The Citizen (Gauteng)

We – and the US – will survive

Tyrants took over and had a very long run, but the belief in equality never died, as all the slave and peasant revolts attest.

- Gwynne Dyer

If I have to read one more hand-wringing article about the “crisis of American democracy”, I’m going to retch. The last straw was an article in the New Yorker this week by Adam Gopnik, an accomplish­ed journalist. It was called What We Get Wrong About America’s Crisis of Democracy, and the strapline read: The interestin­g question is not what causes authoritar­ianism but what has ever suspended it.

No, that’s the wrong question. It assumes, as Gopnik says, that “the default condition of humankind is not to thrive in broadly egalitaria­n and stable democratic arrangemen­ts that get unsettled only when something happens to unsettle them. The default condition of humankind, traced across thousands of years of history, is some sort of autocracy.”

Gopnik grew up in Canada, but he seems to have drunk the American Kool-Aid. That is the familiar mythology in which the United States is not only the first mass democracy but the indispensa­ble one, the shining example without which the others would wander hopelessly in the darkness.

That’s not true. Democracy, not autocracy, is the default mode political system, even though it is “the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time”, as Winston Churchill said in 1947 (quoting an unknown predecesso­r).

Almost every dictator in the world holds fake elections so he can claim legitimacy, however fraudulent­ly. No democratic leaders falsely claim to be dictators or tyrants (although some, like Trump and Duterte in the Philippine­s, secretly aspire to it). So default mode democracy wins in a walk.

This was not true before the 18th century. There are indeed “all those thousands of years of history” when the norm was “some form of autocracy”. But before that there are all those hundreds of thousands of years of pre-history when all humans lived as equals, reaching their decisions by discussion and consensus, in little hunter-gatherer bands.

They didn’t hold elections, because the bands were hardly ever more than a hundred strong and they could just talk things over. But the core belief of democracy is that everybody has equal rights including a share in decision-making.

That basic human belief went undergroun­d when the first mass societies appeared around 6 000 years ago. The only way to run them was from the top down, by force.

So the tyrants took over and had a very long run, but the belief in equality never died, as all the slave and peasant revolts attest. And by the 18th century a kind of mass communicat­ions had finally emerged. Just the printing press plus mass literacy, but that meant everybody could get back to making decisions together as equals, and so the democratic revolution­s began.

The United States was the first, perhaps because it then had the highest rate of literacy in the world.

Democracy has nothing to do with being American or “Western”. China was the first country with printing, and if it had also had mass literacy it could well have been the first country to have a democratic revolution. American democracy will probably survive its current difficulti­es. Democracy as the default mode in the world certainly will.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa