How Democracies Die
This will be one to keep an eye on, a week long series that features an interview with the authors of How Democracies Die [book review here]
www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jan/08/how-democracies-die-by-steven-levi...
The intro to the interview:
During the course of our conversation, which has been edited and condensed for clarity, we discussed whether you need a well-thought-out plan to be a strongman, what America still has going for it, and why the Mueller investigation might be a stress test that American democracy cannot pass.
A good question:
Isaac Chotiner: Was there some aspect of Trump’s campaign, or the early months of his presidency, that made you want to write this book?
Daniel Ziblatt: That’s really the period in which we decided to write the book, during the campaign. We kind of had this eerie feeling we had seen this movie before, with (1.) accusations that Hillary is treasonous, or (2.) aggressive violence, or (3.) later on in the campaign this ambiguity of whether or not he’d accept the results of the election, and this was stuff we had seen before in the political systems that we studied. We could draw on our knowledge of other countries and other places and times to try to understand what was happening.
[numbers added for clarity]
Another good question:
What things do you guys have your eyes on the most, going forward? Is it the 2018 elections? The 2020 elections? The resilience of certain institutions?
Ziblatt: I think the 2018 elections are crucial and the Democrats need to do well in order to conserve some kind of check. I think the second point is what lessons the Republicans draw from the electoral success of the Democrats. Do the Republicans then realize they need to separate themselves finally with Trump? Because even if Democrats sweep the House and the Senate, any need to kind of impeach Trump unilaterally without Republican support is going to be damaging for American democracy in the long run. So in some ways I think it is really critical to continue to focus on the Republicans and to hope and expect that the Republicans at some point, once they see the electoral cost of continuing to align themselves so closely with Trump, will then break with him.
Livitsky's reponse:
Levitsky: So we are keeping an eye obviously on Trump, but we are also keeping an eye on the underlying polarization that is beginning to rip our institutions apart. And I think, getting back to what Daniel said, the future of the Republican Party is critical. The Republicans have to eventually become a party that represents more than small-town white Christians. It has to be a party that can represent a more diverse sector of American society. And until that’s the case, we are likely to have our parties be polarized along racial and religious lines, and that is trouble.
The final word for today's segment:
Ziblatt: I would just add to that, one of the strongest findings in social science is the level of GDP per capita and its correlations with democratic stability. Given the U.S.’s national wealth, the probability of democracy collapsing [is] very, very low. But that again, that’s based on the record of the past 50 years so who knows? Using the past as record, though, we should feel some sense of security.
Using the past as record, we wouldn’t have elected an authoritarian television star.
Levitsky: Right, there is a sense among many different observers, many different scholars, that we are skating onto some new territory.
The only problem I have so far is that the authors and the interviewer have failed to point out the joint liability and accountability the Democratic Party and the MSM have for enabling Trump. I hope they focus on that aspect of the pending collapse of the American Empire later this week. More at the link:
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/01/the-state-of-american-democr...
Comments
Do you do any due diligence at all?
The article's slant (not one word about Hillary cheating Bernie out of the nomination, while painting Putin and Chavez as mere thugs) should have set off all kinds of alarm bells for you. It did for me. So I did five minutes of Googling and here is what I found about Steven Levitsky:
1) He is a member of the Weatherhead Center (founder = Henry Kissinger) [REF 3]
2) He is a member of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (a.k.a. Center for Controlling Latin America with Coups and Crooked Bankers) [REF 1]
3) He is a member of the National Endowment for Democracy's "International Forum for Democratic Studies Research Council.[REF 2] (background on NED = [REF 4]
Both authors are Harvard elitists with a long history of whitewashing America's looting and murder in Latin America and non-stop condemnation of Putin (while ignoring our Shock Doctrine looting of Russia and ignoring Yeltsin). Their book seems to be a one-sided attack on Trump, pretending that Hillary's actual crimes are nothing more than Trumpian lies.
Too bad the Guardian caved to TPTB right after they published the Snowden papers.
Call me back when you get a clue.
REF 1
REF 2
REF 3
REF 4
Oh, the interviewer is Issac Chotiner
Issac Chotiner is a Senior Editor at The New Republic. Yet another dubious operation. Again, due diligence.
I remember TNR from the 80s, it was neocon-lite. At that time, it was funded by Martin Peretz.
And it was more of the same from the 1980s to today. TNR has come to stand for Third Way propaganda, tolerance of neocons, and generally stabbing the genuine left in the front and in the back.
And you think this interview about this book is something a leftie like me would be interested in? What are you smoking?
Again...
See my comment below.
This is a nonpartisan site, if you don't like what's posted, please push back without the insults. That's all we ask.
I understande about the "get a clue" comment, but this one...
What is wrong with citing all the facts about why this is a complete turnoff and saying I have no intention of agreeing with this or letting in stand?
If, as you say
What is wrong with saying that I am totally not buying this?
Nothing wrong...
with not buying it, we encourage rebuttal, without the insults. The insults are the problem.
I blockquoted this:
to emphasize the fact that we are a nonpartisan site. You don't have to agree with anything said here, but because we are nonpartisan don't expect everything to be of "leftie" persuasion. Again, if you don't like it then push back, and you did a great job of supporting your viewpoint, just please, do it in a civil fashion.
Please refrain...
from using language like this:
Folks are free to post what they want. You are free to push back if you disagree, as long as you do it in a civil fashion.
I hear you, but the lack of insight in the OP is infuriating
I gave four solid references to who the authors are and two references about the interviewer.
The author has chosen not to speak to all of that. I'm waiting for a substantive response.
I understand...
