tbone717
Banned
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2011
- Messages
- 3,595
We are just over 7 weeks away from IA and from that point on things are going to start moving at a much faster pace. At this point, I believe it is time for the campaign to start "dumbing it down" so that the average voter can see the clear distinction between Paul and the other candidates.
Paul uses a lot of terms (Keynesian economics, Austrian economics, TARP, Sarbanes–Oxley, Dodd-Frank, etc) that mean nothing to the average voter. This is not because they are necessarily unintelligent, but more so because they don't spend the time reading and researching things that us political types do. Their lives are busy with work, kids, etc so this information needs to be presented to them in a simplified means without all the buzzwords that excite the political geeks like us that get it.
Particularly on the economic issues, Paul needs to frame things out very simply and succinctly. Romney, Newt & Cain believe that the government needs to intervene in the economy; whether it is bailing out banks and corporations, creating regulations, manipulating the tax code or fixing interest rates. Paul believes in the free market and that the government does more harm than good when it intervenes in the marketplace.
Without changing the message, Paul can reach a lot more people by making it simple. Teach the difference between Keynesian and Austrian economics as you would to a high school class. Don't name the regulations by name. Instead call them what they are, excessive regulations that hurt businesses and cost jobs.
I realize that he does this to a point, but I feel that when Paul speaks at times his message is clouded by his intellect. In short, he loses some people when he starts using the political phrases, so they do not hear the message behind it all.
It is important to remember that the overwhelming majority of primary voters do not read political blogs, news sites or forums. They don't watch the news programs or even the debates. They instead go to work, they watch sports, sitcoms and movies. They take their kids to soccer games and ballet classes. The campaign gets a small amount if time to reach these folks in their day to day lives. They need to work on a strategy to show the stark differences between Paul and the others in a concise, understandable manner. And they need to do it quickly.
Paul uses a lot of terms (Keynesian economics, Austrian economics, TARP, Sarbanes–Oxley, Dodd-Frank, etc) that mean nothing to the average voter. This is not because they are necessarily unintelligent, but more so because they don't spend the time reading and researching things that us political types do. Their lives are busy with work, kids, etc so this information needs to be presented to them in a simplified means without all the buzzwords that excite the political geeks like us that get it.
Particularly on the economic issues, Paul needs to frame things out very simply and succinctly. Romney, Newt & Cain believe that the government needs to intervene in the economy; whether it is bailing out banks and corporations, creating regulations, manipulating the tax code or fixing interest rates. Paul believes in the free market and that the government does more harm than good when it intervenes in the marketplace.
Without changing the message, Paul can reach a lot more people by making it simple. Teach the difference between Keynesian and Austrian economics as you would to a high school class. Don't name the regulations by name. Instead call them what they are, excessive regulations that hurt businesses and cost jobs.
I realize that he does this to a point, but I feel that when Paul speaks at times his message is clouded by his intellect. In short, he loses some people when he starts using the political phrases, so they do not hear the message behind it all.
It is important to remember that the overwhelming majority of primary voters do not read political blogs, news sites or forums. They don't watch the news programs or even the debates. They instead go to work, they watch sports, sitcoms and movies. They take their kids to soccer games and ballet classes. The campaign gets a small amount if time to reach these folks in their day to day lives. They need to work on a strategy to show the stark differences between Paul and the others in a concise, understandable manner. And they need to do it quickly.
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