Again, you are working too hard to avoid dealing with the world as it is. A political attack is a good idea if it moves the needle positively, and a bad idea if it doesn't. And in the real world of campaigns, attacks almost axiomatically move the needle both positively and negatively. Campaigns know that and have to decide if the gain on one side of the equation outweighs the offset on the other. Unpopular incumbents in particular live in a world of such choices....they willingly turn races into mudfests to the point of actually depressing turnout in key demographics (because their models show they can only win a low-turnout race.) They actually WANT to make independents get disgusted and stay home. Obama did it brilliantly. He won, despite popularity rates below Trump's current level. (which should be a warning to those who are convinced who can/cannot win the 2024 election....anything is possible.....) This last cycle, Democrats spent millions calling you and me a threat to democracy. What point is served talking about whether it was right or fair for them to have done so? It worked...it improved their outcome beyond what any reasonable analysis indicated it should have been. (and it gave you a platform to blame Trump, so indirectly, you benefited from it as well....)Mothra said:This is word salad designed to obfuscate the fact you will not answer my very simple questions. While I appreciate your perspective on how to run a political campaign, respectfully, I am not at all interested in your analysis of how a politician should dish out - and handle- political attacks. So I am going to try to steer this one more time back to the subject of my posts to see if I can get an honest answer before I give up on you.whiterock said:You're edging off into disingenuous arguments. Lies and personal attacks, partial truths, half-truths, spin-truths, etc....have always happened in politics. Always will. Everybody does it. There is no high ground for you there. The only question is whether or not the attacks, jabs, feints, etc... are effective, or not. I'm noting the movement in the polls and showing what's working or not. You are getting increasingly petulant that I won't virtue posture with you about what things should be rather than what they are.Mothra said:Respectfully, you're ignoring my points to make the point you want to make. I've never argued that DeSantis shouldn't be tough. So you just wasted a lot of bandwidth on several posts arguing a point I've never disagreed with.whiterock said:You are alleging all kinds of things that aren't true. I'm not justifying anything. I'm pointing out that politics is a tough business. If you enter politics, you are going to get called all kinds of things that aren't true. You can whine about it, or you can get tougher.Mothra said:
Democrats are going to suggest a lot more than that, all across the spectrum of nonsense.It's interesting to justify lies and personal attacks against a fellow Republican because Democrats are going to do it. And it's kind of sick to respect someone for engaging in such lies and personal attacks. It's a shame we have devolved into this.Quote:
Get tougher.
I did not complain a single time about Trump's attacks on Cruz. They were tough. Harsh. I knew how the race was going to end. There is no such thing as a gentle coup d''grace. It is hard business, best done quickly. As disappointed as I was at how it ended, I had grudging admiration for a guy who knew how to finish a race. I knew I had a guy who was a fighter. A guy who would not leave me on the battlefield.
GET TOUGHER.
I long for the pre-Trump days of human decency.
It's your line of reasoning that for the first time has me reconsidering whether I will vote for Trump if he's the nominee. I can't believe I've gotten to that point, but I think I might be there.
I'll never forget the first time I got called a RINO. Stung. Never been called that before. The mind races: totally out of right field unexpected, unfair, how could they say that, what do you say to prove them wrong? The answer is....they didn't know me. They actually believed it. I had to smile, then show them what I was. A few years down the road, they were on the team.
I once made a stone cold sober point in a debate about experience for office of a competitor. It was effective because it was textbook accurate. We had different experience and mine was better suited to what was of more interest in that particular election. I maintained a good relationship with the other candidate. We liked and respected each other. His wife, on the other hand, never spoke to me again. She couldn't get past it. Politics is a tough business. Nothing will be given to you. You will have to take it. You will have to DEFEAT your opponent. And if you are challenging the king on the hill, you are going to take a LOT of shots, from all sides. Part of the job.
DeSantis isn't whining about anything.
He's tough.
YOU, friend....need to get a LOT tougher.
