" Palin remotely qualified to be president of the United States? No. But
that's precisely what is so interesting."

But, Obama is?  Interesting use of the word 'remotely' above don't you
think?

v/r
 

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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Helio Wakasugui
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 7:28 AM
To: ProFox Email List
Subject: [OT] Palin: average isn't good enough - Sam Harris

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-harris3-2008sep03,0,5745350.st
ory
 Palin: average isn't good enough
 She's not qualified to be president, and in picking her, McCain shows
that
he has little respect for the presidency.
By Sam Harris
September 3, 2008
 > Discuss
Article<http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oew-sh3-2008sep03,0,11489
2.graffitiboard>
So
let us ask the question that should be on the mind of every thinking
person
in the world at this moment: If John McCain becomes the 44th president
of
the United States, what are the odds that a blood clot or falling object
will make Sarah Palin the 45th?

The actuarial tables on the Social Security Administration website
suggest
that there is a better than 10% chance that McCain will die during his
first
term in office. Needless to say, the Reaper's scything only grows more
insistent thereafter. Should President McCain survive his first term and
get
elected to a second, there is a 27% chance that Palin will become the
first
female U.S. president by 2015. If we take into account McCain's medical
history and the pressures of the presidency, the odds probably increase
considerably that this bright-eyed Alaskan will become the most powerful
woman in history.

 As many people have noted, placing Palin on the ticket has made these
final
months of the already overlong 2008 campaign much more interesting. Is
Palin
remotely qualified to be president of the United States? No. But that's
precisely what is so interesting. McCain not only has thrown all
sensible
concerns about good governance aside merely to pander to a sliver of
female
and masses of conservative Christian voters, he has turned this period
of
American history into an episode of high-stakes reality television:
*Don't
look now, but our cousin Sarah just became leader of the free world!
Tune in
next week and watch her get sassy with Pakistan!*

Americans have an unhealthy desire to see average people promoted to
positions of great authority. No one wants an average neurosurgeon or
even
an average carpenter, but when it comes time to vest a man or woman with
more power and responsibility than any person has held in human history,
Americans say they want a regular guy, someone just like themselves.
President Bush kept his edge on the "Who would you like to have a beer
with?" poll question in 2004, and won reelection.

This is one of the many points at which narcissism becomes
indistinguishable
from masochism. Let me put it plainly: If you want someone just like you
to
be president of the United States, or even vice president, you deserve
whatever dysfunctional society you get. You deserve to be poor, to see
the
environment despoiled, to watch your children receive a fourth-rate
education and to suffer as this country wages -- and loses -- both
necessary
and unnecessary wars.

McCain has so little respect for the presidency of the United States
that he
is willing to put the girl next door (soon, too, to be a grandma) into
office beside him. He has so little respect for the average American
voter
that he thinks this reckless and cynical ploy will work.

And it might. Palin's nomination has clearly excited Christian
conservatives, and it may entice a few million gender-obsessed fans of
Hillary Clinton to vote entirely on the basis of chromosomes. Throw in a
few
million more average Americans who will just love how the nice lady
smiles,
and 2009 could be a very interesting year.

*Tune in next week and watch cousin Sarah fuss with our nuclear arsenal
...
.*



Sam Harris is a founder of the Reason Project and the author of "The End
of
Faith" and "Letter to a Christian Nation."


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