Showing posts with label debates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debates. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Politics as game show

Maybe our problem is that the "debates" are not real debates like Lincoln-Douglas but game shows. And Trump understands this, but serious politicians don't.

My comment to Frank Bruni's "Trump's Ideology of Applause".

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/11/opinion/sunday/donald-trumps-ideology-of-applause.html?comments&_r=0#permid=19756890

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

How to vote intelligently

We went to a League of Women Voters meeting, supposedly to watch "Patriocracy", a movie about the divisiveness in this country.  For some reason, the movie never made it to the meeting place.  Instead we had an impromptu discussion about the subject.

One of the complaints voiced is how many news organizations don't separate fact from fiction, treating every pronouncement from politicians as fact, especially on TV.

I gave these four suggestions for voting intelligently:

Don't watch TV
Don't answer the phone
Read lots of newspapers
Show up and vote

If you don't follow my advice on the first three points, do me, yourself, and your country a favor by proudly acting on the fourth point.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Debates are no way to select candidates

It is almost mandatory for candidates for public office to debate their opponents in some public forum, whether on a TV or radio program or live in some public meeting space.

But do these debate really prove anything?  The candidates appear without notes or aides and answer impromptu questions from a moderator or members of the audience.  They are judged on how well they respond and on their grasp of the issue of the question.  But if elected, do they govern that way?

No!  Sure, there are debates in legislative sessions, but those often do not sway anybody but the folks back home.  The legislators have generally worked out what is in a bill and are merely expressing their support or opposition to it.

The real work is done in offices with plenty of aides and other research sources.  The legislators draft a bill and pass it around to colleagues who have an interest in it.  A legislator may have a bias one way or another about the issue, but he or she has to construct it in a way to maximize support for it.  This cannot be done in the two-to-five minutes allowed in a debate.

Debates also give an advantage to the glib who can come up with a plausible answer within a few seconds.  They put at a disadvantage to the thoughtful who try to consider many aspects of a problem.  We need fewer politicians like the former and more like the latter.

A much better way would be to have a public discussion on an issue, each candidate having access to research assistants to provide additional information.

Thoughtful consideration was essentially the idea of the original Roman Senate and of the original federal legislature of the United States as expressed in the Constitution.

Unfortunately, the government of both Rome and the United States degenerated into bread and circuses.  In the case of the latter, it is entitlements, earmarks, pork as bread and flashy ads and phony debates as the circuses.