Has your opinion of him changed since the Iowa caucuses?
Yes. I'm a Kerry supporter, and not long ago it was looking pretty bleak. Against my better judgment, I began the soul-selling process of forcing myself to be partial to the Angry Old Man from Vermont. Now - thanks to the good people of Iowa - I no longer have to. .
Joe Territo, Petaluma
I hate to say it, but yes. You could say that his pep-rally speech would feel appropriate had you been there in that crowd, and that it doesn't translate well as a sound bite, and that sound bites are no way to form an opinion. But there was still something disturbingly Hitler-like about it. .
Karen Smith, Mill Valley
Given the media info, I was crestfallen that this guy with no apparent contacts with people -- only with policies -- was going to win the nomination. I saw him too many times looking like he was giving himself a pep talk, his expression wooden or flat. Now, I am reassured that other candidates have the vitality to win the position away from him. When he gets himself a life, he might be interesting..
Jason Mark, San Francisco
No. I'm still a strong Dean supporter. Despite the obvious setback in Iowa, I still believe he has what it takes -- namely the right policies and a healthy sense of righteous anger -- to beat Bush this November. .
Steve Shender, Aptos
Before Dean's manic, over-the-top performance in Iowa Monday night, I was fairly certain that he could not beat Bush. Now I'm absolutely sure of it..
Robin Chanin, Santa Cruz
I had a low opinion to begin with. I've read that Republicans were looking forward to running Bush against Dean. It can't be because they think he'd make a formidable opponent. We need to send their worst nightmare to the top of the ticket, not ours.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/01/21/MNG7L4E8PD1.DTL