I agree with sticking to the cause. But he doesn't do that. And the 'moderation' is attempting to appeal to people who are not friends of liberty. A deceit, if you really believe otherwise (I'm not convinced) and an agreement when you do.
Whether our allies on the e-cig front are friends of liberty with regard to other issues or causes frankly doesn't concern me. If we win on this
one topic, which is an
archetypal struggle for personal liberty, then we will have taken a step in the right direction generally. (Edit: I misread you here, so please disregard what comes before this parenthetical. Let us say instead that we agree on the above-quoted point.)
Pragmatism, by definition, is a compromise on principles. Too much to discuss on that here. But if you don't understand that, we don't have much to talk about... lol. If you do, then we do, but perhaps in PM.
In politics, that's generally true, but in principle, pragmatism is simply
practicality. A practical approach to problems may require compromising your principles; it may not. In this case, I sense that you and I simply have an irreconcilable difference with respect to what constitutes compromise.
I think compromise requires substantive
concessions on the e-cig issue. And I'm not seeing anyone at CASAA, least of all Carl Phillips, who advocates for any such concessions. I will acknowledge this much: his blog post from yesterday wasn't terribly informative and it was written in such a way that it is bound to annoy at least half of his readers. It's rife with liberal narratives asserted as if they were established truth, unassailable.
But the bulk of his blog isn't just good, in my view; it's flat-out awesome. I can forgive him his partisan prejudices on other matters. Those prejudices, to my eye, don't reveal themselves very often. In fact, I tend towards the belief that Phillips isn't a liberal partisan; rather, I imagine that he simply gets his news from liberal sources. No biggie if you don't agree.
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/media-general-news/492751-canada-wild-west-e-cigs.html#post11296697
It's the ....ecigs are 'not necessarily good for you, but better than ... x..." type comments that imo, 'gives' too much to the enemy and another attempt of being 'objective' but not being objective at all, but more 'moderate'. Is this who we want on our side? I don't. There's much more of my thinking on this and CASAA if you get into the 'rent seeking' posts I've made here (you can't see them - they're in the veteran's forum), but again.... too much to discuss here.
To say that e-cigs are 99% less harmful than cigarettes ("
The risk is so low that it can just be rounded to zero for any practical (honest) purpose.") isn't a concession or a gesture towards mealy mouthed moderation, in my view. If anything, Phillips is a firebrand, prone to wantonly, even gleefully immoderate talk on the subject (see
here for an example).
(This is great too:
CASAA's Letter to University of Kentucky Regarding Ellen Hahn)
It is not my intention to get into a war with you over this, Kent. If you don't like Carl Phillips or CASAA, then that's obviously your prerogative. It's entirely possible that you know something I don't. I'm just honestly confused; it seems that you and I are very similar in ideological terms, but you appear to interpret what's going on with e-cigs and CASAA/Phillips
far differently than I do.
I do thank you for the link, by the way, and I agree with your comment: Phillips' quote in the article in question
could be twisted by our opponents. But almost every statement is twistable.
I look forward to seeing your discussions in the Veteran's forum, sometime in the distant future.
