Was Democracy Just a Moment?
by Robert Kaplan
Atlantic Monthly, December 1997
In the fourth century A.D. Christianity's conquest of Europe
and the Mediterranean world gave rise to the belief that a peaceful
era in world politics was at hand, now that a consensus had formed
around an ideology that stressed the sanctity of the individual.
But Christianity was, of course, not static. It kept evolving,
into rites, sects, and "heresies" that were in turn
influenced by the geography and cultures of the places where it
took root. Meanwhile, the church founded by Saint Peter became
a ritualistic and hierarchical organization guilty of long periods
of violence and bigotry. This is to say nothing of the evils perpetrated
by the Orthodox churches in the East. Christianity made the world
not more peaceful or, in practice, more moral but only more complex.
Democracy, which is now overtaking the world as Christianity once
did, may do the same.
The collapse of communism from internal stresses says nothing
about the long-term viability of Western democracy. Marxism's
natural death in Eastern Europe is no guarantee that subtler tyrannies
do not await us, here and abroad. History has demonstrated that
there is no final triumph of reason, whether it goes by the name
of Christianity, the Enlightenment, or, now, democracy. To think
that democracy as we know it will triumph-or is even here to stay-is
itself a form of determinism, driven by our own ethnocentricity.
In deed, those who quote Alexis de Tocqueville in support of democracy's
inevitability should pay heed to his observation that Americans,
because of their (comparative) equality, exaggerate "the
scope of human perfectibility." Despotism, Tocqueville went
on, "is more particularly to be feared in democratic ages,"
because it thrives on the obsession with self and one's own security
which equality fosters.
I submit that the democracy we are encouraging in many poor
parts of the world is an integral part of a transformation toward
new forms of authoritarianism; that democracy in the United States
is at greater risk than ever before, and from obscure sources;
and that many future regimes, ours especially, could resemble
the oligarchies of ancient Athens and Sparta more than they do
the current government in Washington. History teaches that it
is exactly at such prosperous times as these that we need to maintain
a sense of the tragic, however unnecessary it may seem. The Greek
historian Polybius, of the second century B.C., interpreted what
we consider the Golden Age of Athens as the beginning of its decline.
To Thucydides, the very security and satisfactory life that the
Athenians enjoyed under Pericles blinded them to the bleak forces
of human nature that were gradually to be their undoing in the
Peloponnesian War.
My pessimism is, I hope, a foundation for prudence. America's
Founders were often dismal about the human condition. James Madison:
"Had every Athenian citizen been a Socrates, every Athenian
assembly would still have been a mob." Thomas Paine: "Society
is produced by our wants and government by our wickedness."
It was the "crude" and "reactionary" philosophy
of Thomas Hobbes, which placed security ahead of liberty in a
system of enlightened despotism, from which the Founders drew
philosophical sustenance. Paul A. Rahe, a professor of history
at the University of Tulsa, shows in his superb three-volume Republics
Ancient and Modern (1992) how the Founders partly rejected the
ancient republics, which were based on virtue, for a utilitarian
regime that channeled man's selfish, materialistic instincts toward
benign ends. Man, Benjamin Franklin said in an apparent defense
of Hobbesian determinism, is "a tool-making animal."
Democracies Are Value -NeutraI
Hitler and Mussolini each came to power through democracy.
Democracies do not always make societies more civil-but they do
always mercilessly expose the health of the societies in which
they operate.
In April of 1985 I found myself in the middle of a Sudanese
crowd that had just helped to overthrow a military regime and
replace it with a new government, which the following year held
free and fair elections. Sudan's newly elected democracy led immediately
to anarchy, which in turn led to the most brutal tyranny in Sudan's
postcolonial history: a military regime that broadened the scope
of executions, persecuted women, starved non-Muslims to death,
sold kidnapped non-Muslim children back to their parents for $200,
and made Khartoum the terrorism capital of the Arab world, replacing
Beirut. In Sudan only 27 percent of the population (and only 12
percent of the women) could read. If a society is not in reasonable
health, democracy can be not only risky but disastrous: during
the last phases of the post-First World War German and Italian
democracies, for example, the unemployment and inflation figures
for Germany and the amount of civil unrest in Italy were just
as abysmal as Sudan's literacy rates.
As an unemployed Tunisian student once told me, "In Tunisia
we have a twenty-five percent unemployment rate. If you hold elections
in such circumstances, the result will be a fundamentalist government
and violence like in Algeria. First create an economy, then worry
about elections." There are many differences between Tunisia
and its neighbor Algeria, including the fact that Tunisia has
been peaceful without democracy and Algeria erupted in violence
in 1992 after its first election went awry and the military canceled
the second. In Kurdistan and Afghanistan, two fragile tribal societies
in which the United States encouraged versions of democracy in
the 1 990s, the security vacuums that followed the failed attempts
at institutionalizing pluralism were filled by Saddam Hussein
for a time in Kurdistan and by Islamic tyranny in much of Afghanistan.
In Bosnia democracy legitimized the worst war crimes in Europe
since the Nazi era. In sub-Saharan Africa democracy has weakened
institutions and services in some states, and elections have been
manipulated to restore dictatorship in others. In Sierra Leone
and Congo-Brazzaville elections have led to chaos. In Mali, which
Africa-watchers have christened a democratic success story, recent
elections were boycotted by the opposition and were marred by
killings and riots. Voter turnout was less than 20 percent. Even
in Latin America, the Third World's most successful venue for
democracy, the record is murky. Venezuela has enjoyed elected
civilian governments since 1959, whereas for most of the 1970s
and 1980s Chile was effectively under military rule. But Venezuela
is a society in turmoil, with periodic coup attempts, rampant
crime, and an elite that invests most of its savings outside the
country; as a credit risk Venezuela ranks behind only Russia and
Mexico. Chile has become a stable middle class society whose economic
growth rate compares to those of the Pacific Rim. Democratic Colombia
is a pageant of bloodletting, and many members of the middle class
are attempting to leave the country. Then there is Peru, where,
all the faults of the present regime notwithstanding, a measure
of stability has been achieved by a retreat from democracy into
quasi-authoritarianism.
Throughout Latin America there is anxiety that unless the
middle classes are enlarged and institutions modernized, the wave
of democratization will not be consolidated. Even in an authentically
democratic nation like Argentina, institutions are weak and both
corruption and unemployment are high. President Carlos Menem's
second term has raised questions about democracy's sustainability-questions
that the success of his first term seemed to have laid to rest.
In Brazil and other countries democracy faces a backlash from
millions of badly educated and newly urbanized dwellers in teeming
slums, who see few palpable benefits to Western parliamentary
systems. Their discontent is a reason for the multifold increases
in crime in many Latin American cities over the past decade.
Because both a middle class and civil institutions are required
for successful democracy, democratic Russia, which inherited neither
from the Soviet regime, remains violent, unstable, and miserably
poor despite its 99 percent literacy rate. Under its authoritarian
system China has dramatically improved the quality of life for
hundreds of millions of its people. My point, hard as it may be
for Americans to accept, is that Russia may be failing in part
because it is a democracy and China may be succeeding in part
be cause it is not. Having traveled through much of western China,
where Muslim Turkic Uighurs (who despise the Chinese) often predominate,
I find it hard to imagine a truly democratic China without at
least a partial breakup of the country. Such a breakup would lead
to chaos in western China, because the Uighurs are poorer and
less educated than most Chinese and have a terrible historical
record of governing themselves. Had the student demonstrations
in 1989 in Tiananmen Square led to democracy, would the astoundingly
high economic growth rates of the 1990s still obtain'? I am not
certain, because democracy in China would have ignited turmoil
not just in the Muslim west of the country but elsewhere, too;
order would have decreased but corruption would not have. The
social and economic breakdowns under democratic rule in Albania
and Bulgaria, where the tradition of pre-communist bourgeois life
is weak or nonexistent (as in China), contrasted with more-successful
democratic venues like Hungary and the Czech Republic, which have
had well-established bourgeoisie, constitute further proof that
our belief in democracy regardless of local conditions amounts
to cultural hubris.
Look at Haiti, a small country only ninety minutes by air
from Miami, where 22,000 American soldiers were dispatched in
1994 to restore "democracy." Five percent of eligible
Haitian voters participated in an election last April, chronic
instability continues, and famine threatens. Those who think that
America can establish democracy the world over should heed the
words of the late American theologian and political philosopher
Reinhold Niebuhr:
"The same strength which has extended our power beyond
a continent has also . . . brought us into a vast web of history
in which other wills, running in oblique or contrasting directions
to our own, inevitably hinder or contradict what we most fervently
desire. We cannot simply have our way, not even when we believe
our way to have the "happiness of mankind" as its promise."
The lesson to draw is not that dictatorship is good and democracy
bad but that democracy emerges successfully on]y as a capstone
to other .social and economic achievements. In his "Author's
Introduction" to Democracy in America, Tocqueville showed
how democracy evolved in the West not through the kind of moral
fiat we are trying to impose throughout the world but as an organic
outgrowth of development. European society had reached a level
of complexity and sophistication at which the aristocracy, so
as not to overburden itself, had to confer a measure of equality
upon other citizens and allocate some responsibility to them:
a structured division of the population into peacefully competing
interest groups was necessary if both tyranny and anarchy were
to be averted.
The very fact that we retreat to moral arguments-and often
moral arguments only-to justify democracy indicates that for many
parts of the world the historical and social arguments supporting
democracy are just not there. Realism has come not from us but
from, for example, Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, an enlightened
Hobbesian despot whose country has posted impressive annual economic
growth rates-10 percent recently-despite tribal struggles in the
country's north. In 1986 Museveni's army captured the Ugandan
capital of Kampala without looting a single shop; Museveni postponed
elections and saw that they took place in a manner that ensured
his victory. "I happen to be one of those people who do not
believe in multi-party democracy," Museveni has written.
"In fact, I am totally opposed to it as far as Africa today
is concerned.... If one forms a multi-party system in Uganda,
a party cannot win elections unless it finds a way of dividing
the ninety-four percent of the electorate [that consists of peasants],
and this is where the main problem comes up: tribalism, religion,
or regionalism becomes the basis for intense partisanship."
In other words, in a society that has not reached the level of
development Toqueville described, a multi-party system merely
hardens and institutionalizes established ethnic and regional
divisions. Look at Armenia and Azerbaijan, where democratic processes
brought nationalists to power upon the demise of the Soviet Union:
each leader furthered his country's slide into war. A coup in
Azerbaijan was necessary to restore peace and, by developing Azerbaijan's
enormous oil resources, foster economic growth. Without the coup
Western oil companies would not have gained their current foothold,
which has allowed the United States to increase pressure on neighboring
Iran at the same time that we at tempt to normalize relations
with Iran "on our terms."
Certainly, moral arguments in support of democracy were aired
at the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, but they
were tempered by the kind of historical and social analysis we
now abjure. "The Constitution of the United States was written
by fifty-five men-and one ghost," writes retired Army Lieutenant
General Dave R. Palmer in 1794: America, Its Army, and the Birth
of the Natian (1994). The ghost was that of Oliver Cromwell, the
archetypal man on horseback who, in the course of defending Parliament
against the monarchy in the mid seventeenth century, devised a
tyranny worse than any that had ever existed under the English
Kings. The Founders were terrified of a badly educated populace
that could be duped by a Cromwell, and of a system that could
allow too much power to fall into one person's hands. That is
why they constructed a system that filtered the whims of the masses
through an elected body and dispersed power by dividing the government
into three branches.
The ghosts of today we ignore-like the lesson offered by Rwanda,
where the parliamentary system the West promoted was a factor
in the murder of hundreds of thousands of Tutsis by Hutu militias.
In 1992, responding partly to pressure from Western governments,
the Rwandan regime established a multi-party system and transformed
itself into a coalition government. The new political parties
be came masks for ethnic groups that organized murderous militias,
and the coalition nature of the new government helped to prepare
the context for the events that led to the genocide in 1994. Evil
individuals were certainly responsible for the mass murder. But
they operated within a fatally flawed system, which our own ethnocentric
hubris helped to construct. Indeed, our often moralistic attempts
to impose Western parliamentary systems on other countries are
not dissimilar to the attempts of nineteenth-century Western colonialists-many
of whom were equally idealistic-to replace well-functioning chieftaincy
and tribal patronage systems with foreign administrative practices
.
The demise of the Soviet Union was no reason for us to pressure
Rwanda and other countries to form political parties-though that
is what our post-Cold War foreign policy has been largely about,
even in parts of the world that the Cold War barely touched. The
Eastern European countries liberated in 1989 already had, in varying
degrees, the historical and social preconditions for both democracy
and advanced industrial life: bourgeois traditions, exposure to
the Western Enlightenment, high literacy rates, low birth rates,
and so on. The post-Cold War effort to bring democracy to those
countries has been reasonable. What is less reasonable is to put
a gun to the head of the peoples of the developing world and say,
in effect, "Behave as if you had experienced the Western
Enlightenment to the degree that Poland and the Czech Republic
did. Behave as if 95 percent of your population were literate.
Behave as if you had no bloody ethnic or regional disputes."
States have never been formed by elections. Geography, settlement
patterns, the rise of literate bourgeoisie, and, tragically, ethnic
cleansing have formed states. Greece, for instance, is a stable
democracy partly because earlier in the century it carried out
a relatively benign form of ethnic cleansing-in the form of refugee
transfers-which created a monoethnic society. Nonetheless, it
took several decades of economic development for Greece finally
to put its coups behind it. Democracy often weakens states by
necessitating ineffectual compromises and fragile coalition governments
in societies where bureaucratic institutions never functioned
well to begin with. Because democracy neither forms states nor
strengthens them initially, multi-party systems are best suited
to nations that already have efficient bureaucracies and a middle
class that pays income tax, and where primary issues such as borders
and power sharing have already been resolved, leaving politicians
free to bicker about the budget and other secondary matters.
Social stability results from the establishment of a middle
class. Not democracies but authoritarian systems, including monarchies,
create middle classes-which, having achieved a certain size and
self-confidence, revolt against the very dictators who generated
their prosperity. This is the pattern today in the Pacific Rim
and the southern cone of South America, but not in other parts
of Latin America, southern Asia, or sub-Saharan Africa. A place
like the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire), where
the per capita gross national product is less than $200 a year
and the average person is either a rural peasant or an urban peasant;
where there is little infrastructure of roads, sewers, and so
on; and where reliable bureaucratic institutions are lacking,
needs a leader like Bismarck or Jerry Rawlings-the Ghanaian ruler
who stabilized his country through dictatorship and then had himself
elected democratically-in place for years before he is safe from
an undisciplined soldiery.
Foreign correspondents in sub-Saharan Africa who equate democracy
with progress miss this point, ignoring both history and centuries
of political philosophy. They seem to think that the choice is
between dictators and democrats. But for many places the only
choice is between bad dictators and slightly better ones. To force
elections on such places may give us some instant gratification.
But after a few months or years a bunch of soldiers with grenades
will get bored and greedy, and will easily topple their fledgling
democracy. As likely as not, the democratic government will be
composed of corrupt, bickering, ineffectual politicians whose
weak rule never had an institutional base to start with: modern
bureaucracies generally require high literacy rates over several
generations. Even India, the great exception that proves the rule,
has had a mixed record of success as a democracy, with Bihar and
other poverty wracked places remaining in semi-anarchy. Ross Munro,
a noted Asia expert, has documented how Chinese autocracy has
better prepared China's population for the economic rigors of
the post-industrial age than Indian democracy has prepared India's.
Of course, our post-Cold War mission to spread democracy is
partly a pose. In Egypt and Saudi Arabia, America's most important
allies in the energy-rich Muslim world, our worst nightmare would
be free and fair elections, as it would be elsewhere in the Middle
East. The end of the Cold War has changed our attitude toward
those authoritarian regimes that are not crucial to our interests-but
not toward those that are. We praise democracy, and meanwhile
we are grateful for an autocrat like King Hussein, and for the
fact that the Turkish and Pakistani militaries have always been
the real powers behind the "democracies" in their countries.
Obviously, democracy in the abstract encompasses undeniably good
things such as civil society and a respect for human rights. But
as a matter of public policy it has unfortunately come to focus
on elections. What is in fact happening in many places requires
a circuitous explanation.
The New Authoritarianism
The battle between liberal and neoconservative moralists who
are concerned with human rights and tragic realists who are concerned
with security, balance-of-power politics, and economic matters
(famously, Henry Kissinger) is a variation of a classic dispute
between two great English philosophers-the twentieth-century liberal
humanist Isaiah Berlin and the seventeenth-century monarchist
and translator of Thucydides, Thomas Hobbes.
In May of 1953, while the ashes of the Nazi Holocaust were
still smoldering and Stalin's grave was fresh, Isaiah Berlin delivered
a spirited lecture against "historical inevitability"-the
whole range of belief, advocated by Hobbes and others, according
to which individuals and their societies are determined by their
past, their civilization, and even their biology and environment.
Berlin argued that adherence to historical inevitability, so disdainful
of the very characteristics that make us human, led to Nazism
and communism-both of them extreme attempts to force a direction
onto history. Hobbes is just one of many famous philosophers Berlin
castigated in his lecture, but it is Hobbes's bleak and elemental
philosophy that most conveniently sums up what Berlin and other
moralists so revile. Hobbes suggested that even if human beings
are nobler than apes, they are nevertheless governed by biology
and environment. According to Hobbes, our ability to reason is
both a mask for and a slave to our passions, our religions arise
purely from fear, and theories about our divinity must be subordinate
to the reality of how we behave. Enlightened despotism is thus
preferable to democracy: the masses require protection from themselves.
Hobbes, who lived through the debacle of parliamentary rule under
Cromwell, published his translation of Thucydides in order, he
said, to demonstrate how democracy, among other factors, was responsible
for Athens's decline. Reflecting on ancient Athens, the philosopher
James Harrington, a contemporary and follower of Hobbes, remarked
that he could think of "nothing more dangerous" than
"debate in a crowd."
Though the swing toward democracy following the Cold War was
a triumph for liberal philosophy, the pendulum will come to rest
where it belongs-in the middle, between the ideals of Berlin and
the realities of Hobbes. Where a political system leans too far
in either direction, realignment or disaster awaits.
In 1993 Pakistan briefly enjoyed the most successful period
of governance in its history. The government was neither democratic
nor authoritarian but a cross between the two. The unelected Prime
Minister, Moin Qureshi, was chosen by the President, who in turn
was backed by the military. Because Qureshi had no voters to please,
he made bold moves that restored political stability and economic
growth. Before Qureshi there had been violence and instability
under the elected governments of Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.
Bhutto's government was essentially an ethnic-Sindhi mafia based
in the south; Sharif's was an ethnic-Punjabi mafia from the geographic
center. When Qureshi handed the country back to "the people,"
elections returned Bhutto to power, and chaos resumed. Finally,
in November of last year, Pakistan's military-backed President
again deposed Bhutto. The sigh of relief throughout the country
was audible. Recent elections brought Sharif, the Punjabi, back
to power. He is governing better than the first time, but communal
violence has returned to Pakistan's largest city, Karachi. I believe
that Pakistan must find its way back to a hybrid regime like the
one that worked so well in 1993; the other options are democratic
anarchy and military tyranny. (Anarchy and tyranny, of course,
are closely related: because power abhors a vacuum, the one necessarily
leads to the other. One day in 1996 Kabul, the Afghan capital,
was ruled essentially by no one; the next day it was ruled by
Taliban, an austere religious movement.)
Turkey's situation is similar to Pakistan's. During the Cold
War, Turkey's military intervened when democracy threatened mass
violence, about once every decade. But Turkish coups are no longer
tolerated by the West, so Turkey's military has had to work behind
the scenes to keep civilian governments from acting too irrationally
for our comfort and that of many secular Turks. As elected governments
in Turkey become increasingly circumscribed by the army, a quieter
military paternalism is likely to evolve in place of periodic
coups. The crucial element is not the name the system goes by
but how the system actually works.
Peru offers another version of subtle authoritarianism. In
1990 Peruvian voters elected Alberto Fujimori to dismantle parts
of their democracy. He did, and as a consequence he restored a
measure of civil society to Peru. Fujimori disbanded Congress
and took power increasingly into his own hands, using it to weaken
the Shining Path guerrilla movement, reduce inflation from 7,500
percent to 10 percent, and bring investment and jobs back to Peru.
In 1995 Fujimori won re-election with three times as many votes
as his nearest challenger. Fujimori's use of deception and corporate-style
cost-benefit analyses allowed him to finesse brilliantly the crisis
caused by the terrorist seizure of the Japanese embassy in Lima.
The commando raid that killed the terrorists probably never could
have taken place amid the chaotic conditions of the preceding
Peruvian government. Despite the many problems Fujimori has had
and still has, it is hard to argue that Peru has not benefited
from his rule.
In many of these countries Hobbesian realities-in particular,
too many young, violence-prone males without jobs-have necessitated
radical action. In a York University study published last year
the scholars Christian G. Mesquida and Neil I. Wiener demonstrate
how countries with young populations (young poor males especially)
are subject to political violence. With Third World populations
growing dramatically (albeit at slowing rates) and becoming increasingly
urbanized, democrats must be increasingly ingenious and dictators
increasingly tyrannical in order to rule successfully. Surveillance,
too, will become more important on an urbanized planet; it is
worth noting that the etymology of the word "police"
is polis, Greek for "city." Because tottering democracies
and despotic militaries frighten away the investors required to
create jobs for violence-prone youths, more hybrid regimes will
perforce emerge. They will call themselves democracies, and we
may go along with the lie-but, as in Peru, the regimes will be
decisively autocratic. (Hobbes wrote that Thucydides "praiseth
the government of Athens, when . . . it was democratical in name,
but in effect monarchical under Pericles." Polybius, too,
recommended mixed regimes as the only stable form of government.)
Moreover, if a shortage of liquidity affects world capital markets
by 2000, as Klaus Schwab, the president of the World Economic
Forum, and other experts fear may happen, fiercer competition
among developing nations for scarcer investment money will accelerate
the need for efficient neo-authoritarian governments.
The current reality in Singapore and South Africa, for instance,
shreds our democratic certainties. Lee Kuan Yew's offensive neo-authoritarianism,
in which the state has evolved into a corporation that is paternalistic
meritocratic, and decidedly undemocratic, has forged prosperity
from abject poverty. A survey of business executives and economists
by the World Economic Forum ranked Singapore No. I among the fifty-three
most advanced countries appearing on an index of global competitiveness.
What is good for business executives is often good for the average
citizen: per capita wealth in Singapore is nearly equal to that
in Canada, the nation that ranks No. I in the world on the United
Nations' Human Development Index. When Lee took over Singapore,
more than thirty years ago, it was a mosquito-ridden bog filled
with slum quarters that frequently lacked both plumbing and electricity.
Doesn't liberation from filth and privation count as a human right?
Jeffrey Sachs, a professor of international trade at Harvard,
writes that "good government" means relative safety
from corruption, from breach of contract, from property expropriation,
and from bureaucratic inefficiency. Singapore's reputation in
these regards is unsurpassed. If Singapore's 2.8 million citizens
ever demand democracy, they will just prove the assertion that
prosperous middle classes arise under authoritarian regimes before
gaining the confidence to dislodge their benefactors. Singapore's
success is frightening, yet it must be acknowledged.
Democratic South Africa, meanwhile, has become one of the
most violent places on earth that are not war zones, according
to the security firm Kroll Associates. The murder rate is six
times that in the United States, five times that in Russia. There
are ten private-security guards for every policeman. The currency
has substantially declined, educated people continue to flee,
and international drug cartels have made the country a new transshipment
center. Real unemployment is about 33 percent, and is probably
much higher among youths. Jobs cannot be created without the cooperation
of foreign investors, but assuaging their fear could require the
kind of union-busting and police actions that democracy will not
permit. The South African military was the power behind the regime
in the last decade of apartheid. And it is the military that may
yet he]p to rule South Africa in the future. Like Pakistan but
more so, South Africa is destined for a hybrid regime if it is
to succeed. The abundant coverage of South Africa's impressive
attempts at coming to terms with the crimes of apartheid serves
to obscure the country's growing problems. There is a sense of
fear in such celebratory, backward-looking coverage, as if writing
too much about difficulties in that racially symbolic country
would expose the limits of the liberal humanist enterprise worldwide.
Burma, too, may be destined for a hybrid regime, de spite
the deification of the opposition leader and Nobel Peace laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi by Western journalists. While the United States
calls for democracy in and economic sanctions against Burma, those
with more immediate clout-that is, Burma's Asian neighbors, and
especially corporate-oligarchic militaries like Thailand's-show
no compunction about increasing trade links with Burma's junta.
Aung San Suu Kyi may one day bear the title of leader of Burma,
but only with the tacit approval of a co-governing military. Otherwise
Burma will not be stable. A rule of thumb is that governments
are determined not by what liberal humanists wish but rather by
what business people and others require. Various democratic revolutions
failed in Europe in 1848 because what the intellectuals wanted
was not what the emerging middle classes wanted. For quite a few
parts of today's world, which have at best only the beginnings
of a middle class, the Europe of the mid-nineteenth century provides
a closer comparison than the Europe of the late twentieth century.
In fact, for the poorest countries where we now recommend democracy,
Cromwell's England may provide the best comparison. As with the
Christian religion (whose values are generally different for Americans
than for Bosnian Serbs or for Lebanese Phalangists, to take only
three examples), the nominal system of a government is less significant
than the nature of the society in which it operates. And as democracy
sinks into the soils of various local cultures, it often leaves
less-than-nourishing deposits. "Democracy" in Cambodia,
for instance, began evolving into something else almost immediately
after the UN-sponsored elections there, in 1993. Hun Sen, one
of two Prime Ministers in a fragile coalition, lived in a fortified
bunker from which he physically threatened journalists and awarded
government contracts in return for big bribes. His coup last summer,
which toppled his co-Prime Minister and ended the democratic experiment,
should have come as no surprise.
"World Government"
Authoritarian or hybrid regimes, no matter how illiberal,
will still be treated as legitimate if they can provide security
for their subjects and spark economic growth. And they will easily
find acceptance in a world driven increasingly by financial markets
that know no borders.
For years idealists have dreamed of a "world government."
Well, a world government has been emerging-quietly and organically,
the way vast developments in history take place. I do not refer
to the United Nations, the power of which, almost by definition,
affects only the poorest countries. After its peacekeeping failures
in Bosnia and Somalia-and its $2 billion failure to make Cambodia
democratic-the UN is on its way to becoming a supranational relief
agency. Rather, I refer to the increasingly dense ganglia of international
corporations and markets that are becoming the unseen arbiters
of power in many countries. It is much more important nowadays
for the leader of a developing country to get a hearing before
corporate investors at the World Economic Forum than to speak
before the UN General Assembly. Amnesty International now briefs
corporations, just as it has always briefed national governments.
Interpol officials have spoken about sharing certain kinds of
intelligence with corporations. The Prime Minister of Malaysia,
Mahathir Mohamad, is recognizing the real new world order (at
least in this case) by building a low-tax district he calls a
"multimedia super corridor," with two new cities and
a new airport designed specifically for international corporations.
The world's most efficient peacemaking force belongs not to the
UN or even to the great powers but to a South African corporate
mercenary force called Executive Outcomes, which restored relative
stability to Sierra Leone in late 1995. (This is reminiscent of
the British East India Company, which raised armies transparently
for economic interests.) Not long after Executive Outcomes left
Sierra Leone, where only 20.7 percent of adults can read, that
country's so called model democracy crumbled into military anarchy,
as Sudan's model democracy had done in the late 1980s.
Of the world's hundred largest economies, fifty-one are not
countries but corporations. While the 200 largest corporations
employ less than three fourths of one percent of the world's work
force, they account for 28 percent of world economic activity.
The 500 largest corporations account for 70 percent of world trade.
Corporations are like the feudal domains that evolved into nation-states;
they are nothing less than the vanguard of a new Darwinian organization
of politics. Because they are in the forefront of real globalization
while the overwhelming majority of the world's inhabitants are
still rooted in local terrain, corporations will be free for a
few decades to leave behind the social and environmental wreckage
they create-abruptly closing a factory here in order to open an
unsafe facility with a cheaper work force there. Ultimately, as
technological innovations continue to accelerate and the world's
middle classes come closer together, corporations may well become
more responsible to the cohering global community and less amoral
in the course of their evolution toward new political and cultural
forms.
For instance, ABB Asea Brown Boveri Ltd. is a $36 billion-a-year
multinational corporation divided into 1,300 companies in 140
countries; no one national group accounts for more than 20 percent
of its employees. ABB's chief executive officer, Percy Barnevik,
recently told an interviewer that this diversity is so that ABB
can develop its own "global ABB culture-you might say an
umbrella culture." Barnevik explains that his best managers
are moved around periodically so that they and their families
can develop "global personalities" by living and growing
up in different countries. ABB management teams, moreover, are
never composed of employees from any one country. Barnevik says
that this encourages a "cross-cultural glue." Unlike
the multiculturalism of the left, which masks individual deficiencies
through collective-that is, ethnic or racial-self-esteem, a multinational
corporation like ABB has created a diverse multicultural environment
in which individuals rise or fall completely on their own merits.
Like the hybrid regimes of the present and future, such an evolving
corporate community can bear an eerie resemblance to the oligarchies
of the ancient world. "Decentralization goes hand in hand
with central monitoring," Barnevik says. The level of social
development required by democracy as it is known in the West has
existed in only a minority of places-and even there only during
certain periods of history. We are entering a troubling transition,
and the irony is that while we preach our version of democracy
abroad, it slips away from us at home.
The Shrinking Domain of "Politics"
I put special emphasis on corporations because of the true
nature of politics: who does and who doesn't have power. To categorize
accurately the political system of a given society, one must define
the significant elements of power within it. Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis knew this instinctively, which is why he railed
against corporate monopolies. Of course, the influence that corporations
wield over government and the economy is so vast and obvious that
the point needs no elaboration. But there are other, more covert
forms of emerging corporate power.
