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Some people say the Dems get beat because they are 'too centrist'.
Others contend that they need to move to the right on some issues.
Now I would personally like to see the Democratic Party re-establish itself as a very progressive, much more liberal party than what we have now.
But just for the sake of speculation...I wonder if the platform really matters as much as the marketing of the message. If the Democratic Party (more left, more right or dead on center) had a propaganda/education/marketing machine of equal or greater influence than the one on the right, would they win every time?
Before you answer, consider how truly awful Bush's platform is, and the extent of support he received.
Now when I say "marketing machine" I'm not talking about just TV ads during an election year, I'm talking about think tanks, eloquent pundits, cleverly framed messages - the whole nine yards.
I have this sense (and it comes from years of experience in sales) that Americans do NOT buy the better product, they buy the product which is MARKETED better. Actual quality, features, price, and appropriateness to their needs are secondary to the effectiveness of the advertising. OK, that's pretty cynical when applied to electoral politics, but hey, I've been pretty cynical since we've moved into a post 11/2 world.
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