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Home Front: Politix
alGore: 'Democracy is under attack'
2006-08-28
Yawn. Still? Again? The attic is still vacant.
LONDON (AFP) - Former US Vice-President Al Gore warned an audience at the Edinburgh International Television Festival that "democracy is under attack". The former presidential candidate said television networks in the world's biggest and most powerful democracies must do more to foster debate, which he said was crucial for democracy to flourish. "In my country and others around the world democracy is under attack," the 58-year-old said.

Gore, who was also in Edinburgh partly to promote his film and book about climate change, both titled "An Inconvenient Truth", continued: "There's a feeling in the US on the part of many that the way democracy operates today is very different from the system we learned about in school."

He said that democracy, which he described as a "conversation", was now "more controlled and centralised", and that the most important role of the media was to facilitate democracy.

Gore said American politicians were spending their time raising funds at small gatherings and cocktail parties because, "the only thing that matters in American politics now is having enough money to put 30-second commercials on air to persuade the voters to elect or re-elect you."

The Internet, however, "offered the promise of recreating a meritocracy of ideas" and while not yet creating the wave of change that has been anticipated, had been "creeping into the TV domain".

Commenting on the US-led war in Iraq, increasingly opposed both by American politicians and grass-roots activists, Gore said: "It's been a long time since the US Senate or members of the House of Representatives had a feeling that what was said made any difference at all."

Questioned as to whether he thought US President George W. Bush, who defeated him in the 2000 presidential elections, was stupid, Gore replied: "I don't think he's unintelligent at all. He's incurious ... there's a puzzling lack of curiosity."
He's just trying to keep up with Carter in the ex-Prez Stupidity Stakes.
Posted by:Threatch Unons6270

#19  Thanks for the Franklin quote, McSeek. I think I have a new slogan for my email.
Posted by: lotp   2006-08-28 20:29  

#18  
The former presidential candidate said television networks in the worldÂ’s biggest and most powerful democracies must do more to foster debate, which he said was crucial for democracy to flourish.
I can't top what Tim Blair said about this one: "He may have a point; after all, the last time Al Gore was involved in a series of debates, it resulted in the election of George W. Bush."

That's gonna leave a mark. :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2006-08-28 20:17  

#17  This guy's elevator doesn't go to the top floor. Go debate the Taliban or Hamas or Hezzballah Al. Jesse Jackson can help with the task. Wah. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
Posted by: JohnQC   2006-08-28 17:56  

#16  If only democracy WERE under attack. Hey al, you sh*t for brains-- We live in a representative Republic. Democracy is tyranny of the majority. Maybe you should listen to a quote by a man whose bathwater you're not worthy to drink:

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb deciding on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote." ---Ben Franklin
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-08-28 14:48  

#15  I blame George Bush for Al Gore's insanity.. If he had lost, Al wouldn't have lost his mind.

And Global warming.
Posted by: DarthVader   2006-08-28 12:35  

#14  Ken Fallin at Opinion Journal 'dignified' the graphic (if that's even possible)
Posted by: Mullah Richard   2006-08-28 12:02  

#13  I still get democracy and republic confused. The US is one, and the other is where everything would be based on polls....
Posted by: Bobby   2006-08-28 10:52  

#12  "There's a feeling in the US on the part of many that the way democracy operates today is very different from the system we learned about in school." Amen Al! Where I went to school, after the election the LOSER didnÂ’t stick around for weeks trying to change the rules of the election and didnÂ’t spend the next FIVE years telling everyone how great he would have been.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2006-08-28 10:07  

#11  He didn't invent the Internet, just crass stupidty. The world is under attack from this.
Posted by: Duh!   2006-08-28 09:56  

#10  Still bitter after all these years...
Posted by: Raj   2006-08-28 08:29  

#9  He didn't even understand the job he was running for.


"So, who are these people?" -- Al Gore, upon seeing busts of the Founding Fathers.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2006-08-28 07:43  

#8  Americas' success is down to the fact it is a republic built on the principle of INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS, not the disguised mob-rule of democracy.

He didn't even understand the job he was running for.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2006-08-28 07:16  

#7  The man is right. Democracy is under attack, by the American and transnational left.

Not to mention all the dictatorial mandates that will come if Gore gets his way on "global warming".
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2006-08-28 05:23  

#6  Gotta love the graphic. Probably not the first time it has been used, though . . . .
Posted by: gorb   2006-08-28 05:06  

#5  lets send al on a space mission and then forgit to tie off his tether.
Posted by: NASA Global Warming Not   2006-08-28 02:15  

#4  Criticizing the very same future Communist-Stalinist-Totalitarian, etc. Amerika he + DemoLeft are trying to impose on America, eh. Thusly, all Americans = Amerikans can trust they won't be gulagged andor exterminated by the Motherly Commie Airborne = OWG/UNO Peacekeeping Force, where invading America = saving America from itself and "civil war". Fighting hard for those few reserved seats on the future Amerikan Politburo Commie Asia never promised them.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2006-08-28 01:15  

#3  Al and Jimmy in one day zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
Posted by: djohn66   2006-08-28 00:59  

#2  Sheezzz -- but you gotta agree with him on this, "the only thing that matters in American politics now is having enough money to put 30-second commercials on air to persuade the voters to elect or re-elect you."

Not sure how gobal warming fits into this.... but we can dream at the next Democrat meeting he attends, he will repeat these words to his party members. Well, I can dream, right?
Posted by: Sherry   2006-08-28 00:58  

#1  The man is right. Democracy is under attack, by the American and transnational left.
Posted by: badanov   2006-08-28 00:30  

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