Free Capitalist Network - Community Archive
Mises Community Archive
An online community for fans of Austrian economics and libertarianism, featuring forums, user blogs, and more.

Interesting spin on Schiff's loss

rated by 0 users
This post has 29 Replies | 8 Followers

Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 6,885
Points 121,845
Clayton Posted: Wed, Aug 11 2010 1:01 AM

Here's a piece celebrating Schiff's loss in Connecticut (McMahon's "victory") as a win for anti-establishment sentiment (dare I say "Tea Party"?). Of course, McMahon spent $24 million of her own cold, hard cash just to win the primary. Schiff reportedly spent $1 million. That McMahon beat the incumbent is supposed to be a "warning shot" over the bow of the establishment.

The narrative I've heard that makes the most sense to me is that the RNC realized that Schiff really could beat their boy in Connecticut, Simmons. Terrified at the thought of a Senatorial Ron Paul, they sent out an SOS to all the Connecticut big-shots, looking for somebody that could do a "big, big favor", and Vince McMahon's wife answered the call. The McMahons are not millionaires, they are billionaires. That $24M was pocket change and will be repaid a hundred-fold, one way or the other. Now that the wool has been pulled from my eyes, it's downright comical to read spin pieces like the above
 
At this point, it doesn't matter whether Linda McMahon wins or loses. Mission Accomplished: Schiff has been neutralized.
 
Clayton -
http://voluntaryistreader.wordpress.com
  • | Post Points: 170
Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 5,118
Points 87,310
ForumsAdministrator
Moderator
SystemAdministrator

On the plus side, Schiff got 27,000 votes.

To paraphrase Marc Faber: We're all doomed, but that doesn't mean that we can't make money in the process.
Rabbi Lapin: "Let's make bricks!"
Stephan Kinsella: "Say you and I both want to make a German chocolate cake."

  • | Post Points: 20
Top 25 Contributor
Male
Posts 3,055
Points 41,895

Way to drain them of net $23m.

  • | Post Points: 20
Top 75 Contributor
Posts 1,365
Points 30,945

Wait a second, the profeshunal wrassling McMahons are involved?!

Come to think of it, when I was a little child watching wrassling, I remember that a lot of the stuff talked on the show was Republican talking points. The heel would be Harvard graduate Christopher Nowinski. The head would be the patriotic Scott Steiner, who beats him up for suggesting that American occupation of Afghanistan is bad.

Wow. Just wow.

So the American political establishment already had a few comedians, wrestlers, and such, so I guess these circus business owners are only next in line.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 166
Points 2,355
Marked replied on Wed, Aug 11 2010 6:18 AM

I like how Schiff only got the barest whisper of a mention. God, news reporting sickens me nowadays. It'll be fun to see people outraged over McMahon "realizing" it's good to be the king, and vow to "Vote her out!" while she destroys further wealth.

  • | Post Points: 5
Not Ranked
Posts 76
Points 1,135
Faustus replied on Wed, Aug 11 2010 7:35 AM

I dont usually go in for conspiracy theorys but this makes sense. Simmons obviously did not care that much about running he largely backed out of the campagin early. It seems plausable that higher ups pursuaded him to come back to split the anti-McMahon vote.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 11,343
Points 194,945
ForumsAdministrator
Moderator
SystemAdministrator

Schiff's campaign was really not very well run.  He made his push too late, he was too invested in come from behind victories.  His last couple weeks of YouTube videos where he begged and berated his own supporters to phone bank for him (which should have been started 6 months ago) was really disappointing.

Also, organizing your own money/phone bombs completely misses the point of bombs.  They are a grass roots thing.  There is little energy behind them if the grass roots are being directed by, or waiting on, the main campaign.

In the end, I never got the feeling Schiff was running to win.  I felt like he was always running behind.

"When you're young you worry about people stealing your ideas, when you're old you worry that they won't." - David Friedman
  • | Post Points: 20
Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 6,885
Points 121,845
Clayton replied on Wed, Aug 11 2010 11:30 AM

@liberty_student: I can't comment on Schiff's campaign, I wasn't following it that closely (seeing as I'm on the opposite coast from Connecticut). That said, I find it highly plausible that the Establishment took steps to ensure that Schiff could not win. Even if he ran his campaign poorly once he was facing serious opposition, he was doing pretty good early on and that likely made TPTB nervous.

Clayton -

http://voluntaryistreader.wordpress.com
  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 276
Points 4,320

I watched the first debate on Youtube among the 3 candidates.  McMahon was dreadful.   

  • | Post Points: 35
Top 200 Contributor
Posts 468
Points 8,085
Wibee replied on Wed, Aug 11 2010 10:58 PM

I wouldn't go far as to say he is the Senatorial Ron Paul.  He's on target with fiscal policy but that is about it.  

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 304
Points 4,860

Wow. Just watched some YouTube videos about the McMahon's; their entire family is extremely vulgar. Democracy is hitting new lows here. 

The older I get, the less I know.
  • | Post Points: 35
Top 75 Contributor
Posts 1,485
Points 22,155
Kakugo replied on Thu, Aug 12 2010 5:03 AM

If you consider that the so called Tea Party movement is already being taken over by old scoundrels in new clothes the following phrase makes a lot of sense:

McMahon’s victory is yet another by political newcomers defying political conventional wisdom by upsetting incumbents and party-backed candidates. This year, being seen as part of the Washington establishment has been more of a hindrance than help for many candidates.

The trick is simply to replace old faces with new faces spouting generic stuff that may have an appeal to the more braindead less informed part of the electorate which got fed up of being squeezed dry to have little in return. Remember that episode of Family Guy in which Lois successfully run for major by spouting out idiotic one liners after her attempts at serious debate failed? Same thing here.

If things keep on going the way they are going expect people like Vinnie's girl to become senators and congressmen and be hailed as "serious change". And of course "change" won't arrive: you'll get more war (both at home and abroad), more debt, more monetary and fiscal politics conceived in a mental institution.But, hey, you can be sure those "new faces" will appear in the news to say how the latest bill (they voted for without blinking) is an abomination.

Together we go unsung... together we go down with our people
  • | Post Points: 5
Not Ranked
Male
Posts 75
Points 1,175

Consultant:

Wow. Just watched some YouTube videos about the McMahon's; their entire family is extremely vulgar. Democracy is hitting new lows here.

Indeed! As the democratic corollary to Murphy's law goes, when you think democracy can't get worse, it does!

BTW, here's a Greek guy's thoughts on the Schiff campaign. Perhaps not so eloquent, but still...

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 25 Contributor
Posts 2,966
Points 53,250
DD5 replied on Thu, Aug 12 2010 10:33 AM

 

Alight, now that this particular circus act is over, can we agree at least as a strategy, to quit this whole circus business and get on with the business of promoting and actually achieving liberty?

Or do we need a few more of these ridiculous attempts to actively participate in the democratic process in order to eventually abolish it?

  • | Post Points: 35
Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 11,343
Points 194,945
ForumsAdministrator
Moderator
SystemAdministrator

DD5:
Alight, now that this particular circus act is over, can we agree at least as a strategy, to quit this whole circus business and get on with the business of promoting and actually achieving liberty?

I agree, but I would like to see more promoters of liberty learn how to influence people without being arrogant and condescending.

"When you're young you worry about people stealing your ideas, when you're old you worry that they won't." - David Friedman
  • | Post Points: 20
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 340
Points 6,230

Alight, now that this particular circus act is over, can we agree at least as a strategy, to quit this whole circus business and get on with the business of promoting and actually achieving liberty?

Or do we need a few more of these rediclous attempts to actively participate in the Democratic process in order to eventually abolish it?

Yeah at this point, the only way I would ever vote for a politician is if his platform was something like:

1. Government is always bad because the only thing it can do is force people into less satisfactory outcomes than they would have pursued absent government coercion.

2. Therefore, I will always push for ANY negative legislation (legislation that reduces existing government power).

3. I will also vehemently oppose ANY positive legislation (any legislation that grants government new or expanded power in any area), and during debate will read the applicable chapter of Economics in One Lesson to demonstrate why this particular intervention, like all others, is doomed to fail.

4. My goal is to be the last person to hold this office, because if I'm successful it will no longer exist by the end of my term.

Anything less than that, and I will not be voting.  Unfortunately, I don't think most voters are ready to hear a message like that, so I'd say the chances I will be voting are basically nil.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 75 Contributor
Posts 1,365
Points 30,945

without being arrogant and condescending.

It's not possible in a certain situation.

Yes, you could be not arrogant and not condescending, if you never took interest in politics or public affairs.

But the moment a man starts becoming political, the rot in his humanity becomes evident. It starts out simple. First you lose interest in fishing. Then in hunting. Then in bicycling. Then in jogging. Then in beautiful women. Then in playing videogames or reading interesting novels.

Then you shut off your computer, and instead start reading books on economics, books on politics, books on philosophy, magazine articles and editorials, and show sudden obsessions with things like the history of labour laws and what effect they had. Then you only open your computer just to dispute such matters on news sites or blogs. Then in informal conversations with friends, the topic somehow suddenly shifts to such matters and leaves you passionately involved in it - and more than you need to be.

The loss of all positive passions and strivings is replaced with easily justified outrage, with you going: "How can a man see those innocents killed in Iraq and defend those soldiers, dammit?!" And in this environment of intellectual hostility, and only negative emotions left, bad manners become high class behaviour, sarcasm becomes intelligent and refined, and condescension useful and necessary.

And suddenly, you are very much like David Cameron facing off Gordon Brown in the parliament - arrogant and condescending in every breath. 

What I am saying applies to every person who gives serious thought to political matters - syndicated columnists, TV talking heads, journalists, political cartoonists, political commentators, protesters on the streets, and ordinary folks.

What I am saying applies to all sides of the political spectrum. Leftists, conservatives, warmongerers, anti-warriors, and so on. Just open Creators.Com, and see all the fuming and furious anger coming from Robert Scheer, Benjamin Shapiro, Marc Dion, R. Emmett Tyrell, Froma Harrop, and Mona Charen.

Did the above things happen to me? No. Was I once falling down that slippery slope? Yes, I have and a few times. Every time, I recover by telling myself that I am an apolitical person and have no interest in the political process to begin with anyway. The interest in short stories leaps back, I can hear people say outrageous and despicable things without getting offended, and mostly get back to worrying about matters like whether I can reach the planet Neptune in my lifetime.

The only thing promoters of liberty can do is socialize, discuss, and mingle with fellow men and talk about whatever interesting matters they can talk about. Living life in civil society is the only way of protecting civil society. We don't become moral beings by memorizing lists of rules, but only by living among our communities and building life on it.

  • | Post Points: 50
Top 100 Contributor
Posts 814
Points 16,290
No2statism replied on Thu, Aug 12 2010 12:10 PM

Schiff's loss is indicative that right-wing socialism is still popular, which really sucks.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Male
Posts 212
Points 4,330
Aquila replied on Thu, Aug 12 2010 12:12 PM

I sent a few bucks Schiff's way, something I've never done before with a politician. I'm glad I didn't send more and I won't be giving money to politicians any more in the future (voluntarily, that is).

As soon as true libertarians begin to win high office, they will cease being libertarian.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 10 Contributor
Male
Posts 11,343
Points 194,945
ForumsAdministrator
Moderator
SystemAdministrator

Prateek Sanjay:
The only thing promoters of liberty can do is socialize, discuss, and mingle with fellow men and talk about whatever interesting matters they can talk about. Living life in civil society is the only way of protecting civil society. We don't become moral beings by memorizing lists of rules, but only by living among our communities and building life on it.

Well said.  And I would add, that to live in a community, one needs to be a social creature, not an anti-social one.  That means mastering the art of persuasion.

"When you're young you worry about people stealing your ideas, when you're old you worry that they won't." - David Friedman
  • | Post Points: 20
Top 75 Contributor
Posts 1,365
Points 30,945

Around my neighbourhood, everytime we neighbours meet and have a chat, we do give each other a piece of our minds on certain topics.

One person who met me discussed how the government here is doing everything possible to destroy the private education system.

To another person, I said that low interest rates given by central bank don't matter, since increasing money supply does not increase economic activity, but merely redistribute scarce resources.

All in all, in my neighbourhood, most people have long stopped voting. The seeds of such thinking have been planted. If it keeps going this way, then slowly, if not in my lifetime, but in some other generation, such thinking will be so prevalent, that a politician shouting for "more taxes on the rich" will find a less than impressed audience and interventionist measures would seem more futile to him.

As it is, urban Indians might not be free marketers (far from it), but many of them have a viciously anti-government sentiment, rooted in India's "mixed economy" days. The result of it has been an increasing lack of enthusiasm for public ventures, and even this Progressive government has been privatizing very slowly, because it just no longer sees the point in doing something that everybody will perceive as a useless failure anyway. As it is, they find themselves overworked managing so many public sector ventures, that they throw up their hands and give up.