The number of residential communities with defended perimeters
that have been built by corporations went from 1,000 in the early
1960s to more than 80,000 by the mid 1980s, with continued dramatic
increases in the 1990s. ("Gated communities" are not
an American invention. They are an import from Latin America,
where deep social divisions in places like Rio de Janeiro and
Mexico City make them necessary for the middle class.) Then there
are malls, with their own rules and security forces, as opposed
to public streets; private health clubs as opposed to public play
grounds; incorporated suburbs with strict zoning; and other mundane
aspects of daily existence in which-perhaps without realizing
it, because the changes have been so gradual-we opt out of the
public sphere and the "social contract" for the sake
of a protected setting. Dennis Judd, an urban-affairs expert at
the University of Missouri at St. Louis, told me recently, "It's
nonsense to think that Americans are individualists. Deep down
we are a nation of herd animals: micelike conformists who will
lay at our doorstep many of our rights if someone tells us that
we won't have to worry about crime and our property values are
secure. We have always put up with restrictions inside a corporation
which we would never put up with in the public sphere. But what
many do not realize is that life within some sort of corporation
is what the future will increasingly be about."
Indeed, a number of American cities are re-emerging as Singapores,
with corporate enclaves that are dedicated to global business
and defended by private security firms adjacent to heavily zoned
suburbs. For instance, in my travels I have looked for St. Louis
and Atlanta and not found them. I found only hotels and corporate
offices with generic architecture, "nostalgic" tourist
bubbles, zoned suburbs, and bleak urban wastelands; there was
nothing distinctive that I could label "St. Louis" or
"Atlanta." Last year's Olympics in Atlanta will most
likely be judged by future historians as the first of the postmodern
era, because of the use of social facades to obscure fragmentation.
Peace and racial harmony were continually proclaimed to be Olympic
themes-even though whites and blacks in Atlanta live in separate
enclaves and the downtown is a fortress of office blocks whose
streets empty at dusk. During the games a virtual army was required
to protect visitors from terrorism, as at previous Olympics, and
also from random crime. All this seems normal. It is both wonderful
and frightening how well we adapt.
Universities, too, are being redefined by corporations. I
recently visited Omaha, where the corporate community made it
possible for the Omaha branch of the University of Nebraska to
build an engineering school even after the Board of Regents vetoed
the project. Local corporations, particularly First Data Resources,
wanted the school, so they worked with the Omaha branch of the
university to finance what became less a school than a large information
science and engineering complex. "This is the future,"
said the chancellor of the Omaha campus, Del Weber. "Universities
will have to become entrepreneurs, working with corporations on
curriculum [emphasis mine] and other matters, or they will die."
The California state university system, in particular the San
Diego campus, is perhaps the best example of corporate-academic
synergy, in which a school rises in prestige because its curriculum
has practical applications for nearby technology firms.
Corporations, which are anchored neither to nations nor to
communities, have created strip malls, edge cities, and Disneyesque
tourist bubbles. Developments are not necessarily bad: they provide
low prices, convenience, efficient work forces, and, in the case
of tourist bubbles, safety. We need big corporations. Our society
has reached a level of social and technological complexity at
which goods and services must be produced for a price and to a
standard that smaller businesses cannot manage. We should also
recognize, though, that the architectural reconfiguration of our
cities and towns has been an undemocratic event- with decisions
in effect handed down from above by an assembly of corporate experts.
"The government of man will be replaced by the administration
of things," the Enlightenment French philosopher Henri de
Saint-Simon prophesied. We should worry that experts will channel
our very instincts and thereby control them to some extent. For
example, while the government fights drug abuse, often with pathetic
results, pharmaceutical corporations have worked through the government
and political parties to receive sanction for drugs such as stimulants
and anti-depressants, whose consciousness-altering effects, it
could be argued, are as great as those of outlawed drugs.
The more appliances that middle-class existence requires,
the more influence their producers have over the texture of our
lives. Of course, the computer in some ways enhances the power
of the individual, but it also depletes our individuality. A degree
of space and isolation is required for a healthy sense of self,
which may be threatened by the constant stream of other people's
opinions on computer networks.
Democratic governance, at the federal, state, and local levels,
goes on. But its ability to affect our lives is limited. The growing
piles of our material possessions make personal life more complex
and leave less time for communal matters. And as communities become
liberated from geography, as well as more specialized culturally
and electronically, they will increasingly fall outside the realm
of traditional governance. Democracy loses meaning if both rulers
and ruled cease to be part of a community tied to a specific territory.
In this historical transition phase, lasting perhaps a century
or more, in which globalization has begun but is not complete
and loyalties are highly confused, civil society will be harder
to maintain. How and when we vote during the next hundred years
may be a minor detail for historians.
True, there are strong similarities between now and a century
ago. In the 1880s and 1890s America experienced great social and
economic upheaval. The combination of industrialization and urbanization
shook the roots of religious and family life: sects sprouted,
racist Populists ranted, and single women, like Theodore Dreiser's
Sister Carrie, went to work in filthy factories. Racial tensions
hardened as the Jim Crow system took hold across the South. "Gadgets"
like the light bulb and the automobile brought an array of new
choices and stresses. "The city was so big, now, that people
disappeared into it unnoticed," Booth Tarkington lamented
in The Magnificent Ambersons.
A hundred years ago millionaires' mansions arose beside slums.
The crass accumulation of wealth by a relatively small number
of people gave the period its name-the Gilded Age, after a satire
by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner about financial and political
malfeasance. Around the turn of the century ]2 percent of a]]
American house holds contro]led about 86 percent of the country's
wealth. But there is a difference, and not just one of magnitude.
The fortunes made from the 1 870s through the 1 890s by John D.
Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, J. P. Morgan, and others were American
fortunes, anchored to a specific geographic space. The Gilded
Age millionaires financed an economy of sca]e to fit the vast
]andscape that Abraham Lincoln had secured by unifying the nation
in the 1860s. These mi]lionaires funded ]ibraries and universities
and founded symphony orchestras and historical societies to consolidate
their own civilization in the making. Today's fortunes are being
made in a globa] economic environment in which an affluent g]obal
civi]ization and power structure are being forged even as a ]arge
stratum of our society remains rooted in place. A few decades
hence it may be hard to define an "American" city. Even
J. P. Morgan was limited by the borders of the nation-state. But
in the future who, or what, will limit the likes of Disney chairman
Michael Eisner? The UN? Eisner and those like him are not just
representatives of the "free" market. Neither the Founders
nor any of the early modern philosophers ever envisioned that
the free market would lead to the concentration of power and resources
that many corporate executives already embody. Whereas the liberal
mistake is to think that there is a program or policy to alleviate
every problem in the wor]d, the conservative flaw is to be vigilant
against concentrations of power in govern ment only-not in the
private sector, where power can be wielded more secretly and sometimes
more dangerously.
