Ideological perfection, Fraser Institute style: why democracy must be destroyed in order to save it

A neo-Con think tank gets ready to save democracy by crushing democracy. A “fellow” of the Fraser Institute stands to the far right. Who’s to say if this is not exactly as they appear? Below: Preston Manning (a Fraser Institute fellow himself) with Stephen Harper, in happier times; the Fraser Institute’s Michael Walker.

Perfesser Dave said it best yesterday: “Democracy is undemocratic when it gets in the way of free market choices.” But Perfesser Dave was joking.

Perfesser Walker of the Fraser Institute said it first, in the Globe and Mail on Nov. 23, and he wasn’t joking.

Michael Walker is sort of like the godfather of the Fraser Institute, the Vancouver-based “think tank” whose far-right nostrums are quoted reverentially by Canadian media as if Dr. Walker had personally carried them down from Mount Sinai engraved on a tablet of stone by the finger of a wrathful and vengeful neo-Con deity.

The Fraser Institute, in turn, is the intellectual headwater of that muddy stream of “Conservatism” that trickles down through Preston Manning of the Reform Party to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the so-called Conservatives he leads.

So if you’ve ever wondered about the Harper Conservatives’ true commitment to our Canadian democracy, Dr. Walker’s explanation is illuminating. Taking issue with Mr. Manning for his support of the idea Greek citizens should be permitted to vote on the “bail out” package proposed by their bankers for their bankers, he put it this way: “…Greek democracy no longer speaks for the public interest and cannot be relied upon to solve the problem.”

How can this be? Well, the Conservative Party avatar explains, “in Greece and an increasing number of countries, democracy itself is in deficit. It is in deficit in the sense that a majority of the Greek electorate has been bribed with payments from government for which nobody in Greece is having to pay in taxes.”

In other words, Dr. Walker elucidated, by their stubborn refusal to accept the market fundamentalist theology of the neo-Cons – and here is the full quote excerpted partly above and plagiarized by Perfesser Dave yesterday – “Corrupted at its very foundation, Greek democracy no longer speaks for the public interest and cannot be relied upon to solve the problem.”

Therefore, Greek democracy must be thwarted, the Greek people treated as truculent wards of the ideologically pure elite who rightly run the market fundamentalist state, else the democratic perfection of the market be obstructed.

If I may be so bold as to parse Dr. Walker’s explanation, his four-part logic unfolds like this:

  1. Free markets are the perfect expression of democracy
  2. Anything that interferes with the perfect expression of democracy is ipso facto undemocratic
  3. Greeks may democratically vote to obstruct the most perfect form of democracy
  4. Therefore, preventing democracy in such circumstances is the perfect expression of democracy

This is the Orwellian tautology that underlies the core position on democracy believed by our Canadian neo-Cons, a group, I submit, that includes our prime minister.

In other words, democracy will only be permitted if it yields the correctly democratic result.

And a mob of unruly Greeks bent on voting to determine their fate, or unruly Canadians for that matter, won’t be the people who get to decide what’s democratic – to wit, the only outcome allowed, the fundamentalist worship of “free markets.” In which, as Dr. Walker risibly asserts elsewhere in his screed, it is a truth universally acknowledged, “the normal pattern in Western democracies is that lower-income families are net beneficiaries and higher-income families are net payers.”

Would the neo-Cons who make up Mr. Harper’s debased Conservative Party be prepared to apply Dr. Walker’s logic in the event, say, that Canadian voters, corrupted to their very foundation by generations of public health care and decent pensions (falsely portrayed as benefits that have not been paid for, or have not been earned), vote for a program or a political party that is not in “the public interest and cannot be relied upon to solve the problem”? Remember: It’s not just Greece that has this problem, according to Dr. Walker, but “an increasing number of countries.”

It could never happen here, you say?

Arguably, it already has in a small way, when Mr. Harper – colluding against our Constitution with the Governor General of the day – prorogued Parliament to prevent our elected representatives from dissolving his government as was their right and essential democratic function.

