Posted by
The Right Resurgence on Friday, November 07, 2008 9:03:50 PM
It is said that if you know your enemies and know yourself, you will
not be imperiled in a hundred battles; if you do not know your enemies
but do know yourself, you will win one and lose one; if you do not know
your enemies nor yourself, you will be imperiled in every single battle. - Sun Tzu, The Art of War
It is always the football coach's greatest dream to get a hold of the opposing team's playbook. In the NFL, teams have even gone so far as sneaking spies into opposing team's practice sessions. In politics, the games are dirtier and the stakes are higher. Let's face the fact, the Republican Party has failed in the marketing and organizing front. It is time for a new strategy.
Before we begin creating our own playbook, let's take a look at one of our opponents most effective playbooks; Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals. I am not suggesting we copy the opponents rules, but it is vital we understand the tactics they use and the proper way to counter these strategies.
From the Rules for Radicals- The 11 Key Rules:
Rule 1:
Power is not only what you have, but what an opponent thinks you have.
If your organization is small, hide your numbers in the dark and raise
a din that will make everyone think you have many more people than you
do.
Rule 2: Never go outside the experience of your people.
The result is confusion, fear, and retreat.
Rule 3: Whenever possible, go outside the experience of an opponent. Here you want to cause confusion, fear, and retreat.
Rule 4:
Make opponents live up to their own book of rules. “You can kill them
with this, for they can no more obey their own rules than the Christian
church can live up to Christianity.”
Rule 5:
Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon. It’s hard to counterattack
ridicule, and it infuriates the opposition, which then reacts to your
advantage.
Rule 6: A good tactic is one
your people enjoy. “If your people aren’t having a ball doing it, there
is something very wrong with the tactic.”
Rule 7: A tactic that drags on for too long becomes a drag. Commitment may become ritualistic as people turn to other issues.
Rule 8:
Keep the pressure on. Use different tactics and actions and use all
events of the period for your purpose. “The major premise for tactics
is the development of operations that will maintain a constant pressure
upon the opposition. It is this that will cause the opposition to react
to your advantage.”
Rule 9: The threat
is more terrifying than the thing itself. When Alinsky leaked word that
large numbers of poor people were going to tie up the washrooms of
O’Hare Airport, Chicago city authorities quickly agreed to act on a
longstanding commitment to a ghetto organization. They imagined the
mayhem as thousands of passengers poured off airplanes to discover
every washroom occupied. Then they imagined the international
embarrassment and the damage to the city’s reputation.
Rule 10:
The price of a successful attack is a constructive alternative. Avoid
being trapped by an opponent or an interviewer who says, “Okay, what
would you do?”
Rule 11: Pick the
target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it. Don’t try to attack
abstract corporations or bureaucracies. Identify a responsible
individual. Ignore attempts to shift or spread the blame.
Study these. We will be looking at each, one by one, in future articles.