Appealing to women voters---Ron's delivered thousands of babies!

Happy Fishing

Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2008
Messages
42
I read a breakdown that RP could stand more female voters, yet why is virtually NO emphasis given to the fact that
Ron was an obstetrition and delivered thousands of babies (i think something like over 6000) during his career!!

Those are fascinating, admirable, and amazing traits/stats to moms and grandmoms that clearly demonstrate his warmth and character, particularly when highlighted and emphasized in light of the impact he wants to have on ALL youngsters by ensuring them a prosperous and free America to grow up in.

Also, those elderly voters he seems to have to work a bit harder for are statistically more likely to be women (women live longer than men), and are most likely grandmoms !!! so, duh, he really should be chatting them up about his OB career and his concern that all their grandchildren get to come up in the America they deserve.
 
Ironically the female vote is what carried Ron Paul to Congress in his district. (for precisely this reason as thread title)
 
So why is it NOT being emphasized more, such as:

Tossed out as a warm note during a debate and at the whistlestops/Townhalls.

In literature and videos.

And MOST IMPORTANTLY RIGHT NOW every time you get a female voter on the phone during the 'Phone from Home's,
and every time you get a mom or grandmom at the door while doing door to door canvassing.

Now don't get me wrong, maybe this is already being done casually, but I think it should be a part of formal campaigning stategy right now to get that fact out upfront to all the potential female voters canvassed because it truly is an amazing attention grabber and testimony to his wonderful character.
 
Hello, Hello out in testosterone land---pay attention to what is important to half of Ron's potential voters, the ladies, and you might get more of their votes!

My gosh, a former Air Force pilot in service to defend the freedoms of Americans who has delivered over six thousand babies, and who has been an honorable Congressional Representative over the course of thirty years!

It doesn't get any better than that.
Get it out there in NH, not enough people are even aware of those things,
keep it simple
 
Just to give you one perspective from someone who just happens to be female. His being an OB/GYN and delivering babies is the furthest thing from my mind when choosing the person who I want to lead the country. It has zero significance to me.

I'm a person first, female is just my sex.
What drew me to Ron Paul was his views on:
foreign policy
civil liberties
economy
the role of government
bringing troops home
2nd amendment
drug war
our freedoms and getting gov't the hell out of our business
etc. etc.

I could go on and on and on about each of these topics. The OB/GYN stuff is just irrelevant.
 
Just to give you one perspective from someone who just happens to be female. His being an OB/GYN and delivering babies is the furthest thing from my mind when choosing the person who I want to lead the country. It has zero significance to me.

I'm a person first, female is just my sex.
What drew me to Ron Paul was his views on:
foreign policy
civil liberties
economy
the role of government
bringing troops home
2nd amendment
drug war
our freedoms and getting gov't the hell out of our business
etc. etc.

I could go on and on and on about each of these topics. The OB/GYN stuff is just irrelevant.


You're atypical.
 
That my friend is silly and selfish.

We are being reminded and remonstrated over and over after analysis of the NUMBERS that we must broaden Ron's appeal to old school traditional conservative older Republican voters.

Maybe to you this is not relevent but to an entire generation of the voters we would like to appeal to it is irrelevent to them and even a bit silly if you want to go around and open your own car doors and shovel your own snow and bring home your own bacon and act like the act of bringing life into the world is unimportant, and god help Ron Paul if you are one of the phoners talking down to traditional conservative women who put a great emphasis in voting upon TRUST, and just might be interested and comforted to learn of an opportunity to place their progenies' futures in the hands of a trusted, honorable, and great man.
 
You're atypical.

Maybe not. I am a female and agree that although I think it is endearing that he has delivered over 4,000 babies it has nothing to do with my support. I will say that I am highly interested in issues related to parenting my children and my personal freedoms. When it comes to his knowledge of the economy and foreign policy I am just impressed. He makes me want to learn more and understand how these things impact me, my family, and my community.
 
The only thing that has appealed to my feminine sensibilities was this:



What brought me to Ron Paul came way before I saw that; it was his stance on civil liberties, obeying the Constitution, foreign policy, etc. In short, I don't think the women problem can be easily solved. They probably vote how the men in their lives sway them to vote. They probably vote for the good-looking one. No, I don't have much faith in my own gender. Sorry.
 
