Posted by
Ron Devito on Saturday, November 14, 2009 12:24:40 AM
By Adrienne Ross - www.motivationtruth.com
A couple years ago a
friend and I went to an outlet in Lee, Massachusetts to do some
shopping. We went from store to store, each time being greeted by a
salesperson asking, "How are you?" and then moving on to the business at
hand: selling goods.
After about the tenth such question, I
decided to have some fun. People ask, "How are you?" not because they
care. In fact, most of the time they don't even wait around for an
answer; they're just going through the motions. We all do it. "How are
you?" is just something we say here in America. It's akin to people
saying, "Have a nice day" at 11:00 at night--which annoys the snot out
of me!
So I told my friend, "Sally, the next time someone asks
me how I am, I'm going to tell them!" She looked like, "Oh goodness,
here we go," because people who know me well know I might do anything
for the sake of being funny or making a point.
So I decided to do something I'd seen in the movie
Ground Hog Day.
So
when the next unlucky salesman asked, "How are you today?" I responded,
"Not too well. Can we go in the back and talk? Oh, did you
really want to know how I'm doing, or were you just making conversation?"
I got a big kick out of that, and I am reminded of it when I think of what Sarah Palin wrote on Facebook yesterday.
Here's why:
I
have heard the President and his administration state time and time
again that those on the other side of the aisle have no interest in
bipartisanship, have no real solutions to offer, and simply want to
block true reform. You've heard it yourselves.
It's a lie.
I
have heard the president say that if anyone has "legitimate"
suggestions, he is ready to hear them. It sounds good, but he uses that
word because
he gets to define what's legitimate. If it
doesn't follow his plan, it's not legitimate. How else can he justify
ignoring the American people who have told lawmakers for months that
they are uneasy--to put it mildly--with the Health Care Bill? How else
can he and Nancy Pelosi ram it down our throats anyway? Apparently our
concerns aren't
legitimate enough.
In the same way
the salesman asked how I was, without really giving a flying fig, so
President Obama--forever the salesman--asked for suggestions yesterday.
This time he replaced "legitimate" with the term "demonstrably good
idea" when describing what kind of suggestion he's willing to consider.
If his history tells us anything, he really isn't expecting to wait
around long enough to get an answer. It's sort of like a drive-by "How
are you?" where he just goes about the business of...well, selling
goods, of course.
Enter Governor Palin who apparently thinks like I do and figured if he's asking, she might as well answer.
So,
as I did with the salesman, she takes him at his word and offers a
response. The only thing missing at the end of her response is, "Did
you really want to know, Mr. President, or were you just making
conversation?"
Below is the beginning of the governor's "demonstrably good idea," posted on
Facebook yesterday. I wonder what the president will do with it.
I
commend the president for acknowledging today that “there are limits to
what government can and should do” to ease our 10.2% unemployment rate
– the highest it’s been since 1983. I also applaud his call for
suggestions and expression of openness to considering “any demonstrably
good idea.” Taking him at his word, I’d like to suggest this one: let’s
learn from history and follow the example of the man who occupied the
White House in 1983 and was able to transform an even worse recession
than the one we’re currently experiencing into the largest peacetime
economic expansion in American history.
Read the entire Facebook note
here.