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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

In defense of platitudes

Platitude:  a banal, trite, or stale remark.

I often hear political commenters dismiss a statement as a mere "platitude." 

Almost always, they are right. The person being dismissed has indeed uttered a platitude.

During a meaningful debate, platitudes are useless. Politics, however, rarely involve meaningful debate.

Barack Obama just got elected on a promise of "hope and change." How more platitudinous can one get? 

"Hope and change" means absolutely nothing. It's banal. It's trite. And it has become stale. So what? 

It was EFFECTIVE. It still is EFFECTIVE.

The thousands of people that gather to fawn over Obama do not want to hear a lecture on the pros and cons of Keynesian economics. They want to hear about hope and change.

They want to feel good. And there is NOTHING wrong with that.

We that believe in freedom need to learn from the success of the statists.

What slogans can we use? How about "freedom"? How about "liberty for all"?

Are these words platitudes? Yep. 

So what? These words represent all that our country was based upon.

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