Fighting the War on Error

"You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists."
- Political & Social Activist Abbie Hoffman (1936-1989)

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Brokaw's MTP disgrace with Gore


When I heard Al Gore's interview today on Meet the Press, I got hotter than the California wildfires. My first thought was, "And people wonder why Al Gore declined to run for president again in '04 and this year."

The questions and bias in Tom Brokaw's interview were so blatant and rankly partisan that for a moment I thought I'd tuned into the Faux News Channel. But, nope, it was NBC's Meet the Press, and institution that's going to sink fast if this is what we can expect from Brokaw the rest of the way until election day. I find myself missing Tim Russert more and more with each passing Sunday.

And my second thought after hearing the interview was that Al Gore is a bigger man than me. Here are a few excerpts:
Let me ask you about your attitude towards [sic] politics these days. I was a little surprised. You're a man who was in politics at the highest level in this country: in the House of Representatives; in the Senate; Vice President for eight years and yet you said recently, "What politics has become requires a level of tolerance for triviality and artifice and nonsense that I have found in short supply." Is that the right kind of signal to send to the young people of this country who more than any time in recent memory are deeply involved in the political decisions that we're making this year? And young people who want to get into the political arena look to Al Gore and he said "it's all about trivia and nonsense."
Congratulations to Brokaw for making Al Gore seem like he's trashing our political system - a sort of Karl Rove on the left. What a joke.

However, Brokaw was only getting warmed up. The worst was yet to come. (By the way, I'd expect a professional broadcaster like Brokaw to use the more grammatically favorable toward, but I guess that's being a little nit picky for a man who's been in broadcasting longer than I've been alive.)

Brokaw then proceeded to wade into the GOP talking-points pool with this whopper:
With all due respect, Mr. Vice President, I can already hear your critics and I don't do Rush Limbaugh, so I will not attempt to. But I can hear him saying on radio, "Well there's Prince Albert. There he was, 25 years hanging out with lobbyists, raising big money, then he lost and now he's above the process, calling it trivial and nonsense."
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I will never run for political office. Because had that been me sitting in Al Gore's chair, I would have unleashed a verbal dressing down that would have made a sailor blush, and I would have gotten up, tossed my mic at Brokaw, interview over.

But, like I said, Gore's a bigger man than me, and he's used to stupid questions, and blatant, partisan, leading questions at that. I really do take measure of Gore for sitting through it all calmly and coolly and answering like he'd expected the question all along.

Pretty funny that Brokaw said, "I don't do Rush Limbaugh," and then he launches into a Limbaugh-like, childish rant that in so many words called Gore a sore loser.

I would really have liked it if Gore had said to Brokaw, "Remember what you just asked me moments ago, something about 'Is that the right kind of signal to send to the young people of this country who more than any time in recent memory are deeply involved in the political decisions that we're making this year?' and it all being about 'trivia and nonsense?' Thanks for making my point, Brokaw."

People who are getting heavily involved in politics need to hear just how trivial, moronic and dirty (mostly because of money) that our politics has become, and it's absurd that Brokaw takes umbrage with Gore over saying it, because Brokaw of all people should know just how true it is.

Oh, and if I were Gore, I would have definitely let Brokaw know that while the courts might have ruled he lost, the American people didn't see it that way, to the tune of about 500,000 votes. I know, Gore has undoubtedly let it go, and I should, too, but like I said, Gore's the bigger man.


In fairness, the interview wasn't a complete disaster, however. Of all people, oil tycoon T. Boone Pickins announced last week his plan for a major shift from oil to wind power in Texas. As much as I despise Pickins for what he did to John Kerry in 2004, he deserves credit for pouring $1 billion of his money into this venture and giving it the recognition it deserves. It really is an illustration, as Gore said, that global warming makes for strange political bedfellows.

One thing that was lacking from Gore's speech last Thursday was mass transit, and the important role it will play in helping move America into the 21st Century and away from fossil fuels. And I'm yet to hear Barack Obama mention mass transit as much as I would like, either. But, an effective, energy efficient and environmentally friendly rail system is a must as part of the solution to oil. More on mass transit in the coming days, including some letters I've been meaning to write to some prominent politicians urging them to adopt aggressive strategies and funding for mass transit.

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2 Comments:

Blogger Nelson said...

"And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I will never run for political office. Because had that been me sitting in Al Gore's chair, I would have unleashed a verbal dressing down that would have made a sailor blush, and I would have gotten up, tossed my mic at Brokaw, interview over."

Actually, that's exactly what we need in politics.

Mon Jul 21, 12:59:00 AM PDT  
Blogger RJ said...

Nelson,
Thanks for reading and your comments. Actually, you are right, we DO need politicians backing off stupid journalists. The chief reason I will probably never run for anything is that I'm not willing to have my entire life, including every personI've ever known, open for public scrutiny.

For instance, (and I blogged about this a day or two ago), Keith Olbermann was recently talking about a John McCain quote from 1986! I love Olbermann, but that was ridiculous. There's plenty in the present to disagree with him about.

My point was that the press is so out of control with our candidates, it's no wonder we don't get many quality people seeking public office.

Mon Jul 21, 01:11:00 AM PDT  

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