The Dumbing Down of American Democracy

Recently, I’ve been thinking a lot about a style of communication that I see from politicians and other public figures, and it is really getting to me. It’s not a just a general style of communication, it is specific to politics, government, and our free society. I'm talking about the clownish oversimplification where every issue, idea, or person is slapped with a "Democrat" or "Republican" sticker. These labels are then used to validate or invalidate ideas, actions, and people. It's as if these statement should tell us all we need to know, like the nutritional facts on a box of cereal. But life, democracy, and politics just isn't that simple.

Take Donald Trump, who seems to see the world through a red-and-blue kaleidoscope. He's been in hot water more times than a lobster at a seafood buffet, and his go-to defense? Pointing fingers at "partisan" judges, juries, prosecutors, and attorneys. Like when he was found liable for sexual abuse and immediately called the judge and jurors "partisan," telling them to be "ashamed of themselves” ¹. Or when he slammed a "Clinton appointed judge" on Truth Social for giving him what he felt was an unfair trial simply because of the President that nominated them decades earlier, with no other reason or evidence ². Most recently, Trump implied that his civil fraud trial will be unfair because he believes that the court clerk is the girlfriend of Democratic Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer ³. He's not just turning courtroom drama into political theater, he is implying that people cannot think or act outside of the box of their political party.

Elon Musk gave us another recent example himself. Chiming in on the Joe Rogan podcast, he claimed Twitter was suppressing Republican tweets 10x more than Democrats. But here's a reality check: Tweets get the boot for spewing dangerous lies, hate, or violence, not party allegiance. Let's ask the uncomfortable question—could it be that one side is tweeting significantly more stuff that crosses the line? I don't have a spreadsheet handy to prove it, but come on, the last 10 years in America shows us enough.

Musk, someone believed by many to be one of the smartest people on earth, is mixing up causation and correlation. Is this out of ignorance or, worse, a calculated move to drive a wedge right through the fabric of America?

I am nowhere close to being the smartest person on earth, and yet I clearly understand the differences between correlation and causation. The concept is a basic rule of logical thinking.

So what’s going on? I’ll tell you what I believe: Politicians and big shots like Trump and Musk are either showing the world their lack of smarts or, more sinisterly, they're deliberately playing the pied piper leading us off the cliffs of division. Because of this, America is at a wildly dangerous point in history.

Why do I say that? Well, because these people influence, millions of people listen to them. They eat up these oversimplified, misleading morsels and spit them back out. Every time they do, they chip away at the trust we've got in our system—our courts, our laws, our very democracy. America is built on this trust, the kind that lets us put power in the hands of the people, where politicians are supposed to be our servants, not sultans.

I worry about what happens when that trust goes away. Down comes the house of cards. We've seen it throughout history. Fascist regimes and dictators are elected because people believe they will be the heros that will save the system, the only people that can act without bias. Of course, they aren’t the heros, they don't hand power back to the people. They keep it, and they do whatever it takes to keep their grip tight.

We've got to stand up to this bullshit. Call it out. Tell Trump, Musk, and their ilk that we're not buying what they're selling. We're better than that. We're smarter, more logical, and too dang stubborn to let our democracy get bulldozed by a tweet or a sound bite. And when I see we, I mean all American’s, regardless of political party affiliation. I believe most of us have it inside to be smart, fair, factual, locial, and unbiased if we want to. Don’t let Trump, Musk, and others push that inherent intelligence down into hiding, let it shine.

So, the next time you're chatting about politics with someone who's parroting these divisive lines, hit them with facts, with calm-reason, with the kind of clear-eyed logic that's been the bedrock of this country. Remind them—and maybe ourselves—that we're capable of more, that we're the land of the free thinkers, not the blindly led.

If we don’t, we might just find ourselves in a history book chapter titled "How to Lose a Democracy 101." And with world tensions flaring up in Ukraine and Israel, our democracy needs to be on solid ground more than ever. We can't let it be shaken by those who'd rather see us divided for their own gain or ego. Let's keep our heads, our hearts, and our freedom intact.

Americans have become weak

We’ve had it too good, for too long. Even with the 2008 financial crisis, we are in the midst of an incredible stretch of prosperity. Even with mass shootings, never in history have we been as safe from harm as we are today.

Life is really fucking good for many Americans.

So why rock the boat? Why risk what we have individually for the greater good? Why go out on a limb to uphold everything that this country stands for? We can let Washington D.C. fight on our behalf, we don’t want to miss brunch with our friends, followed by shopping for all the gifts we’ll give this holiday season.

In the meantime, our democracy is falling apart. We are at grave risk of losing the system that gave us the prosperity we have. If trust and sanctity are lost, we are screwed. We may never come back from it, but even if we do, it will take a generation or more.

Recently, the President of the United States of America admitted to breaking the law through the way he used a charity bearing his name for his own financial gain and personal benefit. He admitted it! And was fined $2mm by a court of law.

That would have been enough for any past president, Democrat or Republican, to be impeached AND removed from office. Not this president though. As a country, we’ve had things too good for too long, why rock the boat and worry about his actions? They didn’t harm us.

Now, we sit through a toothless impeachment process because the same President used his office, and American taxpayer dollars, to bribe a foreign government to advance his own political goals. While I am happy that Congress is seeking, and will likely approve impeachment, the process is toothless. The Senate will get the case next, and the leadership has vowed to quickly clear the President’s name, allowing him to continue doing what he has done for his entire life.

Democracy as we know it will be gone. A joke of a concept, really. If charity fraud isn’t enough, what is? If bribery with taxpayer funds isn’t enough, what is? If asking for a foreign government to hurt your political opponent isn’t enough, what is?

Democracy will be over.

So what are we doing about it? Nothing, really. We go to our holiday parties and talk about how awful things are, but our conversations are soft.. We get angry on Twitter, then turn our attention to a football game, too afraid to get angry IRL.

We are weak. We are soft. This isn’t about political parties. This is about freedom. This is about losing the democracy that changed the world, for the better.

The same country that was founded on protests, the same country that went to war to enforce our constitution, the same country that took to the streets for Civli Rights and to end the Vietnam War, that same country is doing nothing. We are writing toothless blog posts.

The people of Hong Kong are are risk of losing freedoms, and they are doing something about it. They are protesting, making noise, telling the world they won’t stand for it.

Protesters in Hong Kong. Image credit Studio Incendo.

Protesters in Hong Kong. Image credit Studio Incendo.

Iranians are facing economic hardship and potential collapse, because of the poor geopolitical decisions their government is making. So what do they do? They are protesting, making noise, telling the world they won’t stand for it without a fight.

In Egypt, Tunisia, Jordan, Lebanon, and many other Middle East & North African countries, the people stood up, said they were feed up with corrupt and oppressive governments, and they did something about it. They protested. They risked what little they had and took to the streets. Day and night. Until change happened.

Thailand, Chile, France….they fight when their government does wrong by them.

What are we doing about our corrupt government? What are we doing about our eroding democracy? How are we bypassing our polarized political parties to hold our government accountable?

When the United States Senate takes up Impeachment and decides if President Donald Trump should be removed from office, what will we do? Complain to a fellow pinot loving friend during meaningless conversation at a holiday party? Get mad on Twitter?

Or, protest? Make noise. Tell the world we have standards we are willing to fight for? At least try to save our democracy?