Monday, November 16, 2009

Palin gives Obama a 4 on a scale of 1 to 10

From ABC News:

In an interview with ABC News' Barbara Walters, Palin, whose book, "Going Rogue: An American Life," lands on bookshelves Tuesday, said she would give the president a mere four for his job performance on a scale of one to 10.

"There are a lot of decisions being made that I -- and probably the majority of Americans -- are not impressed with right now," said Palin, the former governor of Alaska. "I think our economy is not being put on the right track, because we're strayed too far from, fundamentally, from free enterprise principles that built our country. And I question, too, some of the dithering, and, hesitation, with some of our national security questions that have got to be answered for our country."

1 comments:

exeal said...

I watched Good Morning America this morning (Tuesday) with Barbara Walter's interview. When they started talking about Tina Fey and her "I can see Russia from my house" comment Sarah said:
"Of course I never said that and yet the line was blurred and I think people because it was repeated so often perhaps believed that I had said such a thing. I think she was funny though and I think she was very talented and spot on."

What was so funny about that whole part of the interview was that Barbara Walters was one of those people who thought that Sarah actually said "I can see Russia from my house". I watched The View one day a couple of months ago when John Ziegler was a guest. He made a point of saying that Sarah did not say she could see Russia from her house. Barbara seemed to think she caught Ziegler in a lie and she said (While pointing/wagging her finger at Ziegler) that Sarah most certainly DID say that... She HEARD Sarah say it and there is VIDEO of her saying it. Ziegler told Barbara, no, it was Tina Fey who said it in an SNL skit and the MSM played that clip so much that a lot of people actually think it was Sarah who said it. Barbara blinked a few times and "uh, uh, uh" a few times and went to a commercial break.