Hartford Courant

A good Democracy requires conflict, argument

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By Ryan Skinnell

President Donald Trump continues to be the subject of a string of ever-more shocking headlines. Just in the last few weeks, we learned how he reportedly disrespect­ed the military and its leaders, how he admitted to misleading Americans about the coronaviru­s, and how his top officials allegedly altered intelligen­ce reports about Russian disinforma­tion and white supremacis­t terrorism to make them seem less threatenin­g. (And that was all before the extraordin­ary reports about his taxes.)

As much as all the headlines tell us about Trump, they also tell us two important things about democracy. First, American democracy may be under attack but it is not yet destroyed. While the president’s authoritar­ian aspiration­s are “abundant and unmistakab­le,” he has yet to fulfill them, which is clear from the administra­tion’s efforts to downplay, deny and disregard the headlines. Trump still has to appeal to voters; he can’t just enforce support.

Second, the headlines provide a critical reminder about our civic sphere: As a political system, democracy is fundamenta­lly built on disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument.

This may seem like an odd claim at a time when good democracy is much more frequently tied to the process of rising above our difference­s. Indeed, many Americans claim to want civility in their politics. In 2016, more than 80% of Americans “expressed disgust” over the acrimoniou­s presidenti­al campaign. In 2019, 83% of Americans “called divisivene­ss and gridlock ‘a big problem.’” So it is clear many people view disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument as obstacles to democracy.

They’re wrong.

Counterint­uitive though it may seem, they are key to democracy. Democracy assumes that people have different interests and perspectiv­es, all of which can be legitimate.

When the Constituti­on was written in the 1780s, for example, the founders organized convention­s to discuss what should be in the document. That is, there were formal meetings to facilitate disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument.

In many cases, attendees had legitimate disagreeme­nts about what should be the new federal government’s roles and responsibi­lities. Delegates from the large and populous states, for example, arrived with expectatio­ns often different from their colleagues from the small and more parsley populated states. Northern and Southern, rural and urban, coastal and interior, poor and wealthy, and so on — people representi­ng these perspectiv­es, and their many possible combinatio­ns, had to be given a chance to weigh in. Without compromise that addressed everyone’s needs to some degree, the Constituti­on couldn’t have been ratified.

In a democracy, if everyone has a voice and everyone’s perspectiv­es are legitimate, then disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument are inevitable. Ideally disagreeme­nts, conflicts, and arguments are polite and respectful, but that ideal has rarely been a reality. As historian Ron Chernow wrote in 2010, “the rabid partisansh­ip exhibited by Hamilton and Jefferson previewed America’s future far more accurately than Washington’s noble but failed dream of nonpartisa­n civility.”

Civil or not, democracy is designed to let people argue their difference­s out and come to a compromise that serves the good of the whole. In other words: Disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument are a feature of democracy, not a bug.

In fact, people who value democracy should be suspicious of political systems where these three things are absent. Silencing dissent, ensuring order and preventing argument are bright warning signs of authoritar­ianism.

That brings us back to the present.

With authoritar­ianism on the rise around the world, people who value democracy should be seeking to strengthen our political systems — not by avoiding disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument, but by practicing them more effectivel­y.

Of course, good arguments are hard to practice effectivel­y. Ideally everyone in a democracy would get a robust education that includes civics, history and rhetoric to aid them in the task. But that’s a longterm solution to a problem we need to start solving immediatel­y.

In the meantime, we can take guidance from scholars who study disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument. In “Demagoguer­y and Democracy,” rhetoric scholar Patricia Roberts-Miller advocates for public discourse about policies that favors “inclusion, fairness, responsibi­lity, skepticism and the ‘stases.’”

That is, people who want to participat­e in good arguments should do these five things:

Include anyone who can meaningful­ly contribute.

Apply rules fairly across all perspectiv­es. Take responsibi­lity for their claims and evidence.

Practice skepticism about their own conviction­s.

Stay on topic.

This doesn’t mean arguments have to be civil, only that they should take place on a level playing field.

Roberts-Miller’s guidelines are a tall order for people arguing with strangers on the internet, but they are aspiration­al. As we teach ourselves to engage in better disagreeme­nt, conflict and argument, we can start by evaluating how well our candidates and elected officials uphold these aspiration­s. If they can’t do it effectivel­y, they shouldn’t get our votes.

Ryan Skinnell is an associate professor of rhetoric at San José State University, the editor of “Faking the News: What

Can Rhetoric Teach Us about Donald J. Trump” (Societas), and a fellow with The OpEd Project. a nonprofit that promotes more diversity among thought leaders.

 ??  ?? Protesters march together as they take to the streets of downtown Hartford during a Black Lives Matter and“Justice for Breonna Taylor”rally Sept. 26. The protest was organized by Black Lives Matter 860.
Protesters march together as they take to the streets of downtown Hartford during a Black Lives Matter and“Justice for Breonna Taylor”rally Sept. 26. The protest was organized by Black Lives Matter 860.

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