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To: fightinJAG
The last resort of someone corned by analysis by analogy is to claim, on the most species grounds, that the analogy somehow is not apt.

No actually, responding to an analogy by claiming it is not a fit descriptor is the first resort, not the last.

Doesn't matter that American Idol is all you said.

No actually, it does. I did "deal with the analogy" by pointing out that you are right, that it is nothing more than a circus that we don't have to honor.

Beyond that, of course, it's flawed, because you don't pick the winner. If we were all David Hasselhoff and Paula Abdul then you'd have a point. If that were the case, each of them could still damn well pick someone who hadn't qualified. Not a damn thing stopping them.

Your analogy would be more apt if you stated, "Well, I like this other show better, but nobody watches it, so I guess I'm just forced to watch Idol."

but that does nothing to take away from the fact that it's pretty stupid to sit in the stands and cheer for a team to win that is NOT EVEN PLAYING IN THE GAME.

And what if the team were actually in the game but just had a smaller but still non-zero chance of winning like, oh, a third-party candidate?

Nobody, least of all me, is trying to tell you how to think.

But you are happy to let other people tell you. Is John McCain your first choice?

>>There is no reason that it is any less possible for anyone to win this election.

>Yes, there is. It's called reality.

Then your reality is apparently different from mine, since in mine "difficult" and "impossible" are not synonyms.

You are right back where you felt prompted to post to me in the first place: cheering for the Ravens, so to speak, in a Super Bowl between the Giants and the Patriots.

And you're right back to me showing you the flaw in your analogy. If everyone in your hypothetical Super Bowl cheered for the Ravens, they would still not win. If everyone in November voted for Ross Perot, he would win. You seem incapable of understanding this critical distinction.

I'm not a slave because I realize and accept the reality that in a Super Bowl between the Giants and the Patriots, either the Giants or the Patriots are going to win.

No, but you're a slave if you think you have as much control over the outcome of a game as nothing more than a fan as you do as a voter fully exercising his rights in an election.

For my part, I would say that the "moment you decide that REALITY---the hand you've been dealt---is too hard," and therefore you decide to nurture fantasies such as someone other than the Republican or Rat nominee will win the presidential election in 2008, that's when you've got a problem.

My "problem" then, as you seem to agree with, is nothing more than the realization that my reality is what I make it to be, not what some higher powers beside God "deal" me. And God didn't create the GOP.

And I agree: in this world, feeling this way is something of a problem. But the power to change your own world... that is reality. And you're the one running from it because it's too difficult to consider.

266 posted on 08/10/2008 11:33:38 AM PDT by pupdog
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To: pupdog
the realization that my reality is what I make it to be

Yes, you go ahead and make your reality as to who can and will be elected President of the United States in 2008 whatever it is you want it to be.

Don't let any facts about the process or history get in the way.

268 posted on 08/10/2008 12:18:21 PM PDT by fightinJAG (Rush was right when he said: "You NEVER win by losing.")
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