"...at least the two agreed on same-sex partner benefits, and marriage. What's you guys thoughts on that!"
I'm not so sure about that they did agree. What really interested me was that during that part of the debate, I was in the next room, working on the computer, and half-listening. (I needed to get some stuff done last night, and--frankly--I didn't see much sense in watching the debate.) When the topic of same sex rights came up, I was jolted. Not by the answer. But something about her voice. It seemed to change. Up until then, it was well modulated. Maybe too well modulated, as if putting on an act she'd rehearsed for days. But her voice seemed--to my ears, at least--to change at times. Like when talking about gay rights.
It's hard for me to characterize, but the sense I got was that she wasn't really being honest. She was saying what she thinks certain voters want to hear, not what she really believes. (To be fair, that's nothing new in politics.)
Put it another way--if she was my daughter (God forbid!) and she had that tone of voice saying "I'm doing OK" in school, I'd probably be on the phone, talking to her teachers, finding out exactly what was going on.
I detected at least one more voice change--I think it was talking about working with the other party, putting partisanship to one side, all that usual drivel.
Overall, though, I was actually mildly impressed with Palin's performance. Some would say it was nothing more than a performance, and I won't necessarily argue with that. Yet, she does emerge better on screen than Bush ever has. And I'm sure that along the line, someone has tried to work with Bush, to make him sound better.