Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

Habermas and the Fate of Democracy – Boston Review

A new biography reveals Habermas's commitment to a democratic ideal.

Jrgen Habermass career, with its prodigious philosophy and social theory now translated into forty different languages, can be interpreted primarily as an effort to make intellectual sense of democracy and its untapped possibilities. But the Habermas who emerges in the German sociologist Stefan Mller-Doohms illuminating new biography (Habermas: A Biography) also appears as an intensely political creature, an intellectual whose public interventions over the course of sixty years have regularly galvanized popular debate in Germany and beyond. Beginning in the 1950s, when he was perhaps the first in his generation to take on Martin Heidegger and other older intellectuals who had embraced the Nazis, Habermass public political interventions have been instrumental in shaping our understanding of and aspirations for democracy.

Habermas himself has drawn a sharp distinction between his political interventions and his more systematic scholarship. But Mller-Doohm suggests a fuzzier border, with the more abstract Habermas often giving voice to concrete political experiences. This is true even today, with Habermass scholarship eerily applicable to current waves of populism around the world. And at the age of eighty-seven, Habermas continues to address democratic decay and nationalist nostalgia as he energetically defends the embattled European Union.

Jrgen Habermas grew up in Gummersbach, a sleepy German town about thirty miles east of Cologne. It is a bit surprising that Habermass storythe story of a cosmopolitan and radical democratstarts here since the provincial, upper-middle class, deeply conservative milieu in Gummersbach and elsewhere helped pave the way for Hitlers rise.

Habermass father, Ernst, was a right-wing conservative who joined the Nazi Party in 1933. The young Jrgen was forced to join the Hitler Youth, and then in February 1945, when he was fifteen years old, got news of his call-up from the Wehrmacht. Good luck spared him the fate of other teenagers mobilized during the wars final months: It was sheer coincidence, Habermas later recounted, that I was somewhere else for one night, and on that night the military police came to look for me. Then, thank Godthe Americans came.

Habermas is an intensely political thinker whose ideas are eerily applicable to contemporary global politics.

Germanys defeat helped free Habermas from the provincial social climate. He listened to live radio broadcasts of the Nuremberg Trials and, shocked by the horrors recounted, seems to have quickly grasped the criminal nature of the regime under which he had grown up. Revealingly perhaps, his academic interests shifted away from medicine, a more professionally secure field, to philosophy. His 1954 University of Bonn doctoral dissertation on the Romantic philosopher Friedrich Schelling offers little evidence of Habermass growing radicalism, but his early journalistic pieces, published during the early and mid 50s in major German newspapers and intellectual journals, anticipate his life-long political concerns. Directed against right-wing intellectuals (for example, Heidegger), they criticize an older generation for failing to take democracy seriouslythat magic word, according to Habermas, that brought together otherwise disparate voices within his own postwar generation who sought a clean break from Nazism.

Because Habermas took the magic word of democracy so seriously, he found himself disenchanted not only with established conservative intellectuals but also political elites who preferred to keep their mouths shut about their Nazi entanglements, and for whom Germanys new liberal order was primarily about stability and security, not democratic self-government. Dictatorship and the racism that motored it still haunted his country. Democracy was not a fortunate historical inheritance one could simply take up, but instead an unfinished project. As he has more recently claimed, democracy represents the surviving remnant of utopia: only democracy is capable of hacking through the Gordian knots of otherwise insoluble problems. Thus his life-long intellectual project of trying to understand democracys promise and possibilities.

For a democrat with leftist sympathies in 1950s Germany, where ex-Nazis still dominated many university faculties, the Frankfurt-based Institute for Social Research offered an obvious intellectual home. Made up of heterodox Marxists and Jews recently returned from American exile, the so-called Frankfurt School shared Habermass anxieties about Germanys unfinished democracy and refusal to break cleanly with the Nazi past. In 1956 he joined the eclectic group of interdisciplinary scholars based at the Institute and began working closely with the philosopher and cultural critic Theodor Adorno, its most creative thinker and prominent public intellectual. Adornos habit of speaking his mind, even when politically inconvenient, clearly influenced Habermas.

