Preserving Democracy: What The Founding Fathers Knew, What We Have Forgotten, & How It Threatens Democracy
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Like an aging monument, democracy itself is crumbling. An ever-expanding government threatens both our freedom and a financial collapse. Increasing polarization makes the task of governing effectively difficult.
● Government's attempts to make people's lives better often have the opposite effect
● Differing views of the Constitution divide more than unify us.
● Both sides increasingly question elections if they don’t win.
● Even the concept of what an American is leads to division.
● Debate is often less about solving problems and more about political advantage and defeating the other side.
Today, 15 years after the first edition of this book was published, these problems are growing worse, not better. But the solutions still remain in deeper understanding of the issues and in the ability to work together to produce effective solutions that are based on facts and evidence. We can learn a great deal about how to accomplish this by studying the history of American representative democracy.
Preserving Democracy delves into areas such as taxation and the welfare state, planning versus competition, the rule of law, the breakdown of voting, the distortion of language, the importance of an informed electorate, and the loss of American values. It highlights how these factors have impacted the health of American democracy and government and outlines the long-term consequences.
This book points the way to seriously studying American democratic traditions and the things that have made them function this long. It then talks about how we can get back onto the track of building and preserving a just society.
Every American who plans to vote or otherwise participate in our government needs to read this book, not necessarily to agree with the author on each subject, but to find a way to better understand both the subject and the background of diverse views.
Informed dialogue may be the key to preserving democracy in America.
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Preserving Democracy - Elgin L Hushbeck, Jr
Preserving Democracy
What The Founding Fathers Knew,
What We Have Forgotten, & How It Threatens Democracy
Third Expanded Edition
Elgin L. Hushbeck, Jr.
Energion Publications
Cantonment, Florida
2024
Copyright © 2009, 2024
Elgin L. Hushbeck Jr.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by an information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the Publisher, except for brief quotations in books and critical reviews.
ISBN: 978-1-63199-893-5
eISBN: 978-1-63199-894-2
Library of Congress Control Number: 2024935788
Cover Design by Jason Neufeld
Cover image: Stock Photo Pro (stockphotopro.com) Copyright © Joe Sohm, used by permission
Energion Publications
1241 Conference Rd
Cantonment, FL 32533
energion.com
pubs@energion.com
In Loving Memory
of my sister
Trudy Ann Newman
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Preface To The 2010 Paperback Edition xv
Preface to the 3rd Edition xvii
Introduction: The Last Best Hope 1
1 Nothing Lasts Forever 7
2 Taxes and the Welfare State 33
3 Planning vs Competition 73
4 The Rule of Law 109
5 The Rule of Law Part II: Stare Decisis 137
6 Law and Justice 179
7 The Breakdown of Voting 203
8 The Distortion of Language 245
9 An Informed Electorate? 273
10 The Loss of American Values 301
11 The Never Ending Struggle 327
Questions for an Informed Voter 379
Acknowledgments
This book was the product of many years in both formulation and writing, and many people shaped how it turned out. First, I would like to thank all those with whom I have engaged in discussions over the years for exchanging ideas that resulted in this book.
I would particularly like to thank those who disagreed with me for four reasons. First, the at times vigorous back and forth helped me try out my arguments and ideas, exposed weaknesses and flaws, and, with their challenges, helped me to understand these issues better. Second, their challenges encouraged me to learn more and explore new investigation areas. Third, for allowing me to know how to challenge ideas without attacking people. And finally, for being willing to discuss these issues. In particular, I would like to thank Alfi, Bets, Elaine, jlescallette, Dor, JC, Jo Dakotah, Koka, Pheebs, Leith Anne, Mara, Roberta, Tom, Whit, and Woodsey, along with many others.
I would also like to thank my good friends, Larry and Diane Nixon, for their insights and perspectives. Without them, this book would have been, at a minimum, vastly different, and probably I would have never written it. I would also like to thank my students, particularly those in critical thinking. They were a constant source of new ideas and different ways of seeing things.
When working on the third edition of this book, I received wonderful and very helpful feedback from my fellow writers at the Wisconsin Writers Association: Thekla Fagerlie-Madsen, Naomi Yaeger, Joan Downs, Jeffery Lewis, Rosie Klepper, Rose Bingham, and Laurie A. Scheer.
