- Nothing tells us more about the odd political state of
America than the recent presidential debate and reactions to it.
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- The American debates, of course, are not debates at all.
They are more a set of joint press conferences, a staged opportunity for
both candidates to repeat memorized lines in a cozy environment, protected
by elaborate rules and an always-undemanding moderator. Still, once in
a while, something manages to happen.
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- You cannot look to the prominent members of either major
American political party for an honest assessment of how their candidate
performed. Despite being regularly trotted out on America's
political-discussion
programs, these people leave the impression of old Soviet apparatchiks
offering spontaneous views on Stalin's latest speech.
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- If you looked to the mainline press or the small group
of people who hold lifetime sinecures on television, you would have
concluded
the morning after that the debate was a tie, an opinion generated by the
same tireless machinery that churns out most of what Americans hear about
Iraq. Only the so-called instant polls told you something else, and there
was a clue from John McCain, a man desperate to cleanse his conscience
of groveling for Bush, who briefly admitted that Kerry had his best night
in a long stretch.
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- If you had read the words of former Vice President Al
Gore just before the debate, you might have expected Bush to be a
formidable
opponent, consistently underestimated. But to credit Gore's judgment
required
you to ignore the fact that he is the man whose inept campaign in 2000
put Bush into office. Gore does not want to be remembered as the smart
man, groomed for decades in politics at the highest level, who let one
of the most sniveling and uninformed politicians in American history take
the country's highest office, but that is precisely Gore's legacy.
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- With most of the usual sources of authority discounted,
you were left to your own judgment, something with which Americans are
not all that comfortable. American television's hazy, synthetic vision
of the world, where everything from the best choice of toilet-bowl cleaner
to what should be your view of the latest colonial slaughter is appealingly
served up to be consumed as directed, makes independent judgment unfamiliar
territory.
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- Still, once in a while, there's no shaking the effect
of a stark fact. Any fool could see that Bush is a man who cannot think
on his feet, that his responses are those of a toy doll whose same scratchy
set of recordings play each time you squeeze him. Winning a debate with
a man of his quality would not be an achievement anywhere, except in
America.
Gore should have landed a string of knock-out punches during the 2000
debates,
but he utterly failed to do so. My private guess as to why he didn't is
that he thought the audience might judge him harshly for assisting an
incompetent
to appear incompetent. It reflects the same political sensibility that
had the razor-sharp mind of Mrs. Clinton focused on baking cookies. Kerry's
wife, an outspoken woman of foreign birth, has only just been asked to
make herself a little scarce. She doesn't go down well with the
bowling-bag-and-Barbara-Bush
set.
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- Before the debate, Kerry pretty much had followed Gore's
script for campaign as light farce. On a few occasions, Kerry indulged
an inexplicable taste for the Keystone Cops, making floundering,
bizarrely-twisted
statements about the war in Iraq. You almost expected to see his eyes
crossed
while his jaw worked at the words. His audience, not surprisingly, failed
to see a Keystone Cop as someone to rescue them from a moron, and the polls
marked Kerry down as someone the Political Angel of Death was not going
to bypass in November. As for turning instead to a thoughtful, honest man
like Ralph Nader, that simply is not on in an America that only buys brands
with billion-dollar advertising budgets.
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- So, Kerry had little to lose in the debate. Still, he
offered nothing heroic, nothing startling, only just managing a few pointed
comments most of the world takes as common sense, but in
politically-asthmatic
America even that little wheeze is significant. Judging by Bush's reaction,
which (broadcast on split-screen despite a previous understanding not to
do so) resembled the movements of one of those old monkey-on-a-stick toys,
even these few comments were deeply irritating. It may be that the
broadcast
of Bush's reactions was more telling than anything Kerry managed to say.
Get ready for years of howling cries about a stab in the back from those
who await the coming of a new Dr. Goebbels to save them from the sick
fantasy
of a liberal American press.
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- The ridiculous circumstance in America that tends to
make an incompetent like Bush seem above scrutiny and criticism starts
with the very nature of a Constitution making the President both head of
state and head of government. Thus, when you criticize a President for
doing something stupid, you are seen to be criticizing the symbol of the
country itself, and not merely another politician, which is of course what
Presidents are, first and foremost. In the case of war - even a totally
illegal, bungled, and pointless war like the one in Iraq - you may be
regarded
as giving aid and comfort to some undefined enemy or as not supporting
the "boyz in hawm's way," perhaps the most unforgivable
transgression
an American politician can commit.
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- Less-instant polls at this writing indicate the
public-opinion
impact of Bush's broadcast reactions may be substantial. If so, it is
remarkable
that it took Americans four years to see what a pathetic lump their
President
is, but it is equally remarkable that Kerry, who has said little of
anything
beyond the obvious, will benefit.
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