Yes, IT is.Grizalltheway wrote:Is itAZGrizFan wrote:
Coming from you, that's just fucking comical.![]()
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CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
If the GOP embraced Ron Paul, Obama would be in trouble.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:i agree with IT... CPAC has never told us anything important about the political landscape - it's a dog and pony show - and not a good one at that.Grizalltheway wrote:
Good point. Politics should be the exclusive realm of old, white land-owners.
any place where ron paul can "win" anything is a place divorced from reality.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
um. how do you figure? ron paul would get absolutely waxed in a national election.kalm wrote:
If the GOP embraced Ron Paul, Obama would be in trouble.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
get real... the Paultards delusions that they have huge numbers is perhaps the most absurd thing they believe... and considering what they believe, that really is saying something.kalm wrote:If the GOP embraced Ron Paul, Obama would be in trouble.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
i agree with IT... CPAC has never told us anything important about the political landscape - it's a dog and pony show - and not a good one at that.
any place where ron paul can "win" anything is a place divorced from reality.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Sounds like you're referring to Clinton.houndawg wrote:He's a draft-dodging piece of **** and his boss was an undesirably discharged piece of ****.native wrote:If you love liberty, your hatred of Cheney is misguided.
Perhaps he is a political opponent, but he is not an enemy.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Biden would 2 hole Chaney in front of his ugly wife and dyke daughter.BDKJMU wrote:Why are you talking about Biden?eagleskins wrote:As bad a president a Chimpy was, this guy was an even worse VP, if that is possible.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
If Ron Paul could win the nomination, he would destroy Obama. Too bad he won't
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Depends on who he was up against. He wouldn't beat Obama but he would wipe the floor with a Howard Dean or Nanci Pelosi, I can promise you that.Skjellyfetti wrote:um. how do you figure? ron paul would get absolutely waxed in a national election.kalm wrote:
If the GOP embraced Ron Paul, Obama would be in trouble.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
His numbers would be huge by virtue of simply being nominated. So if you're saying he's a longshot because not enough conks are smart enough to get behind him in the primary, fine. What's more likely is the establishment and monied interests would squash him like a bug in either the primary or the general.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:get real... the Paultards delusions that they have huge numbers is perhaps the most absurd thing they believe... and considering what they believe, that really is saying something.kalm wrote:
If the GOP embraced Ron Paul, Obama would be in trouble.
But people are increasingly fed up with both parties and there are strong populist undertones just waiting to back an anti establishment candidate that isn't completely full of shit. Paul is an R, but has shown a tendency to break with the party on important issues so he might fit that bill.
I'm not saying he has much of a chance, but if he were nominated, Obama would be representing the establishment and having to explain why conditions haven't improved that much for the working class to a bunch of voters who are now more educated about the economy and how both parties are responsible for it.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
OIC. It's bad to pass it because of national security, but it's OK to extend it for political reasons. Gotcha.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:No hypocrisy... it pisses me off that Obama won't repeal it... but I understand why he won't... it's pure politics... and I don't blame him for making that calculation...

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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
89Hen wrote:OIC. It's bad to pass it because of national security, but it's OK to extend it for political reasons. Gotcha.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:No hypocrisy... it pisses me off that Obama won't repeal it... but I understand why he won't... it's pure politics... and I don't blame him for making that calculation...
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Agree. The biggest problem RP would have would be within his own party. The fence-sitters like myself would view him as a breath of fresh air on the national scene. Hard-line partisans like TTBF & Bronco should be scared of an honest politician who doesn't care if he gets elected or stays elected (see Chris Christie....also see the reason Obama was elected to begin with...."Hope & Change" ring a bell?)...kalm wrote:His numbers would be huge by virtue of simply being nominated. So if you're saying he's a longshot because not enough conks are smart enough to get behind him in the primary, fine. What's more likely is the establishment and monied interests would squash him like a bug in either the primary or the general.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
get real... the Paultards delusions that they have huge numbers is perhaps the most absurd thing they believe... and considering what they believe, that really is saying something.
