2019年7月4日 星期四

The Interpreter: American democracy, an unfinished project

A poem for the holiday
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Thursday, July 4, 2019

Welcome to The Interpreter newsletter, by Max Fisher and Amanda Taub, who write a column by the same name.
On our minds: American democracy, an unfinished project
It Never Was America to Me
A page from the Office of Inspector General report on migrant detention. Unsafe, overcrowded, and squalid conditions are widespread, it found.

A page from the Office of Inspector General report on migrant detention. Unsafe, overcrowded, and squalid conditions are widespread, it found.

Where were you before America was a democracy? And where will you be if it stops being one again?
Our childhood history classes may have told us that America has been a democracy for hundreds of years, a shining example of the ideals of liberty and justice for all. But an honest reckoning with history tells a different story.
In his book 'Paths out of Dixie,' Robert Mickey makes a persuasive case that the United States was not truly a democracy for most of its history. Until the 1970s, he argues, "southern states are best understood as 11 enclaves of authoritarian rule."
It is widely known, of course, that black citizens were disenfranchised. Extrajudicial violence, including lynching, was used to keep them subjugated to white rule. That system was obviously not fully democratic — at best, it was what political scientists sometimes call a herrenvolk democracy, in which only the dominant ethnic group gets democratic representation.
But Dr. Mickey lays out evidence that the southern systems were not merely racist  and oppressive, but actually authoritarian — so much so that he does not think they even rise to the limited herrenvolk standard.
The Democratic party — which, at the time, protected southern whites' racial and economic hegemony — placed so many restrictions on suffrage and politics that it became effectively impossible for any other party to compete in elections. 
In effect, that created a cluster of single-party regimes, where white citizens who wished to support a different party were also effectively disenfranchised.
That those single-party regimes lasted so long, within a country that considered itself not only a democracy but a shining example of one, is a measure of how difficult it is to ensure that political institutions match political ideals.
It is also a reminder that creating and protecting democracy is a continuous project, not something that can be accomplished by declarations of independence or emancipation. 
In the past few weeks, the Supreme Court has ruled that partisan gerrymandering can be constitutional. That decision could further compound the effect of the Senate and electoral college, which already weights the votes of mostly white rural America far more heavily than those of more diverse urban communities. U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico and Washington D.C. have no representation in Congress at all. 
And in a stark reminder of how few guarantees there are that people without a political voice will be granted their rights and the full protection of the law, a report from the Department of Homeland Security's own internal watchdog has found that federal authorities are imprisoning migrants, many of whom are most likely entitled to asylum, in deplorable and dangerous conditions. At least six children have died in the department's custody.
So before you go off to barbecue and swim and watch fireworks this Fourth of July, we'll leave you with a few stanzas of one of our favorite poems, Langston Hughes's "Let America be America Again":
O, let America be America again—
The land that never has been yet—
And yet must be—the land where every man is free.
The land that's mine—the poor man's, Indian's, Negro's, ME—
Who made America,
Whose sweat and blood, whose faith and pain,
Whose hand at the foundry, whose plow in the rain,
Must bring back our mighty dream again.
Sure, call me any ugly name you choose—
The steel of freedom does not stain.
From those who live like leeches on the people's lives,
We must take back our land again,
America!
O, yes,
I say it plain,
America never was America to me,
And yet I swear this oath—
America will be!
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What We're Reading
  • How does a dictator with a seemingly unbreakable, decades-long grip on power suddenly fall? For Reuters, Khalid Abdelaziz, Michael Georgy and Maha El Dahan tell the blow-by-blow story of how it happened in Sudan. As ever, the decisive moment came not when protesters flooded the streets, but when a handful of the dictator's key allies quietly withdrew their support.
  • The Trump administration is betting that repeated shows of "resolve" — credible threats of military force — will force concessions from Iran. But research by Roseanne W. McManus, who studies resolve and its uses at Penn State University, finds that the president's approach could backfire by limiting Iran's available responses to counter-escalation. Too much resolve, Ms. McManus writes in a Washington Post article summing up her research, makes it harder for a target country like Iran to grant concessions without inviting more threats or trouble at home.
  • One of the biggest criticisms of Mr. Trump's outreach to North Korea is that the meetings and shows of affection confer legitimacy on Kim Jong-un, strengthening his despotic rule. But research by Xavier Marquez of the Victoria University of Wellington suggests that so-called legitimacy might not matter so much. In a study titled "The Irrelevance of Legitimacy," Mr. Marquez writes, "To the extent that legitimacy appears relevant to accounts of social and political order, it is typically because it works as a residual concept that bundles together many different and sometimes contradictory explanatory mechanisms."
  • The internet makes people less informed, a new study suggests, because an abundance of easily accessible information makes it easier for people to find facts or viewpoints that will support their current beliefs. And, given a choice between learning something new and confirming what they already think they know, people will generally choose the latter. The study, which appears in the Public Library of Science Journal of Computational Biology, was conducted by Filip Gesiarz, Donal Cahill and Tali Sharot.

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