Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
BLOG Bottom-Up Democracy:
Selecting Our Representatives Face to Face
There
has been a lot written lately about the need to reinvent our economy
from the bottom up -- community-based natural enterprises owned and
operated by people right in the community, providing local products to
local customers, responsibly, sustainably, and powerfully connected,
with each community only exporting goods that are excess to the needs
of the community and importing what cannot reasonably be produced in
the community.
A major problem with this ideal is that our political and economic
systems are to some extent inseparable: As long as we have a top-down
political system whose officials are disconnected from local economies
and citizens and beholden to very wealthy and powerful multinational
lobbyists, that political system is going to be at loggerheads with a
bottom-up community-based economic system. This political system will
do everything in its considerable power to disrupt and destroy an
entrepreneurial economic system that would take away all its financial
funders' power, wealth and influence. In fact, our political system has
already and always done so -- trade regulations, legal
indemnifications, tax breaks, corporate 'rights' and massive subsidies
are all skewed in favour of multinationals and against the interests of
local enterprises, labour, the environment and local communities.
Many anarchists (that is, people who believe the less government the
better) espouse simply eliminating government power and infrastructure,
but that actually plays right into the hands of the corporatists, since
it essentially leaves corporations to govern themselves. You only need
consider Exxon Valdez, Bhopal, GMO, well-financed climate change
deniers, all the Bush war profiteers, and all the corrupt and
incompetent bankers that gave us the current economic collapse, to see
what deregulation and self-regulation produces.
A few political thinkers have suggested that we could replace
the current hierarchical political system with its precise opposite --
a bottom-up democracy where each community would pick its own
representatives from among people they knew well, those representatives
would in turn pick their representatives at the next-higher level, face
to face, and so on. This approach has some obvious problems, but let's
see how it might work.
Suppose we designed a computer to create two hundred Regions of
one-two-hundredth of the total number of eligible voters in a country
each, in such as way as to make them as contiguous as possible (i.e. no
opportunity for gerrymandering). So, for example, suppose the US has
200 million voters. Each Region would have one million voters. Each
Area in each Region would have ten thousand voters, and the Areas would
be computer-generated in the same way. There would be 100 Areas in each
Region, or 20,000 Areas in the country as a whole.
Now suppose that within your Area, comprising the ten thousand voters
in your contiguous area, you could self-select to belong, with anywhere
from 75 to 150 others, to a designated Community. You would have to
choose one, and if you didn't want to do so, you would be automatically
assigned, by the same computer program, a Community of the 100 people
in your immediate contiguous proximity. Every four years you would have
the opportunity to self-select a different community, or stay with the
one you were in (provided you were still living in the same Area).
Next, every four years, your Community members (75 to 150 people) would
get together and select a Community Representative (CR) from among
their own members. The one hundred (or so) CRs in an Area would get
together and select an Area Representative (AR) from among their
members. These CRs would also constitute the government of their Area.
The one hundred (or so) ARs in a Region would get together and select a
Regional Representative (RR) from among their members. These ARs would
also constitute the government of their Region. And the RRs would
constitute the federal government, and select a President or Prime
Minister and a Cabinet. Powers would be allotted to the
President/PM/Cabinet, to the Federal Government (the 200 RRs), to the
100 Regional Governments (each with 100 ARs), to the 10,000 Area
Governments (each with 100 CRs), and to the one million Community
Governments (each with 75-150 voters/members). Hopefully with no
overlap!
Could this work? Imagine if you could choose 75-150 people from among
the ten thousand voters living closest to you to constitute your
political Community. Can you imagine self-organizing this way? Can you
guess who you would choose as your CR? Is s/he currently an elected
official? Now draw an Area around where you live consisting of about
ten thousand voters. Who might the 100 CRs in this area select as their
AR? Is s/he currently an elected official? Could this whole system be
corrupted by party organizations preying on citizen indifference to
corral people into faux communities they could control?
Now consider that your Community (unlike your Area or Region) is made
up of people who are not necessarily living contiguously -- they are
people from all over your Area. What powers and authority, currently
residing with some anonymous group that just happens to live in the
same town or neighbourhood, would they have, and what kind of power
shift would this represent?
I have a pretty good idea who I would end up with in my Community. I
also know who would aspire to be our CR, and I think I know that the
person we selected to be our CR would not be one of those politically
ambitious members. It would, instead, be someone we trusted, someone we
would choose precisely because they lacked
political ambition.
Imagine if it worked like this all the way up -- CRs, ARs, RRs, all
selected because they were modest, trustworthy individuals. Would we
have a real democratic political system, immune to lobbyist influence,
party bullying, manipulation and power politics?
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs