Let’s entertain a simple intellectual exercise. You and I are going to play a game. Here are the rules:
1) In my left hand I’m holding a $100 bill.
2) In my right hand I’m holding a $50 bill.
3) You can choose which amount you want to take, but…
4) Upon your choosing I reserve the right to instead give you nothing, and the authority to take $20 from you at my discretion.
How do you play the game so that you can come out ahead?
This is the problem with our politics. To illustrate, and understand that I don’t mean to pick on him at all, this excerpt from one of letsgetitdone’s comments is illustrative of the type written by thousands of people, and can be read everyday in every corner of the internet:
This assumes that the Ds lose the House and Pelosi wins on Tuesday, both good possibilities. It also assumes Pelosi has more good sense than she’s shown in the past two years, when she allowed the Senate to have its way with the House. Anyway, I think a defeat will sober her up and get her angry, and that she won’t care much what O has to say about the desirability of making Ds complicit in cutting SS.
Any sober reader of something like this should see it as nothing but rampant speculation about the internal motives and personality of another person over which you have effectively no influence and no control. In fact, the author of that statement I’m sure would agree to that characterization. Essentially, a pet theory about the machinations of a stranger.
As we race ever further into the frackas of mid-term elections we’re going to be inundated with headlines of various congressional and gubernatorial races, and what they purportedly mean. You’ll be pressured by your peers and your own conscience to make tough decisions about where to cast your vote. Some of you will be admonished for throwing up your hands, and voting outside the major Party duopoly. Others will be heckled for continuing to support the Parties, despite the evidence that they’re corrupted and unresponsive.
You’ll do your very best to make a rational, educated decision about how to cast your vote. Here’s the good news, you can’t.
Going back to the comment quoted above, the fact that one cannot assert what Rep. Pelosi will do with any certainty is what leaves us with speculation like this. Predictions of emotive backlash, insider betrayals, and hopeful powerplays are really all we have to go on, because our form of government is utterly opaque. This stretches beyond Rep. Pelosi, and beyond Congress. It’s not opaque because our representatives hide behind closed doors, though they do, and not because they take cues from obfuscated donors and political operatives, though they do that as well.
Our system of government is opaque because we’re not mind-readers, nor truthsayers. Even when candidates and politicians are out in the open, we can’t determine with certitude where their loyalties lie. We cannot peer into the head of any candidate for elected office, and determine the veracity, resolve, or intent of their many campaign claims and promises. It requires thorough checking and cross-checking to find the inconsistencies in words and actions, and even still then we don’t know for certain if the inconsistencies are for good or ill.
We have effectively constructed a form of governance wherein a person can campaign for office as Mahatma Gandhi, and then once elected they can govern as Gengis Khan, and it doesn’t matter which side of the aisle they’re on. Your only point to demand accountability in such a scenario is to replace them with someone else on a fixed schedule of years, and that someone else can just as easily engage in a ruse identical to their predecessors’. Rendering your opportunity for accountability moot. How do you choose, so as to avoid Gengis Khan in the future? What’s the strategy for success?
This scenario is near and dear to many of us at FDL in the condition and character of the Obama administration. A campaign clearly run on progressive ideals. There were even choice historical quotes from Obama’s earliest political career points that attempted to give credibility to his purported progressive ideals. The result? He’s ushered into office on a message to the public that could not possibly be more betrayed by his administration’s actions since.
However, it’s important to note that this bait-and-switch isn’t unique to Democrats and liberals. There were many disaffected conservatives and Republicans who voted for George W. Bush on the pretense of his being anti-nation building, fiscally conservative, compassionate conservative. They felt as betrayed by Bush as much as many on the left feel betrayed by Obama. Further, we fully expect this betrayal in some cases for ourselves, but almost unanimously when admonishing the opposition. How many times have you read disparaging commentary about how the Tea Party candidates are just the GOP dressed up in an astroturf campaign, and that the Tea Party followers are being lied to by the leadership about the perpetrators of the conditions which fuel their populist rage?
The whole thing, all of it, is predicated on a con. We all know too well just how much of political action is made up by cynical ploys and plays on public ignorance, faith, goodwill and hope. The con is endemic.
Your only real means of “winning” is not to play the game. Now I don’t mean this to say that you shouldn’t vote. Go right ahead and cast your vote. Just do so with the knowledge that you’re effectively playing roulette when you cast it for a would-be politician. You’re casting it for their personality, their incentives, their self-interest, their handling of peer pressure, their whims of careerism, etc. etc. etc. This is why even for a seemingly standup guy like Senator Feingold, a person can make the claim that he’s a stalwart supporter of civil-liberties in the Senate, and others can claim that he really just takes safe protest votes, but caves when it counts. Given the evidence they’re both perfectly valid arguments to make, and you can’t know which is true, because you’re not Senator Feingold.
The question to ask yourself is, “Why do you even have to care what Russ Feingold says and does?” (or any other politician for that matter)
The FDL movement behind JustSayNow is an excellent example of how you can stop playing a game you can’t make a strategy for winning, and start playing one that you can. This is what it’s about people. Making choices for policies, not promises. Putting your time, your energy, and your money into a specific cause, not a personality or guessing at the principles of a total stranger.
You can look at the proposal of Prop 19 today, you can look at the language, you can make a direct decision whether or not you want to support that specific piece of citizen legislation. You get to decide for yourself, and cast your vote accordingly. You’re not left just selecting a surrogate with their own interests, flaws, and incentives to draw up some law, pass it amongst their friends in the capitol, and foist it onto you without your direct consent. So you throw them out for passing it? You’re already subject to the law, and there’s no guarantee their replacement will do any different.
There’s a lot of talk and tribulation about how to arrest control of our government back from the egomaniacs, the narcissists, and the careerists who fill its ranks today. The answer to that is more, and more, and more JustSayNow’s. There are 22 states in this union that have popular initiative and referendum mechanisms. There are two more that have popular initiative mechanisms only to amend their state constitution, and an additional three that provide popular referendums. That’s where change is going to come from. D.C. isn’t going to get any better. If we want popular reforms, then we need to use popular means to get them.
Politicians are just distractions from the issues, so dump them, and go straight to the source. Make your own policies. Make your own proposals. Put them on the ballot. Make your state the one you want to live in. Play a game you can actually build a strategy to win.



24 Comments

Excellent piece, Nathan. You’re completely right that my statement about Pelosi is just a speculative theory. I wouldn’t rely on it for any action, and just put it forward to emphasize that sometimes individuals surprise us because emotions enter inti politics.
The problem you’re pointing to here is the lack of predictability due to the lack of accountability of our representatives to us. Lately, I’ve been writing and thinking a lot about the Interactive Voter Choice System (See http://my.firedoglake.com/nancy-bordier/2010/10/15/third-party-rising-10/ ) as a way of increasing accountability.
Excellent piece Nathan, rec’d.
Nathan…great post…clear and lucid. A primer for those who want to think and act, instead of playing just sheep in a herd!
Nathan, this is a terrific diary. Recommended.
The extent to which our current politics is a game is evident in that we have the technology to allow people to govern themselves STARTING TOMORROW, yet it does not happen. Instead, a system devised over 200 years ago, when it took half his term for the news of a president’s election to reach the last hamlet, pervades.
The only thing more ridiculous than the suggestion that we need “represention” in this day and age is the roulette game in which we engage – and which you so eloquently describe – when we vote for people instead of policies.
I think what you suggest will help, but I can’t see it becoming the game changer that you would like. I might be wrong on that, however. What I agree with you 100 percent about is that we need to play our own games and interject as much chaos into theirs as we can.
ps., I happened to see Defazio on Odonell last night actually blaming Obama for not fighting for progressive values. Who knows, maybe some of the other spineless progressives who have abdicated their role in government by caving to the corporate Dims at every chance will stiffen to the battle. Unfortunately for us and them, their protests begin much later than they should have.
Thanks for the feedback guys. I’ve had it mulling in the back of my head for a long time, but I couldn’t think of the right abstraction to convey it up front, before politicizing it.
Nancy’s work is amazing and is the first step toward the true self-governance I mention below. It is just unbelievable to me that we’ve allowed these hucksters to perpetuate this system for as long as they have.
The real fight will come when they and their corporate masters realize the gravy train is about to depart the rails.
