Preamble
American men, women, and children are members of many communities--families;
neighborhoods; innumerable social, religious, ethnic, work place,
and professional associations; and the body politic itself. Neither
human existence nor individual liberty can be sustained for long
outside the interdependent and overlapping communities to which
all of us belong. Nor can any community long survive unless its
members dedicate some of their attention, energy, and resources
to shared projects. The exclusive pursuit of private interest
erodes the network of social environments on which we all depend,
and is destructive to our shared experiment in democratic self-government.
For these reasons, we hold that the rights of individuals cannot
long be preserved without a communitarian perspective.
A communitarian perspective recognizes both individual human dignity
and the social dimension of human existence.
A communitarian perspective recognizes that the preservation of
individual liberty depends on the active maintenance of the institutions
of civil society where citizens learn respect for others as well
as self-respect; where we acquire a lively sense of our personal
and civic responsibilities, along with an appreciation of our
own rights and the rights of others; where we develop the skills
of self-government as well as the habit of governing ourselves,
and learn to serve others-- not just self.
A communitarian perspective recognizes that communities and polities,
too, have obligations--including the duty to be responsive to
their members and to foster participation and deliberation in
social and political life.
A communitarian perspective does not dictate particular policies;
rather it mandates attention to what is often ignored in contemporary
policy debates: the social side of human nature; the responsibilities
that must be borne by citizens, individually and collectively,
in a regime of rights; the fragile ecology of families and their
supporting communities; the ripple effects and long-term consequences
of present decisions. The political views of the signers of this
statement differ widely. We are united, however, in our conviction
that a communitarian perspective must be brought to bear on the
great moral, legal and social issues of our time.
Moral Voices
America's diverse communities of memory and mutual aid are rich
resources of moral voices--voices that ought to be heeded in a
society that increasingly threatens to become normless, self-centered,
and driven by greed, special interests, and an unabashed quest
for power.
Moral voices achieve their effect mainly through education and
persuasion, rather than through coercion. Originating in communities,
and sometimes embodied in law, they exhort, admonish, and appeal
to what Lincoln called the better angels of our nature. They speak
to our capacity for reasoned judgment and virtuous action. It
is precisely because this important moral realm, which is neither
one of random individual choice nor of government control, has
been much neglected that we see an urgent need for a communitarian
social movement to accord these voices their essential place.
Within History
The basic communitarian quest for balances between individuals
and groups, rights and responsibilities, and among the institutions
of state, market, and civil society is a constant, ongoing enterprise.
Because this quest takes place within history and within varying
social contexts, however, the evaluation of what is a proper moral
stance will vary according to circumstances of time and place.
If we were in China today, we would argue vigorously for more
individual rights; in contemporary America, we emphasize individual
and social responsibilities.
Not Majoritarian But Strongly Democratic
Communitarians are not majoritarians. The success of the democratic
experiment in ordered liberty (rather than unlimited license)
depends, not on fiat or force, but on building shared values,
habits and practices that assure respect for one another's rights
and regular fulfillment of personal, civic, and collective responsibilities.
Successful policies are accepted because they are recognized to
be legitimate, rather than imposed. We say to those who would
impose civic or moral virtues by suppressing dissent (in the name
of religion, patriotism, or any other cause), or censoring books,
that their cure is ineffective, harmful, and morally untenable.
At the same time divergent moral positions need not lead to cacophony.
Out of genuine dialogue clear voices can arise, and shared aspirations
can be identified and advanced.
Communitarians favor strong democracy. That is, we seek to make
government more representative, more participatory, and more responsive
to all members of the community. We seek to find ways to accord
citizens more information, and more say, more often. We seek to
curb the role of private money, special interests, and corruption
in government. Similarly, we ask how "private governments," whether
corporations, labor unions, or voluntary associations, can become
more responsive to their members and to the needs of the community.
