Article by streiff in "RedState":
Last week, the allegedly non-partisan Commission on Presidential
Debates announced that it had set the debate schedule for the 2020
Presidential campaign:
First presidential debate:
Tuesday, September 29, 2020
The University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN
Vice presidential debate:
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT
Second presidential debate:
Thursday, October 15, 2020
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Third presidential debate:
Thursday, October 22, 2020
Belmont University, Nashville, TN
If President Trump is smart, he’ll tell the commission to roll the
schedule up into a very tight little tube, slather it with Astroglide®, a
put it in a warm, dark place for safekeeping.
I’m not a fan of the presidential debates. The whole focus is on
superficiality. That’s why the candidates hire coaches and media
advisers and joke writers for the process. The audience doesn’t watch to
be enlightened–you have to be particularly dumb to have waited until a
month before the election to educate yourself about the issues and
candidates–it watches for the zingers.
“There you go again.”
“I’m paying for this microphone.”
“Where’s the beef.”
“You are no Jack Kennedy.”
These are funny but they are nothing more than a street corner game of “the dozens.”
As the audience has grown in size, the entire enterprise has taken on
the air of a WWE event where the candidates are engaged in a verbal
smackdown on their opponents to the cheers of their fans.
In the past couple of elections, the ugly specter of the celebrity
pseudo-journalist has joined this political danse macabre, with the
moderator injecting themselves into the debate–very much like the
crooked refs who are a trope in WWE or the old Harlem Globetrotters
shows.
If you are constantly carping on the superficiality of political
discussions in America and sniveling about “tribalism,” then you should
want this nonsense to stop.
Not only have the debates become toxic, but there is also a
significant question as to whether they were ever anything else. The
media likes to crow about its role in defeating its bête noire,
Richard Nixon, in 1960 because during his televised debate he was
“testy” and because he had a “five o’clock shadow” (appearing in public
with stubble was bad form for a cis-gendered man in those days, go
figure). Why is this a badge of honor and not shameful? Glib does not
mean smart. Charming, as we saw with JFK, doesn’t mean competent or
trustworthy. Why should the media have this outsized role in our
elections? Why should we allow a process to exist where trivialities can
decide the next president?
More to the point, the debates are simply a ratings draw for the
major networks and the moderator slot is nothing more than a way to
inject yet more blow-dried nincompoops of all sexes into our political
life. President Trump, of all people, should know that agreeing to
debate with a moderator from a news organization that has spent the past
three years calling him a Russian stooge and insinuating, if not
outright stating, that his administration is not legitimate is simply
going to hand the Democrat a lot of sympathetic media just a few weeks
before the general election. The Washington Post and other outlets have
staff who catalog the number of “lies” told by Trump and report on it
regularly–this is a world in which a statement that goes against the
media’s received wisdom is labeled a lie, so whatever–and there is zero
reason to think that any member of these outlets will approach their
role as moderator as anything more than a way to stage a “gotcha” at
Trump’s expense.
In short, the current presidential debates a) cheapen the political
discourse, b) add nothing to the knowledge of the average voter, c) are
structured to create conflict and drama, d) are hosted by moderators who
overtly favor Democrats who are mostly employed by outlets who overtly
endorse Democrats (don’t tell me about the “separation” of news and
editorial because I haven’t believed in unicorns or leprechauns for
quite a few years), d) boost the profile of a handful of media poseurs
who think they should be president, and e) feed into the idea that the
news media is some kind of entitled priesthood uniquely qualified to
cover policy debates. They make all of us dumber and more ill-mannered
simply by their existence.
https://www.redstate.com/streiff/2019/10/22/mr.-president-please-nation-favor-kill-stupid-dysfunctional-presidential-debates