The State of Democracy in the United States
2021-12-06 13:53

Contents


Preamble


I. What is  democracy?


II. The alienation and  three malaises of democracy in the US

1. The system fraught  with deep-seated problems

  (1) American-style democracy  has become “a game of money politics”

  (2) “One person one vote” in  name, “rule of the minority elite” in reality

  (3) The checks and balances  have resulted in a “vetocracy”

  (4) The flawed electoral  rules impair fairness and justice

  (5) Dysfunctional democracy  triggers trust crisis


2. Messy and chaotic  practices of democracy

  (1) The Capitol riot that  shocks the world

  (2) Entrenched racism

  (3) Tragic mishandling of the  COVID-19 pandemic

  (4) Widening wealth gap

  (5) “Freedom of speech” in  name only


3. Disastrous  consequences of US export of its brand of democracy

  (1) The “color  revolutions” undermine regional and national stability

  (2) The US imposition of its  brand of democracy causes humanitarian tragedies

  (3) The abuse of sanctions  breaches international rules

  (4) The “beacon of  democracy” draws global criticism


Conclusion

Preamble


Democracy is a common value  shared by all humanity. It is a right for all nations, not  a prerogative reserved to a few. Democracy takes different forms, and there is  no one-size-fits-all model. It would be totally undemocratic to measure the  diverse political systems in the world with a single yardstick or examine  different political civilizations from a single perspective. The political  system of a country should be independently decided by its own people.  

The United States’ system of  democracy is derived from its own practices. This system is unique, not  universally applicable, and it is far from perfect. However, over the years, the  US, despite the structural flaws and problematic practice of its democratic  system, has claimed itself as the “model of democracy”. It has incessantly  interfered in other countries’ internal affairs and waged wars under the guise  of “democracy”, creating regional turbulence and humanitarian disasters.  

Based on facts and expert  opinions, this report aims to expose the deficiencies and abuse of democracy  in the US as well as the harm of its exporting such democracy. It is hoped that  the US will improve its own system and practices of democracy and change its way  of interacting with other countries. This is in the interest of not only the  American people, but also the people of other countries. If no country seeks  to dictate standards for democracy, impose its own political system on others or  use democracy as a tool to suppress others, and when all countries can live and  thrive in diversity, our world will be a better place.


I. What is  democracy?


Democracy is a term that  derives from the ancient Greek language. It means “rule by the people” or  “sovereignty of the people”. As a form of government, democracy has been  practiced for over 2,500 years, though in different forms, such as direct  democracy of the ancient Athenian citizens and representative government in  modern times. Democracy is a manifestation of the political advancement of  humanity.

Democracy is not an adornment  or publicity stunt; rather, it is meant to be used to solve problems faced by  the people. To judge whether a country is democratic, it is important to see  whether its people run their own country. In addition to voting rights, it is  important to see whether people have the rights to extensive participation. It  is important to see what promises are made in an election campaign and, more  importantly, how many of those promises are honored afterwards. It is important  to see what political procedures and rules are instituted by a country’s systems  and laws and, more importantly, whether these systems and laws are truly  executed. It is important to see whether the rules and procedures governing the  exercise of power are democratic and, more importantly, whether power is truly  put under the oversight and checks of the people.

A functional democracy must  have a full set of institutional procedures; more importantly, it should have  full participation of the people. It must ensure democracy in terms of both  process and outcomes. It must encompass both procedural and substantive  democracy, both direct and indirect democracy. It must ensure both people’s  democracy and the will of the State. If the people of a country are only called  upon to vote and then are forgotten once they have cast their votes; if the  people only hear high-sounding promises during an election campaign but have no  say whatsoever afterwards; or if they are wooed when their votes are wanted but  are ignored once the election is over, then such a democracy is not a true  democracy.

Whether a country is democratic  should be judged and determined by its own people, not by a minority of  self-righteous outsiders.

There is no perfect system of  democracy in the world, nor is there a political system that fits all countries.  Democracy is established and developed based on a country’s own history and  adapted to its national context, and each country’s democracy has its unique  value. Members of the international community should engage in exchanges and  dialogues on democracy on the basis of equality and mutual respect, and work  together to contribute to the progress of humanity.


II. The alienation and  three malaises of democracy in the US


From a historical perspective,  the development of democracy in the US was a step forward. The political party  system, the representative system, one person one vote, and the separation of  powers negated and reformed the feudal autocracy in Europe. The well-known  French writer Alexis de Tocqueville recognized this in his book Democracy in  America. The Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights,  abolitionist movement, civil rights movement and affirmative action were  highlights in the advancement of American democracy. The principle of  “government of the people, by the people and for the people” articulated by  Abraham Lincoln is recognized worldwide.

However, over the years,  democracy in the US has become alienated and degenerated, and it has  increasingly deviated from the essence of democracy and its original design.  Problems like money politics, identity politics, wrangling between political  parties, political polarization, social division, racial tension and wealth gap  have become more acute. All this has weakened the functioning of democracy in  the US.

The US has often used democracy  as a pretext to meddle in other countries’ internal affairs, causing political  chaos and social unrest in these countries, and undermining world peace and  stability and social tranquility in other countries. This makes many people in  the US and other countries wonder if the US is still a democracy. The world  needs to take a closer look at the current state of democracy in the US, and the  US itself should also conduct some soul-searching.

1. The system fraught  with deep-seated problems


The US calls itself “city upon  a hill” and a “beacon of democracy”; and it claims that its political system was  designed to defend democracy and freedom at the time of its founding. Yet, the  vision of democracy has lost its shine in the US today. The self-styled American  democracy is now gravely ill with money politics, elite rule, political  polarization and a dysfunctional system.


(1) American-style  democracy has become “a game of money politics”

The American-style democracy is  a rich men’s game based on capital, and is fundamentally different from  democracy of the people.

