Palin: "Why I am speaking at Tea Party convention."

sofia

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...no mention of the cool 100 G's she's gonna collect..

http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2010/02/column-why-im-speaking-at-tea-party-convention-.html

Why I'm speaking at Tea Party convention
By Sarah Palin

Later this week I'll head to Nashville, where I'll have the honor of speaking with members of the Tea Party movement. I look forward to meeting many Americans who share a commitment to limited government, common sense and personal responsibility. This movement is truly a grassroots, organic effort. It's not a top-down organization; it's a ground-up call to action that already has both political parties rethinking the way they do business.

From the town halls last summer to the protests and marches in the fall to the game-changing recent elections, it has been inspiring to see real people — not politicos or inside-the-Beltway professionals — speak out for common-sense conservative policies and values. As with all grassroots efforts, the nature of this movement means that sometimes the debates are loud and the organization is messier than that of a polished, controlled machine. Legitimate disagreements take place about tone and tactics. That's OK, because this movement is about bigger things than politics or organizers.


The soul of the Tea Party is the people who belong to it — everyday Americans who grow our food, run our small businesses, teach our children how to read, serve the less fortunate and fight our wars. They're folks in small towns and cities across this nation who saw what was happening to our country and decided to get involved. Thank God for them. Many of these good Americans had never been involved in their government before, but now they attend town hall meetings and participate in online forums. They write letters to the editor. They sign up to be precinct leaders and run for local office and support other independent patriots. They have the courage to stand up and speak out.

Their vision is what drew me to the Tea Party movement. They believe in the same principles that guided my work in public service — whether I was working on the PTA and city council or serving as a mayor, commissioner or governor. I look forward to meeting some of these great Americans this weekend.

Recently, some have tried to portray this movement as a commercial endeavor rather than the grassroots uprising that it is. Those who do so don't understand the frustration everyday Americans feel when they see their government mortgaging their children's future with reckless spending. The spark of patriotic indignation that inspired those who fought for our independence and those who marched peacefully for civil rights has ignited once again. You can't buy such a sentiment. You can't AstroTurf it. It springs from love of country and the knowledge that we can make a difference if we just stand up and stand together.

I thought long and hard about my participation in this weekend's event. At the end of the day, my decision came down to this: It's important to keep faith with people who put a little bit of their faith in you. Everyone attending this event is a soldier in the cause. Some of them will be driving hundreds of miles to Nashville. I made a commitment to them to be there, and I am going to honor it.

But participation won't be limited to those in Nashville who have a ticket. It's much bigger than that. Because the Tea Party movement is spread out across the country — with no central offices or annual events — this is an opportunity to connect with like-minded folks. Yes, there will be speeches given in a room in Nashville. But we'll also be speaking with thousands of Americans watching online at twitter.com/SarahPalinUSA, or through various news outlets. And the conversation will continue on my Facebook page.

I will not benefit financially from speaking at this event. My only goal is to support the grassroots activists who are fighting for responsible, limited government — and our Constitution. In that spirit, any compensation for my appearance will go right back to the cause.

The nature of the Tea Party movement means there may never be a "perfectly orchestrated" event: Democracy in action doesn't come with a manual. But we must not get caught up in the politics or the controversies that some hope will distract from the heart of the movement. The focus must remain on our ideas and beliefs, and on supporting those ideas and beliefs however we can.

This weekend, it's Nashville, but in March, I'll head to Searchlight, Nev., for the kickoff rally at the Tea Party Express III. In April, I'll be in Boston for a Tea Party gathering there. Across the country, tea-partiers will be sharing our vision for America's future, a vision that promotes common sense solutions to out-of-control spending and an out-of-touch political establishment.

The process may not always be pretty or perfect, but the message is loud and clear: We want a government worthy of the fine Americans that it serves. And we're going to keep spreading that message one convention, one town hall, one speech and one election at a time.

Sarah Palin, the former governor of Alaska, was the 2008 Republican nominee for vice president.
 
I will not benefit financially from speaking at this event. My only goal is to support the grassroots activists who are fighting for responsible, limited government — and our Constitution. In that spirit, any compensation for my appearance will go right back to the cause.
 
The way that entire statement is written makes me frown.

I will admit that I clicked on it, thinking "Nah... sofia must have pasted that quote incorrectly. No one would let that slip." In addition to the title missing an article of some kind, someone needs to teach Sarah Palin that the order of words means something.

My favorite new Palinism may be "it's a ground-up call to action" since it makes me think of hamburgers.

Though the following is a close second:

I will not benefit financially from speaking at this event. My only goal is to support the grassroots activists who are fighting for responsible, limited government — and our Constitution. In that spirit, any compensation for my appearance will go right back to the cause.
 
I really don't see a big problem with Sarah Palin except:

1.) She's campaigning John McCain.
2.) She's not as Fiscal Conservative as she claims to be.
3.) She has a weak understanding of Foreign Policy.

Other than that, I don't see why RPF hates her so much. I wouldn't vote for her for president, but she's not a bad person or an insider.
 
I will not benefit financially from speaking at this event. My only goal is to support the grassroots activists who are fighting for responsible, limited government — and our Constitution. In that spirit, any compensation for my appearance will go right back to the cause.

i missed that....but the original plan was for her to get paid 100 K...

it drew criticism so apparaently she was forced to back away.....
she does admit she is getting paid....but will turn it over..