Even as he worked under Adornos tutelage, Habermas maintained his intellectual independence. For him, the Frankfurt School never constituted a closed research agenda or shared orthodoxy. Mller-Doohm recounts a series of political and intellectual battles with the Institutes autocratic Director, Max Horkheimer, who worried about Habermass radicalism and at one juncture demanded his dismissal. By the late 1950s, Habermas had become a tough Marxist critic of not only postwar Germany but also liberal democracy more generally. Already at this point, however, Habermass Marxism served mainly as a starting point for exploring tensions between capitalism and democracy, not an all-encompassing philosophical framework promising ready answers. Habermas remained first and foremost a democrat, though one ensconced on the political left and preoccupied with capitalisms threats to democracy.

During this early period, he published The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere in 1962, a major theoretical contribution that chronicles the decline of the nineteenth-century liberal public sphere. The book provides a dreary portrait of contemporary society as increasingly authoritarian, with top-down executive-centered government depicted as replacing an earlier mode of liberal rule in which deliberative publicsgroups of people partially realizing the communicative ideal of free and open discussion among equalsexerted influence via powerful legislatures. Though the volumes Marxist framing located the main source of liberal decay in the transition from liberal competitive to modern organized capitalism, it also sketched Habermass most important intuition: because democracy rests on public deliberation and exchange, participants in discourse should possess equal chances to express their views and must not be unfairly limited when doing so. Those impacted by any decision must be allowed to deliberate freely and equally about it without being hindered by social inequalities.

His efforts even won Horkheimer over, who soon changed his mind about his young colleague and worked behind the scenes to make sure Habermas was named his successor at Frankfurt University in 1964. With one interlude during the 1970s, when Habermas relocated to the bucolic lake district outside Munich to direct a research institute, he spent the rest of his career at Frankfurt as a professor of philosophy and sociology. He soon became the Frankfurt Schools most prolific and prominent representative.

When The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere was translated into English in 1989, Habermas distanced himself both from its bleak diagnostic claims and the Marxist framework. Nevertheless, some of his early observations remain eerily prescient. Habermas observed, for example, that politics and entertainment were becoming blurred by personalization and scandalization, with new technologies dumbing down political and cultural debate. Rather than active citizens and participants in a shared cultural life, Habermas saw compliant consumers unable to distinguish between new products and political proposals. He also worried about the dismantlement of legal and constitutional safeguards and novel types of popular but illiberal and effectively authoritarian rule. Despite its limitations, Structural Transformation can be read as anticipating the emergence of authoritarian populism, along the lines of Recep Tayyip Erdogans Turkey or Viktor Orbns Hungary. With the erstwhile protagonist of The Apprentice propelled to a new starring role in the White House, thanks in large part to fake news and bots, it also sometimes makes for an illuminating reading of Donald Trumps United States.

He was one ofthe first in his generation to take on Heidegger and other intellectuals who had embraced the Nazis.

For uncharitable critics, Habermas remains a nave defender of pristine or ideal speech, where actors somehow miraculously engage in rational discourse in a space free of power. With his efforts focused mostly on formulating a rigorous model of idealized communication, Habermas ignores the harsh realities of political life and overstates its rational traits. His theory, they say, seems suited to a philosophical seminar, not the rough and tumble of politics.

But such critics overlook the fact that his theory is not intended as a recipe book for reformers aspiring to cook up perfect deliberation at short notice. Discourse in the most demanding and hypothetical sense, Habermas concedes, is rarely if ever achievable in ordinary communication. Why then worry about it? For Habermas, if we interpret democracy as a way of life where people make binding decisions based on arguments, we need to grasp how deliberation works, and how best to delineate reasonable and legitimate from unreasonable and illegitimate public exchange. Real-life democracy hardly looks like the idealized communication community Habermas describes. Yet absent some sense of that ideal community, we can neither distinguish manufactured from independent public opinion, nor deepen democracy.

During the last thirty years or so, as Habermas has moved from being a Marxist and left-socialist to a social democrat, he has constructively engaged with the ideas of left-liberal American thinkers such as Ronald Dworkin and John Rawls. He now speaks of the need to tame or civilize capitalism but no longer toys with the prospect of a basically different economic order. The shift has been widely noted by more radical critics. Once fashionable on the left, Habermass name is now sometimes met with skepticism by a younger generation for whom the recent global economic crisis underscores the need for a fundamental attack on capitalism.

Habermass life-long interest in the nexus between democracy and capitalism, however, remains. Mller-Doohm devotes nearly a quarter of his thick volume to a discussion of Habermass cosmopolitanism, a longstanding component of his thinking that in recent decades has taken on a central role. Habermas has always expressed sympathy for Immanuel Kants idea of a perpetual peace founded on cosmopolitan law. Structural Transformation posited that modern means of mass destruction underscore the need to transcend the state of nature in international relations that is so threatening for everybody. His early security-centered call for a new post national politics was then supplemented in the 1990s by the thesis that economic globalization outstrips the nation-states capacity to regulate its own affairs. Like many on the left, Habermas has become increasingly worried about global-level economic transformations that make it difficult especially for small and medium-sized states to maintain a generous welfare state. This diagnosis has motivated him to provide an account of how best to move towards the post national order he thinks we need.

Against those on both left and right who seek what he views as a retrograde rolling back of globalization, Habermas wants political decision-making to be scaled up to our globalizing economy. Democracy and the welfare state not only need to catch up to globalization if they are to survive, but can only do so when reconstituted in new and more inclusionary ways beyond the nation state. He considers it a mistake to try to shore up the nation state with outdated ideas of political identity based on common ethnicity or far-reaching cultural or linguistic sameness, and he attacks nationalists and populists for doing so. For todays Europeans, he believes, only a more democratic and politically robust European Union (EU) can navigate economic globalizations rocky waters and preserve democracys social presuppositions. And only in a stronger more democratic EU could more porous and tolerant political identities flourish.

Habermas has harboreda life-long interest in the nexus between democracy and capitalism.

Simultaneously, Habermas rejects the idea of a world state or even a federal European state. Instead, he proposes a three-tiered framework for global governance, with existing national governments to be complemented by new modes of what he describes as binding supranational (that is, global or worldwide) and transnational (regional or continental) decision-making. At the global or supranational level, a reformed UN would better secure world peace and protect human rights. Because we presently lack anything approaching a robust global demos, however, its authority should remain circumscribed. At the transnational level, environmental, financial, and social and economic policies, or what he dubs global domestic politics, would be negotiated by global actors tasked with generating new modes of cross-border regulation. With the EU in mind, Habermas believes that regional political and economic blocs possess the requisite muscle to get the job done. At the national level, existing states would preserve core features of sovereignty, though they would lack any legal right (as per the UN Charter) to wage aggressive war. Both supranational and transnational decision making would continue to rely on the nation-state and its military and police powers for enforcement.

Habermas lauds the EU for successfully delinking key political decisions from the nation state; in Crisis of the European Union (2012), he goes so far as to claim that its institutional innovations provide a model for others elsewhere hoping to tackle globalization. The EU divides sovereignty between nation states (and their citizenries) and European citizens: nation-states maintain control over coercive authority but share sovereignty with European citizens. Unfortunately, the EUs achievements are threatened by recalcitrant political elites who now impede further progress: they are chiefly responsible for the dire crisis Europe faces. Habermass main target is a post-democratic executive federalism in which powerful national leadersincluding Germanys Chancellor Angela Merkelexpropriate far-reaching powers of crisis management absent sufficient public oversight. In the recent financial and Euro crises, for example, ordinary political and constitutional procedures were circumvented, and vast authority placed in the hands of institutional actors operating behind closed doors. Instead, the EUs crises should have been an opportunity for both we the people of Europe and we the peoples of Europes nations to figure out how best to exercise popular control over controversial matters of economic policy presently exercised by a small group of elite political players.

Habermass cosmopolitan aspirations seem increasingly unachievable in a political context where Donald Trump mocks the UN as just a club for people to have a good time, and Brexit and influential anti-European political parties block a stronger and more immediately democratic EU. Of course, populists also worry about unaccountable elites in Brussels. But for them ideas of a European-wide citizenry and robust EU democracy are dangerous myths and part of the problem, not the solution.

