By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 10.7.04 @ 12:06AM
The presidential debates are deemed important only because the liberal media say they are.
NEW YORK -- I did not know that the American political classes
were so wild for debates. Truth be known, we never hear much about
debates or a politician's debating skills until about this point in
a presidential campaign. Then debating skills are boomed in the
media as a very important element in presidential greatness. Always
it is assumed that the Democratic candidate, whoever that might be,
is superior to the Republican. And so I have answered my own
question. The presidential debates are deemed important because the
liberal media -- the Kultursmog as we say -- can pollute
credulous minds with the claim that the Democratic candidate was
the winner. Superb -- maybe he can take his skills to the United
Nations General Assembly and overwhelm the delegate from Monte
Carlo. But in the real world of geopolitics a honeyed syllogism is
not worth much against armed might or a suicide bomber.
As Vice President Dick Cheney and vice-presidential candidate
John Edwards were spraying their vocal chords, applying their
makeup, and otherwise preparing to debate, I was at a very pleasant
dinner party with one of the few people in America who can still be
recognized as a great debater, William F. Buckley, Jr., founder of
National Review and the brainy combatant who set out over
half a century ago to debate the ideas of modern American
conservatism with the dominant liberal advocates.
In the 1950s there really was a healthy respect for intellectual
debate on college campuses and to some extent beyond the campus and
in the public forums. Buckley with his wit, erudition, and audacity
quickly established himself as a debater of the top tier. In so
doing he advanced the ideas of a strong national defense,
anti-Communism, personal liberty, and market economics into regions
where appeasement, anti-anti-Communism, and the welfare state were
taken for granted.
As the decades have passed, debate has lost its popularity on
campuses and in public forums, possibly because Buckley and his
understudies fared so well. Yet Bill remains a keen student of
debate and so I questioned him about the drear of the recent
debates. They really have not been all that scintillating or
informative. One question that came to mind was, "Is it not
difficult to confront debater Kerry on the war since he has been so
often on every side of the issue?" The very plenitude of his
positions makes it easy for him to bring confusion to any
assertion. Bill responded by quoting not himself from some far-off
debate but President George W. Bush in his recent standoff with
Kerry. Faced with Kerry's multitudinous self-contradictions on the
war Mr. Bush asseverated, "My opponent is consistent in his
inconsistencies." The old debater called that an "elegant
riposte."
The President has had other effective ripostes, and of course
the Francophile Democratic candidate has had his moments. Yet it
really does not matter how well or badly the candidates do in these
debates. In the Kultursmog the myth stands unchallenged
that Democrats are the great debaters. Republicans are inferior. Do
you recall the spokesmen of the Kultursmog ever
acknowledging the debating skills of, say, Ronald Reagan? When they
finally had to acknowledge his rhetorical achievement they did it
disparagingly. He was the "Teflon" guy.
Thus far the debates have been unimpressive, save for Cheney the
other night. His clear victory over Edwards was brought to
confusion by the bilge pumps of the Kultursmog.
Nonetheless he won. Surely Buckley agrees.
How much the debates are going to figure in the final vote I am
unsure. I suspect they will encourage a segment of the electorate
to vote Democratic, the segment that considers itself very
intellectual without actually being intellectual. Otherwise the
election is going to turn a clearly observable difference in
foreign policy. The President has a clear policy of projecting
American force abroad to prevent attacks on us at home. The
challenger offers a vague policy of promising to oppose terrorists
abroad even as he politicizes the war we are in at home and in so
doing aids and abets the enemy. My guess is that a majority of the
electorate will know how to vote.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Economics, Communism, Conservatism