Special thanks go to Jonathan William, who read a draft of the third edition. He often disagreed, yet he gave me extremely valuable feedback and suggestions. Many of these caused me to add additional comments to address weaknesses in the earlier draft. It is how disagreement should work and it made this book better.
Key to all of this has been my editor, Henry Neufeld, who not only had the faith to take on the work but also worked diligently in the editing process with corrections and suggestions to make the book better. And, of course, none of this would have been possible without my wife Hanna’s loving support and encouragement. Thank you for putting up with me. Lastly, I want to thank my mother and father, who taught me a love for this country and an interest and concern for how government works.
Forewords
From the Publisher
It is perhaps unusual for a publisher to write part of a foreword. But as a small businessman and owner of a small publishing company, I am more involved in individual book projects than you might expect. I look for manuscripts that will communicate across political, religious, social, or intellectual lines. I could make money publishing books to be read by the already convinced, reaffirming their existing beliefs. But I see my business as a service as well, so I want to challenge people’s thinking, not just reaffirm their beliefs.
In addition, I hope to reach more than an intellectual elite. Our problems in this country can eventually be traced to we the people
and the behavior we tolerate in media, government, and academia. Some things can be done, but effective action requires clear understanding.
So, whether you call yourself a Democrat, Republican, independent, or member of another party, whether you are liberal, moderate, or conservative, I invite you to use this book to clarify and test your understanding, I don’t mind if you leave your reading in serious disagreement with the author; I only hope that you will leave with a better understanding of what you believe and a greater determination to do your part in renewing our political system.
You will notice that our endorsements come from a variety of people—a military veteran, someone in the professions, some in academia. In presenting this second, paperback edition, we present three forewords. These are from people like you, who live and work, and who care about their country. They are remaining anonymous because they are not famous and they represent many others.
As publisher, of course, I cannot remain anonymous.
— Henry Neufeld, Florida
From a Liberal
America! What a country!
(With apologies to Yakov Smirnoff).
Countless movies and books contain the theme of the family whose children seem to spend most of their time fighting with each other over just about anything. Occasionally, they band together to accomplish some great project, but basically, their lives seem to be one chaotic brawl after another. Unless, of course, someone else threatens one of the groups. Then they all band together, shoulder to shoulder, and fight off the threat. Ten minutes later, everyone is back to infighting.
That in a nutshell is my view of America. It is a country populated by Americans,
a rough and tumble, often brawling, sometimes cooperating, family of hundreds of millions of individuals.
What is the unspoken force that naturally draws Americans together, whether left or right, religious or secular, natural-born or recent immigrant? It seems to be this strange mix of traditions, attitudes, hopes, and commonly-held views that America is a concept worth fighting for. Each of these attributes is a natural offshoot of a country centered on that wonderful instrument entitled the U.S. Constitution. A historical document that we all agree to adhere to, even today.
Only two things can really define the end of America. The first is the refusal of Americans to stand, shoulder-to-shoulder, against all comers. The second would be the removal or diminishment of the Constitution as the underpinning of our daily lives. Under either situation, Americans would simply be a loose gaggle of geographically grouped people without any purpose.
Before this begins to sound like yet another description of the Founding Fathers as demigods who knew everything about everything, I should mention that this is being written by a self-professed, flaming liberal. That’s right. I grew up with a picture of Roosevelt on the mantelpiece and was ecstatic at the outcome of the 2008 elections.
This book is not about politics. It is about America, and serves as a reminder of the responsibility each of us has to cast our votes thoughtfully. If we acknowledge this responsibility and act upon it, we can pass our inheritance, America, to the generations that follow. If we refuse to participate in this democracy, or vote exclusively on emotions rather than thoughtful analysis, we threaten the Life, Liberty, and Pursuit of Happiness for our own descendants. Who are we to squander the gifts handed down to us so that later generations cannot share in the wondrous experience of being an American?
I would urge any American, of any political persuasion or demographic group, to read Elgin’s thoughtful journey to the foundations of the American psyche, and ponder the issues he presents to us. He only asks us to think through our several opinions, and measure their consequences: …in order to form a more perfect union.
