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Democracy
and deference
Mark Slouka, Harper's Magazine
June 01, 2008
http://harpers.org/archive/2008/06/0082039
I blame my parents, which
is trite but traditional. Six years after stepping onto the troubled
shore of Senator Joseph McCarthy-s America they had a son
and promptly began to fill his head with nonsense. In America, they
taught me, talent and hard work were all; allegiance was automatically
owed to no one; respect had to be earned. In America, the president
worked for us, and knew it, and the house we allowed him to live
in for a time—that great white outie of the Republic—was
known as The People-s House. Would that I had been suckled
by wolves.
Turn on the TV to almost
any program with an office in it, and you-ll find a depressingly
accurate representation of the "boss culture," a culture
based on an a priori notion of—a devout belief in—inequality.
The boss will scowl or humiliate you . . . because he can, because
he-s the boss. And you-ll keep your mouth shut and look
contrite, even if you-ve done nothing wrong . . . because,
well, because he-s the boss. Because he-s above you.
Because he makes more money than you. Because—admit it—he-s
more than you.
This is the paradigm—the
relational model that shapes so much of our public life. Its primary
components are intimidation and fear. It is essentially authoritarian.
If not principally about the abuse of power, it rests, nonetheless,
on a generally accepted notion of power-s privileges.
Of its inherent rights.
The Rights of Man? Please. The average man has the right to get
rich so that he too can sit behind a desk wearing an absurd haircut,
yelling, "You-re fired!" or refuse to take any
more questions; so that he too—when the great day comes—can
pour boiling oil on the plebes at the base of the castle wall, each
and every one of whom accepts his right to do so, and aspires to
the honor.
You say I-m tilting
at human nature? That the race of man loves a lord—and always
has? That power (and what good is power if it can-t be abused
a little, no?) has always been one of the time-honored perks of
success, and that, of all the lies told, the one about all men being
created equal is the most patently absurd? Perhaps. But surely one
could argue that the American democratic experiment was at least
in part an attempt to challenge this "reality," to establish
a political and legal culture from which would emerge, organically,
a new sensibility: independent, unburdened by the protocols of class,
skeptical of inherited truths. Willing to be disobedient. To moon
the lord.
Alas, if that was the
plan, it went sideways a long time ago. In today-s America,
the majority is nothing if not impressed by power and fame (its
legitimacy is irrelevant), nothing if not obedient. As for mooning
the lord, the ass to the glass these days is more likely to be the
lord-s, and our own posture toward it, well, something short
of heroic. Worse yet, should someone decide to take offense, and
suggest that it is not the lord-s place to act thusly, he
will be set upon by the puckering multitude who will punish him
for his impertinence.
At a White House reception
a couple of years ago, President George Bush asked Senator-elect
Jim Webb how things were going for his son, a Marine serving in
Iraq. "I-d like to get them out of Iraq, Mr. President,"
Webb replied. "I didn-t ask you that," the president
shot back. "I asked you how your boy was doing."
Webb, a decorated Vietnam
War veteran, had not only risked his own life in the service of
his country but now had a child in harm-s way, serving in
an ill-conceived and criminally mismanaged war sold to the nation
under false pretenses by the man standing in front of him. One might
expect this second man to be nice. To show a modicum of respect.
Should he fall short of this, one could at least take comfort in
the certainty that the American people would hold him accountable
for his rudeness and presumption.
Which is precisely what
many of them did—they held Jim Webb accountable. "I-m
surprised and offended by Jim Webb," declared Stephen Hess,
a professor at George Washington University, in a New York Times
article entitled "A Breach of Manners Sets a Tough Town Atwitter."
Admitting that the president had perhaps been "a little snippy,"
Professor Hess went on to extol the democratic virtues of decorum
and protocol, interrupting himself only long enough to recall a
steel executive named Clarence Randall who, having once addressed
Harry S Truman as "Mr. Truman" instead of "Mr.
President," remained haunted by it for decades.
Hess wasn-t the
only one to be shocked by Webb-s behavior. Letitia Baldrige,
the "doyenne of Washington manners," termed the whole
thing "a sad exchange." Judith Martin, a.k.a. Miss Manners,
made the point that "even discussions of war and life and
death did not justify suspending the rules," then declined
to comment on l-affaire Webb-Bush, saying, "It would
be rude of me to declare an individual rude."
But it was left to Kate
Zernike, the author of the Times article, to place the cherry atop
this shameful confection in the form of a seemingly offhand parenthetical:
"(On criticizing the president in his own house, Ms. Baldrige
quotes the French: ça ne se fait pas—'it is not
done.-)"
To which one might reply,
in the parlance of my native town: Why the fuck not? Répétez
après moi: It ain-t the man-s house. We-re
letting him borrow it for a time. And he should behave accordingly—that
is, as one cognizant of the honor bestowed upon him—or risk
being evicted by the people in favor of a more suitable tenant.
