"Psst" Alaskans say Palin Is “Racist, Sexist, Vindictive, And Mean”; and notes on anonymous sources
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This is a combination of excerpts from two stories, and I recommend a full read of both. Yes, it sheds a new light on Sarah Palin. However, it also will shed light on how the process works.
We begin with background story as it sets the tone for the actual, and first story.
by Charley James –
Anonymous sources are the bane of a reporter’s existence, and have been at least since Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein used them extensively to unmask Watergate and topple Richard Nixon.
Frankly, writing as someone who has been covering news since the late 1960s for everything from local newspapers to major market TV and radio stations to a major business newsweekly, journalists don’t like citing anonymous sources any more than much of the public likes reading pieces that quote people without attribution. Alas, more often than not, the reality is that in a highly-explosive story such as my piece about Sarah Palin published here on Friday, granting anonymity may be the only way to get a source to agree to be interviewed.
That leads us to the beginning of the first piece.
by Charley James –
“So Sambo beat the bitch!”
This is how Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin described Barack Obama’s win over Hillary Clinton to political colleagues in a restaurant a few days after Obama locked up the Democratic Party presidential nomination.
According to Lucille, the waitress serving her table at the time and who asked that her last name not be used, Gov. Palin was eating lunch with five or six people when the subject of the Democrat’s primary battle came up. The governor, seemingly not caring that people at nearby tables would likely hear her, uttered the slur and then laughed loudly as her meal mates joined in appreciatively.
“It was kind of disgusting,” Lucille, who is part Aboriginal, said in a phone interview after admitting that she is frightened of being discovered telling folks in the “lower 48” about life near the North Pole.
Then, almost with a sigh, she added, “But that’s just Alaska.”
Now to background. How does one find a "Lucille"? Does one simply make her up?
When Palin’s name began leaking out the morning of Aug. 30, I sent an e-mail to an old friend from childhood who has been teaching in Alaska since he finished far too much graduate school, basically asking, “Who is Sarah Palin when it’s not raining and what was she before?”
He wrote back with not just a lengthy, invective-filled diatribe against her and the horse she rode in on but also a link to a 63-page vetting report on Palin he said was done up some time ago by Alaska Democrats. After reading it – information in the dossier goes all the way back to 2002 – I wrote again asking if he knew people I could contact for a possible article. A short list of names was provided, including Lucille the Waitress, the much-discussed and oft-doubted woman who seems to have drawn the largest number of questions from commentators on the article.
And how does he know her? Well, like many people living on minimum wage and tips, Lucille holds a second job which, in this case, includes cleaning my friend’s family home every other week.
Lucille was the first person I interviewed. In her late 50s or early 60s, she was nervous even though I provided her with my friend’s name and suggested she call him first to verify who I am. She decided to proceed with the interview, which lasted about 10 minutes. Assuming she knew nothing about having to put an interview “off the record” or on a “not for attribution” basis before the interview starts. I asked Lucille if I could use her name in my article. She let me use her first name but not her last because she said she was afraid she might be fired.
I called my friend after the interview and, relating what’d said, asked if she was trustworthy. I was assured that, “It’d be easier for Lucille to hunt bears bare handed than to tell a lie.”
So, you keep asking questions.
Racial and ethnic slurs may be “just Alaska” and, clearly, they are common, everyday chatter for Palin.
Besides insulting Obama with a Step-N’-Fetch-It, “darkie musical” swipe, people who know her say she refers regularly to Alaska’s Aboriginal people as “Arctic Arabs” – how efficient, lumping two apparently undesirable groups into one ugly description – as well as the more colourful “mukluks” along with the totally unimaginative “f**king Eskimo’s,” according to a number of Alaskans and Wasillians interviewed for this article.
But being openly racist is only the tip of the Palin iceberg. According to Alaskans interviewed for this article, she is also vindictive and mean. We’re talking Rove mean and Nixon vindictive.
No wonder the vast sea of white, cheering faces at the Republican Convention went wild for Sarah: They adore the type, it’s in their genetic code. So much for McCain’s pledge of a “high road” campaign; Palin is incapable of being part of one.
