An op-ed piece in The New York Times by Hélène Landemore opens as follows. (Full text here.)
No Shy Person Left Behind
At its core, our political system is a popularity contest. Elections reward those who are comfortable performing in public and on social media, projecting confidence and dominating attention. This dynamic tends to select for so-called alpha types, the charismatic and the daring, but also the entitled, the arrogant and even the narcissistic.
This raises a basic but rarely asked question: Why are we filtering out the quiet voices? And at what cost?
Over the past two decades, my research on collective intelligence in politics, democratic theory and the design of our institutions shows that the system structurally excludes those I call, in my new book, “the shy.” By the shy I mean not just the natural introverts, but all the people who have internalized the idea that they lack power, that politics is not built for them, and who could never imagine running for office.
In what follows, Landemore promotes allotted citizen assemblies as a way to get the voice of “the shy” heard.
This way of presenting things raises two questions. First, why use the term “the shy” to refer to a group for which this label is clearly inappropriate? The category described by Landemore would be much more appropriately described as “the disenfranchised”, “the politically suppressed”, or “the politically oppressed”. The term “the shy” implies an inherent psychological property of the people being so described, while the category Landemore describe is clearly socially manipulated into a sense of political impotence – a manipulation that in all probability is primarily done by constructing society in a way where the sense of impotence is a completely realistic understanding of the political situation.
It seems that the usage of the term “the shy” is an attempt to avoid using the more subversive, more realistic terms. Terms that would be used routinely, unhesitatingly in the context of official enemies (“authoritarian regimes”) are to be studiously avoided when discussing “Western democracies”.
Second, while the proposal of giving voice to the politically suppressed via citizen assemblies may (or may not, depending on the design) be a good idea, it seems that a fairly easy and straightforward way to given such people a voice would be to invite them to write op-eds in The New York Times. Isn’t shutting them out of mass media one of the ways the politically suppressed are suppressed? Would the editors of The New York Times, who so broad-mindedly gave voice to Landemore, “a political theorist at Yale”, and her suggestions regarding citizen assemblies, be willing to live up to the democratic ideals offered by Landemore by having a daily column by a member of the politically suppressed, randomly selected among the US (or maybe the world) population?

>“the shy” implies an inherent psychological property of the people being so described, while the category Landemore describe is clearly socially manipulated into a sense of political impotence
Then why is it that only a tiny minority choose to make themselves heard on this (and other) forums? Why not draw lots amongst the EbL readership and invite one to make a post every day?
LikeLike
It’s interesting that Yoram shares the perspective of deliberative democrats that people who choose not to speak out on political matters are “suppressed” as they have “internalized the idea that they lack power”. (The liberal democratic perspective is that most people have better things to do, as politics “takes too many evenings”.)
However, if the goal (as Yoram opined on another thread) is “having a government that reflects the values and interests of the population” that doesn’t mean that everybody has to speak — if they did then we would be reconstructing the Tower of Babel. Sortition would be better viewed as a way of aggregating the informed judgment of the population.
LikeLike
Since Sutherland seems rather confused, and just to dispell any potential confusion following his comments above, I’ll clarify: Everybody is most welcome to write posts for Equality by Lot. So far, at least, due to the low volume of submissions, there has been no need for a lottery – all submissions can be expected to be published.
LikeLike
Yoram:> Everybody is most welcome to write posts for Equality by Lot.
Of course, but you recently expressed some disappointment over the very low volume of submissions (and comments) to EbL. I’m suggesting that there is a parallel with political involvement, and that the paucity of popular activity in both domains is more likely a product of psychological disposition than social manipulation. Frequent participants (like Yoram and myself) are oddballs, eccentrics or idealists (as is also the case with people offering themselves for election to public office).
LikeLike