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The Top 10 Jobs Barack Obama Should Consider Instead of Being the President

 

With our president AWOL on most every domestic and worldwide issue (with the exception being Michelle Obama’s war against really tasty food), we’ve come up with some potential jobs for the president to consider.   If nothing else, he can file these jobs under the “created” category as he talks about the debacle that is the stimulus.

Furthermore, we will gladly give him all of these ideas because it really is starting to appear as if he does not even want to be president anymore.  It is sort of our way of saying, “Here is the door, Mr. President.  Do not let it hit you on the way out, sir.”

So in the spirit of wanting to help Mr. Obama reach his fullest potential, here is the list of  jobs for the president to do instead of, well, being the president:

10. “Mom Jeans” Model: Yep, this is our mighty president. Be proud, America, be proud.

9. IRS Special Agent in Charge of Healthcare Enforcement: American Citizen! Where are your healthcare papers!?!?

8. Stranded Car Pusher: I’d bet a Slurpee that the car stuck in the ditch is of the Government Motors variety.

7. Boyfriend to United Nations/Foreign Leaders: The term “Escort” or “Gigolo” could easily apply as well.

6. Advocate for All Outdated, Inefficient, and Vastly Too Expensive Technologies: But Green Technology will win the future! Promise!

5. Professional Sports Watcher: What does the American Public need in these troubled times?  A strong and firm leader?  Nope. Distractions, that’s what!

4. Natural Disaster/International Incident Photography Coordinator: International crises in Japan and Libya? I’m so oblivious that I’ll go to Brazil and play soccer with a bunch of kids instead!

3. A Danseur (Which is a male ballet dancer – I had to Google it): Because he is such a dainty and delicate man, beloved the world over.

2. Kenyan Ambassador to the United States: Did you really think we could put a list like this together without a Birther joke?

1. Co-President of China: No words…No words at all.

What did you think of the list?  Any other ideas for us to pass along to him?

The 7 Secrets of Political Consultants

Last month I talked about a few things elected officials would probably rather you didn’t know. And since we here at American Majority are all about stripping the political process down, it’s time to do the same for that modern-day priesthood: political consultants. Now, some of my friends make their living in this arena, but I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you both they and I get pretty disgusted with many aspects of their field. So let’s dig in and suss out 7 of their secrets:

1) It’s said the best trick the devil ever pulled was convincing folks he didn’t exist. This is kind of the reverse of Elected Official Syndrome, where a lawmaker wants you to believe in their godlike qualities. Instead, political consultants tend to vanish like gorillas in the mist between campaigns (especially ones like last year’s—where “insiders” are considered persona non grata). But just like that mosquito you can hear buzzing about in a dark room, you know they’re still there.

2) And not only are they still around, they’re calling most of the shots. Lobbyists get all the bad press, but political consultants have created a cottage industry for themselves. That permanent campaign you’re sick to death of? The negative campaigning you hate? Their baby. A political “military-industrial complex” means endless job security for them. Think of them as those walkers just out of camera sight, directing the gigantic Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons around every twist and turn on 34th Street.

3) Which leads me to the money they make. I’d never say you can win anything except the most local, grassroots races without both an air and a ground war, but you can take it to the bank that no political consultant ever got rich off volunteers or door-knocking. Oddly, these free things rarely end up in a consultant’s campaign plan. Hmm. Consultants get cuts of media buys (mail, too), which is why by the time an election rolls around you can’t even walk to your mailbox or watch Jersey Shore without seeing a gazillion political ads. Some firms in Washington or state capitols even seek out longshot candidates against Nancy Pelosi or her equal every two years, raising millions of dollars by nationalizing the contest, but, mysteriously ensuring 99% (I’m not exaggerating here) of the funds raised get spent on “consulting services”. Can you say “Madoff”?

4) Here’s another dirty little one: sometimes politics is rigged. Meaning the possible outcomes are managed by political consultants before an issue ever goes public. Trial balloons floated in the press, hearings where cherry-picked citizens testify…they can all be part of the game, and one great big last Kabuki dance before a gavel gets slammed down just like it was always going to.

5) This next one drives me nuts. It’s the Inverse Theory of Political Consulting. Or what I call “Failing Upward”. Right this second I can name you six to ten talking heads who haven’t won a race in years, if not decades. Mike Murphy and Robert Shrum come to mind. You see them every week on the nightly and Sunday news shows. And as long as they continue to be a go-to source for reporters and endless quote machines, they’ll find work (and appearances on cable TV).

