Would better dressed/behaved '60s War Protestors have shortened the War?

(A) If you have a record of me writing that Nixon made his famous “Silent Majority” speech prior to 1969 or that I have claimed that the phrase became popularly known prior to 1969, let the readers here see it. If you do not have my words, could you please cease to make this part of trying to defend your claim that the peace movement’s bad behaviour and dress was responsible for Nixon beating Humphrey and extending the war by several years.

(B) Are you saying that the “SILENT MAJORITY” did not exist until Nixon put those two exact words together on the night he addressed the nation to introduce them to his “Vietnamization” plan? If so, who was he talking to at the Miami GOP Convention in August the previous year?

So is it your position that when Nixon addressed the GOP convention in Miami in August 1968 giving his acceptance speech, and appealing to the ‘silent center’ that no one knew who in the hell he was appealling to or talking about.

Here’s what I wrote:

As I pointed out, Nixon had already mentioned 'the ‘silent’ Americans in the spring of 1968 in a radio address:

Had you heard that radio address and you were not a loud protestor, anti-war demonstrator, picketer; are you telling me that you would not have known that Nixon was speaking to you?
And here is the specific group or identifiable Americans that Nixon was appealing to and talking about in his August 1968 acceptance speech:

Again. Are you saying, that none of those identifiable Americans knew that Nixon was appealing to and talking about them?

(C) Move on. If you can, try to defend your position on some merits and facts and reason rather than picking out a typo where I was addressing another issue..
(D) See my response to (B). I can assure you that in 1968, my mother who voted for Nixon and was horrified that her 18 year old son would protest against the war being fought to stop the encroachment of Communism and Russian Aggression in the ‘real’ world, knew who Nixon was speaking to both in the Radio AAddress in the spring and in the acceptance speech in August.

She did not need to be labled ‘Silent Majority’ to know that she was part of what Nixon was speaking to.

(E) Here we are.