And are you aware most of the young Paul supporters did not vote?
Really? How do you know?
Please provide a link showing that most young Ron Paul supporters did not vote.
Their 'support' did not materialize at the ballot box, consistent with the voting patterns of younger adults in general.
Yes, young people do not vote in as large percentages as older people, because young people tend to be disengaged in the political process. However, young people who are paying enough attention to bother getting involved with a political campaign DO tend to vote. You can't use generalizations about ALL young people to cast aspersions on those who are involved.
Even if younger people are less likely to vote, it is pure idiocy to ignore them as a group just because they are "less likely" to show up. If you choose to ignore younger folks because older folks vote at 50% and younger folks vote at 25%, you are just tossing away votes. Remember, 25% of 1,000 is more than 0% of 1,000.
You should also note that I did not say sign waving ONLY helped get young people aboard. It also works for older folks.
Most of the 2007 Paul grassroots activity was misspent reaching unlikely-voters or Democratic populations, instead of the likely voter populations actually eligible to vote in the GOP primary (to enable him to win nomination).
That's your OPINION, mine differs. If we just target older, hard line Republicans, and IGNORE EVERYONE ELSE, Ron Paul has NO CHANCE. Ron Paul is just not that popular among old school Republicans- did you happen to notice how establishment Republicans did everything they could to ignore him, mock him, disrespect him, and exclude him?
If the energies were spent next time on older independents who ARE likely voters, both to persuade them to vote for Paul, or if Democrats, to even switch party registration in time to vote for him in the primaries, that would make more sense. But "the cheap and easy way" was not, and is not the more intelligent or effective way to go about actually getting Paul nominated and elected.
I'll say this for probably the fifth time: There are a LOT of people who will volunteer to sign wave, march, or go to rallies who simply WILL NOT bang on doors or make political phone calls. I'm one of them- I hate receiving annoying political phone calls and despise jackasses who pound on my door to sell a candidate, and I'm not willing to inflict that upon others.
For those volunteers (who are likely the majority), sign waving may be a good use of their time- far less of a "waste of time" than having them not do anything at all, which is what you'll get from them if you try and insist that they bang on door.