SLIGHTLY OFF THE
MARK
I didn’t watch the first
Presidential debate, or the Vice-Presidential debate, for the same reason why I
don’t watch most talk shows: I don’t like people talking past each other
without actually considering what the other is saying. It’s like the late
stages of a drunken family reunion.
(In the second Presidential debate, Romney
did a credible job against the tag-team of Obama and “moderator” Candy Crowley.)
After spending four years studying
the President’s performance and six months studying his opponent, I’ve pretty
much decided. Besides, I follow politics, but not voluntarily. Studying the
issues and candidates is simply a civic responsibility, like voting in the
election, or for America’s Next Top Chef Shooter Model Idol (coming next season
on Fox).
But after seeing so much argument
over who won between Biden and Ryan, I went back and watched the whole debate
instead of catching up on The Walking Dead
marathon, which frankly would have been both more fun and more believable.
Now I’ll tell you not only who won the debate, but who’s going to win the
election, and why.
I was impressed that Joe Biden
didn’t make any of his famous flubs, and he gets points just for not giving us
a viral quote. Maybe he’d prefer that he did, since his current reputation as a
dunce keeps us from remembering his former reputation as a plagiarist, but he
held his own.
Through the course of the debate
Biden smirked, laughed, interrupted, bullied, and grinned like a gorilla on
laughing gas. While Ryan plodded through his points and appeared calm and
reasoned, Biden waved his arms and mocked like a b-movie villain, and looked
thoroughly un-Vice-Presidential.
Biden won.
Look, Biden’s not dumb. Well, okay, he’s not
all that smart, but if there’s one thing he knows how to do, it’s campaign. It
occurs to me that maybe, with this debate, he was giving people exactly what
they want:
Reality television.
I’m talking the Jerry Springer style
reality TV, the stuff that gives the rest of it a bad name. The kind where
awful behavior is not only tolerated, but expected and celebrated. Who’s the
most memorable and popular contestant on, say, “Survivor”, or “The Bachelor”,
or “The Real World”, or “Surviving the Real
World Big Brother Bachelor” (coming
next season on NBC)?
It’s the bad guy. The one who
imbibes too much, gets into fights, rattles cages just for fun, and stabs any
back that happens to present itself. You don’t turn your back on these people,
because they’re devious, plotting, and willing to do whatever it takes to win.
I prefer the hero to the anti-hero:
The guy who’s straightforward, reasoned, calm, and always does the right thing.
The boring guy, the one who hasn’t existed in politics since Lincoln. And if
you ask somebody in Atlanta, maybe not then.
I’m thinking Biden figured to win
the debate just by being the biggest blowhard, and isn’t that the way most
national elections get won? Love him or hate him, the man knows how to win
elections.
Read a transcript of the debate, as
I did, and you realize from a straight word standpoint it was close to a draw.
There it all boils down to who you believe, and what the fact checkers come up
with – but taken at face value, you can’t see a huge advantage just from the
words. The only other thing I noticed is that the moderator seemed to throw
more hardballs at Ryan. (President Obama was a guest at her wedding, but that
was way back when he was Mr. Obama.)
For some reason this makes me think
of all those nature shows, where the bird with the biggest plumage and the
fanciest dance gets the lady bird. Sometimes that works for the guy with the
nicest hair and the fanciest car, too.
Which brings us to President Obama,
who once drove a 2005 Chrysler 300C, very nice. Hey, I drive a 2005! Of course,
he’s traded up.
Okay, I see no reason to keep you in
suspense: Regardless of who “won” the debate, the next President of the United
States is going to be …
Wait for it …
Barrack Obama.
Who would also be the present POTUS,
so hopefully we’ll save some money by not replacing the White House drapes.
Look, I can give you reasons to not
vote for Obama, and reasons to vote for Romney, but it all boils down to
presentation. In the last election, Obama had the advantage of having no record
to defend (or almost none, considering his brief Congressional career). Four
years later he’s successfully convinced his supporters that he’s still trying
to correct everyone else’s mistakes. That makes being President an advantage:
He can be seen doing official business, travel on the taxpayer’s dime, and just
look darned Presidential.
Add that to the mainstream media’s belief
that he’s the beloved big brother they never had, who lets them borrow the car
and shares his favorite albums. Add that
to the fact that people hate hearing bad news, and love hearing that the
government’s going to give them stuff – free stuff! It sounds too good to be
true, but surely it is. I mean, surely it is true.
Debate the record and our problems
all you want, but when you add fawning journalists, voters who don’t want to
face reality, and the fact that the guy’s just plain charming, and you got
everything you need for a Presidential win – no matter how many chads hang in
Florida.
So, we’re looking at four more years
of praying for the President’s continued good health. And, whichever side you
fall on, at least Joe Biden will continue to be entertaining.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteLooks like you've got a spammer on your hands there...
ReplyDeleteBiden's nutty enough that lone gunmen think, "Do I really want that guy in the Oval Office if I go after the President? No, I don't think so..."
Huh. You just pinpointed exactly why Obama picked that moron for his VP -- to cut down on assassination attempts.
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ReplyDelete