BobTheCoward
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2010
- Messages
- 22,789
Many of those 50 are not senators. You claimed 50 senators.
Many of those 50 are not senators. You claimed 50 senators.
For the record, when did I ever say Sanders was good at messaging or even better than any of them?Look. If you are arguing that Republicans are generally better at messaging then I agree with you. That said, it's easy when you're not saying anything which is what I get from most Republicans. But frankly I don't think Sanders is really any better than Warren at it.
I get mad at most Democrats when they get too wonky. But even worse is the candidate who is unprepared and stumbles over answers.
Warren is much much better at it then she used to be. It's still not good enough. But I don't see a Democratic candidate who standing out better than her. Not a one. So what the hell do we do?
Booker is excellent at messaging.
I think they say plenty of things, but their target audience eats, sleeps, and breathes hate, and are horrifyingly misinformed, on top.
It's easy to message to people with this large, exposed, pulsing lizard brain that's ravenous for more racism, sexism, and general xenophobia.
And?It doesn't refute Warren being pressured to support Medicare For All.
My bad.
eta:
Either way, they all went back on it, at the urging of Obama.
Obama, the democratic POTUS and leader of the democratic party.
Because the POTUS and leader of the party holds a lot of sway like that.
My highli9ghted addition.yeah, but thoughtful people growing up in a complicated world learn to be suspicious of simple themes.
Either way, using lies to "message" to frightened people is pretty easy.
Obama urged them. You don't know if that was the reason they did it.
If they had meaningful power, blue dogs would not have so successfully sunk a public option.
Your reply is bizarre. Non zero and meaningful impact on the things you care about are not the same.
It's a fallacy to think one can't tell the truth and sell it.
Booker is excellent at messaging.
Your reply is bizarre. It wasn't the blue dogs who blackballed the public option.
Paywall
WASHINGTON—Rep. Dennis Kucinich boarded Air Force One opposed to President Barack Obama's health bill. He landed moving toward yes, still not impressed with the substance of the bill, but persuaded the president had heard him out.
"He knew my position to a fine degree of definition," said Mr. Kucinich, who ultimately came full circle, announcing Wednesday he was switching to a "yes" vote.
Can you see this?
The two are not mutually exclusive.I think you're confusing charisma for messaging.
Lakoff is emeritus professor of cognitive science and linguistics at UC Berkeley. His 2004 book, “Don’t Think of an Elephant!”, about how conservatives frame their political messages more effectively than Democrats do, has moved the needle on campaign language, but not nearly enough, he says. Democrats have to keep their messengers on message, and be able to craft that message not just as a recitation of facts and policy, but as a persuasive story about democracy and governance that voters want to hear, and support.
I can tell you the public is not going to buy into universal health care unless it is presented with proper framing
70 percent of Americans support 'Medicare for all' proposal
Seventy percent said they supported providing "Medicare for all," also known as single-payer health care, for Americans, according to a new American Barometer survey.
The poll, conducted by Hill.TV and the HarrisX polling company, found that 42 percent of respondents said they "strongly" supported the proposal, while 28 percent said they "somewhat" supported it.
Fifteen percent said they "somewhat" opposed the measure, while another 15 percent said they "strongly" opposed it.
The results mirrored a Reuters-Ipsos poll released in August, which also found that 70 percent of Americans supported "Medicare for all."