6) Political consultants are also at times much more interested in padding their own personal creative portfolio (and profits) than in actually doing the right thing to win the race. Take the director behind the famous Christine O’Donnell “I’m not a witch” commercial. The absolute last thing that campaign needed at that moment was more attention drawn to something eccentric the candidate had uttered. Yet say it in a 30-second spot she did, because a political consultant was more concerned with making news and raising his profile than in, as Charlie Sheen would say “winning, duh”, the campaign.

7) And finally, the ultimate secret of political consultants: you can win a race without them. We can argue about if politics is more art than a science, whether “cometh the hour, cometh the man” (or woman) is true, or how much time, talent and treasure gets squandered every single election. But American Majority exists so that you too can cut out this middle man of American politics, just like you do in every other area of your current lives (Web M.D. anyone?) And in the end, especially in our Information Age, there’s just no excuse for not getting trained and cracking the political consultants’ code.

Top Ten Things Elected Officials Don’t Want You to Know

American Majority recently announced our new monthly newsletter, aptly titled The Groundswell. Along with traditional updates including upcoming events, news from our alumni and free resources, we aim to offer insights you won’t find from typical organizations inside the beltway. For our inaugural issue National Executive Director Matt Robbins breaks down the top ten things our elected officials don’t want us to know. Check out the full text below.

Top Ten Things Elected Officials Don’t Want You to Know

1.) They Don’t Like Being Watched: They say a watched pot never boils, but boy is that not the case here. Just ask former Senator George Allen. Or former Congressman Bob Etheridge. Or even Congressman Chris Lee (what a hunk, huh?) I can go on. A hundred dollars and a trip to the Wal-Mart camera aisle could be the best investment in changing the status quo an activist ever makes.

2.) Watching Them Matters: And those are just the most public cases, the ones on YouTube. How about blogging to monitor the two things every elected official has? I call these “votes and quotes”. Whether filing FOIA requests, sifting through hours of legislative session coverage, or just showing up at public meetings and hearings for your three minutes of open mike time, you will eventually strike gold.

3.) Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain: This is probably the hardest one for newcomers to politics to grasp. After all, endless handlers, gatekeepers and “body” people strive to maintain a certain mystique about actually meeting your representative. I hate to tell you this, but there is no Great And Powerful Oz. Just the man (or woman) behind the curtain. And they put their pants on one leg at a time, just like you.

4.) Effectively Challenging Them is Not Rocket Science: There are two words in Webster’s dictionary you should never confuse: simple and easy. Winning a political race is a pretty non-complex idea. He with the most votes WINS. Yet every year great, talented people stay out of elections or misapply their energies over the long haul.

5.) The Path to Victory is a Straight Line: I say this because you can draw it on that most basic of all campaign tools: a calendar. Most banks give them out for free. Get yourself one. Then circle the election date (primary or general) and work backwards from it, filling in all the various, labor-intensive, time-consuming things you’ll have to do to get from Point A to Point B. Time flies when you’re walking doors!

6.) Politics is a Game of Musical Chairs: Which is why it’s so vital to have solid, competent conservatives ready to run at all levels—from local to state to federal. There is rarely a year that goes by without an elected official being caught in a scandal, resigning, being appointed to a different office, or just plain keeling over. Somebody’s going to sit in that empty seat—it might as well be you!

7.) Good Old Boys and Gentlemen’s Agreements: Challengers or new blood threaten business-as-usual. Cronyism–crossing the political aisles–secret agreements not to back same-party candidates because one representative has “good working relationships” with bi-partisan colleagues, I’ve seen it all. It’s part of the problem. And us rooting it out is one of the things most terrifying to anyone up for re-election.

8.) Some of Them Hate Their Jobs: Really, you’ll be doing some of them a favor by retiring them. So many elected officials have been “phoning it in” for years. Many don’t even have it in them to campaign with any heart even one last time. Help these poor souls out by letting them know early (and loudly) that they won’t be getting a pass when the next convention or primary takes place.

9.) Entourage Is Not Just a Show on HBO: This is one of the most insidious parts of elected office. How many of us (besides Kramer on Seinfeld) have personal assistants? Schedulers? A muted chorus around us at all times, giving what I call the “golf clap” (a hushed applause at the politician’s brilliance)? Probably one of the most important services you can render a representative is to proclaim that the emperor has no clothes!

10.) Carrots AND Sticks: With all due respect, politicians can be mule-headed much of the time. And all too often, we don’t mind taking them to the woodshed only. But what was it Dale Carnegie wrote? “How to Win Friends and Influence People”? Praising an official when they do something right (preferably publicly) can stick in a politico’s mind just as much as a beating with a switch.

Want to receive the next issue of The Groundswell? Click “Get Involved” at the top.

Lessons From My Three Year Old Daughter

My three year old daughter is awesome.  She’s got more energy than Lance Armstrong, she has an active and never ending imagination, and she is finally (God bless her) figuring out the difference between right and wrong.

More amazing than that, however, is that my daughter has taught me much in regards to advancing the Conservative cause.

(Quick editorial note from my daughter: “Daddy, I am almost four!”)

Thus, here are three lessons I have learned from my daughter that I want to share with fellow Conservatives:

1. Conservatives need to learn to share and play well with other Conservatives…

This is a constant battle at our home.   For some reason when my daughter has friends over she becomes territorial, greedy, and stubborn with her bounty of toys.  She goes from being a princess to being a total monster.

But if you think about it the conservative movement is much the same way.  Within our tent I have seen Tea Parties, 9/12 Groups, and especially our main political party ally be absolutely unwilling at times to share best practices, imaginative ideas, contact lists, and chances to work together.

Granted, in many cases there are certain laws we must be careful to abide by. 

However, if we fail to share key information and ideas with each other (in the proper time and place), we continue to lose the opportunity to unite under common ideas and banners for a common good.  The unfortunate consequence are missed strategic instances to advance our cause – all because of turf wars, information hoarding, and, (to put it bluntly) an unwillingness to share credit.

It is almost as frustrating as my daughter screaming about another kid playing with her Dora backpack.

2. Conservatives need to learn to make “Good Choices”…

The phrase “Good Choices” is the battle hymn of our household.  By this constant drumbeat we are doing our best to make our daughter realize that her choices (good or bad) have consequences.

Indeed, this too is something that all Conservatives need to learn.  Why?  Because as our movement grows and continues to prosper, all of us will increasingly be under the scrutiny of the Left.  At this very moment they are patiently waiting for us to say something “racist”, do something “extreme”, or make a choice that they can use to advance their narrative of us being “hate-mongers”. 

Folks, it is not enough to simply talk about integrity – we must also live lives of integrity.  We must focus on why our ideas and philosophies work better for more people.  On the flip side, we must avoid only talking about how horrible someone is or how much we don’t like them just because they believe and live differently than we do. 

Simply, we must stay above the fray of the nasty, dirty, and personal attacks from those who don’t agree with us.  Let them hate all they want.  This is who they are. 

As individuals and as groups we must make wise choices about how we go about changing our country and taking it back to what our Founders envisioned.  We must not become that which we despise.  Like my daughter, we must learn to make “good choices”.

3. Conservatives need to learn to “use our words”…

As crazy as it sounds, my daughter throws the occasional fit (yes, it’s true).  She starts screaming and crying and very quickly gets completely incoherent.  Thus, she fails to communicate to us what the problem is.

It is in these situations that my wife and I say to her, “It’s okay – use your words.”  What we are doing is trying to calm her down enough to effectively tell us what she is thinking and feeling and why she is so upset.

Why is this important for conservatives?  As people who truly believe in this movement, we must learn how to effectively communicate our views, our plans, the truth, and why our ideas are better for this country.  We must understand how to communicate as candidates for public office, as those who will hold our elected officials accountable, and to those who will increasingly want to fight this battle alongside us.

At the same time, we must use our words carefully and effectively in the midst of our righteous anger, an opponent that will do anything to win, and an electorate at large that is oftentimes apathetic and uneducated about the issues.

I truly believe in my heart that the ideas of the Conservative Movement are better, wiser, and add nothing but prosperity and freedom to our nation.  Thus, I am choosing to use my words to encourage, teach, and change this country through those ideas.

If we as the Conservative Movement can learn to do all of these things, we will be well on our way to winning the battle that lies ahead for our liberty and freedom.

And those are not bad lessons to learn from a three year old.

Summit Speakers Announced

While it has been a very trying past few days, we at American Majority are hopeful. We see the courage and resolve coming from the grassroots and know that America’s finest days are still ahead. We have the numbers, we have the passion, what we need is the training. That is why we put together the Post Party Summits. These regional trainings will be unlike anything you have seen before. We are bringing in some of the best grassroots activists from around the country, people who know how to win because they are doing it.

