Obama and Perilous Delusions of Democracy
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
Recently
by James Bovard: Martial
Law and the War on Terrorism
When Barack
Obama was inaugurated on January 20, there was euphoria across the
land and millions of people cheered in the streets of Washington.
Many people are convinced that American democracy has been redeemed
and that the federal government no longer poses a peril to individual
rights. Since the peoples choice is now at the helm of the
U.S. government, Americans are free.
The Founding
Fathers scorned the doctrine that the election of one person could
purify or redeem an entire political system. The notion that choosing
a supreme leader is the epitome of democracy is the result of philosophical
doctrines that spread shortly before the American Revolution.
Early Americans
thinking on representative government was shaped by the abuses inflicted
by the British Parliament. The Sugar Act of 1764 resulted in British
officials confiscating hundreds of American ships on the basis
of mere allegations that the shipowners or captains were involved
in smuggling; Americans were obliged, in order to retain their ships,
to somehow prove that they had never been involved in smuggling
a near-impossible burden.
The Stamp Act
of 1765 obliged Americans to purchase British stamps to be used
on all legal papers, newspapers, cards, dice, advertisements, and
even academic degrees. After violent protests throughout the colonies,
Parliament rescinded the Stamp Act but passed the Declaratory Act,
which announced that Parliament had, hath, and of right ought
to have, full power and authority to make laws and statutes of sufficient
force and validity to bind the colonies and people of America, subjects
of the crown of Great Britain, in all cases whatsoever. The
Declaratory Act meant that Parliament had the right to use and abuse
the colonists as it chose.
Many American
colonists believed that, for them, British representative government
was a fraud. The Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of
Taking Up Arms, issued by the Second Continental Congress
on July 6, 1775, a few weeks after the Battle of Bunker Hill, highlighted
the crimes of the British Parliament. (The Declaration of Independence,
issued almost a year later, concentrated on King George III as the
personification of British abuses.) This Declaration, written by
John Dickinson and Thomas Jefferson, complained that the legislature
of Great-Britain, stimulated by an inordinate passion for power
... attempted to effect their cruel and impolitic purpose of enslaving
these colonies by violence.... The Continental Congress demanded
to know,
What is
to defend us against so enormous, so unlimited a power? Not a
single man of those who assume it, is chosen by us; or is subject
to our control or influence....
Freedom
and democracy
Americans and
British profoundly disagreed on the source of their freedom. Many
British believed that freedom depended on vesting unlimited power
in Parliament, since they believed the only threat to their freedom
came from the king and his lackeys. Sir William Meredith praised
the British constitution in 1769 because it was the privilege of
the Englishman alone to choose those delegates to whose Charge
is committed the Disposal of his Property, his Liberty, his Life.
In 1768, the speaker of the House of Commons announced, The
freedom of this house is the freedom of this country.... As
Professor John Phillip Reid observed in 1988,
This new
or radical constitutional theory was a departure from
the British tradition of defining liberty without having its preservation
depend on specific institutions, presaging the nineteenth century
and the general British acceptance of what in the eighteenth century
had been constitutional heresy that liberty and arbitrary
power are not incompatible, if the power that is arbitrary is
representative.
Because Parliament
supposedly automatically had the concerns of the entire British
Empire at heart, Americans were told they had virtual representation,
regardless of the fact that they could not vote for any member of
Parliament. The British claimed that the Americans were free because
they were permitted to petition members of Parliament with their
grievances, even though their petitions were routinely not accepted
or read.
Slavery
by Parliament was the phrase commonly used to denounce British
legislative power grabs. Americans believed that the power of representatives
was strictly limited by the rights of the governed, a doctrine later
enshrined in the Bill of Rights. Pamphleteer John Cartwright in
1776 derided that poor consolatory word, representation, with
the mere sound of which we have so long contented ourselves.
James Otis, an influential Massachusetts lawyer, asked,
Will any
mans calling himself my agent, representative, or trustee
make him so in fact? At this rate a House of Commons in one of
the colonies have but to conceive an opinion that they represent
all the common people of Great Britain, and ... they would in
fact represent them.
One New York
critic declared in 1775 that it was inconceivable that Americans
liberty should depend upon nothing more permanent or established
than the vague, rapacious, or interested inclination of a majority
of five hundred and fifty eight men, open to the insidious attacks
of a weak or designing Prince, and his ministers.
