Francis Fukuyama Was Wrong - Democracy Will Not Survive the Era of Social Media

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Francis Fukuyama Was Wrong

Democracy Will Not Survive the Era of Social Media​


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Critics of Fukuyama’s thesis that liberal democracy represents the “end of history”* have tended to look to confirm or falsify it by examining liberal democracy’s direct rivals, e.g. Communist China, Putin’s Russia, and Islamist Iran. To most observers, the weaknesses of these various regimes make liberal democracy seem strong by comparison, and thus tend to confirm Fukuyama’s thesis.

By focusing on such countries, the would-be critics of Fukuyama are looking in the wrong place. If there are any threats or developments that threaten the survival of liberal democracy, they will surely arise not from the periphery of the liberal democratic world or from outside of it, but from within, and especially from its core members.

Certain weaknesses of democracy have gradually been making themselves apparent in recent years. In an era of low interest rates it has been easy for politicians to promise additional spending or tax cuts, without balancing the other side of the ledger. The result is that the burden of government debt has grown steadily higher, and the reforms necessary to fix the problem appear politically impossible: the voters in a democracy will simply not vote for anything that results in short-term pain, and this makes certain problems unsolvable in a democratic system.

But there is a bigger threat to liberal democracy, and one that I think is far more likely to prove fatal. This is that a large portion of the electorate are emotionally volatile, erratic, and of low intelligence. This has always been the case, but for most of the democratic era it didn’t much matter: the upper and upper-middle classes controlled the public discourse through their control of the media and thereby stabilized the system. In such an environment, it was difficult, bordering on impossible, for “grassroots” movements to obtain more than minor influence, except where they had the support of the elite establishment. “Liberal democracy” was thus, in large part, an illusion: outwardly it had the form of a democracy, but in reality politics were firmly under the control and direction of the upper and upper-middle classes.

All of this changed in the social media era. Suddenly, it became much easier for “grassroots” movements to flourish. In the blink of an eye a video or a tweet can go “viral” and command the attention of vast multitudes of the public, regardless of social class or status. Powerful “populist” movements can now arise, based on the support of segments of the public who had previously been excluded from the reality of power. In America we saw the first taste of this with the rise and triumph of Barrack Obama, but the real climax came with the advent of Donald Trump. Whereas the populism of Barrack Obama could easily be, and was, assimilated into the agenda of the established elite, that of Trump could not be, and thus his presidency devolved into a chaotic four-year battle in which the ruling establishment sought, for the most part successfully, to paralyze his administration and curtail its influence over policy.

The Obama-Trump years mark perhaps the only period in history when the American political system became something approaching a full-scale democracy: a democracy not merely in outward form, but in substance—in which the multitudes of the lower and lower-middle classes actually set the tone and direction of politics.

With social media now a fixed feature of the landscape, chaotic figures like Trump are bound to become more frequent, on both the right and the left. We’re entering a populist era that seems destined to last as long as democracy itself.

And this is precisely the question: how long can democracy last in these circumstances?

In the years since 2016, the signs of institutional decay are everywhere: prosecution of political opponents (and here I include Trump’s threats to prosecute his political opponents as well as the legal cases brought against him), attempts to remove candidates from the ballot, attempts to censor social media, attempts to “fortify” the electoral system in such a way as to obtain a desired result—and these are only the most jarring examples. All of these expedients would have shocked an earlier generation of Americans but now they are rapidly becoming the accepted norm.

The essence of the problem is that the upper and upper-middle classes see themselves as—and are in fact—the natural ruling class of society, and are loathe to give up their political power to the lower classes whom they regard—rightfully—as irresponsible and incapable of wielding it.

The only workable system of democracy is one in which the natural ruling class is dominant, but yet appears to share power with the lower classes. When this illusion becomes a reality and the lower classes threaten to obtain real power, the system inevitably breaks down—and this is precisely what is occurring today.

The direction in which the American system is heading is becoming clearer by the day: either democracy will keep stumbling along in the present, ever more chaotic manner, with legal and constitutional norms continuing to fray and with the judiciary serving as a weapon of the ruling class against the unchecked forces of populism; or—which I think is more likely—democracy itself will give way to some other system of government as yet undetermined, but which, with much more reliability than the present system, will entrench power in the hands of the upper and upper-middle classes. In either case, democracy will be destroyed, if not in form, then in substance.

When a new political precedent is set, it seldom occurs just once. If Trump is successfully prosecuted and thereby prevented from becoming president for a second term, we can be sure that this method will be used again in the future, probably by both parties insofar as they able, and probably with less and less ostensible justification each time. Once a taboo has been broken it is next to impossible to re-establish it within the framework of the current system—only a new regime can accomplish that.

In history, periods of turmoil and instability tend to be limited in duration. As an evolving organism, human society tends towards stability. Systems that are unstable and disorderly tend, for that reason, to disappear and to be replaced by those that are stable and orderly. Through such a process of natural selection, a new constitutional order will eventually emerge, though the process may take decades. If I had to hazard a guess I would say that it will involve a restriction of the right to vote to those with a certain amount of education, or who pay above a certain threshold of taxes, coupled with censorship of social media.

We are in such a period of turmoil and instability now. Time will tell how long it lasts and what will come next. Whatever it is, one thing seems likely: Fukuyama was wrong; liberal democracy was not the final stage of history.

*Let me here dispose of a common misapprehension concerning Fukuyama’s work. By the “end of history,” Fukuyama does not mean that historical events will cease to occur; rather, he means by that phrase something more like the “destination of history.” Liberal democracy, in his estimation, is the final stage of historical development: no other socio-political system will supersede it, even though historical events will continue to occur.
 
