For those of us in Generation-X, Alexis de Tocqueville was a popular thinker, especially in industrial music culture, but I had never read his full two-volume, 1000-page study of "Democracy in America" until now. So what can be learned from reading this massive tome today?
Well, certainly there is not enough space to discuss everything in this very ambitious text. Among many things, it does give a thorough breakdown of government structures in the United States from the municipal to the Federal, outlines the general functions entrusted to the various branches, explains why Americans went with an electoral college to elect the President as opposed to a simple majority of the populace, discusses the jurisdiction and authority of State and Federal courts, and outlines the differences between northeastern states and other parts of the country, such as townships and commonwealths vs. counties. But I would caution against using this as a sole reference for learning about American government. Some of the information here is outdated. For example, Tocqueville describes how Senators are chosen by their state legislatures instead of popular election, but this has not been the case since the 17th Amendment of 1913.
Instead, what makes this book stand out today is that it was written from the observational stance of an alien, and from this objective view, the benefits and foibles of the American system speak for themselves. To give you an idea of how Tocqueville writes, consider this paragraph:
"Someone observed to me one day in Philadelphia that almost all crimes in America are caused by the abuse of intoxicating liquors... 'How comes it,' said I, 'that you do not put a duty upon brandy?' 'Our legislators,' rejoined my informant, 'have frequently thought of this expedient; but the task is difficult: a revolt might be anticipated; and the members who should vote for such a law would be sure of losing their seats.' 'Whence I am to infer,' replied I, 'that drunkards are the majority in your country, and that temperance is unpopular.'"
Ouch!
One thing that I hadn't thought of was what governance was like in America BEFORE the formal adoption of the democratic experiment. When the English immigrants landed in the 1600s, they didn't simply adopt the laws of their mother country. In fact, they just sort of did their own thing without the awareness of the Crown in many cases. They voted on their own laws and elected their own officials. Many of their laws were straight out of the Bible. Being a Frenchman, Tocqueville can't help but leak out how he thought the original Puritan settlers must have been crazy people, focused on punitive laws against not only adultery and rape, but lying, swearing, and having long hair. But it sure puts the deeply religious and moral roots of America in perspective, even when considering what traditionally has been censored in American TV and movies, things to which other countries wouldn't bat an eye. It also shows us how America has, from the earliest beginnings, drifted to democracy. Theirs was a liberty enlightened by knowledge, but knowledge for the early settlers could only be found in religion. Thus, liberty for them was religious authority, which they believed made for the healthiest and most prosperous society.
Geez, almost everyone living in America today would have been executed or at least flogged by these rules, including our current leaders. Then again, maybe these early leaders foresaw the fentanyl epidemic, traumatized children, gang violence, and other tragedies we now face with our current lack of compass, though these are the same people who also burned women at the stake based on hearsay rather than heresy, so maybe their powers of foresight weren't all that strong. Still, Tocqueville postulates that maybe their Christian zeal allowed for democracy to flourish. In Volume Two, Part One, he notes that the Quran and the Jewish Scriptures lay down intricate and inviolable civil laws, whereas the New Testament only is concerned with general human treatment of each other as equals. And, vice versa, democracy tends to drift its adherents towards pantheism. When your core belief is in the unity of all humanity, you also tend to believe in the unity of its Creator.
In what has since been called The Tocqueville Effect, he describes one threat to democracy as being the result of the paradox that social unrest increases as social conditions improve. It would be tempting to argue that this is exactly what we are seeing in America today, as our nation's poor would not be considered poor by the standards of other countries where there are more egregious access issues to food, healthcare, and technology. Also, unlike their English ancestors, many of the richest Americans didn't come by their wealth through inheritance of feudal titles and lands. Instead, they started off poor, and built their own empire through hard work, seizing opportunities that only American offered, and a lot of good luck. So Americans have always had an addiction to material well-being. The poor have had a taste of opulence and want more, and the rich live in fear of losing their position and comforts.
However, I am not sure that it is a natural guarantee that social unrest is the result of social improvements. Many might even say our social unrest comes from what Tocqueville calls a "tyranny of the majority". This latter idea was part of what was appealing about Tocqueville in my counterculture, namely American Industrial and post-punk, which tended to attract those in society that felt different from the norms of American mores, and thus felt oppressed by and resentful of mainstream culture. But being a counterculture mostly of the white and middle class, I can't say any of us were really as oppressed as we thought. As we grew up, we began to understand this better, only to be replaced by further generations with their own growing number of subcultures with their own resentments. Tocqueville observed this resentment even back in the early 1800s--"agitated by the chance of success, they are irritated by its uncertainty; and they pass from the enthusiasm of pursuit to the exhaustion of ill success, and lastly to the acrimony of disappointment." And the more divided a country becomes, you get not so much a tyranny of the majority but a tyranny of the MINORITY.
