Monday, March 10, 2008

Political Campaign Rules

Politics is war. Any candidate who does not understand that should not be running for office, because he won't win. War has rules and here is what I think they should be in a political campaign:

  1. You do not lie about yourself or your stance on issues.
  2. You do not lie about your opponent or his stance on his issues.
  3. You do not personally attack your opponent. You only attack his stance on issues or his political philosophy.
  4. You do not attack his spouse or children unless they are "picking up arms" so to speak. If they are out on the campaign stump giving speeches for their spouse, for example, they are fair game. They just stopped being an innocent civilian--they just became part of the war.
The first two rules are the most important. People don't like political ads (or any advertisement for that matter) that are outright dishonest. They understand ads that show the opponent in a negative light--as long as it is truthful. It is part of the game. But start lying about yourself or your opponent then you lose your integrity.. In politics that's all you have in the end.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Miscellaneous Thoughts Part 10

  • If a dictator wants to stay in power he has to ban guns, keep people poor, and control the press.
  • I am thinking about writing an unauthorized autobiography.
  • You think there has been an opinion poll on polls?
  • All rivals in a group "get" or understand each other. It does not matter if they are military rivals, sports rivals, political rivals, or what have you. They all understand the nature of the game and have the same mindset.
  • I think Congressmen should not receive any gifts, trips, or favors from lobbyists. These "gifts" are just bribes, because Congressmen are public officials no different than policemen or judges. It is against the law to bribe other public officials. It should be against the law to bribe Congressmen. I don't think lobbyist or Congress would see it the same way though.
  • Oliver Stone is making a film about President Bush. If he made a film about President Clinton what kind of rating would that film have? An R-rating? Maybe even an X-rating?
  • Suspense movie plot: A serial killer goes after a person who steals his/her identity. Question: Who is the protagonist and who is the antagonist?
  • I wonder if a socialistic liberal would ever hire a public defender if they got accused and arrested of a felony crime?
  • I wonder if AARP is going to endorse John McCain for president. I think they should since they say they are an advocate for the elderly.
  • A person without morality or self-control is like a vehicle without brakes. Sooner or later something bad is going to happen.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Crazy Man with An Axe Scenario

Imagine this scenario taking place. You are outside minding your own business when a crazy guy comes after you swinging an axe. You look in his eyes and there is madness in them. What do you do? Do you...

  1. Yell, "stop or I'll shoot" if you have a loaded gun.
  2. Run and hide.
  3. Try to reason with the madman, or try to apologize to him thinking you must have offended him in someway.
If you are a police officer you would probably do the first option. You want to give him a chance of putting down the axe. If he still comes at you, you would probably just shoot him. The second option is understandable especially if you don't have a weapon or don't know any self-defense. Fight or flight is the instinct here. The only problem is he might still come after you so you better hope he runs slower than you. The worst choice is three. You can only reason with sane people. This guy might be hallucinating you're a demon or an evil alien that needs to be stopped. You do not know what is in his mind or what his motivation is. Apologizing to the madman is even more stupid. The last option will definitely get you killed. It is all about self-preservation and common sense.