Sunday, February 16, 2014

CITIZENSHIP IN A REPUBLIC – The arena, crucible of Democracy




April 23, 1910 - Just out of office as President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt was touring Europe while on his way home from Africa and a historic big game hunt. This day he gave a speech at the Sorbonne (University) in Paris.

The title of his speech was “Citizenship in a Republic.”  Embedded in this remarkable dissertation on Political Science and human nature is one of T.R.’s ageless quotes:

“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.”

We hunter conservationists of the 21st Century endlessly heap our praises on Theodore Roosevelt as if today was 1914 instead of 2014.  And why not? Great were his ‘triumphs of high achievement.’ And many are his words of conservation wisdom still prescient today.

Reality, however, is that T.R. has been dead for 101 years and our Republic lives on, rumbling across the decades in dire need of new triumphs of high achievement that seem instead only to diminish in occurrence as our time passes. Alas, the danger of having T.R. too much with us is that some believe T.R. won the conservation battle for us, and we today need only pick the fruits of forest and stream.

My bet is that T.R.’s ghost, if he could speak now, would gruffly tell us to stop hanging out in the cheap seats blathering about his won-loss record and get our timid butts down into the arena where the battle for the future is ongoing. {He would also drop the masculine rhetorical bias of his day and shout BULLY to the presence of sister warriors and feminine champions in our modern ranks.}

Citizenship in a Republic, in other words, is a home-made, do-it-yourself proposition. The notion that “Freedom Is Not Free” applies as much to the striving of peace-time civics as it does to the sacrifices of war.

 We Americans have created for ourselves the politics we detest today. We have done this by our personal avoidance of the arena -- as if democracy can be a spectator sport. And we have done this by abdicating our citizen’s participatory duty thus giving a no-show win to the plutocratic mercenaries and resource-hungry gladiators who throng the arena. Left unbound, they game democracy to subsume the trust of public office to self-serving people.

It’s not their privilege to make this happen; it’s our fault, fellow citizens. We get the government we deserve.

In step with the central theme of Bull Moose Gazette: wild things, wild places and people who care – I offer these thoughts on democracy as viewed through the prism of natural resource conservation, wildlife management, outdoor heritage and so on.  But certainly T.R. was not so narrowly focused as he spoke before his Sorbonne audience. These civics lessons apply across the whole arena of public affairs in our American Republic.

So please read these columns in context of democracy as an arena -- and the triumphs, defeats, and consequences of what takes place in that arena.

My fundamental premise is that we American individuals can join the struggle and be citizens, or we can accept any of an assortment of would-be tyrants, some abstract others real, as our destiny. The ‘do-nothing with no-consequence’ option doesn’t exist and is simply a loser’s fantasy.

I started this discussion three columns ago with what I see as the most immediately necessary skill needed by citizens in the arena. That skill is communication -- the ability to constructively engage those other citizens with whom we find ourselves in conflict by listening to and understanding their perspective – and by explaining our own.

The second skill I described is the capacity to strike a deal with our counter-parties when a deal is the best outcome available. The word I use is ‘compromise’ but we are really talking about the art of the deal. (square, fair, new or otherwise)

I cite those two skills as of first importance because I observe conservationists and other citizens most often losing a policy decision for lack of these key abilities. But clearly much more goes into a victory in the arena; so we will have many other civic contests and their prerequisite skills to talk about as we go along.

To point the direction this ‘first-things-first’ skill discussion is headed, note that the flip side of the afore-mentioned deal-making skill is the art of deciding when to stand your ground and simply fight. This leads us into the question of power -- how to get it and how to use it.

I list this vital fighting skill only third because I observe people already in the arena using the ‘stand-your-ground’ tactic as their first and only choice for action. They make it a self-justifying crutch to avoid the hard work of communication and the hard choices of compromise. By doing so, however, they delude themselves that tyrannical consequences will not fall upon them.

And we must grasp that our most important civic forums are those in our local communities, towns, commissions and states. Win in those arenas and you will already hold the high ground when you do go to Washington.

And finally we must understand how human nature interacts with our republican political system to produce outcomes that seemingly defy logic but still go up on that big scoreboard of destiny hanging above the arena.

What we seek here is a winning game plan for a 21st Century democratic conservation triumph to rival that of T.R. and his 19th Century Compatriots.

Any conservation citizen who is satisfied with our current policy outcomes will find little interest in this discussion. But we know we regularly suffer losses; and we face the tyrannical outcomes of defeat - or worse - inaction on great decisions such as climate change and resource depletion.

Once again T.R. speaks to this point: “In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.”

But our will is the triumph of high achievement though we err and come up short again and again.  We will win out for those wild places so inspiring to people and vital to wild things. We will impose our will upon the decision either to conserve or to squander the resource treasury that belongs to unborn Americans as much as to ourselves.

We will thus restore some lost virtue to citizenship in this Republic.

And we owe virtue not just to ourselves but to those wild things we hunt and the wild places they inhabit. For they have no champion other than ourselves in the arena of human dominion. We hunter conservationists are bound in a moral covenant with them that we preserve their wild kinds and we save for them wild habitats so large and so sustaining that their wild existence is secured for the future. This debt we owe in exchange for the life we take from them for our own sustenance.

But should we fail let history record, and our descendants know, we failed while daring greatly, so that our place shall not be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.

Who knows! We may end up someplace where we have to look T.R. in the eye and explain the score for our generation.

Having written at such length about citizenship in a republic I will close with a last bow to the master who reveals the essence of citizenship in only eleven syllables:
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” – T.R.