What I've asked you - personally - is whether you condone or think lies and personal attacks against a fellow Republican are a good idea. I've asked whether you think it's good that Trump regularly violates Reagan's 11th Commandment. Instead of having the courage to answer that question, you've instead said candidates are going to get attacked and must be tough. Well, no ****, Sherlock, but that's not what I asked you.
The closest you've come to answering it is you claim to "respect" Trump for all of the personal attacks he made on fellow Republicans. I suppose that's the closest thing we'll get from you to an answer. You are fine with lies and mean-spirited attacks by one Republican on another - well, to be clear, as long as it's the frontrunner, Trump, doing the attacking. And that says a lot about you, personally.
you were particularly offended at that picture of a younger RDS as some kind of outlandish smear. If you were more objective about such things, you would see that it was a fairly subtle jab...."ok buddy, be careful, you have exposure here, too...." to keep RDS from grandstanding excessively as the quintessential family man. Those kinds of jabs are often very effective. One of my greater disappointments in recent years was being unable to persuade a nearly perfect candidate to run for Congress, because he did not want his 10-12 year old kids to hear things said about their father than we both knew would definitely come out....given the MO of the candidate already in the race (as well as the consultant that candidate used). The things themselves? No big deal. Below the "youthful indiscretion" threshold. The attack might have boomeranged against the other candidate as much as the intended target. But the prospect was more worried about being a good father than a good congressman. (ergo proving he had the right stuff for elected office....) He wasn't warned on social media, but he did have some donors asking some questions suggested by the opposing campaign......so the word was out. RDS probably does have a few things in his closet he'd rather his kids not hear. So do you. And I. Normal people do. And for that reason, RDS will pick & choose his battles (and the timing of them) carefully. To the extent that keeps the two campaigns away from questions of who is the bigger playboy, that is a good thing, is it not?
As a rule.....and I mean as a really foundational rule....never accede to a demand to condemn. Never. Once you start, you've given your opponent a handy-dandy tool to back you around anywhere he wants to take you. Condemnation is a virtue posture. And at it's highest form becomes regime political correctness....entire crowds of people formed up to denounce some kind of something just to intimidate free thinkers from allowing what they know to be true to form image in their mind. My sentiments on this were formed from years living in 3rd world dictatorships. There are few things that steel my jaw more than the condemnation culture. Actually, I cannot think of anything I detest more.
If you are running around demanding others condemn something in order to avoid your opprobrium.....well....that's what the woke do.
My questions are quite simple. It's not asking you to "condemn" anyone. It's either a yes or a no. Do you condone or think lies and personal attacks against a fellow Republican are a good idea? Do you think it's good that a certain candidate regularly violates Reagan's 11th Commandment? Let's say, for example, a Republican candidate decides to attack the looks of another Republican candidate's wife. Think that's a good idea and fair game? Think that's ok as long as it's politically effective? Or is there any bridge too far for you?
Now, if its just way too difficult for you to take a stand on a Republican politician's behavior (God forbid!), let me know and I will stop asking. For you, I understand moral judgments are only reserved for Democrat politicians.
I'm not going to worry a nanosecond about your concerns. You shouldn't either. The voters speak on these things. They hold elected officials accountable for the campaigns they run. When I see a campaign attack that raises my eyebrow, I don't get all huffy and threaten to sit out an election. I watch. Assess. Ask why they did that...what am I missing.....what angle are they working...how will voters respond.....? I try to learn what was the calculation behind it. Normally, it's not terribly hard to figure out what the campaigns are attempting to accomplish. That picture of RDS that offended you so.....by any measure a pretty gentle tap in the realm of campaign attacks. The purpose, obvious. And explained to you. Didn't bother me a bit. Shouldn't bother any mature adult. It's politics. Get over it. If you don't, you'll just get all huffy and miss the underlying dynamics really at play in the race.
Let me say this again, more pointedly. The person trying to force you to condemn something is preening their own vanity, at your expense. Stay away from people like that. They are bad news.