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The Virtue of “Quitting”
www.wordpress.com ^ | 26 September, 2011 | MarkAmerica

Posted on 09/26/2011 10:05:11 AM PDT by el_texicano

One of the constant smears leveled at Sarah Palin is that she “quit” her office as Governor of Alaska. The word “quit” is used in the form of a smear, in order to paint her as less-than-committed, but the truth of the matter is that in resigning her post, what she actually did was a magnificently honorable act, rarely done in politics. How many times have you wondered if Barack Obama shouldn’t simply do the honorable thing in the name of the country, and step aside? The problem is that would still leave you with President Joe Biden, so it would not offer much relief. More importantly, however, we must consider the nature of the alleged “quitting” and why Governor Palin left her office early. She wasn’t hounded from office, or anything of the sort, except that what tore at her was the fact that each day she remained, costs were being inflicted on the people of her state, counted in all the wasted dollars spent handling the various FOIA requests, and all the bottled-up legislative work that hung in the balance. Governor Palin could have stuck it out, but what would have been the cost to the State and the People of Alaska? We’ve had numerous politicians under fire for actual wrong-doing who wouldn’t resign, relying upon tax-payers to bear the costs of their defense.

In truth, it is the willingness of our current president to see your money wasted while trying to stave off investigations into his conduct and the conduct of his administration in a number of issues that permits him the luxury of avoiding the “quitter” label. Visitors logs? Fast and Furious? Solyndra? The list goes on and on, but measuring his character, we now know he will never yield the office, no matter how badly he’s run it, and no matter how much it costs the people of America to sustain him in it. Even as some members of his party now murmur that he should indeed “quit” in the interests of his own party by refusing his renomination, Obama stubbornly rejects such suggestions on the basis that his personal claim to official power supersedes the interests of his party, the tax-payers, the voters, and frankly anybody else who gets in his way.

Contrast this with the facts of Governor Palin’s resignation. She had already said, some years before, that she would rather quit the office than ever let the people of Alaska suffer needlessly for her sake. Many politicians make such oaths, but few ever live up to them. After her Vice Presidential run in 2008, she returned home to Alaska to find that the war against her from the national stage had been moved to a field of battle in Alaska. The war against her raged on, with a single purpose: Her adversaries had seen her powerful potential on the national stage, and this was a preemptive strike against her, with the ultimate purpose of the attack being to destroy her, that she could never return to do battle against the machine in Washington DC. If the people and the state of Alaska needed to be ruined in the process, they considered it as mere collateral damage in a necessary campaign.

All of it was politically motivated, and it was hampering the function of the state. Alaska was losing millions, but worst of all, the harsh national politics had been imported into the state and this was obstructing the legislative agenda. The simple fact was that Sarah Palin had become the focus and object of the debate. This was a war to destroy her, and if it meant sinking the state of Alaska with her, the political forces from outside the state were happy to oblige. Realizing that the attacks upon her were causing the state to bleed money and that her legislative agenda was being obstructed for the sake of national politics, Palin decided to step aside and remove herself from the equation. No longer would Alaska be attacked for the sake of the war on Sarah Palin. What Palin did in resigning was to isolate herself from the state so that its business could go on under the leadership of her successor, Lt. Governor Parnell. As a result, the people of Alaska would no longer be made to suffer as proxies in the battle to destroy her. Rather than hunker down and weather the storm as most politicians will try to do, she did the most shocking thing and met their immediate demands. As she has written:

“The reaction to my announcement was instructive. The same people who had wanted nothing more than to throw me out of office were suddenly outraged that I was obliging.”

Some will insist on gaining the political advantage of using the term “quitter” for its negative connotations. This is to tell a lie, and further a smear, and while some are only too happy to do so, I believe in justice, so let me tell you what this really had been: Governor Palin possessed the strength of character to act in the best interest of her state and its people despite the costs to her own short-run political power. She must have known when she resigned her office that she would be called a “quitter.” She must have known how this would be used against her in any future political endeavor. What she did was to put her faith in the good sense of the American people to recognize the truth. She always believed in the values and wisdom of the American people to ultimately sort out what was real and what was merely another political falsehood.

