CA
ON
토론토 기쁨이 충만한 교회
전화: 416-663-9191
1100 Petrolia Rd Toronto, ON
1004열쇠
전화: 416-895-1004
4 Blakeley Rd. Toronto, ON
고려 오창우 한의원
전화: 416-226-2624
77 Finch Ave W #302, North York Toronto, ON
홍이표치과
전화: 647-985-0456
9625 Yonge St #4, Richmond Hill, ON Toronto, ON
럭키조경 & 나무자르기
전화: 647-564-8383
4699 Keele St. Unit 218 Toronto, ON
준비된 바이어 그룹 , BAYTREE 이너써클
전화: 416-226-5999
7030 Woodbine Ave. Suite 103 Toronto, ON
조준상 (로열르페이지 한인부동산 대표)
전화: 416-449-7600
1993 Leslie St. Toronto, ON
최고의 POS시스템 - 스마트 디지탈 POS
전화: 416-909-7070
4065 CHESSWOOD DR. NORTH YORK Toronto, ON
행복부동산 -수잔정 Home Standards Brickstone Real
전화: 647-866-7878
180 Steeles Ave W Unit 30, Thornhill, ON
K-포차 ...미시사가(만두향프라자)
전화: 905-824-2141
169 DUNDAS ST. E. #7 Mississauga, ON
스마트 디지탈 프린팅 - 인쇄 및 디자인
전화: 416-909-7070
4065 chesswood dr. Toronto, ON
부동산캐나다 (Korean Real Estate Post)
전화: 416-449-5552
1995 Leslie Street Toronto, ON
It would be a place where all the visitors including me share the life stories and experiences through their activities,especially on life as a immigrant.
Why don't you visit my personal blog:
www.lifemeansgo.blogspot.com
Many thanks.
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TV토론으로,VP 공화당후보 페일린 본모습 회복.
lakepurity
2008-10-03
Palin Recaptures Her Image
By ALESSANDRA STANLEY
Published: October 3, 2008
“Oh, man, it’s so obvious I’m a Washington outsider, and someone just not used to the way you guys operate,” she said after her opponent explained, somewhat awkwardly, why he had voted in favor of the Iraq war.
There was a little of both on stage Thursday night, though Ms. Palin spoke far more fluidly and confidently than she had in her devastating interviews with Katie Couric of CBS. Ms. Palin did stumble into a few loop-the-loop non sequiturs, but mostly she stuck to practiced talking points. She didn’t answer questions directly, but she spoke out with self-assurance and even cockiness, correcting Mr. Biden when he tried to repeat the Republicans’ slogan about oil exploration in Alaska. “The chant is ‘drill, baby, drill,’ ” she said.
And Ms. Palin was the one who set the tone, making Mr. Biden sound stuffy before he had a chance to make her look unsteady. She bounded onto the stage, shook hands with her opponent and said brightly, “Hey, can I call you Joe?”
He said yes, then addressed her as “Governor Palin.”
She twinkled, cocked her head, and spoke as plainly as she could. “Darn right it was predator lenders,” she told the moderator, Gwen Ifill of PBS, when asked who was to blame for the mortgage meltdown. Her sentences had lots of pep and patriotism, and few g’s at the end of her words ― “You betcha” and “Get down to gettin’ business done” and “doggone it.”
Expectations for both candidates were low, but the expectations for the debate were almost absurdly high ― cable news commentators led up to the event like children on a Halloween sugar bender, deliriously excited by what The Washington Times described as a “Thrilla in Manila” showdown.
Mr. Biden made few mistakes; he appeared more measured and thoughtful on substance, and made forceful points that contrasted with Ms. Palin’s slogans. But she provided the more vivacious, visceral television performance: it was a 90-minute sprint to reclaim her identity as a feisty, folksy frontierswoman ready to storm Washington. And she did it like a reality show contestant ― broadly, with stagey asides to the camera, including an assurance to some third-grade students, in what she called a “shout-out,” that they would get extra credit for tuning in.
She was friendly and respectful to Mr. Biden. Then, every now and then, she cocked her head, winked, and nudged him hard ― like a little sister who knows her older brother cannot hit back.
And while her showmanship may have exhilarated her fans, it also helped Mr. Biden, who is normally known as something of a know-it-all showoff; in contrast to her, he seemed reserved and sincere.
Ms. Palin attacked her opponent’s positions on taxes and on the war with gusto, at one point accusing Mr. Biden of “waving the white flag of surrender” in Iraq. But mostly, she tried to recoup from past blunders on foreign policy. She twice dropped the name of Kim Jong Il of North Korea, made a point of referring to Iran’s president and described the Cuban leadership as “the Castro brothers.” She also recast her television interviews as traps set by liberals, not unforced errors of her own.
At the end of the debate, before she was surrounded by her husband and children, and burped her newborn, she thanked the moderator for the chance to talk to the American people “without the filter, even of the mainstream media, kind of telling viewers what they’ve just heard.”
It was a pre-emptive strike against commentators poised to critique her performance and a retroactive strike against the other Sarah Palin.