But people are increasingly fed up with both parties and there are strong populist undertones just waiting to back an anti establishment candidate that isn't completely full of shit. Paul is an R, but has shown a tendency to break with the party on important issues so he might fit that bill.
I'm not saying he has much of a chance, but if he were nominated, Obama would be representing the establishment and having to explain why conditions haven't improved that much for the working class to a bunch of voters who are now more educated about the economy and how both parties are responsible for it.
http://www.takeahikewnc.com
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
No - his numbers would be decent with a major party stamp... but head to head, with the GOP endorsement, Ron Paul heads toward McGovern/Dukakis country if he's lucky.kalm wrote:His numbers would be huge by virtue of simply being nominated. So if you're saying he's a longshot because not enough conks are smart enough to get behind him in the primary, fine. What's more likely is the establishment and monied interests would squash him like a bug in either the primary or the general.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
get real... the Paultards delusions that they have huge numbers is perhaps the most absurd thing they believe... and considering what they believe, that really is saying something.
But people are increasingly fed up with both parties and there are strong populist undertones just waiting to back an anti establishment candidate that isn't completely full of shit. Paul is an R, but has shown a tendency to break with the party on important issues so he might fit that bill.
I'm not saying he has much of a chance, but if he were nominated, Obama would be representing the establishment and having to explain why conditions haven't improved that much for the working class to a bunch of voters who are now more educated about the economy and how both parties are responsible for it.
Libertarians have convinced themselves that huge numbers of Americans secretly love their agenda and if they ever "just got a chance" they'd win in a tidal wave... bull. shit.
problem 1) most Americans find libertarianism disturbingly draconian
problem 2) even if they ever managed to win - they'd be a lame duck (like ventura was in mn) because they have no real support in congress
problem 3) when exposed to the light of day, and full investigating, the LP's (and RP's) "klan problem" would kill them instantly
problem 4) it isn't the fault of "the system" or "monied interests" keeping RP and the libertarians down... it's the fact that not nearly so many people as they think support their agenda. Paul was on the ballot in 08... all the libertarians had to do was show up... they didn't. he got waxed, over and over again...
I recognize there is a massive disconnect between the intense passion of Paul's limited supporters and their numbers... it manifests itself every time he runs... and, when he loses - his supporters, who want to believe so badly that America agrees with what they see as so obviously correct - that they grasp for anything to explain it... this isn't unique to them... for four years you ran in to plenty of Democrats who would rage about "vote rigging" and "Diebold boxes" in Ohio because they just couldn't believe Bush won... they were deluding themselves too.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
all they had to do was show up and vote in the primaries... if the numbers of people who believe in his message are as big as you seem to think... they should be able to win primaries... and yet they never do.Appaholic wrote:Agree. The biggest problem RP would have would be within his own party. The fence-sitters like myself would view him as a breath of fresh air on the national scene. Hard-line partisans like TTBF & Bronco should be scared of an honest politician who doesn't care if he gets elected or stays elected (see Chris Christie....also see the reason Obama was elected to begin with...."Hope & Change" ring a bell?)...kalm wrote:
His numbers would be huge by virtue of simply being nominated. So if you're saying he's a longshot because not enough conks are smart enough to get behind him in the primary, fine. What's more likely is the establishment and monied interests would squash him like a bug in either the primary or the general.
But people are increasingly fed up with both parties and there are strong populist undertones just waiting to back an anti establishment candidate that isn't completely full of shit. Paul is an R, but has shown a tendency to break with the party on important issues so he might fit that bill.
I'm not saying he has much of a chance, but if he were nominated, Obama would be representing the establishment and having to explain why conditions haven't improved that much for the working class to a bunch of voters who are now more educated about the economy and how both parties are responsible for it.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Ron Paul got 1.6% of the vote in the 2008 primaries, TTBF. That's some HUGE support right there.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
all they had to do was show up and vote in the primaries... if the numbers of people who believe in his message are as big as you seem to think... they should be able to win primaries... and yet they never do.