I regularly get infuriated too. All we ask is to remain civil. Please.
As I said below. I will be civil. n/t
Heh, I drafted an essay last night and titled it,
"We Do NOT Live in a Democracy, Dammit!"
I don't know if I'll finish it now. It doesn't seem to matter.
I did try to read that and got this far:
"measured by the journalists and media, and they have been incredible. So in this sense, these are the kinds of institutions that have risen to the occasion."
According to these guys, the journalists and media have been "incredible".
Just goes to show there are two realities out there, the real one and the one that's all made up.
"This is a nonpartisan site"
I get it about snark; I'm sorry. I will refrain from that no matter how upset an OP makes me.
But I do not understand about nonpartisanship and what it has to do with this thread. I tried to answer it on my own. I read Dreaded Metas 1-3, and went looking for a FAQ, which I could not find.
All I got out of the DMs was that one should play nicely and should not advocate for candidates. This thread is not about candidates. It is about a book and an interview.
Are you saying I can't self-identify as a "leftie" (a fairly broad term)? If this isn't a left-leaning site, then it has me completely fooled.
Setting aside the obvious snark issue, could you please unpack how I seem to have offended against "nonpartisanship"?
Thanks.
This is a left leaning site...
by far, but we also wish to make it accessible to non-lefties. An echo chamber is pretty boring. We've had our share of folks on the right over the years but they don't last long because of the massive push back that they get. We do have several members here that have right and libertarian tendencies and they are welcome, as long as they are civil. The key to participating here is civility. We can have opposing views without rancor or we can have fight club like you can find in the comment section of zerohedge. We have chosen civility.
I consider myself a solid leftie, ask anyone here that knows me well, but sometimes I get defensive when it's suggested that only lefties are welcome here and your comment struck me as such especially when followed up by "What are you smoking", that's why I stressed the nonpartisan thing. I apologize if I misunderstood you intent.
This site has always been touted as nonpartisan from the very beginning as we wished to escape the Democratic Party dogma that we all witnessed at other sites, cough, cough. We strive to be open in discussion on all sides of the issues.
MM - Sorry for the snarky remarks. I forgot where I was.
I appreciated your article on the Carillion debacle and voted it up.
Trying to be a good c99p person with this apology.
This Just In
I've been off line for a few hours since I posted at 10:38 a.m.
I thought I was simply drawing attention to what might be an informative interview. I read the Guardian review of the book and it did not set off any alarms. I was not aware that my OP could be interpreted as an endorsement of the authors, their book or the rest of the upcoming interview snips.
I added a couple of cautionary notes at the bottom of my OP and may or may not choose to follow up. I don't agree with every viewpoint at Slate, but it's a readable site. If the authors go off the rails I may post a critical review or choose to ignore the rest of the "story".
I accept your apology, but it was hardly necessary. Living on Skid Row thickens your skin after a year or two. In fact, I appreciate your research and background on the authors and institutions.
TNR has undergone a recent change of ownership and I have reposted an article or two. Don't even recall if I was critical or agreed with the TNR slant. Here's the recent compressed history from Wiki:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Republic
Where is TNR going? I dunno. Not really important. We'll see what the next excerpts looks like tomorrow. Please feel free to attack the next excerpts of the interview at your liesure. Trust me, I will not take it personally.
Peace Out,
Meteor Man
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn
Red flags
Like poster arendt, I was somewhat upset with the Guardian article. However, I was nevertheless glad I read it. For me, it's important to keep my finger on the pulse of other viewpoints. Often it's not a very palatable chore, but necessary for me as my day-to-day activities keep me in the midst of ardent Trump supporters, extreme right-wingers, and religious fundamentalists/authoritarians/Dominionists, I attempt to understand their views. I most certainly don't agree with them often, but if I have no understanding of the basis of their views, I have trouble arguing against them. So, I bite the bullet and delve into often distasteful theories.
Evidently like poster arendt, I found this Guardian article to fall into the "distasteful" category, although not on the same side of the fence as right-leaning work. Much of what I read was certainly right, but it was in the details that I had trouble. There was this:
Well, yes, just imagine how reprehensible that would seem today. The paragraph continues:
Indeed! Who would defend such antics today? Answer: The Democratic Party, that's who. These few sentences jumped out at me immediately and a red flag was hoisted. Wikileaks showed us via the DNC emails that exactly the same reprehensible ... backroom manoeuvres were employed to torpedo the candidacy of Sanders. Mentioning the Sanders derailment by the DNC should be obvious as hell and totally in context, nevertheless it was completely ignored in the article. A lie by omission, and the article tainted (in my view) -- yet the article remains valuable to read.
I didn't do due diligence in respect to the authors involved with the interview, but once I hit the (above mentioned) text, I understood that I wasn't exactly in home territory.
I do appreciate the post, Meteor Man. I also appreciate arendt's fiery retorts ... although jtc is right regarding the tone.
It's All Good travelerxxx
I read Digby and The American Conservative for precisely the reasons you listed. Both sites have intelligent and thoughtful writers whose comments are frequently right for all the wrong reasons and compel me to analyze my own opinions and beliefs.
Check this out:
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/blogs/
Maybe the writers are sincere and maybe they are dancing The Centrism Kabuki. I dunno.
I haven't been to TOP in years because the opinions are too intellectually dishonest and intolerant of dissent. I put TOP in the same category as Drudge or Breibart, because second hand reports tell me all I need to know.
I like c99p because there is lots of elbow room for dissent and criticism. Hell, I don't always agree with my own comments or OP's I wrote a week or a month ago. Like my AA sponsor said when I was still in the program:
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn