Saturday, October 24, 2020

The Decline Of Common Purpose

At the end of World War II, the American historian Arthur Schlesinger  wrote

Voluntary institutions have provided people with their greatest school of self-government.  Rubbing minds as well as elbows, they have been trained from youth to take common counsel, choose leaders, harmonize differences, and obey the express wishes of the populace.  In mastering the associative way, they have mastered the democratic way.

During the present election -- more than ever -- that notion is being put to the test. Glen Pearson writes that "the associative way" is also being put to the test in Canada:

People have confused politics with democracy, and as they have turned away from its endless partisanship, they have left the heart of their nation to political masters, not empowered citizens.  Citizenship is hard to quantify and even qualify for modern media, who have chosen instead to latch on to the endless drama streaming out of political capitals.  Citizens, on the other hand, including millions of Canadians, have opted to jump into the stream of social media and cable news to stay informed or to confirm their opinions.  The difficulty is that they can do so fully separate from others.  It’s democracy in a box, which one can open at home, scrutinize for a time, then put it back in the closet.

The trend has been going on for a long while. But COVID has offered a chance to change that trend:

Then came COVID – a precarious time when those institutions once rejected were at the forefront of ensuring the essentials of life for Americans and their families, just as in Canada and other nations.  That experience gradually sidelined the president’s rantings and ravings against those depositories of American democracy that the people were suddenly finding essential.  The more he criticized front line workers, medical experts, bureaucrats charged with protecting the country, equality movements,  hospitals, military veterans, the nation’s open-door policy, and, naturally, the Democratic party itself, the harder it became for him to retain supporters other than his loyal base.

In other words, people in democracies around the world are looking to the same institutions they were in the process of rejecting just months earlier.  People aren’t as interested in political shenanigans as their own pain.  They wish to recapture prosperity, not the petty politics that characterized their governments before COVID arrived.

At first, it looked like we might see a rebirth of the associative way. However,

The new patterns are increasingly reflecting the old ones.  Polarization is normal.  Political dysfunction is normal.  The loss of democracy’s allure is normal.  And the lack of ability to build a new and more inclusive nation is normal.

We really can't afford to go back to the old ways. Our public health -- and the health of the planet -- are at stake.

Image: pinterest.com

4 comments:

The Disaffected Lib said...

Yes, we have come to confuse politics with democracy. It's how we can view a majority government elected on barely 39 per cent of the vote as legitimate. The essence of democracy is governance by the consent of the governed. When three out of five voters don't back the majority, the consent of the public is glaringly absent. Yet we think because we all got to vote that means we're a democracy. Nonsense.

BTW, I've switched to a new computer. Blogger, for reasons I haven't sorted out, isn't cooperating. I expect to be back in time to see Joe Biden's successor's inauguration.

thwap said...

I'm always hesitant to say that things today are vastly different from before.

Were Canadians really that united and full of the spirit of democracy in 1948? Was your average Canadian more vocal about who they were and what they wanted then, with less acquiescence to what political leaders said and did?

Were Canadians in the 1970s that much freer from "disinformation" and stupidity than today?

Maybe yes. Maybe no.

Owen Gray said...

Until we have proportional representation, Mound, we cannot claim to be a true democracy. Like you, I'm still trying to figure out how the latest version of Blogger works.

Owen Gray said...

I don't think we've ever lived in a Golden Age, thwap. On the other hand, we have developed public healthcare and old-age pensions. We've done better than we're doing now.