— Bob, Wisconsin
From a Moderate
Inviting and informative, I wish I could have had Preserving Democracy in a political science class in college. It is incredible the way it lays out the essence of the current structure of our laws, taxes, and the analysis of the effects on our democracy and the Constitution in light of past cultures and leaders. Elgin Hushbeck is a modern-day historian providing pertinent information on how and why our Constitution and our United States’ way of life is so unique.
I grew up in the Midwest and came from a large family who once owned their own company. We lived in an affluent suburb until we succumbed to the economics of the ’60s. To keep food on the table, we transitioned to being a family of a Union working father. In those years, both father and mother taught us the value of voting for the right reasons. My Red, White, and Blue parents voted moderately. Mom always said a change in government was a good thing and we should all vote for the individual who will do the most good, which usually translated into voting incumbents out every election. I, being the youngest, was able to travel with Mom and Dad on weekends and patriotic holidays, and during those times witnessed the earliest speeches of some of our great Senators and Representatives today.
In college I was able to study in Kentucky, right in the heart of coal mining country. Later, when I lived as a young married woman with children in Southern Georgia I came to understand a different kind of political landscape, one of many that make up the richness of the United States. Here I learned about the importance of voting for the same person every election. As one Southerner told me We vote knowing that we already understand whom we are dealing with; in changing we might not do as well.
I also lived a bit in Virginia, The center of a Commonwealth,
a place where the history of this great land is a constant reminder in places like the Williamsburg Historical Center. Being able to see the reenactment of our early years as a new nation, puts today into perspective. Preserving Democracy
strengthens that understanding of what our forefathers envisioned. Mr. Hushbeck, a sincere thank you for preserving and explaining so many important details that are so often left out, and for simplifying the complexity of it all.
I urge everyone to take the challenge Mr. Hushbeck sets before us. Read Preserving Democracy.
Bring up at dinner conversation the questions at the end of the book. I am certain you will have many hours of amazing discussion. But most importantly, you will be able to be more informed as to our treasured way of life.
— Di, Wisconsin
From a Conservative
Preserving Democracy
is one of the most timely books that has been written. Although it has been years in the making it raises the alarm as if it had been compiled from and for current events. It is the very current events that make this work so well-timed and consequently a most important read; and unlike just any instrument for alarm, it can be used as a handbook, a starting point for significant change or better yet preservation.
As the subtitle (Preserving Democracy - What the Founding Fathers knew, What we have forgotten, and How it Threatens Democracy) states, it explores what the Founding Fathers knew from their study of history, their knowledge of the greatest thinkers throughout history, and the wisdom they gained from the teachings of God; it discloses what we as a nation have in large part forgotten, repressed, or intentionally altered as to reasons that we are a great and blessed country; and how the dereliction of our times, the inane zeitgeist, is threatening the very existence of what we hold dear and require for life itself. We are losing the ability to exercise and maintain our form of government, a representative democracy.
We The People
is not just another political slogan or a blurb we bring to the surface when campaigns flair. We The People
goes to the very soul of who we are and how we conduct our lives from day to day. Like fish, we seem to be totally unaware of the medium in which we exist. We take our way of living for granted. Only when we see it become polluted do we notice something is not right.
Indeed it is the very system of government, the system that is to protect and not trample our God-given rights, is now polluting our lives with its particulates and toxins. Fortunately, unlike fish, it is our system. We have the God-given intelligence to step back and objectively examine our situation, the choice to correct it, and the power to do so.
Preserving Democracy goes directly to the heart of the matter, to wit, the preserving of the most rarified and valued commodity in history — Liberty. With love for this great nation, a well-rounded education, and life experience, coupled with a great sense of humor, Mr. Hushbeck began to put down his thoughts. That began ten years ago, a time when things appeared to be just right for America. No matter one’s political viewpoint, it was a fact that America was the one sole superpower left standing in the world; that the dangers represented by its advisories had been mitigated if not entirely eliminated; that the wealth of the world in general had increased, not just for some, but for vast populations throughout the globe. In spite of the good times, Elgin could see, through his unique perspective of theology, history, business, and science, that there were fundamental cracks in the foundation. As the intrepid adventurer, an apt analogy found in the book, are we as a nation on a journey where there may be a point of no return?