Over a hundred years ago,  Republican Senator from Ohio Mark Hanna said of American politics: “There are  two things that are important in politics. The first is money, and I can’t  remember the second.” More than one hundred years have passed, and money has not  only remained “the currency” in US politics, but also become even more  indispensable. For example, the 2020 presidential election and Congressional  elections cost some US$14 billion, two times that of 2016 and three times that  of 2008; indeed, they are known as the most expensive elections in American  history. The cost of the presidential election reached another record high of  US$6.6 billion, and the Congressional elections cost over US$7 billion.

The fact that the American  people have to face is that money politics has penetrated the entire process of  election, legislation and administration. People in fact only have a  restricted right to political participation. The inequality in economic status  has been turned into inequality in political status. Only people with enough  capital can enjoy their democratic rights provided by the Constitution.  Money politics have increasingly become an “irremovable tumor” in American  society and a mockery of democracy in the US.

A US Senator had a sharp  observation, “Congress does not regulate Wall Street. Wall Street regulates  Congress.” According to statistics, winners of 91% of US Congressional elections  are the candidates with greater financial support. Big companies, a small group  of rich people, and interest groups are generous with their support and have  become the main source of electoral funding. And those so-called representatives  of the people, once elected, often serve the interests of their financial  backers. They speak for vested interests rather than the ordinary people.  

In March 2020, Robert Reich,  Professor of Public Policy at University of California, Berkeley and former  Secretary of Labor, published a book entitled The System, Who Rigged It, How  We Fix It. According to him, the American political system has been  hijacked by a tiny minority over the past four decades. Political donations are  almost seen as “legitimate bribery”. They enable the rich to have more political  clout. During the 2018 midterm elections, the huge political donations, mostly  coming from the top 0.01% ultra-rich of the American population, accounted for  over 40% of campaign finance. Money politics and lobby groups are restricting  channels for ordinary Americans to speak out, whose voices expressing genuine  concerns are overshadowed by a handful of interest groups. The oligarchs would  enrich themselves with the power they have got while totally ignoring the  interests of ordinary Americans.

On 23 September 2020, in an  interview with Harvard Law Today, Harvard Law School Professor Matthew  Stephenson said that the US is by no means the world leader in clean government,  and certain practices related to lobbying and campaign finance that other  countries would consider corrupt are not only permitted but constitutionally  protected in the US.


(2)  “One person one  vote” in name, “rule of the minority elite” in reality

The US is a typical country  dominated by an elite class. Political pluralism is only a facade. A small  number of elites dominate the political, economic and military affairs. They  control the state apparatus and policy-making process, manipulate public  opinion, dominate the business community and enjoy all kinds of privileges.  Since the 1960s in particular, the Democrats and Republicans have taken turns to  exercise power, making the “multiparty system” dead in all but name. For  ordinary voters, casting their votes to a third party or an independent  candidate is nothing more than wasting the ballot. In effect, they can only  choose either the Democratic candidate or the Republican one.

In the context of  Democratic-Republican rivalry, the general public’s participation in politics is  restricted to a very narrow scope. For ordinary voters, they are only called  upon to vote and are forgotten once they have cast their ballots. Most people  are just “walk-ons” in the theater of election. This makes “government by the  people” hardly possible in US political practice.

Noam Chomsky, a political  commentator and social activist from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,  points out that the US is a “really existing capitalist democracy”, where there  is a positive correlation between people’s wealth and their influence on  policy-making. For the lower 70% on the wealth/income scale, they have no  influence on policy whatsoever. They are effectively disenfranchised.

Ray La Raja, Professor at the  University of Massachusetts, notes in an article for The Atlantic that  America’s current system is democratic only in form, not in substance.  The nominating process is vulnerable to manipulation by plutocrats, celebrities,  media figures and activists. Many presidential primary voters mistakenly back  candidates who do not reflect their views.


(3) The checks and  balances have resulted in a “vetocracy”

American political scientist  Francis Fukuyama points out in his book Political Order and Political  Decay that there is an entrenched political paralysis in the US. The US  political system has far too many checks and balances, raising the cost of  collective action and in some cases making it impossible altogether. Fukuyama  calls the system a “vetocracy”. Since the 1980s, the “vetocracy” of the US has  become a formula for gridlock.

The US democratic process is  fragmented and lengthy, with a lot of veto points where individual veto players  can block action by the whole body. The function of “checks and balances”, which  was purportedly designed to prevent abuse of power, has been distorted in  American political practice. Political polarization continues to grow as the two  parties drift further apart in political agenda and their areas of consensus  have reduced significantly. An extreme case is the fact that “the most liberal  Republican now remains significantly to the right of the most conservative  Democrat”. Antagonism and mutual inhibition have become commonplace,  “vetocracy” has defined American political culture, and a vindictive “if I  can’t, you can’t either” mentality has grown prevalent.

Politicians in Washington,  D.C. are preoccupied with securing their own partisan interests and don’t care  at all about national development. Vetoing makes one identify more strongly with  their peers in the same camp, who may in turn give them greater and  quicker support. Consequently the two parties are caught in a vicious circle,  addicted to vetoing. Worse still, the government efficacy is inevitably  weakened, law and justice trampled upon, development and progress stalled, and  social division widened. In the US today, people are increasingly identifying  themselves as a Republican or a Democrat instead of as an American. The negative  impacts of identity politics and tribal politics have also spilled over into  other sectors of American society, further exacerbating “vetocracy”.

According to a Pew Research  Center report in October 2021 based on a survey of 17 advanced economies  (including the US, Germany and the Republic of Korea), the US is  more politically divided than the other economies surveyed. Nine in ten US  respondents believe there are conflicts between people who support different  political parties, and nearly 60% of Americans surveyed think their fellow  citizens no longer disagree simply over policies, but also over basic facts.   

Jungkun Seo, Professor of  Political Science at Kyung Hee University, observes that as political  polarization intensifies in the US, the self-cleaning process of American  democracy, which aims to drive reform through elections, will no longer be able  to function properly. With the Senate trapped in a filibuster, the US Congress  no longer serves as a representative body for addressing changes in American  society through legislation.


(4) The flawed  electoral rules impair fairness and justice

The US presidential election  follows the time-honored Electoral College system, where the president and vice  president are not elected directly by popular vote, but by the Electoral College  consisting of 538 electors. The candidate who achieves a majority of 270 or more  electoral votes wins the election.

The flaws of such an electoral  system are self-evident. First, as the president-elect may not be the winner  of the national popular vote, there is a lack of broader representation. Second,  as each state gets to decide its own electoral rules, this may create confusion  and disorder. Third, the winner-takes-all system exacerbates inequality among  states and between political parties. It leads to a huge waste of votes and  discourages voter turnout. Voters in “deep blue” and “deep red” states are  often neglected, while swing states become disproportionately more important  where both parties seek to woo more supporters.

There have been five  presidential elections in US history in which the winners of nationwide popular  vote were not elected the president. The most recent case was the  2016 presidential election in which Republican candidate Donald Trump won 62.98  million popular votes or 45.9% of the total, while Democratic candidate Hillary  Clinton won 65.85 million or 48% of popular votes. Although Trump lost the  popular vote, he won 304 electoral votes while Clinton secured only 227, which  gave Trump his presidency.

Another flaw of the electoral  system widely acknowledged by the US public is gerrymandering. In 1812,  Governor of Massachusetts Elbridge Gerry signed a bill in the interest of his  own party, creating in his state an odd-shaped electoral district that was  compared to a salamander. Such practice was later called gerrymandering, which  refers to an unfair division of electoral districts in favor of a  particular party to win as many seats as possible and cement its advantage.

The US conducts a census every  ten years. Following the completion of the census, redistricting or the  redrawing of electoral district boundaries will take place under the principle  of maintaining roughly equal population in every voting district while  considering demographic shifts. Under the US Constitution, each state  legislature has the power to redistrict. This leaves room for the majority party  in state legislatures to manipulate the redrawing of electoral districts. Two  principal tactics are often used in gerrymandering. One is “packing”, i.e.  concentrating the opposition party’s voters in a few districts, thus giving up  these districts to secure the others. The other is “cracking”, i.e. splitting up  areas where the opposition party’s supporters are concentrated and incorporating  them into neighboring districts, thus diluting votes for the opposition  party.

On 27 September 2021, the  Democratic-governed state of Oregon became the first in the country to complete  redistricting. Electoral districts firmly in the hands of the Democratic Party  have increased from two to four, and swing districts reduced from two to  one. This means that the Democratic Party can control 83% of the state’s  congressional districts with 57% of voters. On the contrary, the  Republican-controlled state of Texas, with new electoral district boundaries  determined on 25 October 2021, has seen districts held by Republicans grow from  22 to 24 and swing districts shrink from six to one. The Republican Party now  occupies 65% of state House seats with just 52.1% of voters.

According to a YouGov poll in  August 2021, just 16% of US adult citizens say they think their  states’ congressional maps would be drawn fairly, while 44% say they think the  maps would be drawn unfairly and another 40% of adults say they are unsure if  the maps will be fair. As US politics grows more polarized, both the Republican  and Democratic parties are seeking to maximize their own interests, and  gerrymandering becomes the best approach.

The superdelegate system of the  Democratic Party is also an impediment to fair election. The superdelegates  include major Democratic leaders, members of the Democratic National Committee,  Democratic members of Congress, and incumbent Democratic governors, and are  seated automatically. The superdelegates may support any candidate they choose  or follow the will of the Party leadership without giving any consideration to  the wishes of the general public.

The late political analyst Mark  Plotkin wrote on The Hill that the “Democrats’ superdelegate system is unfair  and undemocratic”, and “the process of eliminating this elitist exercise should  immediately begin”.


(5)  Dysfunctional democracy triggers trust crisis

The American-style democracy  is more like a meticulously set up scene in Hollywood movies where a bunch of  well-heeled characters publicly pledge commitment to the people, but actually  busy themselves with behind-the-scene deals. Political infighting, money  politics, and vetocracy make it virtually impossible for quality governance to  be delivered as desired by the general public. Americans are increasingly  disillusioned with US politics and pessimistic about the  American-style democracy.

A Gallup survey in October 2020  shows that only 19% of the Americans surveyed are “very confident” about the  presidential election, a record low since the survey was first conducted in  2004.

In November 2020, an online  Wall Street Journal report argues that the 2020 general election can be  seen as the culmination of a two-decade decline in faith in democracy in the  US.

According to a poll by The  Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, only 16% of Americans  say democracy is working well or extremely well; 45% think democracy isn’t  functioning properly, while another 38% say it’s working only somewhat well. A  Pew Research Center survey finds that just 20% of Americans say they trust the  federal government just about always or most of the time.

A Brookings online article in  May 2021 indicates that the certification of the 2020 election results by all 50  states still leaves 77% of Republican voters questioning the legitimacy of  President Biden’s election victory due to allegations of voter fraud. This is  the first time such things happen since the 1930s.

A CNN poll in September reveals  that 56% of Americans think democracy in the US is under attack; 52% reply they  are just a little or not at all confident that elections reflect the will of the  people; 51% say it’s likely that elected officials in the next few years will  overturn the results of an election their party did not win.

A 2021 Pew survey conducted  among 16,000 adults in 16 advanced economies and 2,500 adults in the US shows  that 57% of international respondents and 72% of Americans believe that  democracy in the US has not been a good example for others to follow in recent  years.


2.Messy and chaotic  practices of democracy


That democracy in the US has  gone wrong is reflected not only in its system design and general structure, but  also in the way it is put into practice. The US is not a straight A student when  it comes to democracy, still less a role model for democracy. The gunshots and  farce on Capitol Hill have completely revealed what is underneath the gorgeous  appearance of the American-style democracy. The death of Black American George  Floyd has laid bare the systemic racism that exists in American society for too  long, and spurred a deluge of protests rippling throughout the country and even  the whole world.

