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The Media

March 2000

“The candor pander”

by James Bowman

The most revealing and in some ways the most poignant moment to come out of the series of “debates” among the presidential candidates that took place in November, December, and January, before the voting actually started, came during the Republican affair—with the best will in the world it cannot be called a debate in any recognizable sense of the term—in Manchester, New Hampshire on December 2. This was the occasion on which Gary Bauer, reaching for something vaguely inspirational to say, sought to encourage the allegedly “cynical” youth of America by noting as evidence for the greatness of their country the fact that he, G. Bauer, the son of a janitor, could have risen so high as to be numbered among the last six candidates for the Republican nomination to the presidency.

Now I happen to agree with Gary Bauer about many, if not most things, but in this answer he summed up the postmodern politics of the Clinto ...

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James Bowman is the author of Honor: A History (Encounter Books) and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, also published by Encounter (2008)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 18 March 2000, on page 53
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