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- <text id=92TT1291>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: Dial D for Democracy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- U.S. POLITICS, Page 44
- Dial D for DEMOCRACY
- </hdr><body>
- <p>When the necessary technology is in place, an electronic town
- meeting as envisioned by Ross Perot could work. But is it a
- good idea?
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT
- </p>
- <p> Imagine it is 1994. The economy is still stagnating,
- Japan remains in the doldrums as well, interest rates are
- rising, and the deficit has reached $600 billion. Something has
- to be done -- and quickly. President Ross Perot, making good on
- a campaign promise, gets on the horn to the TV networks and
- organizes one of his famous electronic town meetings. That
- night, before a television audience Murphy Brown would die for,
- he lays out the nation's precarious economic situation and the
- stark choices the U.S. confronts. Even before his presentation
- is over, the returns begin to pour in -- by telephone, fax,
- computer modem, video phone and two-way interactive cable TV.
- By morning, the will of the American people is clear: they have
- decided to cut back on Social Security payments, further slash
- military spending and raise their own taxes.
- </p>
- <p> That's how teledemocracy is supposed to work, according to
- Perot, the billionaire computer executive and putative
- presidential candidate. The concept has a certain gut-level
- appeal. To voters fed up with the paralysis of Congress and the
- special-interest outrages that characterize politics-as-usual,
- the idea that the citizenry might bypass all the musty machinery
- of representative democracy and directly influence the
- government seems enormously attractive.
- </p>
- <p> In speeches and interviews, Perot implies that the
- technology required to create an electronic town meeting is
- already in place -- an impression reinforced by events like his
- much bally hooed satellite broadcast last Friday that linked
- Perot rallies in six different states. Participants in five U.S.
- cities could hear one another cheer the candidate as he spoke
- to them from Orlando. To have a truly interactive town meeting,
- however, a number of technical barriers must still be hurdled.
- And even if that happens, it is not at all clear that the result
- will be any way to run a country.
- </p>
- <p> When he describes his plan for taking the pulse of the
- people, Perot seems to assume that viewers will have access to
- some sort of interactive television network. Such a system
- would allow couch spuds to register their opinions simply by
- pressing a button on a keyboard or remote control.
- Unfortunately, interactive television does not yet exist --
- except in a handful of small pilot projects -- and it has not
- been determined who will provide the service when it does
- arrive.
- </p>
- <p> The phone companies and cable-TV systems are jockeying for
- position in what each views as a potentially vast market but
- which neither is ready to create. Stuart Brotman, a
- communications specialist in Lexington, Mass., estimates that
- cable operators would have to spend $20 billion to $30 billion
- on digital-compression and fiber-optic technology to prepare
- their systems for interactive programming. The telephone
- companies, for their part, would have to invest $300 billion to
- $500 billion in fiber-optic networks before they could deliver
- TV-quality pictures into every American's home.
- </p>
- <p> You don't need interactive TV or videophones to have a
- town meeting, of course. An effect similar to the one Perot
- describes could be achieved using standard broadcast television
- and some form of telephone communication -- fax, phone or modem.
- But the long-distance phone networks work on the assumption
- that not everybody will call at once. If masses of people dial
- simultaneously, the lines quickly get jammed. After President
- Bush's State of the Union address last January, for instance,
- cbs broadcast a toll-free 800 number and invited viewers to
- respond to questions posed by Charles Kuralt. Of the 25 million
- calls that were made, only 315,000 got through.
- </p>
- <p> President Perot would not need to go national with every
- issue, however. If he wanted to poll the leaders of the Fortune
- 500 companies on their willingness to limit the compensation of
- top executives, for example, he could do it with a fax machine
- and receive their answers by return fax. If they agreed, he
- could go on TV to announce their support for new legislation
- capping ceo salaries at $1 million.
- </p>
- <p> For more freewheeling discussions he might plug into an
- electronic-mail or bulletin-board system, such as Prodigy or
- CompuServe. These interconnected matrices of computers allow
- participants to exchange written opinions at any time and from
- any place without ever having to meet face to face. On such
- networks a future President could quickly tap the views of
- ordinary citizens and of specialists at universities and think
- tanks across the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> But strange things happen when people communicate
- electronically, some of which do not bode well for tele
- democracy. Anybody who has spent much time on the national
- bulletin-board systems knows that people on these networks are
- more likely to express anger or enthusiasm than they would in
- normal conversation. Social scientists Lee Sproull and Sara
- Kiesler, who have spent more than a decade studying
- electronic-mail communities, suggest that without the visual
- cues that are so abundant in personal meetings, people behave
- much differently. When you cannot see the facial expressions
- that tell you when you're hurting someone's feelings, it's easy
- to drive a point too far. Without countervailing opinions, it's
- easy to take extreme, exaggerated positions -- to "flame," in
- the jargon of the hacker. Lines get drawn. Sides get taken.
- Individuals -- and sometimes whole groups -- get ostracized.
- </p>
- <p> On Prodigy, for instance, there have been outbreaks of
- anti-Semitism and even mass paranoia (based on a rumor that the
- network's central office was spying on people's personal files).
- "The potential for good -- and for mischief -- is very high,"
- says Kiesler.
- </p>
- <p> Video town meetings provide some of the cues missing in
- computer conferences, but they have their own inherent dangers.
- It takes time to present all sides of a complex issue fairly,
- and the answers depend on how and when the questions are posed.
- In the ideal electronic forum, a problem like balancing the
- budget or reforming health care should be raised and thoroughly
- debated by many people over a period of weeks, says Lloyd
- Morrisett, president of the Markle Foundation, which specializes
- in studying the role of the media in politics. "You have to
- allow time for information to penetrate the social fabric," he
- explains. If people are asked to make snap judgments, the risk
- of demagoguery is great. It was Hitler, after all, who pioneered
- the electronic referendum, using radio broadcasts to drum up
- votes for plebiscites supporting his rise to power.
- </p>
- <p> The Founding Fathers did not have computers or cable TV.
- But they did have some experience with crowds and mass
- behavior. From this they concluded that people were too easily
- swayed by passion to be entrusted with direct democracy. The
- government they fashioned was not a national town meeting, in
- which everybody votes on issues, but a representative democracy,
- in which lawmaking power is entrusted to elected officials and
- constrained by a system of checks and balances to ensure that
- decisions are not too hastily made.
- </p>
- <p> The very things that disgruntled citizens decry in
- representative democracy -- namely that it often leads to
- paralysis and a tendency to cater to narrow interest groups --
- are also the source of its strength. Checks and balances guard
- against popular whims and demagoguery while protecting minority
- groups from tyranny by the majority. "Look at history," says
- James David Barber, professor of political science at Duke
- University. "The reality of human experience is that emotional
- responses have turned to utter tragedy time and time again."
- </p>
- <p> It may be inevitable that the U.S. will eventually adopt
- some forms of electronic government; American politics is
- already dominated by video sound bites and computerized polls.
- But the challenge to the nation -- and to candidate Perot --
- will be to use the new technology to support representative
- democracy, not subvert it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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