Re: Should Republicans/Conservatives throw the Presidential election?
> BC Teufelshund (DevilDog) wrote:
> Zarf wrote....
"1: Why the hell can't the GOP win back the House and Senate? Look, the GOP increased the number of senators and representatives in 2004 when the presidential election was taking place. In addition, while the House is going to be a tough call to beat, the Senate isn't too bad of a fight for Republicans, with a 49/49 divide currently, although it'll be an uphill fight since the GOP has more incumbents to defend than the Dems. But the principle still stands that people tend to favor the senate candidates of the same party as their presidential candidates. Knowing that, you can take back the Senate by promoting McCain."
We cannot win because people are not happy with Republicans. That is why we lost both in 2006. If we are to win back majority, the people in the house and senate need to return to their base and be true conservatives. Unless they do this, we will not win. I am a conservative, so I would like us to take them back, don't get me wrong. But I can see where people have a problem with our party, and until that is rectified we will continue to be the minority.
If McCain wins, it means they are happy with Republicans. Therefore, by supporting McCain, one of two things happen:
1: Republicans win, and you're wrong, because straight-ticket voting takes place. Your argument only assumes a general Republican antipathy, not one unique to McCain. Therefore, McCain can still influence popular opinion to support the GOP, so the GOP can still win, solving your problems.
2: Obama wins, and something else happens. But if you give up on McCain, this is inevitable anyway, so let's not worry about it.
Either way, if there's a greater chance of your problems being fixed by voting for McCain just due to the slight chance that the GOP will also win the House/Senate, isn't that better?
"1: If the media is left biased and powerful enough to do that, wouldn't that mean the conservative movement can't win anyway, because the media would simply overlook anything good that was done during a McCain presidency, and emphasize all the good things done during an Obama presidency? But if there is a way to overcome media bias, can't that same tool be used like it was in the immigration debates of today, to pressure McCain on the issues which conservatives disagree based upon?"
No, not at all. We actually have a few things working for us. 1) Fox news. They are fair and actually show both sides. They have great ratings, so we actually have a lot of ppl that watch. 2) We have the radio. That is our power house. People like Sean Hannidy, Rush, Bill O'Reilly, and many more are great people to listen that will actually be honest.
Network news (especailly MSNBC) are starting to lose ratings. A lot of ppl are seeing the lies.
Alright, then. So you have a tool to overcome the media bias, and a damn effective one at that. However, this bites back to two arguments I already made:
1: You can overcome media bias, so you don't need to make America go suicide bomber on itself just to show everyone that liberalism sucks.
2: If the Dems win the presidency and Congress, they'll pass the Fairness Doctrine, screwing over your tools, so you can't get off the ground in 2012.
"1: The media contradiction still exists here. Your scenario is based on the media's power. If the media powerful, your scenario is inevitable. If other agents can overcome the media, then they can separate themselves from McCain on the issues about which they disagree with him."
READ ABOVE
You do the same. ![]()
"1: Wouldn't the media just spin the bad news, just like they've spun good news into bad news?"
NO, not at all. That is the point. If McCain were pres and screwed up, it would be easy. But if Obama is president, they can try to spin all they like. The point of the matter is dems control the white house and dems control the house and senate. They could say what ever they like, but there will be no possible way to blame it on Republicans as it is not possible for it to have been us. We are not in power, they are. There is no way around that, and the ppl know who is in power.
That requires a good number of assumptions:
1: Obama would screw up everyone. Or, at the very least, a good enough cross-section of the nation in key voting states.
2: The effects would be large enough to be visible to the everyday person, unaided by the media.
3: The negative effects would have to be felt by the time the 2012 election hits.
4: The negative effects would have to outweigh all possible potential future gains that could be claimed by the media ("Sure, the deficit is higher than ever, but this is needed for long term economic growth. What? No economic growth yet? Remember, good economic policies take time to become good.")
5: There would have to be absolutely no other future issues on the ballot. ("Sure, the deficit is enormous right now as a result of Obama. But let's not look to the past. Event X has happened, and we need to judge this election based on who can handle future events, not past events.")
6: The negative effects would have to be universal. ("Sure, you're feeling the effects of this slowing economy. But don't think of yourself. Think of person X who did benefit as a result of this policy. Don't you feel good that you're helping person X?" Note: Person X only has to really be a hypothetical person, really, in order to allow people to achieve a feel-good state from their own sacrifice.)
7: Oh, and let's not forget that Obama could rig up election rules, establish the Fairness Doctrine, or do any number of things that result in shutting down the 2012 backlash.
8: Oh, and you're also assuming that the US can survive 4 years of failed policy and still walk out alive.
"Not really. You're still de facto supporting him for President in 2008, even if it's through silent consent. Therefore, you're still responsible for the harms he brings."
Not true. If I do not like either candidate and do not vote, I do not support anyone. I do not support Obama or McCain. I simply will have had no vote. That would be like saying a 7 year old who cannot vote and wants Obama is partly responsible for what he does wrong. I would not want Obama no matter what, I would just rather it be them that screws up and not us. I think that makes a bit more sense.
Question: Who do you prefer: Obama or McCain? Don't answer this from a strategic political perspective (the "Obama destroys liberalism" side). Just based on what each person stands for, along with their personalities or any other characteristics of the candidate, who do you prefer?
The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...