Posted by
PolicyGuy on Wednesday, July 12, 2006 10:45:43 PM
Political commentator John Hood (here's a
link that will be obsolete tomorrow) offers some useful words on political debates, and contrasts two approaches:
"At one pole, you have the shrill, mindlessly partisan, intensely
personal style of political invective that has unfortunately become
ensconced in some of the broadcast media and blogosphere. At the other
pole, you have the namby-pamby, shades of gray,
can’t-we-all-just-get-along approach that attempts to define
differences way in a seemingly endless stream of weasel words and
psychobabble."
True enough. What caught my eye was the word play in the next sentence.
"Neither serves the public interest. Neither keeps the public’s interest."
How so?
"The shrillness gets boring after a time, like watching the
fourth or fifth season of a sitcom where the characters are all fixed
in stone, the jokes are repetitive, and the put-downs obvious and
absurd. And the namby-pamby is intentionally boring, right from the
start, as a strategy to mute debate rather than air and resolve it."
The best path is to be willing to accept and even welcome
significant differences in opinion without resorting to conspiracy
theories, name-calling, and always thinking of the other side as living
in bad faith.
Due to the qualities of human nature, that's easier said than done.