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Author Message
25 new of 536 responses total.
klg
response 339 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 17:09 UTC 2003

"To start on a level playing field in August the Democrats really need 
to" first find a credible candidate.  Where, we don't know. Apparently, 
they have no idea, either.
flem
response 340 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 17:15 UTC 2003

The democrats could nominate Charles Manson and I'd vote for him over
Bush.  
klg
response 341 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 17:20 UTC 2003

Just as we indicated.  Apparently nobody has any idea of any credible 
Democratic candidate.
tod
response 342 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 17:50 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 343 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 18:31 UTC 2003

So, you would prefer that Dean "kill" it for himself, instead? And, why
can't Clark join in the new game as well as Dean? 
tod
response 344 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 18:57 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 345 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 19:17 UTC 2003

I thought Dean was raising his funds through internet sites. Clark could
do the same thing. They don't have to sink as low as Bush is willing to.
tod
response 346 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 12 23:40 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

gull
response 347 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 19:01 UTC 2003

Re #337: I disagree, really.  I think it's naive to ignore how much
money drives politics.  It's all about how much ad time you can buy to
smear your opponent, now.

tod
response 348 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 19:39 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

richard
response 349 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 19:45 UTC 2003

#346..yeah Dean is doing the vast majority of his fundraising through 
the internet.  His current fundraising advantage is directly 
attributable to 500,000 people on the internet contributing $35-$75.  
Dean HAS NOT had $100,000 a plate fundraisers like Bush has, or 
anything of the like.  It is much more of a grassroots effort.  No 
other candidate has ever harnessed the potential of internet 
fundraising before, and the Dean model is going to be used by campaigns 
for years to come.  It is taking power OUT of the hands of rich donors. 

And klg has yet to answer why Bush needed to raise $200 million for a 
primary campaign where he has no opponent.  It is excess just for 
reason of excess.  And because Bush has rich friends who EXPECT to give 
large sums of money because they EXPECT and DEMAND preferential/special 
treatment and extra influence.  Bush is the candidate who is owned by 
special interests.
klg
response 350 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 20:04 UTC 2003

(Thank you.  Were you, Mr. richard, aware that historically the 
Republicans have a much better grass roots fundraising capability - 
both in terms of participation and amount raised - than the Democrats?  
Probably not.  The Democrats prefer to use union and trial lawyer 
money, in addition to the mega-contributions such as the $15 million so 
far this cycle from the likes of Mr. Soros.  Fortunately, these are 
not "special interests," are they???  Furthermore, so long as you 
Democrats make "Hate Bush" the basis of your platform, we Republicans 
should not have much to fear a year from now.  Go How-weird!)
twenex
response 351 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 21:19 UTC 2003

Hate Bush? Withering Hates? Ba-Bush-ka? Don't Give Up, Cos I believe there's
a place where we Democrats belong?
tod
response 352 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 21:22 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

richard
response 353 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 03:44 UTC 2003

klg you still HAVE NOT answered the question--- why does Bush need to 
raise $200 million for a primary campaign where he has no opponent?  
That is primaries money, not money that can be used in the general 
election?  The answer, and you know it, is that he doesn't need to 
raise so much money, but he does because people want to buy favors and 
have influence.  He is selling the White House to fat cat oil men in 
Texas and CEO's of rich and corrupt mutual fund companies.  And klg you 
don't even care.  That is where your morality leaves you.  You don't 
care.  You don't.  So long as a conservative republican gets elected, 
you don't care particularly how he does so or how many people he's 
selling himself to.  It just doesn't matter.  Admit it.
jep
response 354 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 04:23 UTC 2003

What do you suppose President Bush is going to do with all of that 
money?  He's going to promote himself.  He's going to use it for 
campaign advertising, to give himself as much of an edge as he can for 
the election.

This is the same thing that President Clinton did when he and Al Gore 
raised record amounts of money in 1994 and 1995 for their re-election 
campaign.  I believe you were here then, Richard.  Where was your 
moral outrage then?  Did you care?
polygon
response 355 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 04:31 UTC 2003

Actually, I agree that, by the time September-October-November roll
around, the cost of a marginal vote for a presidential campaign is
essentially infinite, or very close to it.  Because media coverage
is intense, density of interest is high, and everybody is talking to
everybody else about it, the campaigns can do little but stir the
pot.  The campaigns have no control over the situation.

The other truism about political campaigns: the more money a campaign has
to spend, the higher the proportion which is wasted.  A well-funded
campaign stays in better hotels, eats better food, has a more spacious
headquarters in a nicer neighborhood, has lots of paid staff, and does
lots of useless tracking polls.  None of these things make the slightest
difference to the outcome.

Shoestring campaigns beat well-funded campaigns all the time -- presuming
that the shoestring campaign DOES have a basic threshold of enough money,
and spends it wisely.  The object is to get the message out, and depending
on the situation, that doesn't necessarily cost a fortune.
tsty
response 356 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 07:25 UTC 2003

maybe shoestring campaigns do better because they are closer to the
people who wear shoestrings ... sted loafers.... ????
scott
response 357 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 13:38 UTC 2003

TS, your reverse-shoe-elitism is starting to get on my nerves.
gull
response 358 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 14:00 UTC 2003

Re #354: The Clintons weren't trying to get people morally outraged
about the amount of money other campaigns were raising while raising
more money themselves.  That seems to be what the Republicans are doing
at the moment.
bru
response 359 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 14:57 UTC 2003

Where is that happening?  I haven't seen any republicans showing moral outrage
at whet the dems are raising?
mcnally
response 360 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 17:19 UTC 2003

  Then take klg off your twit filter..
tod
response 361 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 17:52 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 362 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 18:17 UTC 2003

Do you think they are waiting for the right moment in the campaign to do that?
tod
response 363 of 536: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 18:45 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

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