Just to give you one perspective from someone who just happens to be female. His being an OB/GYN and delivering babies is the furthest thing from my mind when choosing the person who I want to lead the country. It has zero significance (...) The OB/GYN stuff is just irrelevant.
I don't think the women problem can be easily solved. They probably vote how the men in their lives sway them to vote. They probably vote for the good-looking one. No, I don't have much faith in my own gender. Sorry.
Edit: Dayum.

Lemme try to figure out this contradition (IKR, as if :)

Perhaps it's a single (and mostly young) versus married (and mostly older) thing and that women go thru a "don't patronize me" phase when they are young and mostly single, but then after a while they are more willing to listen and eventually agree with "hubby" (regarding such matters) especially if he happens to be politically opinionated. They do this largly out of desire for social circle/neighborly conformity.
 
Last edited:
Hmmm. After reading post #8, think I'll save my post for a more productive thread.
 
Last edited:
I disagree.

First off I said obstetrician. Not OB-GYN.

Secondly I did not say 'brandish'. What could be easier than a simple confirmation that someone is aware of how remarkable RP is by say inquiring "Did you know that Ron Paul served our country as an Air Force pilot, became an MD and delivered over 6000 babies, and over the course of thirty years has honorably served our country as an uncorruptable Congressman?

Also, this generation of female voters we are trying to appeal to kept Dr. Spock next to their nightstands, so I guess no way an obstetrician would in any way have had any 'sway' over their world view.
 
Tempest, no you didn't get it.

I laughingly cannot think of a single female I've ever met who voted for who her husband wanted her to vote for.

Its more of a 'why of course I voted for your candidate sweetie' with a sweet smile.

Trustworthiness is a big deal in a candidate.

And I don't think this is an unproductive thread. The numbers say there is a bit of a problem there.

We need these votes.

As marketers of RP, our means of preserving our liberty for future generations, I think it behooves us to spend just a bit of time figuring out, as it pertains to choosing a presidential candidate, the answer to that perenniel question.
what do women want.

Don't think for a moment that the competition has not spent considerable dollars and effort focus grouping this like crazy.

Remember the Al Gore clothing color pallete changes, etc.

This is war votes are votes!
 
Edit: Dayum.

Lemme try to figure out this contradition (IKR, as if :)

Perhaps it's a single (and mostly young) versus married (and mostly older) thing and that women go thru a "don't patronize me" phase when they are young and mostly single, but then after a while they are more willing to listen and eventually agree with "hubby" (regarding such matters) especially if he happens to be politically opinionated. They do this largly out of desire for social circle/neighborly conformity.

I admire you for trying, lol
I am single, 26, and have no kids...so you could be onto something :p
(But agree with "hubby" on who to vote for because I am too lazy or scared to think for myself?! Think I'll go jump off a cliff first! :D )
 
At the risk of getting myself in trouble, I'll say it bluntly based on field experience: Women vote differently.

Women generally don't vote on hardcore policy issues. They vote for someone who looks confident, acts strong, conveys a positive message, and focuses on issues that have direct appeal to their lives.

Mitt does better with women, for instance, because he has "the look". These things never quantify perfectly, and of course there are many intelligent women who understand the policy issues involved and vote accordingly, but we're talking about voters who look for other qualities.

That said, Ron could take a little inspiration from the ad that killed Goldwater.



I don't think America has seen the real cost of its wars, in the trauma our servicemen and women experienced, and asked what we gained for it. It's a risky ad, but I do think there's something here that can reach women as mothers and daughters.
 
Y'know what. It's late, can't sleep.
Just reread Happy Fishing's posts and I'm thinking I may have misinterpreted them.
Will revisit this thread tomorrow.
*sigh* this topic is frustrating to begin with.
 
Last edited:
Because we need these votes.

Its worth it to think of why we are not quite hitting the mark with these voters.

This is going to be a hard fought battle.

