Thursday, October 1, 2020

For the Sake of Democracy, Cancel the Trump-Biden Debates

The president is maneuvering to steal the election. Why help him?

Little more than 12 hours after the conclusion of the most chaotic, counterproductive and outright offensive American presidential debate in my lifetime, the Commission on Presidential Debates promised unspecified format changes in the two remaining faceoffs between Donald Drumpf and Joe Biden so that the events would be more orderly, which is to say watchable at all.

Hooray for the commission, but give me a break. If its members fully absorbed President Drumpf's 90-minute snit on Tuesday night in Cleveland, then they know that they can show him the way toward decency and give him a few forceful shoves in its direction, but they can never get him there. That's the lesson of his entire presidency. The debate just put a gargantuan exclamation point on it.

A destructive, dangerous exclamation point, too, which is why the commission isn't going far enough. It should cancel the coming Drumpf-Biden debates altogether.

Let Vice President Mike Pence and Senator Kamala Harris have their matchup next Wednesday night, then let Americans move on. They have all the information they need to decide whether they want another four years of Drumpf. Giving him more time in front of a national television audience isn't a route to clarity. It's an expressway to autocracy, because his performance on Tuesday night proved that he will use these showcases to subvert democracy... (continues)

2 comments:

  1. I have only two thoughts on this issue:

    1) As someone who has competed and coached debate for almost ten years, I find the presidential debates cringeworthy and not worth my time (this complaint is not exclusive to the debate earlier this week). There is little to no proper argumentation, no rebuttals, and no decency. These debates are little more than political grandstanding, and the soundbites we glean are not worth the our time.

    2) Read Neild Postman's "Amusing Ourselves to Death." No additional comments needed. Just read the book.

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    Replies
    1. Agreed, it was true and prescient in the '80s and it's even more timely now. I recall using it in one of my first classes at MTSU. Bread and circuses.

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