Political Chowder Ingredients: Facts, Events, Policy, Politicians, Journalists, and YOU
Political Chowder Ingredients:
Facts, Events, Policy, Politicians, Journalists, and YOU

This Week's "You"
Oct. 19, 2008
From the Nashua Telegraph
10/14/08

Palin getting bum rap from women voters

It amazes me each time I read about women who claim to be highly educated yet despise Sarah Palin, writing her off as a narrow-minded, unintelligent woman.

Don't talk to me about women helping women. If the woman does not share the same ideologies as the liberal feminist, then they are no good and fodder for ridicule and scorn.

For a dummy, Sarah has done quite well. She came up on her own coattails. The only man supporting her was, and is, her husband, who is content to remain in the background, realizing his wife is far more eloquent and possibly intelligent than he. That's a dude!

Sarah is a doggone, plain-spoken woman who sets herself apart from the plastic-type, double-speak verbiage coming from a Hillary, Pelosi, Boxer, Waters, etc.

These babes come across as male clones dressed as women. Talk the same, act the same, criticize the same, character-assassinate the same. You're darn tootin' they do.

You betcha I'm voting for Sarah Palin through John McCain. In her I can see myself and millions of other women who are looking for alter egos. A woman we can relate to as being honest, plain-spoken, values-ridden and non-caring about what others think. Now if I could only have her looks and body!

Another reason perhaps why the liberal women dislike her is that Sarah's hips are perhaps half their size. (I plagiarized that statement from a Wall Street Journal columnist . . . it's cute!)

P.S. One hears talk about her not having experience. Well, put her up against the man running for the presidency who has no executive experience but has the ability to impress a naive public with his charismatic voice.

With more exposure and experience as VP, I'd say Palin would probably go down in history as one of our very best presidents should that ever become a possibility.

 

Patrice Podvojsky
Nashua




YOU read this week by host Arnie Arnesen