主题:【文摘】+【原创】关于民主发点谬论 -- moridin
看了不少网上关于民主的争论, 基本上都是围
绕着两点:
1. 民主好不好? (主流说: 好!)
2. 民主是否适合中国国情? 换句话说, 在民主
的路上应该走多快? (没有共识)
一个没怎么得到讨论的问题是: 民主政体的生命力
到底有多强? 我的观点是, 民主政体是在资源无限
的条件下竞争的优胜者. 它的生命力取决于人类发
现/创造/利用新资源的能力.
从民主的发祥地古希腊到近代的民主范本北美西欧,
它们的一个共同点就是资源相对于人口是无限的. 这
里既包括自然资源如土地矿产也包括软资源如商业机会.
这种情况下一个能够在最大程度上发挥个人能动性的
政体必然会压倒对手脱颖而出. 但是到了人均资源不再
丰富的时候这样的政体是否还能坚持下去呢? 我曾经读到
的一篇文章里提到, 当经济发展很快时人们喜欢拿现在
与过去比并获得满足; 当经济停滞时人们更在意自己在
社会里的相对位置,更容易形成小团体去争夺有限的资源.
我觉得美国就快到这样一道坎了: 大家的期望都很高, 但
是科技革命(创造资源的主要手段)是可遇不可求的. 美国
社会的极端化就是内部竞争的苗头.
用emacs加拼音写到这里实在写不动乐. 下面抄段英文.
是大西洋月刊的, 大意是美国历史上
经济停滞期往往也是社会进步的停滞期. 经济增长是民主
的源泉.
The Atlantic Monthly | July/August 2005
Meltdown: A Case Study
What America a century ago can teach us about the moral consequences of
economic decline
by Benjamin M. Friedman
.....
W ould it really be so bad if living standards in the United States
stagnated?or even declined somewhat?for a decade or two? It might well
be worse than most people imagine. History suggests that the quality of
our democracy?more fundamentally, the moral character of American
society?would be at risk if we experienced a many-year downturn. As the
distinguished economic historian Alexander Gerschenkron once observed,
even a country with a long democratic history can become a "democracy
without democrats." Merely being rich is no bar to a society's retreat
into rigidity and intolerance once enough of its citizens sense that
they are no longer getting ahead.
American history includes several episodes in which stagnating or
declining incomes over an extended period have undermined the nation's
tolerance and threatened citizens' freedoms. One that is especially
vivid, and that touched many aspects of American life that remain
contentious today, occurred during the Populist era, toward the end of
the nineteenth century?roughly from 1880 through the middle of the 1890s.
For a decade and a half after the Civil War, economic growth was largely
exuberant, society optimistic, and social progress undeniable. But all
that changed over the next fifteen years, beginning with a faltering
economy. From 1880 to 1890 Americans' real per capita income grew on
average by just 0.4 percent a year (versus almost four percent in the
1870s). Then, after a few strong years at the start of the 1890s, the
economy collapsed altogether. A severe banking panic set off a steep
downturn, widely known at the time as the Great Depression. By the end
of 1893, 500 banks and 15,000 other businesses, including several major
railroads, were bankrupt. Prices, especially farm prices, had been
falling even when the economy was growing strongly. Now the declines
became ruinous. Wheat dropped from an average price of $1.12 a bushel in
the early 1870s to fifty cents or less in the mid-1890s, and corn went
from forty-eight cents a bushel to twenty-one. By the early 1890s
farmers in some western states were burning their nearly worthless corn
for fuel. By 1895 per capita income had fallen below the level it had
reached fifteen years earlier.
Popular discontent followed economic distress. In 1892 labor action
against the Carnegie Steel plant in Homestead, Pennsylvania, sparked an
armed battle between striking workers and company-hired Pinkerton
forces, leaving sixteen dead and more than 150 wounded. Two years later
a strike against the Pullman Sleeping Car Company led President Grover
Cleveland to call in the Army to protect the railroads. At the same
time, hundreds of unemployed men, led by Ohio businessman Jacob Coxey
(the group was known as "Coxey's Army"), marched on Washington to demand
federal assistance. Altogether, during the course of 1894 seventeen such
"industrial armies" marched on the capital.
But economic concerns did not manifest themselves only, or even
primarily, in labor marches and job riots; they soured many aspects of
American society. As wages fell and unemployment rose, fearful citizens
sought to close the country to newcomers?particularly from areas other
than northwestern Europe. The new Statue of Liberty (completed in 1886)
may have proclaimed America's welcome to the world's "huddled masses"
and "wretched refuse," but such popular magazines of the day as
/Harper's/ and /The Atlantic Monthly/ were full of ethnic jokes and
slurs. Beginning in the 1880s hard times catalyzed a movement to tighten
immigration standards. In 1882, after riots protesting the use of
Chinese labor for railroad construction, Congress barred Chinese
immigrants entirely. All other immigrants were subject to a head tax.
Some states adopted legislation prohibiting certain noncitizens from
acquiring land.
Race relations also deteriorated. In a spectacularly unfortunate
coincidence that would affect American history for decades, this period
of economic stagnation?the worst up to that time?set in just as
Reconstruction ended and the federal government finally withdrew its
troops from the defeated southern states. No one will ever know whether
the country's race relations, both in the South and elsewhere, would
have taken a different course had America enjoyed robust economic growth
during this period. In the event, the result was segregation by race in
practically every aspect of daily life, together with appalling racial
violence.
