Advocate for the obvious position using the language and catchphrases of its opponents. I remember once saying, “Well, have we ever tried blindly throwing lots of money at the educational system?” Everyone agreed that this was a wise and sophisticated thing to say, even though I was by far the least knowledgeable person in the room on the subject and was just advocating the default strategy for improving public schools. Other examples:
“Greed is good.”
“The chief virtue of a $professional is $vice.”
“I’m a tax-and-spend liberal, and I think there should be much more government regulation. For example, the sad truth is that the realities of medical care require the existence of death panels, and I’d rather have them run by government bureaucrats than corporate accountants.”
Advocate for the obvious position using the language and catchphrases of its opponents. I remember once saying, “Well, have we ever tried blindly throwing lots of money at the educational system?” Everyone agreed that this was a wise and sophisticated thing to say, even though I was by far the least knowledgeable person in the room on the subject and was just advocating the default strategy for improving public schools. Other examples:
“Greed is good.”
“The chief virtue of a $professional is $vice.”
“I’m a tax-and-spend liberal, and I think there should be much more government regulation. For example, the sad truth is that the realities of medical care require the existence of death panels, and I’d rather have them run by government bureaucrats than corporate accountants.”
Kansas City was one of the more notable examples of having tried that; it didn’t work out well: http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-298.html