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Do We Increasingly Prefer Dogma to Diagnosis?

6/16/2022

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"When all think alike, then no                    one is thinking"
                                        Walter Lippmann




  • ​“Climate change” can only be overcome if we stop using fossil fuels and develop green energy.  Anyone who disagrees is a climate denier or climate sceptic – and a conspiracy theorist.
  • Racism in the Western world is systemic and can only be overcome when all white people acknowledge they are racists and privileged.  Anyone who disagrees is a racist.
  • Anyone who disagrees with government-approved “science” about COVID-19 is a science denier and a conspiracy theorist.
  • Russia is guilty of an unprovoked invasion of the Ukraine.  Anyone who disputes this is an enemy of the “Ukrainian people” and a Putin stooge.”

So begins  Australian philosopher, Wayne Cristaudo’s essay “Prime Facts, Closed Minds and the Russian-Ukraine Conflict”.  Cristaudo asserts that the Western  political and ruling classes have increasingly come to insist that,  for the survival of the planet, or democracy, or world peace,   the masses must subscribe to a package of "truths".  Discussion and debate have been banished.  Groupthink is in.  

Is he right?  We, at Democracy Alert, believe it’s a position worth considering.

Ideology as Truth

Cristaudo argues that  the  tool  for achieving total conformity of speech, thought and action is   ideology – the acceptance of a priori  and unassailable prime principles or ideas which dictate how facts are to be interpreted.  He believes that our ideas about how the world works “have been reduced to an ethico-political position which is so definitive, so absolute, that it can brook no dissent.”  Political and societal issues now come with a truth status that must be locked in.   “Anyone who publicly objects to any of them is  considered to be spreading misinformation or disinformation."

Cristaudo concludes that the simplistic, black and white, good versus evil  way in which we view the Ukraine war is "a symptom of the West's loss of mind."  

Fear and Science as Tools

​
Dutch philosopher, Christian W.K.M. Alting Von Geusau,  goes one step further.  In his essay,  Totalitarianism and the Five Stages of Dehumanization, he  suggests  that we are actually sliding down a slippery slope towards totalitarianism - a system of control that ultimately tolerates no individual freedom or independent thought. 

Like Hanna Arandt before him, Alting Von Geusau asserts that the growth of totalitarianism  is greatly facilitated by a destabilizing or fear provoking crisis – something like our COVID pandemic.  But, its success also depends on authority figures presenting  a clear solution. Science, he argues plays an important role in the solution, except, that only one scientific perspective is to be allowed.    

Alting Von Geusau cites the following 
as evidence that during the pandemic we began a noticeable slide  towards totalitarianism: vaccines as the only solution, endless lockdowns, vaccine passports, suppression of scientific data and debate, censorship and the public shaming of critical voices, 

We would add, specific to Canada, our Prime Minister's  use of words like  racist and  misogynist to describe the unvaccinated, the freezing of donations to the Truckers' Convoy, and the totally unnecessary  invocation of the Emergency Act as a prelude to shutting down their protest.


Citizens or Subjects?

The concerns raised by both Cristaudo and Von Geusau  are  not as radical as you might think.  Twenty seven years ago,  in his seminal work “The Unconscious Civilization”, Canadian philosopher, John Ralston Saul, warned of the way  that our democratic society was being hijacked by what he called corporatism, a form of groupthink, with an emphasis on ideological adherence.

Saul argued that serious decisions were being made less and less through democratic participation and discussion of different points of view.  Instead, they were increasingly the result of behind closed doors negotiations among  elite groups  who had the ability to wield power and shape public opinion.  

The public's role was to acquiesce to the elite's world view  - a world  view whose articulation by political leaders would be reinforced by academic experts.  The mantra that "Only the specialist really knows what's right." meant that doubt was not to be permitted. 

Saul predicted that ultimately, if unchecked, this hijacking of participatory democracy by political and economic elites, backed up by cherry picked academic experts,  would lead to “passivity and conformity in those areas that matter and nonconformism in those that don't."

In short, we were in danger of becoming subjects, not citizens. 

The Way Forward


Implicit in all the above arguments is the suggestion  that at some basic level people prefer to accept prevailing dogma rather than take the time to fully diagnose an issue. Given the dangers that poses for democratic governance, how do we change that? 

Cristaudo argues that the  way forward must include a return to the Socratic method of reasoned argumentation and public discourse  before taking a stance on any issue.    A first step would be  “to establish whether those who claim to have knowledge know what they are talking about.” 

But, that’s easier said than done given the corporate capture of media, including, here in Canada, the CBC.  Even on  the Internet it is becoming increasingly difficult and time consuming to find perspectives that counter the dominant opinion.  Plus, it's so much easier emotionally to go with the flow.


To conclude, behaving like a subject instead of a  participating citizen might conceivably  be fine if we could guarantee enlightened leadership in the ilk of Plato’s philosopher-kings.   

But isn’t it more likely that, if the current trend  continues, the passivity and conformity that Cristaudo, Von Geusau, Saul and Lipmann  lament 
 will lead us, facilitated
 by surveillance capitalism, towards a dystopia more in line with Brave New World or 1984 - or The Great Reset.  

That's our concern at Democracy Alert


Marilyn Reid​

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What do the Ontario election results tell us about our democracy?

6/7/2022

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Did you know that in the recent Ontario election:

  • the Conservative Party got seven times as many votes as the Green Party but 83 times as many seats?
  • the New Democrats received less votes than the Liberals but got four times as many seats?
  • the Conservatives have a very strong majority government, with twice as many seats as all the other parties combined, in spite of only two out of every five voters voting Conservative?
  • only 43% of eligible voters chose to cast a ballot?                                                                           
What does this say about our electoral system here in Canada?

First, it’s pretty obvious that it produces seriously unbalanced results.   The most disadvantaged are minority parties, in this case the Greens, who will never get a truly representative voice in government. Their supporters are simply too spread out across the province.

Secondly, as long as there is only one party on the right, in this case the Conservatives, they will have an advantage.  That’s because those who don’t see themselves as having conservative values increasingly will split their vote between the two other dominant parties, the NDP and the Liberals. 

Thirdly, as the NDP  continues to move more and more towards  the centre, it’s very possible that working class voters will move over to the Conservatives.  That phenomenon has already happened in Europe and the United States and many feel that the NDP’s anti-trucker performance during the Convoy protest will  accelerate that shift here.  

All of the above suggest that it is in the interest of, not just  the Green Party and the NDP, but also the Liberals to push for some sort of proportional representation system.  Will it happen?  Probably not.  It’s doubtful that the big money backers of the Liberal party will go along with it.  They, of course, don’t care what party gets in as long as they can control its leadership.  Proportional representation, with its tendency towards coalition governments, sometimes among multiple parties, makes that control more difficult.   

However,  the disproportionate way our current electoral system can favour one party,  and the powers that back it, is not our  biggest concern at Democracy Alert.  It’s that 43% voter turnout that is most worrying. 

One explanation often heard is that people with minority political views in their constituency don’t bother to vote because they feel their vote  will largely be a waste of time and effort.   That could certainly apply to Green supporters everywhere.    

But what if the bigger reason for the low voter turnout is political apathy – a belief that democracy will just continue to roll along smoothly  without citizen participation?
​
At this moment in our history, as transnational institutions exert  more and more control over national policies,  and as the rich get richer and more powerful,  this is not the time to go limp on democracy.  
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