Tocqueville wrote during a time when America still considered the will of the majority to be as inviolate as the French once considered their king. These days, the country is pretty split, and if there is a majority, it is shouted down with accusations that are designed to be irrefutable. You can't even have an opinion about something as mundane as a superhero movie without serious uproar and even harassment by a vocal minority of those who feel they have ownership of the project. I watch as my daughter struggles finding any positive friendships, because her peer group is constantly competing to be the most broken or the most victimized. Corporations, the least oppressed entities in America, pretend to be champions of the growing number of disenfranchised groups in the hopes of matching the sensibilities of their target audience, while failing to realize that it's never good enough, because society has divided into too many tribal microcosms. News networks and social media influencers do the same thing, pandering to the agendas of their perceived audience for ratings and clicks rather than delivering objective information no matter who it offends or pleases.
Tocqueville would probably argue that what I just described is actually tyranny of the MAJORITY. Even in the 1830s, he observed how people congregate into echo chambers of like-minded peers all patting each other on the back. In these groups, the predominant way of thinking IS the majority, and if anyone of this group starts to doubt the validity of the group's assertions and speaks about it, they risk not only being shunned from the group, but getting cancelled. Tocqueville doesn't actually use the term "cancelled", but he describes the process perfectly, showing that cancel culture was a thing when the United States was still young. But I could argue with Tocqueville by using a number of examples, so I will pick one. Anna Kasparian has worked for the Young Turks, a traditionally liberal-leaning agency, for 18 years, but recently agreed to be interviewed by Glen Beck, a more conservative commentator. Her willingness to share her views "with the other side" led to a very public resignation of one of her staff over her audacity to even speak to Beck. She admits that though this was just one person in her agency, it cost the company viewers who began to doubt that Kasparian was really who she presented to be even after 18 years of consistency. Her appearance on the program could have opened possibilities for Beck viewers to hear and even be swayed by her views, which would have been a win for her company and her "side". Instead, a small portion of her team opted to try to punish her. If this loss of viewership had been significant enough, it could have cost her platform of influence and even her livelihood, despite ultimately sparked by a tiny fraction of the overall U.S. population who even knows who Anna Kasparian is, and we don't have a good system of recourse in such cases. But whether you call this tyranny of the majority or the minority, Tocqueville's ultimate point remains valid. In a country that values free speech, there are far too many avenues to silence the "other". Americans on any side of an issue come to believe they have MORAL authority, and you are either for them or against them. There is no room for doubters, for unbelievers, for infidels. In a tech world where real debates and discourse are becoming rare in favor of imprudent emotional reactions to manipulated sound bytes and click bait, the value of cultural and intellectual diversity in progressing a nation is stifled so that Americans can isolate into ever increasing numbers of ever smaller silos.
Speaking of the media, I was surprised to find Tocqueville as cautious about the role of the media as we are today. At the time this book was written, newspapers were the only predominant form, and every village and hamlet had their own. The good thing about newspapers at the time was that they allowed like-minded people to find each other and thus grow their voices that would otherwise be individually drowned out by the multitudes. But the larger the publication, the more potential to influence opinion towards uniformity. I've grown used to hearing how journalism is dead, how "in the good ol' days," a free press was an essential accountability check on our leaders. Tocqueville did not have this experience with American newspapers. He found them to be incredibly biased even in the early 1800s, and believed a corporate press with interests either in parallel or against a sitting administration or candidate ran the risk of being a propaganda machine for an aristocracy that would otherwise have no ability to impact a democratic government without investing in the media as a tool of influence. Just as we see today, Tocqueville observed that the tactics of the press was to take advantage of people's tendency to believe implicitly without investigation. "When many organs of the press adopt the same line of conduct, their influence in the long run becomes irresistible, and public opinion, perpetually assailed from the same side, eventually yields to the attack. In the United States each separate journal exercises but little authority; but the power of the periodical press is second only to that of the people."
This unfortunate side effect of human psychology dilutes the health benefits of diversity. America is very focused on diversity right now, which I have already argued is necessary for healthy democracy, but fails to take into account that diversity doesn't help a country grow without some modicum of assimilation. There does have to be some coming together to share ideas, some common values upon which everyone in a country agrees, otherwise we have tribalism, where everyone is at odds with each other, competes with each other over victimhood, and clamors for influence. A free press can either help or destroy healthy diversity. Tocqueville saw the dangers inherent in the media, but at the time there was no technology to network the media with citizens across such a vast country. Therefore, he could not foresee the age of the Internet, which should in theory bring us all closer together, but which ultimately seems to have made us more isolated than ever before. But his analysis warns that a large country with a diverse population that is not integrated by shared principles risks devolving into chaos under such a democratic republic. The United States was not nearly as large in Tocqueville's time as it is now, and, though immigration was constantly diversifying the population, he was still examining a country largely of Anglo-immigrants and their descendants, so America was getting by. But he seems to flat out reject the viability of a free press under other circumstances. It is not clear to me what alternative to a free press he was advocating, but I shudder to think about what a true State media would look like.
This is one part of Tocqueville's book that resonates with those who suspect conspiracies of globalism. If powerful people ever wanted to consolidate their power across the world, you would have to collapse democratic systems by micro-dividing the populations of such countries, thus putting enough stress to collapse democracy and allow for a return of a more centralized authority.
American democracy does have measures to counteract tyranny of majority, like judicial independence, a bill of rights, and so forth, but it is vulnerable to the corrosive effect due to decentralized administration. Tocqueville rightfully points out that, in some ways, the Federal or "Union" government is more centralized than the old monarchy of France--there is one Legislature to make the law and one Supreme Court for interpretation of the law, for example--but overall, the designers of the Federal constitution were careful to separate and balance power to have as much of a representative government as possible. This has led to a complex system of decentralized administration. The central body representing the majority must entrust that their will be carried out by agents, often unelected, over whom the representative government cannot reasonably have complete control. Tocqueville does also conjecture that the United States may have been immune (at the time of his writing) to the chaos that could accompany a lack of central administration, because nowhere had he met a collective nation of people more educated and "awake to their common interests" as Americans. Wow! If he could only see us now!
I must also mention how fascinating I found Tocqueville's section on American foreign policy. I think Tocqueville would be shocked at how many foreign wars the U.S. has been involved in since he wrote this book. He applauds the policies established by Washington and Jefferson, as quoted in Washington's farewell address: "The nation which indulges towards another an habitual hatred, or an habitual fondness, is in some degree a slave. It is a slave to its animosity or to its affection, either of which is sufficient to lead it astray from its duty and its interest." However, Tocqueville believes that democracies tend to "obey impulse rather than prudence". Washington issued a Proclamation of Neutrality in 1798 during conflict between England and France, but American sentiment was very strong to enter a war that did not concern them. A weaker president may have caved and declared war against England, but Washington didn't need to win any popularity contest. So perhaps Tocqueville wouldn't be so surprised to know of many overseas wars in which America has since been inserted, or how the people who represent Americans keep sending tax dollars and American lives in the name of overseas interests.
On a final note, Volume I concludes with an extremely long chapter regarding relations between the democratic Anglo-Americans, their African slaves, and the Native Americans. Here, democracy goes out the window. Tocqueville's eyewitness accounts and overall observations pack such a powerful emotional punch that it threatens to fill the reader with the worst kind of anger--impotent anger. While the rest of the book does a great job presenting a balanced view of American democracy, and ultimately concluding that this system may be the best humanity will ever get to true liberty, he purposefully inserts this somber irony of the democratic experiment.
To conclude, this is the most interesting book I've ever read on the subject of political science. I think the value of this book can be summed up in this statement: "It was remarked by a man of genius that 'ignorance lies at the two ends of knowledge.' Perhaps it would have been more correct to say that strong convictions are found only at the two ends, and that doubt lies in the middle." This book is written with this idea in mind. It can help those who feel they know nothing about American government and those who think they know everything. And if you are in the doubting middle, I still think you will find this outsider perspective enlightening, shedding much needed light on a complex system, why it is the way it is, the threats upon the viability of such a system, and the threats it itself imposes. And for those living in the United States today, I think you'll be surprised to find just how little has actually changed in 200 years. I hope that spending some time understanding American democracy is just the remedy needed to help us embrace our diversity while rediscovering our common interests rather than focusing on click bait and political platitudes that divide us.
SCORE: 5 electorates out of 5
SUGGESTED MUSICAL PAIRING: This is Fun (1984) by White Hand