I have never run campaigns based on an ethnic coalition.
“I have never run campaigns based on an ethnic coalition.”
The World Motivation
I have never run campaigns based on an ethnic coalition.
“I have never run campaigns based on an ethnic coalition.”
I have never run campaigns based on an ethnic coalition.
I try to motivate people and align our individual incentives with organizational incentives. And then let people do their best.
I cannot reconcile monitoring certain people for no reason other than their religion with the freedom of religion we have here in America.
There is a diversity of thought and philosophy, diversity of languages and dialects, diversity of political spectrum, and there's a diversity of taste for food. I don't label or characterize Jews in any way.
It is my hope that by reducing the tax burden on small business owners that we can help them grow their businesses and, in doing so, create jobs.
The depressing reality is that campaigns like the Everyday Sexism Project would not need to exist were casual sexism not so startlingly commonplace.
All elections are about choices, and good campaigns will make those choices clear.
I don't often get involved with campaigns at all.
I think a lot of campaigns mis-learned the lessons of Obama 2008. They overly focused on the particular tools, and less so on the fact that the Internet enables a kind of culture of trust to be translated into real power.
With super PACs, we've seen voter turnout go up; interest in elections rise; and the number of competitive races increase. The campaigns of 2010 and 2012 have been more issue-oriented than their predecessors, not less.