Former Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan has an absolutely devastating piece in today’s Wall Street Journal about Sarah Palin:
Sarah Palin’s resignation gives Republicans a new opportunity to see her plain—to review the bidding, see her strengths, acknowledge her limits, and let go of her drama. It is an opportunity they should take. They mean to rebuild a great party. They need to do it on solid ground.
Her history does not need to be rehearsed at any length. Ten months ago she was embraced with friendliness by her party. The left and the media immediately overplayed their hand, with attacks on her children. The party rallied round, as a party should. She went on the trail a sensation but demonstrated in the ensuing months that she was not ready to go national and in fact never would be. She was hungry, loved politics, had charm and energy, loved walking onto the stage, waving and doing the stump speech. All good. But she was not thoughtful. She was a gifted retail politician who displayed the disadvantages of being born into a point of view (in her case a form of conservatism; elsewhere and in other circumstances, it could have been a form of liberalism) and swallowing it whole: She never learned how the other sides think, or why.
In television interviews she was out of her depth in a shallow pool. She was limited in her ability to explain and defend her positions, and sometimes in knowing them. She couldn’t say what she read because she didn’t read anything. She was utterly unconcerned by all this and seemed in fact rather proud of it: It was evidence of her authenticity. She experienced criticism as both partisan and cruel because she could see no truth in any of it. She wasn’t thoughtful enough to know she wasn’t thoughtful enough. Her presentation up to the end has been scattered, illogical, manipulative and self-referential to the point of self-reverence. “I’m not wired that way,” “I’m not a quitter,” “I’m standing up for our values.” I’m, I’m, I’m.
In another age it might not have been terrible, but here and now it was actually rather horrifying.
Noonan Palin goes on to note that many of the things that Palin’s supporters cite as her attributes are actually what makes her so horribly bad as a potential national political figure:
“She makes the Republican Party look inclusive.” She makes the party look stupid, a party of the easily manipulated.
“She shows our ingenuous interest in all classes.” She shows your cynicism.
“Now she can prepare herself for higher office by studying up, reading in, boning up on the issues.” Mrs. Palin’s supporters have been ordering her to spend the next two years reflecting and pondering. But she is a ponder-free zone. She can memorize the names of the presidents of Pakistan, but she is not going to be able to know how to think about Pakistan. Why do her supporters not see this? Maybe they think “not thoughtful” is a working-class trope!
The whole thing is worth a read, and Noonan is largely spot-on in cataloging the reasons why Palin is wrong for the GOP, and for America, as I noted in the days before and after the 2008 election.
The only question is how long after he returns from vacation it will take Rush Limbaugh to kick Noonan out of the GOP.

July 11th, 2009 at 6:21 pm
Peggy Noonan writes that Sarah Palin is “self-referential to the point of self-reverence”?
An understatement. Try “delusions of royalty.”
Mrs. Palin actually said she loves Alaska so much that she’s “sacrificing her title” for the state.
See:
http://notionscapital.wordpress.com/2009/07/07/sarahs-sacrifice/
July 20th, 2009 at 3:31 am
Another idiotic attempt to bury a colossus before she takes your 10 cent god to the mat like the know-nothing leftist buffoon he is.