Democracy is a most
unnatural act. People have no innate democratic instinct; we are not
born yearning to set aside our own desires in favor of the majority’s.
Democracy is, instead, an acquired habit.
Like most habits,
democratic behavior develops slowly over time, through constant
repetition. For two centuries, the United States was distinguished by
its mania for democracy: From early childhood, Americans learned to be
citizens by creating, joining, and participating in democratic
organizations. But in recent decades, Americans have fallen out of
practice, or even failed to acquire the habit of democracy in the first
place.
The
results have been catastrophic. As the procedures that once conferred
legitimacy on organizations have grown alien to many Americans, contempt
for democratic institutions has risen. In 2016, a presidential
candidate who scorned established norms rode that contempt to the
Republican nomination, drawing his core support from Americans who
seldom participate in the rituals of democracy.
American
government’s most obvious problems—from its dysfunctional legislature
to Donald Trump himself—are merely signs of this underlying decay. The
political system’s previous strength and resilience flowed from
Americans’ anomalously high rates of participation in democratically
governed organizations, most of them apolitical. There is no easy fix
for our current predicament; simply voting Trump out of office won’t
suffice. To stop the rot afflicting American government, Americans are
going to have to get back in the habit of democracy.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/10/losing-the-democratic-habit/568336/
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