Communitarians do not exalt the group as such, nor do they hold
that any set of group values is ipso facto good merely because
such values originate in a community. Indeed, some communities
(say, neo-Nazis) may foster reprehensible values. Moreover, communities
that glorify their own members by vilifying those who do not belong
are at best imperfect. Communitarians recognize--indeed, insist--that
communal values must be judged by external and overriding criteria,
based on shared human experience.
A responsive community is one whose moral standards reflect the
basic human needs of all its members. To the extent that these
needs compete with one another, the community's standards reflect
the relative priority accorded by members to some needs over others.
Although individuals differ in their needs, human nature is not
totally malleable. Although individuals are deeply influenced
by their communities, they have a capacity for independent judgment.
The persistence of humane and democratic culture, as well as individual
dissent, in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union demonstrate the
limits of social indoctrination.
For a community to be truly responsive--not only to an elite group,
a minority or even the majority, but to all its members and all
their basic human needs--it will have to develop moral values
which meet the following criteria: they must be nondiscriminatory
and applied equally to all members; they must be generalizable,
justified in terms that are accessible and understandable: e.g.,
instead of claims based upon individual or group desires, citizens
would draw on a common definition of justice; and, they must incorporate
the full range of legitimate needs and values rather than focusing
on any one category, be it individualism, autonomy, interpersonal
caring, or social justice.
Restoring the Moral Voice
History has taught that it is a grave mistake to look to a charismatic
leader to define and provide a moral voice for the polity. Nor
can political institutions effectively embody moral voices unless
they are sustained and criticized by an active citizenry concerned
about the moral direction of the community. To rebuild America's
moral foundations, to bring our regard for individuals and their
rights into a better relationship with our sense of personal and
collective responsibility, we must therefore begin with the institutions
of civil society.
Start With the Family
The best place to start is where each new generation acquires
its moral anchoring: at home, in the family. We must insist once
again that bringing children into the world entails a moral responsibility
to provide, not only material necessities, but also moral education
and character formation.
Moral education is not a task that can be delegated to baby sitters,
or even professional child-care centers. It requires close bonding
of the kind that typically is formed only with parents, if it
is formed at all.
Fathers and mothers, consumed by "making it" and consumerism,
or preoccupied with personal advancement, who come home too late
and too tired to attend to the needs of their children, cannot
discharge their most elementary duty to their children and their
fellow citizens.
It follows, that work places should provide maximum flexible opportunities
to parents to preserve an important part of their time and energy,
of their life, to attend to their educational-moral duties, for
the sake of the next generation, its civic and moral character,
and its capacity to contribute economically and socially to the
commonweal. Experiments such as those with unpaid and paid parental
leave, flextime, shared jobs, opportunities to work at home, and
for parents to participate as volunteers and managers in child-care
centers, should be extended and encouraged.
Above all, what we need is a change in orientation by both parents
and work places. Child-raising is important, valuable work, work
that must be honored rather than denigrated by both parents and
the community.
Families headed by single parents experience particular difficulties.
Some single parents struggle bravely and succeed in attending
to the moral education of their children; while some married couples
shamefully neglect their moral duties toward their offspring.
However, the weight of the historical, sociological, and psychological
evidence suggests that on average two-parent families are better
able to discharge their child-raising duties if only because there
are more hands--and voices--available for the task. Indeed, couples
often do better when they are further backed up by a wider circle
of relatives. The issue has been wrongly framed when one asks
what portion of parental duties grandparents or other helpers
can assume. Their assistance is needed in addition to, not as
a substitute for, parental care. Child-raising is by nature labor-intensive.
There are no labor-saving technologies, and shortcuts in this
area produce woefully deficient human beings, to their detriment
and ours.
It follows that widespread divorce, when there are children involved,
especially when they are in their formative years, is indicative
of a serious social problem. Though divorces are necessary in
some situations, many are avoidable and are not in the interest
of the children, the community, and probably not of most adults
either. Divorce laws should be modified, not to prevent divorce,
but to signal society's concern. . . .
