Well, there's the fact that the people aren't educated or motivated enough to notice and make a row about it.Illuminatus Primus wrote:Why do they even pretend to be legitimate journalists?
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Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
It's only important to those who insist that it's somehow natural, essential, hell, expected that politicians wear them. I just want Obama to say, "Flag pins? Are you serious? We have people dying and you're worried about my accessorizing?"Stas Bush wrote:Flag fucking pins?Not again. I thought it's ... dead. Apparently the wonderful flag pin tradition is very important.
Is this what you were thinking of?Darth Wong wrote:"Democracy is when you say what you want, and do as you're told." (I wish I could remember who said this; it's a great quote).
It's a paraphrase of Dave Barry (near the bottom of the page). Closest I could find, at any rate."Democracy: In which you say what you like and do what you're told."
I have the exact same fear. I really do shudder to think what would happen if Obama was smacked down by the Democratic establishment or by the country in general should he go onto the general election. It would represent a wholesale rejection of the best opportunity to break free of politics as usual, and Obama's supporters would be devastated. I would be devastated. Frankly, I don't know what I'd do if he lost. I'd probably get even more jaded and cynical and just stop voting.Darth Wong wrote:Rebecca said she is very concerned that Hillary will win. Not so much concerned in the selfish sense that Hillary will do anything to Canada, but concerned in the sense that it will confirm her suspicion that democracy is flat-lining in America. Obama came in, tried the defibrillator, and the near-corpse's handlers are pushing him away.
"Democracy is when you say what you want, and do as you're told." (I wish I could remember who said this; it's a great quote).
A poor man's edit: I confused Iltalehti with Iltasanomat, two similar daily newspapers. This is Iltalehti's article about Obama-Hillary debate and manages to be more neutral and matter-of-fact style.Tiriol wrote:That's what one of the Finnish daily newspapers, Iltalehti, reported here (link in Finnish, unfortunately, but the crust is that Obama supposedly stumbled badly in a television interview). Many of the foreign newspapers use US newspapers as sources of information, so such "news" get spread far and wide.Cairber wrote:That debate was a travesty. Even Ed rendell said it was lopsided in the first 40 min (more like first hour I think). The saddest part is now it seems like everyone news stations are interviewing are saying Hillary won.
Well, of course it's going to look like that. All she had to do was sit back and go with it as they hammered Obama on every contact he's ever had and his stupid flag pin.
I didn't watch the 'debate', but that's not surprising.Guardsman Bass wrote:To be fair, they did start hitting them on some actual issues later on. It was interesting to see their reactions on gun control; both generally were pro-gun control in the past, but have played up their "cred" to potential gun-owning voters as of late.
No shit.FSTargetDrone wrote:Is it inappropriate for me to wonder why George Stephanopoulos, who worked to get Bill Clinton elected and then worked in his administration, was chosen to be one of the questioners?? They should have got one of the local ABC affilitate reporters instead.
The Iltalehti article is quite neutral. The writer for Iltasanomat couldn't have been licking Shillary's cunt any harder if he'd tried. Looks like he'd just taken something from the American media, translated it directly and put it out as his own. The references to US media focus groups and panels was especially blatant, as if the media establishment there could be trusted at all.Tiriol wrote:A poor man's edit: I confused Iltalehti with Iltasanomat, two similar daily newspapers. This is Iltalehti's article about Obama-Hillary debate and manages to be more neutral and matter-of-fact style.Tiriol wrote:That's what one of the Finnish daily newspapers, Iltalehti, reported here (link in Finnish, unfortunately, but the crust is that Obama supposedly stumbled badly in a television interview). Many of the foreign newspapers use US newspapers as sources of information, so such "news" get spread far and wide.Cairber wrote:That debate was a travesty. Even Ed rendell said it was lopsided in the first 40 min (more like first hour I think). The saddest part is now it seems like everyone news stations are interviewing are saying Hillary won.
Well, of course it's going to look like that. All she had to do was sit back and go with it as they hammered Obama on every contact he's ever had and his stupid flag pin.
ABC Hosts Heckled After Debate: "The Crowd Is Turning On Me"
The Huffington Post | April 16, 2008 10:17 PM
Reflecting what seemed to be the main consensus of the night - that ABC botched this debate, big time - Charlie Gibson tells the crowd there will be one more, superfluous commercial break of the night and is subsequently jeered.
"OH..." he declares, hands raised in defense. "The crowd is turning on me, the crowd is turning on me."
