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Professor Ian Angell Department of Management, LSE, London WC2A 2AE | +44 (0)20 7955 7655 | i.angell@lse.ac.uk |
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Double Clicking on Democracy
Ian
Angell and Simon Davies
When
did Democracy don the mantle of morality? For how much longer can we keep
up the pretence that democracy is a stepping stone to a global social
utopia. When will it be seen for what it really is: a body-count of the
manipulated mob, to be abused by any determined control-freak?
Iceland's
government sold the medical records of its population to private company
deCODE Genetics. The UK population are forced to register names and
addresses on the Electoral Roll. The Roll is exempt from the Data
Protection Act, and is sold to whoever will pay. Burglars cross reference
likely targets against directories on Compact Disks, and then phone to
check their victims are out before breaking and entering.
A
democratic vote is an excellent way to justify trampling on individual
privacy. Tony Blair wants every Police Force to follow the example of the
Lothian and Borders Police, who are archiving DNA data from everyone
arrested. Apparently seventy five percent of their local population
support this action. But did the people of Edinburgh realise that a
motoring office would place them in the database? Ninety two percent of
the citizens of the London Borough of Newham want CCTV cameras to watch
over their town centre. Newham is at the forefront of new technology. It
uses face-recognition software. The movement of individuals can now be
tracked around the Borough. The odd few percent who want anonymity will
just have to shop elsewhere. Plato claimed that democracy always leads to
despotism and tyranny. Big Brother turns out to be the manipulated voice
of the tyrannical masses insisting on a state-led invasion of privacy.
What
do we get in return for abandoning our privacy? An insignificant input
into an inconsequential national election of a nanny-state, every four or
five years, that has little or no influence on the general scheme of
things. But do we care? The BBC extended its nine o'clock news bulletin
by twenty minutes to report the 1997 General Election. Its normal viewing
figures of 5.5 million dropped to less than 4 million. The cost of
administering the same election on the remote Atlantic islands of St.
Kilda would have cost the 29 adults living there a total of five thousand
pounds. They decided not to bother and save the money.
Meanwhile,
pious words abound concerning 'extending democracy' in an 'Information Society'. The United States administration has placed
more than 100,000 documents on the Internet. However, a snowstorm of
selected information from Washington (or Brussels, or Westminster) changes
nothing. True, cable, telephone and the Internet will enable the public to
receive far more relevant and in-depth explanations of political issues.
But will they participate more intelligently in the political process?
Far
from allowing voters into the policy and decision making process,
technology actually spreads Demosclerosis
(Jonathan Rauch), a disease of government. Mass lobbying of the by vested
interests causes stalemates on every issue, forces through economically
insane proposals, thereby driving government to its knees. On 5 November
1996, voters in California approved Proposition 218. All property-related
assessments, fees, and charges have to be approved (but more likely
disapproved) by the vote of property owners. Consequently Moody's
lowered the ratings on the various bonds of the City of Los Angeles,
completing a self-fulfilling prophecy that the City would lose tens of
millions of dollars in revenue.
The
old cosy relationship between lobbyists and politicians, riding the gravy
train of public money, is coming off the rails. So should individuals be
worried about the rabble-rousers in government? Now any self-appointed
control-freak can mobilize the masses to fax-blitz elected
representatives, or carpet bomb them with e-mail. Anyone with deep pockets
can manipulate the bigoted moral majority, and call for support on single
issue campaigns. They will disseminate blacklists of names of those who
dare stand out against them. The exposed politician has become a 'rabbit
caught in the headlights', needing to 'please all of the people, all
of the time', on every single issue, or face their wrath come
re-election time. Adding to the paranoia are advertisements, opinion
polls, talk‑radio spots, and mass phone calls funnelled through toll-free
numbers. Astronomical sums of money will be needed for mass propaganda. In
a democracy, like everywhere else, money talks.
Self-serving
politicians will promise a wish-list of 'jam today and jam
tomorrow'.The hell of a collectivist heaven will poll the opinions of
the herd to reinstate capital punishment, to ban homosexuality and
immigration, and to insist on a fair(?) distribution of wealth by stealing
from the few rich. However, "a democracy cannot exist as a permanent
form of government. It can only exist until a majority of voters discover
that they can vote themselves largesse out of the public treasury"
(Alexander Tytler). Today, that largesse is free welfare and medical
payouts, and other social security safety nets. But no society can vote
itself into an economic utopia. The invisible hands of untamed economic
forces are at play. Individuals, companies, countries can only steer
within the limits allowed by the flow of self-organizing trends of the
global economy. Going against the flow is futile. If a society doesn't
earn its wages then economic reality can be kept at bay only for a little
while.
Ultimately,
by insisting that society can pay itself unreasonable salary levels, or
set excessive levels of taxation, either inflation or recession will
return, and jobs will disappear. Nevertheless to get elected democratic
governments will be forced to play this game. The needs of the masses will
justify the invasion individual privacy to check that everyone is paying
their fair(?) share. However, the rich, their wealth and their privacy
will emigrate, as Christopher Lasch predicted in The
Revolt of the Elites. In the Information Age, the 'politics of
envy' is suicide. The big political question of the coming decades is
how to find a socially acceptable means of dismantling democracy. No more 'one man (and more recently one woman), one vote'. The Boston Tea
Party-goers insisted on 'no taxation without representation', so why
not 'no representation without taxation', or even better 'the bigger
the tax, the bigger the say'?
In
a society that pays by credit card, prior to each election each voter is
given an audited personal statement of the total tax paid. Then we vote
for (credit that amount to) the party of our choice: the more tax we pay,
the more votes we have. Naturally companies would vote with their
corporation tax, and of course everyone with salaries paid for by the
state would have no vote at all. It's still democracy, but not as we
know it. Article first appeared in the LSE Magazine, Vol 12, Number 1, Summer 2000. |
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