Calhoun’s Cannons for Oct 17, 2012
As theatre of the absurd, you can’t beat our Presidential
Debates, Town Hall Version. The
beautiful stage, the hand-picked, rehearsed and vetted audience, the whole
thing scripted like a piece of Kabuki Theatre.
But, c’mon, America,
we gotta up our game. Here was a
once-in-a-lifetime chance for Mr. John Q. Citizen to ask a serious question of both
a candidate and a President, and we get some doofus whining about how the
Secretary of Energy told him that it wasn’t this administration’s responsibility
to do anything about gas prices and could this possibly be true, O woe?
People, people.
Really? Gas prices? Secretary of
Energy? This is gas-guzzler America,
home of ruthless, winner-take-all capitalism, where Free Market Rules rule,
where we love our price-gougers and rip-off commodity speculators, and now we
have this guy on national TV whining about gas prices? Like he thinks the President is some kind of
dreary Soviet five-year planner who should take over Exxon Mobil and show up at
this guy’s local Gas ‘N Go with a screw driver to reset pump prices? Oh,
Plueeze.
But that’s how much of the evening went, hand-picked
questions that allowed the candidates to conveniently hang themselves in velvet
ropes of clichés while the real 600 pound gorillas sat quietly off stage,
untouched.
Like a Republican Congress of NO with only one stated goal:
Defeat Obama by any means necessary.
Pretty hard to do much of anything to help a foundering country with
that millstone around your neck. Or
income disparities that are a worsening drain on the economy and a real threat
to America’s
unique promise: upward mobility. Or global
warming, the mother of all gorillas coming down on us fast, a gorilla that will
make jobs and gas prices – and everything else – moot. Or a realistic, grown-up
discussion about our gazillion-dollar debt that wasn’t full of fairy stories
about how we can all make it disappear while still getting lots of tax breaks
and free pudding. You know, grown-up topics that needed grown-up answers. Instead we get whines about gas prices.
And theatre, which did have its moments. Candidate Mitt was
back doing his anxious little boy routine from the first debate, fairly hopping
up and down promising the moon, a long litany of, I can do it, I can create jobs, I know how, I
do, I do, I do, I know how, the middle class is crushed, I can get all the oil we need,
I can do it, crushed middle class, I know how, crushed, I’ll lower the rates,
crushed, millions of jobs, lower taxes, more crushed, jobs, I can, I can,
plueeze, plueeze, until Crowley had to tell him to hush up and go take his seat,
which he finally did.
Amusingly, Candidate Mitt’s crowded litany of his own
glorious campaign promises was often juxtaposed with his long j’accuse litany
of candidate Obama’s unfulfilled glorious
campaign promises of four years ago, but at no time did I
ever get a sense that Mitt understood the delicious irony of those
juxtapositions: The huge difference between campaign promises (past and
present) and real world governance.
Not so amusing was Mitt having to be fact-checked on air by Moderator
Crowley. If there’s one thing vital in a
Commander in Chief, it’s the ability to make sure he’s got the facts straight
before speaking or acting. Mitt had
already gotten smacked for rushing into the initial muddle of the Libyan
terrorist attack even before he knew what the facts were and here he was again,
weeks later, still unclear of the events. Not good, even for an Etch-A-Sketch
candidate. Hourly changeable campaign
promises are one thing; Wrong facts about terror attacks are quite another.
But Democrats were happy.
The President was awake this time and ready for a smackdown and now the
media, which never met a sports metaphor it didn’t love, will be filled with
zinging sound bites and fact-checking wonkery, all of which will be endlessly
repeated in order to gin up ratings for the last big showdown before the Big
Race.
Which likely will be a squeaker, given how divided this
country is. But until the voters
understand that if they want those 600 pound gorillas dealt with, they’ve got
to vote into office a better grade of Congressmen. If they don’t, those gorillas will still be
there, growing bigger and more dangerous every year. And in a few years, when
some guy stands up again to whine about gas prices, their response won’t be
pretty.