Tough Getting People Who Know Her to Talk
It’s not easy getting people in the 49th state to speak critically about Palin – especially people in Wasilla, where she was mayor. For one thing, with every journalist in the world calling, phone lines into Alaska have been mostly jammed since Friday; as often as not, a recording told me that “all circuits are busy” or numbers just wouldn’t ring. I should think a state that’s been made richer than God by oil could afford telephone lines and cell towers for everyone.On a more practical level, many people in Alaska, and particularly Wasilla, are reluctant to speak or be quoted by name because they’re afraid of her as well as the state Republican Party machine. Apparently, the power elite are as mean as the winters.
“The GOP is kind of like organized crime up here,” an insurance agent in Anchorage who knows the Palin family, explained. “It’s corrupt and arrogant. They’re all rich because they do private sweetheart deals with the oil companies, and they can destroy anyone. And they will, if they have to.”
“Once Palin became mayor,” he continued, “She became part of that inner circle.”
You find those people with more footwork.
Starting with the small handful of other possible sources provided to me, I began dialling. Some people would talk, others wouldn’t; some would refer me on to other possible interview subjects, others told me to go forth, be fruitful and multiply, in much coarser language before slamming the phone in my ear.
In other words, I relied on what reporters have always relied upon to unearth a story: Legwork, or what it was called about a hundred lifetimes ago when I was first starting out. More accurately, I used my phone. To answer one person who penned a comment to the original piece, this is how someone who grew up in Middle America, visited Alaska once in his life and now lives in Canada could do reporting on a story based up there. Flat rate long distance plans have worked wonders for journalism.
I don't want anyone to think I am leaving things out. Depending on the publication, one can drift into hyperbole a little (in this case admittedly).
Like most other people interviewed, he didn’t want his name used out of fear of retribution. Maybe it’s the long winter nights where you don’t see the sun for months that makes people feel as if they’re under constant danger from “the authorities.” As I interviewed residents it began sounding as if living in Alaska controlled by the state Republican Party is like living in the old Soviet Union: See nothing that’s happening, say nothing offensive, and the political commissars leave you alone. But speak out and you get disappeared into a gulag north of the Arctic Circle for who-knows-how-long.
Alright, that’s an exaggeration brought on by my getting too little sleep and building too much anger as I worked this article. But there’s ample evidence of Palin’s vindictive willingness to destroy people she sees as opponents. Just ask the Wasilla town administrator she hired before firing him because he rebelled against the way Palin demanded he do his job, or the town librarian who refused to hold the book burning Walpurgisnach Mayor Palin demanded.
Now, here's a name those of you who have been following the case will remember - Anne Kilkenny. Yes, she is real and, yes, she did write that email.
Ironically, Palin was pushed into hiring the administrator by the party poobahs who helped get her elected after she got herself into trouble over a number of precipitous firings which gave rise to a recall campaign.
“People who fought her attempt to oust the librarian are on her enemies list to this day,” states Anne Kilkenny, a Wasilla resident and one of the few Alaskans willing to speak on-the-record, for attribution, about Palin. In fact, Kilkenny actually circulated an e-mail letter about Palin that was verified and printed by The Nation.
For good measure, Palin booted the Wasilla police chief from office because, she told a local newspaper, he “intimidated” her.
According to Kilkenny and others in Wasilla as well as Juneau, Palin reduced progressive property taxes for businesses while mayor and increased a regressive sales tax which even hits necessities such as food. The tax cuts she promoted in her St. Paul speech actually benefited large corporate property owners far more than they benefited residents. Indeed, Kilkenny insists that many Wasilla home owners actually saw their tax bill skyrocket to make up for the shortfall. Two other Wasillian’s with whom I spoke said property taxes on their modest, three bedroom homes rose during the Palin regime.
To an outsider, it would seem hard to do, but an oil-rich town with zero debt on the day she was inaugurated mayor was left saddled with $22 million of debt by the time she moved away to become governor – especially since nothing was spent on things such as improving the city’s infrastructure or building a much-needed sewage treatment plant. So what did Mayor Palin spend the taxpayer’s money on, if not fixing streets and scrubbing sewage?
For starters, she remodelled her office. Several times over, as a matter of fact.
