Forthe wrote:I'm still laughing. I think this fails the "do no harm" test.
Ok I am going to play the devil's advocate here. I have said before that I am a Republican, The wife is Democrat, this way we both have a say in each primary. I already said that I would not be voting for McCain, and I dislike the Clintons, which makes my favored candidate pretty obvious.
Saying all that, I still don't think this is necessarily a bad choice. First off, I know virtually nothing about her, and I am not going to believe to what the Dems and Republicans are going to trot out in the next few weeks. I did not believe it when they spread shit about Obama, so why would I accept it about her? I prefer to make my decision on her over the course of the next 67 days. (Yes I know it will be a skewed perception, but I can look at her actions and her past)
I know she is against abortion, I don't like that. I personally would not want my wife to have one, but I think it should be a choice and outlawing it means the Government decides for you.
I know she is for traditional marriage, but I understand she was one of the first to allow partners rights, so at least she is somewhat moderate on that one. As above, I am not going to marry a guy, but if you want to go ahead, I could care less.
She seems to be religious, but the above partner thing makes me hope that she is not overzealous. I have no problem is she found God, just don't tell me I have to find him. Make decisions based on commmon sense, not religious, or conservative or liberal paradigms.
I know she loves guns, I don't, but I don't care if someone has one. A reasonable one! So like abortion, let it be ok, and let the individual make the decision. (CRAZY, I KNOW)
The reason I think this may not be a bad choice is simple. I think the Republicans know they are done this election. McCain is safe. He is old, and would only have served one term if he won. They no he won't win, so why not set up a possible future with Palin. In my industry most experts are suggesting continued sluggish sales until late 2009 to early 2010. We will still be in Iraq, or we will have just left by 2012 and feelings will still be raw. In other words, most of the early part of Obama's term will be problematic and once in office, it will be difficult for him to maintain his rock star status. It will also be hard to accomplish all the changes he wants to address.
Republicans might be angling for 2012 or even 2016 and they have a semi-attractive, decent candidate to mold. If this truely is the Republican plan, and she turns out to be moderate leaning, which I hope she does, then this will hopefully mean a large swing away from this radical conservative, religious time in the parties history. The Republicans really have little to lose here, Mitt or Lieberman would just be more of the same, so go for it.
I chose to be the Republican because I believe in the ideals of the Party. Less government intervention and a conservative fiscal outline. I am not sure where that party went, and I absolutely abhor this new "shared wealth" crap he and Hillary are touting. I believe in the Rights of the People and unfortunately neither party agrees with me there. "Shared Prosperity" sounds like I am going to pay moe taxes for people who have not done as well, and fuck that. I worked hard to get to where I am.
So I will vote Obama, hope that Palin represents a change in the Republicans, and hope even more that common sense can rule the world and the U.S. again. If Palin is just another Religious Wackjob...sigh
When I was younger, I used to think that the world was doing it to me and that the world owes me some thing…When you're a teeny bopper, that's what you think. I'm 40 now, I don't think that anymore, because I found out it doesn't f--king work. One has to go through that. For the people who even bother to go through that, most assholes just accept what it is anyway and get on with it." - John Lennon