Schools--The Second Line of Defense
Unfortunately, millions of American families have weakened to
the point where their capacity to provide moral education is gravely
impaired. And the fact is that communities have only a limited
say over what families do. At best, it will take years before
a change in the moral climate restores parenting to its proper
status and function for many Americans.
Thus, by default, schools now play a major role, for better or
worse, in character formation and moral education. Personal and
communal responsibility come together here, for education requires
the commitment of all citizens, not merely those who have children
in school.
We strongly urge that all educational institutions, from kindergartens
to universities, recognize and take seriously the grave responsibility
to provide moral education. Suggestions that schools participate
actively in moral education are often opposed. The specter of
religious indoctrination is quickly evoked, and the question is
posed: "Whose morals are you going to teach?"
Our response is straightforward: we ought to teach those values
Americans share, for example, that the dignity of all persons
ought to be respected, that tolerance is a virtue and discrimination
abhorrent, that peaceful resolution of conflicts is superior to
violence, that generally truth-telling is morally superior to
lying, that democratic government is morally superior to totalitarianism
and authoritarianism, that one ought to give a day's work for
a day's pay, that saving for one's own and one's country's future
is better than squandering one's income and relying on others
to attend to one's future needs.
The fear that our children will be "brainwashed" by a few educators
is farfetched. On the contrary, to silence the schools in moral
matters simply means that the youngsters are left exposed to all
other voices and values but those of their educators. For, one
way or another, moral education does take place in schools. The
only question is whether schools and teachers will passively stand
by, or take an active and responsible role. . . .
Within Communitites
A Matter of Orientation
The ancient Greeks understood this well: A person who is completely
private is lost to civic life. The exclusive pursuit of one's
self-interest is not even a good prescription for conduct in the
marketplace; for no social, political, economic, or moral order
can survive that way. Some measure of caring, sharing, and being
our brother's and sister's keeper, is essential if we are not
all to fall back on an ever more expansive government, bureaucratized
welfare agencies, and swollen regulations, police, courts, and
jails.
Generally, no social task should be assigned to an institution
that is larger than necessary to do the job. What can be done
by families, should not be assigned to an intermediate group--school
etc. What can be done at the local level should not be passed
on to the state or federal level, and so on. There are, of course,
plenty of urgent tasks--environmental ones--that do require national
and even international action. But to remove tasks to higher levels
than is necessary weakens the constituent communities. This principle
holds for duties of attending to the sick, troubled, delinquent,
homeless and new immigrants; and for public safety, public health
and protection of the environment--from a neighborhood crime-watch
to CPR to sorting the garbage. The government should step in only
to the extent that other social subsystems fail, rather than seek
to replace them. . . .
Many social goals . . . require partnership between public and
private groups. Though government should not seek to replace local
communities, it may need to empower them by strategies of support,
including revenue-sharing and technical assistance. There is a
great need for study and experimentation with creative use of
the structures of civil society, and public-private cooperation,
especially where the delivery of health, educational and social
services are concerned.
Last, but not least, we should not hesitate to speak up and express
our moral concerns to others when it comes to issues we care about
deeply and share with one another. It might be debatable whether
or not we should encourage our neighbors to keep their lawns green
(which may well be environmentally unsound), but there should
be little doubt that we should expect one another to attend to
our children, and vulnerable community members. Those who neglect
these duties, should be explicitly considered poor members of
the community.
National and local service, as well as volunteer work, is desirable
to build and express a civil commitment. Such activities, bringing
together people from different backgrounds and enabling and encouraging
them to work together, build community and foster mutual respect
and tolerance. . . .
Duties to the Polity
Being informed about public affairs is a prerequisite for keeping
the polity from being controlled by demagogues, for taking action
when needed in one's own interests and that of others, for achieving
justice and the shared future.
Voting is one tool for keeping the polity reflective of its constituent
communities. Those who feel that none of the candidates reflect
their views ought to seek out other like-minded citizens and seek
to field their own candidate rather than retreat from the polity.
