Democracy
in America Is a Series of
Narrow Escapes, and We May Be Running Out of Luck
By Bill Moyers
Common Dreams.org
May 17, 2008
The following is an excerpt
from Bill Moyers’ new book, “Moyers
on Democracy“.
Democracy in America is a
series of narrow escapes, and we may be running out of luck. The
reigning presumption about the American experience, as the
historian Lawrence Goodwyn has written, is grounded in the idea of
progress, the conviction that the present is “better” than the
past and the future will bring even more improvement. For all of
its shortcomings, we keep telling ourselves, “The system works.”
Now all bets are off. We
have fallen under the spell of money, faction, and fear, and the
great American experience in creating a different future together
has been subjugated to individual cunning in the pursuit of wealth
and power -and to the claims of empire, with its ravenous demands
and stuporous distractions. A sense of political impotence
pervades the country — a mass resignation defined by Goodwyn as
“believing the dogma of ‘democracy’ on a superficial public level
but not believing it privately.” We hold elections, knowing they
are unlikely to bring the corporate state under popular control.
There is considerable vigor at local levels, but it has not been
translated into new vistas of social possibility or the political
will to address our most intractable challenges. Hope no longer
seems the operative dynamic of America, and without hope we lose
the talent and drive to cooperate in the shaping of our destiny.
The earth we share as our
common gift, to be passed on in good condition to our children’s
children, is being despoiled. Private wealth is growing as public
needs increase apace. Our Constitution is perilously close to
being consigned to the valley of the shadow of death, betrayed by
a powerful cabal of secrecy-obsessed authoritarians. Terms like
“liberty” and “individual freedom” invoked by generations of
Americans who battled to widen the 1787 promise to “promote the
general welfare” have been perverted to create a government
primarily dedicated to the welfare of the state and the political
class that runs it. Yes, Virginia, there is a class war and
ordinary people are losing it. It isn’t necessary to be a Jeremiah
crying aloud to a sinful Jerusalem that the Lord is about to
afflict them for their sins of idolatry, or Cassandra, making a
nuisance of herself as she wanders around King Priam’s palace
grounds wailing “The Greeks are coming.” Or Socrates, the gadfly,
stinging the rump of power with jabs of truth. Or even Paul
Revere, if horses were still in fashion. You need only be a
reporter with your eyes open to see what’s happening to our
democracy. I have been lucky enough to spend my adult life as a
journalist, acquiring a priceless education in the ways of the
world, actually getting paid to practice one of my craft’s
essential imperatives: connect the dots.
The conclusion that we
are in trouble is unavoidable. I report the assault on nature
evidenced in coal mining that tears the tops off mountains and
dumps them into rivers, sacrificing the health and lives of those
in the river valleys to short-term profit, and I see a link
between that process and the stock-market frenzy which scorns
long-term investments — genuine savings — in favor of quick
turnovers and speculative bubbles whose inevitable bursting leaves
insiders with stuffed pockets and millions of small stockholders,
pensioners, and employees out of work, out of luck, and out of
hope.
And then I see a
connection between those disasters and the repeal of
sixty-year-old banking and securities regulations designed during
the Great Depression to prevent exactly that kind of human and
economic damage. Who pushed for the removal of that firewall? An
administration and Congress who are the political marionettes of
the speculators, and who are well rewarded for their efforts with
indispensable campaign contributions. Even honorable opponents of
the practice get trapped in the web of an electoral system that
effectively limits competition to those who can afford to spend
millions in their run for office. Like it or not, candidates know
that the largesse on which their political futures depend will
last only as long as their votes are satisfactory to the sleek
“bundlers” who turn the spigots of cash on and off.
The property
qualifications for federal office that the framers of the
Constitution expressly chose to exclude for demonstrating an
unseemly “veneration for wealth” are now de facto in force and
higher than the Founding Fathers could have imagined. “Money rules
Our laws are the output of a system which clothes rascals in robes
and honesty in rags. The parties lie to us and the political
speakers mislead us.” Those words were spoken by Populist orator
Mary Elizabeth Lease during the prairie revolt that swept the
Great Plains slightly more than 120 years after the Constitution
was signed. They are true today, and that too, spells trouble.
Then I draw a line to the
statistics that show real wages lagging behind prices, the
compensation of corporate barons soaring to heights unequaled
anywhere among industrialized democracies, the relentless
cheeseparing of federal funds devoted to public schools, to
retraining for workers whose jobs have been exported, and to
programs of food assistance and health care for poor children, all
of which snatch away the ladder by which Americans with scant
means but willing hands and hearts could work and save their way
upward to middle-class independence. And I connect those numbers
to our triumphant reactionaries’ campaigns against labor unions
and higher minimum wages, and to their success in reframing the
tax codes so as to strip them of their progressive character,
laying the burdens of Atlas on a shrinking middle class awash in
credit card debt as wage earners struggle to keep up with rising
costs for health care, for college tuitions, for affordable
housing — while huge inheritances go untouched, tax shelters
abroad are legalized, rates on capital gains are slashed, and the
rich get richer and with each increase in their wealth are able to
buy themselves more influence over those who make and those who
carry out the laws.
Edward R. Murrow told his
generation of journalists: “No one can eliminate prejudices — just
recognize them.” Here is my bias: extremes of wealth and poverty
cannot be reconciled with a genuinely democratic politics. When
the state becomes the guardian of power and privilege to the
neglect of justice for the people as a whole, it mocks the very
concept of government as proclaimed in the preamble to our
Constitution; mocks Lincoln’s sacred belief in “government of the
people, by the people, and for the people”; mocks the democratic
notion of government as “a voluntary union for the common good”
embodied in the great wave of reform that produced the Progressive
Era and the two Roosevelts. In contrast, the philosophy
popularized in the last quarter century that “freedom” simply
means freedom to choose among competing brands of consumer goods,
that taxes are an unfair theft from the pockets of the successful
to reward the incompetent, and that the market will meet all human
needs while government itself becomes the enabler of privilege —
the philosophy of an earlier social Darwinism and laissez-faire
capitalism dressed in new togs — is as subversive as Benedict
Arnold’s betrayal of the Revolution he had once served. Again,
Mary Lease: “The great evils which are cursing American society
and undermining the foundations of the republic flow not from the
legitimate operation of the great human government which our
fathers gave us, but they come from tramping its plain provisions
underfoot.”
Our democracy has
prospered most when it was firmly anchored in the idea that “We
the People” — not just a favored few — would identify and remedy
common distempers and dilemmas and win the gamble our forebears
undertook when they espoused the radical idea that people could
govern themselves wisely. Whatever and whoever tries to supplant
that with notions of a wholly privatized society of competitive
consumers undermines a country that, as Gordon S. Wood puts it in
his landmark book The Radicalism of the American Revolution,
discovered its greatness “by creating a prosperous free society
belonging to obscure people with their workaday concerns and their
pecuniary pursuits of happiness” — a democracy that changed the
lives of “hitherto neglected and despised masses of common
laboring people.”
I wish I could say that
journalists in general are showing the same interest in uncovering
the dangerous linkages thwarting this democracy. It is not for
lack of honest and courageous individuals who would risk their
careers to speak truth to power — a modest risk compared to those
of some journalists in authoritarian countries who have been
jailed or murdered for the identical “crime.” But our journalists
are not in control of the instruments they play. As conglomerates
swallow up newspapers, magazines, publishing houses, and networks,
and profit rather than product becomes the focus of corporate
effort, news organizations — particularly in television — are
folded into entertainment divisions. The “news hole” in the print
media shrinks to make room for advertisements, and stories needed
by informed citizens working together are pulled in favor of the
latest celebrity scandals because the media moguls have decided
that uncovering the inner workings of public and private power is
boring and will drive viewers and readers away to greener pastures
of pabulum. Good reporters and editors confront walls of
resistance in trying to place serious and informative reports over
which they have long labored. Media owners who should be sounding
the trumpets of alarm on the battlements of democracy instead blow
popular ditties through tin horns, undercutting the basis for
their existence and their First Amendment rights.
Bill Moyers is the
author of many books including “Moyers
on Democracy” (Doubleday, 2008) and the host of the PBS show,
Bill Moyers Journal.