We just announced names like Erick Erickson of RedState.com and comedian turned activist Steven Crowder. We have lined up some amazing women in S.E. Cupp, well-known author and political commentator and Dana Loesch, conservative talk radio host, tea party activist, and all around power mom. The list goes on. In addition to excellent speakers, we are working to bring you sought after trainers and guest lecturers, to ensure that this movement has the tools needed to implement freedom, not just talk about it.

We hope you will take a look at the Post Party Summits and consider attending one near you. We have worked hard building an itinerary that is beyond anything seen in this movement so far; but most importantly, this will be an event that brings together activists from entire regions. Our hope is that you will leave with connections, strategies, and the know-how to take back your communities, one-by-one.

Health care was only the beginning for us, not the end. I am reminded, and encouraged, by the words of Thomas Jefferson:

Educate and inform the whole mass of the people…They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty..As our enemies have found we can reason like men, so now let us show them we can fight like men also.

Facebook Privacy Video 2: Settings

This is the second video in a two-part series on Facebook privacy settings. The video series was designed to compliment our Facebook Beginner’s Guide. To view video one, click here.



Facebook Privacy Video 1: Friends Lists

This is the first video in a two-part series on Facebook privacy settings. The video series was designed to compliment our Facebook Beginner’s Guide. To view video two, click here.



Fruits of Our Labor

It has now been a week since Arkansas’  filing deadline has passed, and a lot of things are just beginning to sink in.  For instance, there are 71 (and counting) American Majority alumni who are candidates for office.  A state legislator of ours here in central Arkansas said to me, “conservatives are coming out of the woodwork to run for office; this is all due to the work American Majority has been doing….” What a humbling statement to make for our small staff of 2!  We have been enjoying an incredible ride and are excited to see the fruits of our labor.

Not only are the candidates trained and ready to go, but the activists are inspiring watchdogs for their own communities.  Recently, the Faulkner County Tea Party was made aware of a nearly $5 million shortfall in the Conway city council budget…..money that was there one day, and disappeared the next!  What do you think our American Majority alums from the area did?  They have been attending every city council meeting, sending out press releases to the media, contacting their mayor for answers, calling into radio shows with questions, writing letters to the editor and blogging like crazy.  Now, to give those responsible for the monetary loss the benefit of the doubt, it seems to be an innocent mismanagement of funds.  However, that type of leadership is not to be excused anymore by the citizens of Conway.

I think it is fair to say, that the citizen activists who have attended our trainings over the last year have been inspired.  Not necessarily by our winning personalities or our eloquent words…..but I hope by our passion and joy for the job that we love.  It has been such a pleasure to visit with these folks, many of whom have never been involved in the political process, other than fulfilling their American duty and privilege by casting their ballot on Election Day.  Now, some of those ordinary, patriotic citizens are hearing the call to serve their community by running for office.  Not all are running for high profile positions, because they have realized that there is plenty of work to be done in their own town.

For those citizen activists who prefer to remain behind the scenes this time around, many are pledging to volunteer for their favorite candidate(s).  Already, one of our alumni was introduced recently as the Arkansas Conservative Women Coalition Chair for a US Senate candidate.   I felt like a proud Mom as I tweeted her new position to all my friends in the Twitter-Universe.  Others would rather keep a close eye on their elected officials from school board members all the way up.  As our field director, Laurie, often states, “how can your elected representatives know how to govern if you don’t tell them?  It would make things so much easier for them! They aren’t mind readers!”

I think they are getting the picture.

Twitter & Asymmetric Political Warfare

Oh Twitter, how I love thee. Let me count the ways…

I first became interested in Twitter a bit over a year ago while reading Seth Godin’s book, Tribes (for my full blog review of the book click here). Before I even finished the book I had to log online and get my account set up (@razshafer). Since then it’s been a non-stop ride on the twitter train for over a year. Here I sit, 6248 tweets and 3834 followers later, more fascinated by it than ever!

While I’ve been active with social media since the advent of Web 2.0 I had never aspired to use that medium for political ends. After reading Tribes and a few blog articles about the political uses of Twitter I began to see how powerful Twitter could be when used for a specific purpose.

Twitter.com was created in March of 2006 and went live for the world to use on July 13th, 2006. Since that time it’s membership has swelled to well over and its ranked among the most popular social media sites online. For in-depth information about Twitter’s history, check out the Twitter page on Wikipedia.com. You can even see The Story of Twitter in Picture Form if you so desire.

