It’s that time again. Political ads frame segments of your favorite
television show. Signs pop up in yards, inspiring rage or camaraderie.
Bumper stickers become ubiquitous. I have only been eligible to vote in
one election in my short life and have only been tuned in to three, but
already I’m growing battle-weary. And I sense this same fatigue among
many of my generation. We often hear that the youth vote is in the tank
for Obama. But what we don’t hear a lot is that the youth vote isn’t as
excited as it was four years ago. In fact, a Gallup poll this summer
reported that only 58 percent of the 18-29 demographic plans to vote this year.
This is our future that is being debated. This is our country, our
leaders, our government. And yet, there is a sense of helplessness.
I watched two debates this week: the first presidential debate and
“The Rumble 2012.” The presidential debate was first, and within five
minutes I was already yelling at the screen and fiercely regretting my
decision. And I was not just shouting at Romney (full disclosure, I’m
one of those youth voters who will be ticking the box for Obama this
year, though my reasoning behind that is more complicated than one might
expect which we’ll get to later). I was shouting and shaking my fist
because both candidates were up there delivering false or exaggerated
sound bites rather than honestly addressing the real problems that are
facing our country. Romney was proclaimed the winner, and fact checkers everywhere revealed
the gross exaggerations and blatant lies that won him the debate. They
also revealed a smaller though not insubstantial number of lies and
gross exaggerations from Obama.
”The Rumble” was an online, live-streamed debate between Jon Stewart
of The Daily Show and Bill O’Reilly of The O’Reilly Factor. Although it
was less formal than the presidential debates, and largely intended for
entertainment rather than substance, it brought up a number of
interesting and complex issues. What intrigued me the most were the
audience questions that were read in the final segment of the debate.
Many of these questions addressed the issue of trust. Why should we vote
for Obama over Romney? Or Romney over Obama? How can we trust either
presidential candidate? They both lie. They are both vying for the job
of commander in chief of the largest military in the world, leader of
arguably the only remaining superpower, the position called “most
powerful man in the world,” and “leader of the free world.” High stakes
lead to high risks. How can we believe that either candidate or either
party can be trusted with our future?
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