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July 1, 2019
Improving the Debates
By Rudy Avizius
The Democratic Presidential debates clearly showed how the corporate media is failing the people.
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I decided to watch the 2 Democratic Party debates, and came away feeling rather depressed. These "debates" clearly illustrate the problem with the media when it comes to informing people.While I recognize that it was the DNC that decided that rather than have more debates with fewer candidates participating in each, the manner in which the corporate media handled and moderated these "debates" left their audiences with little new understanding of the candidates or the issues.
Having 10 people on stage, with 60 seconds to talk about multiple complex issues and 15 seconds to rebut something is no way to obtain any substance or details. Unfortunately, this format actually fits very nicely into the 140 character limit of many peoples' attention span. This debate format was basically just a forum for sound bites and "got ya's", not for any form of meaningful discussion.
Source: Bloomberg
This chart shows how much time each candidate was allowed to speak and clearly shows how the corporate media plays favorites with those it wished to anoint as front-runners. How can one person be allowed over 12 minutes, while another is allowed 2 minutes? In the first debate Warren was called on for a second time before half of the other candidates had even been heard from the first time. The 2nd debate clearly had the "journalists" favoring the politicians, and ignoring those outside of the system like Yang and Williamson. Williamson had to wait on stage for 27 minutes before she was even called upon with a question. Those who interrupted the most, received the most speaking time. Just we need, "leaders" who interrupt others from speaking, NOT!
How can this even be considered fair or informative by anyone?
This entire circus was a disgrace and "we the people" need some alternate entity to replace the corporate media and step in and provide us with the information we need to make informed decisions. One commercial actually advertised the qualities of one of these celebrity journalists moderating the debate and received almost as much time as one of the candidates.
Given the reality that there are so many candidates participating in each debate, here are some suggestions that either the corporate media or some alternative entity might consider that could improve the transfer of useful information to the audiences:
I stopped watching corporate news years ago, but returned for these debates hoping to get a sense of the candidates. I was disappointed, and was clearly reminded why I stopped watching in the first place.
Rudy Avizius is a former educator and school administrator and a founding member of the Public Banking Institute. He is concerned that the current economic, social, and environmental course we are on is not sustainable, and the time for real change is running out.