Thursday, September 04, 2008

Palin Makes Landfall in St. Paul & Tsunami Piper

Piper Palin Picture
Did you notice the natural expressions Lady Palin's made with her face and eyes...she was looking for the camera.  Wow like Reagan Jr.  She has a rare combination of eloquence, elegance and confidence only seen in people who are authentic and comfortable in their own skin.  She commanded that stage and the cameras where at her beck and call while her choice of words and their delivery reminded me of the spell binding performance of the 3 Tenors.  Sarah Palin embodies American Exceptionalism like a virtuoso!  A bit of Audrey Hepburn meets Lady Thatcher with the shoot in her eyes of a Sargent York sprinkled in....Like USA Today gets the best headline and a good article to boot... Palin makes landfall in St. Paul and with he little Tsunami Pipe I might add!  This is Sarah Palin the First....an American Original...
 
Forget the hurricane that hit the Gulf Coast and the firestorm that greeted Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's entry on the national scene.

The tough rhetoric and sharp-edged humor seemed designed more to rally GOP troops than appeal to undecided independents. Giuliani suggested that Obama had switched positions on such issues as Jerusalem's status, warrantless wiretapping and campaign financing. "If I were Joe Biden, I'd want to get that VP thing in writing," the former New York City mayor joked. "He's never had to lead people in crisis," he said of Obama. "Not a personal attack. A statement of fact. Barack Obama has never led anything. Nothing. Nada. The choice in this election comes down to substance over style. John McCain has been tested. Barack Obama has not."

Earlier, when Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle declared that Obama had zero executive experience - "Zero!" - the crowd took up the chant: "Zero! Zero! Zero!" They would repeat it, off and on, through the evening. It was a late start for a critical week. The convention is one of a few moments, along with the fall debates, that some undecided voters tune in to politics. It's a chance to buff a nominee's appeal or dent his opponent. More than 21 million people watched the GOP convention Tuesday night, Nielsen reported - a huge number, albeit fewer than the nearly 26 million people who watched the second night of the Democratic National Convention last week, when New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton addressed the hall in Denver.


Piper Palin Picture

Piper Palin Picture
Piper Palin Picture
Piper Palin Picture
Piper Palin Picture
Piper Palin Picture

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