My brand of conservatism includes an admixture of classical liberalism. Thus my conservatism is neither of the 'throne and altar' nor of the 'alternative right' variety. But I am open to challenge from intelligent and good-natured critics to my right. Among the intelligent and civil alt-right critics I include Jacques who writes:
In your recent post on abortion, you quote yourself saying there is "no defensible basis for discrimination against women and blacks when it comes to voting". I think that's too strong. I guess it depends on what exactly you mean by "defensible". But there are certainly some seemingly good reasons for that kind of discrimination.
1) Back in the day, almost all of the people paying taxes and working outside the home and fighting in wars were men. So it wasn't arbitrary or unfair, arguably, that only men were granted the right to have a say in matters of public policy. If you are going to be conscripted to fight and possibly die in a war, but your wife isn't, maybe it's reasonable that you play a role in deciding whether to go to war and she doesn't.
More generally, it seems like the natural order in human life is that men are the leaders and women are the followers. Obviously that's a very rough approximation of how things naturally work. But isn't it at least a rough approximation? Most women don't want to lead their families. They want to find a man who is a good leader and submit to his authority. When it comes to public affairs, men have always been the ones who were on the whole the most capable and motivated. Women on the whole have always been more capable and motivated with respect to personal, domestic and small-scale communal life. Again, I realize there are many individual exceptions and complications and qualifications; but isn't this basically how things have always worked, and doesn't it seem likely that these patterns are rooted in human nature? If this is even a rough approximation of the natural order, we have a second reason for allowing only (some) men to vote. And, of course, everyone accepts that rough approximations can be an adequate basis for social order. There are some children who are better equipped to participate in politics or drive a car than some adults, but those are rare exceptions, so it's reasonable to deny voting rights to children. (Mainly because we need general rules and social norms, and we don't have the time or resources to evaluate every single case in great depth.)
The Issue
The issue is whether every adult citizen who satisfies certain minimal requirements, e.g., not being a felon, should be allowed to vote regardless of race, sex, religion, property ownership, etc. I incline to a classically liberal view. Nota bene: classically liberal, not leftist. I'm for 'universal' suffrage. But of course the suffrage cannot be strictly universal. Thus I deny that children should have a right to vote (say, via proxy votes given to their parents). If you think children should have the right to vote, then why not pre-natal children? They too live within our borders and are affected, often drastically, by social policies. And, pace the benighted Jesse Jackson, I deny that felons should be allowed to vote. Felons have shown by their destructive behavior that they cannot order their own lives; why then should they be given any say in how society should be ordered?
What about cats and dogs? They have interests and needs. They are affected by public policies. But that does not ground a right to vote via proxies. (The idea would be that if Tom has two cats, a dog, and a baby daughter, then he gets five, count 'em five, votes, one for humself and four proxies.) And of course I am opposed to lowering the voting age, as some cynical Democrats want to do, so that under-18 teenagers can vote. And this despite the fact that some 14-year-olds are better equipped to vote that some 40-year-olds. The law cannot cater to exceptional cases.
Skin-in-the-Game
Jacques is mounting what I will call a 'skin-in-the-game' argument. I am sympathetic to it.
Those who do not face conscription have no 'skin in the game' with respect to fighting in wars and possibly coming home dead or injured. So why should those who do not face conscription have any say in the matter? Those who own no real property have no skin in the game when it comes to being liable for taxes on real estate. So why should they have a say on what tax rates should be? Some 45% of Americans pay no individual federal income tax. Why should they have a say in the determination of federal income tax rates?
Why should college students in Berkeley, California or Madison, Wisconsin be allowed to vote on local matters given that they will be there for only four years and thus lack a long-term stake in those communities, pay no taxes to speak of, and lack the life experience to make wise decisions?
Jacques continues:
(2) All historical experience suggests that blacks and whites behave very differently when it comes to voting. Blacks vote as a tribal block. They vote for the person they think will benefit blacks. Again, there are exceptions, but this is true as a rough approximation. Whites may have done this to some extent in the past, but now almost none of them do. Huge numbers of whites will knowingly vote for policies that benefit non-whites at the expense of whites. Whites generally seem to have a much deeper interest in principles and justice. They are highly individualistic and low in tribalism compared to blacks. Does it really make sense to extend equal voting rights to groups that have such different and incompatible understandings of the political process? Arguably, a healthy democracy requires a very broad basic agreement on principles and aims, a shared culture and historical understanding, etc. But then it would be reasonable to think that blacks should not vote in white societies. (Maybe they should have their own societies where they can vote and whites can't.)
The Tribalism Question
I agree that blacks as a group are more tribal than whites as a group at the present time. Their political behavior is driven by their self-identification as blacks. This is a fact, but is it the nature of blacks to be tribal? Or could blacks eventually become less tribal, and perhaps as anti-tribal and individualistic as whites? It cannot be denied that black tribalism is largely a response to various contingent circumstances such as their ancestors having been brought to North America as slaves, and their being a minority. Minority status is surely a driver of tribal identification among all racial, ethnic, and social groups. As the contingent circumstances change, one can reasonably expect blacks to become less tribal.
Also to consider is the fact that there is plenty of tribalism among whites as well, for example, white females, white law professors and trial lawyers who vote as a bloc, white union members who vote as their union bosses tell them, and so on.
In an ideal democracy only some people would be allowed to vote. But there is no practical way to determine all and only those who should be allowed to vote beyond the minimal requirements of citizenship, adulthood, etc. There is no going back, obviously: the franchise cannot be removed from blacks and females, for example. And in any case there are plenty of blacks and females who are more qualified to cast an intelligent, well-informed, and wise vote than many whites and males.
So I would say that justice demands universal suffrage in the qualified sense I explained above. I stick to my classically liberal line that "there is no defensible basis for discrimination against women and blacks when it comes to voting."
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