Go back and listen to it again. Her first response was to call for clarification. When Gibson wouldn't give it, she realized he was trying to set her up. She smelled it.TSDguy wrote:
Her body language didn't say "do you mean THIS or THIS" it said "I have no idea what's going on."
Indeed he tried to set her up - with false information.
This reminds me of the 1968 election when Vice Presidential candidate Curtis LeMay (a military man) was asked "Would you use nuclear weapons if it was necessary?" That's a set-up question. No matter what answer you give other than "That's a bullschit question!", you are giving this wannabe reporter a soundbite for the 6 o'clock news. LeMay's response? "Of course I would use them if it was necessary! That is what you said, right?" But from that point forward, he was branded as the VP candidate who wanted to nuke the world.
Ever been interviewed for a fight, TSDguy? You really need to do some major redirection if you don't want to wake up in the ER or be pushing daisies from 6 feet under. The look on Palin's face was the look of someone who smelled the pending gotcha.
Gibson got his sound bite. And unfortunately only a few reporters will step up and call him on his incorrect characterization of The Bush Doctrine. But quite frankly I challenge anybody here on the ability to catch the nuances of both the interpretation AND the lack of any single policy which could be called that. No wonder Palin got deer-in-the-headlamps for a second. It takes the sharp mind of George Will to pick up on that.
Shame on the rest of the press for letting that one go.
- Bill