We need to be a civil society movement, not a political movement.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 166
Points 2,355
Marked replied on Fri, Aug 13 2010 9:19 PM

 First you lose interest in fishing. Then in hunting. Then in bicycling. Then in jogging. Then in beautiful women. Then in playing videogames or reading interesting novels.

Then you shut off your computer, and instead start reading books on economics, books on politics, books on philosophy, magazine articles and editorials, and show sudden obsessions with things like the history of labour laws and what effect they had. Then you only open your computer just to dispute such matters on news sites or blogs. Then in informal conversations with friends, the topic somehow suddenly shifts to such matters and leaves you passionately involved in it - and more than you need to be.

The loss of all positive passions and strivings is replaced with easily justified outrage, with you going: "How can a man see those innocents killed in Iraq and defend those soldiers, dammit?!" And in this environment of intellectual hostility, and only negative emotions left, bad manners become high class behaviour, sarcasm becomes intelligent and refined, and condescension useful and necessary.

I guess this means I'm somewhat corrupted by your standards. I've never held a passing interest(Quite the opposite-Complete hostility towards!) in fishing and hunting, but the rest of the things I'm interested in. blush

 

But anyway, I like Ron Paul or a hypothetical like him,  since he's simply using politics as a vehicle to help spread the message of liberty.

  • | Post Points: 20
Top 200 Contributor
Male
Posts 370
Points 8,785

I always get the impression that Peter Schiff is way too into himself, even though he has some legitimate claim to fame. I think a lot of people would prefer someone more modest. 100% confidence is simply arrogance. I wonder if this had anything to do with voters shying away, but more likely there were other reasons that I have no understanding or grasp of.

This is apparently a Man Talk Forum:  No Women Allowed!

Telpeurion's Disliked Person of the Week: David Kramer

  • | Post Points: 35
Top 25 Contributor
Male
Posts 3,055
Points 41,895

I think a lot of people would prefer someone more modest.

Since when did a modest person win an election?

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 25 Contributor
Male
Posts 4,249
Points 70,775

Arrogance has nothing to do with 100% confidence. Quite the opposite. Arrogance is a cover up for lack of confidence, an act to fool others. Confidence doesn't care what people think.

My humble blog

It's easy to refute an argument if you first misrepresent it. William Keizer

  • | Post Points: 20
Top 500 Contributor
Posts 166
Points 2,355
Marked replied on Mon, Aug 16 2010 7:36 AM

I always get the impression that Peter Schiff is way too into himself, even though he has some legitimate claim to fame. I think a lot of people would prefer someone more modest. 100% confidence is simply arrogance. I wonder if this had anything to do with voters shying away, but more likely there were other reasons that I have no understanding or grasp of.

 

He lost to Linda McMahon, a billionaire. I highly doubt the question of modesty falls on Schiff here. More likely is his awful campaign staff.

  • | Post Points: 5
Not Ranked
Male
Posts 39
Points 535
MPP replied on Mon, Aug 16 2010 8:49 AM

@bcyclwutztht and @Consultant:

could you provide the links to the videos? I'd love to see them.

"It is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring." - Carl Sagan
  • | Post Points: 5
Not Ranked
Posts 3
Points 90

Ditto.

If it cost them $24 million to snag a primary, this is great news. As long as we keep fighting, there are no such things as losses. At $24 million per win, give them all the "wins" we can. Keep giving them their all the Pyrrhic victories that they cannot afford. Keep the price of their "victories" as high as possible both in dollars and in exposure to the truth.

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 150 Contributor
Female
Posts 635
Points 13,150
Vichy Army replied on Sat, Aug 21 2010 12:19 PM

I hope you're not implying that the Tea Party is anything but a bunch of Conservatives and ignorant mobs.

“Socialism is a fraud, a comedy, a phantom, a blackmail.” - Benito Mussolini
"Toute nation a le gouvernemente qu'il mérite." - Joseph de Maistre

  • | Post Points: 5
Top 500 Contributor
Male
Posts 176
Points 2,330
Jackson replied on Wed, Sep 8 2010 11:36 PM

Wow. Just watched some YouTube videos about the McMahon's; their entire family is extremely vulgar. Democracy is hitting new lows here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGnCY64Oerk

I'd say the mcmahon's have their fingers on the pulse of the impoverished white demographic of america fairly well (as evidenced by the success of their business). it shouldn't be surprsing that making billions in pandering to the lowest impulses of humanity led to a successful run in a democratic election.

  • | Post Points: 5
Page 1 of 1 (30 items) | RSS