By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, November 06, 2018
Today is Election Day, which means that a great many
professional to semi-professional scolds will be hectoring you to vote, calling
it a “civic duty” and invoking such clichés as “If you don’t vote, you can’t
complain.” The business of this Tuesday, they say, is to “make your voice
heard.”
Okay. That’s Tuesday. What is the business of Wednesday?
Procedural majoritarian democracy — voting and the
subsequent peaceable exchange of political power — is admirable and necessary
not because, as another cliché insists, “we are all equal at the polling
place.” There is no equality among people in this world — some people have some
pretty stupid political opinions, and they act on them — and the notional
“equality before the law” that we Americans cleave to describes the character
of our institutions, not the
character of our people.
The value of voting is that it is the easiest nonviolent
means of ensuring a minimum level of accountability among lawmakers and high
officials. If we do not like the principal figures in our governments, we can
change them. Voting is a practical measure, not an affirmation of every
ignorant sentiment and selfish demand from every Larry, Caitlyn, and Avery
across the fruited plain. If there were an easier and more reliable method for
ensuring accountability than asking 50 percent plus 1 of the people what they
think about things they don’t know very much about (there’s no shame in
rational ignorance; it is rational, after all), the world would be a better
place, at least a better-governed place. But there isn’t. So we vote.
Voting is not the highest expression of citizenship: It’s
the bargain-basement expression of citizenship, an almost entirely cost-free
opportunity to step into a private place and say: “This is what I want.” There
isn’t anything particularly noble or elevated about “I want.” Every screaming
toddler on every airplane in the sky is saying “I want,” and it doesn’t impress
us all that much. Every crusty bum on the streets of San Francisco with his
hand out is saying “I want,” as is every shrieking women’s-studies major in
Portland and every talk-radio caller in Plano. It’s not that this isn’t
important: It is difficult to ensure accountability to the governed without
asking the governed what they want. But there’s a hell of a lot more to
citizenship than that.
The architects of the American constitutional order
understood this, which is why they put limits on the power of the federal
government and — this is critical — limits on the power of We the People and
their great endless “I want!” They gave us the Bill of Rights, i.e. the list of
stuff that you don’t really get to vote on, the things that are not up for
debate and renegotiation: freedom of speech and of the press, freedom of
religion, the right to keep and bear arms, the right to be free of unwarranted searches
and seizures, etc. I spend a great deal of time talking to people about their
political thinking and their policy preferences, and I am damned pleased that
they don’t get to vote on these things.
Saying “I want” is pretty easy. There are higher
expressions of citizenship. You can see their monuments in Arlington and Valley
Forge, and hear their echoes everywhere from France to Afghanistan. But dying
on the battlefield is not the only way to serve, only the most dramatic. There
are those who die for their principles, and those who live for them: Charles
Sumner, Susan B. Anthony, Henry David Thoreau. And some of those who live for a
cause also die for it: There is no better example of active citizenship than
the career of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
Those are dramatic stories with famous heroes, but all of
those little platoons that are so easy to overlook contribute more to our real
well-being than any election could ever begin to: all that volunteer work,
those quiet helpers behind the scenes, the people enduring endless committee
meetings that, time-consuming and maddening though they are, ultimately are
pointed at worthy and necessary objectives. Every nun up at 4 a.m. praying for
the ultimate good of people she’s never met and never will, fulfilling the
duties of a different citizenship. All those businesses that are really about
more than doing business. All those people doing the tedious work of loving
their neighbors. Who say along with Ed Tom Bell: “Okay, I’ll be a part of this
world.”
It isn’t that we don’t want to be good, or that we intend
to shirk our duties as citizens, which are far more expansive than registering
a personal preference on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November
every other year. It’s that we forget. Forgetting is easy, especially when
there are so many amusing and invigorating distractions, which is most of what
our political discourse really is. Do you really believe that the United States
is on the verge of turning into Nazi Germany or modern Venezuela? Grow up.
It is hard to be a citizen. It is easy to get excited
about the circus.
The American voter is basically unserious, and you might
be forgiven for thinking that he is an idiot. The American citizen, on the
other hand, can rejoice in his membership in a community whose genius, energy,
and decency knows few if any rivals. The vexing thing is that they are the same
person.
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