Got a minute? Simple things to do for Rand Paul or other liberty candidates

nayjevin

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Jun 9, 2007
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Welcoming suggestions for simple things one can do to help Rand Paul become president.

My ideas:

- Share a link

Choose wisely! My experience is that less is more.

- Start a conversation

What do you think about Rand Paul? Who do you want to be President? My experience is, let them talk, nudge, don't argue.

- Read up on Rand's positions

Familiarize yourself with where he stands. Much easier to inform people that there is a candidate who believes what they already do, than to convince them to change their positions.

What else?
 
I already know everything about this man. It's scary to a degree. I remember when I was 14 and I was just learning about Rand. Time flies man. I consider myself lucky since I was exposed to the Pauls at such an early age.
 
You are lucky that I am not in US.Me starting conversation with statist scum is worst thing I that I could do for Rand :)

This is also true also for Danke (or is it Donnay or Danno???...Which one is the weird one? I mix them always. I know one of them is wife of AF).
 
The OP has nothing but good suggestions.

Keep in mind that if your goal is winning votes then NEVER leave someone feeling insulted. Harsh insults directed at their candidate insults their judgement.
Explain what you like about the candidate they're leaning towards, agree with some of their assessments then offer a few things that made you 'unsure' about their candidate or reasons why you like Rand better. Remember when people would insult Ron Paul to our faces? It didn't make us any more friendly to their position, did it?

Most of us are in states that are later on in the primary contest. They don't have to have Rand as their #1 the entire time, just as long as he is at least #2 and the only viable option when primary day comes.

Make friends, not enemies.

... for people in Iowa its gonna be a lot harder. We need you to get Rand to be the #1 choice of the majority.

--

It is also good to have a bit of damage control practice.
Like responses ready to people who want to attack Rand for 'supporting Amnesty'. "We need a president that is devoted to securing the border and I think Rand is the most serious candidate in that regard."
 
This is from 2007, by Forever4Now:

Individual: Non-Internet
Talk to everyone (family, friends, neighbors, workmates, classmates, strangers)
Join a Meetup group & participate
Donate to the Campaign
Donate to ChipIn; Make pledge to PledgeBank
Ask family & friends to donate
Wear RP t-shirt, hat, button, lapel sticker, wristband
Add bumper sticker, window decal, etc. to vehicle
Display yard/window sign at home and small business
Distribute promotional material (flyers, CDs/DVDs, ...)
Post flyers on message boards (work, campus, stores, ...)
Hang posters in work elevator, office
Stamp envelopes, packages, business cards, money, ...
Place stickers on envelopes, packages, business cards, ...
Distribute "Tax Free Tips Act" to tip-based employees
Distribute "Keeping Promises to Seniors" to seniors
Give RP gifts (books, liberty dollars, ...)
Send RP Christmas & Holiday gift cards
Volunteer for Republican club at school
Produce YouTube videos & music

Individual: Internet
Add RP comment/graphic/link to email signature
Email Ron Paul video links to family & friends
Subscribe to RP YouTube, MySpace, Facebook
Add RP content in MySpace, Facebook profile
Comment on RP videos & articles
Participate in blog discussions
Comment in political forums & on political websites
Comment on other candidate videos, blogs, news articles?
Display "I/We support Ron Paul" website graphic
Add your photo to Ron Paul Mosaic
Add your name to the Ron Paul Registry
Vote in online polls
Add comments to Yahoo! & Google Groups
Post FaceBook flyers
Participate in MySpace letter campaign
Make Craigslist posts
Conduct an email campaign (your address book, ...)

Group: Non-Internet
Attend GOP County, Town & City committee meetings
Attend GOP Summer & Fall events
Attend Libertarian party functions
Attend Town Hall meetings
Host a Ron Paul booth at fairs & flea markets
Organize a Fundraiser
Organize a voter registration drive
Organize a Tax Free Tips Act canvass
Organize a Laptop Brigade
Participate in the Nationwide Rallies
Organize a local rally, walk, biking event
Organize a sign waving event
Organize a sign & banner hanging event
Organize a Ron Paul Pub Crawl
Organize a Neighbor-to-Neighbor campaign (letter HERE)
Organize Operation "Woodwork"
Organize a group debate
Organize a call-a-thon to registered voters
Organize a video showing (senior home, church, busy area)
Chalk sidewalks
Distribute Ron Paul book to libraries
Organize a Double Agent event
Conduct a neighborhood survey to see who has heard of RP
Interact with movements/associations (e.g. anti-war, pro-life, veteran, Christian, ...)

