Roger’s Rules

March 4th, 2009 6:08 am

Alexis de Toqueville, man of the moment

Regular readers know of my fondness (and here) for Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America, first published in 1835 but still the best thing ever written about the character of popular government in the United States. I am happy to see that Tocqueville is enjoying a renaissance. The current issue of The Weekly Standard lists him among the contributors to their reflection on “Obama’s America,” appropriately illustrated with a herd of sheep on the cover, and reprints part of his famous description of “Democratic Despotism” in its editorial pages. My Pajamas Media colleague Michael Ledeen–author of an excellent book about Tocqueville–has also weighed in on the subject with a brilliant and melancholy post on the subject (h/t Andy McCarthy).

Russell Kirk rightly said that Tocqueville’s analysis of democratic despotism was “his supreme achievement as a political theorist, a sociologist, a liberal, and a conservative.” The aching pertinence of his dissection of this “tutelary despotism” that “does not tyrannize” but rather “hinders, compromises, enervates, extinguishes, dazes, and finally reduces each nation to being nothing more than a herd of timid and industrious animals of which the government is the shepherd” is a classic in the library of political admonition. For decades, the United States has been drifting towards the shoals of that enslavement. With the ascension of our current President and his plans to inspan us all in his “spread-the-wealth-around” socialism, we are nearing the point of shipwreck. “The devilish genius of this form of tyranny,” Mr. Ledeen writes,

is that it looks and even acts democratic. We still elect our representatives, and they still ask us for our support. “. . . servitude of the regular, quiet, and gentle kind . . . might be combined with some of the outward forms of freedom, and . . .might even establish itself under the wing of the sovereignty of the people.” Freedom is smothered without touching the institutions of political democracy. We act out democratic skits while submitting to an oppressive central power that we ourselves have chosen.

And again:

We will not be bludgeoned into submission; we will be seduced. He foresees the collapse of American democracy as the end result of two parallel developments that ultimately render us meekly subservient to an enlarged bureaucratic power: the corruption of our character, and the emergence of a vast welfare state that manages all the details of our lives. His words are precisely the ones that best describe out current crisis:

That power is absolute, minute, regular, provident and mild. It would be like the authority of a parent if, like that authority, its object was to prepare men for manhood; but it seeks, on the contrary, to keep them in perpetual childhood: it is well content that the people should rejoice, provided they think of nothing but rejoicing. For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness; it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritances: what remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living?

The metaphor of a parent maintaining perpetual control over his child is the language of contemporary American politics. All manner of new governmental powers are justified in the name of “the children,” from enhanced regulation of communications to special punishments for “hate speech;” from the empowerment of social service institutions to crack down on parents who try to discipline their children, to the mammoth expansion of sexual quotas from university athletic programs to private businesses. Tocqueville particularly abhors such new governmental powers because they are Federal, emanating from Washington, not from local governments. He reminds us that when the central government asserts its authority over states and communities, a tyrannical shadow lurks just behind. So long as local governments are strong, he says, even tyrannical laws can be mitigated by moderate enforcement at the local level, but once the central government takes control of the entire structure, our liberties are at grave risk.

At the very end of Democracy in America, Tocqueville sadly names “general apathy” the greatest danger of the age. The great question that faces us today concerns the extent and recalcitrance of that apathy. How far has our enervation proceeded? Mr. Ledeen ends his reflection with the hope that “we’re in for a hell of a fight.” I second that hope, and I tremble at the possibility that we’ve gone too long without exercising the the muscles of freedom and independence to make effective use of them now.

Comment
Bookmark and Share
Digg Print Digg PJM Home

Pajamas Media appreciates your comments that abide by the following guidelines:

1. Avoid profanities or foul language unless it is contained in a necessary quote or is relevant to the comment.

2. Stay on topic.

3. Disagree, but avoid ad hominem attacks.

4. Threats are treated seriously and reported to law enforcement.

5. Spam and advertising are not permitted in the comments area.

The clause regarding "hate speech" has been deleted because readers criticized it as being too loosely defined. We agreed.

