After seeing and hearing the truly astounding amount of “lies, damned lies and statistics” put forward recently to tip the 2024 elections, I was struck by the irony of many who had so frequently and vociferously pledged allegiance to democracy working so hard to minimize the electorate’s knowledge of truth, much less justice or the American way, and with it, the likelihood of making wise democratic choices.
I was also reminded of one of my favorite quotes from James Fenimore Cooper, considered America’s first great writer, in “The American Democrat,” an 1838 primer on Americans’ political responsibilities, written in reaction to the political excesses of his era: “In a democracy, the delusion that would elsewhere be poured into the ears of the prince is poured into those of the people.”
In response, Cooper recognized that citizens needed the vigilance to see through those delusions, if they were to maintain a democracy that did not eviscerate liberty: “The elector who gives his vote, on any grounds, party or personal, to an unworthy candidate, violates a sacred public duty, and is unfit to be a freeman.”
As we get ever closer to Nov. 5, and our feelings of “please let the torture be over” near the breaking point, it is worth letting Cooper inspire some reflection about the process that is currently steamrolling us.
In a democracy, as a matter of course, every effort is made to seize upon and create public opinion … securing power.
Failing of the means of obtaining power more honestly, the fraudulent and ambitious find a motive to mislead, and even to corrupt the common sentiment, to attain their ends. This is the greatest and most pervading danger of all large democracies … We see the effects of this baneful influence in the openness and audacity with which men avow improper motives and improper acts.
The people are peculiarly exposed to become the dupes of demagogues and political schemers, most of the crimes of democracies arising from the faults and designs of men of this character.
Party misleads the public mind.
Opinion can be so perverted as to cause the false to seem to be true; the enemy, a friend, and the friend, an enemy; the best interests of a nation to appear insignificant, and trifles of moment; in a word, the right the wrong and the wrong the right.
Party, by feeding the passions and exciting personal interests, overshadows truth, justice, patriotism and every other public virtue … by putting unworthy motives in the place of reason.
Party feeling … induces men to adopt in gross, the prejudices, notions and judgments of the particular faction to which they belong, often without examination, and generally without candor.
Thus it is we see half the nation extolling those that the other half condemns, and condemning those that the other half extols. Both cannot be right, and as passions, interests and prejudices are enlisted on such occasions, it would be nearer the truth to say both are wrong.
The discipline and organization of party are … putting managers in the place of the people.
When party rules, the people do not rule, but merely such a portion of the people as can manage to get control of party.
Party pledges the representative … right or wrong, when the institutions intend that he shall be pledged only to justice, expediency and the right, under the restrictions of the constitution.
No freeman who really loves liberty … will ever become a mere party man … it will be his earnest endeavor to hold himself a free agent, and most of all keep his mind untrammeled by the prejudices, frauds, and tyranny of factions.
Given how many Americans are now acting as if they were mere “party men,” Cooper’s warnings against putting party before serious thought were never more necessary. Unfortunately, those who most need to heed it show little inclination of doing so.
Gary M. Galles is a professor of economics at Pepperdine University.



