Beyond the democratic state: anti-authoritarian interventions in democratic theory



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beyondTheDemocraticStateAntiAuthoritarianInterventionsIn

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CONTENTS 
INTRODUCTION: DEMOCRACY AGAINST DEMOCRACY. ...............................1 
CHAPTER 
I.
RECLAIMING LIBERTARIANISM .....................................................33 
II. 
THE INDIAN AGAINST LEVIATHAN ...............................................64 
III. THE DEMOCRATIC POTENTIAL OF DIRECT ACTION ...............103 
IV. NETWORK DEMOCRACY ................................................................151 
CONCLUSION: DEMOCRACY AS THE DISPERSON OF POWER. ..................200 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. .....................................................................................................213 



INTRODUCTION 
 
DEMOCRACY AGAINST DEMOCRACY 
 
“‘Democracy’ was once a word of the people, a critical word, a revolutionary word. It has been 
stolen by those who would rule over the people, to add legitimacy to their rule. It is time to take 
it back, to restore it to its critical and radical power.”
-
C. Douglas Lummis (1996, 15) 
“Nuestros sueños no caben en sus urnas” 
(“Our dreams do not fit in their ballot boxes.”) 
-
Slogan from Argentina’s 2001 rebellion 
I. Ambivalence and Ambiguity 
We are deeply ambivalent about democracy today. On the one hand, democracy has 
never enjoyed such great global popularity. There are more democratic governments in 
existence today than at any previous historical moment. Moreover, the democratic ideal has 
been an important source of inspiration for the wave of rebellions known as the Arab Spring that 
began in late 2010 in Tunisia and spread across much of North Africa and the Middle East the 
following year. Indeed, the Arab world – often thought to be among the least hospitable places 
in the world for democracy – has recently been a hotbed of democratic activity. This wave of 
protests and occupations then moved beyond the Arab world and swept across Europe and
finally, the United States throughout 2011: the Arab Spring became the American Fall. 
While the motivations for the occupations varied – from opposition to long-standing 
dictatorial regimes in North Africa, to economic austerity in Greece, Spain and the United 
Kingdom, to a growing concentration of economic and political power in the United States – it is 
noteworthy that the form of resistance employed in each place bore striking similarities. From 
Cairo to Barcelona to New York and Oakland, protesters sought to occupy public spaces and 
hold them for an extended period of time. The tactical strengths of such a strategy were clear: 
maintaining a visible and accessible space provided an easy way for large numbers of people to 



engage with the protest and, simultaneously, allowed momentum to build through escalating 
tension with police and city officials. It is no surprise then that this tactical innovation, which 
garnered so much attention in Tahrir Square, was duplicated in cities across Europe and the U.S.
Beyond its tactical strengths, though, the public occupations provided a highly visible testing 
ground for alternative models of democracy and modes of citizen action. Underlying both the 
Indignados
movement in Spain and the Occupy Wall Street movement in the United States, was 
an effort to radicalize and reinvigorate democratic practice. There was, as the Spanish put it, a 
call for 
¡Democracia Real YA!
: Real Democracy NOW!. Campaign slogans aside, the actual 
practice of decision-making in many occupations – characterized by such mechanisms as the 
“general assembly” and “the people’s mic” – illustrate this radically democratic impulse, which 
used the occupations as a site to experiment with direct and participatory forms of democracy.
In short, democracy has been and continues to be an incredibly inspiring ideal. 
On the other hand, though, there are very real, and quite stark, concerns about the reality 
of actually-existing democratic governments. In Egypt, for example, while 66% of people agree 
that “democracy is preferable to any other form of government,” 56% percent are “dissatisfied” 
with the way democracy is working in their country (“Egyptians Increasingly Glum” 2013).
More striking, I think, are the perspectives of citizens in the so-called “consolidated 
democracies” – that is, democracies that are thought to be highly functioning and stable.
Consider the United States. Fully 80% of Americans says they “trust the government in 
Washington” “some of the time” or “never.” In contrast, only 19% of Americans say the trust 
the government “just about always” or “most of the time” (“Public Trust in Government: 1958-
2013” 2013). Similarly, 69% of Americans say that “government is run for the benefit of a few 
big interests,” whereas only 29% say that “government is run for the benefit of all” (“The ANES 



Guide to Public Opinion and Electoral Behavior” 2008a). Finally, 60% of Americans agree with 
the statement “public officials don’t care what people like me think,” while only 23% disagree 
with that statement (“The ANES Guide to Public Opinion and Electoral Behavior” 2008b).
These numbers should be very troubling. Citizens are highly skeptical of our democratic 
government. Indeed, in this era of partisanship, the fact that we have serious doubts about our 
democracy and little say over our government seems to be one of the few things that a large 
majority of Americans agree about.
As an activist, I have witnessed and experienced this ambivalence first-hand. My first 
experiences with protests and social movements came during the early 2000s as part of the alter-
globalization movement in the Washington, D.C. area. The international institutions whose 
summits we protested – the World Trade Organization (WTO), the International Monetary Fund 
(IMF), the World Bank, and the G8 among others – were not only propagating poverty and 
privatization, but were fundamentally anti-democratic. I still have a shirt I made for an anti-
IMF/World Bank protest that reads, simply “Globalize Democracy.” If the primary ills of 
neoliberal economic globalization could be traced to its unelected, unaccountable, and 
unrepresentative institutions, then the solution was to democratize them. And, yet, at the same 
time, it was the police and politicians in supposedly highly-functioning democratic governments 
that suppressed these movements through the use of force.
More recently, when citizens have challenged growing economic inequality and the 
corporate domination of government, as they have in aforementioned 

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