To a great degree, Sarah Palin's highly anticipated speech to the Republican National Convention last night didn't matter. In her less-than-a-week in the spotlight, the vice presidential nominee has already become a starkly polarizing figure, a national Rorschach test. There was little she could do, in a half-hour address, to win over or alienate any mind that has already been settled.
So Palin's address was, in many ways, an impassioned exercise in denial, a way of pretending that she's still the largely unknown quantity she was when she became John McCain's surprise running mate selection. She introduced herself to a public that is largely obsessed. She pointed out her family, from her 17-year-old daughter Bristol - who stood and showed off her pregnant belly - to her youngest son, who has Down syndrome, "a perfectly beautiful baby boy named Trig." Her husband, Todd, lifted the sleeping infant's hand and gave a gentle victory shake.