-Caveat Lector-

The ignorant American voter
Jeff Jacoby
October 25, 2004

 Not long after Dr. Johnson's landmark "Dictionary
of the English Language" appeared in 1755, a
woman demanded to know why he had defined
"pastern" as the knee of a horse. Johnson's reply
was refreshingly candid: "Ignorance, madam, pure
ignorance."

    We should all be so ignorant. Johnson may not
have known a pastern from a fetlock, but he knew
enough to write an entire dictionary -- all 2,300
pages and 43,000 entries of it -- single-handedly.
Alas, our own ignorance is of an entirely different
order. Consider, as Ilya Somin has been considering
this election season, what Americans don't know
about politics and public policy.

   Somin, a law professor at George Mason
University, observes in a new study for the Cato
Institute that voters tend to be "abysmally ignorant
of even very basic political information." This may
not be news to scholars, who have documented it in
depressing detail, "but the sheer depth of most
individual voters' ignorance is shocking to observers
not familiar with the research."

   He offers some recent illustrations. According to
polls taken this year, nearly 65 percent of the public
doesn't know that Congress has banned partial-birth
abortion. Seventy percent is unaware that a massive
drug benefit has been added to Medicare. At least 58
percent say they have heard "nothing" or "not
much" about the Patriot Act, notwithstanding the
enormous amount of coverage the controversial law
has drawn.

   This is not a new problem. As Cold War tensions
bristled in 1964, only 38 percent of the public knew
that the Soviet Union was not a member of NATO.
In 1970, only 24 percent could identify the secretary
of state. In 1996, The Washington Post reported that
67 percent of Americans couldn't name their
congressman and 94 percent had no idea that
William Rehnquist was the chief justice of the
United States. Only 26 percent knew that senators
serve six-year terms and 73 percent didn't know that
Medicare costs more than foreign aid.

   Gallup found in January 2000 that while 66
percent of the public could name the host of "Who
Wants to be a Millionaire?" only 6 percent knew the
name of the speaker of the House. Last year, a
Polling Company survey found that 58 percent of
Americans could not name a single federal Cabinet
department.

   The ignorant can be found in the highest reaches
of academe. Of more than 3,100 Ivy Leagues
students polled for a University of Pennsylvania
study in 1993, 11 percent couldn't identify the author
of the Declaration of Independence, half didn't
know the names of their US senators, and 75
percent were unaware that the classic description of
democracy -- "government of the people, by the
people, and for the people" -- comes from the
Gettysburg Address.

   With so many Americans so clueless when it
comes to government and public affairs, is it any
wonder that political campaigns are so shrill and
shallow? Or that candidates speak to voters
primarily through TV spots intended to malign the
other candidate's reputation? Or that presidential
"debates" limit answers to 90 seconds and bar the
contenders from engaging in actual discussion?
When voters are unwilling to put any effort into
learning about the issues of the day, it should come
as no surprise that campaign discussions rarely
move beyond vacuous soundbites -- "tax breaks for
the rich," "freedom is on the march," "wrong war,
wrong place, wrong time."

   Somin suggests that widespread political
ignorance may be, in one sense, "rational:" Since no
individual's vote is ever likely to be decisive, no
voter has an incentive to work hard at acquiring
enough knowledge to make an informed choice. But
by that argument, voters shouldn't bother showing
up on Election Day, either. Many don't, of course,
and we hear endlessly about the need to increase
voter turnout. But more alarming than the tens of
millions of non-voting adults are the tens of
millions of adults who *do* vote despite knowing
next to nothing about the candidates and the issues.

   It was not ever thus. A century and a half ago,
ordinary Americans grappled with public
controversies at a level of sophistication that would
be unthinkable today.

   In 1858, tens of thousands of Illinois voters, many
unschooled, crowded fairgrounds and public squares
to watch Democratic Senator Stephen Douglas
debate his Republican challenger, former
Congressman Abraham Lincoln. The topics they
wrestled with were among the weightiest in US
history -- the expansion of slavery, the authority of
the Supreme Court, the limits of popular
sovereignty. The candidates spoke not for 90
seconds at a time, but for 90 *minutes* at a time.
There were no spin doctors, no instant polls, no TV
talking heads -- only thoughtful candidates and
serious voters and the clash of ideas in the public
arena.

   The dumbing-down of our politics is no small
thing. "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in
a state of civilization," Thomas Jefferson wrote in
1816, "it expects what never was and never will be."
Widespread political ignorance poses a potentially
lethal threat to our democratic freedoms. If we were
smarter, we'd be worried.

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/jeffjacoby/jj20041025.shtml

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