Hey lets, thanks for the comment that finally spurred me to write this diary. :-)
I’m still trying to wrap my brain around how the IVCS, as proposed, will compel accountability amongst politicians, and I say that largely because it doesn’t really resolve their disconnect from us, still relies on them viewing their re-election as sacrosanct (which I think is up for question), but more importantly because in some sense those kinds of fluid voting blocks based on issues are already evident in the selection bias of blog readership across the spectrum.
That said, I think it’s a compelling idea generally in that I think even as an informative and engagement tool it can be highly useful, even if it fell short of being fundamentally transformative.
However, and I mean this in the nicest possible way, you need to get Nancy to hire a graphic designer. :-)
DeFazio is one of the good ones, or perhaps the better way to think of it is that he’s one of the best we have, which is an indictment largely of all those that we have, and not specifically a ringing endorsement of DeFazio generally.
However, I’ve often wished that he were my Rep, instead of David Wu, because DeFazio is at least an idea guy, and that in and of itself is commendable.
The problem is that Congress should be full of people like DeFazio, rather than people like him being statistical outliers amongst their peers.
GNathan — Good piece, and you’re right about the effectiveness of initiatives and referendums at the state level.
Sadly, there is no similar mechanism at the federal level, which is where most of the power — and control of the military — resides.
If 27 out of 50 states are trending hard in one direction, the federal government will be under a lot of pressure to comply, or be absolved of its legitimacy.
That’s the rub. To take back our government, we need to fundamentally change the nature of how it works. We need national referendums or at least the ability to overturn federal law.
I don’t want the conversation to devolve into this topic, but such a reform could be added via amendment, and that doesn’t require the consent of Congress or the President.
Thanks Nathan. I think that the IVCS will create greater accountability because voting blocs will be evaluating office holders continuously (day-by-day) relative to the mandates the politicians promised to support. The blocs will comprise lots of people of varying degrees of sophistication and knowledge. Overtime a bloc view of every office holder will emerge and will be reinforced by the day-to-day exchanges going on among voting bloc members. The bloc view of an office holders performance will become stable over time.
When the election season approaches and the candidate tries to use corporate-donated financial resources to overcome the bloc view of their performance and to turn people around, this is unlikely to work. the reason is that views formulated in a interpersonal social networking context are less subject to change by mass media propaganda messages, because those messages are mediated and interpreted by the informal social groups that have formed in the social network.
Once the office holders and candidates realize that mass media approaches to campaigning no longer work, their incentive to cultivate corporate donors and to please corporate lobbyists will decline, because the utility of big money in securing elections will be far less than today. Gradually, the influence of the corps will decline, and the influence of working people will be felt again.
As a quick aside, does anyone know how to do anything with the MyFDL friend feature? I can’t figure out how to actually communicate with my friends, or people in a group. There’s no place to send them a private message, or e-mail them, etc.
Not a clue. It would be nice if we could have the ability to chat directly without necessarily derailing a thread.
So far all I’ve found out (courtesy of cowboybob) is that you can keep an eye on your friends comments on your MyFDL page. Presumably, if something catches your eye, you can pop over to the relevant thread.
Well for the time being I’ll just have to add my e-mail address to my profile.
Also, it shows in the backed of this post that egregious edited it, but it doesn’t say how. Egregious, any insight?
We’re synching the time clocks to bring everybody into the same time zone.
Ah ha! Thanks :-) That’s a pain in the neck, I know.
Thanks Nathan. Recommended!
First, I will “second” greenwarrior’s “Recommended”.
And secondly, unfortunately, I don’t have the time or money, but my approach would be as follows:
A. Establish a “Pissed-Off Americans” Campaign.
B. Establish a web site, accordingly.
C. Craft an Agenda of an approximate 50 “issues”.
D. Search for new candidates for Congress that would be willing to campaign on this Agenda, and if elected, would support, provide the requisite leadership, and vote for this new legislation. And all the while remaining within the Democratic Party.
In closing, back in the congressional cycle of 2002, we, military vets, located five vets and who were will “willing”. To wit, we quit counting when we exceeded in our raising over $200,000.00. Unfortunately, all of our “candidates” lost. Although, this was our first effort, we are still considering a second effort. As such, we even enjoyed our “self-abuse” Okay, that’s a tad of snark.
Jaango
Kinda dead around here. :-)