Picking a most depressing aspect of any Presidential campaign is going to be a challenge. Of course there are always plenty of things we can call stupid or frustrating or downright evil but those are par for the course and probably part of the attraction. This is politics, after all. But for "most depressing" moment, we're looking for something that, in addition to all of those other elements, suggests to us the means by which matters will inevitably continue to deteriorate in the future.
There are a few days left and things could always change but right now I'm looking at
this column by the Washington Post's Kathleen Parker for this year's honors.
Parker's thesis in that column was that American presidential politics, heretofore pristine and uncorrupted by exploitive television advertising, voter suppression, an overwhelming dominance of corporate money, or, least of all, an elitist celebrity punditocracy, has suddenly been reduced to gibberish by the "12 year old mentality" of social media users.
Oh, to be 12 again, the better to enjoy the presidential debates.
Or rather, the better to appreciate the Twitterverse, where America’s obsessive-compulsive, attention-deficit population holds the zeitgeist hostage with tweets and memes that infantilize political discourse and reduce the few remaining adults to impolitic fantasy.
The population holds the zeitgeist hostage! That's a nasty trick and likely an especially frustrating one for someone like Parker whose position as a nationally syndicated Pulitzer Prize winning opinion columnist rightfully bestows that privilidge on her.
The "12 year old" mental midgets don't get to infantilize discourse with tweets and memes about
the First Lady's tasteless vacation or the total
relevance of John Edwards' sex scandal to the 2012 election or
Barack Obama's American "blood equity." No no. That's obviously supposed to be Parker's job.
So let's see how she handles it here. What, precisely is she upset about?
In this, the first social-media presidential election, the debates
have come to resemble reality shows during which virtual audiences cast
ballots (and aspersions), hiccoughing their impulse-reactions to every
word and movement into the intellectual vacuum we charitably call the
body politic.
Two debates in, the complex issues of our day have been reduced to a large yellow bird and binders full of women.
Twitter has reduced our "complex issues of our day" to "Big Bird" and "Binders full of women." I have some quarrel with that statement but before we get into that let us first ask whether these particular reductions are, in fact, any more vacuous than when in previous elections the "complex issues" were reduced to "
Earth tones" or
unfortunate photo ops. Those are just two examples that spring immediately to mind. As is this event where a sitting President was asked to address the all important problem of underwear preference.
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