Both Russia and Iran are democracies. Russia being a Federal Republic and Iran being an Islmaic Republic. Hardly an argument for why democracy is bad or doomed to failure.
Just because they call themselves that doesn't mean they actually are. Putin is very clearly King of Russia, he's just a smart king where he uses the democratic process to legitimize his rule. Iran's president only functions if the Ayatollah endorses him. They aren't democracies/republics in the way you describe.

TBF, that's just how political power works; it must centralize into the hands of the nation's elite. The question that should be asked is whether those Elites are sane and moral. The problem we have is that American elites are neither and aren't incentivized to improve or think long term. Get a pork laden bill passed and collect money is the basic goal of politicians, not building Roman aqueducts or a Great Wall of America. And by Great Wall, I mean the kind of devotion Qin Shihuangdi would spend to build one, not patches of wooden slats and shipping containers.
 
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Democracy Will Not Survive the Era of Social Media

Absolutely right.
The shadow government has already killed democracy.

  • Mass censorship in bold violation of the US constitution and the charter of human rights.
  • Straight-up removal of populist candidates from ballots across what was once the "free world"
  • Arrest of populists promising reform on made up charges, and subjection to literal show trials.
  • Open electoral fraud that would make Iran and Zimbabwe blush, detectable with basic undergrad binomial probability theorem (probability of at least N choose K given probability P) and Law of First Digits Analysis against each reported batch of ballots.
  • Show trials for anyone who publicly speaks out about the open electoral fraud.
  • For anyone who escapes the above machine somehow, the confiscation of bank accounts and denial of basic banking services that, if done to a prisoner of war, would be classified as a violation of Geneva Conventions.
So welcome, SuperCitizens, to Managed Democracy
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Both Russia and Iran are democracies. Russia being a Federal Republic and Iran being an Islmaic Republic. Hardly an argument for why democracy is bad or doomed to failure.
Don't forget the Philippines who voted for a strongman like Duterte. People will unironically throw in their lot with some pretty awful people if they promise to "make things better" in some way.

I find it hilarious yet alarming that the "muh democracy" people lose their shit if people decide to vote for someone they disapprove of. Then it's all "AW GAWD DEY CHEATED AND RUSSIAN HACKERS DID IT"
Just because they call themselves that doesn't mean they actually are. Putin is very clearly King of Russia, he's just a smart king where he uses the democratic process to legitimize his rule. Iran's president only functions if the Ayatollah endorses him. They aren't democracies/republics in the way you describe.

TBF, that's just how political power works; it must centralize into the hands of the nation's elite. The question that should be asked is whether those Elites are sane and moral. The problem we have is that American elites are neither and aren't incentivized to improve or think long term. Get a pork laden bill passed and collect money is the basic goal of politicians, not building Roman aqueducts or a Great Wall of America. And by Great Wall, I mean the kind of devotion Qin Shihuangdi would spend to build one, not patches of wooden slats and shipping containers.
Maybe Russia and Iran are the "managed democracy" model that the DNCCP would like to import to the states. Have elections with a handicap like giving yourself excessive HP if you like fighting games or something but totally suck balls at them.
 
Say what you will about Fukuyama, that fact this faggot thinks there is anything liberal about modern democratic states is a fucking laugh. I mean liberal in the sense we used to understand it, you know, for centuries. Blame the corporations, blame the jews, blame whoever; liberalism these "democracies" ain't.
 
This is that a large portion of the electorate are emotionally volatile, erratic, and of low intelligence.
How can the electorate be of 'low intelligence' when they have enjoyed all of the benefits of 12-13 years of taxpayer-funded public education by 'passionate' and highly-trained educators?
the upper and upper-middle classes controlled the public discourse through their control of the media and thereby stabilized the system.
I'm going to need for you to cool it with the anti-semitic comments.
The essence of the problem is that the upper and upper-middle classes see themselves as—and are in fact—the natural ruling class of society, and are loathe to give up their political power to the lower classes whom they regard—rightfully—as irresponsible and incapable of wielding it.
Because the 'ruling class' has been doing such a bang-up job of things, especially in the last let's say 30 years when they all bent the knee to globohomo.
 
In what way was Trump chaotic?

He started no new conflicts.
Ended decades old conflicts.
Improved energy independence which brings stability.
Lowered taxes which caused the economy to grow and tax revenue to increase and unemployment to shrink. And no it was not just a tax cut for the rich it was for pretty much everyone unless you were too fucking stupid to adjust your withholding and ended up owing instead of getting a refund.
He was standing up to China, keeping Russia in check, and forcing Mexico to address their complicity in the invasion of the US.
He was also putting the UN and NATO on notice.

So...for three years we had a stable world that was prospering. How is that chaos?

Oh right when all you want to see is war, strife, and profiteering on misery I guess stability is chaos.
Because he upset the established applecart for the Acela Corridor people. Remember, whenever they say Trump is a threat to "Our Democracy" what they mean is that he is a threat to "Oligarchy with Democratic Trappings."
 
This is that a large portion of the electorate are emotionally volatile, erratic, and of low intelligence.
The number of trust fund kids perpetually spazzing out on Twitter and news media puts the lie to the idea that the controlling class is any smarter. If anything they are completely delusional about the country they live in.
 
Democracy will survive, its the current hegemony that's in trouble as all the sources of its power can only work if their dictates aren't challenged and enforced through information monopoly.
 
Oh look, yet another article about how Le Drumpf is the end of society because dum dums are allowed to vote on their self interests instead of leaving things in the hands of the Enlightened Elite.

Yawn.
 
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