Democracy?
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
Democracy
is a curious notion. The ancient Athenians are said to have practiced
it with an assembly of male property owners, a fraction of their
population. The founders of our constitutional form of political
government were by and large opposed to the idea of allowing a popular
vote amongst the common people determine their representatives,
let alone policy, yet they endorsed the idea of majority rule within
their congress. Americans today take majority rule for granted;
if five vote yea, and four vote nay, the yea wins. We call this
democracy. Does this really work in practice?
Let’s
take a small city of 100,000, and let’s be generous, and say that
half of them are registered to vote. Come election time, after a
noisy, nasty campaign, 30% of registered voters show up at the polls,
and somebody is elected by a 5% margin. What have we got here? Out
of 100,000 people, 14,350 have picked their next rulers. Is this
democracy?
I’m
guilty of optimism in that scenario; local elections often bring
out only 3% to 15% of registered voters, who may only account for
20% of the total population to begin with.
I
got to see that kind of democracy in action when I lived in a small
unincorporated town several years ago. The permanent population
was around 12,000, most of them retired. There was one county sheriff’s
deputy in residence; he made the rounds about midnight, and if he
found an oldtimer a little too lopsided to drive, he took them home.
There was no crime to speak of.
But
a handful of people had a stake in that town. They gambled, and
quietly bought up whatever potentially prime real estate was sitting
idle, then they launched a noisy campaign to incorporate the town.
Suddenly the local newspaper was full of crime stories, and drunk
drivers. We need a police department, it screamed. (Guess who owned
the paper.) All of the local merchants were opposed, because incorporation
meant Wal Mart, McDonalds, Burger King, all of the franchises that
will not locate in an unincorporated town.
The
election took place: 601 aye, 598 nay. The town incorporated, got
a mayor, a city council, and a police department. The cops preyed
on the oldtimers until the city cut a deal to look after parolees
and their families from the state prisons. Need I say more? Oh,
that handful of people; funny thing, they all sold out and moved
away.
Many
commentators complain about the stupid Americans who keep electing
one psychopath after another to our highest political office. Some
commentators then blame the American population as a whole for the
psychopathic behavior that radiates from the District of Criminals.
These commentators overlook the facts of our democracy.
I
don’t know if anybody knows the size of the American population.
My family, for example, has never been counted in a census. As many
people accept 1.3 billion for China, I choose 300 million for America.
In
the 2004 election, 121,480,019 voted. That’s 40.4% of the population.
62, 040, 606 voted for Bush. That’s 20.6% of the population. Is
this majority rule? Is this democracy? Is this a mandate?
No.
This so-called democratic tradition to which we supposedly pay homage,
wealth, and blood is a fraud. I’d much rather be able to pick the
services I want from a private menu, and buy them myself, like coercion
insurance. The sooner we discard the curious notion of democracy,
the better.
September
5, 2005
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2005 Robert Klassen
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