her nickname was Sarah Barracuda.

And she presented herself as a determined small-town mom aware of the needs and challenges of real American families.

The 44-year-old Palin had the presence of a former broadcaster, the poise of a former beauty contestant. The down-to-earthiness of a mom with five children, from 19 years old down to 4 months. And the realistic eye of a natural politician who knows the sales appeal of reform and the power of the pause.

And in doing so, Palin won the hearts of the delegates, who were but enthusiastic extras in the television drama transmitted into millions of homes. There, many Americans got their first impression of....

...this governor from a vast, distant land that was purchased from Russia by history's second Republican administration.

In her one ad lib of the evening, Palin drew a resounding roar from the crowd that frequently broke into chants of "Sarah! Sarah! Sarah!" "You know the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull?" asked the mother of five, pausing perfectly as the noise died. "Lipstick!" (See video below.)

Her husband of 20 years, Todd, a United Steelworkers Union member, smiled and nodded knowingly to those sitting around him.

By Monday she'll be out on the campaign trail on her own, delivering the message of the day as the No. 2 salesperson in the exhausting routine that is a national campaign.

And that will be yet another test for the former mayor and current governor who stood down her own party's establishment to win the state's chief executive job two years ago.

Strong and normal were the reactions of many delegates. Dick Stoffel is a 65-year-old carpenter who lives six miles down the road from Palin's home in Wasilla. He told The Times' Bob Drogin that he's worked for and contributed to her campaigns since she first ran for mayor.

"She's in touch with the common person," Stoffel said. "She admits she's not a perfect person. She has problems like anyone else. But she doesn't hide them. She's genuine."

"A political star was born tonight," Paul Viar, a retired GM worker from Michigan told our Maeve Reston. "That was astonishing!"

For video highlights of the speech, go here.

--Andrew Malcolm

Alaska Governor and new Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin with her newborn Trig

Some of the crowd's favorite lines:

"I was mayor of my hometown. And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves.

"I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have actual responsibilities."

"In April, my husband, Todd, and I welcomed our littlest one into the world, a perfectly beautiful baby boy named Trig. From the inside, no family ever seems typical. That's how it is with us.

"Our family has the same ups and downs as any other ... the same challenges and the same joys. Sometimes even the greatest joys bring challenge. And 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."

"Sudden and relentless reform never sits well with entrenched interests and power brokers. That's why true reform is so hard to achieve."

"We've all heard his dramatic speeches before devoted followers. And there is much to like and admire about our opponent. But listening to him speak, it's easy to forget that this is a man who has authored two memoirs...but not a single major law or reform -- not even in the state Senate."

"In politics, there are some candidates who use change to promote their careers. And then there are those, like John McCain, who use their careers to promote change."

"My fellow citizens, the American presidency is not supposed to be a journey of 'personal discovery.' This world of threats and dangers is not just a community, and it doesn't just need an organizer.

"And though both Sen. Obama and Sen. Biden have been going on lately about how they are always, quote, 'fighting for you,' let us face the matter squarely.

"There is only one man in this election who has ever really fought for you ... in places where winning means survival and defeat means death ... and that man is John McCain."

Remarks by Alaska Governor Sarah Palin

Mr. Chairman, delegates, and fellow citizens: I am honored to be considered for the nomination for Vice President of the United States.

I accept the call to help our nominee for president to serve and defend America.

I accept the challenge of a tough fight in this election... against confident opponents ... at a crucial hour for our country.

And I accept the privilege of serving with a man who has come through much harder missions ... and met far graver challenges ... and knows how tough fights are won - the next president of the United States, John S. McCain.

It was just a year ago when all the experts in Washington counted out our nominee because he refused to hedge his commitment to the security of the country he loves.

With their usual certitude, they told us that all was lost -- there was no hope for this candidate who said that he would rather lose an election than see his country lose a war.

But the pollsters and pundits overlooked just one thing when they wrote him off.

They overlooked the caliber of the man himself - the determination, resolve, and sheer guts of Senator John McCain. The voters knew better.

And maybe that's because they realize there is a time for politics and a time for leadership ... a time to campaign and a time to put our country first.

Our nominee for president is a true profile in courage, and people like that are hard to come by.

He's a man who wore the uniform of this country for 22 years, and refused to break faith with those troops in Iraq who have now brought victory within sight.

And as the mother of one of those troops, that is exactly the kind of man I want as commander in chief. I'm just one of many moms who'll say an extra prayer each night for our sons and daughters going into harm's way.

