The Arrogance of this woman boggles the mind! Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, George Bush, Richard Nixon all in one. That this woman is on the national stage insults us all.
Palin "annoyed" with Katie Couric's questions, says irrelevent.(CNN)
Campaigning Saturday in Fort Wayne, Indiana, a city once represented in Congress by another vice presidential candidate named Dan Quayle, Sarah Palin delivered one of her longest stump speeches to date and revealed that she was "annoyed" with the line of questioning presented by Katie Couric in her now-infamous interview with CBS.
Palin says : I was kind of annoyed with the questions that I was being asked because I thought they were kind of irrelevant to, you know, national security issues and getting our economy back on track, so I kind of showed some of that annoyance."
Couric did, in fact, ask Palin several questions about the economy and national security, focusing in particular on the congressional bailout package, the mortgage crisis, John McCain’s record on regulation, the war in Afghanistan, hunting terrorists in Pakistan, Russia, Iran, Syria, Israel and the role of the United States in the world.
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com...
The governor continued to press the campaign’s message of the day: that Barack Obama and congressional Democrats will, if elected, expand government and redistribute the hard-earned dollars of regular Americans, criticisms that brought on accusatory shouts of "socialist!," "Communist!" and, at one point, "Hussein the socialist!"
The Indiana crowd — easily Palin’s largest of the day — was warmed up by country legend Hank Williams, Jr., who often appears at Palin campaign events to perform his recently-penned ode to the GOP ticket: "McCain-Palin tradition."
But Williams may have been channeling the enthusiasm of the crowds for Palin — and also reflecting recent reports that Palin is "going rogue" with an eye toward the 2012 presidential race. At one point during his performance, he intentionally scrambled the song’s lyrics and put the Alaskan at the top of the ticket, praising a "Palin-McCain tradition."
That musical witticism earned Williams a loud cheer from the crowd.