Plato said that democracies inevitably lead to moral decay because as they
indulge more in fake freedom, people’s values deteriorate and become more
childish and self-centered, resulting in the citizenry turning on the democratic
system itself. Once
childish values take over, people no longer want to
negotiate for power, they don’t want to bargain with other groups and other
religions, they don’t want to endure pain for the sake of greater freedom or
prosperity. What they want instead is a strong leader to come make everything
right at a moment’s notice. They want a tyrant.
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There’s a common saying in the United States that “freedom is not free.”
The saying is usually used in reference to the military and wars fought and
won to protect the values of the country. It’s a way of reminding people that,
hey, this shit didn’t just magically happen—thousands of people were killed
and/or died for us to sit here and sip overpriced mocha Frappuccinos and say
whatever the fuck we want. It’s a reminder that the basic human rights we
enjoy (free speech, freedom of religion, freedom of the press)
were earned
through a sacrifice against some external force.
But people forget that these rights are also earned through sacrifice
against some
internal force. Democracy can exist only when you are willing
to tolerate views that oppose your own, when you’re willing to give up some
things you might want for the sake of a safe and healthy community, when
you’re willing to compromise and accept that sometimes things don’t go your
way.
Put another way: democracy requires a citizenry of strong maturity and
character.
Over the last couple of decades, people seem to have confused their basic
human rights with not experiencing any discomfort. People want freedom to
express themselves, but they don’t want to have
to deal with views that may
upset or offend them in some way. They want freedom of enterprise, but they
don’t want to pay taxes to support the legal machinery that makes that
freedom possible. They want equality, but they don’t want to accept that
equality requires that everybody experience the same pain, not that everybody
experience the same pleasure.
Freedom itself demands discomfort. It demands dissatisfaction. Because
the freer a society becomes, the more each person will be forced to reckon
and compromise with views and lifestyles and ideas that conflict with their
own. The
lower our tolerance for pain, the more we indulge in fake freedoms,
the less we will be able to uphold the virtues necessary to allow a free,
democratic society to function.
And that’s scary. Because without democracy, we’re
really fucked. No,
really—empirically, life just gets so much worse without democratic
representation, in almost every way.
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And it’s not because democracy is so
great. It’s more that a functioning democracy fucks things up less often and
less severely than any other form of government. Or, as Churchill famously
once said, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except all the
others.”
The whole reason the world became civilized and everyone stopped
slaughtering one another because of their funny hats is because modern social
institutions effectively mitigated the destructive forces of hope.
Democracy is
one of the few religions that manages to allow other religions to live
harmoniously alongside it and within it. But when those social institutions are
corrupted by the constant need to please people’s Feeling Brains, when people
become distrustful and lose faith in the democratic system’s ability to self-
correct, then it’s back to the shit show of religious warfare.
31
And with the
ever-advancing march of technological innovations, each cycle of religious
war potentially wreaks more destruction and devastates more human life.
32
Plato believed societies were cyclical, bouncing back and forth between
freedom and tyranny, relative equality and great inequality. It’s
pretty clear
after the past twenty-five hundred years that this isn’t exactly true. But there
are patterns of political conflict throughout history, and you do see the same
religious themes pop up again and again—the radical hierarchy of master
morality versus the radical equality of slave morality, the emergence of
tyrannical leaders versus the diffuse power of democratic institutions, the
struggle of adult virtues against childish extremism. While the “isms” have
changed throughout the centuries, the same hope-driven human impulses have
been behind each movement. And while each subsequent religion believes
it
is the ultimate,
capital T “Truth” to unite humanity under a single, harmonious
banner, so far, each of them has only proven to be partial and incomplete.