Democracy’s
Most Critical Defect
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Recently by Robert Higgs: Partisan
Politics – A Fool’s Game for the Masses
Although democracy
now comes closer than anything else to serving as a world religion,
it has never lacked critics. For millennia those critics, such as
Aristotle, had large followings among political thinkers and practicing
politicians. Even as late as 1787, when a group of prominent men
met in Philadelphia to compose the U.S. Constitution, democracy
was viewed with trepidation, and the framers created an apparatus
of government in which democracy was hemmed in on all sides, lest
the country fall into the much-dreaded condition of mob rule.
Nowadays, democracys
defects are more likely to be seen as relatively benign its devotees
like to quote Winston Churchills quip
that democracy is the worst form of government except all
those other forms that have been tried from time to time
or as defects not of democracy itself, but of the party shenanigans
and other frictions that keep the democratic system from operating
more fully. Thus, people complain of gridlock and bemoan
a do-nothing Congress because these things impede the
unrestricted functioning of democracy.
Public choice
theorists have written countless articles and books spelling out
the manifold ways in which democracy, viewed as a political decision
rule for making collective choices by means of voting, may fail
to aggregate the preferences of individual constituents into an
outcome that represents the will of the people. More
than fifty years ago, Kenneth Arrow showed
that no such aggregation is possible, given certain seemingly appealing
restrictions on the nature of peoples preferences, such as
transitivity (if A is preferred to B, and B is preferred to C, then
C cannot be preferred to A).
None of this
theorizing had the slightest effect on the common peoples
idea that democracy can and should translate the will of the
people into collective choices; nor has it kept generations
of politicians from talking as if such a translation were possible
and desirable. (Political practice, in contrast to political rhetoric,
has always proceeded in the usual corrupt fashion, featuring scheming
plutocrats, privilege-seeking special-interest groups, and the iron
law of oligarchy.)
I mention these
things only by way of introduction, however, because here I wish
to claim that democracys gravest defect has little or nothing
to do with the defects traditionally ascribed to it. I maintain
that its severest defect, indeed, a flaw so critical that it gives
democracy the potential to destroy civilization, pertains to its
effect in corrupting the peoples moral judgment.
To see how
this corruption comes about, let us begin by recognizing that in
many peoples eyes, certain government functionaries may legitimately
take actions that would be condemned as criminal if anyone else
were to take them. If you or I were to threaten a neighbor with
violence unless he handed over a specified sum of money, we would
be universally recognized as engaged in extortion or attempted robbery.
Yet, the functionaries of St. Tammany Parish, the state of Louisiana,
and the United States of America routinely obtain money from me
in precisely this manner. And although many people subject to such
takings may complain that the amounts demanded are excessive, hardly
anybody describes the exactions as constituting nothing more than
extortion or armed robbery. Why not? Because the functionaries who
assess and collect these sums of money which they style taxes,
not loot, plunder, or swag are democratically elected public
officials.
From a moral
point of view, I am hard pressed to see how their employment status
gives them a defensible right to act in ways that everyone would
recognize as criminal if undertaken by a private individual. In
political theory, a representative democratic government is said
to derive its just powers by delegation from the people who are
governed, with their consent. I assure you that I have never consented
to have the various governments rob me, especially for the financing
of countless activities that I consider to be useless, destructive,
or inherently criminal. Regardless of the uses to which a government
puts its booty, however, the people cannot justly delegate to political
representatives any rights that they do not possess. If I do not
have a right to plunder my neighbor, how can I delegate that right
to a government functionary who purports to represent me?
Read
the rest of the article
October
28, 2009
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. He
is also a columnist for LewRockwell.com. His
most recent book is Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
Copyright
© 2009 Robert Higgs
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