NEW CASTLE —
By now, I’m starting to feel like that little girl in the YouTube video.
You know, the one where she’s sobbing because she’s tired of hearing about the presidential campaign. Her mother seeks to console her with the fact it’s almost over.
Well, it is almost over. And not just the presidential contest. We have been hammered by advertising from campaigns for assorted offices in state and federal government. It’s enough to bring you to tears.
It’s not that I’m easily shocked. I’ve been in the news business for a few decades now, observing what I call the “silly season” around election time. As the voting draws near, the campaigns grow more desperate.
And more cynical. The negative advertising we’ve been subjected to this year is nothing short of appalling. When I see or hear these ads, either on the air or in print, I conclude they tell us much more about the people behind them than the candidates they are attacking.
I would like to think voters are turned off as much as I am by these ads, but campaigns still produce them. Their research must conclude that they work.
But I think they are disgraceful and repugnant. And along with becoming increasingly ugly, these ads also are increasingly distorting the truth.
It’s obvious to me that winning is more important to many candidates than winning with honor. The campaign smear is alive and well, and it’s leaving a growing stain on the nation’s political system.
An old saying — attributed to baseball great Casey Stengel — observes that sports doesn’t build character but instead exposes character. The same could be said of any form of competition, campaigns included. Sadly, the advertising we get speaks poorly of those who say they want to serve us.
Here at the New Castle News, we often are on the periphery of these bitter campaigns, as the candidates seek every advantage. They hope their attacks on opponents will become part of news stories, while they are likely to object to material in the paper that puts them in less than positive light.
That includes endorsements editorials. We often hear nothing from candidates the paper endorses, and that’s fine. Editorial endorsements are intended to serve our readers, not be viewed as favors to recommended candidates.
But we do, at times, hear from candidates who aren’t endorsed, as they take exception to that fact and go about critiquing the newspaper’s opinion. Yet come Election Day, all candidates will receive plenty of non-endorsements from voters. That’s the way it goes.
With each election cycle, as more and more money flows into campaigns, Americans will be forced to endure increasing amounts of negative advertising. The only way to stop it is for voters to demand cleaner campaigns. It won’t happen automatically.
Columns
Mitchel Olszak: Negative campaign advertising overwhelms process
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John K. Manna: A look back a big wins, tiny turnout in primary
Years from now few people, if any, will remember Tuesday’s primary in Lawrence County. The few probably will not remember that only 9,291 registered voters turned out at the polls. It wasn’t the lowest turnout over the last 25 years or so.
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Culinary Conversation: No sour grapes — just all things lemon
The makers of a lemonade mix have one intention for their consumers — add water and enjoy. Those fine people may be interested to know I found another use for the canister.
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Lori Brothers: Body awareness can help manage stress
Are you an “inny” or an “outy”? I’m not referring to your belly button, even though the concept also applies there. I am talking about how you manage your stress. Do you internalize or externalize?
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Mitchel Olszak: Snooping threat to the free press
In “All the President’s Men,” reporter Bob Woodward conducts late-night meetings with a source in a parking garage. That source, Deep Throat (later revealed to be high-ranking FBI official Mark Felt), was worried that he would be exposed as a tipster in the Watergate scandal.
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Culinary Conversation: A day in France— or close to it
Here’s some advice: If your spouse packs your lunch, never complain about the contents. I wasn’t actually griping. I just noted that it lacked excitement. The response from spouse was — our kitchen isn’t the Ritz Carlton.
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John K. Manna: Data shows decline in number of primary voters
Voter participation isn’t what it used to be. That’s nothing new, but there has been a significant drop in voting here in Lawrence County. And it’s happened suddenly, particularly in the so-called “off-year” elections.
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Dave Ramsey: Avoid college loans if you can
“Dave Says" is a weekly column featuring financial advice from nationally syndicated radio host Dave Ramsey. His column is filled with timely, relevant questions and answers taken from actual letters and calls on Ramsey's radio program, “The Dave Ramsey Show.”
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John K. Manna: New legislative districts give advantage to local lawmakers
We finally have a map, and area state legislators have to be gushing with joy. The map, which reshapes state House and Senate districts in Pennsylvania, gained the approval of the state Supreme Court this week.
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Mitchel Olszak: Toomey takes a chance on guns
How does a conservative Republican senator representing a state with a Democratic majority protect himself politically? One way is to take positions that tend to straddle the nation’s ideological fence.
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John K. Manna: Shortfall in state tax collections means painful decisions lie ahead
I don’t deny that there are really smart people in Harrisburg who deal with the state’s budget and taxes. But I have to wonder what any of them — including the governor — think when it comes to taxes.
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