That guy's beard is truly a thing to behold. Same with wearing glove to the debate, and getting the other candidates to break down laughing and start using his own lines. It's a masterpiece.
I'm not going to bother arguing over the points of theory and such. But yeah, that O'Donnell. Oh man.
My favorite part of watching that interview is, while she
repeatedly asks incredulously where in the First Amendment can be found language describing any kind of separation of government and religion, as the crowd is openly laughing at her, she turns to them with that giant smug grin on her face. She honestly believed she was winning that debate, that she had outsmarted the question and was tricking someone into repeating a falsehood.
But if you were wondering how she could stumble over such incredibly obvious, and utterly important for governance, questions like "What's in the First Amendment?" and "What has the Supreme Court decided that you disagree with?", there is an answer. Her debate preparation and coaching team was made of
the same people who coached Sarah Palin, to literally the exact same results to the exact same questions. Christine O'Donnell is not going to win that election. But she could very well be a harbinger of things to come; a rapidly entrenching segment of the Republican party that honestly believes you can stick any doofus in front of a camera, and as long as you feed them enough base-rousing applause lines, you have a viable candidate.
She and her press staff are
thankful for the reaction she got. Why? Because her platform basically boils down to - smart people are bad, dumb people are principled. Making her opponent look like a pinheaded wiseguy, and making it look like O'Donnell was being derided by those hoighty-toighty campus intellectuals, is exactly what they want, because it gets know-nothing-and-proud-of-it conservative culture-base-voters to the polls. Thankfully, at least in this case, it probably won't lead to victory. But victory is really beside the point. This kind of rabblerousing is turning out to be a fantastic fundraising tactic, or at least career-starting tactic, and while it may not work in the district of the campaign itself, it bleeds into the national media and helps charisma-deprived candidates elsewhere rally the same sort of voters without having to try very hard. Time will tell.