Palin in 2012

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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No they're not.



A Tale of Two Résumés
Barack Obama versus Sarah Palin.
by Dean Barnett

Having spent over a decade as a headhunter for lawyers in another life, I've seen many résumés. And every résumé tells a story. The stories told by Barack Obama's and Sarah Palin's résumés could hardly be more different for two people of roughly the same age and aspirations.
WHAT STORY DOES Barack Obama's résumé tell? Obama became the head of the Harvard Law Review in 1990 and graduated Harvard Law magna cum laude in 1991. These accomplishments suggest great intelligence and strong interpersonal skills. They also suggest limitless potential.
So what did Obama choose to do with his limitless potential after leaving Harvard? Not much. His first two years out of law school, he began writing a book, commenced lecturing at the University of Chicago Law School and returned to his old vocation of community organizing. Obama's résumé would probably advertise the fact that he eschewed big money options to better serve humanity in these various capacities. Many members of the legal community would view these claims of selflessness with skepticism. Some cynical readers of his résumé would infer that he spent the time "trying to find himself," and perhaps think of the old Bill Cosby crack that after two years of searching, he should have been able to find not just himself but a couple of other people as well.
All readers of his résumé circa 1993 would ask what Obama accomplished at his serial vocations. And there the story gets grim. He didn't finish his book during the two years in question. He didn't pursue any scholarship at the University of Chicago, so his career there stalled at lecturer and never advanced to the professor level. And as is ever the case with something as nebulous as community organizing, pointing to tangible accomplishments would be impossible.
Thus begins a pattern of under-achievement, or more specifically non-achievement, that has followed Obama since law school. In later years, Obama practiced law for a few years and then he had enough of that. His 1995 book, Dreams From My Father showed much promise, yet Obama didn't further explore his skills in this area until over a decade later with the best forgotten campaign tome, The Audacity of Hope. Similarly, Obama was a part time state legislator of minimal accomplishments. When Obama went to the United States Senate, he impressed his colleagues with his potential. But he again never attempted to tap that potential, beginning a run for president shortly after his arrival in the World's Greatest Deliberative Body.
Unlike Obama, one wouldn't look at the early years in Sarah Palin's résumé and necessarily see unlimited potential. A 1987 graduate of the University of Idaho, Palin's greatest accomplishments from her youth would come in the "Miscellaneous Information" portion of the résumé. The fact that she had won a beauty contest would impress some people. Her sinking of a critical free throw on a broken ankle in her high school state championship would impress others. Still, there would be nothing in Palin's résumé from her younger years that would suggest potential like Obama's.
And yet throughout her adult life Palin, again unlike Obama, overachieved. In 1992, she got elected to the Wasilla, AK city council. In 1996 she became mayor. She was by all accounts a very successful mayor. Her résumé entry for her mayoral years would have all sorts of bullet points for tangible accomplishments like reducing city property taxes by 40 percent. Similarly, Palin's time as governor has been distinguished. Both would starkly contrast with the various stops in Obama's career where he occasionally held impressive titles but accomplished little.
Two things would leap out from Sarah Palin's résumé--a pattern of overachievement and a pattern of actually getting things done. Two things would also leap out from Barack Obama's résumé--an undeniable wealth of talent and an equally undeniable dearth of accomplishments.
While it has become almost a cliché on the right to belittle Obama as a talker rather than a doer, his résumé suggests just that. Obama does have the requisite brain power to be president; it's unlikely that the intellectual demands of the job would overwhelm him. But his past work experience is unnerving. Obama had ample talent to excel at all the other positions he has held, and yet he accomplished little at each. So what would he do as president? Would his efforts in the Oval Office be as indifferent and irresolute as they've been at every other stop along his professional path? Could one imagine him making the political sacrifices and showing the fondness for bold action that characterized Harry S. Truman?
As for Palin, she lacks Obama's glittering Ivy League credentials. While that fact scandalizes vast portions of the Bos-Wash corridor, the scandalized neglect the most common purpose for an education--to develop one's abilities to such a point that one can actually begin accomplishing things. And there again is where Palin shines--she has gotten a tremendous amount done everyplace she has been.
In truth, Sarah Palin is the kind of employee virtually every enterprise seeks--the kind who gets things done. And Barack Obama is the kind of employee a company hires only when it's in the mood for taking a risk and willing to wager that the candidate's past performance isn't predictive of his future efforts.
Dean Barnett is a staff writer at THE WEEKLY STANDARD.
 

Avro

Time Out
Feb 12, 2007
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Oshawa
A Tale of Two Résumés
Barack Obama versus Sarah Palin.
by Dean Barnett

Having spent over a decade as a headhunter for lawyers in another life, I've seen many résumés. And every résumé tells a story. The stories told by Barack Obama's and Sarah Palin's résumés could hardly be more different for two people of roughly the same age and aspirations.
WHAT STORY DOES Barack Obama's résumé tell? Obama became the head of the Harvard Law Review in 1990 and graduated Harvard Law magna cum laude in 1991. These accomplishments suggest great intelligence and strong interpersonal skills. They also suggest limitless potential.
So what did Obama choose to do with his limitless potential after leaving Harvard? Not much. His first two years out of law school, he began writing a book, commenced lecturing at the University of Chicago Law School and returned to his old vocation of community organizing. Obama's résumé would probably advertise the fact that he eschewed big money options to better serve humanity in these various capacities. Many members of the legal community would view these claims of selflessness with skepticism. Some cynical readers of his résumé would infer that he spent the time "trying to find himself," and perhaps think of the old Bill Cosby crack that after two years of searching, he should have been able to find not just himself but a couple of other people as well.
All readers of his résumé circa 1993 would ask what Obama accomplished at his serial vocations. And there the story gets grim. He didn't finish his book during the two years in question. He didn't pursue any scholarship at the University of Chicago, so his career there stalled at lecturer and never advanced to the professor level. And as is ever the case with something as nebulous as community organizing, pointing to tangible accomplishments would be impossible.
Thus begins a pattern of under-achievement, or more specifically non-achievement, that has followed Obama since law school. In later years, Obama practiced law for a few years and then he had enough of that. His 1995 book, Dreams From My Father showed much promise, yet Obama didn't further explore his skills in this area until over a decade later with the best forgotten campaign tome, The Audacity of Hope. Similarly, Obama was a part time state legislator of minimal accomplishments. When Obama went to the United States Senate, he impressed his colleagues with his potential. But he again never attempted to tap that potential, beginning a run for president shortly after his arrival in the World's Greatest Deliberative Body.
Unlike Obama, one wouldn't look at the early years in Sarah Palin's résumé and necessarily see unlimited potential. A 1987 graduate of the University of Idaho, Palin's greatest accomplishments from her youth would come in the "Miscellaneous Information" portion of the résumé. The fact that she had won a beauty contest would impress some people. Her sinking of a critical free throw on a broken ankle in her high school state championship would impress others. Still, there would be nothing in Palin's résumé from her younger years that would suggest potential like Obama's.
And yet throughout her adult life Palin, again unlike Obama, overachieved. In 1992, she got elected to the Wasilla, AK city council. In 1996 she became mayor. She was by all accounts a very successful mayor. Her résumé entry for her mayoral years would have all sorts of bullet points for tangible accomplishments like reducing city property taxes by 40 percent. Similarly, Palin's time as governor has been distinguished. Both would starkly contrast with the various stops in Obama's career where he occasionally held impressive titles but accomplished little.
Two things would leap out from Sarah Palin's résumé--a pattern of overachievement and a pattern of actually getting things done. Two things would also leap out from Barack Obama's résumé--an undeniable wealth of talent and an equally undeniable dearth of accomplishments.
While it has become almost a cliché on the right to belittle Obama as a talker rather than a doer, his résumé suggests just that. Obama does have the requisite brain power to be president; it's unlikely that the intellectual demands of the job would overwhelm him. But his past work experience is unnerving. Obama had ample talent to excel at all the other positions he has held, and yet he accomplished little at each. So what would he do as president? Would his efforts in the Oval Office be as indifferent and irresolute as they've been at every other stop along his professional path? Could one imagine him making the political sacrifices and showing the fondness for bold action that characterized Harry S. Truman?
As for Palin, she lacks Obama's glittering Ivy League credentials. While that fact scandalizes vast portions of the Bos-Wash corridor, the scandalized neglect the most common purpose for an education--to develop one's abilities to such a point that one can actually begin accomplishing things. And there again is where Palin shines--she has gotten a tremendous amount done everyplace she has been.
In truth, Sarah Palin is the kind of employee virtually every enterprise seeks--the kind who gets things done. And Barack Obama is the kind of employee a company hires only when it's in the mood for taking a risk and willing to wager that the candidate's past performance isn't predictive of his future efforts.
Dean Barnett is a staff writer at THE WEEKLY STANDARD.

Isn't that cute, someone else thought of a response for you....as usual.

When you want to stop the copy and paste Walt and think with your own mind I'll be happy to respond in kind.

Until then.....

Palin is a quiter and will never be prez....Obama's resume already usurps hers....thanks for playing.:lol:
 

Avro

Time Out
Feb 12, 2007
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Oshawa
Obama quit the Illinois senate and the US senate so that makes him a quitter. At least he's not a quiter like Palin, whatever that is.

Obama quit because he had another job, not a book tour.

Palin quit politics.....put that on the resume....lol.

Keep trying, perhaps you can cut and paste something.:roll:
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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Location, Location
Obama quit the Illinois senate and the US senate so that makes him a quitter. At least he's not a quiter like Palin, whatever that is.
Well, technically, you are right.

But he moved on to a higher role within the government, so it's hardly like quitting, it's more like getting a promotion.

I doubt that you're familiar with that concept.
 

SirJosephPorter

Time Out
Nov 7, 2008
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Isn't that cute, someone else thought of a response for you....as usual.

When you want to stop the copy and paste Walt and think with your own mind I'll be happy to respond in kind.

Until then.....

