Stonewalling

A political campaign is tricky.  You have to get your message out and keep control of the situation, but at the same time you have to let it go and roll with the punches.  It’s a lot like any other advertising campaign in a mixed old/new media world, but with a strong deadline and high stakes that fire passions.  More importantly, the conduct of that campaign itself is often more important than the candidate because, like new media, you’re not just selling a product but a relationship.

The Governor’s race in Minnesota is crackling with a very good example of what not to do right now.  The Emmer campaign is so consistently far over the top in their efforts to control their message that they are clearly doing great harm to their candidate – and calling into question their philosophy, policy, and identity.

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Rally to Restore Sanity

Imagine a mob descending on the capitol.  They aren’t armed with pitchforks and torches – no, many of them are holding the cotton candy they bought to keep the kids from getting too bored and whiny.  They aren’t angry, except maybe at the sitter who canceled at the last minute to go play disk golf with her boyfriend.  This is a concerned mob, a group of people who aren’t shouting slogans mostly because they find “Hey, Hey” chants to be a bit embarrassing.  Their list of demands is not long – all they want is for people to think for a change.

This is the Rally to Restore Sanity.  30 October 2010.  Be there – if it’s not too much trouble.

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Methane

Just in case we didn’t get the message the first time, another oil rig has exploded in the Gulf of Mexico.  It was evacuated safely and there appears to be no leak.  But given that it was another BP rig, the nooze and politicos are eager to point fingers at the oil company.  They shouldn’t.  Anyone who does not think that industrial accidents are always going to be a part of a dangerous industry is delusional.  The blame for all of these disasters rest with a nation that has an insatiable thirst for oil.

Fortunately, there are many things that can be done.  One that I favor involves a step by step process by which we move to a methane based fuel system.  Let me explain as briefly as I can.

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Summer’s End

As we head into Labor Day, summer is nearly over and the long hazy daze of hot weather are coming to an end.  It’s traditionally the time of year when various financial institutions, including the stock market, begin to perk up and take notice of what’s been happening since the weather was less languid.

This year the return from vacation is as hectic as ever.  Economic news over the last week has been terrible, showing a horrific decline in home sales, stubborn new jobless claims, and a huge downward revision in GDP.  None of this can be taken as good.

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Dark Issues

It is possible to write about how silly our “politics” has become and never run out of new material.  That much has to be obvious by now.  But it is still amazing how far from reality the election year chatter has become. Dark Issues have taken the place of any sense of reality and rationalism.

Are we really that scared of what is happening to our nation that we’ll talk about nearly anything else?

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