In my favorite book, Atlas Shrugged, the protagonist is John Galt. His act of “quitting” and all those who followed him was portrayed by the villains as an act of abandonment and cowardice. One after the other, all the best and most virtuous people “quit” and disappeared, leaving behind all the trappings of fame and fortune for the sake of an idea, knowing that by the rules they had been fighting, they could never succeed or win. Instead, they “quit.” In so doing, they rescued the world, because without them, upon whom the villains had relied to keep the world going, evil was starved out of power. As they quit, they joined in an effort to undermine the broken, evil system from the outside in a way they could have never accomplished from within. In isolation, what they found is that their power had been magnified by their absence.

Is Governor Palin’s position now any different? The great shellacking of the left in 2010 was largely a result of the determined efforts of Sarah Palin and all those Tea Party patriots who answered her clarion call to clean up Washington by sending in new blood. The Tea Party responded magnificently, and they began in earnest the process of that critical reform. In this way, Sarah Palin has been a far more effective leader for the nation than she could have been in her office of Governor. What she must have discovered is what John Galt knew: In walking away, you will find liberation if you have the wisdom to make use of it.

At the end of the story, there comes a moment when the so-called “quitters” realize the way has been made clear, and they decide to return to the world at large. I can only imagine that Sarah Palin now looks to see if her way is now clear, and whether there is an opening through which she may now re-emerge. I believe that evidence has come in several forms, including the results of 2010′s elections, and the progression of this electoral season. At this moment, the Republican field is being shown to have few shining lights. Herman Cain’s ascension to the top of the Florida GOP straw poll is just the latest example. What all of this demonstrates is that the Emperors have no clothes. The people we’ve been told are the “front-runners” have been such only for the apparent lack of better choices. There is a vacuum into which others may attempt to leap, but in truth, we all know that there’s only one person who will satisfy this lacking, and it isn’t the governor of a very blue state.

Those who suggest Palin had “quit” understand little about her governing philosophy. She had always believed that no single personality is more important than the business of responsible governance. When she resigned her office, it was in recognition of this fact and obedience to her conscience on the matter. Most politicians will fight on because to hold power is the end-all, be-all of their existence. Their egos come before all else, and the narcissism implicit in their behavior drives their decision-making. It is always all about them. Governor Palin is not that kind of leader, and her resignation was the indisputable proof. She thought it better to stand aside, or as she put it, “to pass the ball.” You may be forgiven if you have bought the superficial narrative about “quitting,” but it’s time to accept the truth of this story: What she did, she did out of her firm commitment to Alaska and Alaskans.

Many Americans claim to want leaders who exhibits the strength of character to put the interests of the country before their own political careers. Governor Palin made precisely that choice, to her own political detriment, but to the immediate benefit of the people of her state. “Passing the ball” to Sean Parnell, the media circus and the political smear campaign followed her, leaving her successor to run with the ball unobstructed on behalf of the people of Alaska. Knowing this now lays the question upon your intellectual table: Did you mean it when you said you prefer your leaders to put the interests of the people ahead of their own, or was that mere posturing on your part? Politician after politician makes this sort of promise, but damnably few of them live it. What of you? When you lamented the state of politics and the general moral bankruptcy of so many politicians, did you mean it? Did you understand what you were asking of them? Having watched politics for so many tiresome years being played out with always the same essential ending, have you become too cynical to recognize that in the person of Sarah Palin, there had finally been a politician who had actually lived according to that premise which is for so many just more high-minded talk never to be followed by actions?

I long ago decided that Sarah Palin was anything but a “quitter.” I realized it was just one more example in a long string of smears, where virtues are twisted into vices. In much the same way that my favorite heroes in literature had their best and highest virtues turned upon them, so it is true of Sarah Palin. I recognize in her a politician who did not abandon her oath, but instead, in the most thoroughly rational and honorable way, she kept true faith and allegiance to it. What her example should actually teach us is how lacking in honest virtue our current leadership in Washington DC has been, as they fight to maintain their power without any concern for how it hampers the nation and its people. Instead, they cling to power like so many ticks to the hound, embedded and draining the lifeblood of the nation. As a group, they could exercise no greater virtue than to “quit,” but don’t expect that spectacle any time soon. The vice that is their compulsive grasping for power forbids it, and all the while, the nation suffers mightily at the hands of their intransigent incompetence. There is great virtue to be found in that rarest of politicians who puts the interests of the whole people ahead of her own, but for a change, and in justice to all our finest declarations about the virtues we wish to see in our leaders, we should recognize it and honor it. Sarah Palin isn’t a “quitter.”

She kept her word.


TOPICS: Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: gop; palin; politics; president
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To: el_texicano

This is just Perry troll bait. WTF cares? Only them. Obama must go and Palin can get it done.


21 posted on 09/26/2011 10:57:14 AM PDT by ReneeLynn (Socialism is SO yesterday. Fascism, it's the new black. Mmm mmm mmm...)
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To: Fresh Wind
Good luck convincing the sheeple that her resignation was anything other than a cowardly act by someone wanting to cash in on a TV deal, because THAT’S the way it will be spun.

Palin can overcome her negatives just like Reagan did. If she can convince enough Republicans to win the GOP nomination, then she will be able to do it with the general populace. And if it's really true that she can't overcame these media-manufactured negatives, then the perceived problem will take care of itself, won't it?

The media has smeared Sarah relentlessly, and she is still standing. There is little substance to her negatives. So I really don't understand all the hysterical hand-wringing and deference to the media.

We shouldn't let the media choose our candidates for us, nor embrace the notion that they have any such power. They may have at one time, but no longer.

22 posted on 09/26/2011 10:57:34 AM PDT by sargon (I don't like the sound of these "boncentration bamps")
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To: Wolfstar

As demonstrated daily by the PDSers here.


23 posted on 09/26/2011 11:00:09 AM PDT by JaguarXKE
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To: el_texicano

I resigned from a company that was telling me to remove data points from a set being sent to a customer. I refused and resigned. Looking back I could have escalated further than I did, but I felt that mere fact they were putting me in that situation told me more about the company than I would learn in any other situation. I’ve had people tell me quitting is never the answer and they can never look me straight in the face when I explain the situation above.

I understand where Palin was coming from and she likely felt it was the best thing she could do for the state and that she was leaving it in able hands .... of course it didn’t hurt that she had a fall back that was more lucrative. But it doesn’t mean she was wrong.

In the end none of us can read her mind and know why she really did it, but I tend to err on the side of trust - the destruction of that trust with my past employer is why I left.


24 posted on 09/26/2011 11:02:29 AM PDT by reed13
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To: NakedRampage

“I’m sorry, but you can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.”

Sadly, though, you can make a silk purse and have people who will tell you it isn’t silk, but a sow’s ear. They are deeply troubled. Scrape them off and keep moving.


25 posted on 09/26/2011 11:02:52 AM PDT by jessduntno (Obama shanks. America tanks.)
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To: NakedRampage

“I see dumb people...
... they’re everywhere...
... they walk around like everyone else...
... they don’t even know that they’re dumb...

And...
Some of them...

...THEY POST HERE”


One can not teach a pig to sing. Don’t worry, I don’t want to hear you squeal.


26 posted on 09/26/2011 11:07:15 AM PDT by Gator113 (Palin 2012, period.....)
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To: reed13

“the destruction of that trust with my past employer is why I left.”

Good for you...


27 posted on 09/26/2011 11:08:19 AM PDT by el_texicano (Extremism in the face of tyranny is no fault, Moderation in the face of evil, no virtue.)
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To: wtc911

You would rather have someone like Obama who uses tax money to defend himself?


