Posted on 10/01/2020 9:07:14 AM PDT by Kaslin
Political debates only reveal a candidate's abilities and beliefs if we can follow what's going on. Let's auto-mute mics for candidates not on the clock.
Of the many things this nation must reaffirm, its that words matter and promises should be kept. If former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump stick to the commitments their campaigns agreed to months ago, Americans will have the option to sit through two more presidential debates this year.
As soon as is possible, however, the Commission on Presidential Debates must ensure a return to an informative, meaningful, and respectful discussion between the candidates seeking to lead the free world. If they cant do that, then after this election, the debates should be placed on hiatus.
The American people deserve better than the mind-numbing, oratorical anarchy that was on display Tuesday night in Cleveland. The first presidential debate between Biden and Trump featured the sitting president of the United States disrespectfully called a clown and told to shut up. It featured bumblings, incessant interruptions, misstatements, and flippant falsehoods that remained largely unscrutinized by moderator Chris Wallace, who was lampooned by the left, the right, and even many on his own network for failing to maintain control.
Commentators from various news outlets called the event chaotic, tumultuous, and the worst presidential debate in living memory. The trend of debates becoming nigh unwatchable dates back at least the 2016 GOP primary and worsened during the most recent Democratic Party primary season. Yet the Biden vs. Trump fiasco was an entirely different level of awful. Something needs to be done to make sure we never have to witness something so destructive and embarrassing again.
To wit, the overwhelmingly negative response to Tuesdays debate has reportedly prompted the commission to acknowledge it needs to add additional structure to the format to ensure a more orderly discussion.
While Americans wait to see what they have in store, there’s a simple solution: Mute the microphone of any candidate not officially on the clock. Mics should only be un-muted only during a candidates designated time to speak. This isnt complicated.
To preserve impartiality and allow them to focus on the job at hand, this muting power should not be held by moderators but by the sound booth. Ideally, it would kick in automatically, protecting candidates from bias.
Rebuttals to two-minute answers should be limited to an uninterrupted 60 seconds. Visible to both the candidates and the audience, a simple green/red graphic would note who has the floor. During the final ten seconds, a subtle visual countdown akin to an NBA shot clock would allow viewers to keep everyone honest.
Ive seen amateur high school students manage more than 16 audio channels of active voices on giant sound mixers during massive stage-filling productions of The Sound of Music, Grease, and Beauty and the Beast. So, if for some reason automation cant be implemented, then surely, for an event of the stature of a presidential debate, the commission can scrounge up a personal sound techie for each candidate whose sole job is to manage one channel of audio.
But what of entertainment value or spontaneity? Well, aside from the fact that the purpose of presidential debates isnt to be humorous or unexpected, its not at all certain a mic-monitored setup would lead to a boring or stiff debate. Experience and history should lay any such concerns to rest.
Almost all of the most memorable and illuminating presidential debate moments of the past came during candidates using their appropriately allotted speaking time. Whether Michael Dukakiss technocratic self-destruction, Ronald Reagans one-liners against Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale, Bentsens deflation of Dan Quayle, or Gerald Fords gaffe regarding Soviet domination in Eastern Europe, none of these moments came as interruptions or interjections into the opposing candidates approved time to speak.
If a candidate on the clock issues blatant falsehoods or inaccurate statements, thats what paper and pens are provided for. Candidates should be capable of taking notes and waiting the less than two minutes to correct the record and urge viewers to look up the validity of a questionable comment.
Ben Domenech and David Harsanyi make equally solid arguments for longer answers or freer cross-examinations between candidates. For at least the last two election cycles, however, candidates from both parties have proven themselves unwilling to let their opponents finish complete sentences, let alone entire arguments. Without an iron-clad enforcement mechanism to prevent interruptions that make it impossible for viewers to understand whats being said, such scenarios risk the same uninformative, unfollowable chaos just in extended segments.
Weve likely moved long past the required decorum and attention spans required for a three-hour Lincoln-Douglas style debate, with candidates speaking in 60-minute statements, followed by 90-minute rebuttals, and concluding with a 30-minute rejoinder from the first candidate. But there is an achievable sweet-spot between the Shakespearean-level oratorical quality of the Lincoln-Douglas debate of 1858 and the incoherent and insulting mess 73 million Americans just sat through.
Americans deserve better, and the world needs to see a better representation of America. Major political debates in America used to be events the whole family could watch together. Now, subjecting a teenager to viewing a presidential debate amounts to some degree of emotional abuse.
Tragically, as early polling indicates, what should be an event that galvanizes healthy discussions and brings curious young minds into a fruitful investigation of political philosophy has repulsed many Americans. A CBS News post-debate poll found a supermajority of 69 percent of debate watchers were annoyed; 83 percent felt the tone of the debate was negative.
More than 90 million eligible voters didnt vote in the 2016 presidential election. We need debates and similar forums to energize the public about our republic and to provide further incentive for undecided or hesitant Americans to become politically engaged. Instead, they’re being turned off, possibly forever.
Debates arent supposed to be WWE-style rumbles or Dean Martin celebrity roasts. Far from it. Debates should better inform us of a candidates positions on issues, show us a candidates ability to think extemporaneously, and reveal character. Debates dont exist to amuse us. But make no mistake about it, there was nothing at all amusing about the political travesty and wasted opportunity we witnessed Tuesday night.
Yeah, sure.
I'm sure the Democrats will somehow find
(manufacture) those "90 million" votes.
Democrats dont want people to know their history. The Democrats dont want voters to know anything about the issues. An educated voter is dangerous to Democrats.
These are totally unnecessary. Trump has a record and Biden has a web site...which says NEW GREEN DEAL is the plan.
Yes,
But also mute the “moderator”’s mike so they can’t keep interrupting during the speaker’s time.
Just as Rush just now reminded us, this is the way the media behaves, this is the way the media wants the untermensch to behave, so f them.
Don’t
Have
Them
They’ve been nonsense for decades.
The previous “debates” have always been about the moderators in the panel rarely the candidates. This last one was as close as I have seen to a true debate where two candidates just duke it out.
Yes...a guy 4 yrs into politics has proven successes over a 47 yr politician with nothing.
If mod gets a mute button, President Trump should have one as well!
I have an idea. How bout a moderator that only asks question instead of a 5 minute diatribe and meaningless bs.
For example, Immigration and Border Security...you have 2 minutes...GO..
Moderators spend too much time inventing gotcha questions.
Muting the mike is a good approach. However, the choice of moderators should be changed. Each debate should have 2 moderators chosen by the candidates. The moderator chosen by the Republicans would ask questions of the Democrat. The one chosen by the Democrat would question the Republican. In addition The Republican candidate would be allowed to ask the Democrat two direct questions. The Democrat would be allowed to ask the Republican 2 direct questions.
As I posted on other threads related to this topic ...
Just look at one typical question below and ignore the content for the sake of this discussion:
WALLACE: "All right. I have one final question for you, Mr. Vice President. If Senate Republicans -- we were talking originally about the Supreme Court here. If Senate Republicans go ahead and confirm Justice Barrett, there has been talk about ending the filibuster or even packing the court, adding to the nine justices there. You called this a distraction by the president, but in fact it wasn't brought up by the president; it was brought up by some of your Democratic colleagues in the Congress. So my question to you, is you have refused in the past to talk about it. Are you willing to tell the American people tonight whether or not you will support either ending the filibuster, or packing the court."
Wallace lost control of that debate because both of the candidates were bored out of their minds just listening to him try to get a question out of his mouth. Half the audience didn't even remember the first part of his rambling by the time he even got to anything resembling a question.
The "question" I posted there was typical of Wallace's approach to the debate. It was downright awful -- littered with something that is best described using another Freeper's term I saw yesterday: "Chris Wallace's stupid editorializing preamble to every question he asked."
Debates should be between the two candidates. Let them pose the questions and offer the responses with moderators only time keepers.
Moderator-driven debates, where they ask the questions, let alone intercede, are not debates at all. And they are unwatchable.
Jail
Biden and the Clintons and Obama should all be in jail
Everybody loves to compare it to the Nixon/Kennedy Debate.
One big difference, neither was the sitting President at the time, although Nixon was VP, but it’s a whole different ballgame when the sitting President is debating a challenger, who hasn’t been in the arena.
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