Preparing to a Marathon

2008 campaign

Yesterday’s amazing fundraising is a clear sign that their is a large group of voters, mostly young, that are unhappy with the current political system. This is a larger group and they are looking for:

So there is at least something in Paul’s worldview for most people to strongly dislike, even hate, if they are so inclined. Yet that apparent political liability is really what accounts for the passion his campaign is generating: it is a campaign that defies and despises conventional and deeply entrenched Beltway assumptions about our political discourse and about what kind of country this is supposed to be.

While Barack Obama toys with the rhetoric of challenging conventional wisdom, Paul’s campaign — for better or worse — actually does so, and does so in an extremely serious, thoughtful and coherent way. And there are a lot of people who, more than any specific policy positions, are hungry for a political movement which operates outside of our rotted political establishment and which fearlessly rejects its pieties, even if they disagree with some or even many of its particulars.

[...]

Regardless of one’s ideology, there is simply no denying certain attributes of Paul’s campaign which are highly laudable. There have been few serious campaigns that are more substantive — just purely focused on analyzing and solving the most vital political issues. There have been few candidates who more steadfastly avoid superficial gimmicks, cynical stunts, and manipulative tactics. There have been few candidates who espouse a more coherent, thoughtful, consistent ideology of politics, grounded in genuine convictions and crystal clear political values. Here is what Jon Stewart said to Paul on The Daily Show:

    You appear to have consistent principled integrity. Americans don’t usually go for that.

There is never a doubt that Paul actually believes what he is saying, nor is there any doubt that what he believes is the by-product of critical and rational thought grounded in genuine political passion.

The short term challenge is to to harness this phenomena to as many votes as possible. I said before that I don’t think that Ron Paul can win the nomination and although after yesterday I’m more cautious with my predictions I’m still thinking that the 2008 elections should not be our main focus. Focusing on the election is being limited to the protest, and letting someone else channeling it into political power. But what we seeing is more than a mere protest, a general dissatisfaction with the current system - what we seeing is an old deeply rooted demand for individual liberty. 
We ought to start thinking how do we keep the fire and use it to rebuild a movement that will reclaim the GOP. What we see now should be only the base for long term advocacy and education in the campuses. We should learn how to maintain the gathering places over the Internet and it shouldn’t be tied to one election, nor to a specific candidate. The 2008 campaign is a sprint, we need to be ready for the Marathon.

Last time it took 16 years between Goldwater and Reagan, Hopefully this round will be much shorter. 

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Rogel @ November 6, 2007

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