Quote:
Originally Posted by Arles
What possible reason would Palin have to go into these interviews given the tone against her for the first 2-3 weeks. The questions would be something like "Do you really feel you are fit to be a mother and a candidate?"
"Do you think it's appropriate that you're the first woman candidate when you want to force women to hide in alleys with closehangers for abortions?"
It would be akin to someone asking Obama "In light of the recent comments, what was the reason you stopped worshiping the Muslim religion, did it have anything to do with 9-11?" - It's a rediculous question and no matter how he responded he would sound defensive. You think Obama would take interviews if the tone was like that? Or even McCain? I doubt it.
It's smart for her to do this - over 50% in a recent poll blame the press for trying to smear her and this plays very well with them. I'm sure she will do some sort of "friendly" interview at some point, but there's really no reason to. McCain is in about the best spot he could be right now - why make a play with Palin like this until he needs to?
As an aside, I'm seeing a lot of parallels between Palin and Clarence Thomas. There was a certain percentage incensed that Thomas (a conservative against affirmative action) was the next black man after Marshall on the supreme court (very pro affirmative action). The anger and vitriol towards Thomas was almost unprecedented for a supreme court justice. I see kind of a similar thing with the pro choice movement and Palin. Why would anyone want to participate in that type of dialog that will be nothing but extremely mean and completely unfair?
|
There's no way in hell she get asked the second question and she'd probably be thrilled to be asked the first as she'd hit that fat pitch out of the park. The Obama "question" is so utterly stupid that it needs little comment.
Again, it's two points. One, she won't tell the American public what her views are on foreign and domestic policy. Given her position, that should be unacceptable. Second, the McCain camp believes the media should show proper respect and deference. Have we really had a problem over the last eight years of the press not being deferential enough to our leaders? The outcry from certain folks from Missouri would be deafening if Obama only gave interviews to those that showed enough respect and deference.