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View Full Version : GOP has Even MORE Blind Faith in Palin, Despite Her Shrill Irrationality & Desertion


disrupter
07-07-2009, 07:04 PM
Looks like the violent, irrational, racist, sexually repressed right Still supports Palin,

in spite of her abandoning her governorship duties mid-term.

What would be unacceptable desertion for her son in the US military is 'OK' for her ELITE celebrity 'book-deal' politician status,

because of her shrill screeching harpy cries of 'left-wing' media abuse.

I guess the four horsemen banner carrier GOP are willing to forgive anything of their psychopathic & irrational leadership.

The right is full of irrational, superstition & makes no sense to anyone who still has an iota of common sense.

The right wants to drag all of humanity down into their suicide, Armageddon agenda.

Poll: Palin's support still strong among GOP

By Susan Page, USA TODAY; 07 July 2009
WASHINGTON —

Sarah Palin's bombshell that she will resign as Alaska governor actually has

boosted[???] her a bit among Republicans,

a nationwide USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, though it also has dented her standing among Democrats and independents.

Palin, tapped by GOP presidential nominee John McCain as his running mate last year, remains a favorite of Republicans and conservatives — and a nemesis for Democrats. Two-thirds of Republicans want Palin to be "a major national political figure for many years to come," while three-fourths of Democrats hope she won't be.

Independents by 55%-34% would prefer she leave the national stage.

The findings underscore how polarized opinions of Palin were even before Friday's surprise announcement. Seven in 10 Americans say their views weren't affected by her decision. Among those whose opinions have shifted, Democrats by 4-1 and independents by 2-1 feel less favorably toward her. Republicans, however, are inclined to see her more favorably.

"For independents and Democrats, she's already not their candidate, and with Republicans her support is not based on her record as governor of Alaska," Republican media consultant Alex Castellanos says. "The basis of her support is that she represents the social conservative wing of the party, that she's a new-generation working-mom conservative, and that she's a victim of the news media. And she's still those three things."

The poll Monday of 1,000 adults — including 321 Democrats, 323 independents and 316 Republicans — has a margin of error of +/— 3 percentage points for the full sample and 6 points for the partisan subsamples.

Palin's complaints about unfair treatment by the news media resonate with many. Three-fourths of Republicans, more than half of independents and even a third of Democrats say coverage of Palin has been unfairly negative.

Men were significantly more likely than women to say Palin has been treated unfairly.

Overall, 53% call the media's coverage unfairly negative, a jump from the 33% who held that view after the Republican convention in September.

Palin has complained that her actions and her children have been subjected to tougher scrutiny and criticism than other public figures. In a series of TV interviews aired Tuesday, the governor defended her decision to leave office 18 months before her term was up and parried questions about her future. "Don't know what the future holds," she said on ABC. "I'm not gonna shut any door. That — who knows what doors open?"

She talked to reporters in Dillingham, Alaska, wearing waders and helping husband Todd as he hauled in salmon from the family's fishing nets.

When it comes to a potential presidential run, the USA TODAY poll displays both Palin's strength in the Republican base and her weakness among the swing voters who usually decide national elections. Republicans by 71%-27% say they would be likely to vote for her if she ran for president in 2012, while independents by 51%-44% would not.

Her overall standing is only slightly more negative than that of Hillary Rodham Clinton in November 2000, eight years before she nearly won the Democratic presidential nomination.

Then, 47% told Gallup they were likely to vote for Clinton for president if she ran in 2004 or 2008; 51% weren't. Now 43% are likely to vote for Palin; 54% aren't.http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2009-07-07-palin-poll_N.htm

If you want reckless, unaccountable superstitious psychopathy to run your nation, you should definitely vote for the irrational deserter Palin.

Just like the pro-war hypocritical deserters/deferrers Bush & Cheney.

hdmarketing
07-07-2009, 07:26 PM
Looks like the violent, irrational, racist, sexually repressed right Still supports Palin,

in spite of her abandoning her governorship duties mid-term.

What would be unacceptable desertion for her son in the US military is 'OK' for her ELITE celebrity 'book-deal' politician status,

because of her shrill screeching harpy cries of 'left-wing' media abuse.

I guess the four horsemen banner carrier GOP are willing to forgive anything of their psychopathic & irrational leadership.

The right is full of irrational, superstition & makes no sense to anyone who still has an iota of common sense.

The right wants to drag all of humanity down into their suicide, Armageddon agenda.

Poll: Palin's support still strong among GOP

By Susan Page, USA TODAY; 07 July 2009
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2009-07-07-palin-poll_N.htm

If you want reckless, unaccountable superstitious psychopathy to run your nation, you should definitely vote for the irrational deserter Palin.

Just like the pro-war hypocritical deserters/deferrers Bush & Cheney.

Yea we all know she threatens ou and your defunct media liberal pricks.
She is the best thing that has happened to the GOP in a very long time.

If she runs, YOUR BOY is FINISHED:lmao2:

foxbaron
07-07-2009, 08:36 PM
When you are in the military you don't have the option to quit. Any civilian job and that includes elected office is just that, a job, and anyone can quit, resign or walk any time they wish.

Situations change in people's lives and sometimes they have to reevaluate what they are doing and make changes.

I admire her for having the backbone to do what she feels is right regardless of anyone else's opinion.

She is the one who has to live with her decision, not you.

