Venture Galleries Blog for Readers and Writers

Camelot's Cousin by David Stokes

Is it better for politicians to lie or to speak the truth?

 

Jack Nicholson
Jack Nicholson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I am amazed at the outcry that has grown up around the recent revelations about a presidential candidate whose remarks at a fundraiser raised eyebrows.

Remember Jack Nicholson’s iconic one-liner in A Few Good Men? “You can’t handle the truth,” he said.

So, is that the lesson we take away from this latest news flash?  Is the moral teaching at issue that we prefer people vying to be the “leader of the free world” to lie whenever they get the chance and apologize if they get caught telling the truth?

I have spent more than twenty-five years sitting in courtrooms and deposition rooms listening to people testify under oath.  Often, as soon as they take their hands off the Bible, they plunge into bizarre lies.  Sometimes the tales they spin are so transparently false that even people who are on their side have a hard time keeping a straight face.

Why do they lie?  It is in their self-interest.  It’s as simple as that.  

Lying corrupts the legal system.

Does truth-telling corrupt the political process?

I don’t see how it could.

If we catch a candidate in a  moment of candor, we gain a valuable insight into what makes him tick.  For a minute or two, we see beyond the “message” crafted by his handlers.  In the current political process where campaign events are so carefully orchestrated that we never get beyond talking points, it is refreshing to hear someone say what is really on his mind.

This doesn’t mean that we have to like his particular version of the unvarnished truth.  We may disagree entirely with him and turn our backs on him for saying it.

That’s the price tag that comes with truth-telling. But at least we can evaluate what he really stands for.

So, what is all the hubbub about in the last few days?

Have we come to a point in American political campaigns where we want our leaders to lie to us, to be careful only to say what they believe we want to hear?

Was Jack Nicholson right?  Can we not handle the truth?

 

 

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  • http://twitter.com/jackdrsm Jack Durish

    Most of what passes for lies in politics is actually ignorance. Candidates make promises to do or accomplish things that aren’t even in the realm of the office they are running for. But, in the instance that inspired this post, it was a moment of truth. It’s interesting that I was going to post fundamentally the same thing in my blog last Sunday, however the events in the Middle East caused me to put that on the back burner. I will post it this coming Sunday. I have collected statistics and seen the same information and drawn the same conclusions as Candidate Romney. Of course I can say it. I’m not running for anything and don’t give a damn if my readers can’t handle the truth.

    • http://www.venturegalleries.com Stephen Woodfin

      Jack, but that is part of the problem. Why do we have to leave the truth-telling to analysts? Everyone believes, rightly or wrongly, that anyone who takes the time to write about politics only does so because he has a dog in the fight or an axe to grind or is in someone’s pocket. So all political commentators become suspect. This is all because the candidates themselves don’t have the gumption to stand up and tell it like it is. Like I said, I may disagree with what a candidate says when he is candid. I may think he has his facts wrong or that he is lying, but at least I know where he stands. That is the part of the political process that is lost now in the days of multi-million dollar campaign contributions and politcal in-fighting. At some point we have to get beyond partisanship and reach a place where we can address the critical issues that confront us.

  • http://twitter.com/CalebPirtle Caleb Pirtle

    For most politicians, Republican or Democrat, don’t seem to know the difference between the two. When I grew up, you had two choices: tell the truth or lie. Today’s politicians have a third option: spin it.

    • http://www.venturegalleries.com Stephen Woodfin

      And when they spin it it is the voters who experience vertigo.

  • http://twitter.com/laurazera Laura Zera

    We can handle the truth! We can! How funny/sad would it be if we made all campaigning politicians deliver their addresses while hooked up to a lie-detector test unit?

  • http://twitter.com/SayBumpandTweet Mary Kathryn Johnson

    My husband and I both yelled at the TV, “It’s the TRUTH!” when this “undercover video” was uncovered by Mr. Carter, and blasted everywhere. Unfortunately, the general public can’t handle the truth, because it is most likely about them, and people don’t like to hear about their own selfishness on national TV.

    If you want to really hear the truth about the current tax law, and who pays what, talk to an E.A. (Enrolled Agent licensed to represent taxpayers in front of the IRS). My husband is an E.A., and I either shake my head or silently fume or outright SCREAM when he comes home at midnight during tax season and tells me about his day. *sigh*

    Great post Stephen!

  • john crawley

    I think the outcry comes not from the fact he told the truth and spoke his mind. I think that is, in fact, what got him in to trouble; because what he said was so offensive to half the country, it solidified many’s belief that the man is out of touch with the real America he is going to be asked to govern, if elected. A scary notion. I am glad Mitt was honest. We finally get to see a transparent view of him, not varnished by handlers or spin doctors. a view that is not part of a tap dance. This was genuine Mitt. He doesn’t know half the country. For that matter the other half is pretty strange to him as well. But he’s got a real good handle on about 1% of the population. Thank god he spoke the truth when he did. Now we know.