But let-s not kid
ourselves. The outrage over the Webb-Bush exchange was not really
about decorum. It was about daring to stand up to the boss. Rudeness?
Stop. This is America.
We-re rude to one
another more or less continually. We make mincemeat of one another
on television, fiberoptically flame one another to a crisp, blog
ourselves bloody. No, rudeness, as deplorable as it is, is not the
point here, particularly as Webb, judged by any reasonable standard,
wasn-t rude at all.
But wait—maybe
rudeness is the point after all. Maybe rudeness, in our democratically
challenged age, has morphed into a synonym for insubordination.
If true, this explains a great deal. It suggests that in America
today, only something done to those above us can qualify as rudeness.
Done to those below it-s something quite different—a
right.
Which brings us to the
case of former Secretary of State Colin Powell, whose dueling careers
as soldier and statesman fought it out before the U.N. Security
Council on that memorable day as the nation prepared for war. The
soldier, not surprisingly, dispatched the statesman, to our ongoing
grief and Powell-s everlasting shame.
In a nutshell—or
shell casing, perhaps—it came down to this: despite his doubts
about the "intelligence" he had been provided, despite
the fact that he spent days "trimming the garbage" from
Vice President Cheney-s "evidence" of Iraq-s
weapons programs and its ties to Al Qaeda, Powell went ahead and
shilled for the liars anyway. Why did he not threaten to expose
the whole thing publicly? Because, as he has said, to do so would
have betrayed the ethic of the loyal soldier he believed himself
to be.
What kind of culture
defines "maturity" as the time when young men and women
sacrifice principle to prudence, when they pledge allegiance to
the boss in the name of self-promotion and "realism"?
What kind of culture defines adulthood as the moment when the self
goes underground? One answer might be a military one. The problem
is that while unthinking loyalty to one-s commanding officer
may be necessary in war, it is disastrous outside of it.
Why? Because loyalty,
by definition, qualifies individualism, discouraging the expression
of individual opinion, recasting honesty as a type of betrayal.
Because loyalty to power, rather than to what one believes to be
true or right, is fatally undemocratic, and can lead to the most
horrendous abuses. Powell-s excuse—that he did not want
to betray the ethic of the loyal soldier—was precisely the
one used by the defendants at Nuremberg, and if you say that the
analogy is a reckless one, that Colin Powell is no Rudolf Hess but
a generally decent man—an A student, a team player, a loyal
employee, a good soldier—I-ll agree, and say only this:
God save us from men and women like him, for they will do almost
anything in the name of "loyalty." Something to consider,
perhaps, as the nation contemplates electing to the presidency John
McCain, a member of our warrior class for whom loyalty constitutes
the highest possible virtue.
What we require most
in America today are bad soldiers: stubborn, independent-minded
men and women, reluctant to give orders and loath to receive them,
loyal not to authority, nor to any specific company or team, but
to the ideals of open debate, equality, honesty, and fairness.
Democracy, of course,
is not an absolute but a relative value: "We-re not
perfect," the cry will sound, "but show us who is!"
I-ll take a pass on perfection, but I-ll say this: when
it comes to the egalitarian attitude democracy presupposes, the
Brits, for all their wigged getups and parliamentary histrionics,
have it all over us. It-s not just the formal, procedural
differences between the two political cultures (the mandated brevity
of the British election season, or the government-s strictures
on how much money a candidate can spend) that cast us in a sad and
diminished light; it-s the difference in spirit that lies
behind, and informs, these distinctions.
In general, the Brits
act as though the government is their business and they have every
right to meddle in it. Americans, by and large, display no such
self-assurance. To the contrary, we seem to believe, deep in our
hearts, that the business of government is beyond our provenance.
What accounts for the difference? My wife, whose family hails in
part from England, has a theory: unlike us, the Brits don-t
confuse their royalty with their civil servants, because they have
both, clearly labeled. Acknowledging the universal desire to defer,
they channel that desire, wisely, into the place where it can do
the least harm, a kind of political sump. Americans, on the other
hand, lacking the royal catch basin, are squeezed between pretense
and practice. Though we continue to pay lip service to the myth
of the independent American, we understand it as a fiction—nice
for a Friday night with a pint of Ben & Jerry-s but about
as relevant to today-s world as a butter churn.
On the other side of
the Atlantic, meanwhile, the Brits have become, in large part, what
we were once supposed to be. Consider, for starters, the unavoidable
(if largely symbolic) fact that our president lives ensconced in
a palace, while 10 Downing Street is a row house. From there, consider
the regal arrogance of the president and the president-s men:
their refusal to justify or explain policy, or abide by the Constitution,
or respond to the concerns of Congress.
Next, consider the spectacle
presented by the president-s "meetings with the people,"
when he deigns to have them. Consider the extent to which he is
scripted, buffered, coddled; the extent to which his audiences are
screened to assure that they consist of cheerleaders whose "questions"
are nothing more than praise couched in the shape of a question,
or who don-t even bother with the interrogative form and,
like one woman at a Bush "rally," walk up to the microphone
and say things like "my heroes have always been cowboys,"
then sit down to thunderous applause.
More? Recall
an average press conference: the president striding to the podium,
his slightly irritated, patronizing manner. Recall the press corps-
sycophantic chuckling at every half-assed quip, its willingness
to accept the most insulting answers, its downright Prufrockian
("and how should we presume") inability to challenge
an obvious untruth. Consider the fundamental inequality implicit
in the fact that the president is always addressed as "Mr.
President," while septuagenarian journalists are invariably
"Tom" or "Judy." Survey the whole sad spectacle,
soup to nuts, then dare to consider what the alternative might look
like.
To indulge
this fantasy, look up one of the question-and-answer programs on
the BBC and watch a prime minister sweat, literally, while answering
questions from an audience specially selected, according to the
New York Times, to assure that its members "are tough and
knowledgeable." Or take in one of the many lengthy press conferences,
noting in particular how seriously the PMs take the process, or
how, on being told that they haven-t answered the question
precisely, they apologize (apologize!) and try again. But why stop
there? Make it hurt. Look up the session in which former Prime Minister
Tony Blair appears in front of a live audience whose indignant members
demand an apology from him for going to war, and respond to his
answers, as one woman did, with "That-s rubbish, Tony."
Now recall that steel
tycoon who, upon accidentally addressing the president as "Mr.
Truman" rather than "Mr. President," was never
able to forgive himself for the breach of etiquette. Which one is
the citizen, and which the subject?
The real problem we face
is not the Bush Administration-s imperial pretensions, its
quasi-cultish stress on loyalty, or its instinctive suspicion of
debate and dissent but the extent to which the administration-s
modus operandi is representative of a society increasingly conversant
with the protocols of subservience. In the long term, it is this
tilt toward deference, this willingness to hold our tongues and
sit on our principles, that truly threatens us, even more than the
manifold abuses of this administration, because it makes them possible.
Over a century and a
half after its publication, Tocqueville-s Democracy in America
has largely calcified into a reference work, a Bartlett-s
Quotations for journalists in a hurry. To those who still bother
to read it, however, it offers something invaluable—a chance
to plot our position on the road from, or to, despotism. Like any
map, Tocqueville-s simply charts the terrain between two points—call
them freedom and tyranny. Which direction we happen to be traveling,
and how quickly, is up to us to determine; which "goal"
we are currently approaching is the question at hand.
It-s not a difficult
question to answer. On the contrary, unless one has been in a deep
sleep for the past seven years, the answer is glaringly obvious.
Tyranny isn-t something up ahead; it-s right here. It-s
in the soil, in the very air we breathe. It-s the other climate
change, and no less real. The old tyranny, from which we emerged
as a nation, has been transformed by the wonder-working ways of
time and advertising into a powdered wig, a tricorn hat, and the
God-given freedom to burn hot dogs; the new tyranny, meanwhile—infinitely
more dangerous, Made in America—looms just ahead, so large
as to be very nearly invisible.
Why haven-t we
noticed? Perhaps we-re too busy, or too stupid, to recognize
the political beast when it stands before us, slavering in the road.
Perhaps we-re so confused by the rope-a-dope tactics of our
would-be dictators—just look at them, falling back into winking
buffoonery one moment, attacking the enemies of righteousness the
next—that we don-t quite know what to think.
There-s another
possibility. Maybe we-re not out on the street protesting
this administration-s abuses of power because we-re
no longer the people we once were, because we-ve been effectively
bred for docility. Equality, Tocqueville pointed out, "insinuates
deep into the heart and mind of every man some vague notion and
some instinctive inclination toward political freedom." And
inequality? Might it not, by precisely the same calculus, insinuate
"some instinctive inclination" toward political tyranny?
Of course it might. Once the idea of inequality is allowed to take
root, a veritable forest of ritualized gestures and phrases springs
up to reinforce it. The notion that some bow and others are bowed
to comes to seem natural; the cool touch of the floor against our
forehead begins to feel right: from classroom to corporate cubicle
to the halls of Congress, deferential way leads on to deferential
way, and at the end of the road, as Tocqueville foresaw, stands
a baaa-ing polity "reduced to nothing better than a flock
of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the
shepherd."
Lincoln had it right:
"If destruction be our lot we must ourselves be its author
and finisher." We-re off to a fine start.
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