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First of all, Smirk only won 2004 by a little over 3 million votes - - he only got 50.73% of the vote. So a hell of a lot of people did care about facts in 2004. More to the point, in 2000, Gore got 1/2 million more votes than Bush - - so more people did care that the facts were on our side. The 2000 election was so extreme between our side running on the facts and their side running on spin, I think it's a better example.
IMNSHO problem with 2004 was that we backed off of a number of issues that were our issues previously, issues that we supported on principle, in order to chase after a few swing state voters - - under the mistaken idea that we could back off those ideas without any downside. Backing off of support of gun control and choice and gay rights was a mistake for several reasons, the one nobody talks about is how it played into the GOP's meta-narrative about us. According to the GOP, we're flip flopping panderers who will say anything to get elected. So backing off of controversial positions makes us look bad unless we have a good reason. (Your own reaction to pulling the NARAL ad is a good example.) The Kerry/Edwards campaign never gave a good reason, instead their PR people told the press the political advantages they hoped to gain by those positions. Which, again, played right into the meta-narrative that Democrats are flip-flopping panderers who'll say anything to get elected.
Add to that the fact that our nominee did not have a national profile (outside of political junkie circles), so folks could not say to themselves "yeah, I know MOST Democrats are flip-flopping panderers who'll say anything to get elected, but I've been following John Kerry for years, and I know HE'S not like that!". They had to take on faith that John Kerry was the guy he claimed to be - - something that most people won't do when they vote. They'll vote for the devil they know many more times than they'll vote for the devil they don't know.
I think we're basically in agreement about the message and "spine" issues, but I firmly believe there's no long term value in us embracing the sleaze tactics of the right. Pulling the NARAL ad is caving only if it was fair and accurate, and it wasn't. It implied that Roberts wrote the argument just to aid abortion clinic bombers - - in other words, it implied Roberts is pro-terrorist. To make matters worse, Roberts was even interviewed at the time he wrote the argument and he explained that the argument was NOT designed to help folks bomb abortion clinics. Now, because NARAL so heavily implied that Roberts wrote that agreement because he is pro-terrorist, anything else NARAL says about Roberts will be ignored by vast numbers of people - - because NARAL is now the wacko group who claimed Roberts was pro-terrorist.
We've been watching the Right destroy their own credibility for years. Do any of us listen to anything The Family Research Council or Accuracy In Media say? No, of course not - - because they're the wackos who do nothing except spew partisan BS, and we tune them out for that reason. Is that really what we want for NARAL? To be tuned about by people we want to persuade?
When people in the past have faced much worse evil than Bush (like Hitler and Stalin), they had much more reason than we do to question whether the high road was the right one to take. Hitler looked unbeatable for almost a decade. Even though there were people in the States who advocated adopting fascism because of that, we smart enough to avoid that mistake. We could have entered World War II much earlier if Roosevelt had rounded up everybody who disagreed with him and had them killed. The fact that Roosevelt came even close to Nazi tactics by rounding up some Japanese Americans and put them in camps is not something we celebrate - - it's something we're ashamed of, because we know it was beneath us morally, and it did nothing to help us win the war.
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