Umpire Regimes
This rise of corporate power occurs more readily as the masses
become more indifferent and the elite less accountable. Material
possessions not only focus people to ward private and away from
communal life but also encourage docility. The more possessions
one has, the more compromises one will make to protect them. The
ancient Greeks said that the slave is someone who is intent on
filling his belly, which can also mean someone who is intent on
safeguarding his possessions. Aristophanes and Euripides, the
late-eighteenth-century Scottish philosopher Adam Ferguson, and
Tocqueville in the nineteenth century all warned that material
prosperity would breed servility and withdrawal, turning people
into, in Tocqueville's words, "industrious sheep."
In moderate doses, apathy is not necessarily harmful. I have
lived and traveled in countries with both high voter turnouts
and unstable politics; the low voter turnouts in the United States
do not by themselves worry me. The philosopher James Harrington
observed that the very indifference of most people allows for
a calm and healthy political climate. Apathy, after all, often
means that the political situation is healthy enough to be ignored.
The last thing America needs is more voters-particularly badly
educated and alienated ones-with a passion for politics. But when
voter turnout decreases to around 50 percent at the same time
that the middle class is spending astounding sums in gambling
casinos and state lotteries, joining private health clubs, and
using large amounts of stimulants and anti-depressants, one can
legitimately be concerned about the state of American society.
I recently went to a basketball game at the University of
Arizona. It was just a scrimmage, not even a varsity game. Yet
the stadium was jammed, and three groups of cheer leaders performed.
Season tickets were almost impossible to obtain, even before the
team won the national championship. Donating $10,000 to $15,000
to the university puts one in a good position to accumulate enough
points to be eligible for a season ticket, though someone could
donate up to $100,000 and still not qualify. I have heard that
which spouse gets to keep tickets can be a primary issue in Tucson
divorce cases. I noticed that almost everyone in the stands was
white; almost everyone playing was black. Gladiators in Rome were
almost always of racial or ethnic groups different from the Romans.
"There may be so little holding these southwestern communities
together that a basketball team is all there is," a Tucson
newspaper editor told me. "It's a sports team, a symphony
orchestra, and a church rolled into one." Since neither Tucson
nor any other southwestern city with a big state university can
find enough talent locally, he pointed out, community self-esteem
becomes a matter of which city can find the largest number of
talented blacks from far away to represent it.
We have become voyeurs and escapists. Many of us don't play
sports but love watching great athletes with great physical attributes.
The fact that basketball and football and baseball have become
big corporate business has only increased the popularity of spectator
sports. Basketball in particular-so fluid, and with the players
in revealing shorts and tank tops-provides the artificial excitement
that mass existence "against instinct," as the philosopher
Bertrand Russell labeled our lives, requires.
Take the new kind of professional fighting, called "extreme
fighting," that has been drawing sellout crowds across the
country. Combining boxing, karate, and wrestling, it has nothing
fake about it-blood really flows. City and state courts have tried,
often unsuccessfully, to stop it. The spectators interviewed in
a CNN documentary on the new sport all appeared to be typical
lower-middle and middle-class people, many of whom brought young
children to the fights. Asked why they came, they said that they
wanted to "see blood." The mood of the Colosseum goes
together with the age of the corporation, which offers entertainment
in place of values. The Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz provides
the definitive view on why Americans degrade themselves with mass
culture: "Today man believes that there is nothing in him,
so he accepts anything, even if he knows it to be bad, in order
to find himself at one with others, in order not to be alone."
Of course, it is because people find so little in themselves that
they fill their world with celebrities. The masses avoid important
national and international news because much of it is tragic,
even as they show an unlimited appetite for the details of Princess
Diana's death. This willingness to give up self and responsibility
is the sine qua non for tyranny.
The classicist Sir Moses Finley ended his austere and penetrating
work Politics in the Ancient World (1983) with these words:
"The ideology of a ruling class is of little use unless
it is accepted by those who are being ruled, and so it was to
an extraordinary degree in Rome. Then, when the ideology began
to disintegrate within the elite itself, the consequence was not
to broaden the political liberty among the citizenry but, on the
contrary, to destroy it for everyone."
So what about our ruling class?
I was an expatriate for many years. Most expatriates I knew
had utopian liberal beliefs that meant little, since few of them
had much of a real stake in any nation. Their patriotism was purely
nostalgic: a French friend would be come tearful when her national
anthem was played, but whenever she returned to France, she complained
nonstop about the French. Increasingly, though, one can be an
expatriate without living abroad. One can have Oriental rugs,
foreign cuisines, eclectic tastes, exposure to foreign languages,
friends overseas with whom one's life increasingly intertwines,
and special schools for the kids-all at home. Resident expatriatism,
or something resembling it, could become the new secular religion
of the upper middle and upper classes, fostered by communications
technology. Just as religion was replaced by nationalism at the
end of the Middle Ages, at the end of modern times nationalism
might gradually be replaced by a combination of traditional religion,
spiritualism, patriotism directed toward the planet rather than
a specific country, and assorted other organized emotions. Resident
expatriates might constitute an elite with limited geographic
loyalty beyond their local communities, which provide them with
a convenient and aesthetically pleasing environment.
An elite with little loyalty to the state and a mass society
fond of gladiator entertainments form a society in which corporate
Leviathans rule and democracy is hollow. James Madison in The
Federalist considered a comparable situation. Madison envisioned
an enormously spread-out nation, but he never envisioned a modern
network of transportation that would allow us psychologically
to inhabit the same national community. Thus his vision of a future
United States was that of a vast geographic space with governance
but without patriotism, in which the state would be a mere "umpire,"
refereeing among competing interests. Regional, religious, and
communal self-concern would bring about overall stability. This
concept went untested, because a cohesive American identity and
culture did take root. But as Americans enter a global community,
and as class and racial divisions solidify, Madison's concept
is relevant anew.