Local/Mainstream Media
Contact newspapers/radio/TV for RP coverage (RNC tool for writing letters)
Contact talk shows to request RP as guest
Write local/mainstream newspaper & magazine articles
Write student newspaper articles
Take out newspaper & magazine ads (N.H. ad)
Arrange newspaper inserts
Comment on newspaper forums
Take out free classified ads
Participate in "Hope Across America" radio initiative
Run SpotRunner TV ads

Open Air Advertising
Airplane banners
Skytyping
Billboards; Other outdoor advertisers
Remote Control Airplanes
Rooftop ads (e.g. Google Ron Paul in NY)
Public transportation ads

What worked? What didn't?
 
I have some ideas for how to organize closer to the election but a bit concerned as to when and where to reveal them... I think our grassroots will be so much more powerful than any other that it doesn't matter... any thoughts on this?
 
Find points of agreement. Don't argue.

When talking to a democrat, use your heart. Don't dismiss their concerns, but gently offer better solutions. For example, with the minimum wage, don't argue how it hurts businesses or the economy, but show them how it ends up hurting poor people the most.

When talking to a republican, use your brain. You're not trying to win them over to Rand, you're just trying to make Rand an acceptable alternative. Don't bash their favorite republican - that's dumb. Say something like you'd like to see Rand, but whoever wins would be better than Hillary.

It's about being inclusive instead of exclusive. Always find common ground and work together instead of against them.

Again, with both sides, you are not trying to win an argument, you are just demonstrating you care about the same things. Make Rand an acceptable choice.
 
Donate to ChipIn; Make pledge to PledgeBank

As there are many who are disgruntled from donating to the official campaign, I think it's important that we list ways that money can be effectively spent. There have been many wastes of money in both grassroots and campaign projects, and of course everyone feels differently what they were and how wasteful. There have also been successes. Rather than debate what those were here, I'd like to focus on making sure that people who have extra money and want Rand to be president know what their options are. If there were a great place that had 'take action' initiatives, and I were in charge of campaign fundraising emails, I would include the link in my letters.

People should be aware of the things they can do with their money on their own (buy a bumpersticker), through the campaign (ideally deciding what specific activity their money is funding), and through grassroots initiatives (funding a chipin by well-vetted grassroots leaders).
 
Sign waving way overated. Only goes so far. I had fun with them in 07', but far better uses of time.

Opinions vary greatly. I think as name recognition increases, sign waving becomes less valuable. I think it was motivating to those involved. Some of those I was involved with started out with a sign-making party - we talked about other valuable things while we were making signs, and had a bunch of signs to put places afterwards. Also it's not a zero-sum game - sign waving motivates some people to do something when they might not have done anything otherwise - and allows meetups to network. Not sure where signwaving fits in with this campaign though.
 
Sign waving way overated. Only goes so far. I had fun with them in 07', but far better uses of time.

Ha! I have to agree with this to a certain extent.

nayjevin said:
Opinions vary greatly. I think as name recognition increases, sign waving becomes less valuable. I think it was motivating to those involved. Some of those I was involved with started out with a sign-making party - we talked about other valuable things while we were making signs, and had a bunch of signs to put places afterwards. Also it's not a zero-sum game - sign waving motivates some people to do something when they might not have done anything otherwise - and allows meetups to network. Not sure where signwaving fits in with this campaign though.

Oh man, same here. So many fond memories from 2007/2008.

As someone recently said on facebook. It was like, "oh hey, you like Ron Paul too? Cool! Let's get together and change the world!"
9hpdh1.jpg

That's me with the red hair bent over. I was pregnant with my first.

There was such a naivete & fellowship, just because we saw each other as intelligent human beings who simply wanted to make this country better by electing a President who could actually CHANGE things.
 