No one is going to force anyone to pay attention to her, but the democrats will because she scares the hell out of them. She is a threat to them because she is popular with the masses.

mwillman
07-07-2009, 09:14 PM
She is no threat, she might impress a bunch of redneck fools but a quitter is a quitter and she couldn't even finish one term as governor.

Life_Long_Dem!
07-09-2009, 01:07 PM
she was the main reason McCain lost because she couldnt keep her big mouth shut and it cost him votes so if she actually has the spauldings to run in 2012 with the most limited executive experience...less than Obama had she will be the laughing stock again...Palin=nail in McCains coffin that cost him the election and she WILL be the nail in her own coffin giving the dems and Obama(or anyone else from the dems) an assured 4 more years in office! mark my words!:thumbsup:

SeniorChief
07-09-2009, 01:12 PM
she was the main reason McCain lost because she couldnt keep her big mouth shut and it cost him votes...

That is complete horseshit, dumbass.

Had we flipped-flopped, i.e. SHE ran for President, with McCain as the VP, your boy Obama would be "community organizing" today, vs. fucking up everything he's touched since Inauguration Day.

Fact.

Suck on it.

Life_Long_Dem!
07-09-2009, 01:15 PM
That is complete horseshit, dumbass.

Had we flipped-flopped, i.e. SHE ran for President, with McCain as the VP, your boy Obama would be "community organizing" today, vs. fucking up everything he's touched since Inauguration Day.

Fact.

Suck on it.
you dont think her constant "drilling" of bill ayers...Obama "palling" around with terrorists and the other bs nonsense that even mccain wanted tamed down...that didnt wear thin on Americans who were sick of hearing it and wanted talk of the real issues...the economy and such?

SeniorChief
07-09-2009, 01:18 PM
you dont think her constant "drilling" of bill ayers...Obama "palling" around with terrorists and the other bs nonsense that even mccain wanted tamed down...that didnt wear thin on Americans who were sick of hearing it and wanted talk of the real issues...the economy and such?

Hell no. Since she joined the ticket their ratings SOARED. Hell, I recall McCain/Palin took the lead in the ratings for awhile. Obama was truly shitscared, I am certain.

We (Repubs) weren't voting for McCain. We were voting for Palin.

The Professor
07-09-2009, 01:22 PM
the most limited executive experience...less than Obama had

LOLOLOL!!!

all the tacit admissions

LOLOL!

bluejunk44
07-09-2009, 03:12 PM
blind faith is not something someone should brag about

bluejunk44
07-09-2009, 05:22 PM
looks like palin was twisting the truth a bit

http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/republican-party/key-reason-palin-gave-for-quitting-appears-to-be-false/



One of the chief reasons Sarah Palin has given for resigning as Governor of Alaska is that her state’s taxpayers are being forced to spend money defending her government against ethics complaints that would otherwise fund teachers, cops, and road repair.

But in response to our questions, a spokesperson for the Alaska governor’s office just gave us new information that casts serious doubt on this assertion. The revelation makes the resignation episode even stranger, and raises fresh questions about the real reasons for her abrupt departure.

During her resignation speech last week, Palin presented herself as a heroic defender of the taxpayer. She said that money being spent on government lawyers to defend against these “frivolous ethics violations” could be “going to things that are very important, like troopers and roads and teachers and fish research.” Palin repeated exactly the same point this week.

But David Murrow, a spokesperson for the Governor, said in an interview that much of this money was budgeted to the lawyers in advance and would have gone to them anyway, even if state lawyers hadn’t been defending against these ethics complaints.

In response to our questions, the Governor’s office provided us with a detailed breakdown of the millions Palin has claimed has gone to defending against ethics complaints. It does list roughly $1.9 million in expenditures.

But Murrow, the spokesperson, acknowledged to our reporter, Amanda Erickson, that this total was arrived at by adding up attorney hours spent on fending off complaints — based on the fixed salaries of lawyers in the governor’s office and the Department of Law. The money would have gone to the lawyers no matter what they were doing. The complaints are “just distracting them from other duties,” Murrow said.

In other words, while these lawyers might have been free to do other legal work for the state, the ethics complaints have apparently not had the real world impact Palin has claimed, and didn’t drain money away from cops, teachers, roads and other things.

Similarly, TPM reports that there are only three ethics complaints outstanding against the Palin administration in any case — which, combined with the above, casts serious doubts on one of her chief stated reasons for quitting.

Murrow has not responded to folllow-up questions asking him to explain how this squares with Palin’s claims. We’ll update you if he does.

Surfrider
07-12-2009, 06:22 PM
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_nnnK0TK9Uqs/RdZOoaR4fKI/AAAAAAAAAT4/E47Ivas7cic/s400/Mr.Burns%2Bof%2BJapan.gif

"I speak for the Republican Party."

MintJulep
07-12-2009, 06:44 PM
Hell, he looks better than Pelosi. More honest, too.

doctordog
07-12-2009, 06:53 PM
Hell, he looks better than Pelosi. More honest, too.

He is not as yellow as Obama.:disbelief:

Smurf-Herder
07-12-2009, 09:26 PM
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_nnnK0TK9Uqs/RdZOoaR4fKI/AAAAAAAAAT4/E47Ivas7cic/s400/Mr.Burns%2Bof%2BJapan.gif

"I speak for the Republican Party."

Can't leave her alone, can you.

The obsession just makes her more popular, as the continuing victim of the Left.