There is something postmodern about this scenario, with its
blend of hollow governance and fragmentation, and something ancient,
too. Because of suburbanization, American communities will be
increasingly segregated by race and class. The tendency both toward
compromise and toward trusting institutions within a given community
will be high, as in small and moderately sized European countries
today, or as in ancient Greek city-states. Furthermore, prosperous
suburban sprawls such as western St. Louis and western Omaha,
and high-technology regions such as the Tucson-Phoenix corridor,
North Carolina's Research Triangle, and the Portland-Seattle-Vancouver
area will compete with one another and with individual cities
and states for overseas markets, as North America becomes a more
peaceful and productive version of chaotic, warring city state
Greece.
A continental regime must continue to function, because America's
edge in information warfare requires it, both to maintain and
to lead a far-flung empire of sorts, as the Athenians did during
the Peloponnesian War. But trouble awaits us, if only because
the "triumph" of democracy in the developing world will
cause great upheavals before many places settle into more practical-and,
it is to be hoped, benign-hybrid regimes. In the Middle East,
for instance, countries like Syria, Iraq, and the Gulf sheikhdoms-with
artificial borders, rising populations, and rising numbers of
working-age youths-will not instantly become stable democracies
once their absolute dictators and medieval ruling families pass
from the scene. As in the early centuries of Christianity, there
will be a mess.
Given the surging power of corporations, the gladiator culture
of the masses, and the ability of the well-off to be partly disengaged
from their own countries, what will democracy under an umpire
regime be like?
The Return of Oligarchy?
Surprisingly, the Founders admired the military regime of
Sparta. Only in this century has Sparta been seen as the forerunner
of a totalitarian state. Why shouldn't men like Madison and George
Washington have admired Sparta? Its division of power among two
Kings, the elders, and the ephors ("overseers") approximated
the system of checks and balances that the Founders desired in
order to prevent the emergence of another Cromwell. Of course,
Sparta, like Athens, was a two-tiered system, with an oligarchic
element that debated and decided issues and a mass-helots ("serfs")
in Sparta, and slaves and immigrants in Athens-that had few or
no rights. Whether Sparta was a monarchy, an oligarchy, or a limited
democracy-and whether Athens was oligarchic or democratic-still
depends on one's viewpoint. According to Aristotle, "Whether
the few or the many rule is accidental to oligarchy and democracy-the
rich are few everywhere, the poor many." The real difference,
he wrote, is that "oligarchy is to the advantage of the rich,
democracy to the advantage of the poor." By "poor"
Aristotle meant laborers, landowning peasants, artisans, and so
on essentially, the middle class and below.
Is it not conceivable that corporations will, like the rulers
of both Sparta and Athens, project power to the advantage of the
well-off while satisfying the twenty-first century servile populace
with the equivalent of bread and circuses? In other words, the
category of politics we live with may depend more on power relationships
and the demeanor of our society than on whether we continue to
hold elections. Just as Cambodia was never really democratic,
despite what the State Department and the UN told us, in the future
we may not be democratic, despite what the government and media
increasingly dominated by corporations tell us.
Indeed, the differences between oligarchy and democracy and
between ancient democracy and our own could be far subtler than
we think. Modern democracy exists within a thin band of social
and economic conditions, which include flexible hierarchies that
allow people to move up and down the ladder. Instead of clear-cut
separations between classes there are many gray shades, with most
people bunched in the middle. Democracy is a fraud in many poor
countries outside this narrow band: Africans want a better life
and instead have been given the right to vote. As new and intimidating
forms of economic and social stratification appear in a world
based increasingly on the ability to handle and analyze large
quantities of information, a new politics might emerge for us,
too-less like the kind envisioned by progressive reformers and
more like the pragmatic hybrid regimes that are bringing prosperity
to developing countries.
The classicist Sir Moses Finley has noted that what re ally
separated the rulers from the ruled in the ancient world was literacy:
the illiterate masses were subject to the elite's interpretation
of documents. Analogous gulfs between rulers and ruled may soon
emerge, not only because of differing abilities to process information
and to master technology but also because of globalization itself.
Already, barely literate Mexicans on the U.S. border, working
in dangerous, Dickensian conditions to produce our VCRs, jeans,
and toasters, earn less than 50 cents an hour, with no rights
or benefits. Is that Western democracy or ancient Greek-style
oligarchy?
As the size of the U.S. population and the complexity of American
life spill beyond the traditional national community, creating
a new world of city-states and suburbs, the distance will grow
between the citizens of the new city states and the bureaucratic
class of overseers in Washington. Those overseers will manage
an elite volunteer military armed with information-age weapons,
in a world made chaotic by the spread of democracy and its attendant
neoauthoritarian heresies. We prevented the worst excesses of
a "military-industrial complex" by openly fearing it,
as President Dwight Eisenhower told us to do. It may be equally
wise to fear a high-tech military complex today. Precisely because
the technological future in North America will provide so much
market and individual freedom, this productive anarchy will require
the supervision of tyrannies-or else there will be no justice
for any one. Liberty, after all, is inseparable from authority,
as Henry Kissinger observed in A World Restored: Metternich, Castlereagh,
and the Problems of Peace 1812-1822 (1957). A hybrid regime may
await us all. The future of the Third World may finally be our
own. And that brings us to a sober realization. If democracy,
the crowning political achievement of the West, is gradually being
transfigured, in part because of technology, then the West will
suffer the same fate as earlier civilizations. Just as Rome believed
it was giving final expression to the republican ideal of the
Greeks, and just as medieval Kings believed they were giving final
expression to the Roman ideal, we believe, as the early Christians
did, that we are bringing freedom and a better life to the rest
of humankind. But as the nineteenth-century Russian liberal intellectual
Alexander Herzen wrote, "Modern Western thought will pass
into history and be incorporated in it . . . just as our body
will pass into the composition of grass, of sheep, of cutlets,
and of men." I do not mean to say that the United States
is in decline. On the contrary, at the end of the twentieth century
we are the very essence of creativity and dynamism. We are poised
to transform ourselves into something perhaps quite different
from what we imagine.
Democracy
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