Sarah Palin does not distinguish between the private and the professional. As such, she blurs boundaries. This leaves her open to continual ethical lapses.
Most professions offer some training in ethics. But an ethics code, no matter how detailed, is no substitute for extensive training in ethical decision-making. And many people who enter politics may stumble seriously for lack of sensitivity to ethics. Awareness of boundaries and the ability to draw firm boundaries goes a long way toward protecting oneself from ethical lapses. I doubt politicians get any training in that. And then we’re just left with the person’s own ethical understanding. That, to my mind, is exactly why character and temperament are so important in picking leaders.
What follows is a list of general problems, which may arise from a failure to draw boundaries (borders) between professional roles and duties versus private or personal roles and duties. Many of the examples in this list relate to Sarah Palin specifically, but they are typical of the kinds of problems any politician, bureaucrat, or other professional might face.
1. Flirtatious behavior is not appropriate in professional situations. You see that in the way Palin campaigns. It may not seem huge…. but look at Rich Lowry now! Look at the Pakistani leader who now has a fatwa against him after his meeting with Palin! All because of Palin’s inappropriately flirtatious behavior due to not maintaining professional boundaries.
2. Palin’s excuse for why her husband was involved in dealing with Walt Monegan (the Commissioner fired in Troopergate) is that she and Todd are “so close.” He’s always “helped her in her political roles.” Thus, he inappropriately had access to personnel files. And there were breaches of confidentiality. He often sat in on state meetings. Not appropriate. He’s not sworn in to an office, but is simply “meddling” in government. Imagine if Palin had a federal job with a security clearance and violated that security boundary!
3. When a politician mixes personal and professional roles, he or she is not looking out for the citizens’ interests so much as for his or her own. We see that in the Palin’s per diems (for staying at her own home) as well as in charging the state for her family to fly around with her at state expense. Failure to pay her taxes or considering that paying taxes is “not patriotic” is a similar problem of a greater magnitude.
4. Drawing boundaries helps a person make ethical decisions. Depending on one’s role, there are role-specific obligations. It seems that Palin is unable to recognize that professional obligations – in her role as governor – supersede family ties. Or that her obligations to the voters and to the law supersede her own needs or preferences as a private individual.
5. On the other hand, failure to see such boundaries also leads Palin to “use” her children as political props. She fails to see that her responsibilities as a parent supersede her desire to show off a family or seek votes based this or that family member.
6. Lack of drawing these ethical boundaries has gotten Palin into other hot water. And there is also another ethical/legal issue that she is facing in addition to the just concluded Troopergate investigation. In Alaska a government official cannot speak publicly for or against a ballot initiative. But she did that! She excused herself from this law, she assumed, simply by saying something like, “Well, I’m just going to take off my governor’s hat and talk to you as a private citizen.” And she gave advice about how to vote and that swung the vote! So now she’s facing that problem too. And it is completely due to her lack of awareness of boundaries and ability to draw them. (link to come)
7. For positive examples of drawing firm boundaries, you could look at the other side of it by noticing how Obama does draw boundaries. And does that very well. Result? No drama. No professional messiness. Someone who can protect his children and let them have as normal a childhood as possible. With limit-setting.
8. Cronyism is, in essence, a failure to draw boundaries. You see that with McCain as well as with Palin. She promoted people from high school and her church. People who had very little background for the job. But she liked them and felt comfortable with them. I could imagine Palin fitting very well into the cozy crony-dominated campaign of McCain, who also does not distinguish between private and professional.
9. Letting McCain’s campaign run the “Troopergate” interference provides further examples of boundary lapses. Palin fails to take note that as a governor, she has an obligation to her state. She can’t just turn over her responsibilities to someone else, who is not sworn to state office. And let them have information that is confidential and pertains to state matters. And she can’t let that other party make decisions for her, with regard to addressing a state-generated investigation, where she answers to the legislature, not to another entity like a national campaign. The number of boundary crossings (messy boundaries) in the Palin situation is really beyond belief at this point! What with investigations ongoing and a campaign meddling in them, my Ethics Meter says: Yikes!