"Oh no. Please, suh. Wudevah you do... please don't nahmnate Ron Paul."
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Appaholic wrote: an honest politician who doesn't care if he gets elected or stays elected
Seriously?! Ron Paul has been a politician for 35 years.
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Reminds me of the year Ross Perot jumped into the Presidential race as a third party candidate because he had a strong, but not strong enough following inside the GOP.
These guys are nothing alike, but the situation looks familar. Strange little guys.
These guys are nothing alike, but the situation looks familar. Strange little guys.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Wow, that's mighty arrogant coming from a party who just got their asses handed to them. I'm not a Paul supporter, I'm a progressive small business guy and theoretically the sweetspot for the new Democratic Party.No - his numbers would be decent with a major party stamp... but head to head, with the GOP endorsement, Ron Paul heads toward McGovern/Dukakis country if he's lucky.
Libertarians have convinced themselves that huge numbers of Americans secretly love their agenda and if they ever "just got a chance" they'd win in a tidal wave... bull. shit.
No, most Americans have no fricking clue what libertarianism is about. I do, and disregard most of it, but the notion of competitive fairness is appealing.problem 1) most Americans find libertarianism disturbingly draconian
Way to support the corporatocracy. This is why the Democratic base is eroding.problem 2) even if they ever managed to win - they'd be a lame duck (like ventura was in mn) because they have no real support in congress
I'll guarantee you I'm more politcally aware than the average joe, and these type of accusations are barely on my periphery - which means they won't stick during an election.problem 3) when exposed to the light of day, and full investigating, the LP's (and RP's) "klan problem" would kill them instantly
Similar to Perot (who got 20% of the vote), and to a lesser extent, Nader, this meme is a complete reflection of what's fucked up about the monopoly the two parties have. Paul can push an economic agenda that at it's core is anti-establishment. It has the potential to resonate - especially as the fundamentals of our mixed economy continue to be neglected and the middle class continues to suffer. And this to a point where a completely social liberal like myself might hold his nose and vote economically.problem 4) it isn't the fault of "the system" or "monied interests" keeping RP and the libertarians down... it's the fact that not nearly so many people as they think support their agenda. Paul was on the ballot in 08... all the libertarians had to do was show up... they didn't. he got waxed, over and over again...
Again, I think you're underestimating the populism out there. Democrats can continue to ignore it and play the corporatist game at their own risk.I recognize there is a massive disconnect between the intense passion of Paul's limited supporters and their numbers... it manifests itself every time he runs... and, when he loses - his supporters, who want to believe so badly that America agrees with what they see as so obviously correct - that they grasp for anything to explain it... this isn't unique to them... for four years you ran in to plenty of Democrats who would rage about "vote rigging" and "Diebold boxes" in Ohio because they just couldn't believe Bush won... they were deluding themselves too.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
1. it's not arrogance - he can't get shit for votes... '08 should have been a good year for him... but he got 1.8%
2. you're right - most don't know... and when they find out, the general response is that it's akin to anarchism with business suits... the notion of that limited of government died for most people in 1929 (when it failed absolutely)
3. it's not about "the corporatocracy" it's fact. i watched it happen in MN... fact is, when you have no coalition, when you have no support in congress... you are a lame duck.
4. they aren't on your radar... yet. they also haven't been shown to the country in a multi-million dollar tv and mail campaign. it's damning stuff, and you put it out there early, and with enough money behind it to really let it sink in... and it will be the first and only thing most people know about him. (don't believe me? ask your average mn voter about Tom Emmer - the GOP gov candidate... you know what most voters know... 2 DUI's and he fought for reduced DUI penalties... killed him)
5. my point is this about Paul, and I said the same thing about Nader in 2000... get your shit together, get organized, and turn your people out to vote for you... if you can't accomplish that simple feat... you aren't ready to run the damn country.
people can bemoan the two party system all they'd like - but we have winner-take-all elections, and in a system like that... the natural evolution of things is to have it come down to two sides. third parties will rise, usually on the strength of one issue, and then will proceed to get co-opted by one of the major parties if they get enough followers... been happening like that for decades... just the nature of the beast.
our system of government is designed to prevent the kind of extreme and radical change that the paultards are pushing for... it keeps our country from lurching this way and that every four years. it's designed to promote stability and some responsiveness... but it's not built for radicals.
