Accidental Blogger

A general interest blog

Sarah Palin made it to my corner of the woods, this Saturday afternoon. "Thousands" lined up to meet her, per the gushing report from the Washington PA Observer-Reporter

(Note, the website page had been read 297 times by the time I saw it. Are there thousands of people in Washington PA, or was the true number of gawkers and admirers just barely over 2000, which would have qualified for the use of the plural?)

"Thousands of people stood in a queue outside Sam’s Club at Trinity
Point Saturday morning, many standing in line overnight, for a chance
to see Sarah Palin and have her autograph a copy of her new book.

Sharon Jacobs of Greer, S.C., along with her sister, Amy Gerwing of
Venetia, got into line about 8:30 p.m. Friday outside the store. For
Gerwing, it was not only an opportunity to have her books signed but to
thank Palin for the note she sent to the Peters Township woman when she
was diagnosed with breast cancer.

Palin sent her a note offering words of encouragement from herself and
her husband, Todd Palin. Gerwing said a friend of hers sent Palin an
e-mail about her diagnosis. Palin sent the note a few weeks later.

Jacobs said while her sister is a big Palin supporter, she was
ambivalent about the former Republican vice presidential nominee who
may be pointing for her own run to the White House.

“I am trying to educate myself and learn more about her,” Jacobs said. 

———–

Why didn't the folksy note translate into unquestioning adoration for Palin, I wonder. Maybe Palin's early departure leaving 400-odd unsigned books at Noblesville, Indiana yesterday had them wondering about the wisdom of relying on Palin.

Also, some camped there overnight in their enthusiasm – at least 40 people were in line at 8:30 pm on Friday, as they formed new friendships over mutual admiration of Palin. "He said Palin is likable because she is a down-to-earth conservative woman. "She hunts," he added."

For this area,  like many others, is Hunter's Paradise, the land of the brave, the free, the 'bitter who cling to their guns and religion'.

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4 responses to “Chasing the Paliban (Sujatha)”

  1. Here is someone who has actually read the book.

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  2. I suspect Frank Rich has read more of the book than Palin herself :)

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  3. Dean C. Rowan

    Perhaps it’s a book whose text can only be skimmed. One can’t swim in a puddle.

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  4. A puddle is only good for splashing muck around, much like the book. Perfect analogy, Dean!

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