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I thought he did extremely well in the debate last night.
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seems to me the solution to this political quandary is to have a moderate candidate joined with a Tea Party VP candidate2. The Republicans are going to really struggle to come up with a candidate who will both appease the Tea Party crowd and still be electable among the 70% or so of American voters who don't have Tea Party leanings.
Although I have more respect for Ron Paul than for most of the R candidates, as a democrat I'd be very happy to have him be the candidate. Very, very happy.
barfo
Paul and Johnson are the only two candidates I'd consider at this point. Odd that they're Republicans, since I've repeatedly been told that Libertarians (both are) clearly must favor Democrats.
I've had numerous discussions with other Libertarians, and my suggestion was to spend all the party's efforts and money on one big prize, like governor of California, or one of the state's two senate seats. My thinking is that having one powerful voice in an influential office would be the best way to have the principles heard and gather popularity, rather than just losing all but a few lesser races and having the ideas not heard at all.
Fortunately, the Democrats and Republicans are the best spokespeople for the Libertarian Party.
At some point, people will (as Johnson says) realize that electing the same sorts of people over and over again isn't making anything any better. To this end, Paul's rise in popularity the past couple of elections is exactly because there is a voice to be heard and the press covers the republican (and democratic) debates a lot more than they do the Libertarian Party ones.
It remains to be seen who the LP runs. I have no clue why they nominated Bob Barr last time around - he's no Libertarian.
Four years ago at this point it seemed like a wide open race. Hillary was probably the favorite, then McCain and then probably Obama and Romney in a tie for third.
I guess a lot of that is not having an incumbent president or a sitting VP running in 2008, as opposed to now. Still, it's kind of shocking that there aren't one or two people even being seriously mentioned as a favorite Republican candidate at this point.
It demonstrates pretty clearly to me two things:
1. Being the favorite at this point doesn't necessarily entitle you to anything. Hillary was and she lost.
2. The Republicans are going to really struggle to come up with a candidate who will both appease the Tea Party crowd and still be electable among the 70% or so of American voters who don't have Tea Party leanings.
My sense is that Tea Partiers, and consequently the whole party, would rather see a Barry Goldwater type Pyrrhic victory of a True Believer, than have somebody who is more moderate make it a close race.
The Democrats were in a very similar situation in 1992. GHW Bush was riding outrageously high approval ratings and there was no front runner in the race. Bill Clinton, failed governor of a tiny state went on to win the nomination. He was sorta the Dems' tea party guy, see the DLC.
How'd that work out?
If the Republicans' best hope is a miracle run equivalent to Bill Clinton's, more power to them. Clinton was also one of the most talented campaigners in recent history. There is a guy like that in the 2012 field, but he's the sitting President.
I don't think anyone thinks Obama is guaranteed to win re-election, but it doesn't look good for the Republicans. A basketball team that's trailing by 20 in the fourth quarter can look to examples of teams overcoming such deficits, but that doesn't mean they're in a good position to win.
Clinton was able to beat the likes of Al Gore, who was not an unknown. The flaw in your thinking is that some unknown guy is not a good campaigner. How can you know the unknown?
Clinton was also one of the most talented campaigners in recent history.
I could only wish those that favor limited government had someone as smart and politically savvy as Bill Clinton.
The people that favor limited government that have real talent you generally find in the private sector. If you were of the mindset that government wasn't all that effective, why would you participate in it?
To change it in the way that you and they favor (i.e. limit it)?
It's small potatoes to making your mark in the private sector.
If it's not particularly important to you guys, why do you complain so much about government?
Your little game is boring. Go find someone else to play.

I don't see why it's hard to understand that someone who's successful in the business world might want to contribute something back to society by performing public service. Schwarzenegger could have made a lot more money making movies than being governor.
And he would have been contributing more to society, too.
barfo
No, I was just highlighting your attempt to have your cake and eat it too: pretend that government is far too unimportant for real achievers yet, on the other hand, speaking in dire tones about how Obama (and "the Left") is destroying our children's futures.
As usual, though, when your lack of logic is exposed and you can't defend your position, you hit the eject button of "you bore me, please stop talking to me." No worries, I'll keep pointing out the flaws in your reasoning and you can keep pretending that you're bored by it.![]()
I don't see why it's hard to understand that someone who's successful in the business world might want to contribute something back to society by performing public service. Schwarzenegger could have made a lot more money making movies than being governor.