10. In my view people who can draw boundaries have one of the single most important qualities of a good leader or good supervisor, no matter where they might work. These are people who grade fairly and treat students or employees or children equally. Who can place professional responsibilities above personal needs. Who recognize that authority is not a power to wield but a responsibility one discharges. That the one with greater power always has greater responsibility to draw boundaries and exercise special care for those they serve or who serve under them.
11. Persons with certain character disorders, particularly narcissistic individuals, who lack empathy for others (e.g. cannot put themselves in the shoes of others), seem particularly prone to problems with ethics and boundaries. To begin with these individuals tend to overvalue themselves and believe what they are doing is right and proper. They may refrain from second-guessing themselves or seeking advice as to the appropriateness of their behavior. This puts them at a disadvantage when making decisions. If they happen to be a politician, it then puts the voters, We The People, at a decided disadvantage. When a politician, or indeed any professional, puts his or her own personal needs above professional duties, the fiduciary responsibility of the person in power is sacrificed on the altar of selfishness. The politician has failed society and indeed his or her oath of office.
To my mind, when it comes to the presidency, the Oath of Office is the single most important duty. That oath is to The Constitution. Once again, since few politicians get any training in political ethics, we are left with the person’s own ethical understanding, which is exactly why character and temperament are vitally important in picking leaders.





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Terrific post. Really enjoy the “boundary” language. You’re the first one I’ve heard apply it to Palin.
digg
I’d love to know the extent to which Ms. Palin’s (self-image)identity as a moral christian contributes to her poor ethical performance, and whether she’s aware of the difference between the morals and ethics.
Great Post!
This type of information should be required reading for every middle school student. Great post.
wow, what a fabulous diary, TheraP. More please.
I’ve added my vote to the digg
(hope that digg glitch gets fixed soon so that people realize that the digg has been opened even if the number uptop for regular diaries is zero)
Great post. Agree with the analysis regarding boundaries. My specialization is with the chronically suicidal traumatized personality disorders. Without boundaries, I have lost my license or been sued years ago. That’s one thing that fascinated me about the bushco administration. He looked like the pillar of discipline, ethics and boundaries when he began his bid for presidency. It didn’t look that way to me, likely to you and to many others. We saw something different, something rigid, something fake, lacking good judgement. A discipline created from the outside, instead of inside. That is what Palin reminds me of. Her discipline, her boundaries, her attraction to the evangelical persuasion appears to me to be an attempt to regulate the self using an external means because the internal controls are broken.
Duty, Truth, and Honor. Ethics always comes back to these three ideals. Boundary setting is a major implementation tool.
Until I can figure out how to edit the post and put the link there, here is an article from the Washington Post back on 9/28, which gives an excellent description of the incident where Palin imagined she could “fudge” the law by just metaphorically taking off her governor’s had and speaking publicly “as a private citizen.” (thus influencing the vote, which is a referendum, which is a no-no for politicians in Alaska)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/…..02834.html
Much food for thought here, TheraP. I hope it gets front-paged sometime today.
[By the way, edit is only available for a certain amount of time after posting. I think its in the range of an hour or two, but I’m not sure. If you are within the allowed time, there is an edit button that only you can see, on the line with “Recommend”.]
Palin’s mother had three of her children in 3 years as a very young mother. Palin was the last of the 3 close births. (she’s 44 and 2 sibs are 45 and 46) You can picture this tiny little girl who learned to get attention. And it still desperately needing it after all these years. It’s never enough.
This article from The Guardian, published yesterday, provides, to my mind, one of the best analyses of Palin that I have read. It will provide more context, I believe, to what I have written above. And certainly confirms your clinical instincts (and mine) about this woman’s dynamics:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl…..arahpalin1
In a way I can allow myself some sympathy for her this morning. As you know, people tend to shy away from someone who’s been indicted or found guilty (even via an investigation) of improper behavior. And the woman is unlikely ever again to be in a position to receive that endless attention she so craves. That will be her karma more than anything. (Of course I could be wrong….)
She’s a fascinating case study for so many reasons.
Excellent post.
Palin places personal loyalty at the top of her ethical/moral code. She tried disingenuously to get the resignations of those Wasilla officeholders whom she didn’t believe would kiss her ring after she became mayor. Placing loyalty above all else is the primary ethic of organized crime and dictatorship.