Our son Track is 19.

And one week from tomorrow -- September 11th -- he'll deploy to Iraq with the Army infantry in the service of his country.

My nephew Kasey also enlisted, and serves on a carrier in the Persian Gulf.

My family is proud of both of them and of all the fine men and women serving the country in uniform. Track is the eldest of our five children.

In our family, it's two boys and three girls in between - my strong and kind-hearted daughters Bristol, Willow, and Piper.

And in April, my husband Todd and I welcomed our littlest one into the world, a perfectly beautiful baby boy named Trig. From the inside, no family ever seems typical.

That's how it is with us.

Our family has the same ups and downs as any other ... the same challenges and the same joys.

Sometimes even the greatest joys bring challenge.

And 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. Todd is a story all by himself.

He's a lifelong commercial fisherman ... a production operator in the oil fields of Alaska's North Slope ... a proud member of the United Steel Workers' Union ... and world champion snow machine racer.

Throw in his Yup'ik Eskimo ancestry, and it all makes for quite a package.

We met in high school, and two decades and five children later he's still my guy. My Mom and Dad both worked at the elementary school in our small town.

And among the many things I owe them is one simple lesson: that this is America, and every woman can walk through every door of opportunity.

My parents are here tonight, and I am so proud to be the daughter of Chuck and Sally Heath. Long ago, a young farmer and habber-dasher from Missouri followed an unlikely path to the vice presidency.

A writer observed: "We grow good people in our small towns, with honesty, sincerity, and dignity." I know just the kind of people that writer had in mind when he praised Harry Truman.

I grew up with those people.

They are the ones who do some of the hardest work in America ... who grow our food, run our factories, and fight our wars.

They love their country, in good times and bad, and they're always proud of America. I had the privilege of living most of my life in a small town.

I was just your average hockey mom, and signed up for the PTA because I wanted to make my kids' public education better.

When I ran for city council, I didn't need focus groups and voter profiles because I knew those voters, and knew their families, too.

Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown.

And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves.

I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a "community organizer," except that you have actual responsibilities. I might add that in small towns, we don't quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working people when they are listening, and then talks about how bitterly they cling to their religion and guns when those people aren't listening.

We tend to prefer candidates who don't talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco.

As for my running mate, you can be certain that wherever he goes, and whoever is listening, John McCain is the same man. I'm not a member of the permanent political establishment.< br>
And I've learned quickly, these past few days, that if you're not a member in good standing of the Washington elite, then some in the media consider a candidate unqualified for that reason alone.

But here's a little news flash for all those reporters and commentators: I'm not going to Washington to seek their good opinion - I'm going to Washington to serve the people of this country. Americans expect us to go to Washington for the right reasons, and not just to mingle with the right people.

Politics isn't just a game of clashing parties and competing interests.

The right reason is to challenge the status quo, to serve the common good, and to leave this nation better than we found it.

No one expects us to agree on everything.

But we are expected to govern with integrity, good will, clear convictions, and ... a servant's heart.

I pledge to all Americans that I will carry myself in this spirit as vice president of the United States. This was the spirit that brought me to the governor's office, when I took on the old politics as usual in Juneau ... when I stood up to the special interests, the lobbyists, big oil companies, and the good-ol' boys network.

Sudden and relentless reform never sits well with entrenched interests and power brokers. That's why true reform is so hard to achieve.

But with the support of the citizens of Alaska, we shook things up.

And in short order we put the government of our state back on the side of the people.

I came to office promising major ethics reform, to end the culture of self-dealing. And today, that ethics reform is the law.

While I was at it, I got rid of a few things in the governor's office that I didn't believe our citizens should have to pay for.

That luxury jet was over the top....

I put it on Ebay.

I also drive myself to work.

And I thought we could muddle through without the governor's personal chef -- although I've got to admit that sometimes my kids sure miss her. I came to office promising to control spending -- by request if possible and by veto if necessary.

Senator McCain also promises to use the power of veto in defense of the public interest -- and as a chief executive, I can assure you it works.

Our state budget is under control.

We have a surplus.

And I have protected the taxpayers by vetoing wasteful spending: nearly half a billion dollars in vetoes.

I suspended the state fuel tax, and championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress.

I told the Congress "thanks, but no thanks," for that Bridge to Nowhere.

