....and how to make the campaigns more fair and inclusive. I have a couple of ideas that you can critique (that kind of means make fun of ladies). I was a war gamer and there were two major types of games; one with representative forces meaning someone had an advantage and the other everyone started equally in assets.
I think we can make elections (federal and state) like a wargame in which all candidates start with equal forces so no one has an advantage except their ideas and strategy.
The first thing is to qualify. All elections will be paid for by the tax payer and only the taxpayer. Each candidate would have to raise both a certain amount of cash and collect a set amount of signatures to prove viability. For a presidential candidate it may be $20 million to show that people are interested in your ideas and maybe 100,000 signatures per state (Alaska and Wyoming will have to have special rules). Once you qualify (even third party candidates) you are allocated so many hours of TV, radio, and print advertising. Some time is more expensive than others so you have to be careful when you use it. For example, a nationwide, network 30 second commercial during the World Series may be worth 10 minutes of time in the morning or drive time. You don't want to waste your time and you do want to use all of it. It may stop October surprises if you have to ration your media time for the event.
Every candidate will have to participate in certain events. Speeches and debates, after all this is a contest and we want to see them strut their stuff. No more incumbents avoiding debates because they have become senile or where never smart to begin with.
Sever penalties will have to be put in place for candidates, parties, or donors who break the rules. I mean jail time! Every consideration has to be accounted for. Every plane ride, every "independent" commercial on your behalf, every party (campaign event) paid for by a donor must be counted. Unfortunately, we cannot not prevent the press from taking sides. They can cover an favored candidate (free advertising) and refuse to even name the opponent.
The general idea is that all candidates start on an equal footing. They can bias the game with great staffers, great strategy, or great skills.
Comments?