One reason for believing that economic frustrations contributed to the
sad history that followed is that although the former Confederate states
regained full political independence with the end of Reconstruction, in
1879, most of them did not begin to adopt what in time became pervasive
"Jim Crow" laws until the 1890s. By the end of that decade most southern
states had made it illegal for blacks to ride with whites in railroad
cars, and some had also segregated city streetcars and railroad-station
waiting rooms. The devices used to deny most black citizens their voting
rights?property and literacy requirements, poll taxes, and white-only
primaries?were likewise adopted mostly in the 1890s or after.
But the legal changes enacted during this period barely capture the
racist and anti-immigrant (and anti-Catholic, anti-Semitic, anti-ethnic)
sentiment of the time. The 1880s saw a rise in vigilante violence in
rural areas?not only lynchings in the former Confederacy but also
beatings, murders, and arson by such groups as the Bald Knobbers, in the
Ozarks, and the White Caps, in Kentucky and elsewhere. Such colorful
populist figures as "Pitchfork" Ben Tillman, who served as governor of
South Carolina from 1890 to 1894 and then as a U.S. senator, and Tom
Watson, a widely read newspaperman who ran for vice president on the
Populist ticket in 1896, were outspoken white supremacists. Tillman
publicly defended lynching, called for the repeal of the Fifteenth
Amendment (which had given the vote to blacks), and advocated the use of
force to disenfranchise blacks in the meantime. Watson's speeches and
editorials were regularly devoted to sensational attacks on blacks,
Catholics, Jews, and foreigners. The American Protective Association, an
anti-Catholic organization founded in Iowa in 1887, spread rapidly once
the 1893 depression began, and claimed to have 2.5 million members
nationwide by the mid-1890s. Anti-Semitic propaganda was so common among
Populists by 1896 that William Jennings Bryan felt obliged to disavow it
during his campaign for the presidency.
Steps that would have made America more democratic were not without
advocates during this period. Many Populists favored such measures as
direct primaries and the popular election of U.S. senators. Some also
favored women's suffrage. Bryan was a tireless advocate for all these
causes. Yet none of them advanced in the face of prolonged economic
stagnation. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court only made matters worse. In two
key decisions it effectively gutted the Civil Rights Act passed in 1875
(when economic growth was strong), declaring private racial segregation
and then segregation legislated by the states to be constitutionally
protected. Throughout the Populist era America's media, politics, and
legislation all lent support to cultural exclusion, societal rigidity,
and efforts to turn back the clock. These ultimately proved futile, but
for a while they poisoned both politics and society. Openness toward the
future, faith in a better society for all, and support for the rights of
minorities were simply not the order of the day.
E conomic weakness does not always produce social regress, of course;
history is not so deterministic. The depression of the 1930s led, for
the most part, to a reaffirmation of America's openness and generosity.
But that was atypical; the Populist era was more the norm.
When slow growth together with widening inequality halted improvements
in living standards for many Americans in the 1920s, the upshot was the
revival of the Ku Klux Klan (not just in the South?at the Klan's peak
perhaps one in ten white Protestant U.S. men was a member), the tightest
and most discriminatory immigration restrictions in the nation's
history, and the elimination of both federal and state laws designed to
protect women and children. Similar economic conditions in the 1970s and
1980s provided the backdrop for another round of anti-immigrant
agitation, the rise of the right-wing militia movement, and incidents of
politically motivated domestic terrorism.
Not just in America but in the other Western democracies, too, history
is replete with instances in which a turn away from openness and
tolerance, often accompanied by a weakening of democratic institutions,
has followed economic stagnation. The most familiar example is the rise
of Nazism in Germany, following that country's economic chaos in the
1920s and then the onset of worldwide depression in the early 1930s. But
in Britain such nasty episodes as the repression of the suffragette
movement under Asquith, the breaking of Lloyd George's promises to the
returning World War I veterans, and the bloody Fascist riots in London's
East End all occurred under severe economic distress. So did the
ascension of the extremist Boulangist movement in
late-nineteenth-century France, and the Action Fran?aise movement after
World War I. Conversely, in both America and Europe fairness and
tolerance have increased, and democratic institutions have strengthened,
mostly when the average citizen's standard of living has been rising.
The reason is not hard to understand. When their living standards are
rising, people do not view themselves, their fellow citizens, and their
society as a whole the way they do when those standards are stagnant or
falling. They are more trusting, more inclusive, and more open to change
when they view their future prospects and their children's with
confidence rather than anxiety or fear. Economic growth is not merely
the enabler of higher consumption; it is in many ways the wellspring
from which democracy and civil society flow. We should be fully
cognizant of the risks to our values and liberties if that nourishing
source runs dry.
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【文摘】+【原创】关于民主发点谬论
🙂民主乃衰落之道 16 红黑客 字409 2013-10-15 11:50:55
🙂这老贴的含金量是比较高啊。05年说的话 4 wage 字216 2013-10-15 09:57:38
抬头一顶 神仙驴 字0 2005-11-18 10:59:07