
Palin: ‘pot-smoking creationist’
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By
Jim D'Entremont
Sarah Palin's life has the contours of a made-for-
TV movie. She has already been the subject of a
fawning biography, Sarah: How a Hockey Mom
Turned Alaska's Political Establishment Upside
Down (Epicenter Press, 2008), written in fanzine
prose by Kaylene Johnson. ("Sarah said that she
appreciates the many outdoor adventures she had
as a child....") The official Palin narrative promoted
by the Republican Party portrays her as a
quintessential maverick, a plucky young woman
who came out of nowhere to clean up Alaska's
male-dominated political scene, quash pork barrel
projects, and stand up to Big Oil. But the facts
suggest something darker, quirkier, and more
complex.
The facts emerging about the vice-presidential
candidate are studded with seeming contradictions.
"A pot-smoking creationist?" exclaimed Bruce
Mirken of the Marijuana Policy Project, soon after
the Fox Network broke the news of McCain's choice
of running-mate -- and some of her foibles. Palin,
44, admits to having once smoked marijuana, a
substance with some limited legal status in Alaska,
but now, reverting to Pentecostal propriety, she
advocates tough penalties for dealers and users of
all illegal drugs.
Born in Idaho in 1964, Sarah Heath Palin was
transplanted to Alaska by her father, a high-school
science teacher. Initially baptized Catholic, she has
belonged since childhood to the Assemblies of
God, a Pentecostal denomination whose members
speak in tongues and hurl themselves to the church
floor, "slain in the spirit." In high school, where her
ruthlessness at basketball earned her the nickname
"Sarah Barracuda," Palin headed a chapter of the
Fellowship of Christian Athletes. She now worships
at the Juneau Christian Center, a haven for
proponents of dominion theology, a belief system
advocating Christian theocracy. In keeping with the
tenets of her faith, she is anti-choice, hostile
toward gay sex and extramarital straight sex,
convinced of the literal truth of the King James
Bible, and willing to believe that the world was
created in six days less than 10,000 years ago.
She and her husband Todd Palin were married in
1988. At the time, both were members of the
secessionist Alaska Independence Party. They
became Republicans during the 1996 presidential
campaign.
The Palins' children include a son, Track, a 19-
year-old National Guardsman bound for Iraq, and
three younger daughters. In April 2008, Palin gave
birth to a second son, Trig, who has Down
syndrome. Rumors persist that Palin faked the
pregnancy to protect the actual birth mother, her
unmarried daughter Bristol, then 16, but that would
make Bristol's current, well-documented pregnancy
-- five months as of September 1 -- not just a
mockery of her mother's belief in abstinence-only
sex education, but a sci-fi event.
When Reuters broke the pregnancy story on Labor
Day, many thought the news would tarnish Palin's
family-values image. Instead, it attracted support.
Palin readily acknowledged her unborn grandchild,
stressing that Bristol and the baby's 18-year-old
father, Levi Johnston, planned to marry. (This may
have been news to Johnston, whose MySpace page -
- since expurgated -- expressed, amid such
statements as "I'm a fuckin' redneck," his interest in
dating other women, and his wish not to have
children.) Conservatives praised Palin for her
candor, congratulating Bristol for not choosing
abortion. Focus on the Family's James Dobson
commended the Palins for "living out pro-life
values."
Palin's involvement in Feminists for Life (FFL) is an
allegiance that signifies far more than anti-
abortion sentiments. FFL members regard abortion
as "violence against women," and oppose ending
pregnancy even in cases of rape or incest. Many of
the organization's members also oppose all forms
of contraception.
Alaska's born-again governor has longtime ties to
Senator Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), now under
indictment on seven counts of violating the Ethics
in Government Act. From 2003 to 2005, she was a
director of "Ted Stevens Excellence in Public
Service, Inc., an organization designed to groom
Republican women for political careers. Before he
faced criminal charges, Stevens gave Palin a ringing
endorsement during her 2006 gubernatorial
campaign.
Portrayed as a foe of earmarks -- funding
provisions for constituents' special interests,
inserted into unrelated legislation -- Governor
Palin has sought to benefit from them throughout
her career, securing $27 million worth of perks for
her tiny hometown.
Palin herself is now under investigation for having
fired Alaska's Public Safety Commissioner, allegedly
in retaliation for his refusal to fire her ex-brother-
in-law, State Trooper Mike Wooten, then engaged
in a child-custody battle with her sister. During her
mayoral career in Wasilla, she could be counted
upon to fire any town official who disagreed with
her policies.
As governor, her policies favor making massive use
of the Alaskan wilderness. She says she does not
believe human activity affects global warming; her
much-touted energy expertise is actually a
commitment to widespread development. She
favors off-shore drilling and drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge. She has gone to bat for
victims of the Exxon Valdez oil spill, but on the
whole she confronts Big Oil to ask for speedier
exploitation of Alaskan lands.
If John McCain, 72, is elected, Vice President Sarah
Palin will be poised to succeed the oldest man ever
elected to the presidency, a man with a history of
malignant melanoma.
Also this issue:
Biden' time in the Palinolithic
Joe Biden: A gay-rights liberal
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