Attend GOP County, Town & City committee meetings

Sooner rather than later.


This is *the* most important thing to do right now. Even if you don't go to the meetings, go to the local parades - find the Republicans - and walk with them. Find their booths at the local festivals and talk with them (NOT ARGUE!) Find a candidate locally that you can support and do it with all you've got. If you can't find someone - then *BE* that candidate!!
 
This is *the* most important thing to do right now. Even if you don't go to the meetings, go to the local parades - find the Republicans - and walk with them. Find their booths at the local festivals and talk with them (NOT ARGUE!) Find a candidate locally that you can support and do it with all you've got. If you can't find someone - then *BE* that candidate!!

Yes - do what Rand is doing. Network - build connections
 
Ha! I have to agree with this to a certain extent.



Oh man, same here. So many fond memories from 2007/2008.

As someone recently said on facebook. It was like, "oh hey, you like Ron Paul too? Cool! Let's get together and change the world!"
9hpdh1.jpg

That's me with the red hair bent over. I was pregnant with my first.

There was such a naivete & fellowship, just because we saw each other as intelligent human beings who simply wanted to make this country better by electing a President who could actually CHANGE things.

That's awesome!
 
Ha! I have to agree with this to a certain extent.



Oh man, same here. So many fond memories from 2007/2008.

As someone recently said on facebook. It was like, "oh hey, you like Ron Paul too? Cool! Let's get together and change the world!"
9hpdh1.jpg

That's me with the red hair bent over. I was pregnant with my first.

There was such a naivete & fellowship, just because we saw each other as intelligent human beings who simply wanted to make this country better by electing a President who could actually CHANGE things.

What part of Indiana are you from?
Just out of curiosity. You don't need to answer if you don't want to.
 
As there are many who are disgruntled from donating to the official campaign, I think it's important that we list ways that money can be effectively spent. There have been many wastes of money in both grassroots and campaign projects, and of course everyone feels differently what they were and how wasteful. There have also been successes. Rather than debate what those were here, I'd like to focus on making sure that people who have extra money and want Rand to be president know what their options are. If there were a great place that had 'take action' initiatives, and I were in charge of campaign fundraising emails, I would include the link in my letters.

People should be aware of the things they can do with their money on their own (buy a bumpersticker), through the campaign (ideally deciding what specific activity their money is funding), and through grassroots initiatives (funding a chipin by well-vetted grassroots leaders).
On the topic posted above:

The longer I've been around politics the more I think about where to spend money and how far that money actually goes. Reminds me of the parable of the three men, each given a certain amount of money by their master.
If funds are limited (I'm near broke) make sure you're spending what you do spend wisely.

There is always hype going on but make sure you don't give in too quickly.
If you can only afford to donate $50, that $50 might be better spent on an individual project rather than thrown into a money bomb.

And grassroots projects are often times not carried out the exact way they're advertised. Make sure you understand how they plan on using the money and have some sort of accountability to be sure the money is spent wisely.
 
On the topic posted above:

The longer I've been around politics the more I think about where to spend money and how far that money actually goes. Reminds me of the parable of the three men, each given a certain amount of money by their master.
If funds are limited (I'm near broke) make sure you're spending what you do spend wisely.

There is always hype going on but make sure you don't give in too quickly.
If you can only afford to donate $50, that $50 might be better spent on an individual project rather than thrown into a money bomb.

And grassroots projects are often times not carried out the exact way they're advertised. Make sure you understand how they plan on using the money and have some sort of accountability to be sure the money is spent wisely.

Yes, and time and resources are generally best spent on blockwalking, followed by direct mail. We need to make sure more local candidates win, $50 is literally nothing in a national or statewide campaign.
 
Yes, and time and resources are generally best spent on blockwalking, followed by direct mail. We need to make sure more local candidates win, $50 is literally nothing in a national or statewide campaign.

For the campaign itself, definitely. Networking locally, GOTV, definitely. There will also be people who live in remote areas, or in precincts where the campaign may not have an HQ nearby. Varied options and lots of vetting will be in order.
 
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