Why discount an entire subset that we need because perhaps they think a little differently about things than ourselves. I don't think we have the luxury of saying too bad, they should see things my way. We want their vote
not the other way around so its incumbant upon us to try to figure them out a bit more, and see what we need to change.

I'm from NH and believe me if your selling what they aren't buying, well the road is paved with good intentions.
 
Ron Paul having delivered 4000 babies isn't going to do much for him with women. It's a good point to make when you talk of Ron Paul's respect for life when talking about him being pro-life, but it's not a good point to bring up when you try to appeal to women. If anything, I can see it backfiring by making you look sexist, as if the main thing on a woman's mind is having babies. I'm sure to the women whose babies he delivered it was important and endearing, but to the rest of the female population, I doubt it.

The things that will endear women to Ron Paul are pretty much the same things which endear men to him. The problem, however, isn't so much Ron Paul but the fact that libertarianism in general doesn't seem to attract nearly as many women as men. Why that's the case I can't say for sure, but I would venture a guess that women are conditioned to think of themselves and their identities in a more collective manner - you see it pushed by modern feminism, where it essentially creates and promotes a female-centric interpretation on a variety of issues, even to the point of dominating the discourse on some (abortion, domestic violence, eating disorders, single parenthood, etc.). The end result is to create a general sense of vulnerability on some level among women because they are women, which then leads to a worldview based on their being a woman (as opposed to their simply being any other individual), and consequently a more collectivist mindset. This doesn't happen with men. This isn't to say that all women are collectivist and men are individualist, but that our society seems to instill a collectivist mindset in women in greater numbers than men. Ultimately, libertarianism and Ron Paul's message is an individualist one, and thus it may have a little more difficulty appealing to women in the numbers that it appeals to men. To get it to appeal to women in those kinds of numbers would require some deconstruction of a lot of that, and that isn't exactly something one man can do at campaign stops, even Ron Paul. To do that kind of deconstruction would take an entire generation.

In other words, you're going to have to accept that we have to live with Ron Paul's message appealing to men in greater numbers than women.
 
Ron Paul having delivered 4000 babies isn't going to do much for him with women. It's a good point to make when you talk of Ron Paul's respect for life when talking about him being pro-life, but it's not a good point to bring up when you try to appeal to women. If anything, I can see it backfiring by making you look sexist, as if the main thing on a woman's mind is having babies. I'm sure to the women whose babies he delivered it was important and endearing, but to the rest of the female population, I doubt it.

The things that will endear women to Ron Paul are pretty much the same things which endear men to him. The problem, however, isn't so much Ron Paul but the fact that libertarianism in general doesn't seem to attract nearly as many women as men. Why that's the case I can't say for sure, but I would venture a guess that women are conditioned to think of themselves and their identities in a more collective manner - you see it pushed by modern feminism, where it essentially creates and promotes a female-centric interpretation on a variety of issues, even to the point of dominating the discourse on some (abortion, domestic violence, eating disorders, single parenthood, etc.). The end result is to create a general sense of vulnerability on some level among women because they are women, which then leads to a worldview based on their being a woman (as opposed to their simply being any other individual), and consequently a more collectivist mindset. This doesn't happen with men. This isn't to say that all women are collectivist and men are individualist, but that our society seems to instill a collectivist mindset in women in greater numbers than men. Ultimately, libertarianism and Ron Paul's message is an individualist one, and thus it may have a little more difficulty appealing to women in the numbers that it appeals to men. To get it to appeal to women in those kinds of numbers would require some deconstruction of a lot of that, and that isn't exactly something one man can do at campaign stops, even Ron Paul. To do that kind of deconstruction would take an entire generation.

In other words, you're going to have to accept that we have to live with Ron Paul's message appealing to men in greater numbers than women.


Women are no more or less collectivist than men. Liberty for ourselves, our families and our future generations are just as important.

And its not rocket science in so far as needing deconstruction.

Listen, men love their football/baseball stats, great conversation starters/icebreakers.

I'm just thinking you've got to throw something out there that piques the female voter interest long enough to get the libertarian message out, and lets face it it aint Ron's dashing sense of style!
 
Back
Top