If you love liberty and despise equalitarian outcome, then you will love Preserving Democracy. You will find it a must-read.
— Larry, California
Preface To The 2010 Paperback Edition
It has been a tumultuous and challenging couple of years. When I started writing Preserving Democracy nearly a decade ago, the threats and problems I described, though accurate in the long term, had a theoretical feel about them. Sure, the country had concerns that, if not corrected, could lead to severe difficulties. Still, those problems seemed to be in the distant future.
While serious, the Internet bubble, the events of 911, and the recession that followed were not out of line with the types of problems that the country had faced and survived in the past; and survive the country did. Yet, as I finished the book, it was becoming clear that another bubble, the housing bubble, was popping and that this would send the country into another recession.
It was unusual to have two economic bubbles so close to each other, though at first, it looked to be just another period of economic difficulty like those the country had experienced before. Early indications were that this recession might even be on the mild side.
Yet, as my publisher readied the hardcover edition for publication, it became clear that this was not the case. Something was different this time, and something had changed. The theoretical dangers in the future I had written about seemed suddenly more real and closer.
In the aftermath of the housing bubble came the lockup of the credit markets, TARP, the bailouts, the takeovers, the stimulus plan, and the hitherto unimaginable explosion in government spending and its corresponding budget deficits. When it came time to write a new chapter for the paperback edition, the subject was pretty straightforward: what happened? How did we get here?
In many respects, the issues, dangers, and problems discussed in the first nine chapters are what happened. This new chapter will briefly explain why the bubble grew and how officials mishandled it. The previous chapters will give you a better understanding of the depth of the particular issues and some suggestions on how we can avoid them.
Still, all in all, I remain hopeful and upbeat. America has faced some pretty severe challenges in its history, both internal and external. Each time the American people have rallied to the challenge, there have been many Greatest Generations.
The American people give all indications of doing the same this time.
Elgin Hushbeck
Wausau, WI
May 2010
Preface to the
3rd Edition
A lot has changed since the first edition of Preserving Democracy in 2009 and the paperback edition in 2010. The Obama administration, which started with a hopeful optimism that the country had finally turned a page on its racist past, ended with the country having higher racial tension than when it began. Then came the division of the Trump years. 2020 was particularly difficult. It started with Impeachment, followed immediately by the COVID pandemic with its lockdowns, the Black Lives Matter protests, many of which ended in violence, and a tumultuous election in 2020. 2021 didn’t start any better with the Capitol Riots.
Nor have things returned to normal. 2021 saw the reemergence of inflation and the debacle of Afghanistan. Since then, the world has become increasingly unstable with wars in Ukraine and the Middle East and threats of war over Taiwan and in North Korea.
Nor have things been much better on the domestic front; people struggle to make ends meet with a reemergent inflation while facing increases in crime and homelessness; millions are streaming into the country, straining social services. Everywhere you look, America seems pushed to the breaking point. People openly question whether our democratic system will survive.
The core message of Preserving Democracy is more relevant than ever. Yet it was clear that so much had changed, and a new edition was needed. Some issues discussed and left unresolved in earlier editions are now resolved. Some are no longer issues. Some of the more theoretical threats discussed are now major political issues. In some cases, new concerns have arisen. As such, the third edition is both a significant rewrite and an expansion, adding a new chapter in one case.
With all this change, the goal remains to keep a nonpartisan focus that stresses issues rather than people. While I think the situation has worsened since the earlier editions, I remain hopeful it is not too late.
What really needs to happen is for individuals to stop demonizing those who disagree and begin to discuss the issues with them, focusing more on thoughtful listening rather than simply telling them they are wrong. We need engagement, not polarization.
Suppose more and more people on both sides do this. Only then can we start moving toward consensus, which is vital to any healthy democracy. As the number of people doing this grows, the politicians must follow at some point. Democracy cannot be saved from the top down; it can only be saved from the bottom up. It is the people who have the real power, and it is only from them that any real solution to our problems must come.
