Democracy and the Fall of the West
By Craig Smith and Tom Miers
()
About this ebook
Democracy is held to solve one of the oldest puzzles of human social life: how do we ensure that our rulers have a legitimate mandate and rule in the interests of the whole community? We are supposedly now guided by institutions whose democratic mandate ensures that they will govern in a benign manner in the interests of all.
Democracy & the Fall of the West challenges that assumption by drawing on an alternative theory about the nature of modern democracy and its impact on Western society. It argues that the secret of the West’s success is not Democracy, but Liberalism.
Craig Smith and Tom Miers demonstrate that, since the introduction of democracy, the power of the state has re-grown at the expense of the liberty of the individual. Far from underpinning our freedoms, Democracy is in fact undermining them. It has unshackled the coercive power of the state, and will result in the inevitable decline of the West as we know it.
Craig Smith
Craig Smith has a master's in American studies from New York University. He has published poetry and prose in numerous literary magazines and lives near Taos, New Mexico.
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Democracy and the Fall of the West - Craig Smith
DEMOCRACY AND THE FALL OF THE WEST
Craig Smith and Tom Miers
Copyright © Craig Smith and Tom Miers, 2011
The moral rights of the author have been asserted.
No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without permission, except for the quotation of brief passages in criticism and discussion.
Originally published in the UK by Societas
Imprint Academic, PO Box 200, Exeter EX5 5YX, UK
Originally published in the USA by Societas
Imprint Academic, Philosophy Documentation Center
PO Box 7147, Charlottesville, VA 22906-7147, USA
Digital version converted and published in 2012 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
Introduction - Illiberal Democracy
This book sets out a hypothesis: that modern democracy is leading to a new tyranny, undermining the foundations of the West’s success in a way that will inevitably cause its decline and fall.
Democracy is commonly thought of as one of the linchpins of the West - a key component that guarantees the freedoms, identity and dynamism of Western society. We contend the opposite: that the concept of a ‘liberal democracy’ is a contradiction in terms. The democratic process unleashes political forces that increase the power of the state at the expense of liberty to the point where democratic government is little different in outcome to the other forms of tyranny that exist and have existed around the world.
The idea of democracy being inimical to liberty is not new. In fact the potential problems inherent in democratic government have been discussed by some of the greatest Western philosophers from classical times onwards. The first chapter of this book sets out the central features of liberalism[1] that are the foundations of Western success. In Chapter Two we’ll look at the place of democracy in the development of Western political thought and show the ambivalence, and at times downright hostility of some of the greatest of Western political thinkers to the idea of democracy. In Chapter Three we will trace the tension between the idea of law and the demands of democracy, showing how the growth of democratic government has subtly undermined the notion of the rule of law.
Modern political classes are not entirely blind to the problems thrown up by democratic government. Chapter Four describes the material consequences of democratic socialism while Chapter Five tells the story of the liberal reaction against this. But while democratic politicians may identify the flaws in socialism and act to remedy them, their efforts are doomed by the political system in which they operate. Chapter Six shows how the West is now losing its special edge and returning to the normal condition of history - a state where powerful governments compete to achieve political goals at the expense of both the individual and civil society.
We end on a note of hope, however, imagining in the epilogue how we could finally construct a new form of governance that entrenches liberalism and constrains the power of government forever.
Political economy is never an exact science. This book does not attempt to justify in great detail the many historical, political and philosophical conclusions we draw. To do so would lengthen it beyond easy readability without proving our point. Even the concept of ‘the West’ is hard to define exactly. Many of our examples and references come from Britain. But the same trends are apparent in other countries with a strong tradition of both liberty and democracy.
So this book is not meant to be definitive. Instead we hope it outlines an unconventional idea in fairly short form with the aim of inviting readers to look at modern Western society more critically.
1 In this book the word ‘liberal’ holds its original meaning pertaining to individual liberty, rather than its occasional modern political usage (especially in the United States) meaning ‘left wing’.