If our state wanted a bridge, we'd build it ourselves. When oil and gas prices went up dramatically, and filled up the state treasury, I sent a large share of that revenue back where it belonged -- directly to the people of Alaska.

And despite fierce opposition from oil company lobbyists, who kind of liked things the way they were, we broke their monopoly on power and resources.

As governor, I insisted on competition and basic fairness to end their control of our state and return it to the people.

I fought to bring about the largest private-sector infrastructure project in North American history.

And when that deal was struck, we began a nearly forty billion dollar natural gas pipeline to help lead America to energy independence.

That pipeline, when the last section is laid and its valves are opened, will lead America one step farther away from dependence on dangerous foreign powers that do not have our interests at heart.

The stakes for our nation could not be higher.

When a hurricane strikes in the Gulf of Mexico, this country should not be so dependent on imported oil that we are forced to draw from our Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

And families cannot throw away more and more of their paychecks on gas and heating oil.

With Russia wanting to control a vital pipeline in the Caucasus, and to divide and intimidate our European allies by using energy as a weapon, we cannot leave ourselves at the mercy of foreign suppliers.

To confront the threat that Iran might seek to cut off nearly a fifth of world energy supplies ... or that terrorists might strike again at the Abqaiq facility in Saudi Arabia ... or that Venezuela might shut off its oil deliveries ... we Americans need to produce more of our own oil and gas.

And take it from a gal who knows the North Slope of Alaska: we've got lots of both.

Our opponents say, again and again, that drilling will not solve all of America's energy problems - as if we all didn't know that already.

But the fact that drilling won't solve every problem is no excuse to do nothing at all.

Starting in January, in a McCain-Palin administration, we're going to lay more pipelines ... build more nuclear plants ... create jobs with clean coal ... and move forward on solar, wind, geothermal, and other alternative sources.

We need American energy resources, brought to you by American ingenuity, and produced by American workers. I've noticed a pattern with our opponent.

Maybe you have, too.

We've all heard his dramatic speeches before devoted followers.

And there is much to like and admire about our opponent.

But listening to him speak, it's easy to forget that this is a man who has authored two memoirs but not a single major law or reform - not even in the state senate.

This is a man who can give an entire speech about the wars America is fighting, and never use the word "victory" except when he's talking about his own campaign. But when the cloud of rhetoric has passed ... when the roar of the crowd fades away ... when the stadium lights go out, and those Styrofoam Greek columns are hauled back to some studio lot - what exactly is our opponent's plan?

What does he actually seek to accomplish, after he's done turning back the waters and healing the planet? The answer is to make government bigger ... take more of your money ... give you more orders from Washington ... and to reduce the strength of America in a dangerous world. America needs more energy ... our opponent is against producing it.

Victory in Iraq is finally in sight ... he wants to forfeit.

Terrorist states are seeking new-clear weapons without delay ... he wants to meet them without preconditions.

Al Qaeda terrorists still plot to inflict catastrophic harm on America ... he's worried that someone won't read them their rights? Government is too big ... he wants to grow it.

Congress spends too much ... he promises more.

Taxes are too high ... he wants to raise them. His tax increases are the fine print in his economic plan, and let me be specific.

The Democratic nominee for president supports plans to raise income taxes ... raise payroll taxes ... raise investment income taxes ... raise the death tax ... raise business taxes ... and increase the tax burden on the American people by hundreds of billions of dollars.

My sister Heather and her husband have just built a service station that's now opened for business -- like millions of others who run small businesses.

How are they going to be any better off if taxes go up? Or maybe you're trying to keep your job at a plant in Michigan or Ohio ... or create jobs with clean coal from Pennsylvania or West Virginia ... or keep a small farm in the family right here in Minnesota.

How are you going to be better off if our opponent adds a massive tax burden to the American economy? Here's how I look at the choice Americans face in this election.

In politics, there are some candidates who use change to promote their careers.

And then there are those, like John McCain, who use their careers to promote change.

They're the ones whose names appear on laws and landmark reforms, not just on buttons and banners, or on self-designed presidential seals.

Among politicians, there is the idealism of high-flown speechmaking, in which crowds are stirringly summoned to support great things.

And then there is the idealism of those leaders, like John McCain, who actually do great things. They're the ones who are good for more than talk ... the ones we have always been able to count on to serve and defend America.

Senator McCain's record of actual achievement and reform helps explain why so many special interests, lobbyists, and comfortable committee chairmen in Congress have fought the prospect of a McCain presidency -- from the primary election of 2000 to this very day.

Our nominee doesn't run with the Washington herd. He's a man who's there to serve his country, and not just his party.

A leader who's not looking for a fight, but is not afraid of one either. Harry Reid, the Majority Leader of the current do-nothing Senate, not long ago summed up his feelings about our nominee.

He said, quote, "I can't stand John McCain." Ladies and gentlemen, perhaps no accolade we hear this week is better proof that we've chosen the right man.

Clearly what the Majority Leader was driving at is that he can't stand up to John McCain. That is only one more reason to take the maverick of the Senate and put him in the White House.

My fellow citizens, the American presidency is not supposed to be a journey of "personal discovery." This world of threats and dangers is not just a community, and it doesn't just need an organizer.

And though both Senator Obama and Senator Biden have been going on lately about how they are always, quote, "fighting for you," let us face the matter squarely.

There is only one man in this election who has ever really fought for you ... in places where winning means survival and defeat means death ... and that man is John McCain.

In our day, politicians have readily shared much lesser tales of adversity than the nightmare world in which this man, and others equally brave, served and suffered for their country.

It's a long way from the fear and pain and squalor of a six-by-four cell in Hanoi to the Oval Office. But if Senator McCain is elected president, that is the journey he will have made.

It's the journey of an upright and honorable man -- the kind of fellow whose name you will find on war memorials in small towns across this country, only he was among those who came home.

To the most powerful office on earth, he would bring the compassion that comes from having once been powerless ... the wisdom that comes even to the captives, by the grace of God ... the special confidence of those who have seen evil, and seen how evil is overcome.

A fellow prisoner of war, a man named Tom Moe of Lancaster, Ohio, recalls looking through a pin-hole in his cell door as Lieutenant Commander John McCain was led down the hallway, by the guards, day after day.

As the story is told, "When McCain shuffled back from torturous interrogations, he would turn toward Moe's door and flash a grin and thumbs up" - as if to say, "We're going to pull through this." My fellow Americans, that is the kind of man America needs to see us through these next four years.

For a season, a gifted speaker can inspire with his words.

For a lifetime, John McCain has inspired with his deeds.

If character is the measure in this election ... and hope the theme ... and change the goal we share, then I ask you to join our cause. Join our cause and help America elect a great man as the next president of the United States.

Thank you all, and may God bless America."

Photo of Palin at the podium: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times
Photo of Palin and her family: Joshua Roberts / Bloomberg News


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Did listen just a bit, but i can't stand her voice, and she trully reminds me of a pitbull.
But reading other posts...gotta tell you...she is really making a bad impression. I understand some attacks are ok, but this woman is bitter and she went over the top. This is really not sticking with the independent voter. Remeber Obama's speech, it had some high tones, but it wasn't attack after attack...it simply demaned from McCain that "democrats care too, not just you"...this woman here talked about the styrofoam columns, trashed community activism saying it requires no real responsabilities, dimished Obama's memoir's when she can't even write her own speeches.
Republican showed their true colors here...go ahead with Palin...she's all your's but America is past this non-sense. Palin was completely Appalling!!!

loved the line...

" The right reason is to challenge the status quo, to serve the common good, and to leave this nation better than we found it."

Even my 6 year old was cheering!

Independent Voter -

A poll driven speech written by Schmidt and Rove delivered by their newest student Gov. Sarah Palin at the Republican convention.

Her attack with a smile means more negative ads.

Schimidt and Rove can't spin a extreme-conservative on the issues into a moderate.

She will attempt to draw the Democrats into the mud and fight.

What is disturbing is the attacks on the media. We count on the media to ask the questions we can't ask
but we want to know about.

The Republican tactics against the media are McCarthyism.

This is a Democracy!

This speech was relentlessly negative, divisive and partisan. it was obnoxious! America is sick to death of personal attacks substituting for policy ideas.
I think Sarah Palin shot herself in the foot on this one.

In the fine tradition of GW Bush (when he portrayed himself not as the elitist carpetbagger he was/is, but as a good 'ol boy, hunky cowboy), Palin did a beautiful job.

Focus on her positions and the issues, people, or we're gonna end up with a 'Hottie'-Bush next in line.

It's over for the dems.

Sarah is the real deal. The press will continue to tear her down but the people love her. She is the next vice president.

It was an awful speech. It had no grace in it whatsoever. I had hoped to feel some pride in the first woman Repub VP, but instead I felt embarrassed. It was an ugly, belittling speech, seemed small minded and dare I say "low brow." She seemed like the mean girl from high school. I also thought Guiliani was right up there with her in low class rhetoric. Had hoped for better from both.

@Marcelo

You forgot one thing, Joe Biden's speech was full of attacks. That is the job of a vice president candidate. So now you are saying women should not have attack speech?
Well, Obama's speech had a lot of attacks in it too so did every Democrat speaker.

Same old Grand Old Party not that of Lincoln but of Hoover- Bush recessionary era. Different setting by using a Hockey Mom and President of PTA to be the new attack dog of Karl Rove draped into another spin of a caring Mom. This is a continuation of the Horton Furlough during the run of Dukakis, Kerry's achilles' heel on Swift Boating or Al Gore's outplanking the sensual Bill, now they chose Sarah Palin b/c she represents rural america (their target), the disenchanted Hillary voters (the 2nd target), the Christian Conservatives of the South and Midwest (holds the purse)with an appeal of a new running soap opera VP candidate. The more media scrutinized her, the more she becomes the aggrieved lady knight with a shinning armor. While the nation's attention is fully rivvetted with poor Sarah and her son with disability, they forgot the 8 year blunder of Bush-Cheney. What happened to our unfavorable balance of trade with Europe, China, Japan, Germany and Middle East; the burgeoning deficits; unemployment and outsourcing of jobs; sub prime mess; declining value of dollar; $4 per gallon & highest profitability of oil companies; corruption by the CEO's and sleazy politicians, 4,000+ lives that were wasted on the wrong war and 20,000 more maimed thinking that they were fighting for their country on the premise of bad intelligence; the isolation of America from the league of allied nations; the emergence again of Neo-Cons; the illegal immigration; high cost of agricultural feeds and chemicals; and finally, the rise of crime due to unemployment in many urban poor areas. Where are those issues? The Hockey Mom never mentioned these issues, the United States of America has been capsulized to the size Wasalla. If the intellectual American electorate buy this ploy, the Democrats, Americans indeed had gone to the dogs!

Bitter. When not shrill. The Earmark Queen continues the great charade....

Palin just called McCain ''upright and honorable'' in her acceptance speech.

What is upright and honorable about cheating on your wife Carol with countless women for 5 years because your wife Carol is no longer pretty after a bad car accident, then divorcing her to marry a hot rich woman named Cindy who is 18 yrs younger, and whose father is going to give you a national political career based out of Arizona?

How can Palin call McCain upright and honorable? What, did she just meet the McCain 15 minutes ago? Oh wait, that's right, she did ...

terrible speech. I learned nothing about someone I know nothing of... had never heard about until less than a week ago... all I heard was nasty, negative, juvenile, high-schoolish attacks. She even managed to insult those of us who work to make our communities a better place.

truly, is this what we want in the White House? we still know nothing about her other than the fact that she can deliver nasty speeches and read a teleprompter.

Are you kidding, you can't stand Sassy Sarah's voice? Please, she is so articulate and professional compared to the democrat screamers and cursers! She was brilliant. She was composed, professional, funny, articulate, clever and sassy! The only reason people are being so vile about her is because they are SCARED! Keep being scared because McCain Palin will clean up DC, shrink government, stop spending, and lower taxes for everyone so America and American's can get back to business. None of this rob from everyone to give to slackers!!

Yeah sure, Dems just leave it to all of their other operatives (left bloggers, media, general a$$holes) who do the attacking, than smugly act superior. Of course, omitting the moment when they're were caught on tape saying what they REALLY feel!

The difference is the Reps will apparently say it to your FACE!

LOL, she OWNED you CHUMPS tonight!

Wow...not really!

Her speech was nasty, sarcastic and full of lies. She put down community organizers. She is a small minded, religious fanatic, and a bitchy woman.

But she was part of the status quo! Don't you get it? She tried to fire a librarian for refusing to ban books! Is that American? Since when have the Republicans been for the common person?
She didn't have to impress the delegates. She had to impress America. And with no economic plan other than continuing to lower taxes on the rich and keeping job creation in private hands, and shooting at wolves from planes, there's nothing there. And most Americans know it.

Plenty of Democrats are willing to question Obama. But the self-righteous Republicans are unified in their support of Palin - no questions asked. They trot her and the family out on the stage, then tell us we aren't allowed to say a thing? With her husband in a separatist party, her pregnant teenage daughter by the drop-out boyfriend, her sacking of her divorced sister's husband's boss, other decisions of hers that are not mainstream, etc. etc. etc. Trailer trash ! I'm not wild about Obama, but I can't take another 4 years of the Republican spin machine. They are so dishonest it stinks.

