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The first political party of the new political paradigm and its get-rich government caught on quickly. They called that party the Neotech Party. Until then, a third-party effort had never been successful. How was this different? Millionaire standards of living would come to the people by replacing career politicians with market-driven business leaders and unleashing the geniuses and Neotech in all industries, not just the computers. That financial incentive made all the difference.
Once the Neotech Party of entrepreneurs and other market-driven business leaders was nationally recognized, angry America sent the Republicans and Democrats home for good in the next two elections. The anger behind the voting public was directed at the game of politics and its career politicians, the ruling class. The Neotech Party accepted market-driven business leaders only and, therefore, did what was best for the economy, not politics...namely free the country's entrepreneurs, the most gifted geniuses, to bring the Neotech Revolution beyond the computer/cyberspace industry to all industries. The Neotech Party abandoned politicians and superseded politics. And that was exactly what America was looking for...and needed.
America's initial attraction to third-party presidential campaigns in the late 20th century came from the people wanting something better, yet those third-party attempts fell far short. Problem was: everyone had his or her own ideas of something better. Therefore, to coordinate everyone's different hopes into a single common denominator was an indomitable task. In the end, third-party attempts always fell short.
Under the old code, our political system worked by power in numbers, and to rally six people to agree on politics was not easy, no less sixty or so million people. Furthermore, people did not want to invest money or time into wasted votes. As a result, our country mostly remained a limited-choice, two-party system: "Us or them."
Ironically, the underlying problem for America's third-party fantasies was politics itself. Politics not only made for a terrible common denominator, but the mention of politics caused the ordinary person to tune out and sign off. For, the ordinary American had come to the conclusion that politics could not help him. In late 20th-century polls, the majority of Americans believed that politics hurt their overall prosperity in life. So a third-party politician? People quickly got turned off; after all, a politician was...a politician. The initial Ross Perot sensation, for instance, was because the country first perceived him as a market-driven businessman before they realized he was merely a political businessman.
Aside from tuning out politicians, including third-party politicians, the people always found, to their dismay, that third-party politics was still...just politics. The layman was, in his own words, "done with politics" because politics did not benefit his life; in fact, politics drained his life. Until something came along that superseded the arena of politics and universally benefited the layman, no third party had a chance.
That something did come along. To get outside the arena of politics required going to the universal common denominator the people had always hoped for: to improve their own personal riches and quality of life. After all, everyone had the get-rich dream. The inevitable Neotech Party came from a better world focussed on making that dream come true. With the agenda of freeing the economy and not piling on the politics, only market businessmen could run for office. That new party was just what the country was waiting for. You see, when it came to politics, people were fast learning: it mattered not what candidates said, but who they were. People now realized that whatever politicians said was just an illusion anyway. Whatever was said, career politicians still just benefitted themselves and advanced their own political careers at the cost of the economy. Nothing spectacularly good ever happened for the wealth of the people, which was particularly tragic on the eve of progressive computerlike buying power.
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