While the COVID-19 pandemic  remains out of control in the US, the issue of mask-wearing and vaccination  has triggered further social division and confrontation. Dividends of economic  growth are distributed unfairly, and income growth has stalled for most ordinary  people for a long period of time. The American-style democracy can hardly uphold  public order and ethics, nor advance public well-being to the fullest.


(1) The Capitol riot  that shocks the world

On the afternoon of 6 January  2021, thousands of Americans gathered on Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. and  stormed the Capitol building in a bid to stop the joint session of the Congress  from certifying the newly-elected president. The incident interrupted the  transfer of US presidential power, leaving five dead and over 140 injured. It is  the worst act of violence in Washington, D.C. since 1814 when the British troops  set fire to the White House, and it is the first time in more than 200 years  that the Capitol was invaded. Senate Republican leader described it as a “failed  insurrection”. A scholar from the US Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) exclaims  that the US is not nearly as unique as many Americans believe, and that the  Capitol riot should put an end to the notion of American exceptionalism, of an  eternal shining city on a hill.

The assault on the Capitol has  undermined the three major bedrocks of the American-style democracy.

First, “democracy” in the US is  not democratic as it claims. The refusal of some US politicians to recognize the  election results and their supporters’ subsequent violent storming of the  Capitol building have severely undercut the credibility of democracy in the  US.

Second, “freedom” in the US is  not free as it claims. Twitter, Facebook and other social media  platforms suspended the personal accounts of some US politicians, a de facto  announcement of their “death on social media”. This has bust the myths of  “freedom of speech” in the US.

Third, the “rule of law” in the  US is not bound by the law as it claims. The totally different attitudes taken  by US law enforcement agencies toward the “Black Lives Matter” (BLM)  protests and the Capitol riot are yet another reminder of the double standards  in the US “rule of law”.

The assault on the Capitol sent  shock waves throughout the international community. While deploring the  violence, many people also expressed disappointment at the US.

British Prime Minister Boris  Johnson tweeted that what happened in the US Capitol were “disgraceful  scenes”. 

French President Emmanuel  Macron said that “in one of the world’s oldest democracies ... a universal  idea — that of ‘one person, one vote’ — is undermined.” 

South African President Cyril  Ramaphosa commented that it “shook the foundations” of democracy in the US.

Former Indonesian President  Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono tweeted that the political farce in the US offers much  food for thought, and that there is no perfect democracy, especially when it  comes to its practices.  


(2) Entrenched  racism

Racism is an indelible blot on  democracy in the US. While advocating “all men are created equal”, the founding  fathers of the US left the institution of slavery untouched in the  Constitution of 1789. Today, although racial segregation has been ostensibly  abolished in the US, white supremacy is still rife and rampant across the  country. Discrimination against Black Americans and other racial minorities  remains a systemic phenomenon.

American society has  experienced relapses of its malaise of racial discrimination from time to time.  On 25 May 2020, George Floyd, a Black American, lost his life in Minnesota  because of law enforcement violence by the police. “I can’t breathe” — Floyd’s  desperate plea for life before his death — sparked public outrage. Afterwards,  protests and demonstrations erupted in about 100 cities across the 50 states of  America, demanding justice for Floyd and protesting against racial  discrimination. The demonstrations continued more than 100 days after the  incident.

What happened to George Floyd  is merely an epitome of the tragic plight of Black Americans over the past  centuries. Sandra Shullman, Past President of the American Psychological  Association, says that America is in “a racism pandemic”. The dream of civil  rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. remains unrealized. According to an  editorial of The Indian Express, a mainstream newspaper of India, American  racism has endured, subverting the country’s deepest democratic institutions in  the process.

In February 2021, Stanford  News, a website of Stanford University, carried an article examining systemic  racism in the US. The article suggests that in education, youth of color are  more likely to be closely watched; in the criminal justice system, people of  color, particularly Black men, are disproportionately targeted; and in the  economy and employment, from who moves forward in the hiring process to who  receives funding from venture capitalists, Black Americans and other minority  groups are discriminated against in the workplace and economy-at-large. A study  by the University of Washington finds that around 30,800 people died from police  violence between 1980 and 2018 in the US, which is about 17,100 higher than the  official figure. It also indicates that African Americans are 3.5 times more  likely to be killed by police violence than white Americans.

The anger erupting across  America is not just Black anger, but across racial lines. An article published  on the website of The Jerusalem Post of Israel notes that American Jews are  concerned about right-wing antisemitism and violence driven by white supremacist  groups. According to annual surveys conducted by the American Jewish Committee,  in 2020, 43% US Jews feel less secure than a year ago, and in 2017, 41% say  antisemitism is a serious problem in the US, up from 21% in 2016, 21% in 2015,  and 14% in 2013.

The bullying of Americans of  Asian descent is increasing in the US. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, there  have been growing cases of Asian Americans humiliated or attacked in public  places. Statistics from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation indicate that  hate crimes against people of Asian descent rose by 76% in the US in 2020. From  March 2020 to June 2021, the organization Stop Asian Americans and Pacific  Islanders Hate received over 9,000 incident reports. A survey of young Asian  Americans on the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) website shows that in the  past year, a quarter of young Asian Americans became targets of racial bullying,  nearly half of the respondents expressed pessimism about their situation, and a  quarter of the respondents expressed fear about the situation of themselves and  their families.


(3) Tragic mishandling  of the COVID-19 pandemic

With the best health and  medical resources in the world as it claims, the US has been a total mess when  it comes to COVID response. It has the world’s highest numbers of infections and  deaths.

According to figures released  by Johns Hopkins University, as of the end of November 2021, confirmed  COVID-19 cases in the US had exceeded 48 million, and the number of deaths had  surpassed 770,000, both the highest in the world.