Still, some persons may discharge their community responsibilities
by being involved in non-political activities, say, in volunteer
work. Just as the polity is but one facet of interdependent social
life, so voting and political activity are not the only ways to
be responsible members of society. A good citizen is involved
in a community or communities, but not necessarily active in the
polity.
Paying one's taxes, encouraging others to pay their fair share,
and serving on juries are fully obligatory. One of the most telling
ills of our time is the expectation of many Americans that they
are entitled to ever more public services without paying for them
(as reflected in public opinion polls that show demands to slash
government and taxes but also to expand practically every conceivable
government function). We all take for granted the right to be
tried before a jury of our peers, but, all too often we are unwilling
to serve on juries ourselves.
Cleaning Up the Polity
We need to revitalize public life so that the two-thirds of our
citizens who now say they feel alienated or that the polity is
not theirs, will again be engaged in it.
Campaign contributions to members of Congress and state legislatures,
speaking fees, and bribes have become so pervasive that in many
areas of public policy and on numerous occasions the public interest
is ignored as legislators pay off their debts to special interests.
Detailed rationalizations have been spun to justify the system.
It is said that giving money to politicians is a form of democratic
participation. In fact, the rich can "participate" in this way
so much more effectively than the poor, that the democratic principle
of one-person one-vote is severely compromised. It is said that
money buys only access to the politician's ear; but even if money
does not buy commitment, access should not be allotted according
to the depth of one's pockets. It is said that every group has
its pool of money and hence as they all grease Congress, all Americans
are served. But those who cannot grease at all or not as well,
lose out and so do long-run public goals that are not underwritten
by any particular interest groups.
To establish conditions under which elected officials will be
able to respond to the public interest, to the genuine needs of
all citizens, and to their own consciences requires that the role
of private money in public life be reduced as much as possible.
All candidates should receive some public support, as presidential
candidates already do, as well as some access to radio and TV.
To achieve this major renewal and revitalization of public life,
to reinstitute the prerequisites for attending to the public interest,
requires a major social movement, akin to the progressive movement
of the beginning of the century. For even good causes can become
special interests if they are not part of such a movement, keeping
their strategies and aims in constant dialogue with larger aims
and multiple ends. Citizens who care about the integrity of the
polity either on the local, state, or national level, should band
with their fellows to form a neo-progressive communitarian movement.
They should persevere until elected officials are beholden--not
to special interests--but only to the voters and to their own
consciences.
Freedom of Speech
The First Amendment is as dear to communitarians as it is to libertarians
and many other Americans. Suggestions that it should be curbed
to bar verbal expressions of racism, sexism, and other slurs seem
to us to endanger the essence of the First Amendment, which is
most needed when what some people say is disconcerting to some
others. However, one should not ignore the victims of such abuse.
Whenever individuals or members of a group are harassed, many
non-legal measures are appropriate to express disapproval of hateful
expressions and to promote tolerance among the members of the
polity. For example, a college campus faced with a rash of incidents
indicating bigotry, may conduct a teach-in on intergroup understanding.
This, and much more, can be done without compromising the First
Amendment. . . .
Social Justice
At the heart of the communitarian understanding of social justice
is the idea of reciprocity: each member of the community owes
something to all the rest, and the community owes something to
each of its members. Justice requires responsible individuals
in a responsive community.
Members of the community have a responsibility, to the greatest
extent possible, to provide for themselves and their families:
honorable work contributes to the commonwealth and to the community's
ability to fulfill its essential tasks. Beyond self-support, individuals
have a responsibility for the material and moral well-being of
others. This does not mean heroic self- sacrifice; it means the
constant self-awareness that no one of us is an island unaffected
by the fate of others.
For its part, the community is responsible for protecting each
of us against catastrophe, natural or man-made; for ensuring the
basic needs of all who genuinely cannot provide for themselves;
for appropriately recognizing the distinctive contributions of
individuals to the community; and for safeguarding a zone within
which individuals may define their own lives through free exchange
and choice. . . .