Off camera, observers let out their frustrations. Watch it:
Visitors to ABC's site weren't much kinder. Here's a sampling on page 1:
...This is AWFUL. Thank goodness for Jon Stewart and Comedy Central. He does a better job of interviewing and asking relevant questions of his guests in 5 minutes than these 2 yahoos have in more than an hour. ABC should be ashamed. George should be ashamed. Charlie should be ashamed. This isn't a debate. This is a hit job.
...Asinine questions - abysmal debate. Fire these silly moderators NOW. They insult the intelligence of the American people.
...I haven't watched ABC "news" in a few years. I see I haven't been missing much! MORE THAN half the debate turned over to Bittergate, Rev Wright, the Weathermen, Tuzla, FLAG LAPEL PINS? Most of the televised debates I've seen this campaign season have been lame, but this one takes the prize. Either you guys are morons or you think that we are. Either way, I'm glad to have seen the last of you. Really, really bad.No winners in this debate, but a definite loser: ABC "NEWS"
...This is the WORST debate I have ever watched. Never in my life have I been more disenchanted with the news media as a whole, especially a news organization such as ABC that I believed to have some sense of purpose to bring substantive information and perspective to the American people. Americans are tired of the snipping between the candidates and the lack of discussion about what each candidate will do to help the country. ABC News should be ashamed for presenting such a failure of a debate.
...Are you kidding me? "We don't have much time left. Let's have a MINUTE to talk about gas?" Charlie and George, you need a crash course on the distinction between "issues" and an "agendas." Hint: The candidates have the former; you have the latter.
...ABC News . . you should be ashamed of this debate. Where did you get these questions?? Where are the ISSUES. We have heard enough about Rev Wright and what Hillary did or didn't do in Bosnia. Let's hear about issues that matter such as the cost of Health Care, the war in Iraq, the Energy Crisi, the Crisis in Our Schools, and THE ECONOMY, STUPID!!
...Geoirge and Charlie= narcissistic elite "journalists" trying to score a rating point, but asking questions that would yield a "F" in middle school journalism. This debate may be used for years in journalism classes, on how to not run a debate. Disney-who owns ABC- get better cartoon characters to run a debate. Elmer Fudd would do much better.
...Has ABC News noticed that your so called "debate" has been universally panned? Charles Gibson is a pandering person more fit for the National Enquirer than a responsible news program. Stephanopoulis is barely better. I am so disappointed but not surprised.
Well, if one was of a conspiratorial bent, one could say the news media are hoping to nobble the nomination in Hillary's favour since she's be the weaker candidate to go up against McCain past Labour Day.Chris OFarrell wrote:Well I've read through the transcript and seen a few clips of the debate...
One sided BS doesn't even begin to describe it. You know, I can't help but wonder if the Media is so fucking desperate to keep this 'race' between the two going, that they are actively trying to DIRECTLY help the Clinton campaign in some ways given how far behind she is...seriously!
It was just PATHETIC! If this was an SDN thread, it would have been tossed into the sewer after 10 minutes!
See the ass end of 'I was almost killed' thread for my workplace politics. Really left-leaning here in Baton Rouge these days.Invictus ChiKen wrote:I think this smear campaign is having the opposite effect. My hard core Republican Bush is the greatest thing ever, Democrats just want to give our money to brown people Father, has spoken up in his defense.
I'm seeing many people like that around here.
hu Apr 17, 2008 at 06:34:35 AM PDT
After the first forty minutes of last night's Democratic debate, it was clear we were watching something historic. Not historic in a good way, mind you, but historic in the sense of being something so deeply embarrassing to the nation that it will be pointed to, in future books and documentary works, as a prime example of the collapse of the American media into utter and complete substanceless, into self-celebrated vapidity, and into a now-complete inability or unwillingness to cover the most important affairs of the nation to any but the most shallow of depths.
Congratulations are clearly in order. ABC had two hours of access to two of the three remaining candidates vying to lead the most powerful nation in the world, and spent the decided majority of that time mining what the press considers the true issues facing the republic. Bittergate; Rev. Wright; Bosnia; American flag lapel pins. That's what's important to the future of the country.
What a contrast. Only a few weeks ago, we were presented with what was considered by many to be a historic speech by a presidential candidate on race in America -- historic for its substance, tone, delivery, and stark candor. Last night, we had an opposing, equally historic example -- and I sincerely mean that, I consider it to be every bit as significant as that word implies -- of the collapse of the political press into self-willed incompetence. You might as well pull any half-intelligent person off the street, and they would unquestionably have more difficult and significant questions for the two candidates. It was not merely a momentarily bad performance, by ABC, it was a debate explicitly designed to be what it was, which is far more telling.