On 8 January this year, 300,777  new confirmed cases were reported, a record single-day increase  since the COVID-19 outbreak in the US. On 13 January alone, 4,170 Americans died  of COVID-19, far exceeding the death toll of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

At the end of November,  the average daily increase of confirmed cases in the US had climbed to  over 70,000, and daily death toll to over 700.

One in every 500 Americans have  died of COVID-19. Up to now, COVID-19 deaths in the US have surpassed its total  death toll from the 1919 Influenza Pandemic, and its combined deaths in World  War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Iraq War and the war  in Afghanistan.

If the US had taken a  science-based response, a lot more lives could have been saved. The pandemic, as  epidemiologist and former head of the US Centers for Disease Control and  Prevention William Foege put it, is a “slaughter”.

The pandemic has taken a heavy  toll on the US economy. The rate and scale of business shutdown and unemployment  in the country are beyond imagination, leaving a large number of Americans  jobless. People’s anxiety and sense of powerlessness has been exacerbated by  growing factors of social instability.

The COVID Hardship Watch  released by the US Center on Budget and Policy Priorities on 29 July 2021  suggests that while there have been improvements over the situation in December  2020, hardship is widespread for Americans in the first half of 2021. Some 20  million adults live in households that have not got enough to eat, 11.40 million  adult renters are behind on rent, facing the risk of being evicted.

As indicated in the statistics  released by the US Census Bureau, by 5 July 2021, at least one member in 22% of  all households with underage dependents had lost their source of income.

US consumer confidence has  dropped substantially, and progress in job market recovery has stalled.  Institutions such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Oxford Economics have  significantly revised down growth forecasts for the US economy. At the same  time, the pandemic, coupled with three rounds of massive economic stimulus  plans, among other factors, has caused port congestion and supply shortages,  pushing inflation higher. In October of this year, US CPI surged by 6.2% from a  year earlier, marking a year-on-year rise of no less than 5% for six consecutive  months, and a record high since 2008.

The root cause of the continued  spread of the coronavirus in the US is not a dearth of science, but the refusal  to trust and rely on science. For the sake of elections, some politicians have  prioritized partisan interests over national interests, politicized pandemic  response, and focused on shifting blames on others. The federal and state  governments have failed to galvanize a concerted response to the pandemic, and  are mired in infighting instead. As a result, pandemic response measures have  been severely politicized. The choices with regard to vaccination and  mask-wearing have become a bone of contention between the parties and among the  people. There appears a growing trend of anti-intellectualism.

A report by the French  newspaper Le Monde observes that the COVID-19 crisis has highlighted  the fragility of democracy in the US. The extremely expensive health system,  reserved for the rich and leaving the poorest without social security, has made  this country, yet one of the most developed in the world, fall behind due to  social injustice. This is a typical case of a democratic drift that makes it  impossible to effectively manage a crisis.

Stanford News notes that, in  the area of public health, the COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted  communities of color and has highlighted the health disparities between Black  Americans, whites and other demographic groups.


(4) Widening wealth  gap

The US is more polarized than  any other Western country in terms of wealth distribution. Its Gini coefficient  has increased to 0.48 in 2021, almost the highest in 50 years. As revealed by  reports of the Institute for Policy Studies, a US think tank, the combined  wealth of US billionaires soared 19-fold between 1990 and 2021, while over this  same period, US median wealth only increased 5.37%. The harsh reality in the US  is the rich is becoming richer, and the poor poorer.  

According to Fed’s October 2021  statistics, the middle 60% of US households by income, defined as the “middle  class”, saw their combined assets drop to 26.6% of national wealth as of June  this year, the lowest in three decades, while the first 1% had a 27% share,  surpassing the “middle class”.

A report by UC Berkeley  economist Emmanuel Saez shows that in terms of average annual income,  America’s top 10% rich earn over nine times as much as the bottom 90%;  the wealthiest 1% are about 40 times more than the bottom 90%; and the  ultra-wealthy top 0.1% are 196 times of the bottom 90%.

The stimulus policy that the US  has introduced in response to COVID-19 has, while pushing up stock markets,  further widened the gap between the rich and the poor. The wealth of US  billionaires has grown US$1.763 trillion, or 59.8%, over the 16 months since the  COVID outbreak in the US. The wealthiest 10% now own 89% of all US stocks,  registering a new historic high.

The wealth polarization in the  US is inherent to its own political system and the interests of the capital that  its government represents. From the “Occupy Wall Street” movement, to the recent  “Harambe stares down Wall Street’s Charging Bull”, the American people have  never stopped condemning the widening wealth gap. Yet, nothing has changed.  Those governing the US choose to do nothing about the growing wealth inequality.  And the pandemic has further exposed a rule in American society — capital first  and the rich first.


(5) “Freedom of speech”  in name only

In the US, the  media is juxtaposed with the executive, the legislative and the judiciary as the  “fourth branch of government” and journalists are considered “uncrowned kings”.  Though US media organizations claim to be independent from politics and serve  freedom and truth, they are actually serving financial interests and party  politics.

A few media  conglomerates maintain control of the US news media and  have morphed into a political force with outsize influence.

Under the  Telecommunications Act of 1996, the federal government is required to  relax regulation over the ownership of media outlets. This has led to an  unprecedented wave of mergers and a crippling erosion of the diversity and  independence of the US media. The drastic reduction in the number of media  outlets has enabled a few companies to expand into monopolies.

In the US, a few media  conglomerates are now in control of over 90% of media outlets, netting them an  annual profit even higher than the gross domestic product (GDP) of some  developing countries.

These media behemoths, while  eager to make more business footprints, have extended their reach into American  politics, attempting to sway political processes through lobbying, public  relations campaign or political donations.  

The US media monopolies have become  “invisible killers” of civil and political rights.

