No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.
- US Supreme Court

Sunday, April 13, 2008

'they just don't understand'

I have been seeing this a lot. As frustration grows, more people are pointing out the words or actions of this person or that person or the party or the media...'they just don't understand'.

I am afraid they do.

Read what top business books have been saying for decades now: this is how you win. Every game is a war game. Know your enemy. Use whatever tools are available. Stealth is better than force. Study strategy. Use your enemy's weaknesses.

"They" are doing it on purpose. They are yanking chains and pushing buttons.

"They" know perfectly well that it will enrage - that is why they do it.

"They" know perfectly well it is unfair - they just don't care, or they think it's funny.

The old boys' rules here:
  • defeat the candidate at any cost.
  • legitimacy only becomes an issue when it helps their side.
  • fair play only becomes an issue when it can be manipulated to help their side.
The moral restraints that keep most people reasonably well-behaved have been eroding. In 2008 America, winning is the ultimate moral good.

I so wish we could make up a new political party. Instead of liberal vs. conservative, the central axis would be a different with-us-or-against-us:

If you are civilized and respect the
boundaries of common decency, you're our friend.

If you play by unethical power rules,
you're a threat.


I bet we'd lose a few elections, but like an organic garden, we'd end up much healthier and thus much stronger.

(And the party would be inherently centrist in nature.)

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