Thanks, Jim. I felt it was so important to get this out when the “iron is hot” for this issue. (da google was awake, but I wasn’t so awake)
I’ll be at professional meeting in the middle of the day (from about 11 central time till maybe 2:30 or so) So if it goes up on the front page during that time, I won’t be available to comment. Otherwise, I’d be pleased to assist if that would be helpful.
Case study indeed. This article needs to go to the front page.
PS. Have taught ethics classes and incorporate ethics in all I do and say.(It has kept me my teaching license for 31 years)
Thanks for this.
Before becoming a psychologist, I taught young children for 8 years (3rd and 4th grade) and did a lot on moral reasoning with them. Children instinctively believe in fairness. And we had some wonderful, wonderful discussions about moral dilemmas. There’s a crying need for this.
You’ve correctly described the predominant characteristics of the Republicans now in office — indeed, of today’s GOP — Cheney, Addington, Libby, Rove and Bush chief among them, exemplified by their ready use of government to promote private corporate ends, to the detriment of 95% of taxpayers, who see their healthcare, schools, roads and bridges and first responders suffering in consequence. That’s a corporate-political bridge that’s been furiously constructed from both ends, and is now being sandbagged and hardened against attack from a new administration that will have different expectations about how its officials spend their time and taxpayers’ money.
Ms. Palin is simply an example of like attracting like. What the Right has missed, but Obama’s campaign has not, is that the pendulum swings, it is swinging and may swing more.
The pain of a looming Greater Depression wonderfully concentrates the mind, and, a large swath of extremists notwithstanding, Americans are refusing to accept the MSM version, indistinguishable from the GOP version, of events any longer. Which holds promise as we begin the recovery task ahead of us, but doesn’t bode well for McCan’t’s campaign, or his ability to return to the Senate or to private life. He seems more likely to turn into one of those Germans who spent their remaining years torching the promise of Weimar in order to hide their own and their generation’s failures.
Wonderful post, TheraP. Thank you.
Didn’t there used to be a reccommend button somewhere?
This needs to go front page forthwith!
One suspects that “fairness”, at least its absence, like our reaction to an absence of symmetry, has become a built-in trait, an expression of the characteristics required for success in social groups. Every child can tell within a millimeter which piece of cake is larger or smaller. Recognizing that, my parents set the rule (those darn regulations!) that s/he who cut the cake took the last slice, a kind of separation of power that produced wonderfully evenly cut slices.
Rove Republicans make sure they cut and take the first slice (Congressional Democrats cut, then give the GOP the first slice), then make those who get none pay for the party. Rather like the cuckoo bird that parasitically lays its egg in another, smaller specie’s nest. Hatching first and being bigger, the night visitor throws out its would be siblings. Poor momma, built to accept any hatchling in her nest as her own, even if it looks like Karl or Sarah, exhausts herself feeding a youngster that has doomed her own children. An eerie description of the relationship between a Rove Republican and the average American family, whether it be about taxes, jobs, healthcare or children serving in Iraq.
It seems to me that Palin’s inability (or refusal) to draw boundaries is what actually endears her most to the screaming mob.
Excellent analysis of Palin’s ethical failings.
Palin should have “just said no” when the McCain campaign “offered” to
intervenemeddle in the official State of Alaska business regarding Troopergate (like she falsely claims she did with the Bridge to Nowhere).I agree with your hypothesis. Indeed, the loosened ego boundaries are reminiscent of Hitler’s ability to “mind-meld” with an audience, are they not?
Scary stuff!
Great post. Your #11 is a scarily spot on description of GWB.
Great article.
Of course the republicans are dismissing this as she and first dude were just trying to protect the family…
But that misses the point.
She should protect all Alaskans from this trooper if he was so bad not just her family. That’s what a real governor WITH ethics would have done.
Her short political history is as rife with these misjudgments as McCain’s is long.
Can’t wait for the nightmare of bush/mcCain(hopefully)/palin to be over.
TheraP- this is a great great post! ty so much. I go digg.
Excellent post, TheraP…I appreciate the education from your perspective. Personality disorder seems to be the only “order” of the current Republican powermongers. [see also the new Matt Taibbi article on Rove in RS-link in my diary].
The sorry thing is how the media act as enablers, and I’m not just talkin’ the Usual Suspects of the Rethuglican hate-talk radio.