Laying out two intertwined explanations, Habermas has struggled to make sense of the nationalist and populist backlash. Like others, he thinks that populist and nationalist movements draw support disproportionately from economic globalizations losers. He chides his friends on the social democratic left for pursuing economic policies barely distinguishable from those of the political right. The anti-EU backlash can be attributed precisely to that failure to recalibrate political and economic processes that has so vexed him since the 1990s, a failure exacerbated by mainstream politicians who allow populists to pose disingenuously as best able to provide economic security to voters suffering globalizations worst consequences. In an interview with a political journal last November, Habermas reiterated his longstanding call for left-leaning parties in Europe to join arms and go on the offensive against social inequality by embarking upon a coordinated and cross-border taming of unregulated markets. Though sometimes vague on details, Habermas believes that only new transnational social and economic measures and regulations can extinguish populist political fires.

Simultaneously, Habermas criticizes European leaders for failing to pursue political reforms that might strengthen Europe-wide democracy. In his view, their preference for opaque, top-down decision-making feeds political resentment against Brussels. In 2014 he cautiously greeted right-wing populists, not of course because of their policy views, but only because he hoped they might inadvertently spur mainstream politicians to start a serious conversation about political and institutional reform. On this second view, the immaturity of the EUs version of transnational democracy is the main culprit behind long simmering and now apparently explosive populist anger.

Only new transnational social and economic measures and regulations can extinguish populist political fires.

Habermass economic and political explanations both help make sense of present-day political quagmires. Yet neither does justice to the sizable hurdles faced by flesh-and-blood politicians who risk being attacked by populists for putting general European interests ahead of national interests. Europes main political players, after all, still answer not to a European demos but to national and local constituencies. Given existing electoral and political incentives it seems a lot to ask of them to transcend their parochial preoccupations. He sometimes gives politiciansand especially his left-leaning alliestoo little credit for the genuine quagmires they face, as they respond to angry voters who blame global elites for declining life prospects.

It also seems ironic that our most impressive contemporary theorist of democracy spends so much time attacking elected leaders and other political elites for failing to take on unpopular political tasks. What about grassroots political and social movements, or a European public sphere? Why do we still see so few genuinely cross-border popular or citizen-based initiatives to reform or strengthen the EU? Habermas stylizes himself as a radical democrat, and has always emphasized that democracy remains principally a grassroots affair between and among active citizens who argue and debate about competing views. However, he has had relatively little to say about that part of the story.

Whether Habermass preferred loose, multi-tiered system of European governance, rather than a robust federal European state, might tame globalizing capitalism also remains unclear. Most successful attempts to regulate capitalism have gone hand in handjust think of the New Dealwith institutional enhancements to centralized state power. Redistribution within the EU, as in many existing political entities, would seem to demand relatively autonomous, more centralized institutions able to take on powerful local interests (e.g., within the EU, Germany, the main bulwark behind austerity policies). Of course, Habermas is probably right to deem lingering calls today for a European federal state politically unrealistic. Yet this hardly renders his own model of a decentralized, non-statist, yet simultaneously more egalitarian and redistributionist, EU any less difficult to fathom politically.

Since the 1950s Jrgen Habermas has used his enormous intellectual and political energies to deepen democracy. Mller-Doohm occasionally seems overwhelmed by his subject. He neglects, for instance, the fascinating story of Habermass massive global dispersionhow his ideas have been taken up and creatively reworked by admirers and disciples. Mller-Doohms broad sympathies for Habermas also make him more cautious about expressing criticism. Still, he does a service in methodically outlining Habermass theoretical trajectory, highlighting its strengths as well as ambiguities and dead-ends. And he recounts Habermass activities as an outspoken public contrarian, in which Habermas has regularly confronted revanchist voices in Germany reluctant to confront the Nazi past and cramped views of national identity. While it seems unlikely that Habermas will win his battle to extend democracy beyond the nation state anytime soon, he has defined a path of intellectual and political engagement that others with similar commitments willwe can only hopecarry forward.

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Habermas and the Fate of Democracy - Boston Review

NATO, the UN and democracy: A trio for Trump – The Hill (blog)

Its been a busy week for President Trump. In less than seven days, he has learned that Russia is not our ally and that far from being obsolete, NATO is instead a great alliance and the bulwark of international peace and stability as he declared to NATOs Secretary General during a meeting at the White House on April 12.

