Quote from Maverick74: Do this for me. Call up all your friends and family and asked them how many of them watched the debate. Nobody I know watched it, and i live in Chicago, a pretty politically active town. The ratings for these things are atrocious!!!! Look it up, I'm dead serious. You are definitely in the minority.
Are you asking me to prove your point for you?
Quote from Maverick74: The debate was fair. A fair debate is not asking every candidate the same questions over and over again. Who would want to watch that. Debates are suppose to be lively and dynamic. I don't want to hear Gary Johnson speak. I like Gary. Love Gary. But I know where he stands on every issue. Now, let's say Gary said something this week in the news that was controversial. Then I would want to hear the moderators ask him to address those comments. I would also want to get comments from the other candidates regarding those remarks. Other then that, I don't care.
Since we seem to be sticking with your specific preferences are you saying you know less about Romney than you do about Johnson...really?
Quote from Maverick74: And the reason why Romney is getting the lion share of the talk time is because he is deemed the front runner or in 2nd place. Come on man, don't be obtuse. In the 2004 democratic primary race, I didn't need to hear from Al Sharpton that much when he is polling at 1%. I wanted to hear from Hilary and Obama! You may not think that is "fair", but these debates can't last 10 hours.
I see, so you selectively apply polling criteria to afford talk time. Romney is one or two so he gets the most but the number three guy gets second to least? Not sure I can refer to that as logic.
Quote from Maverick74: Anyone that has access to the internet can Google their favorite candidates and watch all their youtube videos. It's not that hard man.
I agree. However, the debates give the candidates a national stage. Not everyone Google's candidates but most people will turn their tv on. These affairs are already restricted to those who poll high enough nationally. Therefore, selectively restricting talk time further, based on undefinable criteria is unfair in the extreme.