As pundits around the country debate what the political future will be of Alaska's soon-to-be former Governor, I can't help becoming increasingly convinced of the prediction I texted to my brother after watching her Vice-Presidential acceptance speech last summer: Sarah Palin will be the first woman president of the United States.
Don't be fooled - that condescending laughter you hear from Palin-despising liberals is a lot less about them thinking it could never happen, and a lot more about them fearing that it will.
Why else would that Democrat propaganda machine called the New York Times dump so much ink over the fourth of July weekend attempting to convince Americans Palin was a lunatic? Back-to-back columns by those queens of incoherence, Gail Collins and Maureen Dowd, lambasted Palin for being a, "disjointed, garbled, scandalous, underachieving, nutty, batty, erratic, egoistic, solipsistic, reckless, crazy quitter," who "deserted Juneau with her tanning bed." Methinks they doth protest too much.
But the Times wasn't alone. Network morning shows and evening newscasts informed us that her resignation amounted to political suicide and undoubtedly took her out of contention for the presidency in 2012. Evidently it didn't dawn on them that their rush to diminish the notion of her chances only demonstrated how strong they really are.
Consider the left's narrative ever since John McCain introduced Governor Palin to the national scene: she was supposedly an inexperienced, uneducated, quirky mayor of a podunk town that simply was not ready for prime time. She lacked concentration, was unnecessarily divisive, mean to animals, and lacked any foreign policy savvy. This, they said, sunk McCain's chances of winning the presidency. No matter how demonstrably false, this was exactly the template the left pretended to believe. But if they truly did - if they were truly convinced of her incompetence and un-electability - then why are they so obsessed with talking about her?
Why not focus on the real threats to their power like Republican Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, or the increasingly impressive representative Mike Pence? Why not spend the valuable pages of the Times ripping Newt Gingrich's strategy for real change, or Mitt Romney's perpetual candidacy? Why focus on a loony that apparently no one would vote for anyway? Why work so neurotically to convince Americans of what they say we already think?
The obvious answer is that they know Americans don't think those things about Governor Palin, and they are scared to death of her.
Regardless of what the talking heads postulate, any conscious observer of the 2008 election knows that McCain's margin of loss would have been staggering without the presence of Sarah Palin on his ticket.
Regardless of what left-wing demagogues deride as her lack of experience and knowledge, remember that this is a woman who had more executive experience in 2008 than Obama, Biden, and McCain combined. Further, the position she took on Israel during the campaign that was mocked by liberal journalists is now being parroted by the Obama administration. And Palin's statements on personal responsibility and the foolishness of the Obama stimulus monstrosity now seem prescient given the bill's epic failure.
Regardless of the "quitter" nonsense, the fact remains that politicians leave their posts to take on new, greater challenges and opportunities on a regular basis. An example would be the man who "quit" on the people of Illinois to become president. The truth is Palin had become such a target for the demented left that the good people of Alaska were being forced to pay millions of dollars of legal fees to fight frivolous lawsuits brought against their Governor for purely political reasons. Her decision spares them that, plus it allows a staunch conservative lieutenant governor to carry on the successes of her administration and run in 2010 as an incumbent.
Regardless of what the Democratic spokesmen on MSNBC pontificate about Palin being an embarrassment to the Party, just ask any 2010 Republican congressional candidate which national figure they want to come and help campaign for them. I'll give you a hint...it's not going to be Mike Huckabee.
The primary source of the left's angst over her decision is that as long as she was confined to the Great North, she had limited ability to grow her political base. Now, she is free to tour, speak, study, raise money, and rejuvenate the country's defense, economic, and social conservatives. That is what has the liberals worked up into a lather.
Many of the high-priced political thinkers are suggesting that if Palin is eyeing the presidency at all, it won't be until 2016 or 2020. I don't buy it. In three years, she will be the most well known, articulate, charismatic conservative in America with a boatload of cash, an energized base, and a solid team of advisers around her. Palin in 2012? You betcha.