That offers hope. To really reduce innocent deaths and violence, Trump could add United Nations peacekeeping, and democracy support to his tutorial. Meanwhile, like a clock stuck on twelve, Trump was occasionally if unwittingly correct about the need for NATO reform.

Yet, NATO was fundamentally designed for an older style of warfare in which the Russians came barreling through the Fulda gap in tanks. NATO is simply not designed for todays murky form of proxy warfare.

Prepositioning weapons in Eastern Europe may offer some deterrent, but weaponry is less decisive than willpower and more creative methods of intervention.

Wars today are likely to mimic the Ukraine where Russian troops mingle with fifth-column separatists, or Syria, where Russian weapons and air support assist Assads troops and murkier forces from Iran and Hezbollah.

A united NATO may deter such incursions, but the Wests admonishment of Georgias President for egging Russia into war in 2008, the failure of Britain and the U.S. to uphold a red line in Syria in 2013, and the weak pushback on Russias seizure of the Crimea the following year have encouraged Russia to continue its strategy.

To do its primary job, NATO must recalibrate, creating tripwires and treaties that serve as deterrents to a new form of warfare that is likely to continue.

Meanwhile, war is no longer the great killer it once was. Battle deaths used to be in the millions, but todays shadowy wars are far less deadly. On average, wars between states kill only about 3,000 people a year today, and despite an uptick in civil war deaths thanks to Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan, civil wars now kill only about 90,000 people a year.

Meanwhile, Mexicos drug cartels killed the same number of people as the violence in Iraq in 2015. More Nigerians and Indians died violently that year than Syrians, and more people died violent deaths in Brazil than in Iraq and Syria combined. The devastation of war is horrific, but 83 percent of violent deaths today occur outside of conflict zones.

From 2010 to 2015, three kinds of violence were responsible for the deaths of more than four times as many individuals as battle deaths from war: Homicide often caused by organized crime; violence among organized groups of citizens, such as paramilitaries and gangs; and violence from terrorists and states killing their own citizens. And the people killed were more likely to be children and ordinary people, rather than professional soldiers or self-proclaimed rebels.

If Trump is truly concerned about the violent, unwarranted deaths of innocent children and it seems he is there is more he can do.

The much-maligned United Nations actually has a strong track record of keeping peace. A RAND study analyzing U.S. and UN missions from the 1960s through 2005 found that two-thirds of those UN peacekeeping missions were successful. They are also cheap: In 2005, the UNs 17 peacekeeping operations, involving 70,000 troops, cost less than one month of U.S. led operations in Iraq. Despite its flaws, peacekeeping contributed to the fact that since the early 1990s, civil wars have been cut in half and from 1993 to 2003, deaths in civil wars reduced by fivefold.

Some of the greatest problems with peacekeeping stem from the Security Councils imposed rules of engagement and the failure of the great powers to provide speedy money for troops. Some of the worlds best conflict scholars estimate that if the peacekeeping budget was increased to $800 million and stronger rules of engagement were mandated, major armed conflict might be halved. The deal-maker-in-chief could get better security for less cost by really focusing on reforming and strengthening the United Nations, building on the work of his predecessor.

Finally, state killings, terrorism and even homicide are all linked by a single thread: rotten governments that extract most of a countrys wealth, favor certain groups of citizens, and leave most of society to fend for themselves.

U.S. democracy assistance has a track record of helping people in such countries help themselves. Thats why Russia hates it and has been funding lobbying efforts in the U.S. to curb the paltry money the U.S. spends helping civil societies. Yet instead of doubling down, the Trump Administration and some Senators are letting Russia divide us internally.

Lifeless infants cradled in their fathers arms and grey-faced toddlers gassed to death should drive America and its allies closer together to fight the deaths of innocents. Seizing the moment to reform NATO and the UN and deepen democracy support could place Trump in the surprising role of statesman.

Rachel Kleinfeld has a doctor of philosophy and master of philosophy fromSt. Antony's College, Oxford and aB.A. from Yale University. She is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Her forthcoming boo is on how countries escape immense violence. You can find her onTwitter: @RachelKleinfeld.