So, why was she getting paid in the first place?
 
I really don't see a big problem with Sarah Palin except:

1.) She's campaigning John McCain.
2.) She's not as Fiscal Conservative as she claims to be.
3.) She has a weak understanding of Foreign Policy.

Other than that, I don't see why RPF hates her so much. I wouldn't vote for her for president, but she's not a bad person or an insider.

she belongs to Bill Kristol. Thats why I hate her.

If she was legit she'd endorse Medina, not Perry.
 
i missed that....but the original plan was for her to get paid 100 K...

it drew criticism so apparaently she was forced to back away.....
she does admit she is getting paid....but will turn it over..

So, why was she getting paid in the first place?

She is probably using appearances to raise money for political action, seems fair. The check may go to SarahPac (just a guess).

dano
She donated $2,000 to Rand is what the news reports say. Maybe, she'll dig a little deeper after the primary.
 
dano
She donated $2,000 to Rand is what the news reports say. Maybe, she'll dig a little deeper after the primary.

That's meeasly.. I hope she donates more than that after her speaking engagement.
 
I really don't see a big problem with Sarah Palin except:

1.) She's campaigning John McCain.
2.) She's not as Fiscal Conservative as she claims to be.
3.) She has a weak understanding of Foreign Policy.

Other than that, I don't see why RPF hates her so much. I wouldn't vote for her for president, but she's not a bad person or an insider.

From my standpoint, it's not that she's a bad person or an insider or anything else. She is not the best standard-bearer for this movement, but that's not up to me to decide for anyone but myself. I find her dishearteningly ill-informed on some issues, and dangerously-opinioned on others. I find contradictions in her viewpoints popping up here and there, and I am not a huge conspiracy fan... but she is very much being marketed right now.

If I were the GOP, and I knew that being the GOP wasn't going to cut it to win elections anymore, and I knew that my party had a chance of unseating a charismatic President and making him a one-term wonder...

Well, what I'd do is I'd find someone "likable" and keep her in the news, and position her to be high up in this "Grassroots" stuff everyone's so excited about. It's like a very unsettling experiment to me sometimes. I get the feeling we're being painted into a corner. No matter where we go, we're going to end up with dirty feet.
 
...no mention of the cool 100 G's she's gonna collect..

http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2010/02/column-why-im-speaking-at-tea-party-convention-.html

Why I'm speaking at Tea Party convention
By Sarah Palin

--


The soul of the Tea Party is the people who belong to it — everyday Americans who grow our food, run our small businesses, teach our children how to read, serve the less fortunate and fight our wars. They're folks in small towns and cities across this nation who saw what was happening to our country and decided to get involved. Thank God for them. Many of these good Americans had never been involved in their government before, but now they attend town hall meetings and participate in online forums. They write letters to the editor. They sign up to be precinct leaders and run for local office and support other independent patriots. They have the courage to stand up and speak out.

--

what was missing here? hmmm... OH...

"and by-golly, since most of these 'everyday Americans' won't be able to afford to buy tickets to this event..."

then whatever blabbering follows...
 
what was missing here? hmmm... OH...

"and by-golly, since most of these 'everyday Americans' won't be able to afford to buy tickets to this event..."

then whatever blabbering follows...

Nah the rabble can follow on Facebook or Twitter... that much is explained *very* clearly.
 
If she was legit she'd endorse Medina, not Perry.

She endorsed Perry before most had heard of Medina. Not saying she would have endorsed Medina, but her endorsement was awhile ago, and I think it's safe to say Medina is rising (more recently).

By the way, Palin is no angel; not trying to defend her as a liberty candidate or someone who truly gets it.
 
That's meeasly.. I hope she donates more than that after her speaking engagement.

Judging my the media Rand Paul received from her endorsement, I'd say it was worth more than money.

Local news all across the state, not to mention the national coverage.
 
I go after Palin all the time because I think she's a woefully underqualified small time politician looking to cash in on the sudden fame thrust upon her when McCain plucked her out of obscurity.

It's not that she's the worst politician out there- there are plenty who are far worse.

But she isn't up to the task of running the country and I oppose her as a standard bearer- if she becomes the front runner or (God forbid) the nominee, we'll be stuck with ANOTHER BAD REPUBLICAN candidate.

She's fully qualified to be Mayor of Wasilla, but President (or VP) of the USA?

She hasn't got the stuff.
 
She endorsed Perry before most had heard of Medina. Not saying she would have endorsed Medina, but her endorsement was awhile ago,

that's what I've tried to explain to some of the conspiracy folk... she went in with Perry almost 6 months ago now... they were buddy-buddy in that US governers org/whatever... didn't expect anything less...

she's somewhere in between the GOP and a more liberty movement... she's being exploited and sometimes I do not think she knows it, other times I do...

my gut tells me she's gunna end up being some neocon/GOP tool... but my gut has been wrong once today and twice since Sunday so you never know how that goes...

still need to observe her a bit more...
 
my gut tells me she's gunna end up being some neocon/GOP tool

I don't think there's a whole lot of "gunna" left to debate. She became a complete neocon tool in the election, and has done nothing of substance to change that. If she ever was anything but a neocon, she sold out long ago.
 
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