Because Twitter has released no official estimate of its membership, we are left to guess or estimate likely membership. In my own search of an estimate I took a few factors into account: 1, Twitter.com has received between 23 and 24 million unique visitors per month over the last several months. 2, Only 45% of Twitter users use the website. While many users no doubt visit the site at least once per month, a rough estimation, given these two statistics, is about 50 million users. Considering that 21% of twitter users have never actually tweeted, our estimate of active accounts comes to: 41 million. Regardless of the exact number of active members, Twitter has a huge audience which is heavily engaged. It’s an incredibly powerful venue for broadcasting information, digesting news, debating viewpoints and building relationships.

I believe that in the “David vs. Goliath” battle we are engaged in we must approach the fight much like asymmetric warfare. There was a phenomenal article written by Malcom Gladwell in the New Yorker last May titled “How David Beats Goliath: When Underdogs Break the Rules.” The thesis of Gladwell’s article is that when Davids write their own rules, rather than fight by the conventions that their opponent tries to impose then they will win more often than not. He supports this with a study conducted by Political Scientist Ivan Arreguín-Toft. In the study Arreguín-Toft studied every war within two hundred years in which there was significant imbalance (10 to 1 based on military power and population) between combatants. He found that when the weaker power (David) fought by the rules and conventions imposed by the stronger power (Goliath) that David lost 71.5% of the time. This is still quite impressive considering the 10 to 1 power imbalance but when he focused on wars where David wrote his own rules, like in the Biblical account, David won an incredible 63.6% of the time.

Right now we are faced with a David vs. Goliath fight. Conservatism is riding a populist wave but the principles which we advocate and the policy proposals we promote are far from being understood by the majority of our elected officials. While conservatives are indeed a majority, we still fail to demonstrate our size and power at the ballot box. In this fight we need to look to unconventional tools, such as new media, to promote the principles we champion.

I’m convinced that, in this new era of political communication, discovering and utilizing tools like Twitter is not an option. It is a necessity. The question of where we fight the battle is not up to us but if we leave tools un-utilized or under-utilized then we set our movement up for failure. For those of us at American Majority, failure is not an option.

In support of your efforts to become more active online, our Staff has created a Guide to Twitter and Activism: The Twittivism Guide. It is a 40 page document (free to view or download) which will guide you from being a non-user to a Twitter Power-User. American Majority trainings also offer in-depth new media training as part of  our Activist and Candidate Political Training sessions.

If you remain unconvinced of the power of social media, check out this video. It was created by Erik Qualman (@equalman) and blows my mind every time I see it.

Building Your Tribe

My Uncle/Mentor/Entrepreneurial Advisor, Matt Miller, sent me a copy of Seth Godin’s “Tribes” for me to read about a year ago. With it being at the beginning of my last college semester, the book sat idle on my desk for a few days, but once I picked it up I had difficulty putting it down. In between Calculus 2 and Intermediate Macro-Economics it proved to be a welcome break and Godin’s 147 page best seller opened my eyes to a number of realities about leadership in our current era. The book inspired me to get back in to blogging and join Twitter as well as quench many of my own excuses for putting off leadership to the future.

The book’s central theme is that passion for leadership and the willingness to stand out from the crowd are the only prerequisites for building and leading your “Tribe.” Seth details a number of inspiring anecdotes, from his own life and those of others, that highlight this reality. His goal is to knock down the traditional excuses that people use which keep them from active leadership.

As each of us is working to be more active politically and make an impact in our community it is important that we see leadership for what it really is. We need to realize how methods of leadership have changed with technology and learn how to utilize them effectively.

Much of the book can be condensed into what he outlines as the key elements of creating a micro-movement (a.k.a. building and activating your own Tribe.) There are five things you have to do and six principles you need to follow:

Five Things to Do:

  1. Publish a manifesto.
  2. Make it easy for your followers to connect with you.
  3. Make it easy for your followers to connect with one another.
  4. Realize that money is not the point of a movement.
  5. Track your progress.

Six Principles to Follow:

  1. Transparency really is your only option.
  2. Your movement needs to be bigger than you.
  3. Movements that grow, thrive.
  4. Movements are made most clear when compared to the status quo or to movements that work to push the other direction.
  5. Exclude outsiders.
  6. Tearing others down is never as helpful to a movement as building your followers up.

Most of these action steps and principles look like to do lists from nation-wide political organization or a company that is trying to change the direction of an industry. However, Godin points out that following these same steps can make the most obscure movements and most radical ideas effective and help you build a Tribe and make a difference.

