By George Neumayr on 10.6.04 @ 12:55AM
Senator Gone should have gone AWOL.
Dick Cheney played the sober judge in last night's debate while
John Grisham Edwards played the sophistical trial lawyer, long on
cheap rhetoric, short on real responsibility. "Senator Gone," as
Cheney called him (quoting a North Carolina newspaper), can't even
claim experience in the Senate because he is almost never there to
experience anything.
Without a record Edwards fell back on rhetoric, leveling
convoluted charges too insider baseballish to keep the audience
from turning to real baseball on another channel. John Edwards
treats the American people like an audience at a Michael Moore
movie, expecting them to respond robotically to the sound of
"Halliburton."
Cheney's substance only highlighted Edwards' lack of any. He
looked hollow, gesticulating in proportion to his lack of sincere
thought. Cheney made Edwards look like a smart-alecky ass when
Edwards tried to score political points by sneering at the Iraqis'
contribution to the war effort. Like a grandfather scolding a
mindless teenager, Cheney suggested to Edwards that he treat the
sacrifice of Iraqis with a little more respect.
Some debaters master details and miss the big picture. Other
debaters get the big picture and stumble on details. Cheney is
pretty good at both, making him a deadly debater against a
demagogue like Edwards who thinks canned lines are a substitute for
convictions.
The essential cheapness of Edwards was seen in his use of family
members (both his and Cheney's) as political props. When he wasn't
using Cheney's daughter to score political points against his
opponent, he was telling bizarre stories about his undereducated
father "learning math on television." Then he added patronizingly,
"I was proud of him." Edwards's subtext: My father was a loser, I
am a winner who rose from a family of losers through hard work,
vote for me.
Why do we need to know that his father learned math by watching
"Sesame Street"? And what possible relevance could Cheney's
daughter have to national policy? The lifestyle choices of
vice-presidential daughters now drive television debates? There is
no bottom to the superficiality and stupidity of American politics
under the influence of Democratic demagoguery.
The Kerry-Edwards position on homosexual marriage is as
convincing as their position on Iraq: they are against it and for
it. They are for marriage between a "man and a woman" and against
attempts to define marriage as that union. They don't want the
states to veto the judges of Massachusetts through an amendment
power given to the people in the Constitution, but Edwards and
Kerry are fine with an extraconstitutional "global test" vetoing
America's national security.
Moderator Gwen Ifill asked Edwards a simple question: Isn't a
global test a "global veto"? His lawyerly distinctions were utterly
inadequate to the question. To the question, would you have left
Saddam Hussein in power? Edwards just resorted to lawerly evasion.
It is too bad Cheney didn't say, "Notice, Gwen, that Edwards didn't
answer your question, because he and Kerry would have left Saddam
Hussein in power."
Edwards said he is "frightened" by the spread of the AIDS
epidemic in Africa and the conflict in the Sudan -- "two huge moral
issues for the U.S." -- but saw no moral urgency in stopping the
spread of Saddam Hussein's terrorism. Since certainty is a vice and
uncertainty a virtue in the philosophy of Kerry and Edwards, no
contradiction is too great for them. They will decrease the deficit
by increasing government. They will help small business by taxing
it out of existence (Cheney noted that almost a million small
businesses would see their taxes rise under Kerry and Edwards).
They will promote class unity by practicing class warfare (Edwards
conjured up the "multimillionaire by the swimming pool"). They will
fix health care by spreading universal health care, a topic
Edwards, ever the ambulance chaser, returned to time and again.
They will defend Israel -- Edwards' pandering on this score was
almost comic -- while Kerry calls Israel's security fence against
Palestinian terrorists a "barrier to peace."
Edwards took his trial tricks into a debate with a vice
president as commanding as a judge. The American people aren't
likely to rule in his favor.
topics:
Taxes, Health Care, Television, Business, Constitution, Law, Iraq, Israel, NATO, Africa