Possible Maine Senate Candidate Troy Jackson Just Called to 'Get Rid' of People...
There Is a Case of the DNC Hiding Its Financials and the Press...
Rep. Summer Lee Admits She Wants More Black Doctors, Even If They're Unqualified
The 'Extreme Passion' of Socialists Has a Very High Body Count
Kathy Hochul Admits Zohran Mamdani Has Lost Control of NYC's Homeless Problem
Ro Khanna Just Said This About Former Rep. Jamaal Bowman and Cori Bush,...
Democrats May Love Socialism, but They Can't Get Enough Luxury on the Campaign...
The Trump Administration Is Planning to Make a Major Move Regarding Legal Immigration
JD Vance Wants to Stop Socialism. A Republican Socialism Isn't the Answer.
Massachusetts Man Sentenced for Collecting Dead Beneficiary's Social Security Checks for Y...
Former Federal Reserve Adviser Sentenced to 38 Months for Lying About Ties to...
Brandon Gill Introduces Legislation Requiring Naturalized Citizens Speak English
Texas Flooding Returns to Camp Mystic Region, Leaving One Dead and Dozens Rescued
The Biggest Foreign Corporate Investment in America Just Got Even Larger
ABC's The View Could Take a Serious Hit From the FCC Just in...
OPINION

One of Civilization's Wonders

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
One of Civilization's Wonders
AS THE NATION'S ELECTORAL BRAWL drew to a close, I thought about a question posed by ABC's Martha Raddatz to vice-presidential candidates Joe Biden and Paul Ryan during their
Advertisement
debate in Kentucky last month. She quoted "a highly decorated soldier" who was "dismayed" at the tone of the campaign. "The ads are so negative," the soldier had lamented, "and they're all tearing down each other rather than building up the country."

Raddatz challenged the candidates: "What would you say to that American hero about this campaign? And at the end of the day, are you ever embarrassed by the tone?"Biden and Ryan sidestepped the question, resorting instead to their rehearsed arguments and talking points. Which was too bad, for that soldier's grievance deserved a response.

I wish the candidates had reminded him that the vitriol of US presidential competitions didn't begin with Barack Obama or Mitt Romney. In 1884, British historian James Bryce described the battle for the White House between James Blaine and Grover Cleveland as a "tempest of invective and calumny," and the nastiness of presidential campaigns was an old story even then.

Yet those campaigns end in what can only be described as a miracle. For months we fight over the most emotional, consequential issues in American life.
Advertisement
The stakes always seem enormous. The hopes and fears of millions of voters are invested in the outcome. In much of the world and for most of history, only bloodshed could resolve disputes so momentous. But everyone knows how this election will end. The losing candidate will deliver a graceful concession speech; the victor will peacefully take the oath of office in January.

Yes, the meanness of these campaigns is regrettable. Politics isn't pretty anywhere. But here it ends with amazing dignity, in polling stations across the country, as a mighty nation calmly effects the transfer of power and authority. If that isn't one of civilization's wonders, what is?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement