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May 25, 2003
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LIBERTY 2004 MEME PROJECT
I've been commenting on others' contributions
to
Rayne
's and Kriselda'
s Liberty 2004 Meme Project, and recommending that we use
The Tipping Point
as a process for getting traction for the memes we decide on. I thought
it was time to offer up some ideas of my own. Let me start with my biases
and blind spots. I don't understand why so many Americans continue to support
Bush. In any other developed country, someone with his approach, extremist
policies and record of failures would be soundly trounced if he ran for re-election.
I also don't understand the lack of passion around electoral reform. After
the debacle of 2000, when the Supreme Court ended up appointing a president
because the electoral system was incapable of doing so, after seeing the
abuses that partisan appointed electoral commissions can perpetrate, after
seeing large corporations use huge campaign donations to buy both major parties,
after seeing the abomination of 'redistricting' ridiculed as profoundly anti-democratic
at home and around the world, why isn't serious electoral reform a priority
in every American's mind? How can the country that prides itself as the epitome
of democracy tolerate a thoroughly dysfunctional electoral system?
Having said what I don't understand, what I do understand is
that in every country in the world, what's happening locally trumps what's
happening nationally and internationally. People care more about the domestic
economy than the global one, more about domestic security than international
security, more about local water quality than global warming.
So here are the five principles that I believe should govern the selection
of the Liberty 2004 Memes, and the process by which the memes should be used:
- Triage: The target audience should be undecided,
independent, moderate, occasional and 'swing' voters. No point coming up
with a campaign that appeals only to those that are going to vote for us,
or against us, anyway.
- KISS: The memes should be simple, memorable and compelling,
and address the issues most important to the target audience. Not cute, not
too-clever-by-half, not strident, not abstract, not demanding. Remarkable
would be nice, but is not absolutely necessary.
- Positive and Negative: We probably need two memes,
because some people vote for and other people vote against,
and we need to appeal to both.
- No personal attacks: As vital as it is that the positive
message resonate personally, it is equally important that the negative message
not be personal. The negative message needs to be about
the impact of the Bush policies and the Bush administration's performance
, not ad hominem criticisms of the administration. Even using barbed
language like the Bush regime, as tempting and satisfying as it may
be, will backfire with many moderates.
- Catchphrase + Stories: The memes must be a combination
of a catchphrase and supporting
stories
. The stories reinforce the catchphrase and give it life, depth, power. The
story of the rescue of the captured American woman soldier in Iraq is an
example of the type of powerful story the Republicans have learned to use.
We need stories that are even better, and ideally more truthful.
At this stage, and with the caveats above, here are my two recommended memes:
- Put America Back to Work. This is the positive message,
that reflects the massive unemployment, threat of unemployment and under-employment
that is the legacy of Bush's economic mismanagement and collusion with multi-national
corporations that have no allegience to the American people. The stories
supporting it should be about real Americans, including small American
businesspeople, who are struggling to make ends meet as a tiny number
of individuals and corporations reap obscene profits and destroy and export
jobs in the interest of increasing profits even further. It's not a new or
clever message, but it meets every one of the criteria above. Salon bloggers
have already provided at least a half-dozen perfect stories.
- Government For the People: This is the negative
message, that reflects the concerns of many Americans that the current administration
is unduly interfering with the rights and day-to-day lives of Americans.
The stories supporting it should be stories of government terrorizing 'ordinary'
Americans just going about their business: The NY restaurant diners who were
assaulted and had guns waved in their faces during the bungled FBI raid.
American citizens who have 'disappeared'. Personal stories of Homeland Security
excesses. The implication is that the security forces that the current administration
has established and inflicted on Americans are incompetent and out of control.
Personal stories that show the damage of right-wing Republican social legislation
are also fair game, provided the focus is on the personal impact of the legislation,
not on the legislation itself.
I'll post this to the Liberty 2004 Meme site, and I look forward to your
reactions to my 'outsider's view'.
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2:09:54 PM
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© Copyright 2003 Dave Pollard.
Last update: 03/06/2003; 10:40:50 AM.
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