
It's Debate Night in America, with vice presidential candidates Joe Biden and Sarah Palin squaring off at Washington University in St. Louis.
The New York Times has a useful piece today in which they asked several writers, business people, and political figures for question suggestions.
They were all good, but this one seems particularly timely:
Governor Palin, as we both know, Alaskans are a special breed. I grew up in Fairbanks, a few hundred miles north of Wasilla. I was proud to live on the frontier, far from civilization. Like many Alaskans, I lived in a log house on a dirt road, with no city water, sewer system or trash collection. We didn’t get much from our government, and we didn’t want much.
I love my frontier state, but the first thing I learned when I moved to the Lower 48 was how unlike the rest of the country Alaska is. How would you govern America when as mayor and governor, you hardly had to provide basic public services? In Wasilla, less than a tenth of the town is connected to the sewer system.
Alaska’s economy runs on oil proceeds — we don’t even pay income tax. And despite our disdain for Washington, we are given hundreds of millions of dollars from the federal government each year. How would you handle our financial crisis when you’ve never had to balance a budget while tax revenue fell?
— RACHEL KLEINFELD, the executive director of the Truman National Security Project.
The article is here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/02/opinion/02veepdebatefortheweb/html?hp
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