Then Palin spent $1 million on an unnecessary, new park that no one other than the contractors and Palin seemed to want. Next, Sarah doled out more than $15 million of taxpayer money for a sports complex that she shoved through even though the city did not own clear title to the land; now, seven years later, the matter is still in litigation and lawyer fees are said to be close to at least half of the original estimated price of the facility.
There are plenty more examples of arbitrary decisions, bad fiscal policy and intemperate behavior. That's why I recommend reading both of the stories.
To sum up the initial article:
“She’s a bigot, a racist, and a liar,” is the more blunt assessment of Arnold Gerstheimer who lived in Alaska until two years ago and is now a businessman in Idaho.
“Juneau is a small town; everybody knows everyone else,” he adds. “These stories about what she calls blacks and Eskimos, well, anyone not white and good looking actually, were around long before she became a glint in John McCain’s rheumy eyes. Why do I know they’re true? Because everyone who isn’t aboriginal or Indian in Alaska talks that way.”
“Sambo beat the bitch” may be everyday language up in the bush. Whether it – and the outlook, politics and worldview Palin reflects when she says such things in public – should be part of a presidential campaign is another thing altogether. The comment says as much about McCain as it does about Palin, and it says a lot of things about Americans who overlook such statements (as well as her record) and vote anyway for McCain.
In finishing his background piece of the story, Mr. James concludes.
As I’ve been doing for 40 years, when I’d finish interviewing one source I’d ask them if they knew anyone else I might call. Thus, one source frequently begat a second which, often, begat a third. Thus, a picture of Sarah Palin began to emerge and the result was Alaskans Speak.
Do I wish more people would have spoken to me on the record and for attribution? Absolutely. Do I regret writing a piece that relied upon so many anonymous sources? Not one bit.
by Charley James
September 6, 2008 at 08:00 pm by dunkelberg, 1632 views, 28 comments





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (28)
at 20:38 on September 6th, 2008
Dunkelberg, good stuff.
at 21:00 on September 6th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
I read through the 63-page vetting report, now that I call news and well researched, Simple, down to the facts and siting sources, events, places and occasions. I wonder though, since this information is not secret and can be read by any one, any where and any time. Why then are they still people supporting the Palin McCain Campaign, now either they are blind narrow minded supporters of the Right Extremist if I may called them that since this is what they are. Or they are plain Fascist and worth. Sorry in advance for having insulted 20% of the USA. Just a guess based on the last Elections statistics.
at 21:26 on September 6th, 2008
Y Carumba !!!
at 23:48 on September 6th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
Yep, she is the worst thing that can happen to the USA and World. Certainly in combination with grandpa John McCain.
That's why Barack Obama should be the next president of the USA:
http://members.nowpublic.com/world/why-barack-obama-should-be-next-president-usa
at 00:28 on September 7th, 2008
I had just come across this on the net this morning and was going to share it, but since I had few contacts in Idaho and Alaska to verify the information provided, decided not for fear someone would think it was all made up.
From my conversations with people I know from there, it doesn't surprise me to hear that Alaska has race issues, huge race issues.
I understand that Palin is originally from Idaho as well. When we went to visit Cord de Lane, it was the most "color free" place I have ever been to in my life! I kept looking around to see if I could find ANYONE that was different. There was none. I am considered white (whatever that means), and I took notice! It reminded me of the Republican National Convention held this week. A sea of "conformity".
As for Palin, a few people were willing to give their names in this article. So there may be something to this. The future "son in law" certainly does raise some interest in this area. He was mindful enough to remove the "doesn't want kids" from his myspace, but left the "f**king redneck" on with pride. In my experience, being from the deep south, like minded people generally tend to hang out together. Not always, but usually. Some are less open with their racial views. They smile and wave, and behind closed doors, they are honest about how they really feel with people they trust and know. What is disturbing though is that this story may be true, and she wants to be VP of the most ethnically diverse country on the planet! That would be frightening!!!
Maybe upon seeing that those of us in the lower 48 do care and have taken notice of Alaska, they will feel free to open up to us if there is something they need to say. We shall see, won't we.
