Say It Ain't So, Sarah! Palin Uses Government Resources to Publicize
Her Pain
http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/analysis/583
Much was made of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's recent whining over how
she
was treated by the media as Sen. John McCain's running mate in the
2008 presidential election. In an interview with a conservative
filmmaker for his new movie titled Media Malpractice... How Obama Got
Elected, Palin faults the media for practically everything up to and
including her failure to win the vice presidency.

But that shot off the bow apparently wasn't enough for Palin. She
went
further last week, complaining about the media's treatment of the
interview in which she complained about the media. But the truly
reprehensible part about it is that she used public resources to do
so, publishing a press release on the official governor of Alaska's
Web site titled, "Governor Says 'There You Go Again' to Salacious
Nature of Recent Reporting."


Her main beef was with the right-of-center news Web site
Politico.com,
which published a story about the interview that concentrated on
Palin's response to a question about the treatment of Caroline
Kennedy
in her bid for the open Senate seat in New York.


>From Palin's press release:


Particularly troubling was a post on Politico.com titled, "Palin:
Media Goes Easy on Kennedy." The headline inflames the governor's
quote in the transcript, in which she answered a question about media
treatment of the prospect that Caroline Kennedy would be appointed to
the U.S. Senate: "It's going to be interesting to see how that plays
out and I think that as we watch that we will perhaps be able to
prove
that there is a class issue here also that was such a factor in the
scrutiny of my candidacy versus, say, the scrutiny of what her
candidacy may be."


"I was not commenting at all on Caroline Kennedy as a prospective
U.S.
senator, but rather on the seemingly arbitrary ways in which news
organizations determine the level and kind of scrutiny given to those
who aspire to public office," Gov. Palin said today. "In fact, I
consider Ms. Kennedy qualified and experienced, and she could serve
New York well."


Palin may be glossing over a few things, however. Politico merely
wrote that Palin "believes Caroline Kennedy is getting softer press
treatment in her pursuit of the New York Senate seat than Palin did
as
the GOP vice presidential nominee because of Kennedy's social class."


Which is pretty much exactly what she said. Politico never said that
Palin thought Kennedy was unqualified for the job.


Palin also insisted that the media has printed lies about her family
and then never corrected them, even after she requested a retraction.
However, in every instance in which she insists she's been wronged by
liars, she hasn't yet provided proof of the contrary, and generally
refuses to answer reporters' inquiries.


This is evident in how she went after the Anchorage Daily News. The
newspaper has been trying to put to rest rumors about Trig's birth,
and asked Palin's staff a few additional questions about it recently.
Palin's angry press release alleged that, in trying to disprove the
rumors with factual evidence of Palin's pregnancy, the Anchorage
Daily
News is giving "credence to the sensational allegation that the
governor's child, Trig, is not hers."


That assertion also appears to be an exaggeration at best. On their
editor's blog, the Anchorage Daily News posted an e-mail exchange
between the paper's publisher and Palin, prefacing it with the
following:


"The newspaper never took seriously the conspiracy theory that the
governor did not give birth to her son Trig, but that recently we had
made an effort to document his birth in pursuit of a story about why
the Trig rumors, while baseless, are apparently so widespread and
persistent."


I would encourage readers to read the e-mail exchange; it's quite
entertaining and sheds additional light on the extraordinarily
indignant acrimony Palin is able to dredge up at the drop of a hat.
She even writes "say it ain't so" at one point, for all our readers
who might be missing her charming colloquialisms.


But the fact that Palin is totally off base in her accusations is
beside the point. Palin's obsession with her own victimization makes
it impossible for her to see how inappropriate it is to post such
self-
pitying aggrandizement on a government Web site.


>From Troopergate to Trig, Palin has always had a difficult time
separating public from private. This is part of the reason the media
latched on to reports about her family. When you parade your children
around as campaign props, you shouldn't be surprised when people
start
asking questions about their lives.


The press release amounts to a highly personal rant against the
media.
Palin airs her grievances in an area that should be reserved for
official government business. Even if the press release were
truthful,
it's highly inappropriate.



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