To: Mad2 who wrote (71102 ) 4/28/2012 4:16:21 PM From: John 4 Recommendations Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 103300 I'm enjoying reading your posts, my friend. You make some compelling points here as well. However, I respectfully disagree with you on this particular issue. Here's why. In a civilized nation populated with civilized citizens, I would agree with you wholeheartedly. The high road is certainly preferable, as it used to be in the United States. Unfortunately, we no longer have such a nation. The United States of America has devolved. As a consequence, very brutal and ruthless tactics are now required to win this war against an illegal alien African Muslim invader and imposter and his ilk. My point in my previous post was not to invoke racism, but rather to suggest that conservative PACs and SuperPACs that are not affiliated with Romney's campaign should personally and politically attack Obama in political ads using every amount of personal and political ammunition at their disposal. To do anything less will be to repeat Juan McShame's strategic and tactical errors that led to his demise and defeat. Of course, Romney's campaign and his supporters should run a clean campaign that amplifies Romney's excellent merits and his history of successes, while clearly communicating Obama's abysmal shortcomings and abject failures. Beyond the Romney campaign, there should be a very strong undercurrent of unaffiliated PACs and SuperPACs that exist purely to discredit, smear, and ruin Obama from the ground up, leaving no stone unturned. Absolutely nothing should be out-of-bounds with the content these lobbyists run, and absolutely none of their ads should mention Romney at all. It should be purely a "destroy and ruin Obama politically" effort. The goal of this secondary effort would not be to pit Romney against Obama, but to simply make people sick to their stomach's whenever they think of Obama. Consequently, even if they hate Romney, they would never dream of voting for Obama. This action could considerably undermine his voter turnout.