2. you're right - most don't know... and when they find out, the general response is that it's akin to anarchism with business suits... the notion of that limited of government died for most people in 1929 (when it failed absolutely)
3. it's not about "the corporatocracy" it's fact. i watched it happen in MN... fact is, when you have no coalition, when you have no support in congress... you are a lame duck.
4. they aren't on your radar... yet. they also haven't been shown to the country in a multi-million dollar tv and mail campaign. it's damning stuff, and you put it out there early, and with enough money behind it to really let it sink in... and it will be the first and only thing most people know about him. (don't believe me? ask your average mn voter about Tom Emmer - the GOP gov candidate... you know what most voters know... 2 DUI's and he fought for reduced DUI penalties... killed him)
5. my point is this about Paul, and I said the same thing about Nader in 2000... get your shit together, get organized, and turn your people out to vote for you... if you can't accomplish that simple feat... you aren't ready to run the damn country.
people can bemoan the two party system all they'd like - but we have winner-take-all elections, and in a system like that... the natural evolution of things is to have it come down to two sides. third parties will rise, usually on the strength of one issue, and then will proceed to get co-opted by one of the major parties if they get enough followers... been happening like that for decades... just the nature of the beast.
our system of government is designed to prevent the kind of extreme and radical change that the paultards are pushing for... it keeps our country from lurching this way and that every four years. it's designed to promote stability and some responsiveness... but it's not built for radicals.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Somtimes dramatic change is needed. I listened to a Dylan Ratigan podcast the other day about the economy where the guest cited a statistic that 3800 people were convicted and jailed by 1995 as a result of the S&L crisis. To date there's something like zero people convicted as a result of the 2008 financial crisis. The Democrats have learned to play the game quite well and will continue to lose the likes of me as a result.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:1. it's not arrogance - he can't get shit for votes... '08 should have been a good year for him... but he got 1.8%
2. you're right - most don't know... and when they find out, the general response is that it's akin to anarchism with business suits... the notion of that limited of government died for most people in 1929 (when it failed absolutely)
3. it's not about "the corporatocracy" it's fact. i watched it happen in MN... fact is, when you have no coalition, when you have no support in congress... you are a lame duck.
4. they aren't on your radar... yet. they also haven't been shown to the country in a multi-million dollar tv and mail campaign. it's damning stuff, and you put it out there early, and with enough money behind it to really let it sink in... and it will be the first and only thing most people know about him. (don't believe me? ask your average mn voter about Tom Emmer - the GOP gov candidate... you know what most voters know... 2 DUI's and he fought for reduced DUI penalties... killed him)
5. my point is this about Paul, and I said the same thing about Nader in 2000... get your shit together, get organized, and turn your people out to vote for you... if you can't accomplish that simple feat... you aren't ready to run the damn country.
people can bemoan the two party system all they'd like - but we have winner-take-all elections, and in a system like that... the natural evolution of things is to have it come down to two sides. third parties will rise, usually on the strength of one issue, and then will proceed to get co-opted by one of the major parties if they get enough followers... been happening like that for decades... just the nature of the beast.
our system of government is designed to prevent the kind of extreme and radical change that the paultards are pushing for... it keeps our country from lurching this way and that every four years. it's designed to promote stability and some responsiveness... but it's not built for radicals.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Dude knows his shit.kalm wrote:Somtimes dramatic change is needed. I listened to a Dylan Ratigan podcast the other day about the economy where the guest cited a statistic that 3800 people were convicted and jailed by 1995 as a result of the S&L crisis. To date there's something like zero people convicted as a result of the 2008 financial crisis. The Democrats have learned to play the game quite well and will continue to lose the likes of me as a result.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:1. it's not arrogance - he can't get shit for votes... '08 should have been a good year for him... but he got 1.8%
2. you're right - most don't know... and when they find out, the general response is that it's akin to anarchism with business suits... the notion of that limited of government died for most people in 1929 (when it failed absolutely)
3. it's not about "the corporatocracy" it's fact. i watched it happen in MN... fact is, when you have no coalition, when you have no support in congress... you are a lame duck.
