Washington Examiner columnist Byron York, formerly one of Palin’s strongest supporters, spoke with conservative activists and they had nothing good to say about Palin’s speech. One of the attendees he spoke with, a person he describes as a “well-connected Iowa Republican,” was especially harsh, saying: “Calling Gov. Palin’s remarks bizarre and disjointed would be charitable. Her shelf-life, even with the most conservative voters in our party, seems to be near the end. In a day filled with strong performances from likely candidates ranging from Scott Walker to Ted Cruz, her remarks were a distraction.” On the Iowa Republican blog, Craig Robinson wrote about how difficult it was to find a positive reaction to Palin’s speech: “Of all the people I talked to about Palin’s speech, only one person didn’t have a negative reaction. That person basically said it was a typical Sarah Palin speech. It was received poorly by everyone else I spoke with. I’m not comfortable sharing everything I heard about the speech — it was that bad.”
Like Palin, Ronald Reagan was purely an inspirational speaker, full of non sequitur anecdotes. When he was elected Governor and later President, everyone thought, this guy is a dope. How can he govern? He didn't. His advisors did.
She makes a fair point in the first clip. If we keep electing the same people over and over, the status quo that nobody seems to like is the result.
Seems like most of these weirdos just like the attention and have no real expectations when it comes to a bid (except maybe Palin who has been taken advantage of and now seems to be in a perpetual state of self-delusion). Does anyone who follows politics closely down there doubt that it will be a Clinton/Bush rehashing next year?
I forgot. Who was the black player she fucked when she, an adult reporter, interviewed him, a college student? She was simultaneously seeing her current husband. The player was later an NBA star.