SteveG


Elizabeth Warren Explains the Intellectual Foundation She Provided

I have tried to explain the concept of this rebuttal ad to the Elizabeth Warren campaign to no avail. I finally decided to make a prototype of the ad that I had in mind.

If the campaign still refuses to counter the attack that will not go away, maybe this prototype can go viral and make up for what they refuse to do. Its going viral depends on you sharing it and recommending it to anyone you know.  Either share this blog post or share the video at YouTube.


The voice artist that is standing in for Elizabeth Warren for the explanation of the intellectual foundation is Shelah Jordan.

For more on the real Elizabeth Warren and the two books that were mentioned, see the videos in the list below.


Brown vs Warren: Deja Vu All Over Again

JaneS sent me a link to a Plymouth Daily News article, Running for President in 2016 instead of for Senator in 2012. I derived the headline for this post from the wording in the link to the article. [Actually it was the link on the front page of the newpaper that said 2012 Brown vs Warren race starting to look like the 2010 Brown vs Coakley shocker. I never noticed that my titled did match the actual title of the article. I also did not even look at the picture at the top of the article before I titled this post.][When I go back to the newspaper’s front page, I don’t even see the title that I thought belonged to the article. The link has a popup title when you hover over it that says Is she running for President in 2016 instead of for Senator in 2012. Of course that may change by the time you get to the article.]

To give you just a flavor of the devastating article, I will include the teaser below:

I have spoken to local town committee chairs who are so put-off by the Warren staff that they are sitting out her campaign and spending their time working “for people I like,” as one put it to me.

The Warren campaign staff gets paid. Local town chairs and activists work for free. No one works for free for someone unless they like them, and that ain’t happening here for Elizabeth Warren.

Here’s what the Warren staff asked unpaid Cape Cod Democratic Town Committees to do last week in 20-degree weather:

  • Canvass neighborhoods in Bourne, Mashpee, Hyannis, Yarmouth and Dennis that have a large number of registered voters that did not vote in the 2010 election to discuss the importance of the 2012 election cycle.
  • Collect nomination signatures to get Elizabeth Warren and other participating local Democrats on the ballot (if you choose).
  • Distribute literature for Elizabeth and answer questions these voters may have about the 2012 election.

Canvassing door to door may work in urban areas, but it is anathema in the boonies where older and more affluent voters live.

I am amazed at how the newspaper article fits right in with my own experience.

I had to think about it for a while to figure out the logic of the actual headline on the article. Is it Warren that is actually running for President in 2016 rather than Senator in 2012? If so, she could do us all a favor by getting out and throwing her support to Marisa DeFranco.

Or could it be Deval Patrick who will run for President in 2016 using the Elizabeth Warren message that never got out?


2012/02/20 update

Via Facebook, I have been corresponding with a person familiar with the Warren campaign and received some information that helps put The Plymouth Daily News article in perspective.

In his message, he said,

…My own view of it is that all polls should be taken seriously, even if you think they are crap. The key message here is that nothing is certain. If we fight as though it is true, we will win by 10 points more, even if it isn’t true.

Now for the positive news. The Poll is crap. It was filled with leading questions, (eg: “Do you think Scott Brown is a leader”, “Do you think ELizabeth warren is a radical intellectual”) run by a Pollster who is very close to Mitt Romney. It did not account for the fact that still 30% of the MA population (including many Democrats) doesn’t know who Elizabeth Warren is. A poll a few days earlier took exactly this iinto account and yielded a lead for Warren in a statistical tie. However, despite all that, the Poll represents something even if it is not predictive. Since no Polls at this stage of an election are really predictive, it is what it is and we circle back to the fact that I think all polls carry some useful insight.


Love Warren’s Great Story, Just Wish That Nasty Fly Weren’t In The Ointment

I attended Elizabeth Warren’s appearance in Ware today.  Another member of the Sturbridge Democratic Town Committee attended. In an email, CarolM remarked:

I feel we should support her fully as a strong, knowledgeable, passionately committed candidate who will fight for equality of opportunity and a “level playing field” in America and who would no doubt be formidable in a political debate against Scott Brown!