Elgin Hushbeck
Wausau, WI
January 2024
Introduction
The Last Best Hope
Fellow-citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress and this administration, will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance, or insignificance, can spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass, will light us down, in honor or dishonor, to the latest generation. We say we are for the Union. The world will not forget that we say this. We know how to save the Union. The world knows we do know how to save it. We – even we here – hold the power, and bear the responsibility. In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free – honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve. We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth.
Abraham Lincoln¹
America today is at a crossroads. Many are unclear about where we have come from or where we are going. Based on the recent presidential elections, the only clear message is that people are unhappy and want change. Obama even made the slogan Change
central to his winning campaign. Since the 1970s, the Presidency changed parties with each president, except in 1988. Half of these presidents served a single term. But, with this constant back and forth, what people want to change is unclear.
The challenges facing the country are both numerous and varied. When I wrote the first edition of this book in 2009, radical Islam threatened attacks, Russia was reemerging as an adversary, and a few people saw the looming threat of China. An unstable government in North Korea had nuclear weapons, while Iran sought to acquire them, with the real danger that, if acquired, they would use them.
We still have most of these problems. Russia has invaded Ukraine. The threat of China has only grown, though now many in both parties recognize the problem. Still, the fact that China could invade Taiwan is a growing concern. North Korea and Iran remain problems, though they have receded a bit.
Then there are all the domestic problems. At the time of the first edition, there were the bailouts, the housing crisis, the economy, unemployment, health care costs, energy policy, and the environment, to name just a few. Some of these, like the housing crisis, are no longer significant concerns or have at least changed. Thus, the housing crisis, driven in part by people who could not pay back their loans, has changed into a problem of finding a house in the first place. Others are newer problems or problems that have worsened: inflation, the border, crime, declining cities, homelessness, and the growing number of deaths resulting from fentanyl.
While such ongoing concerns often consume our attention, some problems threaten democracy itself. These problems don’t always get the coverage of the more immediate issues, but that does not change the fact that they are both real and severe.
Many of these problems come from a fundamental split in the electorate over the country and the Constitution. Is the country centered on the individual and liberty, or the group and equality? While we might all want both, these are fundamentally mutually exclusive, something we will explore in more detail in Chapter 9. The result is division and stalemate. Even over problems deemed severe by both parties, this division results in paralysis, and nothing happens.
For example, both parties have recognized that Social Security has been going bankrupt for decades. Still, there is no agreement on what to do. There is also the problem that there will be some pain whatever the politicians choose, and voters will probably be unhappy. The sooner we do something, the less painful the fix will be. Still, politicians get reelected by making voters happy, so the net result is a stalemate, and they do nothing. Bankruptcy, rather than fifty years away, is now only about ten.
The premise of this book is that the opinion of almost all the prominent thinkers, from Plato and Aristotle forward, is that democracy was an unworkable system of government. As we will see in Chapter 1, they believed it was doomed to fail, dissolving into tyranny. The Founding Fathers understood these criticisms when developing the system of checks and balances that has worked so well.
Since then, we have made repeated changes to the government, some minor, some major. As we make changes, how many of us understand the key weaknesses of democracy? Are the changes we make simply removing deadwood unnecessary in the 21st century? Are we eliminating critical foundational supports, essential checks, and balances? How would we know the difference?
This is the central question of the book. Rather than just an abstract discussion of political philosophy, the book focuses on several important issues like taxes and the different approaches to government. We will examine the Rule of Law, the role of justice, voting, and how we discuss or fail to discuss issues. We will explore the concepts of an informed voter and American values. Finally, we discuss the financial crisis in 2007-9.
Many of these issues were more in the realm of potential concerns at the time of the first edition but have since become, like voting, more visible and thus, more political concerns. Each chapter looks at a current trend that, if left unchanged, could cause American democracy to fail, just as all the earlier attempts have failed.
While I have firmly-held views in all these areas, I have tried to avoid being overtly partisan. Moving beyond theory without citing specific examples is impossible, and examples automatically risk partisanship. Still, while using examples, I try to be non-partisan. Some will undoubtedly be critical of my lack of success in this area.