28 posted on 09/26/2011 11:15:02 AM PDT by CynicalBear
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To: Fresh Wind
>> And, if she gets the nomination, you can count on a barrage of TV ads hitting her on this issue.<<

That would be good! Then we can show how she sacrificed to keep from having the Alaska tax payers pay for her defense unlike Obama who uses our tax money to defend himself from showing his BC.

29 posted on 09/26/2011 11:17:11 AM PDT by CynicalBear
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To: Gator113
Haha, yes, very clever and all that.

>But the fact remains that she quit.

30 posted on 09/26/2011 11:22:15 AM PDT by NakedRampage (Fortis cadere, cedere non potest (A brave man may fall, but he cannot yield))
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To: sargon
There is no politician in the nation whom I trust more, even though I might disagree on some details.

That's really what it comes down too, isn't it?

TRUST

I trust her because she put the people of Alaska before herself. I trust her to do the same thing for the nation.

31 posted on 09/26/2011 11:26:06 AM PDT by Jess79
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To: who_would_fardels_bear
Regardless of whether or not her quitting was a moral act, she was only governor of a sparsely populated state for a short time. Is this enough experience for a stint as president?

Not if that were her only governmental experience. But it's not -- she has nearly 20 years of government experience, all in executive positions.

32 posted on 09/26/2011 11:26:36 AM PDT by kevkrom (This space for rent.)
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To: NakedRampage

You can’t make a Conservative FR post out of pig slop...but you had to try anyway.


33 posted on 09/26/2011 11:30:38 AM PDT by MestaMachine (Wanna confuse obama? Ask him his REAL name.)
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To: NakedRampage; Gator113
And its not that I don't like Mrs. Palin. But in quitting she made a huge political blunder...And I know what you're going to say, she put Alaska before herself and blablablah...But the fact remains that you can't just quit in the middle of term, and then very quickly take a lucrative TV deal.

And what if she got elected POTUS and decided it was in America's best interest for her to resign from that job?

34 posted on 09/26/2011 11:31:49 AM PDT by NakedRampage (Fortis cadere, cedere non potest (A brave man may fall, but he cannot yield))
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To: wtc911

“Utter nonsense.”

Yes, you do. Frequently.


35 posted on 09/26/2011 11:34:30 AM PDT by MestaMachine (Wanna confuse obama? Ask him his REAL name.)
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To: NakedRampage

Did you ever figure out if Commander Neil Armstrong actually landed on the moon or was the whole thing done in a movie set?

Do you like Gladiator movies?


36 posted on 09/26/2011 11:34:30 AM PDT by Gator113 (Palin 2012, period.....)
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To: sargon
She hit the ground running and helped forge a national grassroots movement which gave rise to a new political force in American politics: the TEA Party.

Nothing against Sarah, but I didn't get involved in the Tea Party because she lead me to do so. I got involved because I was sick of irresponsible federal spending.

Yes, Sarah and I share the same views on that, but I can't say that she was my "leader" in deciding to take action.

37 posted on 09/26/2011 11:35:36 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: MestaMachine
I see. Palin is above critisism.

The point is, she is a politician, and no politician is right every time on everything. By worshipping the ground she treads on and refusing to acknowledge that Palin is only human, like you and me, you guys are making a huge mistake...

Like I said before, I like Palin and I've read her book and all that, but I don't think she can overcome the political obstacles put in her way. At this point, I'm putting my insignificant support behind Cain, but I imagine Perry will get the nomination.

38 posted on 09/26/2011 11:37:22 AM PDT by NakedRampage (Fortis cadere, cedere non potest (A brave man may fall, but he cannot yield))
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To: wtc911

“Utter nonsense.”

You didn’t need to post that... we all know that your posts are “Utter nonsense”.


39 posted on 09/26/2011 11:37:39 AM PDT by Gator113 (Palin 2012, period.....)
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To: Gator113
What?

Is this the point where I get nervous and break down and accidentally reveal I'm a 3rd tier retread from DU or something?

Because its not going to happen. Because I'm not.

40 posted on 09/26/2011 11:40:15 AM PDT by NakedRampage (Fortis cadere, cedere non potest (A brave man may fall, but he cannot yield))
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