Saturday, April 23, 2011

Sara Palin, the Wiffle Molly


In the present and despairing political environment of Coke or Pepsi parties, Palin comes across as effervescent like a Diet Shasta.

It really is a shame we can't have someone to step up like a true statesman.

I would take on to a stateswoman, but that 90s shill about "gravitas" comes to mind: I wish Palin could put on a serious sense of grinding visionary leadership and tough minded verbal attribution like Britain's Iron Lady, Margaret Thatcher.

Put them side by side, and the "hockey mom" sounds like she couldn't lead us out of a sideline spat over a bad call, let alone an international crisis. I do believe that in a campaign that nears the stretch for one or one other having the nuclear codes, there won't be a majority of serious voting Americans who would be able to chose Palin over Obama.

Sorry to say, Palin is much more wiffle-molly than Iron Lady.

So I believe she will find some hurdles rising in the primary road ahead - the new dynamics of the actual primaries will make things very tight for her as a real race for a real nomination begins.

Palin's situation is an education for those of us who are issue visionaries - who like some verbal content, but suddenly have to seriously reconsider a person's context and capability.

With Palin, I can see her legacy taking a place near H. Ross Perot the more this nation puts her into the rear view. She would be the wiffle molly and he would be all ears.

Bottom Lines

The documents that provided a foundation for our nation can grade the way for others

The U.S. Constitution and our Declaration of Independence are some of the unbreakable things about our republic.

After being tortured into saying whatever they needed it to say so they could gain the extreme ends of whatever they wanted, this republic's domestic enemies will never be able to take away the legacy of what the Constitution means to the cause of proper self government.

Though maligned and misunderstood, and now largely ignored for its content and contextual meaning, the Declaration of Independence stands gigantic among the keynote statements for the cause of human freedom.

If a day comes that this country is overrun by every conceivable enemy within and without, if the militant power of the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, our revolution, our republic, is undone, yet will these documents remain unbroken, ready to provide the seeds to grow the next tree of liberty - to flourish for whatever next generation is willing to plant, grow, nurture and protect it.

As astute historians have already pointed out, if the revolution had failed to begin with, or the new republic been wiped out in its infancy, either one of these documents would still be worthy of note among the most preeminent and compelling achievements of the millennium.

Our fight is not to bring meaning to these documents but to bring their meaning to us - our land and people - before it's to late, today, for us.

We still have the militant power to assemble ourselves together, to redress our government, to launch judgment on Election Day and speak convincingly at every opportunity for the restoration of our proper, legal system.

We still have the militant power to expose the lawless federal government agencies, the ones not described and delineated in our Constitution, for the fraudulent corruption and illegitimacy that they are.

We still have our voice, and we still are locked and loaded, powder dry - ready to respond if the ballot box is taken away from us. There are still some patriots in America who know how to fight - AND - who would rather fight than squish.