Fire Fly wrote:Darth Wong wrote:FSTargetDrone wrote:I'm sick not so much of the election but of the extraneous bullshit like the "Reverend Wright Controversy." I'm sick of the endless discussion of issues that do not matter. There isn't nearly enough discussion about the really important issues.
Of course not, because the goddamned primary campaign drags on for a year. Why the fuck does it have to last so long? When it lasts that long, news people start manufacturing shit in order to keep up the viewers' interest.
Could someone explain to me why, for example, the party primaries are held sequentially across so many months? Why aren't they all held on the same day, nationwide? Is there some rationale to this incredibly tedious process?
My own reasons why:
1. Short term attention span on the part of the populace; the candidates need to constantly repeat their slogans so that it sinks in.
2. Voter apathy due to a shit load of economic and health care problems; most people have more immediate worries. The average household is swimming in bills, taxes, and mortgages, partly because of the "American dream." Much of the US is built on an attrition-style survival, going day to day with a basic routine, working 40 to 60 hours a week just to make enough money. Of course, this leads to the short term attention span.
3. Because we tend to have problem bloated lives, we increasingly distract ourselves with various forms of entertainments and escape. For those who don't have problem bloated lives, they fill their ennui with various forms of entertainment and escape.
4. Because we fill our lives with so much escapism, the media outlets have to constantly compete with one another, resulting in scandal driven reporting to one up the other. Of course, this only leads to contentless politics, resulting in more apathy and shorter attention spans.
You know that none of this actually addresses the question, don't you?
Darth Wong wrote:You really can't extricate yourself from the current system, can you? Does it occur to you that with nationwide primaries in a short campaign, there would be no need to have specially tailored political campaigns for every individual state at all, and that you could run the campaign at a national level instead?
Tailoring individual campaigns for each state seems like a ridiculous idea on the face of it, since surely any Presidential policy would be applied on a national scale, which means that the promises tailored to Iowa should be just as relevant to someone in New York as the promises tailored to New York.
And is it a particularly American thing to defend something that's sub-standard as being "the system", and then to complain about how much money it will cost to fix it (even when comparable changes in other countries actually
save money)? You see it in health-care debates, you see it when you bring up the idea of changing the shape of US currency, you see it in gun control ads.
I can almost imagine the same argument being played out just prior to the civil war:
Abolitionist: Slavery is immoral and demeaning to both the slaver and the slave. We should stop it.
Southerner: But it's the system we've got, so we just have to live with it. You don't want those slaves going around cheating the system now, do you? Besides, think about how much it would cost.
Abolitionist: Well, actually, the example set by the northern states would suggest that slavery not only is not necessary to a strong economy, but also holds economic growh back.
Southerner: But think about how much it would cost! And besides, it's the system that we have in place!
Abolitionist: ...