Yes, Sarah the "New Republican Terminator" has TERMINATE THE "APPEASEMENT KID" AND HIS PARTNER "WITHDRAWAL VP"

Just like I said she would. Sarah the "New Republican Terminator" is going to take the "WITHDRAWAL VP" and give him a debate on his life. In fact as soon as she steps on to the stage "BIDEN" will be toast.

She also take on the "ELITE MEDIA" and "TERMINATE" them to.

VJ Machiavelli
http://www.vjmachiavelli.blogspot.com
ps This is not longer your "GRANDFATHERS" Republican Party

I think after the Pro-Obama press has given her unfair scritinization, and the attacks on her family, her attacks were all warranted. She did a great job BIG TIME..the press is are a bunch of papparazzi packrats that need to be called out for going overboard...GOOD for her...now we have a real horse race on our hands..it is going to get interesting from here on out!

She was definitely the attack dog for McCain. For a first speech before a national audience...she was BRILLIANT!

I LIKE SARAH!

Personally, I found the speech disgusting. Attacking Obama for being a community organizer while bragging about being the mayor of a 10k citizen town is pretty shameless. Can't wait to see the Daily Show's coverage there should plenty of clips to laugh at.

But I think the speech will be well received by the general population. People claim they don't like negative politics, yet time after time its shown effective. Plus, whining about the media has also proven an effective tactic this year (look at how the media backed off of HRC after she started whining).

Unlike Guilliani, Pallin is able to mask the slime, with a healthy smile. But I hope she remembers the cheers, if McCain loses this November, it won't just be the "liberal media" attacking her, it'll be her fellow conservatives. And after watching them light up with glee at each cheapshot fed to them, I'm sure Pallin will discover that there are fiecer creatures in her party than hockey moms.

I was not impressed. She mocked, which Barack Obama never did. This was just rather low-class. She lied, saying Obama wasn't for developing new sources of energy. This was transparently false and very condescending to the American public. Toward the end she clearly stumbled, halting unnaturally at points in sentences that did not call for pauses - clearly tripping over the teleprompter. It was a sorry sight. I think she benefited from low expectations, and that is all.

This is a person who:

-Opposes abortion for rape and incest victims.

-Does not support contraception.- Opposes sex education programs. Supports abstinence-only education.

- Wants to require parental consent for abortions for women/girls under age 18.

- Supports a constitutional amendment to deny health benefits to same-sex couples.

- Supports teaching Creationism in public schools (Teaching that the world was literally made in 7 days.)

- Does not believe global warming is human-made.

Congratulations on delivering a phenomenal speech Vice President candidate Palin!

Your plain truth words should appeal to all sides of the political spectrum. What I saw and heard were grand statements of truth and action, with believable and down to earth appeal. So many have been blinded by the light of Obama's "change" rhetoric, that they've failed to ask the harder questions about actual leadership, actual change, and actual plans for the future. The sermon routine gets old, even for those of us that humbly acknowledge, "we're Republicans voting for Obama".

The party line Democrats have to be shaking in their boots. A surprise speech from a REAL woman VP candidate, a re-energized Republican base, a large number of men and women supporting real change in the form of Sarah Palin.

The funny irony of Obama and the Democratic National Convention, is the huberis of a platform marketed as "Change", delivered by all the Washington beltway big-wigs. It all looked so "Business as Usual". There wasn't change. There was Obama making celebrity entrances on cue. The Clinton grandstanding, complete with Hillary, Bill, and Chelsea parades... ...I'm still appalled that Democrats would market this as anything close to Change.

Obama is a good leader. McCain is a good leader. Biden is one of the longest standing congressman in government, for the "great state of Delaware". Palin, although a new face, has run a state of great importance to the US economy. Despite what anyone says, I believe Palin is representative of the leadership and change that America needs. Biden is the old guard, he is the antithesis of what Americans are demanding in Washington.

Thanks you Sarah Palin for re-energizing me and the rest of the American people that were hoping for an exciting race and a candidate that doesn't talk down their nose with a sermon reminiscent of a preacher on Sunday. We all know how they live their lives....

I thought Palin appeared very mean spirited and not as likable as I thought she would be.....not my kind of girl.

 


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