Political Rules for Aspiring Politicians
I have been reading about the speeches given by an aspiring political candidate. He seems to be against everything that the current incumbent has undertaken. It struck me that this is a very simple way to campaign for public office. I’m sorry it never occurred to me when I was actually running for office. A bit of reflection produced these simple rules for aspiring political candidates: Follow these and you can’t go wrong.
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Play to the audience – tell them whatever they want to hear.
- Take a strong stance against the other side, whoever they are.
- Focus on making them look bad, at beating them, not on solving our problems.
- Offer only criticisms of their attempts – it’s much easier.
- Make the other side so upset with your antics that they will stop listening to you.
- Smile a lot, look strong and confident.
- Use simple phrases, nothing too complicated.
- Never ask your audience to engage in any hard work.
- Never consider or even mention the other side’s perspective, lest they think you are trying to negotiate.
- Never actually study a complex issue and offer creative alternatives.
- Never praise a positive step by the other side.
- Be sure to say “God bless America” at the end – forget that the term “America” includes some of the poorest countries in the world.
- Never ask your deity to look with favor on the vast majority of human kind who converse with a different deity, and whose problems are inextricably bound up with our problems.
- Forget that a majority of voters are independents, not on your side or that other side.
- Forget that, as often stated by that noted Canadian Sage, Red Green, we are all in this together.
© Copyright Carl Scheider 2004
Created on ... December 18, 2009