Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 8,753
- Points
- 1,040
>I am forced to question what all your reactions would be if the Liberals had done the same thing....
My reaction would likely have been that since Martin could almost never give a direct and meaningful answer to a question, changing the means by which questions were asked would have been irrelevant.
The press like scrums and ambushes because they hope to catch a politician off balance and obtain a meaningless but controversial (and hence salable) sound bite. Since these opportunities have been reduced - including the conscious lip-biting enforced on the more outspoken MPs whose views are regarded as lying too far outside the mainstream of polite discourse - there has been a sustained whine of complaint from not only the press, but from people opposed to the government who want more such controversial sound bites on the record in order to construct a suitable ("scary") effigy of the government to oppose. In short, they seem to wish public discourse to consist of the equivalent of a word association test - don't think about it, just spit out whatever comes to mind when we bombard you with a flurry of shouted questions, crowd your personal space, and shine a bevy of bright lights upon you.
What confounds me is that - judging from blog posts - many of the same people objected to the shotgun debate on our commitment to Afghanistan.
So, my challenge to people is: which do you choose? Either you want politicians to be in a composed state of mind to respond intelligibly to questions of substance in order to provide answers of substance on the burning issues of the day, or you don't. Pick one and stand by it.
My reaction would likely have been that since Martin could almost never give a direct and meaningful answer to a question, changing the means by which questions were asked would have been irrelevant.
The press like scrums and ambushes because they hope to catch a politician off balance and obtain a meaningless but controversial (and hence salable) sound bite. Since these opportunities have been reduced - including the conscious lip-biting enforced on the more outspoken MPs whose views are regarded as lying too far outside the mainstream of polite discourse - there has been a sustained whine of complaint from not only the press, but from people opposed to the government who want more such controversial sound bites on the record in order to construct a suitable ("scary") effigy of the government to oppose. In short, they seem to wish public discourse to consist of the equivalent of a word association test - don't think about it, just spit out whatever comes to mind when we bombard you with a flurry of shouted questions, crowd your personal space, and shine a bevy of bright lights upon you.
What confounds me is that - judging from blog posts - many of the same people objected to the shotgun debate on our commitment to Afghanistan.
So, my challenge to people is: which do you choose? Either you want politicians to be in a composed state of mind to respond intelligibly to questions of substance in order to provide answers of substance on the burning issues of the day, or you don't. Pick one and stand by it.