Robert McChesney, a leading US  scholar in the studies of political economy of communications and professor at  the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, notes in his book Rich  Media, Poor Democracy that media companies, profit-driven by nature,  confine people to the world of entertainment programs, depriving their access to  diversified information, distracting their interest in public  affairs, diminishing their ability to distinguish between right and wrong, and  muting their voice in the decision-making of social policies. In an American  society dominated by media narratives, traditional notions of civic and  political involvement have shriveled. Depoliticization has turned democracy into  a political game without citizens.

A report in Miami’s New  Herald argues that as the media is controlled by the elite and  conglomerates, people are not able to distinguish between facts and political  propaganda.    

The US media is no longer a  “gatekeeper” of democracy. The political wrangling between the Left and Right in  the US media has further entrenched the estrangement and division between  the two parties and between the elite and the mass public. It has  aggravated political polarization in the US, pushing the political Left further  left and the Right further right. And it has fueled the spread of extremist  ideologies and populism in the US.

According to a study by Sejong  Institute, a think tank in the Republic of Korea, over 80% of conservative  voters in the US see news reports by mainstream media outlets, such as New  York Times, as false information and have a biased trust in media. Voters  believe in only a few media outlets and would ignore communications at the  national level. Levelheaded discussions and consensus-building have been  replaced by megaphone politics and negative partisan strife.

The Digital News  Report 2021 issued by the University of Oxford and Reuters Institute  indicates that among 92,000 online news consumers surveyed in 46 markets, those  in the US have the lowest level of trust in news, a mere 29%.  

In the information age  when traditional media is on the decline, social media has become a  new favorite for the general public. Yet, like traditional media, social  media is also under the control of big capital and interest groups. To increase  their website traffic, social media sites use algorithms to create “information  cocoons”, leaving extreme content unchecked and uncontrolled. This drives users  toward self-reinforcing their existing views, exacerbates identity politics, and  further divides public opinion.

In October 2021, former  Facebook employee Frances Haugen leaked tens of thousands of pages of explosive  internal documents of Facebook. She disclosed to Columbia Broadcasting System  (CBS) that Facebook would not hesitate to sacrifice public interests to keep  users on its platform and make profits. Facebook has become a main platform for  social extremists and is fraught with hate speech, disinformation and  misinformation. Action is only taken on 3-5% of hate and about 0.6% of violence  and incitement on the platform.



3. Disastrous  consequences of US export of its brand of democracy


Without regard to huge  differences in the level of economic development and in the historical and  cultural backgrounds of countries around the world, the US seeks to impose its  own political system and values on other nations. It pushes for what it calls  “democratic transition”, and instigates “color revolution”.

It wantonly interferes in other  countries’ internal affairs and even subverts their governments, bringing about  disastrous consequences for those countries. In other words, the US has  attempted to model other countries after its own image and export its brand of  democracy. Such attempts are entirely undemocratic and at odds with the core  values and tenets of democracy. Without producing the expected chemistry, the  American-style democracy has turned out to be a “failed transplant” that plunges  many regions and countries into turmoil, conflicts and wars.


(1) The “color  revolutions” undermine regional and national stability 

The US has a habit of  interfering in other countries’ internal affairs in the name of “democracy” and  seeking regime change to install pro-US governments.

A former senior CIA  official once talked about making people “what we want them to be” and “follow  our directions”, and the possibility of confusing people’s minds, changing their  values, and making them believe in the new values before they know it.

Former Secretary of State  Michael Pompeo openly admitted “I was the CIA director. We lied, we cheated, we  stole. We had entire training courses. It reminds you of the glory of the  American experiment.”

The US has developed a  system of strategies and tactics for “peaceful evolution”. It would start with  “cultural exchanges”, economic assistance, and then public opinion shaping to  foster an atmosphere for “color revolution”. It would exaggerate the mistakes  and flaws of incumbent governments to foment public grievances and  anti-government sentiments.

In the meantime, it would  brainwash local people with American values and make them identify with  America’s economic model and political system. It would also cultivate pro-US  NGOs and provide all-round training to opposition leaders. It would seize the  opportunity of major elections or emergencies to overthrow targeted governments  through instigating street political activities.

In recent history, the US has  pushed for the neo-Monroe Doctrine in Latin America under the pretext of  “promoting democracy”, incited “color revolution” in Eurasia, and remotely  controlled the “Arab Spring” in West Asia and North Africa. These moves  have brought chaos and disasters to many countries, gravely undermining world  peace, stability and development.

In Latin America and the  Caribbean, people have long been under no illusion about “the American-style  democracy”. Any attempt of the US to promote its self-styled “model of  democracy” would be only self-defeating and self-humiliating.

In 1823, the US issued the  Monroe Doctrine, declaring “America for the Americans” and advocating  “Pan-Americanism”.

In the following decades, the  US, under the excuse of “spreading democracy”, repeatedly carried out political  interference, military intervention, and government subversion in Latin America  and the Caribbean.

The US pursued a policy of  hostility toward socialist Cuba and imposed blockade against the country for  nearly 60 years, and subverted the government of Chile under Salvador  Allende. These were blatant acts of hegemonism. “My way or no way.” That’s the  US logic. 

Since 2003, Eastern Europe and  Central Asia have seen the “Rose Revolution” in Georgia, the “Orange Revolution”  in Ukraine, and the “Tulip Revolution” in Kyrgyzstan. The US State Department  openly admitted playing a “central role” in these “regime changes”.

In October 2020, the Russian  Foreign Intelligence Service revealed that the US planned to instigate “color  revolution” in Moldova.

The “Arab Spring” that started  in 2010 was an earthquake that shook the entire Middle East. The US orchestrated  the show behind the scene, and played a key role. The New York Times  revealed in 2011 that a small core of American government-financed organizations  were promoting democracy in “authoritarian” Arab states. A number of the groups  and individuals directly involved in the “Arab Spring” revolts received training  and financing from US organizations like the International Republican Institute,  the National Democratic Institute and Freedom House.