Quite so, Avro. And it would be one thing if he posted thought provoking, serious articles by reputable, disinterested columnists. But he invariably posts articles by the lunatic right, who are on the right wing fringe of the Republican Party.
 

ironsides

Executive Branch Member
Feb 13, 2009
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SJP: You really have no idea how we think, right or wrong as EagleSmack has mentioned Obama is our President. We may all not like it, but there is always next time. I do not expect Sarah Palin to win in 2012, but if she did life would go on. Of course she has a negative effect on women, most attractive women do. They don't like their men ogling and gawking. Don't worry come 2012 there will be a qualified Republican to run against the Democrats.
 

SirJosephPorter

Time Out
Nov 7, 2008
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SJP: You really have no idea how we think, right or wrong as EagleSmack has mentioned Obama is our President. We may all not like it, but there is always next time. I do not expect Sarah Palin to win in 2012, but if she did life would go on. Of course she has a negative effect on women, most attractive women do. They don't like their men ogling and gawking. Don't worry come 2012 there will be a qualified Republican to run against the Democrats.

i am sure there will be many qualified candidates, ironsides. Whoever is the nominee will give Obama a run for the money (including Palin). It is just that if the economy is doing OK by 2012, Obama will be a difficult opponent to beat.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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Quite so, Avro. And it would be one thing if he posted thought provoking, serious articles by reputable, disinterested columnists. But he invariably posts articles by the lunatic right, who are on the right wing fringe of the Republican Party.

One of your least enchanting habits is this one of belittling any opinion BECAUSE it comes from the right. Not on the basis of what is contains, you simply dismiss it out of hand because you disagree with the viewpoint, and therefore you see no value in it. If you had left out that second sentence, you would have made a reasonable point; as it is, you make yourself look pathetic.
 

SirJosephPorter

Time Out
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One of your least enchanting habits is this one of belittling any opinion BECAUSE it comes from the right. Not on the basis of what is contains, you simply dismiss it out of hand because you disagree with the viewpoint, and therefore you see no value in it. If you had left out that second sentence, you would have made a reasonable point; as it is, you make yourself look pathetic.

You may not like it, but that is the truth, TenPenny. Anything written by a right wing extremist is not worth the paper it is written on. No doubt the same applies to left wing extremists, but you don’t see anybody here copy and paste articles by left wing extremists, so it is not relevant here.
 

TenPenny

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Jun 9, 2004
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You may not like it, but that is the truth, TenPenny. Anything written by a right wing extremist is not worth the paper it is written on. .

You are the most pathetic hypocrite on this forum. If you were at all a thinking man, a liberal, you would at least consider the perspective that everyone writes from. Even the right wing nutjobs have a reason to think the way they do. I sometimes agree that you have a point.

But you are so patronizing, so closed-minded, you are a joke. You are a disgrace to thinking people everywhere.
 

gopher

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Jun 26, 2005
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Minnesota: Gopher State
''was trashed over and over again by hateful screaming libs last year''


LOL! Today it is REPUBLICANS who are screaming bloody murder over Palin's many lies.

Did you watch REPUBLICANS Scott Conroy and Nicolle Wallace on MSNBC today?

Both said Palin is undergoing ''bizarre fixations'' when she alleges that neither prepared her for the Katie Couric interview which proved to be such a disaster for her. BOTH STATE ON THE RECORD THAT THEY FULLY PREPARED HER. This was corroborated by Republican McCain.

McCain was also interviewed by that network and he stated categorically that Palin has made up ''fabrications'' as to the work of Conroy and Wallace. He praised their work and Palin has offered nothing to disprove his claim.

MSNBC stated that they invited Palin to counter these refutations today - PALIN REFUSED TO REPLY TO THESE CHARGES!

 

gopher

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''Dean Barnett is a staff writer at THE WEEKLY STANDARD. ''


Weekly Standard --- that's all you need to know. You'd likely find more credibility in the Faux network.

LOL!
 

ironsides

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Feb 13, 2009
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i am sure there will be many qualified candidates, ironsides. Whoever is the nominee will give Obama a run for the money (including Palin). It is just that if the economy is doing OK by 2012, Obama will be a difficult opponent to beat.


Well as of now, no matter what the polls say, the economy is not doing well, jobs are still being lost and people are still losing homes.Yes the rich are still getting richer. Many States are on the verge of bankruptcy just like California. Freeloaders still want more. So you can use that as a baseline. No, all is not well with the people in the U.S.
 

SirJosephPorter

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Well as of now, no matter what the polls say, the economy is not doing well, jobs are still being lost and people are still losing homes.Yes the rich are still getting richer. Many States are on the verge of bankruptcy just like California. Freeloaders still want more. So you can use that as a baseline. No, all is not well with the people in the U.S.

We still have three years to go, ironsides. That is a long time in economics and in politics.

When Bush took over in 1988, economy was doing very well. Yet Bush lost in 1992, because economy was in the tank.

On the other hand, economy was in the tank when Clinton took over in 1992. Yet he easily won the reelection in 1996, since the economy was doing very well.

So today's economy is no indication of how it will be in 2012.