All of the media buzz has been about who won, who didn?t, and who scored points in the three presidential debates. After the first, Kerry had momentum, so said the press. After the third, Bush had it. Why such a fuss over the debates? We?re not electing a debater-in-chief. We?re electing a president and commander-in-chief. The candidate who is best qualified is not necessarily the best performer. He?s the one with the best record and disposition?regardless of debating skills.

Some pundits and many bloggers on the Internet pointed to the problem in the debates of form over substance and our shift from being a word-oriented culture to being an image-oriented culture. They have it completely right. As media critic, the late Neil Postman wrote, ?If politics is like show business, then the idea is not to pursue excellence, clarity or honesty, but to appear as if you are, which is another matter altogether.?

When people are deciding who is going to be president, they should look at the candidates? records?that is, what they?ve accomplished, what they?ve stood for, how they?ve voted, their character, their deepest beliefs, and their convictions. These identify who they are and what they?re made of. In the area of character my primary concern is veracity. Are they truth-tellers, and do they respect the truth?

In order to evaluate substance over style and get to the truth, you?ve got to strip away all the smoke that is blown into the air during the campaigns. For example, campaign promises: By the end of the debates, I was out of breath. I thought that if we added up all the dollars promised per hour-and-a-half debate, we?d have 90 trillion dollars in new programs. It?s obvious that they can?t fulfill all these promises.

Then there?s the blame game. I thought the height of absurdity was reached in the last debate when Bob Schieffer asked the president what he was going to do about the shortage in flu vaccines. The fact is the president can?t be held responsible for the shortage, because a British manufacturer had a contaminated lot. And the president isn?t responsible for every job that is lost either. The economy is far bigger than the president. Facts and figures were flying so fast and furiously in the debates that nobody could keep track because nearly all of them require the kind of careful explanation that?s impossible in a dueling sound-bite format.