Great idea. I can't answer private freepmail during the weekdays, but I'm here. A few general statements, which may be known to most but repetition isn't a crime:
- The enemy is a master of deception and misdirection. They will use the truth in a manner which makes it unrecognisable. The best example of this tactic is the "16 words" of the SOTU address. Those words were true when they were said, and are still true today. But by subtly changing what was said, the enemy has, by and large, convinced america that they were false.
- They will argue that it was false because the white house claimed the words should not have been in the SOTU, even though the only reason the WH said that is because they didn't describe a "certainty".
- They claim that this was the ONLY reason we went to war, even though the vote for the war happened 3 months before these words, and they were a minor part of the argument.
- They claim he said Iraq bought uranium from Niger, when the actual claim was that the BRITISH said Iraq TRIED to buy uranium from AFRICA.
- They claim Wilson debunked this, when in fact he provided evidence FOR the claim (Wilson reported that Nigerian officials confirmed that Iraq sent a delegation to Niger in 1999).
- It is nearly impossible to fight back on all fronts at once. When answering a critic, it is best to pick a single strong argument, use it to refute a critical point of your enemy, and then note that the enemy is unbelievable.
- A letter-to-the-editor should be simple, direct, and start with facts for your side on ONE issue before pointing out how the facts debunk the opponent.
- In public debate, avoid personal comments, stick to facts -- but that includes the fact that your opponent is misleading.
- The word "liar" is much stronger than it appears, and will often turn off those you are trying to persuade, even if it is accurate. Better to simply note your opponent is WRONG, rather than attributing motive.
- The Ombudsman can be your friend, if you speak to him clearly, and on-point, and with your own words. The Washington Post ombudsman discussed in his column this Sunday what gets his attention, you should read this and follow the advice: The Limits of E-Mails En Masse
- Make friends with your local opinion columnists. Write them when they say things you agree with, and then tell them you want to read about this war stuff. Encourage them to look at the facts. Send them research material.
- Make even better friends with the local opinion page editor. Write whenever a good column appears, and tell him that is why you read the paper. If a conservative writes in your paper, send letters to the editor when you agree, and when you disagree -- it shows that columnist is being read and attracting people.
- Your local politicians probably avoid this national stuff. Explain to them how their constituents are effected by the morale-busting speech. If you have local guard troops, explain how the troops are affected. Better yet, if you have a connection to the troops, get those troops to send you e-mails explaining it themselves, and fire that off to politicians, to editors, to columnists, and to letters-to-the-editor.
- If you are part of a local republican committee, get the committee to issue a resolution condemning the attacks on the troops, and urging support for "america" and its chosen foreign policy. If possible, hold a public news conference announcing letters sent to politicians about this "resolution". In other words, MAKE NEWS.
- Another "make-news" activity. Picket. Show up at candidate forums, with simple slogans. WE NEED SOME GOOD 10-word or less SLOGANS. For those in Virginia, the new governor-elect is having 5 town-hall meetings. If we had pickets outside, and if inside we could get a question to him about how he feels about the democrats lying about the war for political gains, it might make the news.
I know I'm preaching to the choir, or more to the point I'm writing to people who have BETTER ideas, who have been at this a LONG time, longer than I have, and who have real-life experience with picketing and making a difference.
I hope this post has been helpful to some, and I'm certain that those who are more knowledgable than I will correct my mistakes, and expand on any good ideas I might have expressed.