I have at least attempted to remain balanced in my presentation. In some cases, I passed up recent examples because they were too partisan and used others because they were more balanced. In all the examples, I kept party affiliation to a minimum. I focused on the policies and problems rather than the people and parties. Some examples are not as recent as they could have been because older examples are easier to treat more dispassionately and objectively. The ‘heat of battle’ has subsided a bit. I did, however, include some recent examples simply so the book would not be dated.
Finally, the main focus of this book is on the problems that face our democracy. I firmly believe not only that these problems are solvable, but in many cases, ignorance of the problem is more dangerous than the problem itself. For many, if we had a consensus on the nature of the problem, the solution would follow naturally. For others, if we had a better understanding of the reasoning behind these solutions, at least the people could decide on the country’s direction.
Because of this, I have focused on the problems rather than on possible solutions. While each chapter ends with a What Can be Done section, I have not put much detail into that discussion. In fact, at one time, I was not even going to include any potential solutions. Still, I decided that discussing the problems without mentioning possible solutions could leave the reader with a sense that we are doomed. While I believe these problems are severe, I don’t believe we are doomed.
The brief nature of the solutions’ sections opens them up to the criticism of superficiality. I only ask you to remember that I offer these as a first step toward solving these problems, not the final word. Ultimately, we must solve these problems through the democratic process. As we will see in the first chapter, attempts to fix these problems by imposing solutions are doomed to fail. Once the person or body imposing the solutions relinquishes power, the imposed solutions will be abandoned.
The only proper solution must be a democratic one, where people debate the problems, suggest solutions, and consider the pros and cons and their ramifications. Then, the people must decide how we as a country will proceed.
An important obstacle will be the prevailing attitude that democracy is about winning elections. While a common view, it is both false and dangerous. When viewed as winning elections, democracy, likewise, becomes defeating the opposition. It becomes focused on depriving the opposition of having a say in the democratic process.
Granted, there will be winners and losers in any vote, so it is easy to see how such an attitude can become dominant. Still, if that is the attitude, eventually, democracy will fail. The alternative view prevailed at the Constitutional Convention and during the ratification process. It is a view of democracy that seeks consensus.
Building consensus is hard work. It sees everyone as part of the process, with a voice to consider. Those who disagree are not people to demonize; they are people with perspectives one must consider in any solution. It focuses on working together rather than defeating.
Building consensus was the attitude that founded the country. The Constitution was a compromise document on virtually every point. Nobody got everything they wanted. Everybody gave up something. Even during the ratification process, supporters made compromises, resulting in the Bill of Rights. In a healthy democracy, the goal is to seek the most significant majority possible. It requires a good understanding of the issues and the various points of view.
Our system currently focuses on fifty percent plus one, or whatever is required to win. Such a focus can only lead to division and polarization, which is where we find ourselves. It breeds instability since no decision is final. They only last until the current group loses power.
The only way to ensure policies remain in effect is to keep the other side from winning. The issues become secondary. You don’t need a good understanding of the issues or why the other side disagrees. You only need to know they are the enemy and must be defeated. The only way to ensure this long-term is some sort of tyranny, which is why democracies fail.
This book will focus on understanding the core issues. You may disagree with some of the analysis or the proposed solutions. That is fine. These are present, not as the final word, but the beginning of a course correction. The hope is that this will be a starting point, not for mandating this or that policy solution, but to begin the discussion toward reaching the broadest possible consensus. Anything short of this would be self-defeating.
1 Abraham Lincoln, Message to Congress,
December 1, 1862, cited in National Park Service, Secession Will Destroy Democracy,
http://www.nps.gov/liho/historyculture/secdemocrary.htm (accessed April 3, 2009).
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Nothing Lasts Forever
Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
George Santayana
It was a huge party. The one thousand guests, a veritable Who’s-Who of society, enjoyed the best foods served on golden plates and the best wines in golden goblets. Perhaps some enjoyed the wine a little too much.