  ~~ Ron Moody

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

POLITICS – The Art of the 'Tolerable But Less Than Desirable'




As I write this column the U.S. Senate has just passed the new 2014 Farm Bill sending it to the President for signature. Readers will recall my previous column expounded on the unpleasant necessity of making deals with competitive interests in order to establish policy and law in our democratic republic.

The term I coined to label this topic is ‘the tyranny of compromise.’ With the help of Congress, I will use the Farm Bill as a lab specimen to dissect the anatomy of such natural resource politics.

But first a political ground truth: When American citizens face the need to make a policy decision they will organize into factions and follow one of three general courses of political action.

Course 1: One faction will gain enough power to force its will on all differing factions to meet the need, 

Course 2: Power to stop or enable action is divided among factions who meet the need by negotiating a compromise decision, or, 

Course 3: Power to stop or enable action is divided among factions who fail to negotiate a compromise decision thus leaving the need unmet. Also, in this third course of action, the default decision is to continue the status quo; and this default typically has consequences beyond the actual issue being addressed (or not).

In the Realpolitik of our country today the first option never happens. Every political decision we Americans undertake will follow either Action Course 2 or Action Course 3.

Our history of natural resource decisions is rife with examples of Course 3 politics where unyielding factions leave lands, waters and minerals wasted, degraded and ruined for lack of an agreement - while also losing opportunities for progress. These destructive outcomes are what I metaphorically describe as the ‘tyrant’ whose sword punishes us for our failures in self-government.

Our willingness to deflect the punishments for our civic failures by tacitly accepting resource degradation tells much about how qualified we are as a people to live up to the civic challenge of operating a constitutional republic. If freedom is not free then such tyranny can’t possibly be affordable.

My purpose in these columns is to focus attention on the opportunities and necessity of learning how to make Action Course 2 – the compromise option – work for good outcomes. The obvious caveat here, of course, is that such outcomes are always less than what any given interest group will view as desirable. An old saying about politics is that it is “the art of the possible.” I think the “art of the tolerable but less than desirable” is more descriptive.

So called ‘Win-Win’ solutions are always in the eye of the beholder.

Here in Montana we have no state-level equivalent to the massive federal farm bill which will spend $956.4 billion tax dollars over the next decade while spreading the dough over dozens of diverse programs. Our Big Sky resource decisions come in smaller packages but greater numbers. Any point in time we find us debating a Forest Service or BLM management plan, or a Fish and Wildlife regulation, or some critter controversy such as those surrounding Sage Grouse, Wolves or Bison – and all this comes before the Legislature convenes.

These political discourses usually involve a corps of perennial combatants which includes: extraction industries, environmentalists, recreationists, agriculturalists with some outright political opportunists tossed in to boil the pot.

Even though we Montanans, and by extension all Westerners, will argue over anything we have to stand in awe of the encyclopedia of saloon brawlers who tangle over the federal farm bill.

To grasp the degree of difficulty involved in this particular democratic decision-making we need only recall that the 2014 Farm Bill was supposed to be the 2012 Farm Bill. The needs served by the Farm Bill, however, are just too important to allow a Course 1 or Course 3 outcome. It may take years of hard bargaining but Course 2 must be followed even though all concerned will hold their nose when they sign on to it.

The first great Farm Bill compromise is buried in the architecture of the bill itself – the forced marriage of the social welfare food stamp program vital to urban interests wedded to the farm subsidy program cherished by rural agriculture. This creates a mutual hostage-taking situation where both urban and rural factions hold a veto shotgun to each other’s head.

Within this wedding dance other factions such as environmentalists, local food advocates, hunters and anglers wheel and deal for inclusion of their project and exclusion of their opponent’s project.

As an example, the ‘Sodbuster’ program is one element of the Farm Bill championed by hunting groups. Sodbuster imposes a conservation discipline on farmers who enroll in the new Crop Insurance program expanded in this Bill. The standard federal subsidy for these insurance premiums is 60 percent. A farmer who plows under native grassland, however, will now see his or her insurance subsidy drop to 15 percent. {Punishment by reduction of reward seems to be about as bad as it gets for ag interests.}

Farm groups view this discipline as the end of life as they know it - while also cheering for the expanded insurance subsidy. Conservationists, meanwhile, are well pleased that Sodbuster finally made it into law - while also bewailing the fact that Sodbuster applies to only six states instead of all states.

Such is the face of victory. Everyone objects to the bill but it will become law because it offers just enough grease to a host of sharp-elbowed bedfellows to keep them between the sheets – a hard-won but fruitful compromise, indeed.

Democracy is hard work – and clearly persistence is the stuff of ultimate success. We westerners with our natural resource culture and economy can be grateful we don’t have to navigate a massive Farm Bill maze. But coming to tolerable agreements on public land management, wildlife management, threatened species preservation and a host of other issues will require herculean labor, perseverance and, most important, empathetic communication.

In my view submitting to the tyrant of failure is unthinkable even if the sausage-grinding seems unbearable.

Ours is not a new conundrum, however. Ironically, the birth of the modern conservation ethic in America can be dated to the 1864 publication of a book by George Perkins Marsh titled “Man and Nature.” In that book he first documented the existence of the ultimate tyrant of nature by describing how human actions led to a pervasive resource depletion that destroyed first the Greek civilization then the Roman.

All this talk of politics should not distract us from the truth that an ecological tyrant really does exist, its sword is lethal and a whole civilization can die from bad resource decisions.

I will leave the topic with some consolation offered by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill: “Democracy is the worst form of government possible – with the exception of all the others.”
~~ Ron Moody