1: The Struggle for Liberty
In May 2010 the United Kingdom held one of the periodic rituals of its status as a democracy - a General Election. The election was eagerly anticipated, partly as a result of the longevity of the sitting government, partly because of the corruption of the departing Parliament and partly because of the economic problems facing the nation. The introduction of television debates between the party leaders represented the only real innovation in the campaign process. The mechanics of an election are now familiar across the globe and they were engaged in Britain with only some minor misfires concerning postal voting and queues at closing polling stations.
The result of the election was a hung parliament and a week of frantic negotiations to form a coalition that would provide a stable government for the country. One result of this chain of events, enhanced by the presence of the Liberal Democrats in the resulting coalition, was an increased discussion of electoral reform and the extent to which Britain’s government was genuinely democratic. Widespread dissatisfaction with the policies of a particular government is commonplace, but the events of the preceding few years had led many in Britain to ask deeper questions about the nature of their political constitution. Much of this discussion concerned itself with the possible permutations of changing the electoral system or reforming the House of Lords, but little of it addressed the deeper nature of the political system.
In this book we hope to confront precisely this issue - to ask the very difficult question of whether our deep commitment to the ideal of democratic politics has the potential to undermine the success of our way of life. This is not a problem limited to the United Kingdom. To the extent that what is known as the West is united by a shared commitment to democracy, so it too faces the deeper problems that we seek to address.
Democracy is often regarded as a universal value: the culmination of a set of historical developments in a collection of political societies that has come to be known as the West. The West has enjoyed unprecedented levels of economic growth and political power over the last 300 years. And it is over this same period that the countries of the West have developed their democratic polities. In the view of many this is no coincidence. Democracy and economic growth, coupled with political stability and a flourishing society, come together as a package arrived at by the West. The economic and social progress associated with the West has become a vindication of democracy - an argument that has allied itself to the moral argument for democracy as the only legitimate way of organising the political life of a nation.
That democracy is a good thing is now a near universally accepted tenet of political thinking in the West, and now beyond. Some two thirds of the world’s states are now democratic. As democracy has spread around the world increasing numbers of people have been convinced that it is the key to a successful and flourishing society. So prevalent is this view that some have even come to consider it their moral duty to spread democracy around the world, to encourage or even enforce it where it has yet to take hold. In the face of this near universal admiration for democracy it runs the risk of becoming an unquestioned orthodoxy.
In this volume we want to pause and take a cool look at the notion of democracy. While we are not against elected governments per se, we feel that many of the benefits that have traditionally been associated with democracy are not the result of that political system. Instead they are the result of another dimension of the West’s development. The simplest way to understand the point that we want to make is to realise that what is often referred to in casual conversation as a ‘democracy’ is actually more accurately described as ‘liberal democracy’. The point of stressing this is that most of what is valuable in the political order achieved by the West is actually a result of its liberalism rather than its democracy.
Liberalism and democracy are intertwined in the political systems of the West and it is our contention that they are in serious tension, and that this tension has the potential to destabilise the Western nations and destroy the sources of their success.
* * *
Let’s be clear from the start about what we mean by dividing the term ‘liberal democracy’ into two constituent concepts. There is a clear distinction between the two sets of political ideals and institutions - those of liberalism and those of democracy. Our contention is simple - that the tremendous success of the West over the last three hundred years has been a product of the liberalism of Western nations rather than of their commitment to democracy. We are not blind to the fact that democracy is a valuable part of the political structure developed in the West over this period, but we want to be clear about the source of the West’s progress.
By liberalism we mean a set of ideals and institutions developed in the West over a long historical period. The chief institutional characteristics of liberalism include legal protection of individual rights and a sphere of private life, religious toleration, the limitation of political power by law and constitutions, the defence of property rights and the institutions of a market economy. These institutions are backed by commitment to human freedom as a moral and political value. By democracy we understand a form of political organisation characterised as rule by the people, in modern political systems via elected representatives. The institutions of democracy are accompanied by a wider set of beliefs about the value of egalitarian political order and the desirability of extending democracy into as many areas of social life as possible.
For the liberal, elections are valuable political instruments, but they are instruments towards liberal ends. We must draw a distinction between democracy - rule by popular