It seemed a strange time to celebrate, for the city was under attack. But the guests at the party were unconcerned. A wide moat and high walls protected them. While almost certainly an exaggeration, the ancient Greek historian Herodotus’ claim that they were over 80 feet thick and 300 feet tall conveys the sense of safety the walls provided. No attacker had gotten past the defenses in over a thousand years. They had stored up plenty of food, and a river ran under the walls, providing plenty of water should the attacking army try to starve them out. So, the party went on safely behind the walls.
The safety was only an illusion. Not only would the city fall, but it would fall that night. Knowing they could not breach the walls and not wanting to wait the years it might take to starve the city’s inhabitants into surrender, they did something the guests had not even considered.
They diverted the Euphrates River to no longer flow under the city walls. Instead of a river providing water, there was now an empty river bed, allowing Cyrus’s army to march directly into the city under the wall. With virtually all its leaders and top officials drunk at the party, Babylon fell in a single night. It was over before the guests even knew what was happening.
There is often a fine line between ignorance and arrogance. So fine that it is often challenging to distinguish if someone is arrogant or does not know any better. Of course, the worst case results from a mixture of the two: arrogance based on ignorance.
This was the case with the rulers of Babylon and their arrogance in throwing such a party while the city was under siege and their ignorance of the grave danger. They took it for granted that they were safe, unaware of the danger around them.
There are some similarities with 21st-century America. Many take for granted much of what is good and even great about this country. It is just how things are, how they should be, and how they will always be. Most are unaware of the weaknesses and dangers in the system that enemies could exploit, resulting in its downfall.
Instead, we have slogans. Democracy is good, and the more democracy, the better. Count every vote. For some, it does not matter whether the voter is a citizen or if they are here legally.² They are persons, and in a democracy, shouldn’t everyone have their say? Aren’t we all just citizens of the world?
And, of course, anything the people want and vote for is automatically good. The people voted for it democratically, and democracy is good; therefore, anything they vote for must likewise be good.
Conversely, anything that stands in the way of voting, and therefore democracy, is terrible. Voter registration must be simple and easy, with minimal hassles, lest any inconvenience becomes a barrier to voting. The epitome is the ability to register when you vote.
Voter fraud is merely an abstract concept, a red herring used by those wishing to limit democracy. Asking potential voters to demonstrate their identity to ensure only those with a legal right to vote do so or that they vote only once raises too many barriers. It hinders democracy.
Voting itself must be easy. The old-fashioned ideas of ‘election day’ and ‘going to the polls’ are too restrictive and limit people’s ability to vote. So, now we have early and absentee voting, not just for those who need it but for anyone who wants it. Now, many vote weeks in advance before the candidates can debate, or in the case of primaries, drop out.
Voting is simultaneously a sacrosanct right and a troublesome nuisance. We must do everything we can to ensure that people can cast a vote and that we count the votes. Whether or not fraud or illegal voting ultimately negated one’s vote is irrelevant. That a vote was cast and counted is what is essential.
Anything the people want is automatically good simply because it is an expression of their will. Thus, the problems we face can only result from the people’s will being thwarted or blocked in some way by that most evil of all groups, the special interest.
As a result, politicians then fall into two groups. Not Republicans or Democrats, though they use those names. No, the meaningful categories are those fighting for the people and those representing the dreaded special interests. Of course, the problem is that most politicians say they fight for the people and that their opponent represents the dreaded special interests. A few babble on about some policy details, but they are dull.
One message that does seem to resonate with the voters is change. The direction is irrelevant, and change to what is likewise irrelevant. What resonates is change for change’s sake. Thus, every so often, the office of the president changes the party in power. However, this type of change is restricted mainly to the president, as, for the most part, that is the only politician people can name. Voters typically spare Senators and Representatives from this regular change unless things are really bad. After all, if you don’t know who they are or how long they have been there, how do you know if it is time for a change?
The other central theme that resonates is what they (the politicians) give us (the voters). Yet, here, a conflict exists. There are those receiving from the government and those paying the bill. Voters must then go to the trouble of deciding whether to vote for more benefits or more tax cuts, though even here, the politicians have become accommodating enough to promise both frequently.
The net effect is that the size and cost of government have exploded over the last century. But not to worry because that is what the people want, and what the people want must be good.
A Looming Danger?
Most Americans would probably be