Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Palin’
When you try to follow the news as much as we do, sometimes you miss out on all of the goodness of the great outdoors. Thankfully we now have, “Sarah Palin’s Alaska”, which premiered Sunday night on TLC, which a review in The New York Times describes:
It’s a nature series for political voyeurs: viewers get to observe Ms. Palin observing nature.
We know a lot of people are talking about the show, and we too can’t resist the surreal look into the life of the woman who might have been the nation’s vice president.
Just looking at the video above, you get the gist of the show: Sarah Palin being outdoors, Sarah Palin being indoors, Sarah Palin being a mom, Sarah Palin posing on rocks… If you don’t get out much, it’s worth a look because the Alaskan landscape looks amazing.
There are plenty of animals in Alaska, and Sarah Palin is a real political animal. The inevitable question is: what does this series means for Palin’s political career. From that same NYT review:
A reality show is a risky step for any politician, but then Ms. Palin is no ordinary politician. It’s still not clear whether she plans to run for president in 2012, or is just riding high on her popularity and fame. The TLC program highlights her physical bravery, but the series’s existence points to a different kind of courage: Ms. Palin is not afraid to be herself.
It is interesting, because most political candidates couldn’t afford this kind of nationwide exposure — and TLC is paying her. But at the same time, arguably Sarah Palin is already so well-known and has such a well-developed folksy persona that the show is just another job for now.
So far, the viewer sees Palin being a mom (who does a lot of rock climbing and salmon fishing, apparently) and the politics is a bit secondary. This might just be the entire appeal to an American populace who can’t remove themselves from the permanent campaign yet still could use some wholesome family fun. Writes Alyssa Rosenberg for The Atlantic:
But in an era of manicured and manipulated reality television, Sarah Palin’s Alaska is good entertainment precisely because of its pettiness and sweet family humor, its innocently prurient look at a very famous family. This may not be the sum of Sarah Palin, and the show may not aid her potentially-extent presidential ambitions. But if all else fails, Sarah Palin has a second career waiting for her as a Real Housewife of Alaska.
We’re curious if you all think that this could help Sarah Palin’s political side or if it maybe will just add one more layer to what the public already knows about her? Are you going to tune in next Sunday? If you need a reason to/not to, check out “The Five Most Ridiculous Moments from the ‘Sarah Palin’s Alaska’ Premiere.“
Startling statistic alert! 66% of parents fed their kids McDonald’s in the last week.
Young voters might have made a difference in legalizing pot in California. A poll explains…
Looking forward to “Sarah Palin’s Alaska?” Check out this (cynical) advanced review.
We at USDemocrazy could not resist sharing with you this arousing assessment of American current events in Anime. Please share with us your favorite moments in the video above. We have so many we do not know where to start…
All right, let’s start with Wall Street. As displayed in the cartoon above (by KAL), Washington politicians are not pleased with the money folks from Wall Street. The biggest target is Goldman Sachs, who sent its best and brightest to the Hill this week to answer some tough questions. Here is their highlight real: …read more.

Am I prettier than Palin? You betcha! Thanks to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Let’s keep it congenial… Sarah Palin’s former beauty queen competition is entering the political scene.
Put down the phone!!!!!!!!! It’s a cancer-causing death machine!
A big-oted deal… Gordon Brown gets his poor British self in trouble.

Whether you love or hate Sarah Palin, you have to admit… she is magnet for the spotlight. When she is not in the headline news, members of her family rush to fill the void.
For example, we at USDemocrazy stumbled across this curious Palin-related news tidbit:
A group of frisky teenagers allegedly led by Palin’s 15 year old daughter, Willow were caught vandalizing a home in Wasilla, Alaska, including breaking doors, stealing clothes, leaving empty vodka containers around.
Calculations are that the home suffered between twenty to thirty thousand dollars in damage. Sources say it appeared the teens stayed in the house for several hours, perhaps even overnight.
Maybe Sarah Palin will be able to explain what happened on her new Television show…
You haven’t heard? The Discovery Channel is picking up her show, for over $1 million per episode. …read more.
It’s a wacky day for news… Probably due to all the cabin fever Mid-Atlantic residents are suffering from… (Snowpocalpyse 2.0!)
We’ve all heard the Sarah Palin 2012 rumors, so now see how they might be materializing!
More rumors coming out of New York state, where Governor Paterson is under fire due to claims in a New York Times article that hasn’t come out yet!
The only way I’m not going to be governor next year is at the ballot box, and the only way I’m leaving before that is in a box,” Paterson said.
Could we see a Justice Clinton on the Supreme Court? The Daily Beast thinks stranger things have happened…
Now that you’ve grown to appreciate USDemocrazy’s thoughtful and insightful predictions for 2010 (what, you don’t agree?!), we hope you’re looking forward to the elections coming up this year.
All of the recent banter over health care and President Obama’s performance in office is raising a question… which party will be victorious in 2010?
Some such people spoke out on The McLaughlin Group on Sunday. ‘Political oblivion’ is discussed in no uncertain terms in the video above.
You can find what the panelists thought on other topics of yearly importance, including the most original thinker and the worst politician of 2009, here.
The McLaughlin Group, for those of you not always tuned into PBS (we saw it while waiting for Sesame Street to come on this week) is a public affairs round-table show with big-mouthed panelists and some fun debates. Not everyone is enthralled with their styling of arguing debating, as shown in this video below:
We at USDemocrazy are responsible for our fair share of awkward moments. But none compare to meeting your long lost twin, and saying “Do I recognize you?”
Could this leave Sarah Palin speechless? Not a chance! . . . Leave us your best caption for the picture above …or a pair!

Sarah Palin releases her new book, Going Rouge Rogue
A new poll by Public Policy Polling finds a majority of the GOP thinks Acorn stole the presidential race for Obama.
Palestinian/Israeli peace talks may be in jeopardy, as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas vows not to seek another term.

Time to pack the fishing Rods! There’s evidence of water on the moon!
Sarah Palin (Remember Her?) is talking back!
Police seize pet Crocodile from Mafia boss! Or was the crocodile the boss?
"Did somebody say my name?" asks Dr. Kevorkian.
Raise your hand if you think you’ve heard enough about health care!
Well, the truth is that we at USDemocrazy think there’s a whole lot still to say. So, whether you have or have not read our most recent post on the big overhaul, this post is still an important read.
Why? One word: euthanasia.
Now, we have heard a lot of euphemisms for this nasty term (which, you know, may be a euphemism too…). When we typed “euthanize the elderly” into Google we discoverd that euthanasia is getting alot of attention these days…
One reason is thanks to a Betsy McCaughey, former Republican lieutenant governor of New York, when she wrote an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal:
But legislation now being rushed through Congress—H.R. 3200 and the Senate Health Committee Bill—will reduce access to care, pressure the elderly to end their lives prematurely, and doom baby boomers to painful later years.
Now, where did this notion of ending the lives of seniors prematurely come about? Presumably from a provision in the oft-talked-about bill. The bill suggests Medicare cover a consultation between the elderly and their doctors every five years. (If you’re feeling ambitious, it’s on page 425 of the bill.)
According to a fact-finding piece aimed at debunking the euthanasia belief, Talking Points Memo pointed out,
These consultations include “an explanation by the practitioner of the continuum of end-of-life services and supports available, including palliative care and hospice, and benefits for such services and supports that are available under this title.”
Additionally, the White House has launched its own site (www.whitehouse.gov/realitycheck) in hopes of dispelling such rumors… which, you know, don’t make Obamacare sound so appealing. (Here’s the link directly to the expert debunking of the euthanasia myth.)
It would seem that what started out as a discussion on helping seniors explore their options has turned into a monster that wants to pull the plug on America’s more mature generation.
“Is the Government Going to Euthanize my Grandmother?” asks Ezra Klein pointedly on his Washington Post blog, to which Georgia Republican senator Johnny Isakson replied with an explanation about end-of-life directives:
In the health-care debate mark-up, one of the things I talked about was that the most money spent on anyone is spent usually in the last 60 days of life and that’s because an individual is not in a capacity to make decisions for themselves. So rather than getting into a situation where the government makes those decisions, if everyone had an end-of-life directive or what we call in Georgia “durable power of attorney,” you could instruct at a time of sound mind and body what you want to happen in an event where you were in difficult circumstances where you’re unable to make those decisions.
Well, that makes sense to people in all fifty states, as Isakson later points out. He also mentions that the aforementioned consultations between patients and doctors about end-of-life treatment options is voluntary, too.
Yet, none of this talk about euthanasia has been helped by the assertion by former Alaska Republican governor Sarah Palin that the new health care plan will include so-called “death panels” to determine who will and who will not get the full level of care they need. Says Palin, via Facebook:
And who will suffer the most when they ration care? The sick, the elderly, and the disabled, of course. The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down Syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s “death panel” so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their “level of productivity in society,” whether they are worthy of health care. Such a system is downright evil.
The truth is, most people would agree that this system is evil. But the question may be is such a system is less fair than our current one?
On the complete opposite of the debate spectrum is Robert Wright at the Atlantic, who writes:
But let’s be clear: the people who are trying to sabotage reform by telling mind-boggling lies about its hidden rationing agenda seem, in fact, pretty content with rationing; they seem happy with a system in which the least “productive” members of society get bad health care, including, occasionally, health care so bad that it leads to death.
For more background, we suggest you check out Politics Daily’s bullet points on the euthanasia issue.
And for the other side, see what the Wall Street Journal says about how Obamacare will treat seniors.
Then, tell us what you think: will we be seeing more Jack Kevorkians under the new health care plan, if it passes? Or can seniors, and the rest of us, rest easy?
“It’s on, Google!!!” Microsoft and Yahoo! get together. We read it all on Google News.
Yeah, I tweeted about mold in my apartment. Sue me.
You cheapskates! Time spends just a little for a cover photo.

Who WOULDN'T want this in their home/office?
Shatner does Palin, by reading, of course, her poetic words.



