Post Trump rally musings...
While I agree wholeheartedly with your logic... if you can stand in line or stand at a Trump rally for hours on end, you can work as a volunteer in an election, I ask the question: for every Trump attendee, how many Trump supporters are at home?
It takes a fair degree of commitment to attend a Trump rally, knowing that you probably aren’t going to get in, but you hope nonetheless, that you will make it into the venue.
Trump supporters attend for various reasons, including their own personal ones that can be classified as self-centered or selfish, but also know that they are projecting enthusiasm for P. Trump, in their overwhelming numbers, and send a message of peaceful protest in support of P. Trump, to friend and foe alike.
This enthusiasm has a carryover effect, which spreads to other patriots watching on the sidelines, and likely helps to spurn them into taking some kind of action with regards to election activism.
Obviously, we need more bodies on the ground no matter where they come from, so the word needs to get out.
Begin quote >>> You’re not in the [Republican] party unless you’re a Precinct Committeeman. Precinct Committeemen are the Party.
Daniel Schultz <<< End quote
WAR ROOM
WATCH DAN TALK PRECINCT STRATEGY WITH STEVE BANNON
THE POWER OF THREE-TENTHS OF ONE PERCENT OF SEVENTY-FOUR MILLION
In a nutshell, this is what every conservative — including you, dear reader — needs to do ASAP — if our goal is to have our state legislators pass election reform laws requiring all counties to stop using any kind of imaging machines for counting votes and, instead, return us to the “gold standard” of counting votes: hand-counting at the polling locations before the paper ballots are allowed to leave the premises and making voting by mail the exception and not the rule. The first step in taking back our government, by electing better, people, is by taking back the Republican Party from those running it now. And that means YOU becoming a precinct committeeman for your voting precinct. (Precinct committeeman is called different things in different states (precinct chair, precinct delegate, precinct committee officer, member, etc.; the bottom line is that you want to become a voting member of your local or county committee, and it is not difficult to do so.)
