I woke up this morning and turned on the laptop to
start my morning routine. Generally, the first thing I like to do is check
e-mail, see the news of the world from overnight and get a heads-up on the
weather forecast for the day.
My first site of choice is always www.yahoo.com, and
today’s headline made me realize how much times have changed. It read:
“Fact
Check: the Final Presidential Debate”
Are either of these candidates telling the truth? Not as often as we should expect, says many fact checkers |
It’s not breaking news that the third and final,
presidential debate was held last night. Surely, about 60 million people
watched it, if the ratings of the previous pair of debates held up. During the recent presidential cycles, certain
terms have entered the lexicon of our English language. A couple of decades
ago, we learned that a spin doctor was more than one of the guys from the
quirky 90’s group that liked to sing about Superman. Later, the exit poll
became a popular term. For this election, our new term is fact checker.
Actually, I like the idea that the proverbial “Big
Brother” is now overseeing the debates and reporting back to the public of the
blow-by-blow recap of the truthfulness of each candidate’s statements. It is a
much needed public service and is long overdue.
My problem is – how did we come to this?
Our public figures are beginning to develop under a
cloud of gray. Do singers lip sync? Is the home run hitter taking steroids? Are
those breasts real or fake? Are the reality shows staged? What is Kim Kardashian’s
talent?
Amazingly, part of a celebrity’s persona is now built
on the mystery behind the person. This is more astounding in the age of You Tube
and Twitter where we can reach out and “touch” our heroes. Politicians have now
grown to fall into the category of “mystery person.”
In other words, they lie. Profusely. We know they
lie, they know they lie, their handlers know they lie, the moderator knows they
lie, but now, it’s OK, and acceptable.
Regardless of one’s political persuasion, I hope
that more people are seeing what I am – which is – our current presidential
candidates, Gov. Romney and President Obama, lie an awful lot. And we accept
this. Perhaps we were numbed by the President Clinton “Monicagate” scandal,
when after all was said and done, many people nodded and said, “Well, he lied
to protect his family.” In other words, again, it’s OK.
It’s also shameful.
My wish is that many American citizens will take
action. Please write to your Congressional officials, and demand that they tell
the truth. If you meet the official in a public forum and get the opportunity
to ask him/her a question, have a follow-up question ready which will make that
person prove their first answer. If we continue to lower our expectations for
public officials, the outcome will never change. It’s like the old saying ...”I
feel like a mushroom. Everybody keeps me in the dark and feeds me (manure).”
Get out of the dark.
It’s days like this that I miss Ross Perot’s campaign
of 1992.