It is certainly true that a case could be made that the moderators explicitly set out to frame even the supposedly "substantive" questions according to GOP designs. The implicit presumption of success in Iraq when, nearly an hour into the debate, the moderators finally deigned to mention the defining current event of this campaign. Gibson, as moderator, lied outright about the supposed effects of capital gains tax cuts, and dogged the candidates over it to a greater extent than any other economic issue: does he really believe that of all the economic challenges facing this nation, the most pressing of them is supplication towards a decade-long Republican bugaboo? Gun control? Affirmative action? These are the issues that are most compellingly on the minds of Democratic primary voters, in 2008? Or were the questions taken from a 1992 time capsule, insightful probes gathering dust for a decade and a half until they could find network moderators desperate enough to dig them up again?
But even slanted questions could be forgiven, of the press; what was more inexplicable was the intentional wallowing in substanceless, meaningless "gaffe" politics. It says something truly impressive about the press that a few statements by a presidential candidate's preacher bear far more weight to the future of our nation than the challenges of terrorism or war. It is truly a celebration of our own national collapse into idiocracy that we can furrow our brows and question the patriotism of a candidate, deeply probe their patriotism based on whether or not they regularly don a made-in-China American flag pin, but a substantive discussion of energy policy, or healthcare, or the deficit, or the housing crisis, or global climate change, or the government approval of torture, or trade issues, or the plight of one-industry small American towns, or the fight over domestic espionage and FISA, or the makeup of the Supreme Court -- those were of no significance, in comparison.
If a media organization set out to intentionally demonstrate themselves to be self absorbed and ignorant, they could not have accomplished it better. It was not just a tabloid debate, but the tittering of political kindergardeners making and lobbing mud pies. It was politics as game show. The moderators demonstrated that to them and their supposed "news" organization, the presidency of the United States of America is about the trivialities of_politics_, which were obsessed over ravenously, not about the challenges of American governance, which were fully ignored.
Certainly, as mere citizens we could ask little of the network that unapologetically brought us The Path to 9/11, a fabricated conservative pseudo-documentary laying the blame for terrorism at the feet of everyone loathed by the far right. But it is not simply ABC that bears the blame: surely, one could expect similar drivel from any of the other networks or cable channels who have so successfully and self-importantly dimmed the national discourse, these past ten years. For his part, the chairman of the written intellectual wisp, the New York Times' David Brooks, marveled at the "excellent" questions:
Indeed, how dare his peon readers whine about these things: this is how the political game is expected to be played by the grand masters of our discourse. Symbolic tours of flag factories! Checkmate! That is the elite idea of "issues" in our national debate. Piss on the war, and screw the economy -- somebody find a goddamn flag factory to tour! That is how our most elite media figures like to see political opponents "exposed" as... well, what exactly? What does touring a flag factory prove, other than the media in this country is so astonishingly gullible, tin-headed and shallow that you can actually tour a damn flag factory and get praised for it by our idiot press as being a bold, disarming move against your opponent?We may not like it, but issues like Jeremiah Wright, flag lapels and the Tuzla airport will be important in the fall. Remember how George H.W. Bush toured flag factories to expose Michael Dukakis. It’s legitimate to see how the candidates will respond to these sorts of symbolic issues.
Truly, we have become a nation led by the most lazy and ignorant. It seems impossible to mock or satirize just how shallowly the media considers the actual world ramifications of each election, how glancingly they explore the actual truth behind political assertion or rhetoric, or how gleefully they molest our discourse while praising themselves for those selfsame acts. And that, in turn, is precisely how we elected our current Idiot Boy King, a man who has the eloquent demeanor of a month-old Christmas tree and the nuance of a Saturday morning cartoon.
It seems impossible, but we may yet have an election season in which we can be in a slogging, five-year-long war, and mention the fact only in glancing asides. We may yet have a series of Republican-Democratic debates in which the most pressing issues of the economy are entirely ignored, so that we can more adequately explore the "patriotism" of the candidates as expressed by their clothing. We may have yet another campaign season carefully orchestrated to leave all but the most glancing and hollow of themes untouched, while our press achieves multiple orgasms at every botched line, every refused cup of coffee, every peddled character assassination or character assassination-by-proxy peddled by the sleaziest of paid dregs. A campaign, in other words, perfectly suited to the bereft, rudderless, and substanceless self-pronounced guardians of our democracy.
Perhaps, if nothing else, it is time to take back the debate process and insist once again on moderators chosen for competence, expertise and neutrality, rather than network or cable network fame. The elites of our press have managed to botch the task time and time again; perhaps it should be left to someone with an actual interest in doing the job.
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