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1. It's the law
Primaries and conventions aren't optional things. They aren't window dressing. They aren't unnecessary arguing. They're encoded in the law. There is no single authority available to decided to just scrap the whole process. We only have a single Democratic nominee because we have a naitonal Democratic convention to inform the states who goes on the ballot. If there's no primaries, then there's no convention, in which case there wouldn't be anybody to actually name the nominee.
If we changed the nomination process to having, say, a congressional caucus to pick our nominee (which is the only alternative to there being a primary/caucus system and the system they used from 1804 to 1824) we sure wouldn't have the front runner we have today. The national leaders wouldn't have picked a Dean (or a Carter or a Clinton). But all this goes to point 2.
2. It's democracy
We actually have to vote. But democracy is much more than just voting. Democracy is a bunch of people--all those who care to, not just those who get selected at random by pollsters--voicing their opinions and fighting and bickering a bit before they come up with an answer like "Person X will be our next president." Messy? Sure, there's millions of us. The process of democracy takes some time and patience and mess and heat to come to a final decision. The alternative is tyranny. Any good cook will tell you you can't avoid a mess if you want to make the full recipe work.
3. We will be united
Democrats always bicker among ourselves. This doesn't weaken us. It doesn't keep us from being united in November. It doesn't hurt our chances. It actually serves to (a) toughen up our eventual leader for the fight to come, (b) give those of us who wouldn't pick our current leader fell that the nominee somehow earned his place at the top, and (c) makes sure we pick our best guy. Howard Dean is a much stronger candidate now than he was just a few weeks ago. He's learning his limitations and his personal foibles as a candidate. So are Clark, Edwards, Gephardt, Braun, Lieberman--all of them. Kucinich is a much much sharper arguer now than he was in the first debates. He's honed his message and rallied his people and brought new people into the process; they all have done this.
4. Plenty of money
We're not gonna run out of money. Dean has shown us that. We'll be out funded by the GOP, but we always are. By the time November rolls around, a few million here or a few million there won't make a difference. Bringing more dough into the system, while unfortunate, does tend to invest a lot more people in the final outcome. This too is building to a head on election day.
Be patient. We'll get through this and be in good shape in November. At the end it'll all come down to fundamentals: the right candidate, the right message, and a strong organization. All these factors are fed by the things you're worrying about. Forget the trees; look at the forest. It's growing.
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