Mustafa Ahmady, an African and  international affairs specialist in Ethiopia, contributed an article to Ahram  Online entitled “Promised Lands”, explaining that it was largely due to Obama’s  famous statement “Now means now” that furious Egyptian protesters  overthrew Mubarak, and that they paid a heavy price as a result of the political  change.

Seeing what the US had done,  the Arab people have come to realize that the US wants to force a stereotyped  model of democracy on them regardless of their own will.

In countries forced to copy and  paste American values, there is no sign of true democracy, true freedom, or true  human rights. What have been left in these countries are prevailing scenes of  persisting chaos, stagnation and humanitarian disasters.

The US export of its values has  disrupted the normal development process in the recipient countries, hindered  their search for a development path and model befitting their national  conditions, brought political, economic and social turmoils, and destroyed, one  after another, what used to be other peoples’ beautiful homelands. The turmoils,  in turn, have given rise to terrorism and other long-term challenges that  threaten and jeopardize regional and even global security.

As suggested by the French  website Le Grand Soir, democracy has long become a weapon of massive destruction  for the US to attack countries with different views.

The US applies different  standards in assessing democracy of its own and other countries. It praises or  belittles others entirely according to its own likes or dislikes. Following the  Capitol attack on 6 January 2021, an American politician compared the incident  of violence to the 9/11 terror attack, calling it a “shameful assault” on the US  Congress, constitution and democracy. It is ironic that in June 2019 the same  politician called the violent demonstrations at the Hong Kong Legislative  Council building as a “beautiful sight to behold” and commended the rioters for  their “courage”. What a blatant double standard.


(2) The US imposition  of its brand of democracy causes humanitarian tragedies 

The US export of its brand of  democracy by force has led to humanitarian disasters in many countries.  The 20-year US war in Afghanistan has left the country devastated and  impoverished. A total of 47,245 Afghan civilians and 66,000 to 69,000 Afghan  soldiers and police who had nothing to do with 9/11 attacks were killed in US  military operations, and more than 10 million people were displaced. The war  destroyed the foundation for Afghanistan’s economic development and  reduced Afghans to destitution.

In 2003, the US launched  military strikes against Iraq for its alleged possession of weapons of mass  destruction. The civilian death toll of the Iraq war is between 200,000  and 250,000, including over 16,000 directly killed by the US military. More than  a million people lost their homes. Moreover, the US troops seriously violated  international humanitarian principles, as evidenced by the frequent incidence of  prisoner abuse. Until now the US has not been able to produce any credible proof  of Iraq’s possession of weapons of mass destruction.

According to records available,  33,584 civilians were killed in war and conflict in Syria between 2016 and 2019.  Among the victims, 3,833 were directly killed in bombings by the US-led  coalition and half of them were women and children. The Public Broadcasting  Service (PBS) reported on 9 November 2018 that the “most accurate air strike in  history” launched by US forces on Raqqa alone killed 1,600 Syrian civilians.

In 2018, the  US launched airstrikes on Syria again for the purpose of, what they  called, preventing the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government. But the  “evidence” of the alleged use of chemical weapons by the Syrian  government turned out to be a fake video footage directed and produced by the  White Helmets, an organization funded by intelligence agencies of the US and  other countries.


(3) The abuse of  sanctions breaches international rules

Unilateral sanction is a “big  stick” the US wields in dealing with other countries. Over many years, the  US has exercised its financial hegemony and abused its technological clout to  carry out frequent, unilateral bullying against other countries.

The US has enacted some  draconian laws, such as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the  Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, and the Countering  America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, and issued a series  of executive orders to target and sanction specific countries, entities or  individuals.

The ambiguous rules contained  in these acts and executive orders, such as the “minimum contacts principle” and  “doctrine of effects”, are in fact a willful expansion of the jurisdiction  of US domestic laws.

These acts and executive orders  make it possible for the US to abuse its domestic channels for prosecution and  exercise “long-arm jurisdiction” over entities and individuals in other  countries. The two most prominent examples are the case of French company Alstom  and that of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou.

Statistics show that the Trump  administration had imposed over 3,900 sanction measures, which means the  US wielded its “big stick” three times a day on average. As of fiscal year 2021,  the entities and individuals on US sanction lists topped 9,421, 933% higher  compared to the previous fiscal year.

The US unwarranted unilateral  sanctions and “long-arm jurisdiction” have gravely undermined the sovereignty  and security of other countries, severely impacting their economic development  and people’s wellbeing. The sanctions and “long-arm jurisdiction” constitute a  gross violation of international law and basic norms of international  relations.

The US sanctions against other  countries have continued unabated into 2021.

The US administration, in  collaboration with its European allies, have ramped up containment and  suppression against Russia, imposed blanket sanctions allegedly in response to  the Navalny incident and alleged Russian cyber attacks and interference in US  elections, among others, and launched a diplomatic war by the expulsion of  Russian diplomats.

With regard to issues such as  the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline project and the digital service tax, the  US has not hesitated to sanction even its European allies.

Following the entry into force  of the China-US phase one trade agreement, the US has taken further measures to  suppress and contain China. It has placed over 940 Chinese entities and  individuals on its restricted lists. According to statistics from the Office of  Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the US Department of the Treasury, as of 19  October 2021, a total of 391 entities and individuals from China (including Hong  Kong and Macao) have been sanctioned by the US.

In an article published in the  September/October 2021 issue of Foreign Affairs, Daniel Drezner,  Professor at Tufts University and Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution,  criticizes successive US administrations for using “sanctions as the go-to  solution for nearly every foreign policy problem.” He notes that sanctions not  only are ineffective, but also “exert a humanitarian toll”, and that the United  States of America has become the “United States of Sanctions”.

US unilateral sanctions are a  continuous, grave violation of human rights of Americans and other peoples. The  worst example is the protracted US blockade against Cuba.

For more than 60 years,  in total disregard of the many resolutions of the UN General Assembly, the US  has continued its comprehensive blockade against Cuba based on its embargo  policies and domestic laws such as the Torricelli Act and the Helms-Burton  Act.