4. they aren't on your radar... yet. they also haven't been shown to the country in a multi-million dollar tv and mail campaign. it's damning stuff, and you put it out there early, and with enough money behind it to really let it sink in... and it will be the first and only thing most people know about him. (don't believe me? ask your average mn voter about Tom Emmer - the GOP gov candidate... you know what most voters know... 2 DUI's and he fought for reduced DUI penalties... killed him)
5. my point is this about Paul, and I said the same thing about Nader in 2000... get your shit together, get organized, and turn your people out to vote for you... if you can't accomplish that simple feat... you aren't ready to run the damn country.
people can bemoan the two party system all they'd like - but we have winner-take-all elections, and in a system like that... the natural evolution of things is to have it come down to two sides. third parties will rise, usually on the strength of one issue, and then will proceed to get co-opted by one of the major parties if they get enough followers... been happening like that for decades... just the nature of the beast.
our system of government is designed to prevent the kind of extreme and radical change that the paultards are pushing for... it keeps our country from lurching this way and that every four years. it's designed to promote stability and some responsiveness... but it's not built for radicals.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
That's just it, TTBF. His message doesn't get out there. He isn't one of the "chosen" house negores like Bush / Clinton / et al. So he doesn't get the airtime other candaidates get...period (just like Nader). And he never will which is why he won't get elected. Regardless of his message which, if Dems listened to without the static from spin doctors, might actually resonate with some of their populist leanings. But instead, there are political operative fucktards who make a living from character assasination in this culture of fear and who's only advantage being they know how to work the media better & how to suck the proper corporate dik for funding to accomplish this task.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:all they had to do was show up and vote in the primaries... if the numbers of people who believe in his message are as big as you seem to think... they should be able to win primaries... and yet they never do.Appaholic wrote:
Agree. The biggest problem RP would have would be within his own party. The fence-sitters like myself would view him as a breath of fresh air on the national scene. Hard-line partisans like TTBF & Bronco should be scared of an honest politician who doesn't care if he gets elected or stays elected (see Chris Christie....also see the reason Obama was elected to begin with...."Hope & Change" ring a bell?)...
But I concede. You are right. He has no chance for the same reason a documentary on the financial collapse of 2008 wouldn't stand a chance opposite of the Survivor season finale. Congratulations....you've maintained your power base with the idiot crowd until the Rep's Beck crowd / Birthers gain control on the requisite election cycle. We get the government we deserve.
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Appaholic wrote:That's just it, TTBF. His message doesn't get out there. He isn't one of the "chosen" house negores like Bush / Clinton / et al. So he doesn't get the airtime other candaidates get...period (just like Nader). And he never will which is why he won't get elected. Regardless of his message which, if Dems listened to without the static from spin doctors, might actually resonate with some of their populist leanings. But instead, there are political operative fucktards who make a living from character assasination in this culture of fear and who's only advantage being they know how to work the media better & how to suck the proper corporate dik for funding to accomplish this task.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
all they had to do was show up and vote in the primaries... if the numbers of people who believe in his message are as big as you seem to think... they should be able to win primaries... and yet they never do.
But I concede. You are right. He has no chance for the same reason a documentary on the financial collapse of 2008 wouldn't stand a chance opposite of the Survivor season finale. Congratulations....you've maintained your power base with the idiot crowd until the Rep's Beck crowd / Birthers gain control on the requisite election cycle. We get the government we deserve.
bitter much? don't kid yourself, there are plenty of Paultards well versed in the same "character assassination" techniques you attribute to my profession. the problem for them is not "the media" or "the system" or even "the money"... it's inept campaign managers who haven't figured out how to get his message out.
