Campaign 2008: Riding the Road of Trivialities

Posted March 28, 2008 on 4:38 pm | In the category 2008, Election 2008, Politics, U.S. Domestic Policy, U.S. Foreign Policy | by Jeff

As the interminable Democratic campaign for president drags its weary ass along the Trivialities Turnpike it is worth asking how the hell we got on this road to begin with? Serious issues abound – the failed Iraq War, a looming failure in Afghanistan, a weakened NATO unwilling to push the fight in Afghanistan, a weakened American military, a dollar in the proverbial toilet, an enormous budget deficit, a looming or actual recession, shortfalls in Medicare and Social Security, rampant international distrust of the United States, a non-existent Middle East policy – and the list goes on.

And what are we being fed by the media? John McCain’s barbecue menu and the great spitball fight between Senators Clinton and Obama. The press moves from spitball to spitball, manufacturing intensity on fundamentally trivial issues. They capture the public’s interest and create temporary shifts in polls that then feed the horse race mentality of a press unable to focus on the real issues that determine the state of the world and of America’s declining quality of life. Do we really care all that much that Geraldine Ferraro thinks Senator Obama is “lucky to be black?” Or that Senator Obama’s former Pastor has said some stupid things mixed in with a justifiable rage over much of what America has done to blacks for over 200 years? Or whether Bill Clinton plays his typical cheap tricks? Are those the only kind of issues that can capture the American peoples’ attention? Are we really so ignorant of the world or so lazy that we cannot put the effort into thinking about serious issues and identifying trivialities for what they are? Or have we simply turned it all over to a shallow, irresponsible press?

For a lengthier and stronger look at these concerns see Matt Taibbi’s latest piece on his website: The Smirking Chimp – here is a taste:

We can’t focus for more than ten seconds on anything at all and we’re constantly exercised about stupid media-generated non-scandals, guilt-by-association raps, accidental dumb utterances of various campaign aides and other nonsense — while at the same time we have no energy at all left to wonder about the mass burgling of the national budget for phony military contracts, the war, the billion dollars or so in campaign contributions to be spent this year that will be buying a small mountain of favors for the next four years. – Matt Taibbi

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  1. The critique applies to the media, particularly TV news – broadcast and cable – generally. The 6 o’clock news is urban slaughter, car crashes, and gas prices. Now even the national broadcast TV news – the programs which in the past were anchored by such relative giants as Sevareid, Cronkite, and, a long time ago, Murrow – are now mostly garbage. Guest “reporters” sit before the lead anchor and spout out the trivialities you reference. No wonder the American voter tends to not know his ass from his elbow. No wonder – even more critically – the American student is ill-informed and badly educated. The news programs reflect the masses’ interests in an effort to boost ratings, and the masses wander from non-issue to non-issue and think highly of themselves.

    Comment by John — March 30, 2008 #

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