The Cuba blockade is the  longest and cruelest systemic trade embargo, economic blockade and financial  sanctions in modern history. The blockade has been gravely detrimental to Cuba’s  economic and social development, causing US$100 billion direct losses to Cuba’s  economy.

US blockade and sanctions  against Iran began in late 1970s. Over the past 40-plus years, US unilateral  sanctions have increased in both intensity and frequency. They have gradually  evolved into a rigorous sanction regime that covers finance, trade and  energy, and are targeted at both entities and individuals. The purpose is to  intensify pressure on Iran from all dimensions.

In May 2018, the US government  announced its unilateral withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action  (JCPOA), and soon after resumed and expanded sanctions against Iran. Many  countries and relevant entities have been forced to give up their cooperation  with Iran. A large number of foreign oil enterprises left the country.  Iran’s manufacturing industry has been unable to keep up normal operations. The  country has suffered economic slowdown, coupled with heightened inflation and  massive currency depreciation.

The US has imposed sanctions  on Belarus, Syria and Zimbabwe, among others, over the years, and ratcheted  up “maximum pressure” against the DPRK, Venezuela, etc.


(4) The “beacon of  democracy” draws global criticism

The people of the world have  a discerning eye. They see very well the flaws and deficiencies of democracy in  the US, hypocrisy in exporting US “democratic values”, and US acts of  bullying and hegemony around the world in the name of democracy.

A Russian Foreign Ministry  spokesperson once noted that the US is accustomed to posing as the “global  beacon of democracy” and urging everyone else to take a humane approach to what  they call “peaceful protests”, but adopting completely opposite measures at  home. She further noted that the US is “not a beacon of democracy”, and that the  US administration “would do well to, first of all, listen to its  own citizens and try to hear them, instead of engaging in witch-hunts in their  own country and afterwards talking hypocritically about human rights in other  countries”. The US is in no position to lecture other countries on human rights  and civil liberties, she noted.

In May 2021, Latana, a German  polling agency, and the Alliance of Democracies founded by former NATO Secretary  General and former Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, released  a Democracy Perception Index which is based on a survey of over 50,000 people in  53 countries. The findings reveal that 44% of respondents are concerned that the  US may pose a threat to democracy in their country, 50% of Americans surveyed  are concerned that the US is an undemocratic country, and 59% of US  respondents think that their government acts in the interest of a small group of  people.

In June 2021, Brian Klaas,  Associate Professor of Politics at University College London, contributed an  article to The Washington Post entitled “The world is horrified by the  dysfunction of American democracy”. The article quotes data from Pew  Research Center, which suggest that “America is no longer a ‘shining city upon a  hill’” and that most US allies see democracy in the US as “a shattered,  washed-up has-been”, and that 69% of respondents in New Zealand, 65% in  Australia, 60% in Canada, 59% in Sweden, 56% in the Netherlands and 53% in the  United Kingdom do not think that the US political system works well. More than a  quarter of people surveyed in France, Germany, New Zealand, Greece, Belgium and  Sweden believe that American democracy has never been a good example to  follow.

A report by the polling agency  Eupinions indicates that the EU’s confidence in the US system has declined, with  52% of respondents believing the US democratic system does not work; 65% and 61%  of respondents in France and Germany hold the same view.

In September 2021, Martin Wolf,  a renowned British scholar, pointed out in his article “The strange death of  American democracy” contributed to The Financial Times that the US political  environment has reached an “irreversible” point, and “the transformation of the  democratic republic into an autocracy has advanced”.

In November 2021, the  International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, a Sweden-based  think tank, released The Global State of Democracy listing the US as a  “backsliding democracy” for the first time. The Secretary General of the  institute said that “the visible deterioration of democracy in the United  States” is “seen in the increasing tendency to contest credible election  results, the efforts to suppress participation (in elections), and the runaway  polarization”.

Indian political activist  Yogendra Yadav points out that the United States is not “an exemplar of  democracy”, that the world has realized that the US needs to reflect on its  democracy and learn from other democracies.

Mexican magazine  Proceso comments that behind a seemingly free and democratic facade, the  US system of democracy has major flaws.

Sithembile Mbete, a Senior  Lecturer in the Department of Political Sciences at the University of Pretoria,  writes in an article published in Mail and Guardian that “many of the  markers of free and fair elections — a universal voters’ roll, centralized  election management, uniform rules and regulations — are absent in the American  system. Much of what we Africans have been trained to recognize as good  electoral conduct has never existed in the US.” 


Conclusion


America: no longer the beacon on  the hill

— The Times of  Israel 


What is now imperative for the  US is to get to work in real earnest to ensure its people’s democratic rights  and improve its system of democracy instead of placing too much emphasis on  procedural or formal democracy at the expense of substantive democracy and its  outcome.

What is also imperative for the  US is to undertake more international responsibilities and provide more public  goods to the world instead of always seeking to impose its own brand of  democracy on others, use its own values as means to divide the world into  different camps, or carry out intervention, subversion and invasion in other  countries under the pretext of promoting democracy.

The international community is  now faced with pressing challenges of a global scale, from the COVID-19  pandemic, economic slowdown to the climate change crisis. No country can  be immune from these risks and challenges. All countries should pull together.  This is the best way forward to overcome these adversities.

Any attempt to push for a  single or absolute model of democracy, use democracy as an instrument or weapon  in international relations, or advocate bloc politics and bloc confrontation  will be a breach of the spirit of solidarity and cooperation which is critical  in troubled times.

All countries need to rise  above differences in systems, reject the mentality of zero-sum game, and pursue  genuine multilateralism.

All countries need to uphold  peace, development, equity, justice, democracy and freedom, which are common  values of humanity.

It is also important that all  countries respect each other, work to expand common ground while shelving  differences, promote cooperation for mutual benefit, and jointly build a  community with a shared future for mankind.