Sarah
Palin, the former half-term Alaska Governor, vice presidential
candidate, presidential wannabe, conservative heart throb and coiner of
the term "death panels," has never been good at irony.
Come to think of it, in the six years since she burst on the
national scene, she has repeatedly proven herself to be good at nothing
except deception and obfuscation, as well as a pitch-perfect ability to
say the wrong thing at the right time, such as her outrageous comments
in the wake of the 2011 assassination attempt that nearly took the life
of Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, killed six people and injured 13
others. Palin can no longer see Russia from her kitchen window, to
paraphrase one of her legendary misstatements, and today lives in a $1.7
million Scottsdale, Arizona, home, although still claiming to be an
Alaska resident.
While
Palin's star has faded for all but a hard-core few conservatives for
whom her absence of credibility and competence were never a concern, she
continues to say outrageous things, most recently in asserting that
likely Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Rodham Clinton must
release her medical records because, by implication, this would prove
she is unsuitable for office because she is brain damaged as a result of
a fall in December 2012 that resulted in a concussion.
"America, you deserve fair and consistent coverage of relevant issues
before deciding a Presidential/Vice Presidential ticket, so have faith
the agenda-less media will refuse to push whispers and wildly inaccurate
information about a partisan politician’s body part," Palin said in a statement. "Goodness, no one
credible would print lies, continually harass a candidate's doctor [and]
disrupt local hospital staff . . . "
How outrageously ironic.
Palin,
in calling for Clinton to release her medical records, which she will
be obligated to do if she is indeed the nominee, adds yet another bright
star to her constellation of hypocrisy.
This is because Palin herself
repeatedly promised during the 2008 presidential campaign to
release her medical records as had Barack Obama and Joe Biden. When
running mate John McCain finally did so late in the evening of November
3, the day before Election Day, there
was a page-and-a-half long letter -- as opposed to medical records --
annexed to McCain's records signed by her personal physician stating
that she was in good health and had had an uneventful pregnancy.
In
mentioning the pregnancy, the letter alluded to one of the great
mysteries -- or yucky non-stories, if that is your view -- of the 2008
campaign that Palin references in her statement on Clinton's: Did she
put over an enormous hoax on the American public in claiming she was
pregnant with and gave birth to Trig Paxson Van Palin on April 18,
2008?
The question, in my view and that of a small handful of
investigative journalists with long attention spans, was valid because
there was no proof
and there still is none today that Palin is Trig's biological mother.
And so, one good turn deserving another (thank you, Ms. Palin) below is an update of my own investigation.
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