Writers for the New York Times are still sneering at Sarah Palin and
her family on a regular basis. After all, these snobs will never
forgive her for going to the University of Idaho, or for having a
husband who isn’t a lawyer or an investment banker, but a member of
the United Steelworkers union, who doesn’t have a degree, whose mother
(who is part Yupik) is a former secretary of the Alaska Federation of
Natives, and whose grandmother is a member of the Curyung tribe.

But at least the New York Times has now retracted the outrageous
fabrication it printed on the front-page of Tuesday’s edition: that
Sarah Palin was a member of the Alaska Independence party for two
years in the 1990s.

Other papers around the world continue to print this falsehood (in
London, the Guardian’s front page had a banner headline which read “My
fellow Alaskans”) and other lies generated by left-wing smear blogs
continue to be lapped up by many in the mainstream media.

No, Sarah Palin didn’t support Pat Buchanan in the 1999-2000 campaign;
she was an official on the campaign of Republican presidential
contender Steve Forbes.

No, her eldest son Track (who is deploying to Iraq this week) didn’t
join the National Guard because he was a drug addict.

No, her daughters Willow and Piper aren’t named after witches on TV.

No, she’s not anti-Semitic. In fact, she has an Israeli flag in her
office, and quietly turned up for services at a newly opened Wasilla
synagogue to pay her respects.

No, she didn’t cut funding for unwed mothers, but increased it by 354
percent (and no, the Washington Post doesn’t appear to have corrected
its story about this despite being asked to do so).

But, yes, she did try to cut her own salary by $4,000 a year when she
was mayor of Wasilla; and yes, she voted against the $4,000-a-year
raise while on the city council.

And yes, she (like John McCain) did get it right when she supported
the surge in Iraq, while Barack Obama and Joe Biden got it badly
wrong.

And yes, she did take on the corrupt Republican-party establishment in
Alaska, while hardly anyone is asking why Obama failed to ask
questions about the notoriously corrupt Democratic-party machine in
Chicago, or was happy to take huge donations from the now-jailed crook
Tony Rezko.

Whatever else happens in this too-close-to call 2008 presidential
election, I think we can happily conclude that America has come a long
way in getting over its race problem. Thankfully, there has been very
little racism directed against Barack Obama by anybody except for
people on the absolute fringes.

But, as Hillary Clinton came to realize when she was given unfair
treatment by the Obama-infatuated media, and as Sarah Palin has seen
to a much greater extent in the period of a mere week, clearly the
same cannot be said of America’s sexist problem.

Personally, I don’t find it funny when New York magazine runs a
headline “Levi Johnston and Fat Girlfriend Arrive in St. Paul.” Or
when the Washington Post’s online magazine, Slate, launches a “Name
Bristol Palin’s Baby” contest.

Richard Cohen, leading columnist at the Washington Post thought it was
acceptable (even amusing) to compare Sarah Palin to a horse, and so,
judging by many of their online comments, did his readers. I don’t
want to even begin imagining the outcry if the Washington Post had
instead compared any other political candidate to an animal.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MTExYmYyYmQwMjFhNzU1YTE1MmQ3N2E1MmQ1OTI2OTI=&w=MQ==
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