U.S. democracy: will the last one out please turn off the lights? (Editorial).democracy n. l.a. Government by the people. (Webster's Third New International Dictionary) Ever-lower voter turnout in U.S. elections is a perennial story. Now comes study, reported in the Washington Post in February, that actually makes you wonder why voting rates are still so high. Analyzing a national survey, political scientists John Hibbing and Elizabeth Theiss-Morse confirmed that most Americans are not interested in the issues and don't want to get involved. Almost half thought that the country would benefit if "successful business people"--like Enron's Kenneth Lay Kenneth Lee "Ken" Lay (April 15, 1942 – July 5, 2006) was an American businessman, best known for his role in the widely-reported corruption scandal that led to the downfall of Enron Corporation. , perhaps?-and/or "unelected experts" made the big decisions. We bate bate 1 tr.v. bat·ed, bat·ing, bates 1. To lessen the force or intensity of; moderate: "To his dying day he bated his breath a little when he told the story" debate, especially when there's strong disagreement. We can't bear to see compromise at work and can't handle multiple issues at the same time. Democracy, basically, turns us off. As baseball legend Casey Stengel Noun 1. Casey Stengel - United States baseball manager (1890-1975) Charles Dillon Stengel, Stengel said to one of his losing teams, "Can't anybody here play this game?" We in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. seem to have forgotten how, though we once knew. In 1858, for instance, thousands turned our in the hot summer sun to hear seven very long debates between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. But since then, human ingenuity (much of it American) has created television, shopping malls, and the Internet. Many of us in the United States long ago stopped consuming to live and began living to consume. The role of consumer has expanded with our waistlines, squeezing out the rote rote 1 n. 1. A memorizing process using routine or repetition, often without full attention or comprehension: learn by rote. 2. Mechanical routine. of citizen. And as long as the promised-land machinery keeps working for most of us, we'll probably go on supersizing and leaving the governing to somebody--anybody--else. Politics 101: Governments exist to juggle competing interests. Autocracies do it by naked force; only democracies can fully embody and honor the popular will. But if that will is not actively and systematically expressed, government responds to narrower interests. No matter what issues you care about, they can't be addressed legitimately unless everybody pays some attention and sticks in their oars. Absent this engagement, power concentrates at the top, leaders pursue momentous policies without clear, broad support, and abuses of civil rights occur that would not be tolerated by a citizenry cit·i·zen·ry n. pl. cit·i·zen·ries Citizens considered as a group. citizenry Noun citizens collectively Noun 1. less remote from politics. Democracy cannot survive if we forget how it's supposed to work. The more we forget, the more we consent to our infantilization. If we need reminders, we can look to Kerala in India or Porto Alegre Porto Alegre Port and city(pop., 2005 est.: city, 1,386,900; metro. area, 3,978,263), southern Brazil. Located along the Guaíba River near the Atlantic Ocean coast, it was founded c. 1742 by immigrants from the Azores. It was first known as Porto dos Casais. in Brazil, which enjoy thriving grassroots democracies Grassroots democracy is a tendency towards designing political processes where as much decision-making authority as practical is shifted to the organization's lowest geographic level of organization. . But we'd better be quick: once our democracy has been bought up, co-opted, and safely put behind glass, we'll be reduced to asking What's happening here? and Who is in charge? It won't be democracy, and it won't be us. |
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