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#1 | ||
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College Starter
Join Date: Dec 2002
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Newsweek article on Howard Dean and the internet
“HOWARD DEAN'S TRICK”
- By Mark Shields - Monday, July 7, 2003 The reaction of the Democratic Party establishment to former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean's raising more money during the second quarter of the year than any of his eight rivals for the party's presidential nomination reminds me of the legendary Theodore White's memorable report of the scene in the Boston Garden during John F. Kennedy's last campaign rally on the eve of the 1960 presidential election. JFK, according to White, was surrounded on the stage by a " covey of the puffy, pink-faced, predatory-lipped politicians who had so dominated Massachusetts politics before he had taken over." Noting their "envious faces" as the candidate spoke, Richard Donahue, a Kennedy aide observed: "You know they can't understand this. They think he has a trick. They're listening to him because they think if they learn the trick, they can be president, too." To listen to experienced and able politicians in the campaigns of Dean's Democratic rivals this week was to hear men searching for the "trick" that had transformed the under-funded underdog into the well-heeled contender. Most were sure they had found Dean's gimmick: It was his mastery of the Internet. The Vermonter has used the Web effectively to recruit contributors and supporters. It's true that the Dean campaign's Web site is well-designed and welcoming to visitors. But to credit the Internet with Howard Dean's surge makes about as much sense as much-earlier Republicans who convinced themselves that FDR was politically unbeatable because "he was so terrific on radio," just as Democrats were, later, certain that Ronald Reagan's enormous popularity was because he "was so terrific on TV." In each case, the opposition's solution was identical. Republicans "only" had to find a candidate who was as good on radio as FDR, and Democrats had "simply" to locate the Gipper's equal on the tube. Make no mistake about it. It is not the medium -- radio, TV or the Internet -- which enlists and converts voters to a cause. It is the message -- what the candidate stands for and communicates -- that touches and moves voters. At a time when a large chunk of the Democratic Party membership was strongly opposed to President George W. Bush and his advocacy of a pre-emptive U.S. war against Iraq, the leadership of the Democratic Party -- especially "first-tier" presidential candidates Sens. John Kerry of Massachusetts, Joe Lieberman of Connecticut and John Edwards of North Carolina, along with Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri -- stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the Republican president. Howard Dean spoke to -- and for -- the millions of Democrats who were against that war. That is message! Now, when the most recent CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll asks, "All in all, do you think the situation in Iraq was worth going to war over or not?" and a growing 42 percent of Americans answer, "No," it is understandable why, to more than a few Democrats, Dean looks to be wise, as well as brave.... His early success at fund raising is no guarantee that Howard Dean will be a serious candidate in New Hampshire next January. But Dean used no tricks nor gimmicks to collect those contributions. His opponents better understand: It was his message. |
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#2 |
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Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Is it some new rule that every hot button issue, or anything that is phat and dope and poppin' fresh needs at least two threads?
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#3 |
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College Starter
Join Date: Dec 2002
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Technically the rule applies strictly to things phat and dope. To this point, poppin' fresh is a bit of a grey area, and hot button issues get at least three threads.
Also here is a funny Ari Fleischer quote from a few days ago: "I think the burden is on those people who think he didn't have weapons of mass destruction to tell the world where they are." |
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#4 |
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Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
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This wasn't a rip on you timmy, it's just something that seems to be happening a lot. Just look at what I see on just one page of general discussion:
NCAA College Football 2004 Impressions NCAA Football 2004 to ship on Monday? What an ALL-STAR Game! MLB All-Star game - Who's Watching It? Newsweek article on Howard Dean and the internet Howard Dean Queer Eye for the Straight Guy I think this is about shorty See, there are several groups of posts on the same topic. |
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#5 | |
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Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Quote:
Taken out of context, I suppose one could find that funny. |
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