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The Politics of Dopes - Ted Rall

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stimbox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 11:37 AM
Original message
The Politics of Dopes - Ted Rall
"Of course, Obama's three-part story ignores important issues that affect real people--jobs, college tuition costs, taxes, healthcare, Iraq. I'm 44, and I've never met anyone who thinks there's "partisanship in Washington." (Most voters complain that their party isn't forceful enough.) It's a lame sales pitch, though it may work.

What Obama has not done is answer the question: Why does he want to be president? The answer--that it would be a cool addition to his resume--is too unappealing to say out loud.

The night of the New Hampshire primary Obama declared (four times!): "There is something happening in America!" What's happening? "Change," he said, "is what's happening in America." Change to what? Obama didn't say.

"Yes, we can," Obama said (11 times). "Yes, we can, to justice and equality. Yes, we can, to opportunity and prosperity. Yes, we can heal this nation. Yes, we can repair this world. Yes, we can." Great. How?

He cannot say."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ucru/20080115/cm_ucru/thepoliticsofdopes
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amborin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 11:44 AM
Response to Original message
1. that is all such b.s.
keep repeating "hope" and "change"

for some, that's apparently enough....just the words themeselves....never mind specifying what the "change" might consist of.....or how it would get implemented....leave those detals for some other time....2012 perhaps?

is this the ultimate ego-maniacal approach? I, myself, am change, if you vote for me, by that very act, you've accomplished 'change'?



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trogdor Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 11:48 AM
Response to Original message
2. Details aren't for the campaign trail.
Too many details will get you into trouble. Don't believe me? Ask President Gore or President Kerry how getting all hung up on details affects a campaign.
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groovedaddy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 12:49 PM
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3. Here's something Obama could probably use
From the book: "Made to Stick"

PRINCIPLE 1: SIMPLICITY

How do we find the essential core of our ideas? A successful defense lawyer says, "If you argue ten points, even if each is a good point, when they get back to the jury room they won't remember any." To strip an idea down to its core, we must be masters of exclusion. We must relentlessly prioritize. Saying something short is not the mission — sound bites are not the ideal. Proverbs are the ideal. We must create ideas that are both simple and profound. The Golden Rule is the ultimate model of simplicity: a one-sentence statement so profound that an individual could spend a lifetime learning to follow it.

PRINCIPLE 2: UNEXPECTEDNESS

How do we get our audience to pay attention to our ideas, and how do we maintain their interest when we need time to get the ideas across? We need to violate people's expectations. We need to be counterintuitive. A bag of popcorn is as unhealthy as a whole day's worth of fatty foods! We can use surprise — an emotion whose function is to increase alertness and cause focus — to grab people's attention. But surprise doesn't last. For our idea to endure, we must generate interest and curiosity. How do you keep students engaged during the fortyeighth history class of the year? We can engage people's curiosity over a long period of time by systematically "opening gaps" in their knowledge — and then filling those gaps.

PRINCIPLE 3: CONCRETENESS

How do we make our ideas clear? We must explain our ideas in terms of human actions, in terms of sensory information. This is where so much business communication goes awry. Mission statements, synergies, strategies, visions — they are often ambiguous to the point of being meaningless. Naturally sticky ideas are full of concrete images — ice-filled bathtubs, apples with razors — because our brains are wired to remember concrete data. In proverbs, abstract truths are often encoded in concrete language: "A bird in hand is worth two in the bush." Speaking concretely is the only way to ensure that our idea will mean the same thing to everyone in our audience.

PRINCIPLE 4: CREDIBILITY

How do we make people believe our ideas? When the former surgeon general C. Everett Koop talks about a public-health issue, most people accept his ideas without skepticism. But in most day-to-day situations we don't enjoy this authority. Sticky ideas have to carry their own credentials. We need ways to help people test our ideas for themselves — a "try before you buy" philosophy for the world of ideas. When we're trying to build a case for something, most of us instinctively grasp for hard numbers. But in many cases this is exactly the wrong approach. In the sole U.S. presidential debate in 1980 between Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter, Reagan could have cited innumerable statistics demonstrating the sluggishness of the economy. Instead, he asked a simple question that allowed voters to test for themselves: "Before you vote, ask yourself if you are better off today than you were four years ago."

PRINCIPLE 5: EMOTIONS

How do we get people to care about our ideas? We make them feel something. In the case of movie popcorn, we make them feel disgusted by its unhealthiness. The statistic "37 grams" doesn't elicit any emotions. Research shows that people are more likely to make a charitable gift to a single needy individual than to an entire impoverished region. We are wired to feel things for people, not for abstractions. Sometimes the hard part is finding the right emotion to harness. For instance, it's difficult to get teenagers to quit smoking by instilling in them a fear of the consequences, but it's easier to get them to quit by tapping into their resentment of the duplicity of Big Tobacco.

PRINCIPLE 6: STORIES

How do we get people to act on our ideas? We tell stories. Firefighters naturally swap stories after every fire, and by doing so they multiply their experience; after years of hearing stories, they have a richer, more complete mental catalog of critical situations they might confront during a fire and the appropriate responses to those situations. Research shows that mentally rehearsing a situation helps us perform better when we encounter that situation in the physical environment. Similarly, hearing stories acts as a kind of mental flight simulator, preparing us to respond more quickly and effectively.

http://www.madetostick.com/thebook/excerpts.php
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 02:22 PM
Response to Original message
4. Kucinich and Edwards gave details. What did they get?
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katty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 03:24 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. true, and I am glad they did, that is what I want - details
are way to too dangerous.
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 04:07 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. it's a catch-22. Tell the truth and get shut out or just hope that people know you'll do good
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