ELITE DELUSIONS: The dumbest campaign!

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 2012

Part 3—Major pundits are starting to notice: Inquiring pundits are starting to notice the dumbness of this campaign.

One such pundit is David Brooks. In Tuesday’s column, his headline called the current race the “Dullest Campaign Ever.” As he continued, he presented the first of nine reasons for this sad state of affairs:
BROOKS (7/31/12): Dullest Campaign Ever

A few weeks ago, Peggy Noonan wrote a column in The Wall Street Journal that perfectly captures my attitude toward this presidential campaign: It’s incredibly consequential and incredibly boring all at the same time.

Since then, I’ve come up with a number of reasons for why it is so dull. First, intellectual stagnation. This race is the latest iteration of the same debate we’ve been having since 1964. Mitt Romney is calling President Obama a big-government liberal who wants to crush business. Obama is calling Romney a corporate tool who wants to take away grandma’s health care.
Why is this campaign so dull? For his first reason, Brooks listed “intellectual stagnation.” His second reason was from the same family: “Lack of any hint of intellectual innovation.”

Brooks didn’t ask if Obama was right—if Romney would take away grandma’s health care (or some significant portion thereof). But he did mention the brain-numbing gaffes which have dominated this dumbest campaign. “Candidates don’t even have to rehearse the arguments anymore; they just find the gaffes that will help them pin their opponent to the standard bogyman clichés,” Brooks correctly wrote.

Brooks described an extremely dumb campaign. But then, so did Ruth Marcus, in a column in yesterday’s Washington Post.

According to Marcus, the focus on gaffes has taken the place of substance. It’s hard to say she’s wrong:
MARCUS (8/1/12): A gaffe a day keeps the substance away

The 2012 presidential campaign has become a festival of gaffe-hopping.

The candidates skitter along on the surface of politics, issuing vague pronouncements or taking predictable shots at each other. But these seem like increasingly brief interludes, mere campaign busywork as each side awaits and—abetted by an attention-deficit-disordered media—pounces on the opponents’ next gaffe.
Marcus noted that these alleged gaffes are often examples of the “faux gaffe,” in which a candidate “is skewered, generally out of context, for saying something that he clearly did not mean but that the other side finds immensely useful to misrepresent.” Quite correctly, she cited examples of faux gaffes which have been ascribed to each candidate—to Obama and to Romney.

Marcus gets credit for noting that our “attention-deficit-disordered media” are partial architects of this disorder. Playing a more traditional game, Brooks listed nine causes of the dumbness without suggesting, even once, that his own press corps might be part of the mess.

In Brooks’ column, only the candidates were at fault. As our pundits have done for many years now, he disappeared the gruesome performance of his own brain-dead elite.

That said, Brooks and Marcus both noticed the dumbness of the unfolding campaign. In that, these major pundits were right. Surely, this is the dumbest White House campaign of the modern era. This campaign has been so dumb that it raises an obvious question: Does a modern nation this dumb have any real chance to survive?

How dumb is the current campaign? Compare it to an earlier, disgracefully stupid campaign, the campaign which got its start in March 1999.

That Bush-Gore campaign was disgracefully stupid, mainly because of the press corps. Marcus even tells the truth (slowly) about that campaign, noting that “some alleged gaffes” from that campaign—“Vice President Al Gore supposedly asserting that he invented the Internet or discovered Love Canal, for example—have always had a questionable provenance.”

That is Marcus’ euphemized way of saying that her guild invented a long string of phony “gaffes” and pounded Gore with them for two years. Marcus euphemizes this obvious fact to the point where it can barely be found in her prose—and yet, given the rank dishonesty of her guild, her statement is one of the frankest admissions the press corps had ever made about this inexcusable conduct.

(Every step of the way, your “liberal leaders” have agreed to take part in this rolling deception.)

Campaign 2000 was monumentally stupid, largely because of the press corps. But even within that noxious framework, the candidates proposed and debated major policy ideas:

Candidate Bush proposed his now-famous tax cuts in late November 1999, almost a full year before the election. He proposed partial privatization of Social Security in May 2000, with six full months left to go.

Those proposals were discussed and debated all through the long campaign. (Conservative and mainstream pundits strongly supported Candidate Bush’s privatization ideas.) Meanwhile, Gore and Bradley conducted a long debate about health care in the Democratic primaries.

The press corps dissembled endlessly about Bradley’s health care proposal, attempting to prop up their floundering favorite. That said, the debate did occur.

Even in that disgraceful campaign, real proposals were advanced and debated. By August 2000, clear policy differences were on the table between Candidates Bush and Gore.

As became clear at the end of that month, major journalists still couldn’t explain what Bush had proposed in his tax cut plan. But Bush had made some major proposals, and Gore was pushing back hard.

Very little resembling that state of affairsexists in the current campaign. As Marcus correctly says, the string of brain-dead gaffe alerts has almost wholly replaced discussions of substance.

Last Sunday, the public editor for the New York Times pondered this miserable state of affairs. He asked his newspaper’s politics editor how the Times should react to this mess (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 7/30/12).

It’s very, very late in the game for such questions to be asked. Tomorrow, we’ll look at the answer the public editor got.

What should the New York Times do to rescue this dumbest of all campaigns? What kind of service can it provide for its “sophisticated readers?”

Do any such readers really exist? Or is that an elite delusion?

Tomorrow, we’ll review the proposal which emerged from within the Times, which may be our dumbest newspaper.

Tomorrow: Blog posts!

14 comments:

  1. The Anonymous IdiotAugust 2, 2012 at 10:21 AM

    There's an hilarious typo in Bob's post: "affairsexists" HAHAHAHA! What a useless writer!

    I don't know why I even bother visiting this site day after day after day...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Brooks can attempt to trivialize Obama's position as "Romney trying to take grandma's health care away," but I kinda think the future of Medicare is a rather substantive issue, especially since Romney so quickly endorsed Paul Ryan's original plan to turn Medicare into a voucher system.

    But then again, I suppose that was just a "gaffe".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Obama may not like Ryan's plan. On the other hand, Obama has not proposed any plan to address the issue of Medicare solvency. Presumably, that plan will come another day, probably from another person.

      Delete
    2. No, not true. Obama has made several proposals for containing Medicare costs and improving the solvency of the fund.

      Here's a pretty good story from a couple of months ago comparing the plans of Romney and Obama re: Medicare.

      Beware, however. It comes from the NY Times. You know, that newspaper that never covers substantive issues:

      http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/15/us/politics/romney-medicare-plan-draws-stark-contrast-with-obamas.html?pagewanted=all

      Delete
    3. Obama's health care law has at best only slightly improved the long term solvency of Medicare.

      His own trustees acknowledge this fact.

      By Kelly Kennedy, USA TODAY
      Updated 4/23/2012 10:36 PM

      WASHINGTON – The Medicare and Social Security trust funds are both on "unsustainable paths" — as they have been for years — and will be exhausted by 2024 and 2033, respectively, a trustee report released Monday said.

      Delete
  3. Besides trivializing, it's false. Grandma's healthcare will be intact. It's the working adults today and their children who, under the Republican plan, would have to hope vouchers are sufficient to purchase the same coverage under private insurance.

    Does Brooks give a crap whether it's false? I seriously doubt it. I seriously doubt that he has the fundamental decency to care about being poorly informed about what he writes. And make no mistake: characterizing it as "grandma's healthcare," in a deliberate attempt to foment generational discord, is either being seriously misinformed or is deliberate lying.

    Does the editorial staff of the Times give a crap whether its columnist is seriously misinformed or deliberately lying? Please.

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