These guidelines are very general and cannot cover every possible situation. Please don't assume that Pajamas Media management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment. We reserve the right to filter or delete comments or to deny posting privileges entirely at our discretion. If you feel your comment was filtered inappropriately, please email us at story@pajamasmedia.com.

7 Comments

1. Mustang94:

Somebody (I can’t recall whom) wrote a book touching on the history of this phenomenon and its associations with the political left. It’s the one with the red dust jacket with the smiley face on it. What was the name of that book again?

Mar 4, 2009 - 8:34 am 2. Amy:

That great book is “Liberal Fascism” by the learned and hilariously astute Jonah Goldberg. A must read for what is happening to us and to know that all that is happening now is by design. Proof of that? The chief of staff, “No crises should be wasted.” That just about says it all.

Mar 4, 2009 - 9:12 am 3. Warren:

I am currently reading Liberal Fascism for the third time. If liberals could back up their arguments against conservativism with as much damaging factual and historical proof as Goldberg uses against them in that book, we conservatives would have no choice but to pack it in and go home. However, truth is rarely on the liberal side, although that never seems to bother them. Give them an unproven ideal over a proven fact, and they will accept it every time. Unfortunately, the liberal disinterest in truth and the independent voters’ consistent cowering before the demands of relativists have combined to create a democratic tyrrany from which absolute truth will have a hard time recovering its place of reverence (if it ever had one). Therefore, I salute Roger Kimball and Jonah Goldberg for taking a stand. We need all the help we can get.

Mar 5, 2009 - 9:14 am 4. Duke of Sharon:

Back when the PATRIOT Act was the liberal bogeyman de jour, we heard a lot of the old, “those who would sacrifice liberty for safety deserve neither.” Apparently, to today’s leaders, that only applies to a very thin segment of liberty and safety, why doesn’t it apply to economic liberty and safety as well?

Mar 5, 2009 - 9:43 am 5. Will:

Liberal romanticism is dumb as bricks, but the conservative politicians are hypocritical to the max. I think there’s too much knee-jerking going on, especially with a band-wagon the size of the Internet. Liberal Fascism sounds funny and has a lot of truth, but Conservative Fascism (or rather, Conservative Hypocrisy) has even more truth, the cliche being that fiscal Republicans don’t exist in office any more even though they all take turns barfing up the same story of fiscal responsibility. And Sharon, if you’re going to make a point, don’t just spit words on a screen, actually try and make your point make sense, because what you’re trying to say is some weird version of events that only make sense in your head (another major problem with us conservatives these days).

Mar 5, 2009 - 11:46 am 6. Steynian 333 « Free Canuckistan!:

[...] ROGER KIMBALL: “Alexis de Toqueville, man of the moment” …. [...]

Mar 10, 2009 - 2:18 pm 7. Gaffe Prices:

Hey Will, could you explain again why Liberal Fascism is the better choice over Conservative Hypochrissy in that straw man way you doo sooo well?

I mean, after all, better to lose to the new national socialisms than to commit that most cardinal of sins- dread HYPOCRISY!!!

With hypocrisy defined by you as engaging in some moderate form of what the administration and congress are doing now; namely, engorging themselves on a spending and bribery binge that exceeds the budgets of all previous presidents combined. But hey, you’re there safe and secure, spotting hypocricy where it rears its ugly head, before the rest of us in denial to the max can see it.

You know, there’s a job for you in the new 0bamas administration, because 0bama said he wanted to cut that stuff right out…

But don’t get me wrong, I like, so totally agree with you on everything! So why don’t we all just stop bickering and complaining, and submit to our new gay and lesbian overlords?

Yeah, and guilt ourselves some more, and engage in all the other pieties of this new crackpot religion.

Mar 12, 2009 - 9:30 pm

Write a Comment

Name: (required, displayed)
Email: (required, not publicized)
URL: (optional, displayed)
Comments: