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  • Body buildingthe art of meticulously sculpting every muscle of your body in order to achieve an ideal image

  • proportionate, symmetrical, statuesque perfection.

  • Politics is more like body building than one might think, except instead of molding your body,

  • politicians painstakingly sculpt their personalities in order to optimize their appeal to voters.

  • That’s why Carly Fiorina started smiling... and probably shouldn't have.

  • According to French Marxist philosopher Guy Deboard, this is emblematic of a larger problem.

  • Written in 1967, Deboard’s The Society of Spectacle warns of a culture driven entirely by image,

  • in which people are more concerned with how they are perceived than they actually are.

  • It is a society fundamentally altered by the power of advertisement

  • that perverts reality so that the only thing that matters

  • is the projection of an aura, mystique, or specific representation;

  • where were all constantly preoccupied with managing and curating our image.

  • The content of these images is inconsequentialall that matters is the shininess of the form.

  • This image is always communicated through mediaan idea of media very different from Deboard’s day.

  • We live in a time where we are saturated with so many images

  • endless blogs, websites, TV channels, Tumblrs, and YouTubers.

  • As a result, there’s a cutthroat race to gain the most amount of attention

  • and political news has to compete in this same realm.

  • How can the rather dry issue of balancing the budget possibly compete with 10 awkward texts from your ex girlfriend?

  • The answer: make politics more entertaining.

  • Indeed, politics is becoming more and more like a spectator sport

  • the candidates Olympians at the art of bullshitting.

  • The aesthetic of the debates are only a sound cue away from Monday night football or a UFC fight.

  • We find ourselves in a media landscape where spectacle is a proven vehicle to success

  • it’s the reason why the line between clickbait, journalism, and ads is getting blurrier everyday.

  • And since political news is almost entirely consumed through media outlets,

  • the line between politics and entertainment is disappearing.

  • We expect that same gratification from our politicians that we do from our Buzzfeed articles.

  • This is what French philosopher Francois Debrix dubbedTabloid Realism:”

  • A form of politics structured around easy headlines and common sense dialogue.

  • He says: “Americans do not want to read or hear that they are underpaid, overworked, bullied at work, in the home, when serving their country in foreign lands.

  • They want glamorous stories, scandals, exceptional events,

  • news they can build dreams on or develop a sense of anger from.

  • In short, they want to be entertained.”

  • If we are primed to love spectacle, then why not go with the most spectacular candidate?

  • The thing that sells best in this spectacle-driven society is distraction.

  • It doesn’t matter whether or not there are 40 plot holes in Star Wars: The Force Awakens

  • what matters is that you clicked on the link promising to expose these plot holesand that you like to think that there are.

  • Likewise, it doesn’t matter if hundreds of Muslims in New Jersey celebrated 9/11 or not

  • it’s a much more exciting narrative.

  • Entertainment was supposed to be a distraction from the serious truth of our political lives.

  • But now, politics has become a parody of itself and reflects a greater truth.

  • As Deboard famously said: “in a topsy-turvy world, the true is a moment of the false.”

  • Despite the fact that Trump may constantly lie about factsthere is an element of greater truth in his lies.

  • The truth, that in our image-driven society, we don’t want the truth

  • we choose to consume a projected image of what we desire to be true.

  • We would rather vote for someone who embodies a reality that we want to believe

  • than a person that actually reflects the reality of politics.

  • A formal definition of politics has its roots in the Greek wordpolitikos," "of, or pertaining to, the polis,”

  • where the polis is the city-state or a community.

  • And as such, politics concerns a community of citizens and their everyday interaction.

  • For Aristotle, civic participation isn’t just a duty; it is the very thing that defines human beings as being apart from animals.

  • As political animals oron politikon, humans are endowed with the logos, the ability to use reason and speech.

  • More and more we seem to be animals that crave distraction,

  • and politics is just another way to get that.

  • If thousands of years ago human beings were civic, political, and social animals concerned with justice

  • what have we become, are we still human

  • or are we: zōon clickbaitcon, zōon distracticon, zōon whatsthatovertherecon?

Body buildingthe art of meticulously sculpting every muscle of your body in order to achieve an ideal image

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