I replied with an agreement and a “but”.

I agree about Warren’s message. She has a nice, coherent story that ties together the role of government in creating the environment for us all to succeed. When she tells the history from the depression era through the 1980s and into the 2000s where she describes what we as a country did right to get us to our pre-eminent position in the world and what we started failing to do since the 1980s, it makes a wonderful counter to the story the Republicans have been selling since Goldwater lost to Johnson.

I have to put one fly in the ointment that worries me, though.

In a “debate” with Scott Brown, she won’t have 15 minutes of uninterrupted time to give this shpiel. This is one of the reasons why she needs to debate Marisa DeFranco while the electorate is not even watching. Consider DeFranco as the sparring partner that would get Warren into shape for the real fight.

After watching the “debate” in Lowell (see Warren shines in debate debut), I commented,

I was not that impressed with Elizabeth Warren.

The format was a mix of long form answers that lasted 1 minute, and quick answers that were supposed to take 10 to 15 seconds. This is not a format that a champion debater has honed her skills on. Debate skills are almost useless in this format.

The skill you need is to quickly come up with a short answer to a surprise question that finds the pithiest reflection of your deepest beliefs.

There was one person there who managed to do this for almost every question. That woman was Marisa DeFranco. I had never heard of her before. Until tonight, I didn’t know she was running.

Being charitable to the Warren staff, they seem so devoted and committed to her, that they won’t brook any mention of any possible problems. I wish I could get my message through to them, but every time I try they throw me out of the campaign.

Maybe I am being paranoid, but when Elizabeth saw me close up in Ware, she seemed to be almost frightened to get close enough to talk to me. (Her field organizer, GregM, definitely knows who I am.) (I suppose it could have been that I forgot to shave this morning.)

If anybody else knows how to deliver this message in a tactful manner that might get listened to, please feel free to use any of my ideas or words along with your own to get through to the campaign.

I have liked the story about the economy that Warren can explain since even before she was running. I have a number of her lectures and interviews posted on this blog.  Since she started to campaign, I have seen much progress on her part in honing that message so that she can deliver its essence in a relatively short amount of time.  She did not speak that long in Ware, but she managed to deliver a beautifully put together and coherent story as I said above.  If the electorate ever gets to hear the whole pitch, I think they would be convinced.  My fear is that there are very few forums where she can deliver that message so that  enough of the voters will get to hear it.


Where Are The Women?

I received this email offering a way to complain to the Republican leadership of the House of Representatives about their misogynist approach to legislation on women’s health care issues. Perhaps this is an easier alternative than taking to the streets in protest.



U.S. Senate candidate Marisa DeFranco takes on healthcare, immigration and Elizabeth Warren

The MassLive article, U.S. Senate candidate Marisa DeFranco takes on healthcare, immigration and Elizabeth Warren, was recommended to me by reader BillM.

I’ll pick out just a few items to emphasize for my own reasons, but there are many more excellent points in the article.

“A lot of people will say to me that their grandparents came legally, and why can’t immigrants do that today?” DeFranco said. “But what they don’t realize is that back then there was an open border policy. Now you can only come through an immediate relative or through business. There are asylum cases, but those are much more complicated. It is not easy or cheap to become a U.S. citizen, although the process does have its fair points such as a citizenship option following five years with a green card.”

The reason why I like the above quote is that it demonstrates a point I have been making about running for office.  When you support a certain point of view and you get some flak for it, you don’t just try to hide what you believe.  You explain why you have that point of view, and you try to educate people as to that viewpoint’s merits.  How will a politician ever get to lead the country in a better direction, if that candidate always backs away from promoting any idea that the public does not already like?

One example she cited where more of a fight would have been beneficial is the healthcare overhaul and its exclusion of a public option which would have made health insurance companies compete with the federal government.

“The mandate to buy coverage from the health insurance companies, which is a Republican idea, is the crux of the problem,” DeFranco said. “I’m glad we did something on the national level but the Democrats really capitulated on the public option and that was a mistake. They started with the public option as their top marker. It’s classic negotiation 101, you negotiate high to end up at middle or high ground of where you want to end. They should have started with single-payer and they would have ended up with a public option. Poll after poll showed that 70 percent of people wanted a public option. It’s just an option. If the insurance companies are really behind their free market mentality, then operate in a market. And if the government is your competitor and you’re so much better than the government, compete.”

My reason for choosing the above quote is because it gets to one of my major disappointments with President Obama.  I am not disappointed because President Obama did not accomplish something that I had hoped he would.  My disappointment comes from his inability to even negotiate well.

Let me emphasize one of the sentences from that last DeFranco comment.

If the insurance companies are really behind their free market mentality, then operate in a market. And if the government is your competitor and you’re so much better than the government, compete.

I had thoughts like this at the time of the health care debate and at any time Republicans back away from their purported belief in “free markets.”  I kept thinking then, and I keep thinking now, “Why couldn’t Obama have made that point?”  Even if making that point wouldn’t have won the argument, he would have educated the people to start thinking about that point.  Because of Obama’s continual capitulations without even trying the people have still no inkling that there is a counter idea to what the Republicans said.

If a politician is ever going to modify people’s opinions, when is the right time to start?  I claim that the right time is each and every time that politician speaks in public.  I cannot see the point of waiting for a better time.  Changing people’s opinions takes repetition.  If you wait until you need the opinion to be changed, it is too late.  You have already lost the battle before you even begin to fight.

I raise these points because this is also my fear about Elizabeth Warren.  She hasn’t even gotten the nomination yet, and she is already showing the weaknesses that Obama at least kept hidden until after he was elected.  In Obama’s case we can make the famous Bush claim, “Fool me once, shame on you.”

In Elizabeth Warren’s case, “Fool me twice, shame on me.”  Bush of course couldn’t quite get the words out right.


I wonder if liberals and progressives accept a Democratic politician’s silence on some of our issues because of our distaste of how the Republican candidates throw read meat issues at their base.

I think it is important to differentiate two different things that we may mistake for two sides of the same coin. One is the Republican’s behavior which I believe may be pandering to their base by saying things the candidate  doesn’t even believe.  This is not the same thing as a Democrat saying something that the party base likes when it is a firmly held belief of the politician.

Isn’t it sad that when we don’t like the Republicans saying outrageous things on the right of the political spectrum we take that as a lesson that we shouldn’t say what we truly believe on the left side of the spectrum.


George Soros – Fox News Alliance Exposed

The article posted on Nation Of Change, George Soros – Fox News Alliance Exposed, certainly drew my attention. The entire text of the post is quoted below:

According to Shona Daress, liberal mogul George Soros has been secretly controlling the flow of information out of Fox News. This revelation may come as a suprise considering Fox’s apparent vendetta against Soros, but it is no less true because of the surprise. Fox News is publically owned, and George Soros didn’t have to ask to take control.

I thought this was the entire story, until I read the line that said Read it at Mother Jones. When I followed that link, I saw the real headline was Grand George Soros—Fox News Alliance Exposed at CPAC.  If your suspicions aren’t raised enough now, let me tell you that this is a serious story about the tinfoil hat set at CPAC.

I didn’t notice until I started posting this how the word “surprise” is misspelled in the original item in  Nation Of Change.  I don’t know if this was a typographical or editing error or it was an overly subtle clue that this story was a hoax.

 


Elizabeth Warren Signature Gathering

I have signature gathering sheets to get Elizabeth Warren’s name on the U.S. Senatorial primary ballot. The primary will be held on September 6, 2012. The deadline for the campaign to turn in the signatures for certification is May 8, 2012.

The only valid signatures I can collect are from registered voters in the town of Sturbridge, Massachusetts. You must be registered as either a Democrat or as unenrolled (independent).

If you would like to add your signature to the nomination paper, you can send me an email. I can either come to you to have you sign or you can come to me to sign. Otherwise, I will be around town collecting signatures.

Elizabeth Warren State Primary Nomination Paper