Sarah Palin shines even with Charlie Gibson’s inane questioning. For one, she’s going for VICE President. Has Gibson or anyone asked Obama about how self confident he is about running for PRESIDENT with no experience and no foreign policy experience.

Unlike Obama’s stuttering and taking too long to think of an answer, Sarah Palin is a great speaker that answers the questions quick and extremely well, even though Gibson tried and tried to trip her up with foreign policy questions and asking the same Israel and Pakistan question over and over. She did great! I don’t even think Obama or McCain have had so many foreign policy questions all at once. SHE’s the VICE PRESIDENT Nominee, start asking the same questions the same way and the same flippant, condescending attitude to Obama and even McCain and see if you have a job the next day.

The part about how Gibson explains the Bush doctrine to the Governor, HE’S WRONG, no matter what you hear.

Palin’s Definition of ‘Bush Doctrine’ Hits the Gibson Mark

ABC News’ Charles Gibson, who is being credited with stumping Sarah Palin on the definition of the “Bush Doctrine,” has himself defined the nebulous phrase in a variety of ways, including one that mirrored Palin’s disputed explanation.

Gibson and his colleagues have been all over the map in defining the Bush Doctrine over the last seven years. In 2001, Gibson himself defined it as “a promise that all terrorists organizations with global reach will be found, stopped and defeated.”

But when Palin tried to give a similar definition on Thursday, Gibson corrected her.

Okay, she’s done the “Liberal Media” interview everyone wanted her to do and she did great. This attitude is exactly what McCain’s campaign was talking about when they weren’t going to let her do just any interview. Charlie Gibson was trying his best to rattle her and make her answer the questions the way he wanted them answered so they would have something to attack the campaign with. Didn’t work.

Can’t wait for the debates.

Bush Doctrine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia