Palin Proves Conservatives Can Fight Pop Culture and Win 
by  Gary Bauer 

06/19/2009 



In the Age of Obama, many conservatives are consoling themselves with this 
thought:  Conservatism wins on the issues.  Polls show majorities of Americans 
want less government and fewer and lower taxes; they want leaders who will 
stand up to our enemies; they are skeptical about the science of global 
warming; they want public policy to show respect for human life at all stages, 
and, yes, most Americans still believe marriage should remain between a man and 
a woman. 

A Gallup poll this week showed 40 percent of Americans interviewed describe 
their political views as conservative, while just 21 percent self identify as 
liberal. 

Though conservative values remain popular among Americans overall, they have 
never been embraced by the popular culture.  Hollywood, the music industry, 
sports and the fashion world are all overwhelmingly liberal.  In these sectors 
of American society, conservative positions almost always lose. 



These realities make the recent Sarah Palin-David Letterman dust-up quite 
interesting.  For decades conservatives have engaged the popular culture at 
their peril.  Whenever conservatives pushed back against the excesses of the 
pop culture, they risked getting labeled bigoted, ignorant or, worst of all, 
prudish.  

But Sarah Palin has proved that conservatives can fight the pop culture and 
win.  That’s because while many Americans consume the entertainment of people 
like David Letterman, they embrace the values of people like Sarah Palin.  

The controversy surrounds comments made more than a week ago by the "Late Show" 
host. Letterman joked that Palin, who was in New York City to attend an autism 
event, had bought makeup from Bloomingdale’s to update her “slutty flight 
attendant” look. He later added that Palin had attended a New York Yankees 
baseball game, and that during the seventh inning stretch Palin’s daughter had 
been “knocked up” by Yankees’ libidinous third baseman Alex Rodriguez.   

Letterman claims he was referring to Palin’s 18-year-old daughter, Bristol, but 
only Palin’s 14-year-old daughter, Willow, attended the game with her mother.  
So Letterman ended up joking about statutory rape.  

Initially, Letterman did not apologize. While jokes that sexualize kids are 
“crude, sexist, perverted,” as Palin stated in response to Letterman, they have 
sadly become a comedic staple. Watch the most popular comedians and you’ll find 
many jokes are intended to humiliate, demean and tear down. Throw in some 
disgusting sexual references and you have a perfect recipe for big laughs in 
today’s popular culture.  And if the target of the comedian’s demeaning sexual 
jokes is a conservative politician, so much the better.  

There is an obvious double standard. What would have happened had Letterman 
made the same joke about Barack Obama and his family? We know. Letterman would 
have been forced into early retirement, and perhaps prosecuted under some “hate 
crimes” statute.  

Letterman then offered a snarky non-apology apology in which he insisted he had 
meant to suggest that Bristol, not Willow, had been “knocked up” by A-Rod.  
While there is a significant legal difference, only according to our cultural 
elites could the addition of four years transform a beyond-the-pale insinuation 
into an acceptable punch-line. The target of his cruel insinuations remained a 
young girl who, through no fault of her own, is the daughter of a political 
figure.

Finally, after a week, Letterman offered something closer to a legitimate 
apology, which Palin graciously accepted.  I doubt Letterman would have 
apologized had he not been forced to do so. But his jokes caused a huge 
backlash among his viewers, some of whom formed a campaign to urge CBS to fire 
him.  

Viewers were so irate that one "Late Show" advertiser pulled its sponsorship.  
Letterman was slammed by women’s groups across the ideological spectrum.  Even 
the National Organization for Women denounced him for “snicker[ing] about men 
having sex with teenage girls (or women) less than half their age…”

Despite the strong backlash, some conservatives argued that Palin was wrong to 
call out Letterman for his outrageous remarks. One commentator predicted that 
critiques of Letterman would lead to a form of censorship, while a former GOP 
advisor said going after Letterman made Republicans look small, and insisted 
the entire episode was a “win-win for Letterman.” 

Letterman has enjoyed a temporary ratings boost, but there’s deeper meaning in 
the incident.  The cultural left lampoons Palin because her values and life are 
completely foreign to them. They find it bizarre that she hunts, prays and says 
things like “you betcha.’”  They can’t fathom that she brought a child with 
Down syndrome to term and that she didn’t pressure her daughter into aborting 
an unexpected pregnancy.  

Letterman may not know anyone who would vote for Palin or a family that looks 
like hers.  But his Palin joke backfired in part because scores of millions of 
Americans are living lives that more closely resemble Palin’s life than 
Letterman’s.  Like Palin, they pray in churches, hunt and fish and raise 
imperfect families with unconditional love.  They are more than uneasy about 
the culture’s sexualization of children and its infantilization of adults.  

The cultural left mocks Palin’s values, but its taunts often fail to gain 
traction, because Palin’s politics and principles are much more main-stream 
than those of her critics.  Sarah Palin is a false target for the popular 
culture.  It can’t resist the temptation to ridicule and lampoon her, but she 
offers too much common sense and inspiration to make for good jokes.  

In the Age of Obama, pop culture elites may be excused for their over-the-top 
bashing of conservatives. Liberals have always controlled the popular culture, 
and now they control government too. They probably assume most of the country 
has shifted leftward and come round to their view of the world.  But it hasn’t. 
 Just ask David Letterman.  




Former presidential candidate Mr. Gary Bauer is president of American Values 
and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families. 

 avid Letterman " THE UGLY AMERICAN " ON TV SHOW

 
June 15th, 2009 12:41 PM Eastern
KATHLEEN TROIA ‘K.T.’ McFARLAND: How Women Can Strike Back at Letterman


By Kathleen Troia “K.T.” McFarland
National Security Expert/Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense
Almost every woman I saw last weekend talked about David Letterman. “I can’t 
believe he said those things about a child!” “How can he get away with it?” “No 
wonder women don’t run for office, they want to put their families through 
that.”
 
 
Cambodia remains occupied by Vietnam .
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights.
 
The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6,, calling for a 
withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Cambodia.
"Prime Minister Pham Van Dong called on me and, in the presence of Premier Chou 
En-lai, swore in the name of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam that the latter 
would always respect the land frontiers as well as all islands belonging to the 
"Kingdom of Cambodia" March 1970 by Sihanouk . Wilfred Burchett book "The China 
Cambodia Vietnam triangle " P-176-177

June 8, 1970 No details of a North Vietnamese agreement with Prince Sihanouk 
are given following his return to Peking after a two-week visit to Hanoi.

Dec. 25, 1978 PM Pham Van Dong launched an invasion of Cambodia. Some 100,000 
Vietnamese with 20,000 KUFNS troops, under the direction of Gen.Van Tien Dung, 
launch an invasion of Cambodia.

on the behavior & character of a Vietnamese refer to the book " Giai Phong " by 
T Terzani.
the book describes a Vietnamese as a thief , a liar , a killer , a deceiver, a 
sleeper
 
 

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