Dispersions of power, transparency, and mutual accountability.
By
Frances Moore Lappé
for Common
Dreams
Celebrating
the inauguration of a new president and an end to years of attacks on democracy
is a perfect moment to probe together: What do we mean by democracy in the
first place?By Lalo Alcaraz
Here’s
where I start.
Beyond
our physical essentials, to thrive every human needs to experience three states
of being:
First,
we need to feel personal agency—to know that our voices count. Philosopher Eric
Fromm labeled it as our simple need to "make a dent." Yes, we like to
make things happen!
Second,
we need meaning—a sense of purpose beyond our own survival.
And
third, people need connection. So, we do best when we experience our power and
meaning in communities of common purpose.
For
me, these three—a sense of personal power, meaning, and connection—enable us to
experience dignity. Dignatus is the Latin root of this beautiful concept,
connoting a sense of worthiness.
And
what does dignity have to do with democracy?
Everything. I believe that the premise of dignity is what our nation’s deeply flawed—yet insightful—rebel founders were getting at when they asserted it to be “self-evident, that all men are created equal.”
And
democracy is humanity's only positive vision of governance—i.e., a way of living with
each other and the Earth—holding the potential to enable positive dignity. I
say “positive” because I am also painfully aware that our species needs these
essentials so profoundly that if we cannot meet them in a constructive way, we
turn to destructive strategies. Terrorism, we know, can fulfill these same
needs.
So,
my case for democracy is based on a triad defining its foundations.
First, inclusive, distributed power. Second, transparency to keep power
accountable to the “general welfare,” as our own constitution’s preamble
prescribes as central to our nation’s purpose. Third, democracy requires, and
nourishes, a culture of mutual accountability. “Some are guilty, but we’re all
responsible,” as Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel reminds us.
Thus,
for me, it is no surprise that it is in the times when we’ve enabled the
opposite of these three positive conditions to arise that humanity has
experienced its darkest hours. And, in this moment, if we are honest with
ourselves, we can see their manifestations—in increasingly concentrated power,
secrecy in public affairs, and a shaming-and-blaming culture.
Today,
when the climate emergency is putting life itself at risk—we have a great gift:
clarity.
Along with proof of our species’ outsized, long-evolved capacities for empathy, cooperation, and fairness, we also have inescapable evidence of their opposing tendencies: that most of us—not just a few psychopaths—are capable of callousness and even unspeakable brutality.
All-important then is the necessity
to foster the three conditions—dispersions of power, transparency, and mutual
accountability—that, for me, define democracy and have proven to keep the worst
within us in check while bringing forth the best.
From
this framing of humanity’s challenge, it becomes clear that the greatest, most
immediate obstacle we face is our failure to grasp this truth—to cling instead
to the premise that “those bad people” are what’s doing us in.
With
clarity, however, that virtually all are capable of evil and thus all are
responsible for creating the conditions that restrain us, must come
courage—courage to get busy creating these conditions, i.e. democracy.
Democracy is of course not a fixed structure we inherit. Its essence is
“eternal struggle” that’s “easily lost and never fully won,” said our first
Black appellate judge, William Hastie.
In
other words, to save the democracy we thought we had we must take democracy to
where it’s never been.
And the stirring news, perhaps for the first time, is that Americans are getting it: that no matter what rips most at our hearts, be it the climate crisis, the evil of endemic racism, or the extreme suffering of needless poverty exposed by COVID-19, none—we know—can be met without democracy. We are joining in new alliances with dignity as our lodestar and John Lewis as our patron saint. At least he is mine.
Framed by John Lewis as “good trouble,” together we may
discover we can do what we before thought to be impossible. To spread this good
news, my Small Planet Institute has co-created with the Democracy Initiative a
new online portal—www.DemcracyMovement.US—to this positive
uprising. Here we can learn, connect, and act for democracy wherever we are.
So,
let us ever more consciously cultivate the power, meaning, and connection that
can create democracy, enable dignity, and foster courage in each of us.
Frances Moore
Lappé is the author of nineteen books, beginning with the
acclaimed "Diet for a Small Planet." Most
recently she is the co-author, with Adam Eichen, of the new book, "Daring Democracy: Igniting Power,
Meaning, and Connection for the America We Want." Among her
numerous previous books are "EcoMind:
Changing the Way We Think to Create the World We Want" (Nation
Books) and "Democracy's
Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life."
She is co-founder of the Cambridge, Mass.-based Small Planet
Institute. Follow her on Twitter: @fmlappe