Plumbing
the Depths
How
the Gears Turn
by Fred Reed
March 13, 2008
Common delusions
notwithstanding, the United States, I submit, is not a democracy—by
which is meant a system in which the will of the people prevails. Rather
it is a curious mechanism artfully designed to
circumvent the will of the people while appearing to be democratic.
Several mechanisms accomplish this.
First, we have two identical
parties which, when elected, do very much the same things. Thus the
election determines not policy but only the division of spoils. Nothing
really changes. The Democrats will never seriously reduce military
spending, nor the Republicans, entitlements.
Second, the two parties
determine on which questions we are allowed to vote. They simply refuse
to engage the questions that matter most to many people. If you are
against affirmative action, for whom do you vote? If you regard the
schools as abominations? If you want to end the president’s hobbyist
wars?
Third, there is the effect of
large jurisdictions. Suppose that you lived in a very small (and
independent) school district and didn’t like the curriculum. You could
buttonhole the head of the school board, whom you would probably know,
and say, “Look, Jack, I really think . . . .” He would listen.
But suppose that you live in a
suburban jurisdiction of 300,000. You as an individual mean nothing. To
affect policy, you would have to form an organization, canvass for
votes, solicit contributions, and place ads in newspapers. This is a
fulltime job, prohibitively burdensome.
The larger the jurisdiction, the
harder it is to exert influence. Much policy today is set at the state
level. Now you need a statewide campaign to change the curriculum.
Practically speaking, it isn’t practical.
Fourth are impenetrable
bureaucracies. A lot of policy is set by making regulations at some
department or other, often federal. How do you call the Department of
Education to protest a rule which is in fact a policy? The Department
has thousands of telephones, few of them listed, all of which will brush
you off. There is nothing the public can do to influence these goiterous,
armored, unaccountable centers of power.
Yes, you can write your senator,
and get a letter written by computer, “I thank you for your valuable
insights, and assure you that I am doing all . . . .”
Fifth is the invisible
bureaucracy (which is also impenetrable). A few federal departments get
at least a bit of attention from the press, chiefly State and Defense
(sic). Most of the government gets no attention at all—HUD, for
example. Nobody knows who the Secretary of HUD is, or what the
department is doing. Similarly, the textbook publishers have some
committee whose name I don’t remember (See? It works) that decides
what words can be used in texts, how women and Indians must be
portrayed, what can be said about them, and so on. Such a group amounts
to an unelected ministry of propaganda and, almost certainly, you have
never heard of it.
Sixth, there is the illusion of
journalism. The newspapers and networks encourage us to think of them as
a vast web of hard-hitting, no-holds-barred, chips-where-they-may
inquisitors of government: You can run, but you can’t hide. In fact
federal malefactors don’t have to run or hide. The press isn’t
really looking.
Most of press coverage is only
apparent. Television isn’t journalism, but a service that translates
into video stories found in the Washington Post and New
York Times (really). Few newspapers have bureaus in Washington; the
rest follow the lead of a small number of major outlets. These don’t
really cover things either.
When I was reporting on the
military, there were (if memory serves) many hundreds of reporters
accredited to the Pentagon, or at least writing about the armed
services. It sounds impressive: All those gimlet eyes.
What invariably happened though
was that some story would break—a toilet seat alleged to cost too
much, or the failure of this or that. All the reporters would chase the
toilet seat, fearful that their competitors might get some detail they
didn’t. Thus you had one story covered six hundred times. In any event
the stories were often dishonest and almost always ignorant because
reporters, apparently bound by some natural law, are obligate technical
illiterates. This includes the reporters for the Post and the Times.
Seventh, and a bit more subtle,
is the lack of centers of demographic power in competition with the
official government. The Catholic Church, for example, once
influentially represented a large part of the population. It has been
brought to heel. We are left with government by lobby—the weapons
industry, big pharma, AIPAC, the teachers unions—whose representatives
pay Congress to do things against the public interest.
Eighth, we are ruled not by a
government but by a class. Here the media are crucial. Unless you spend
time outside of America, you may not realize to what extent the press is
controlled. The press is largely free, yes, but it is also largely owned
by a small number of corporations which, in turn, are run by people from
the same pool from which are drawn high-level pols and their advisers.
They are rich people who know each other and have the same interests. It
is very nearly correct to say that these people are the
government of the United States, and that the federal apparatus merely a
useful theatrical manifestation.
Finally, though it may not be
deliberate, the schools produce a pitiably ignorant population that
can’t vote wisely. Just as trial lawyers don’t want intelligent
jurors, as they are harder to manipulate, so political parties don’t
want educated voters. The existence of a puzzled mass gawping at Oprah
reduces elections to popularity contests modulated by the state of the
economy. One party may win, yes, or the other. But a TV-besotted
electorate doesn’t meddle in matters important to its rulers. It has
never heard of them.
To disguise all of this,
elections provide the excitement and intellectual content of a football
game, without the importance. They allow a sense of Participation. In
bars across the land, in high-school gyms become forums, people become
heated about what they imagine to be decisions of great import: This
candidate or that? It keeps them from feeling left out while denying
them power.
It is fraud. In a sense, the
candidates do not even exist. A presidential candidate consists of two
speechwriters, a makeup man, a gestures coach, ad agency, two pollsters
and an interpreter of focus groups. Depending on his numbers, the
handlers may suggest a more fixed stare to crank up his decisiveness
quotient for male or Republican voters, or dial in a bit of compassion
for a Democratic or female audience. The newspapers will report this
calculated transformation. Yet it works. You can fool enough of the
people enough of the time.
When people sense this and
decline to vote, we cluck like disturbed hens and speak of apathy. Nope.
Just common sense.