Dr. Walker goes on: “The demonstrations in the streets of Athens were not the manifestation of democracy at work. They were the vanguard of the clear majority of citizens who are disconsolate at the prospect of loosing (sic) their ability to continue to feast at the expense of their children. As past Greek and other experience has demonstrated, the only way that democratic frenzy comes to a halt is when the country hits the wall and can no longer borrow the money to carry on.” (Emphasis added.)

As you can see, Dr. Walker has modified the traditional definitions of democracy – the notions that the “majority rules,” or, the “majority rules with appropriate protections for minorities” – to rule by those who know best, inevitably a self-selecting group.

But that is how these fundamentalist zealots, burning with the cold flame of ideological purity, view the possibility that voters might democratically choose public solutions to the very real deficiencies of unregulated markets, or seek to ask the principal beneficiaries of our economic system to pay their fair share of its costs.

They see such thinking as the product of a frenzy that can be morally circumvented by any means, no matter how immoral.

Democracy means nothing to people whose only goal is the perfect distillation of their ideological nostrums, especially when they are conveniently in their own self-interest. It hardly matters if the ideological perfection they pursue is Stalinist or Straussian, it leads down the same dangerous intellectual cul de sac. (And I make no apology for that analogy, by the way, even here in Stalinism-obsessed Alberta.) When they are finished, there may be no way left for us to assert ourselves but in a frenzy in the streets!

If this doesn’t worry you, you haven’t been paying attention to history.

This post also appears on Rabble.ca.

5 Comments on "Ideological perfection, Fraser Institute style: why democracy must be destroyed in order to save it"

  1. Robert Cannaday says:

    With apologies to Steven Weinberg (but I fell this is more accurate) –

    With or without ideology, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil—that takes ideology.

  2. b_nichol says:

    "…democracy will only be permitted if it yields the correctly democratic result."

    The Harpo's view of the Canadian Wheat Board members vote in a nutshell.

  3. Filostrato says:

    Yes. Imagine people actually deciding their own fate, refusing to repay debt they didn't incur, holding their leaders responsible for terrible fiscal management, commission of war crimes, breaking the laws of the country and libel, slander and fraud to gain power? No wonder they quake in their tiny boots.

    In these days when actual people are tossed on the scrap heap while corporations are given all the rights of people with the added bonus of immortality, it's no wonder that democracy has undergone a similar transformation. All the CEO's, CFO's, COO's and other alphabetical combinations bear no responsibility for the actions of their organizations. When one is caught in severe wrongdoing, all the C(blank)O's resign en masse, which, I presume, lets them off the hook. An immortal entity with no responsibility and no morals – a psychopath – is this what democracy has been subjugated to?

    Robert Reich said that he'll believe corporations are people when Georgia and Texas start executing them.

    I'll start believing in a Canadian democracy when the government and its members are prosecuted for their crimes and not allowed to make up the law as they go along or enact laws that are contrary to the provisions in our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    Meanwhile, the Kremlin-on-the-Rideau will continue to be occupied by overstuffed men in overstuffed suits, meeting in secret and whisked from place to place in black SUV's, guarded by other men in overstuffed suits with suspicious bulges under their arms.

  4. Anonymous says:

    The fraserites blame the protestors for feasting off their children's future, are the right winger neo-cons not feasting off our children's future too? Pot calling the kettle black. They want unfettered, unregulated all you can eat buffet, with no oversight, no regulation and no remorse how it affects others. Shallow, callous, remorseless and cold. They dont' care bout human beings.

  5. Carlos Beca says:

    You made a point I consider extremely important and that is that we seem to think that Canada is immune from extreme situations. The reality is that it takes no time for a sudden change that can put us in a real bind. Those that are totally alienated from the political and social changes going on will be the future perplexed.

    Another unfortunate fact is that the right wing market fundamentalist vision of life such as the one you mention, is definitely the one winning the day even when it makes no sense whatsoever. It is dangerous and before it is over it is going to leave us in a very weak situation from where we do not know we can recover. When one looks at Greece I cannot see any type of normalcy for at least 2 generations and that is if they can manage to come up with some very smart politicians which, as we all know, is a losing game. If anything politicians are getting more crooked and less skillful.

    No one knows the consequences of all that this unregulated experiment but I certainly am not hopeful at all. I believe that as good human beings we all are, animal predators of the highest level, we will go down to the bottom before we wake up.

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