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Monday, February 25, 2008
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
Words, Words, Words: The Decline of American Eloquence
by Paul Greenberg
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It was sad, watching the two remaining contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination engage in a civil little sparring match Thursday night. Because it was hard not to note, once again, the long slow decline of political debate in this country since Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas thought out and fought out the great issues of their day. Those were real debates rather than a joint press conference.

I would rather have heard less from my colleagues in the ever-intrusive media and more from the candidates themselves. It would be a step up if the press weren't involved in these productions at all except to report and comment on them. Matters were better arranged in the series of seven great debates between Mr. Lincoln and Judge Douglas in 1858.

But it is useless to dream of returning to that style of political engagement. Man, homo faber, doesn't just shape his tools, they in turn shape his mind. And our technology, in this case, television, long ago turned presidential debates into a contest between competing applause lines. Result: Instead of thought, we get sound bites.

These days the best one can hope for is that we the people will see past the snappy rejoinders and associated razzmatazz, and compare the candidates themselves - their records, character, qualifications and promise as well as their positions on the issues. But that civic duty seems to get harder every presidential year as television whittles away at our collective attention span. The "progress" of political debate in this country from 1856 to 2008 might be enough to disprove any theory of evolution.

It was good to hear the memory of Barbara Jordan invoked Thursday night - at least three times by my count. She was one of the most inspiring orators of her time as well as a constitutional scholar of some note. Her rhetoric was soaring, but that doesn't mean it wasn't well grounded, too. It had the best of foundations: the Constitution of the United States.

Congresswoman, professor and mother courage, Barbara Jordan was a well of both thought and inspiration. She was the Mahalia Jackson of political rhetoric. She combined the best attributes of both Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois, that is, an eye for the practical and an unswerving dedication to liberty.

Barbara Jordan was her own person - the very antithesis of groupthink. Her refusal to be pigeonholed by race or class or ideology was a constant refreshment, as was the love of the Constitution that permeated her every pronouncement. How she is missed. If only her party would produce a worthy successor. But that, too, is unlikely in these mediocre times for public speech.

In one of her less than astute moves, Hillary Clinton tried to dismiss Barack Obama's gift for rhetoric as just words. I would have loved to see her try that routine on Barbara Jordan; there wouldn't have been much of Sen. Clinton left after that. She'd have been blown away by the sheer force of Barbara Jordan's magnificent, inspiring, imperative words - and the heights to which they took anyone with the heart and soul and mind to be moved by them. Continued...

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Subject: Manners and American conservatives

Thoughts inspired by reading Nellis's post on Americans and the customs of others:

No American conservative should believe that he or she needs to respect the cultural practices of non-Americans. All American conservatives know that Americans are (1) favored by God in all things; (2) the best people ever to have existed on this planet; (3) endowed by nature and God with unconditional rights and priveleges to say and do whatever they wish about and to anyone they choose; (4) despise and revile all things not American, including the customs of non-Americans; (5) bomb the cr*p out of anyone who says different.

I'll betcha most TH readers will say an "amen" to this.

replies to lilly and Nellie
To lilly: If you've ever read any of my posts, you know that I'm a card-carrying liberal. My post re: Greenberg's column is my expression of shock that a conservative columnist could do such a poor job of researching his subject. I'm certainly not criticizing Barbara Jordan for being a lesbian. No conservative who did 5 minutes of resaerch on Barbara Jordan should praise her for anything. I conclude that Greenberg is simply a sloppy political journalist.

to Nellie: Ultimately, it doesn't matter what the truth is about Obama's early education. Conservatives will continue to lie about it because it will be an effective move in trying to discredit him with American voters. I certainly don't expect conservative opponents of Obama to do anything other than invent and circulate any lie about him that might work.
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