Are democracy and free markets inherently hostile to each other? That’s the question Brian Anderson takes up in his new book, Democratic Capitalism and Its Discontents, my review of which appears in the Nov. 6 issue of National Review, currently on sale at newsstands and online.
In my view, the problem is with democracy, not markets. Finding any faults with democracy is undoubtedly a bizarre thing in our time, but it is clear to me that the contradictions that seem to be inherent in democratic capitalism are in fact inherent in democracy itself, and that market capitalism is the victim of democracy, not an abuser. Hence my thought, taking after that of the American Founders, is that where democracy interferes with freedom, it is democracy that ought to give way.
I recognize that this proposition may sound rather radical, and I shall defend it further in future, but in the meantime, here’s my review of Brian Anderson’s book, which will give you a sense of the outlines of the argument:
Vision Things
S. T. Karnick
Democratic Capitalism and Its Discontents, by Brian C. Anderson (ISI, 189 pp., $25)
With the fall of the Soviet Union and the effective end of international Communism, and given that radical Islam is a thorn in our side but no long-term threat to Western culture, democratic capitalism no longer faces any plausible external threats. It confronts plenty of serious internal ones, however, as Brian C. Anderson makes clear in this new book.
Anderson, editor of City Journal and author of South Park Conservatives, is concerned about whether democratic capitalism can continue to survive, particularly in its greatest historical bastion, the United States. A particular worry is whether there are elements in democratic capitalism itself that inevitably press toward its demise. He observes that “the notion of the universal equality of man, which liberal democracy claims as its foundation,” has inevitably unleashed “an egalitarian spirit that it could never really tame.” Economic and social freedom create inequality, because not all people are equally gifted, but if everyone is created equal yet not everyone is equal in fact, something must be wrong.
Pursuing this materialistic conception to the point of obsession, the Western Left promotes as remedy “an aggressive secularism, an overweening state, and a transformation of constitutional law into partisan politics.” Resolutely avoiding the sin of despair, Anderson answers the critique by outlining both the real achievements of free societies and the intellectual and cultural foundations for them. Key among his insights is that the defenders of freedom tend to take a very practical view of life, judging ideas and policies by the consequences they bring, whereas opponents of liberty want to force reality into a mold based on their imaginings of an ideal society. The radicals’ vision isn’t connected to an understanding of how human beings really are; that’s why they end up attacking all the organically developed institutions and ideas that make a free society work– economic freedom, religious faith (especially Christianity), individual liberty, rule of law, the principle of subsidiarity, the family, and public morality.
At the center of the conflict is religion. “Post-Christian Europe has unsurprisingly sunken progressively deeper into moral relativism,” Anderson writes; and the differences between Europe and America are clearly a result of two entirely different worldviews. Despite the presence in America of a fairly influential though relatively small atheist contingent and some strong currents of relativism and antinomianism, “religious conservatives profoundly shape American society. . . . They are a transpolitical presence in almost every walk of American life. In this way, they continue indirectly to influence political society by helping to ‘regulate’ political mores.”
This infuriates both European and American statists, for Christians and many Jews consistently champion the very things that stand in the way of the creation of a new and (as imagined) vastly better society. That, I think, is what they really hate about Judaism and especially Christianity: not the belief in God as such, but the fact that the belief in an all-powerful God who cares about individual human beings makes people much more reluctant to indulge in coercive schemes to transform people and their surroundings to fit materialistic dogma.
The purveyors of modern liberalism relentlessly impose these utopian visions regardless of the disasters they create, and then use the resulting catastrophes as an excuse for more ambitious schemes even further disconnected from reality. As Anderson observes in his critique of the lionized liberal philosopher John Rawls: “The egalitarian liberalism Rawls called justice would be unworkable in practice, even if it were desirable. His works do not speak to any recognizable political world and ignore almost completely the real dilemmas and tragedies of our time.” Similarly, Jean-Paul Sartre’s work “stands as an absolute warning about the wrong turns that moral and political thought can take when untethered from nature or any sense of reality.” The hate-filled revolutionary blather of Antonio Negri, the Italian co-author of the immensely popular 2001 socialist screed Empire, expresses nothing but contempt for ordinary people and is simply another example of “the adolescent thrill of perpetual rebellion.” This mentality in extremis is most luridly evident in Fascism and Communism–which, Anderson writes, “desolated entire nations . . . in their quest to revolutionize the bourgeois economic and political condition.”
The central question is how to understand in a healthy manner the idea of popular sovereignty. French philosopher Bertrand de Jouvenel observed the rise of what Anderson describes as “the idea that ‘the people,’ not some divine source or ancient custom, have final authority on all matters of law and social organization.” While that may sound completely benign, Anderson notes, it actually “erodes the restraints on what political communities can imagine doing” and “encourages the notion that the state is a tool for directly securing the people’s well-being.” As a result, even in democracies no practical concerns can ultimately constrain the perpetual amassing of government power toward any ends that ambitious and influential people may conceive.