The book is fantastic! Easy to read, short enough to blow through in a few sittings, inspirational and cheap enough that you can afford to pass it on to a friend once you have caught the bug. Below is a link through to Amazon.com so that you can find out how to be a more effective leader and build your own Tribe!

WATCH SETH GODIN DISCUSSING TRIBES

Raz & Reba’s Excellent Adventure

WATCH THE TRAINING HIGHLIGHT REEL FROM THE RAZ ‘N REBA TOUR

One of the downsides to a widespread, national organization can be lack of “unit cohesion.” At American Majority we work to foster friendships and camaraderie among our staff through a variety of channels but my new favorite is the inter-state training tour.

Last week, Beka “Reba” Romm and I traveled from our respective states of Kansas and Texas to Charlotte, NC. There we teamed up with Douglas Price to begin “Raz & Reba’s Excellent Adventure.” This was no simple training tour, my friends...It was history in the making.

Through our five day, four training tour, we equipped nearly 140 conservative activists with the tools necessary to make a difference in their community. Our goal was to fan brushfires of freedom across the Carolinas and that’s exactly what we did.

Day 1: Douglas Price picked Reba and I up at the airport, uniting our cohort. After being served dinner by a waitress that looked remarkably like a taller Monica Lewinsky, we sallied on to Doug’s house to watch the State of The Union. This event resulted in voracious tweeting and severe heartburn for all involved.

Day 2: Summerville, SC was the location of our first training so after picking up the rental car and Reba from the hotel, our crew headed south. At Reba’s request we’d built enough time into our travel so that we could make it down to the shore for a few minutes before our training. It was absolutely beautiful and only my second time to the Atlantic shore.

That evening we kicked off the training portion of our tour with an energetic group of 45 Summerville conservatives. We couldn’t have asked for a better crowd to start the training. These folks were fired up and ready to learn. Reba and I hit our stride early and discovered that we work really well as a team!

Day 3: We awoke to dire weather reports forecasting freezing rain, snow and apocalypse on our trip to Greenville but refused to be cowed by such prognostication. We made record time during our trip for our Day Three training in Myrtle Beach, SC and lamented the fact that we didn’t bring our golf clubs along for the ride.

That afternoon we trained in a historic train depot which has been curated in Myrtle Beach as a type of community center. The crowd was dynamic and their passion for liberty was clear. I can’t wait to hear more great things about their accomplishments!

Following the training we headed up to Greenville, SC for the evening. Along the way we decided that considering the weather forecast that we would push back the start time of our training in order to allow people more time in transit, for safety. The evening rounded out with some hang-out time back at the hotel.

Day 4: We knew that the weather would have a negative impact on turnout for the training but had no idea how many people would stay at home. As it turned out, the Greenvillians surprised us with remarkable fortitude. We had a nice turnout and I think that it was personally my best training experience of the trip.

Following the training, Doug and I chipped an inch thick sheet of ice off of the rental car and we began the trek north to Charlotte. Somehow, Doug managed to keep us on the road and safe in spite of the obstacles which were presented.

Upon arrival in Charlotte it became apparent that the city shuts down when ice or snow are encountered. Reba and I tried to eat at several different restaurants only to find them closed down. We were, however, able to finally secure sustenance.

Day 5: All good things must come to an end and our tour was no exception. We wrapped things up with a bang at the training in Charlotte. Not only did we have a packed house but the local Fox TV affiliate came out to do interviews and record some of the training. You can see the clip they aired below! As it turned out, we were actually also covered on Fox & Friends the next morning as well!

Raz & Reba’s Excellent adventure was on the whole a huge success: We trained a fantastic corp of conservatives, braved storms, and tightened relationships between the three American Majority offices represented. I look forward to getting to train with Doug and Reba in the very near future. Watch out America, there’s no telling where we’ll go next!

For Candidates, Effort is Everything

Two weeks ago, the nation witnessed the election of Scott Brown over Martha Coakley in the race for the Massachusetts Senate seat previously held by Ted Kennedy for like 57 years.  With this result still fresh on my mind, over the last few days I have attempted an impossible undertaking.

My mission?  Figure out exactly why Scott Brown won, how he won, and the lessons normal Americans can learn from his monumental and historic victory.

In short, I was going to do what seemingly no other human being could (minus, amazingly enough, the MSNBC talking heads):  I was going to pin down the exact reasons that a state senator with a truck beat the pants off of a popular and established (and seemingly insurmountable) opponent in Martha Coakley, herself the current Attorney General of the state.