The views of contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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NATO, the UN and democracy: A trio for Trump - The Hill (blog)

Bartleby’s significance to democracy. – Albany Times Union (blog)

Source: gastoncavalleri.com

In class this week, we read Bartleby, the Scrivener by Herman Melville. This story is one of my favorite American literature stories of all time. I just love the entire premise of the story, and Bartleby is a character that really intrigues me.

I read this at one point in an American Literature class. This week, I read this in my American Political Thought class. I understood why we read this in my American Lit class, but I am beyond confused as to why this is in American Political Thought.

My teacher flat out told us there is no right answer as to how Bartleby relates to American politics, yet there are a bunch of small, nuanced answers. When I researched, I found something about a passive aggressive paradox the idea that democracy is so incredibly passive aggressive, nothing ever truly gets done. Sure, I can see this. Another classmate brought up the idea that democracy surrounds freedom of choice, which Bartleby had. Democracy supports freedom of choice, like Bartlebys boss, much to the detriment of his company and Bartlebys character. One student even brought up the idea of confusion in democracy; the story is filledwith the confusion that ensues when Bartleby stops doing his job. Democracy is confusing and messy, much like this office was. It could even be a critique of capitalism because the office is working Bartleby and the other scriveners in a mundane job where they are miserable.

I know I have readers who have read Bartleby before. If not, it might be worth your time to look up the story and familiarize yourself with it. Its quite a good read. What do you think is the relation between Bartleby and democracy? If there are no right answers, I want to hear what people think. I think the more discourse we can get going on the topic, the better understanding we can all have. Myself included, Im stumped.

So, tell me what you think. What is the relationship between Bartleby and democracy?

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Bartleby's significance to democracy. - Albany Times Union (blog)

Is It Too Late for Turkey’s Democracy? – New York Times


New York Times
Is It Too Late for Turkey's Democracy?
New York Times
Representative democracy has never come easily for Turkey. Founded in 1923, the Turkish republic did not hold its first multiparty elections until 1946. Few Turkish governments since have run the country effectively; none has truly adhered to the rule ...
Turkey's referendumThe vote that will determine the fate of Turkey's democracyThe Economist
Q&A: 'Executive presidency will help Turkish democracy'Aljazeera.com
Turkish government 'is against democracy'Deutsche Welle
The Independent -Daily Sabah
all 220 news articles »

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Is It Too Late for Turkey's Democracy? - New York Times

Democracy Is Not Dying – Foreign Affairs (subscription)

In the West, it is difficult to escape the pessimism that pervades current discussions of global affairs. From Russias invasion of Crimea and the never-ending crises of the European Union, to the Syrian catastrophe and the rise of the Islamic State (also known as ISIS), the world appears to be tearing at the seams. Meanwhile, democracy itself appears to be unravelinghelped along by resurgent authoritarianism, weakened liberal democratic values, rising populism, and contagious illiberalism.

Democracy has unquestionably lost its global momentum. According to Freedom House, there are only a handful more electoral democracies in the world today than there were at the start of this century. Dozens of newer democracies in the developing world are struggling to put down roots, and many older democraciesincluding, of course, the United Statesare troubled. The theory that democratic transitions naturally move in a positive direction and that established democracies dont tumble backward no longer holds water.

The gloom has become so thick, however, that it obscures reality. A number of politicians, journalists, and analysts are overstating or oversimplifying negative trends and overlooking positive developments. They too easily cast U.S. President Donald Trumps rise, the Brexit vote, and the mainstreaming of populism in many parts of Europe as part of an all-embracing, global counterrevolution against liberal norms. Although the state of democracy around the world is indeed very troubled, it is not uniformly dire, especially outside the West.

IDEALIZING THE PAST AND FOCUSING ON THE NEGATIVE

Todays intensifying apprehension is infused with nostalgia for the 1990s and early 2000s as a period of strong global commitment to liberal norms. Yet even then, illiberal forces were asserting themselves. In 1997, for example, the political commentator Fareed Zakaria famously warned in Foreign Affairs of the rise of illiberal democracy, arguing that half of the democratizing countries in the world today are illiberal democracies. Earlier that year, also in Foreign Affairs, one of the authors of this article (Thomas Carothers) gave a

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Democracy Is Not Dying - Foreign Affairs (subscription)