- reply
A concerned Alaskan (not verified)at 00:38 on September 7th, 2008
Good reporting. Most of us here in Alaska do live in towns with small populations so we do have to be careful what we say about elected officials. As a side note not all Alaskans speak the same way Palin does about non-caucasians.
at 08:11 on September 7th, 2008
>Most of us here in Alaska do live in towns with small populations so we do have to be careful what we say about elected officials
We are careful to enunciate clearly so our elected official knows clearly and without doubt how we rate his job performance.
at 01:32 on September 7th, 2008
at 01:45 on September 7th, 2008
One other unrelated inquiry: I've had a couple stories with hundreds of views but only a couple of comments. A couple posters remarked on my comments pages that their earlier posts didn't go thru. I wonder if something's happening to certain targeted posts on the way across the border... statistically, it doesn't jibe. Your thoughts?
at 02:05 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
What gets me is she is caught in the lie and she still says she is not lying.......It is like watching 2 different people inside her body. Jeckyl and Hyde, or a type of 2 personality disorder. What is it that liars are drawn to each other? The more and more I watch this unfold , it appears that they are throwing the election. Whatever is going on....I have always known that McCain was selected in New Hampshire. Before N. Hampshire arrived he was in worse shape than the other runners financially, and suddenly out of no where he wins the N. Hamp primary. I don't buy it....it was rigged..... And he gets his advice from the people who gave him N. Hampshire.....I think he got advice from the Bush team to pick S. Palin. He knew nothing of her, until someone dropped her name in his mind...saying new Gov. Alaska, Oil.....and then he announces without knowing the stuff going on with her.....and what can he do? Drop her? Admit his mistake? Throw out his experience card on Obama for her?
The more I watch this the more incompetent it all really boils down to...From Keating Five, to his drug addict wife holding up a topless dance contest sign, to his son who screws up making a Nevada bank to close down. His connections to crook Phil Gramm still ponying the Enron Loophole that Ken Lay designed who was charged and convicted of defrauding millions from California residents, makes them as liable and they should be indicted as well.
http://downwithtyranny.blogspot.com/2008/09/what-does-sarah-palins-selection-tell.html
He's a wild maverick alright...some character they should stick in a cowboy movie, not as President of the USA. Rev.
at 03:27 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
“She’s a bigot, a racist, and a liar,”...she refers regularly to Alaska’s Aboriginal people as “Arctic Arabs”...
The American people voted Bush in twice. He is also a bigot, a racist, and a liar. It was a master stroke to chose Palin. In the end sexism trumps racism for sympathy/swinging votes.
at 04:11 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 04:54 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff. National Enquirer, News of the World mudslinging to be sure.
at 08:03 on September 7th, 2008
Nice guys don't do well in politics. No country needs a nice guy running the show. Palin sounds stronger and better with every report.
at 08:30 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. I'm going to call family in North Pole I'll get back to you. I do however believe the stories due to the things I've already heard from family. She should be ashamed of herself the "Artic Arabs" as she calls them are natives she's not!
at 08:36 on September 7th, 2008
The correct term is blue-eyed Arabs.
at 18:28 on September 7th, 2008
I'm correcting myself she did go to high school there so I guess that does make her a local. Her nick name was "Sarah Baracuda" in school I spoke with family a little while ago in the North Pole. Our family members who's names I will not mention due to the fact they owned a large media company in Fairbanks. I don't want anything to come back to them in anyway or to the new owners who are friends of the family another thing her husband is part Eskimo.
at 09:06 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff. As Artie Johnson used to say -- very interesting.
at 09:16 on September 7th, 2008
anonymous or just plain make believe. You are a good story teller but honestly you know all this is lies. Anything to promote an immoral agenda......
at 09:29 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
I'm not at all surprised about it, and I think she'll have a golden cow patty if she finds out her new grandchild is actually from that black kid who made that video claiming to be the baby's father.
at 09:44 on September 7th, 2008
This is all so very funny--because Sarah Palin is married to an Alaskan native. Jeez, when the "anonymous" sources--with no outside proof, as real reporters Woodward and Bernstein worked hard to track down--get cited in smears, people just plain forget to check out reality first.
Anything based on just anonymous comments is just....gossip. People who cite Woodward & Bernstein need to actually research and see how much work they did to corrobate anything told to them by any "anonymous" type source.