This is a great diary.
Thanks, TheraP.
I like this post very much TheraP. thanks for posting. The stuff about not being supported when someone else differentiates himself with a different opinion or action than Ms. Palin was very telling to me. People like that are in a box and the objects that enter her world are to be controlled like so many teddy bears and dolls, including McCain. It should get interesting. But at the same time, they can know when that object can do damage to them and blow up in their faces, so they can back off when they sense that. Finely honed survival skills.
The other interesting thing is biting the hand that feeds you. People should be loyal to Ms. Palin, but she doesn’t feel the need to return the favor to people who supported her ie the resignation and finger pointing at the person who appointed her to the oil board. She got bored or knew she was in over her head and rather than fail, she quit with style and either internally or not, blamed him for putting her in that position. I bet the same with happen to McCain. She’s already blaming the press for her lamo interviews.
OTOH, I wonder if some voters will have some sort of cognitive dissonance about her Sally Fields perkiness (sorry Sally! Love ya!) and the crude selfishness she so clearly displays to people around her. Grace Kelly was well known to sleep with her leading men, but she wore the very proper white gloves that the rep of loose woman just didn’t stick.
An acute lack of self awareness, another textbook Republican trait.
Awesome diary TheraP.
TheraP, this is an excellent post and helps a lot of us understand why we have a visceral negative reaction to her (and a lot of other people just like her). I think it is important to keep putting these perspectives out in the world so that with understanding, people are in a position to do something about it (like not vote for her for dogcatcher or anything else!).
It speaks IMHO that all of us need to pay attention to those ‘gut’ reactions and run the other way – even if we don’t understand why. Thanks!
Great post!
Terrific, absolutely terrific posting.
5. On the other hand, failure to see such boundaries also leads Palin to “use” her children as political props. She fails to see that her responsibilities as a parent supersede her desire to show off a family or seek votes based this or that family member.
Not long after all four of the Obamas sat down with someone (Katie Couric or somebody) Barack Obama stated there wouldn’t be anymore of those kinds of settings or interviews. I think it became quite clear, quite quickly, to him and his wife where it might lead.
There is no downside in life anymore for anyone with the most remote connections (and the rest know that if they button their lip they can stay there).
Sadly cheaters win.
Just look at the jerk blazing down the breakdown lane and cutting people off in traffic – they get ahead. Carry that up the chain and you get CEO’s that have no downside (they can take all the money, screw the company up, and then in addition walk away with 45Million). None of them get charged – hell even when the evidence that they were criminal – or an obvious need for an investigation.
Now illegal abuse of power is nothing to pols, media, law. One would think it would be the most dispicable crime there is. Abuse of power is just like child abuse.
Thanks FORD you asshole (and Nixon and RayGun and Bush the perps).
Please feel free to take these points and make use of them anywhere. No need to make an attribution. Just get the word out.
As you likely realize, there’s a whole new area of Palin fuzzy boundaries, related to who built her house and cronyism related to the Wasilla sports complex contracting. As AKmuckraker at mudflats put it:
TPM, as many know, has huge software problems. Right now they are doing beta testing. In an effort to help, I just tried to post this at the beta site. Instead, I got signed in to the regular site. So, now there’s a duplicate post there… and I didn’t even get the beta chance to preview it before it posted… so it’s got huge boundaries there between the paragraphs.
Just wanted to post this explanation. I truly had assumed I was posting into the beta ether…..
Oh, well, Karma works in strange ways, does it not?
I’m so glad to read this. I had her pegged as a NPD pretty much after she hit the national scene. I once worked with an NPD boss–you can see them coming a mile away once you’ve had to deal with one. Inch deep, no empathy, paranoid, needs constant praise, distorts others intentions, petulant, etc., etc.
The reason I’m glad to read this is because its very, very serious. The idea of having a VPOTUS, and by extension if something happened to McCain, a POTUS also have NPD is just beyond scary in my opinion. Nuclear codes in her hands? Makes me want to throw up.
Thera,
I have a question.
You aren’t insinuating that Palin is responsible for these men’s behavior, are you?
The way I understand what you’ve written is due to her lack of boundaries, others think it’s okay to reciprocate.