Splicetoday

Politics & Media
Oct 10, 2008, 09:54AM

Diagnosing the "Average American" Media Lie

Sarah Palin's flirty debate wink is old news, sure, but what really stands out in this exceptionally cutting piece is the takedown of pundits who "imagine themselves as interpreters of a mythical mass of 'average Americans' who they both venerate and despise."

We're living in the Age of Schism-mongering:

It was an appalling display. The only reason it was not widely described as such is that too many American pundits don't even try to judge the truth, wisdom or reasonableness of the political rhetoric they are paid to pronounce upon. Instead, they imagine themselves as interpreters of a mythical mass of "average Americans" who they both venerate and despise.  In pronouncing upon a debate, they don't try and determine whether a candidate's responses correspond to existing reality, or whether he or she is capable of talking about subjects such as the deregulation of the financial markets or the devolution of the war in Afghanistan. The criteria are far more vaporous. In this case, it was whether Palin could avoid utterly humiliating herself for 90 minutes, and whether urbane commentators would believe that she had connected to a public that they see as ignorant and sentimental. For the Alaska governor, mission accomplished.

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