I agree
Nobody loves the Doctor more than me, but as someone who's delivered hundreds of presentations to groups, and been a member of groups like Toastmasters...I can tell you this stuff
is important.
Experts have long known that communication is l
argely nonverbal.
With this in mind, my observations are:
1)
Watch your Replays of Your own Debates for Confidence-Building: I've head this man speak and he wow's me with the instantaneous commands of relevant facts and historical references that he's able to use when he speaks. Why? He just plain knows the material. He's very well-read and well-studied.
2)
Keep up with the well tailored suits. Earlier in the campaign I was noticing the occasional "baggy-looking" suit that was not complementary. He's a very fit, virile looking man for his age. He's got a good upright and confident posture and when he wears a well-tailored suit that's not loose fitting, he looks great!
3)
Relax & Slow down when You Can: Be more slow and deliberate when the timer's not running. Nobody gets more hard-hitting truth into the time-limited debate sequences than Dr. Paul. He EXCELS at this. He also sounds most confident and self-assured when he's speaking under-the-gun like this.
BUT... When you're sitting casually with John Stewart or Bill Maher or the like...RELAX. Take your time. You're the star man...they're not going to cut you off. He talked over and interrupted John Stewart several times and it makes him appear to be desperate or backed into a conrner, etc.
The slower, more deliberate speech will also convey an air of seriousness to the subject matter.
4)
Keep Strong and Aggressive on Two things Especially:
A)
Out of Iraq. "I'm not a pacifist"..."I suggested letters of marque and reprisal"..."I'm a combat veteran"..."Constitutional restrictions of the Exec Branch", etc.
B) The Republicans CAN'T WIN A GENERAL ELECTION with a pro IRAQ War nominee, PERIOD.