With real journalism, the newspaper/TV/radio has to be ready to go to court in case they get sued for libel or anything else. So anything done, like W&B, has to have proof of any anonymous "tips", and enough so to get it past the corporate lawyers before publishing. I've been there, done that. My newspaper required 3 named sources with verifiable research before *any* story that began with an anonymous source or tip could be considered for publication.
On the internet, though, anyone can post whatever they want, post anonymous smears, and then pat themselves on the back for being a "citizen journalist" and never be called to account for anything--or have to prove anything. And this is what will sink the current fad for so-called citizen journalism.
Here's what I hear from an "anonymous source"--Obama takes his marching orders from a coalition of Muslim Taliban leaders,conveyed via contributors to his campaign like Rezko. Like that one? It's "anonymous" so it must be true.
at 10:14 on September 7th, 2008
It should be Shhh. Sssh is sissified.
at 11:11 on September 7th, 2008
Say what? I can't believe people even listen to opinion like this. Total falsehood and moronic lies.
at 14:00 on September 7th, 2008
I love the made up notion that because someone has some part of their heritage, or even all of their heritage as one thing, say Caucasian, or African American, for instance, the argument made by some is that they can not possibly be racist, especially against their own.
Coming from a diverse mix of heritages, I have seen so many examples of racism and prejudices within people's own communities and race that I am often taken aback by it.
I hear darker skinned African Americans telling others they are uppity or white because someone speaks proper English. Light skin is considered more acceptable in some communities, darker skin in others. I hear terms like "good hair", and token. "High yellow", green eyes, etc. There is definitely prejudices and racism within th African American communities amongst other African Americans. And I hear the "n" ord used effectionately, but also as a way to describe someone in anger towards other African Americans. I find it very sad.
When I lived in Japan may years ago, the older society members has ideas on mixed races of African American and Japanese, they were considered taboo to some. They shunned those that were mixed. Older Chinese have this too. I heard one of my friends moms tell me that her parents would never accept her child if she had a mixed baby.
In caucasian communities, I hear people say things like "trailer trash", describing whites that are somehow less than everyone else because of where they live, how they dress, or how they talk. Their are seen as being below everyone else in the same race. Like a subsect. And there is still a percentage of the race that isprejudiced. I have met people whose families abandoned them because they got pregnant with an African American child. The child is not accepted by the family. My father would be one of those people. He would not accept a mixed child.
I just wanted to dispell that falsehood.
As I said before, this story about her being racist may be true, but it may not be. I am reserving judgement on this one. I have heard that Alaska has a huge race problem, and I knew it was not very diverse. So it wouldn't surprise me if it was true. I just want a little more evidence on this before I throw the book at her.
I know where she stands on gays, on the right to choose, and death penalty. I know where she stands using her kids as a political platform, then says they are private. I see she is capable of making up credentials to make herself appear more like a Maverick, when in fact she is the status quo for the same Republican right wingers we have had in office for the last 8 years. Anti gays, anti poor, anti atheists, anti women's right to choose. Just because they wrapped it up in a former beauty queen, doesn't mean it isn't the same old ticket.
at 14:56 on September 7th, 2008
dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 22:38 on September 7th, 2008
This is the most irresponsible reporting and it appears that many of you with high ranking on now public and control editing are using rumors to indict Palin. Only on the internet can you report this crap. First name sources Ha. You should be ashamed of yourselves. It's a pathetic display of partisan politics. It may be true but you have NO solid proof. It is just as easy to say I met some one that knows you and has said that you have called every minority group x, y, and some Z. I think you truly have too much time on your hands. This is becoming a rag sheet.
- reply
djermanoat 10:36 on September 11th, 2008
tikun showers the posts with shame and disapproval when he/she is unable to account for the truth of things....after supporting the obvious reporting dunkelberg has provided with videos, and the serpants tongue twisting Palins jawbone. Don't cry here tikun...in disbelief.....give your rag sheet to Bush, Cheney, McCain and Palin......your handout political leaders, that suck off the American taxpayers, that work hard everyday.. That's all they ever give the American people, is war and bloody rag sheets.
at 08:09 on September 11th, 2008
An article that dispels untruths being promoted by the McCain-Palin campaign can be found here.