The influence
of Rousseau
At the same
time that the Americans were fighting a revolution against the fraud
of representation, continental Europe was becoming entranced by
a new doctrine. From the 1600s onwards, the abuses of monarchs made
representative government increasingly attractive. Unfortunately,
at a time when most continental Europeans had scant political experience,
the doctrines of Jean Jacques Rousseau swept the intellectual field.
Rousseaus
1762 book, The
Social Contract, merged contemporary romanticism and mysticism
with 18th-century political thought. Rousseau gave people an engraved
invitation to delude themselves about the nature of majorities,
government, and freedom. He asserted that representative governments
are based on the general will, which, naturally, could
be different from the conscious will of the people themselves:
It follows
from what has gone before that the general will is always right
and tends to the public advantage; but it does not follow that
the deliberations of the people are always equally correct. Our
will is always for our own good, but we do not always see what
that is; the people is never corrupted, but it is often deceived,
and on such occasions only does it seem to will what is bad.
Regrettably,
Rousseau provided few hints on how either rulers or ruled could
recognize the general will. The fact that people opposed surrendering
more power to government simply proved they did not know their own
will.
Rousseau waved
a philosophic magic wand over representative government and pretended
that his doctrine of the general will had solved all its problems.
As historian William Dunning noted in 1920, The common interest
and the general will assumed, through [Rousseaus] manipulation,
a greater definiteness and importance than philosophy had hitherto
ascribed to them. They became the central features of almost every
theory of the State.
Rousseaus
doctrine of the general will became the invocation of rulers seeking
unlimited power. Hitlers Volk was the Teutonic rendition of
Rousseaus doctrine. J.L. Talmon, author of The Origins of
Totalitarian Democracy, concluded that Rousseau was unaware
that total and highly emotional absorption in the collective political
endeavor is calculated to kill all privacy ... and the extension
of the scope of politics to all spheres of human interest and endeavor
... was the shortest way to totalitarianism.
Americas
Founding Fathers
In contrast
to Rousseau, the Founding Fathers were keenly aware of the potential
abuses of popular government. The American Revolution was based
on cynicism about the fraud of representation in the British Parliament.
The French Revolution, following Rousseaus doctrine, was based
on the delusion that the people are infallible and that democratic
government automatically pursues the common good. One revolution
was based on distrust of government, the other on messianic expectations
from a change in form of a government.
While John
Adams naïvely declared in 1775 that a democratical despotism
is a contradiction in terms, few Americans held that belief
by the mid 1780s. Judge Alexander Hanson declared in 1784, The
acts of almost every legislature have uniformly tended to disgust
its citizens and to annihilate its credit. One commentator
in the 1780s, noting the early dashed hopes of democratic governments,
declared that the usurpation of 40 tyrants at our doors, exceeds
that of one at 3,000 miles. James Madison wrote in The
Federalist Papers,
Complaints
are every where heard ... that [government] measures are too often
decided, not according to the rules of justice, and the rights
of the minor party; but by the superior force of an interested
and over-bearing majority.
Unfortunately,
the doctrines of Rousseau have had far more influence on subsequent
thinking about democracy than the insights of Madison and other
Founding Fathers. Throughout American history, more attention has
been paid to the rhetoric of democracy than to its substance. Lysander
Spooner, a Massachusetts abolitionist, ridiculed President Lincolns
claim that the Civil War was fought to preserve a government
by consent. Spooner observed, The only idea ... ever
manifested as to what is a government of consent, is this
that it is one to which everybody must consent, or be shot.
George W. Bushs
presidency became a disaster in part because he behaved as if winning
votes entitled him to unlimited power at home and abroad. Obamas
rhetoric is thus far not as bad as the worst of the Bush teams
verbal strutting. (Who could forget White House counsel Alberto
Gonzaless 2004 assertion of a commander in chief
override of federal law?)
But many of
Obamas supporters have Rousseau-like doctrines that could
make it easy for the new president to spurn the leashes the Constitution
imposes on all presidents and federal officials. Unfortunately,
most Americans seem to have learned little from the Bush presidency,
aside from the fact that George W. Bush was a liar and a buffoon.
American democracy needs a strong dose of the Founders realism
on representative government.
August
21, 2009
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2009 Future of Freedom Foundation
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