|
First, to understand what I think I see, you have to adopt the same assumptions I make:
1) Republicans are evil;
2) Republicans have to operate outside of legal bounds to secure an election (see Watergate, the October Surprise, and Bushco), otherwise they have little to no chance to win even in favorable conditions, which this election will not have;
3) The media, from the executives who determine what's news to the anchors that report it, is part of the wealthy Republican elite and take their orders from some factions of the Republicans;
4) President Obama is smarter than all of them, has correctly anticipated their moves months or years in advance, and has already locked the next election down unless the Republicans resort to extralegal means;
5) Despite unified control of their organs and a relatively solid front (as long as their path is destruction and delay, rather than repair and creation), those who control the Republican Party are not unified; they instead pursue individual paths to evil according to their own unique self-interest.
The "individual paths to evil" part is the important one. Some Republican candidates, like Gingrich and Santorum, are entirely political and totally absorbed in their individual pursuit of power. Their evil will be directed at those who stand in their immediate way first, and then this President. The cleverest move for those candidates (or those exactly like them--Bachmann) will be to aim for the VP slot and then orchestrate the downfall of the new Republican President who acquires office through extralegal means.
The front-runner candidates--pretty much only Romney and that new stupid Texan, despite his current decline in fortunes--must be aware that their only chance is to be in it when something... unfortunate... happens on the opposite side. They're running on a lightning strike's chance... but they have a good relationship with Zeus.
But outside of the candidates, there is an entirely larger, more powerful, and more evil network of people who are of two general opinions: the election is already lost; or the election is lost unless it is secured through extralegal means. (The Republicans stupid enough to think they can win legally also are not good planners, so they can be safely discounted in this conversation. Former Bush Administration people have their own problem, which is that they have to secure the collusion of the nominee no matter who it is, in order to outrun the statutes of limitations for the crimes that still hang over their heads.)
Those who think the election is already lost will take the opportunity to try to expand their base, exactly as they prevailed upon the McCain camp to accept Sarah Palin in his throwaway electoral bid. They're the ones carefully pushing the polls in Cain's favor and focusing press attention on him, in hopes of sliding him into the VP slot, or even conceding the election entirely by greasing the nomination for him. (Putting Cain on top is a guaranteed loss: over half of Republican voters are racists who will certainly sit out an election between two black men, or vote for a third party candidate who will just as certainly arise if that possibility happens.)
But that loss will also attract a new cross-section of idiots from social out-groups who share the larger Republican ideals of greed and exploitation, or think that running Cain somehow absolves them from decades of race-baiting and vote suppression (and the obvious cynicism in nominating him at all). Putting Cain in the second slot also locks out the scheming sociopaths, histrionics, and narcissists that are currently competing for that position (not to say Cain isn't one of those, too). Smart Republicans probably can't help noticing that despite every possible roadblock, President Obama is still doing a pretty good job of tending the sheep so the fleece can grow back. A Cain nomination would fit well into those plans.
Those who think the election is lost and want to steal it will take entirely different, highly individual approaches to stealing the election. For protection, they won't reveal their plans to other factions, which leads to the amusing possibility of them working at cross-purposes and canceling each other out (what happens when a team of Cubans and a team of Texans break into the same Democratic headquarters at the same time?). Cain is unlikely to fit into any of their plans, which may put him in just as much personal danger as our President is in--with a lot less protection.
So who will win? The ones who want him to win-and-lose or the ones who want him to lose so they can steal? Right now, the bought press is for Cain, which suggests most of that directed money is in favor of him. If he is allowed to sink and fade, it suggests to me the murderers and thieves have won over the white collar criminals, and their next step will be to somehow destabilize the nation and the Democratic Party through criminal means in advance of an election they cannot otherwise win.
But no, there's no chance in Hell Cain can win. He'll be taken out the second someone sees that chance reveal itself. He'll be taken out if the press-plan wins and the thieves continue with their own plans. He'll be taken out if any one of a dozen lavishly funded shady oppo groups doesn't like him--and they all don't like him.
And let's hope I don't have to be proven correct--it's thoughts like these that make me happy I am wrong most of the time.
|