Susan McWilliams Barndt is professor of politics at 麻豆影视 and author of The American Road Trip and American Political Thought. She teaches and writes on political theory, the history of political thought, and politics and literature. This is the fourth in an occasional series with Pomona faculty on issues important to voters in this year鈥檚 elections.
We hear it frequently said that 鈥渄emocracy is on the ballot鈥 this fall. What signposts would point that direction?
Well, you鈥檙e talking to someone who believes that democracy is always on the ballot. Every election puts people鈥檚 lives and civil rights at stake.
But I also believe that the ballot鈥攖he mere act of voting鈥攊s always insufficient for achieving democracy. I鈥檓 a fan of the saying that when it comes to democracy, voting is the period at the end of a very long sentence. Democracy requires cultural and institutional support. Democracy requires some degree of social trust, or at least mutual toleration. Democracy requires certain habits of mind and heart, and it requires faith and moral commitment.
Political scientists like me have been worried about the state of democracy in America for a long time鈥攕ince long before I became a political scientist. And that鈥檚 for lots of reasons: from the rise of an administrative state, to the collapse of unions, to the perpetuation of racial discrimination, to the decline of bowling-league membership (really!), to the weakening of political parties, to the collapse of campaign finance regulation. Everything happening in this election is somehow connected to those broader antidemocratic forces, and others.
So I think it鈥檚 a bad news/good news/bad news/good news situation. The bad news is that this election鈥攏o matter how it turns out鈥攚on鈥檛 be the single thing that saves democracy in America. The good news is that this election鈥攏o matter how it turns out鈥攚on鈥檛 be the single thing that ruins democracy in America.
That brings us back to the bad news department: Democracy is on tenterhooks in the United States, and for reasons that go much deeper than this election.
But let me offer one last bit of good news. This follows what the English author G.K. Chesterton said after he visited the United States 100 years ago. Chesterton said that in America, he saw an 鈥渁rmy of actualities鈥 opposed the ideal of democracy. But, Chesterton said, he saw no ideal opposed to the ideal of democracy in America. And he thought that in the end, that fact would probably matter the most.
Today, a huge majority of Americans in surveys鈥攕omething like 80 percent鈥攕ay they believe that democracy is under threat. But just as large a majority of Americans say they still believe in democracy. At least for now, whatever else we disagree about, I think it鈥檚 important to remember that we agree on that.
You research and write about American political thought. Are today鈥檚 political currents updated packaging of old ideas or something new?
Mark Twain once wrote that you can鈥檛 stop history from repeating itself because for better and for worse, human character is what it is. I think that鈥檚 true as a general rule, and it鈥檚 certainly true in American political thought.
Students in my American Political Thought course are always surprised (once they get beyond the unfamiliarity of 17th or 18th century writing style) by how directly the course readings hit them. You read great American thinkers like Anne Bradstreet, Mercy Otis Warren, Lemuel Haynes, William Apess, W.E.B. DuBois鈥擨 could go on and on鈥攁nd it鈥檚 uncanny. They are asking relevant questions and making relevant critiques and imagining relevant alternatives. Realizing that can really change your political perspective.
Many parts of the world seem to be tacking to the right. How does your study of political theory and the history of political thought help us understand this phenomenon?
At least since Plato, political theorists have noticed that when people feel overwhelmed and anxious, we tend to yearn for a strong authority to come in and fix things. Because as anyone who鈥檚 suffered a panic attack knows, the feeling of anxiety is terrible. You鈥檇 bring in any force you could to stop it.
We live in an overwhelming and anxiety-producing moment. Ours is a time of massive scale, impersonal power, tremendous technological change, unstable social norms and multiplying inequalities鈥攏ot to mention a deteriorating planet. It鈥檚 a lot for all of us. One of my students鈥 favorite adjectives right now is 鈥渃haotic.鈥
Under such anxious conditions, many people are going to yearn for strong, decisive and even authoritarian rule. The only way to fight that authoritarian impulse is to fight the anxiety that produces it. I recommend reading Astra Taylor鈥檚 The Age of Insecurity, which is really helpful for thinking about this stuff.
Does the history of political thought provide any rays of hope for our age of extreme polarization?
In his recent book Begin Again, my own teacher Eddie Glaude tells a story about when a reporter went to visit James Baldwin in Istanbul in about 1970. Baldwin was a mess at that point. He had gone to Istanbul to hide out during a time of political and personal crisis.
Somehow it comes to pass that the reporter asks Baldwin about hope. And Baldwin says, even though he鈥檚 barely holding onto the cliff鈥檚 edge, 鈥淗ope is invented every day.鈥
It never gets better than James Baldwin: 鈥淗ope is invented every day.鈥 The history of political thought鈥攖he history of our species鈥攖estifies not only to our terrific capacities for stupidity and terribleness, but also to our terrific capacities for creativity, bravery and love.
Glaude says, when he鈥檚 recounting that Baldwin story, 鈥淲e鈥檙e not only disasters; we鈥檙e also miracles.鈥 Amen to that. In this age when many people are too cool or too cynical to believe it, I insist we believe it: We are miracles, too.