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April 16, 2005
Why
American Politics Has Gone Nuts
by Tibor R. Machan, Ph.D.
Have
you noticed? There doesn't appear to be any room
for civil discourse in politics these days. There
is no issue about which the disputing parties
merely argue -- the other side just has to be
vicious, lying, deceiving, cheating, wishing simply
to hurt some people, moved by mendacity while we
are, of course, pure of heart. There isn't a
discussion of the merits, the pros and the cons,
only of who is evil, who is not.
Take the social security reform issue. Bush
supporters see their opponents as caring nothing
about the upcoming plight of young people, while
his opponents must be uncaring toward old people.
That seems to be the essence of it now. Or the war
in Iraq. It isn't about whether the policy is
sound, but what Bush and Cheney must be gaining
from it, or why opponents must all be Saddamites,
lovers of a tyrant.
Well, I have an idea why things have gotten to
be so acrimonious in American politics. It concerns
the utter corruption of the nature of American
government.
When America's founders embarked upon
establishing the country, they laid out a vision
about its basic ideals and ideas. They so stated
this in the Declaration of Independence. The
country was to be based on certain fundamental
principles about human nature, namely, that
everyone has, simply as a human being, certain
unalienable rights -- to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness, among others -- and that it
is government's function to secure these rights.
The rest is all details -- important ones,
admittedly, but details nonetheless. It's about how
to do this basic task, not about what is to be
done. That latter issue had been largely settled --
government was supposed to deal with crime and
foreign aggression, little else. For this it has to
have certain powers which were spelled out in the
Constitution but otherwise it was the people --
you, I, and everyone else in the country who was to
be free to do what he or she chooses and all our
problems were to be solved by us, not the
government, which had its task set: keeping the
peace.
Now, admittedly, this is to look at the matter a
bit simply. But still the picture is basically
right. The Founders wanted a free country with a
government of strictly limited powers for the
purpose of securing our rights to be free to do
what we needed to do in our highly diverse
lives.
Already back then it was clear that America is a
country with a highly diverse citizenry. In 1798 a
young man, J. M. Holley, wrote to his brother that
"the diversity of dress, manners, & customs is
greater in America, than in any other country in
the world, the reason of which, is very obvious. It
is considered as a country where people enjoy
liberty and independence; of course, persons from
allmost every nation in the world, come here as to
an assylum from oppression; Each brings with him
prejudices in favor of the habits of his own
countrymen...." (Quoted in "Endpaper," The New
York Times Book Review, November 5, 1995, p.
46).
So what is national politics to be about in such
a place? It is, to quote that failed presidential
candidate Michael Dukakis, to be "about
competence," that's all. Who are to administer the
system best? It wasn't to be about whether the
country is to go Right or Left or Christian or
Muslim or socialist or capitalist. None of that was
to be debated because that debate was over once the
fundamentals were laid out and country had been
founded.
Alas, this is now all gone. The party politics
we have is not about fielding candidates for a
specific job but about whether America will have
this or that kind of government -- big, small,
democratic, welfare statist, liberal, conservative
or whatever.
It wasn't supposed to be this way at all. But
because now the dispute is about what kind of
country we should have, party politics has
degenerated into combat, with hostile camps
peddling their respective conceptions of society
and dismissing opponents as enemies instead of
treating them as contestants. And that is not what
American politics set out to be, not in its
essence.
Machan
Archive
Copyright © 2005 Tibor Machan and reprinted
with permission.
Tibor Machan holds the Freedom Communications
Professorship of Free Enterprise and Business
Ethics at the Argyros School of Business &
Economics, Chapman University, CA. A Research
Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, he is author of 20+ books, most
recently, Putting
Humans First: Why We Are Nature's Favorite.
More
Books by Dr. Machan in The Academy
Bookstore
Dr. Machan can be reached at: machan@chapman.edu
and machatr@home.com
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