Harry Targ
(With the growing threats to democracy across the United States and conservative advocacy of "civics literacy" educational programs I thought it would be appropriate to repost an essay that appeared in The Rag Blog, October 24, 2014).
Through her decades of entertaining on stage and screen, [Joan] Rivers developed numerous classic bits and catchphrases, but three small words stand above the rest: "Can we talk?" (@kbendernyc, 09/04/2014, also at People.com)
I never liked comedienne Joan Rivers who died
recently. But her famous one-line introduction to talk show interviewers and
stand-up performances is a powerful reminder that certain subjects might be
dangerous to discuss in polite company. Whether the United States political
system is a democratic one is such a subject.
Everything we Americans have learned since infancy
suggests that the United States is a democracy. In fact, the United States
political system, we are told repeatedly, is the gold standard for the world.
Distinguished data source Freedom House claims that freedom can only exist in
democratic political systems. Democratic systems are those in which governments
are accountable, the rule of law exists, and associations and speech are
guaranteed to all. Polity IV, another data-based source of information about
governments, has a more refined definition of democracy: procedures by which
citizens can express their preferences about leaders and policies and there
exists both constraints on executive power and guarantees of civil liberties.
University of Iowa Political Science Professor William
M. Reisinger prepared a chart summarizing the key components of democracy
reflected in the writings of political philosophers (such as Aristotle),
politicians (John C. Calhoun), skeptics (H. L. Mencken), and a variety of
contemporary political scientists. He appends to his chart 25 quotations that
illustrate variations in the understanding of the concept “democracy.” Reisinger
identifies five emphases in most writings on the subject.
“1)it is a dangerous form of government; 2)it includes
genuine competition for power; 3)it permits mass participation on a legally
equal footing; 4)it provides civil and other liberties that restrict the sphere
of state power within the society; or 5)it promotes widespread deliberation
about how to make and enforce policy so as to promote the common good” (William
M. Reisinger, “Selected Definitions of Democracy,” uiowa.edu).
Reflecting on these five elements of democracy might lead
to a more sober understanding of the United States political system than what
most people learned in school (from kindergarten through graduate programs in
political science). Particularly looking at Reisinger’s last four features might
suggest that the United States does not meet broadly endorsed criteria for a
democracy.
Does the political system afford “genuine competition
for power?” The answer is no for a variety of reasons. Campaigns for office
from local through federal positions require enormous amounts of money. Supreme
Court decisions have enshrined the right of the wealthy (often the one percent)
to pour unlimited financial resources into elections. Koch Brothers affiliates
have even invested in local school board elections to influence school
curricula and give support to the privatization of education.
Funding of elections is reinforced by rules and
regulations limiting political participation to two parties. Also states, from
Indiana, Wisconsin and Michigan to the South and Southwest, have imposed
rulings making it harder for citizens to vote. Some voter suppression laws,
sometimes overturned by courts because of their egregious violation of
constitutional principles, have survived serious challenges (such as the
Supreme Court decision to allow the Texas disenfranchisement of an estimated 600,000
minority voters) at least for the next election. In the end money,
institutionalized procedures, state laws, and judicial decisions have
undermined the possibility of competition for political power.
Everything that has been said above limits equal and
mass participation in politics. Money, power, institutions, and media
propaganda conspire to limit political participation and the entire weight of the political system works to impair workers,
minorities, young people, and the elderly. In the 1970s, Political
Scientist Samuel Huntington wrote a paper for the then influential foreign
policy organization, The Trilateral Commission, warning of the “danger of
democracy.” The danger he identified all across the globe was the “excess of
democracy.” In other words, in the 1970s, (and one would only surmise the
condition is worse today) too much participation in politics would challenge
the status quo and stability.
Reisinger pointed out that some definitions of
democratic states (on his chart six of 25 entries) highlight “civil and other
liberties that restrict the sphere of state power within the society.” There is
much anecdotal evidence to suggest that local police have garnered vastly
increased power to arrest, charge, kill, and incarcerate more citizens on a per
capital basis than most countries in the world. The most overrepresented
targets of the expanding police state are young, African/American males but the
class character of the criminal justice system has been prevalent as well. In
addition federal government surveillance, criminal conduct by the National
Security Agency, and long-standing practices of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to undermine and crush dissent have been significant features of
the historical landscape.
Finally, Reisinger has found some references in
discussions of democracy to “deliberation” on public policy to “promote the
common good.” Less than ten media conglomerates control most of the information
consumed by the citizenry and think tanks generating “expert” analyses are
bought and paid for by corporations, government agencies, billionaires, and
political parties.
Two recent stories have been ignored in the mainstream media. First, the German government has decided to provide free college education to all its citizens (and thus eliminating crippling student debt). This is a policy that should warrant discussion.
Second, Cuba has transported a
delegation of 160 Cuban health care professionals to Sierra Leone and expects
to provide another 260 for Liberia. The first delegation was sent before
President Obama announced a U.S. program of medical aid to West Africa. It
could be that if Americans were aware of the special training received by
medical personnel in Cuba, particularly in Third World settings, they might
suggest that United States and Cuban collaboration would increase the
effectiveness of ending the threat of a spreading Ebola epidemic in Africa.
These are just two policies worthy of conversation in the United States. (To
its credit the New York Times on its
opinion page on October 20, 2014 published an editorial entitled “Cuba’s
Impressive Role on Ebola”).
In sum, the Joan Rivers one-liner is critical now. We
need to talk about the reality that the United States is not a democracy. And as
a few commentators have pointed out, democracy is dangerous. It is dangerous
because the people will be able to participate in the decisions that affect
their lives; class, race, and gender will not exclude participation in
politics; and the whole reason for democratic institutions is to “promote the
common good.” As Pennock put it the ideal democracy is one characterized by:
“Government by the people, where liberty, equality and
fraternity are secured to the greatest possible degree and in which human
capacities are developed to the utmost, by means including free and full
discussion of common problems and interests.” (Roland J. Pennock, Democratic Political Theory, Princeton
Press, 1979, 7).
To be clear the United States is not a democracy. Progressives who believe it fool themselves at the
peril of the country. BUT, rather than disengagement, they should struggle all
the harder “inside and outside” conventional political processes to achieve it.
And struggles for equality, justice, and a sustainable environment are also
struggles for democracy.