Yep, I was going to crack this code and find out exactly what went on in this bluest of blue states that led to this political Armageddon.

I began by scouring the internet, newspapers, cable news channels, and even Twitter for days on end.  I chewed up every bit of information I could find and tossed about in a sea of political theories as if I were a gung-ho poly-sci major during the first week of a new school year.

However, what I quickly figured out through all of this information was that theses simple questions of “how” and “why” were going to be a lot harder to answer than I had initially thought.  In stark reality, I found out is that that there is not a consensus on the reasons for Scott Brown’s victory – actually there was not even anything close to what anyone could consider a consensus.

What I did find was spin (oh, there was lots of spin), but there were also literally hundreds of theories and conjectures about what exactly had transpired to make his win possible.  Along these lines, I read the word “populism” a lot.  I saw the word “anger” a bunch. Likewise, there were multiple readings about “incumbent”, “excitement”, “bad candidate”, “momentum”, “establishment”, “Obama”, “healthcare”, and “gaffes”.

But still, it seems to me that literally no one agrees on the why or the how of Scott Brown’s victory.

So my next step was to cut through all of this garbage, look at the campaigns and candidates, and see what the glaring differences were.  In my continued search, one word kept popping off of the pages and into my head over and over and over.  The ads the candidates ran spelled this out, the gaffes that were made spelled this out, and the desperation toward the end of the campaign spelled this word out.

In one word, why and how did Scott Brown defeat Martha Coakley?

EFFORT… Six letters, one word, and the most damaging weapon in Scott Brown’s holster.

With that word in mind, rewind with me to just before the Massachusetts election.  I am sitting in the living room of a school board candidate of a small suburb of Oklahoma City.  This particular candidate has never been involved in politics, never ran for office, and has never even volunteered for a campaign.  He is the very definition of a green candidate, and no, I don’t mean the save-the-earth kind of green.

Anyway, this guy knew two things about being a candidate for public office: yard signs and election day. That’s it.   He didn’t have a clue about micro-targeting, GOTV, financial reporting, grassroots, or new media applications. He wasn’t aware he needed to do a little fundraising, knock on doors, use both earned and free media, or even simply announce his candidacy to the local press.

But you know what he wanted to do? Work.  He wanted to find folks to vote for him, speak wherever there was a microphone, explain to people what needed to be fixed in the school district, and tell them his ideas on how to fix it.  He burned with a desire to beat the 15 year incumbent who also happened to be the president of the school board…who was also rich…and who had never drawn an opponent.

So for three hours in his living room that night, we talked about effort, messaging, and overcoming the lack of name recognition.  By the end of the night, this completely overwhelmed challenger was convinced that if he could out-work, out-effort, and out-campaign the incumbent, he could win.  Would it take a lot of sacrifice and time?  Yes, but effort always demands those things.

Effort is an action but it is also an attitude; obviously there is always a physically active element that comes with effort but there is also a mentally active element as well.  In short, there must be the desire to put out effort before there can be the action of effort.

Scott Brown illustrates this point in a variety of ways.  He obviously wanted to win or he would not have run for the United State Senate in the first place.  But more than that, he showed how badly he wanted to win by the actions he undertook as he crisscrossed the state to meet voters in every corner of the state.  He even had television ads about how many miles his truck had accrued because of his travels.  Genius!  Couple that by the excitement he fostered in his vast army of volunteers, who then did their best to match his level of effort in their phone calls, canvassing , and GOTV efforts, and you have an atomic bomb of many people working as hard as they could to deliver victory to Scott Brown on election day.  Again, it is all about effort.

However, Martha Coakley’s lack of effort and seemingly dispassionate campaign can easily be seen in her now famous answer about how hard she was working in comparison to Scott Brown: “As opposed to standing outside Fenway Park?  In the cold?  Shaking hands?”

By this quote we can see that Martha Coakley apparently didn’t put out enough of effort or perhaps even have the desire to do so.  In fact, even earlier in the campaign, this very telling quote was made by state Rep. Bill Bowles of Attleboro in the article Sluggish Coakley Effort Irks Dems in the Sun Chronicle of Attleboro, MA:  “I’m not happy with the level of campaign effort I’ve seen.”

Oh boy.

In a related quote, one voter in Massachusetts (and a Coakley supporter) said this in another local paper:  “The Democrats, specifically, expected it not to be close so they sat back.  I mean, I get three calls a day from Scott Brown’s daughters.”

Holy crap.

Notice the difference in the amounts of effort – in this case it relates to what one campaign expected to happen versus what the other campaign made happen.

It is because of these very stark contrasts in effort that I believe shows that you can strip away all of the issues, the anger, the voter turnout, and the memory of Ted Kennedy to very easily see that effort played perhaps the biggest role in Scott Brown’s win.

Furthermore, this is yet another example of a candidate’s willingness to work and put out the effort to win as a major reason for victory.  And granted, this is not always the case – effort is not always the determining factor, and there are probably thousands of examples of both national and local races where this was not true.

However, the flipside of that coin is that a lack of effort can be a major reason for insuring a loss.

In the end the greatest thing for a candidate is no matter how big or how small your election is, effort has a real chance to overcome any hurdles you may face on the campaign trail.

Along these lines, take a look at the school board candidate from earlier.  As we ended our conversation, a few of the tactics he said he was going to employ leading up to election day was to spend time every morning with the vast amount of folks at the coffee shop downtown, walk his town’s neighborhoods with his wife and a few volunteers on a nightly basis, and go to high school basketball games with campaign business cards he created at home with his message and election day information on them.  For him, this was a simple way to get his message out there and encouraged people to vote for him.

But the consistent thread in all of these activities?  Yep, effort.

This gentleman knows that he has a mighty hill to climb, but his plan is to work his tail off and use his effort to make up the ground of experience, name recognition, and money.  These are the lessons we talked about that night after we had briefly discussed the Massachusetts election.

In conclusion, the issue of effort makes complete sense in the context of running for public office.  Whatever office you desire, just be determined to go after it with all of your might.  And think about it: if effort can help a free market and limited government conservative win in Massachusetts, effort can definitely help you win, too.

Some Other Books I Read in 2009

One of the best bits of advice I got when I was younger was that, “Readers are leaders, and leaders are readers.” I send the AM staff a book a quarter that I feel will help them become better at what they do.

1. The Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism by Robert Murphy. A quick and easy read, but with some nice “sound bites” on the free market system. Murphy’s book is good for those that aren’t going to dig into Hayek, Mises, etc., but still want to have a better idea of what the free market is all about. Took me maybe a few days to read thru it.

2. The Myth of the Robber Barons by Burton Fulsom. Not a long book, but an interesting look into the misconceptions about the Vanderbilts and Rockefellers of this world. Fulsom really lays out the difference between political entrepreneurs, or crony capitalists, and the real market entrepreneurs. The book really does give a better appreciation for what the real free market entrepreneurs accomplished, and how they made people’s lives better.

3. The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. I read Atlas Shrugged in 2008, and of the two, Atlas is my favorite. While I dismiss Rand’s objectivism, I think both are worthwhile reads.

4. Free to Choose by Milton and Rose Friedman. A classic that everyone interested in knowing more about the free market should read. Took me awhile to get into it, but once I did, flew through it.

There were others I read, like Founding Characters, which explores the lives of some of the key Founders, that I would also recommend.

Some Books I Read in 2009

People will sometimes ask what I read. Here are some of the books I read in 2009, and would recommend.

1. Economics in One Lesson  by Henry Hazlitt. A really concise read on free market economics in layman terms. Couple hundred pages long, so not a heavy read.

2. The Essentials of Economics by Faustino Ballve. A little tougher read, though just over a hundred pages. But Ballve, a Spanish economist, has gems like this: “. . . the free market is the most obvious expression of the sovereignty of the people and the best guarantee of democracy. Individual guarantees stated in writing in the constitution are of no use to a nation if it is not the people, but a third party, whether government or trade-union, that fixes prices and wages . . . for in that case the people, in being deprived of their right to free choice in the market, i.e. their right to assign everything the rank and the value it suits them to give it, from being sovereign are reduced to the status of slaves.”

3. The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression by Amity Shlaes.  Shlaes does an excellent job of really taking another look at the history of the Depression, FDR’s policies, and some of the impacts, short term and long term, of those policies. Really good read. Little longer, but worth it.

4. The American Cause by Russell Kirk. Not a long book, but a must read for those wanting to better understand who we are as a nation, what the principles are that have made us great, and why they’re worth fighting for. 

More recommends tomorrow.

Activism Tips: Precinct Work 101

Drew Ryun of American Majority provides a detailed podcast on how to win your precinct.

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