ugandanet  

[Ugnet] Sarah Palin as Evita?

Mitayo Potosi
Wed, 18 Nov 2009 08:47:30 -0800

*Sarah Palin as Evita ?**   ** Interesting !!!
*Our Rogue Evita.  Posted on Nov 16, 2009

By Eugene Robinson <http://www.truthdig.com/about/staff/517>

No force on earth can stop Sarah Palin from becoming our very own “lite”
version of Eva Peron—a glamorous and tragic legend, minus the tragedy.
Eventually, some clever composer will write a blockbuster musical about her
life and times. Stage directions will include: “SARAH fires gun. MOOSE
dies.”

It’s futile to try to ignore Palin, however noble the effort may be. She’s a
phenomenon, and it hardly matters that so many people believe she augurs the
final dissolution of American politics into a big, frothy bowl of mush. The
republic will survive even her.

Anyway, she’s unlikely ever to become—shudder—commander in chief. A new
Washington Post-ABC News poll shows that 60 percent of Americans believe
Palin is not qualified to be president, and 53 percent “definitely” would
not vote for her.

You do have to wonder about the 37 percent who’d think about it, though. And
as for the 9 percent who definitely *would* vote for Palin, that’s enough
people to qualify as a movement—the equivalent of Evita’s fervid *
descamisados*, or “shirtless ones,” who entrusted her with their hopes and
dreams.

Palin’s followers can afford shirts. But evidently they feel so
disenfranchised, so ignored, so put upon by forces beyond their control,
that they are willing to look past her every shortcoming and forgive her
every betrayal. What matters is “Going Rogue”—not the cleverly titled book
itself, but Palin’s willingness to thumb her nose at political and social
convention.

So what if she displayed no real grasp of the issues in interviews during
last year’s campaign? Those reporters were being beastly, trying to show her
up. So what if the inside-the-Beltway crowd thinks she’s an airhead? The
state of mind called “Washington” is the problem, and she’s the solution. So
what if she quit as governor of Alaska with a year and a half left in her
term? “Only dead fish go with the flow,” she explained, demonstrating once
more her sassy roguishness.

Palin’s knack for being cleverly transgressive is almost like performance
art. Her doppelganger, Tina Fey, did a hysterically prescient bit, right
before Election Day, in which “Palin” vowed that she was never going away.
Fey’s “Palin” predicted that she’d become either president or “a white
Oprah.” So on whose show does Palin launch her book? Oprah’s, of
course—adding to the long list of Palin lore that you simply couldn’t make
up.

Palin indeed would be a terrific talk-show host, but she has much bigger
ambitions. I think her ultimate impact, like Evita’s, may be more
sociological than political.

She taps into several broad currents of discontent. She speaks for social
conservatives, long taken for granted by Republicans who brandish their
opposition to issues such as abortion and gay rights at election time but
never actually do anything about them. She speaks for small-town and rural
Americans who feel their concerns are ignored. She speaks for hunters who
fear that “Washington” wants to take their guns away.

Unlike so many of her detractors—Republicans as well as Democrats—she didn’t
go to an Ivy League school. She scrapped and scraped her way through
college, as a lot of people do. And she’s a woman who juggles a complicated
family and a demanding career. This is one of the most important elements of
the Palin persona, because it resonates with so many other American women
who see their own daily struggles in Palin’s.

Of course, Palin’s feminism is highly situational. She has expressed
sisterly solidarity with Hillary Clinton, of all people, on the added burden
that female candidates must bear in deciding what to wear on the campaign
trail. But that burden was lightened for Palin by the $150,000 in designer
clothing bought for her and her family with campaign funds.

True believers will not mind. Palin’s unconventional trajectory and unkempt
mind are seen as authentic, in the sense that we all know people who’ve had
ups and downs in their lives and who couldn’t point to Kazakhstan on a map.
Her success to date represents a triumph of authenticity over
accomplishment. In the final analysis, I believe, that’s not enough to make
her president. But others seeking the 2012 Republican nomination
underestimate her at their peril.

Toward the end of her life, Eva Peron gave a famous speech in which she
vowed, “I will return, and I will be millions!” Sarah Palin, our Evita, has
returned—and she will *make* millions.

*Eugene Robinson’s e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.*

*

*
_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
Ugandanet@kym.net
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet
% UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/


The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
---------------------------------------
  • [Ugnet] Sarah Palin as Evita? Mitayo Potosi