Running a guy like RP wouldn't be hard for a decent operative with half a clue... part of the problem is the libertarian ethic that undermines a serious campaign effort. it's the same problem that plagues the greens... an innate dislike and distrust of top-down management means the troops never march in a straight line, clear objectives are never attained, and professionalism is non-existent.
the other problem for these guys is that they flat lose in the marketplace of ideas with most voters... i know that's hard for libertarians to comprehend... same as it is for the greens... but the vast majority find their agendas too extreme...
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- Appaholic
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
Yeah...no shit....sorry..TwinTownBisonFan wrote:Appaholic wrote:
That's just it, TTBF. His message doesn't get out there. He isn't one of the "chosen" house negores like Bush / Clinton / et al. So he doesn't get the airtime other candaidates get...period (just like Nader). And he never will which is why he won't get elected. Regardless of his message which, if Dems listened to without the static from spin doctors, might actually resonate with some of their populist leanings. But instead, there are political operative fucktards who make a living from character assasination in this culture of fear and who's only advantage being they know how to work the media better & how to suck the proper corporate dik for funding to accomplish this task.
But I concede. You are right. He has no chance for the same reason a documentary on the financial collapse of 2008 wouldn't stand a chance opposite of the Survivor season finale. Congratulations....you've maintained your power base with the idiot crowd until the Rep's Beck crowd / Birthers gain control on the requisite election cycle. We get the government we deserve.![]()
bitter much? don't kid yourself, there are plenty of Paultards well versed in the same "character assassination" techniques you attribute to my profession. the problem for them is not "the media" or "the system" or even "the money"... it's inept campaign managers who haven't figured out how to get his message out.
Running a guy like RP wouldn't be hard for a decent operative with half a clue... part of the problem is the libertarian ethic that undermines a serious campaign effort. it's the same problem that plagues the greens... an innate dislike and distrust of top-down management means the troops never march in a straight line, clear objectives are never attained, and professionalism is non-existent.
the other problem for these guys is that they flat lose in the marketplace of ideas with most voters... i know that's hard for libertarians to comprehend... same as it is for the greens... but the vast majority find their agendas too extreme...
http://www.takeahikewnc.com
“It’s like someone found a manic, doom-prophesying hobo in a sandwich board, shaved him, shot him full of Zoloft and gave him a show.” - The Buffalo Beast commenting on Glenn Beck
Consume. Watch TV. Be Silent. Work. Die.
“It’s like someone found a manic, doom-prophesying hobo in a sandwich board, shaved him, shot him full of Zoloft and gave him a show.” - The Buffalo Beast commenting on Glenn Beck
Consume. Watch TV. Be Silent. Work. Die.
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TwinTownBisonFan
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Re: CHEYNEY BOOED AT CPAC!!!
fair enough...Appaholic wrote:Yeah...no shit....sorry..TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
![]()
bitter much? don't kid yourself, there are plenty of Paultards well versed in the same "character assassination" techniques you attribute to my profession. the problem for them is not "the media" or "the system" or even "the money"... it's inept campaign managers who haven't figured out how to get his message out.
Running a guy like RP wouldn't be hard for a decent operative with half a clue... part of the problem is the libertarian ethic that undermines a serious campaign effort. it's the same problem that plagues the greens... an innate dislike and distrust of top-down management means the troops never march in a straight line, clear objectives are never attained, and professionalism is non-existent.
the other problem for these guys is that they flat lose in the marketplace of ideas with most voters... i know that's hard for libertarians to comprehend... same as it is for the greens... but the vast majority find their agendas too extreme.....just re-read my earlier post....I was a bitter fok....
...thanks for the mature response in spite of my "tantrum"....
...On a lighter note, those reasons are valid....I imagine trying to run a liberterian campaign might be akin to herding cats.
and yes - herding cats is about right. part of what makes mainstream campaigns work is that the staffers are willing to accept a rigid organizational structure and "swim in their lane" as it were. it's the same reason that most of the time a professional army will defeat a guerrilla insurgency... training and discipline go a long way.
North Dakota State University Bison 2011 and 2012 National Champions