Anderson thus observes, after Tocqueville, that the great current threat to democratic capitalism is inherent in democracy itself, as “the democratic regime threatens to eliminate every reference point beyond the sovereign individual” and eats away everything except the pursuit of material gain—which is a pretty good description of our current Western political situation. Anderson–himself avoiding any utopian temptation–ultimately offers no specific solution to this fundamental problem. Instead he posits a “humbled modernity” that “distrusts any utopian efforts” and is “aware of the limits of what the state or any centralized authority can do.”
Such a negative, conservative response, however, is hardly calculated to fire the imagination of those headed to political combat. (Yelling “Stop!” is not nearly as appealing as saying “Go!”) The great challenge for contemporary defenders of freedom may be to create a vision of a free society that sounds as good as the fantastic schemes of the utopians, if that is indeed possible. And it may well be: The fact is, freedom works. Free people reduce economic inequality, lift multitudes out of poverty, cure diseases, clean up the environment, and make lives longer and more comfortable. And social freedom need not undermine religion or morality. Echoing historian Rodney Stark and others, Anderson attributes America’s religious strength to the nation’s “free market of religions.” When people are truly free to choose, they tend to be religious, as America demonstrates so vividly.
Perhaps, then, there is indeed a highly appealing picture that champions of freedom can draw—of Ronald Reagan’s “shining city on a hill,” a place of both liberty and order, where people are free to pursue their dreams as long as they don’t harm others, and in which their dreams are constrained by a modest sense of their place in the world based on a recognition of their humble status before the Almighty. The world is always going to have its share of dreamers, so we might as well give them something good to dream about.
Dear Mr. Karnick:
A well-written review, most of which I concur with.
The word “democracy,” though, used in reference to the United States, may be inappropriate. I’ve read that at least a few of the Founders were anxious to avoid the pitfalls inherent in democracy and chose to establish a republican, or representative, system of government to act as a check on mob rule. It’s interesting in that regard to see occasionally somebody advocating abolishing this or that feature of the Constitution which serves to constrain direct, “democratic” access to the reins of power. Usually such persons are of the so-called “liberal,” or Leftist, persuasion.
If someone running for President were to announce: “Elect me and I guarantee that I won’t give any of you a thing,” you can bet a wail of dismay would swell in the land, from the halls of corporate headquarters in Silicon Valley to the shores of welfare queens’ backyard pools. I’d vote for that person, but of course s/he would never stand a chance of being nominated, much less elected. The Nanny State, with its alphabet soup of meddlesome and incompetent government departments, is in the ascendant; and there seems to be no political will to curb these usurpations of power.
Now, I’m all for a free economic market; free enterprise is the right way to go. HOWEVER: The people in the marketplace should possess a morality which serves to check their ambitions so that they harm no one in the pursuit of profit. (I hesitate to use the word “ethics” because it has been all but emptied of meaning by persons who term themselves “ethicists” but manifestly are devoid of morality.) The regnant problem today is unrestrained corporate influence in domestic politics and international relations. Some writers have termed it “corporatism,” rule by powerful business interests. Neither major political party seems free of corporatist control, and a vote for either of them is a vote for more of the same. (And, no, I am NOT a Marxist!) Corporatists ride the coattails of our “democracy,” enjoying its benefits while ignoring their responsibility to be good citizens. Citizens! Transnational corporations evidently don’t feel loyalty to any nation state, the United States included. Hence the massive trade deficits, the gutting of the middle class, the devaluation of the dollar, the massive sell-off of America’s infrastructure (it’s only just begun!), the continual erosion of U.S. sovereignty, and the resultant disgust which most citizens feel towards their government.
So the average (wo)man in the street gets hammered both ways: by the utopians who always seem to find a place in government and the corporatists relentlessly pursuing the bottom line AT ANY COST (which they don’t have to pay; let the taxpayers pick up the tab). To me, both groups are frightening, and both exert a stultifying influence on the average person’s life and freedom. When Big Business sleeps with Big Government, their offspring is always going to be ugly.
We may be in the End Game of the Great American Experiment. One of the Founders, I think it was, noted that the Republic would flourish only so long as the people remained moral; that the whole thing would come crashing down when Americans abandoned their First Principles, as you say:
“economic freedom, religious faith (especially Christianity), individual liberty, rule of law, the principle of subsidiarity, the family, and public morality.”
At the moment, I’m not very optimistic–but maybe I’ll feel better tomorrow.
Best regards,
Mike Tooney
Much to think about here. Thanks for sharing it.