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It's Tuesday, September 10, which makes me realize that we're not only going to be entertained by the Harris-Trump presidential debate tonight, but, also, tomorrow, we have to look forward to a whole series of very serious and important commemorations of 9/11.
Tonight: As I mentioned, there will be the first – and almost certainly the last –presidential debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris that will take place in Philadelphia at 9 p.m. Eastern. As I presume is true of most of you, I am having great difficulty containing my excitement over what will undoubtedly be a series of deeply substantive and thought-provoking exchanges between the two candidates. But I'm a professional and we have a show to do, so I'm doing everything possible to keep those emotions in check. I hope that you can do the same. We're going to talk a little bit about the upcoming debate while trying hard to avoid all those dreary media cliches that are used to, as they call it, set the scene for what is about to happen, such as what has Kamala to do to win and what must Trump avoid doing to harm himself and other fascinating predictive inquiries like those.
We do have on the ground, in Philadelphia, both the ruggedly independent journalist Michael Tracey and our producer Megan O'Rourke, and we will hear from them about some of the insights they have already attained. They have credentials to get into the media wing of the debate and we're going to hear from them about some of what they are showing and there's also the gradient dissipation that the media has over entering – this is the big treat they get after the debate – to enter what is called in a rare bit of political candor, the “spin room.” That's very bizarre to call it that because it actually describes what American politics is and that's where the candidates' surrogates go after the debate to explain why their candidate won. We'll try to have some interviews from there before the show with some people, it might be difficult, but certainly we will definitely have interviews after and we'll post those on our local platform along with my reaction to the debate, which I will talk about in a minute.
Then, as we mentioned last night, but did not get to, Kamala Harris, finally did something yesterday that she had thus far refused to do. She posted a page on her campaign's website entitled “Issues”. There was no “issues page” anywhere on her website. It was just donations, support and biographies, nothing about the issues. They finally posted that to advise the country on what she believes and intends to do if she becomes president. The problem is that the page does nothing of the kind. It's incredibly cliched, vapid and evasive, as much as Kamala Harris’s campaign has been thus far, thus, I think, compounding her growing problem and the one that she has to address most tonight, that Americans, for good and obvious reasons, have no idea who she really is or what she actually stands for, because the real answer is she believes in standing for nothing.
And then finally: Fred Fleitz has been around foreign policy circles for a long, long time. Back in the Bush-Cheney administration, he was known as a key ally and protégé of John Bolton. When we posted that word protégé of John Bolton as a preview to our show, he objected. So, I want to make clear that he considers himself that previously, but no longer to be that. But he did also work for John Bolton in the Trump White House. He's an avid supporter of Israel and believes that Islam and Muslims pose a threat to the West. He is also now a scholar at a think tank that purported to define what America First is, particularly when it comes to foreign policy, which is his specialty. I want to speak with him tonight. Let's try to explore some of what we believe are some of the internal tensions and even contradictions between the concept of Trump's America First worldview as he defines it and many of the foreign policy positions advocated by many of the people close to him, including Mr. Fleitz’s. So, look forward to that conversation.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.