tbone717
Banned
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2011
- Messages
- 3,595
Regarding the downer tone of this thread: Ron does seem able to turn out rockstar type event numbers. But there is a downside to this: A lot of those people think going to a rally is all that's necessary and they don't vote. Some of them tend to be too young to vote. And some are from out of state, and follow Ron around to rallies like he's the Grateful Dead.
The other problem is that relying on delegates means we have to rely on the R party to act fairly at conventions. And we know from long experience that this won't happen. I've been involved in two conventions here in NV, '98 and 2008, where the party was willing to break the rules and/or run from the convention room and shut off the lights to keep candidates from getting their earned number of delegates. We know that TX and LA decided to use the "deaf convention chair" gambit. I expect a lot more of this one. And MO intimidated delegates with hot light interviews challenging their legitimacy, suppressing our turnout.
If Ron doesn't start winning the vote in a state or two, these tactics will all be in play again and, as we see over and over again, the media doesn't give a flying fig and won't even report the facts.
So, Ron really does have to win a state or two to help us on the ground out. I'm a delegate in NV and I'm already hearing of suppression tactics being used. Ron can help us by picking maybe two states and living there until they vote. That would give us the ammuntion, along with the latest poll that shows only Mittler and Ron beating Obama.
I see a campaign that is capable of growing and actually accomplishing a lot. And Ron seems to be going out and doing what we've asked him, to campaign hard. Now he has to focus on one or two winnable states.
While I am not condoning any of the type of tactics you mentioned in your post, I can kind of empathize where these people are coming from. I like to look at things from other's perspective sometimes, and thought to myself - what if Paul was the national frontrunner, he won our state by 45% and had won a bunch of other states, and then at the delegate convention a bunch of Newt supporters tried to use the process to gain an advantage. We'd probably have a similar reaction as some of these folks are having. Again, that doesn't justify it, since we are playing by the rules, but you can see maybe where they are coming from.
Which means that you are correct. Paul does need to win some states to legitimize our efforts. We cannot expect to be taken seriously hobbling along in third or fourth place in one state after another, and then pull this "surprise, we stacked the delegate deck in our favor" without some eyebrows being raised. The strategy to win the delegates is a sound one, but it does also require us to win the old fashioned way as well - with a plurality of support at the ballot box.