Get these FREE newsletters in your email!

Alexander Cockburn

See more great free newsletters
on the subscribe page.

Type your email address:

Your email address is safe with us. View our Privacy policy.

Religion:
Enjoy religious news and spiritual inspiration on the religion page
The Funnies:
Get free jokes, comics, and more! See them all on
our funnies page
Author Bio:
Political journalist Alexander Cockburn (pronounced CO-burn) began his career at the University of Oxford, working as a reporter and commentator in...

Read more about Alexander Cockburn.
Books:
Read the classics online or by email. More details on the books page
Games:
Fun online games, quizzes, hangman and more on the games page
Alexander Cockburn

Imbecilic Tedium: The Debate in Nashville

Alexander Cockburn
The presidential campaign plummeted into imbecilic tedium in Nashville as Barack Obama and John McCain faced off in the second debate. The encounter took place against the vivid backdrop of economic catastrophe, the obvious failure of the $700 billion bailout to turn the tide, Tuesday's market averages hurtling into the abyss, a paralyzing credit freeze, the prospect of savage deflation and prolonged world depression.

Scant intimations of these disasters penetrated the walls of the Belmont University auditorium. It was as though the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, even though apprised that fire and brimstone had already consumed substantial portions of their cities, with prospective destruction of the remnant, spent a vainglorious 90 minutes vying with each other in proclaiming the fundamental soundness of their economy and the greatness of their civilization.

McCain said he had a plan. He would require his Treasury Secretary to bail out beleaguered homeowners. Obama said he'd do the same. It's a sensible idea. But a few days earlier, both men had voted yes to a bankers' bailout that explicitly does not rescue homeowners but exposes the defaulters to foreclosures superintended by the Treasury. The testy and self-important moderator, Tom Brokaw, could have swiftly asked them about this but he didn't.

McCain said he'd consider a spending freeze. Obama could have asked him whether this would include a freeze on the war in Iraq, which has so far cost nearly a trillion dollars. He did finally circle around to this matter, but way too late and much too feebly. In a week when only the government stands between Americans and ruin, one would have thought McCain's Reaganesque attacks on government could have drawn telling barbs from Obama. The auditorium had plenty of veterans who, like McCain, have access to hospitals run by the Veterans' Administration. Obama declined the opportunity.

As a debater, Obama is pitifully slow on his feet. This is not a time when any Republican candidate wants to be reminded that a cause dear to President Bush's heart was Social Security "reform," shorthand for handing over peoples' pensions, now held in government accounts, to Wall Street. Yet, when McCain agreed with Brokaw that America's Social Security system needs "reform," Obama promptly accepted the faulty premise that the Social Security system is in crisis. Why didn't he point out that had privatization been enacted, millions would have already seen the monthly checks standing between them and utter destitution go down the tubes, destroyed by the sharks at now-bankrupt institutions like Lehman Bros?

Obama is too timid even to invoke the greatest hero in the Democrats' pantheon, Franklin Roosevelt. If ever there was a moment to quote FDR, to pledge a new New Deal, it is surely now.

The discussion of foreign affairs was even worse, with the added burden of being mostly repetitions of the first debate in Oxford, Miss. McCain invoked the uniqueness of America and its mission to bring freedom and light to the rest of the planet. Obama solemnly agreed. Neither man saw fit to address the fact that America is only able to shoulder these imperial burdens because China has been prepared to finance the war in Iraq. The difficult word "China" was fleetingly mentioned, once. The issue of an immense and unsustainable Pentagon budget intruded not at all, nor did the thousand or so U.S. military bases overseas.

Both men once again bravely declared they would not allow another Holocaust to happen. Both pledged constancy to Israel. Both men said that an Iran with nuclear weapons was unacceptable. Brokaw could have asked them for their reactions to outgoing Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert's stunning disclosure in an interview with the Hebrew-language newspaper Yediot Aharonoan Israeli newspaper that he thinks Israel is on a totally misguided course, should "actually withdraw from almost all the territories, if not from all the territories," agree to the division of Jerusalem and give Syria back the Golan Heights. Brokaw didn't, though he did raise the recent British assessments from Kabul saying the West's war is lost. This elicited scant reaction from Obama, who continued to pledge higher U.S. troops levels in Afghanistan plus forays into Pakistan, whatever the opinion of Pakistan's government might be.

Asked if Russia was evil, just like the Soviet Union in Ronald Reagan's eyes, Obama said yes, McCain said maybe. Trade? Latin America? Africa? Europe? Nothing from either man, though they both agreed that they would flout the United Nations at will.

Of the two performances, Obama's was the more appalling since he is meant to be the candidate of change and new ideas. He has no detectable commitment to change and no new ideas. Neither does McCain. Yet, the post-debate panelists mostly claimed the Town Hall meeting an absorbing affair, rich in content.

We have one more debate, in which McCain will have another chance to reduce Obama's commanding lead, something he failed to do last night, even though it now seems Sarah Palin did slow McCain's slump with her performance last week. McCain and Palin are trying to get traction by slurring Obama for association with Bill Ayers, a leader of the bomb-throwing antiwar Weathermen in the '60s. Obama was 8 when they threw the bombs. It doesn't seem a productive line of attack for McCain and Palin, particularly when many Americans wouldn't mind blowing up Wall Street themselves.



Copyright 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.

This news arrived on: 10/10/2008
Share this Story
Digg   del.icio.us   Yahoo   Facebook   Google   

Printer Friendly Version | Send this page to a friend | Post Comment


Rate This Story:

Great - 5 - 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 - Bad




Posted Comments:

10-12-2008 01:11
Sunshine49 wrote:

To phyllba

Three of Obama's top campaign advisors all had a hand in the meltdown of Freddy and Fanny. In fact, they are old executives that helped cook the books. Obama's old partners in crime (ACORN) helped push the socialistic idea of subprime mortgages for minorities that was the real reason this all happened in the first place. The first "bailout" didn't pass Congress because there was pork in it such as $20 billion to ACORN. WHY? When you follow the bad money trail -- it all leads back to Democrats and Obama.

I find it unbelievable the sheer stupidity of the American voter. First, the Democrats caused this meltdown that will end up destroying the US economy for many years to come and now they are talking about taking over Washington because the voters are going to put them in office.

I guess I can't blame the voter completely. When Obama has $468 million dollars ($300 million from undisclosed donors from overseas) to brainwash the public with lies -- what else are they supposed to think. Maybe you Obama fanatics need to look a little deeper than Obama's "promises" of change before we get another communist takeover like Cuba.



10-11-2008 09:24
phyllba wrote:

Obama Vs. McCain

I voted for Obama in the PA primary because I thought his advisors were better than McCain, who knows less than nothing about economics and domestic affairs.
McCain's lobbyist advisors are the deregulators of epic proportions and in the pay of Fany Mae and Freddie Mac.
Obama will be somewhat better than McCain, but certainly not revolutionary. He is a cautious liberal.
What dismayed me was that neither took the market and credit crash seriously. They both had talking points that they wished to convey.
After 45 minutes, I went to my computer and listened from another room because I realized I was not learning a new thing.
And I volunteer for Obama because he is the far better candidate-certainly no FDR-than McCain.
I also can't stand the idiot Palin McCain has chosen to run with him. She may solidify their right wing fundamentalist base and rabid Republican deregulators, but those people seem to me almost as bad as terrorists-domestic and foreign.



10-11-2008 09:06
sassy wrote:

Our freedom at risk

Our freedom is gone if Obama has his way.As it is Obama dosn't like somthing that is said about him,instead of proving that it is not the truth he calls in his lawyers.I don't now about any of you but I can't call a lawyer every time I don't like what someone says i'm not,I just prove them wrong.Obama is not the one to deliver us from this fincial mess that the demacrats have created.



10-11-2008 08:39
JDB wrote:

freedom and light

"God rest you merry, gentlemen, Let nothing you dismay; Remember Christ our Saviour was born on Christmas Day; To save us all from Satan's power when we were gone astray. O tidings of comfort and joy, comfort and joy; O tidings of comfort and joy."

I turned off the debate about 45 minutes into it finding it tediously boring. Respecting the system, we are given the choices we are given regardless of our personal preferences. But the above verse from that famous carol reminds us not to look for a messiah among men. We must realistically face election.




Comment archive | Comment FAQ's

Post Comment::

Author:
Subject:



Recent archives Featured news

View Alexander Cockburn ezine stories by date or visit the complete archive

Featured Channel: Politics

The ArcaMax Politics channel is one of 70 content categories offered by ArcaMax Publishing on this ...