Public Safety and Public Health
The American moral and legal tradition has always acknowledged
the need to balance individual rights with the need to protect
the safety and health of the public. The Fourth Amendment, for
example, guards against unreasonable searches but allows for reasonable
ones. . . .
We differ with the ACLU and other radical libertarians who oppose
sobriety checkpoints, screening gates at airports, drug and alcohol
testing for people who directly affect public safety (pilots,
train engineers, etc.). Given the minimal intrusion involved (an
average sobriety checkpoint lasts ninety seconds), the importance
of the interests at stake (we have lost more lives, many due to
drunken drivers, on the road each year than in the war in Vietnam),
and the fact that such measures in the past have not led us down
a slippery slope, these and similar reasonable measures should
receive full public support.
There is little sense in gun registration. What we need to significantly
enhance public safety is domestic disarmament of the kind that
exists in practically all democracies. The National Rifle Association
suggestion that criminals not guns kill people, ignores the fact
that thousands are killed each year, many of them children, from
accidental discharge of guns, and that people--whether criminal,
insane, or temporarily carried away by impulse--kill and are much
more likely to do so when armed than when disarmed. The Second
Amendment, behind which NRA hides, is subject to a variety of
interpretations, but the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled, for
over a hundred years, that it does not prevent laws that bar guns.
We join with those who read the Second Amendment the way it was
written, as a communitarian clause, calling for community militias,
not individual gun slingers.
When it comes to public health, people who carry sexually transmitted
diseases, especially when the illness is nearly always fatal,
such as AIDS, should be expected to disclose their illness to
previous sexual contacts or help health authorities to inform
them, to warn all prospective sexual contacts, and inform all
health care personnel with whom they come in contact. It is their
contribution to help stem the epidemic. At the same time, the
carriers' rights against wanton violation of privacy, discrimination
in housing, employment and insurance should be scrupulously protected.
The Human Community
Our communitarianism is not particularism. We believe that the
responsive community is the best form of human organization yet
devised for respecting human dignity and safeguarding human decency,
and the way of life most open to needed self-revision through
shared deliberation. We believe that the human species as a whole
would be well-served by the movement, as circumstances permit,
of all polities toward strongly democratic communities. We are
acutely aware of the ways in which this movement will be (and
ought to be) affected by important material, cultural, and political
differences among nations and peoples. And we know that enduring
responsive communities cannot be created through fiat or coercion,
but only through genuine public conviction.
We are heartened by the widespread invocation of democratic principles
by the nations and peoples now emerging from generations of repression;
we see the institutionalization of these principles as the best
possible bulwark against the excesses of ethnic and national particularism
that could well produce new forms of repression.
Although it may seem utopian, we believe that in the multiplication
of strongly democratic communities around the world lies our best
hope for the emergence of a global community that can deal concertedly
with matters of general concern to our species as a whole: with
war and strife, with violations of basic rights, with environmental
degradation, and with the extreme material deprivation that stunts
the bodies, minds, and spirits of children. Our communitarian
concern may begin with ourselves and our families, but it rises
inexorably to the long-imagined community of humankind.
In Conclusion
A Question of Responsibility
Although some of the responsibilities identified in this manifesto
are expressed in legal terms, and the law does play a significant
role not only in regulating society, but also in indicating which
values it holds dear, our first and foremost purpose is to affirm
the moral commitments of parents, young persons, neighbors, and
citizens, to affirm the importance of the communities within which
such commitments take shape and are transmitted from one generation
to the next. This is not primarily a legal matter. On the contrary,
when a community reaches the point at which these responsibilities
are largely enforced by the powers of the state, it is in deep
moral crisis. If communities are to function well, most members
most of the time must discharge their responsibilities because
they are committed to do so, not because they fear lawsuits, penalties,
or jails. Nevertheless, the state and its agencies must take care
not to harm the structures of civil society on which we all depend.
Social environments, like natural environments, cannot be taken
for granted.
It has been argued by libertarians that responsibilities are a
personal matter, that individuals are to judge which responsibilities
they accept as theirs. As we see it, responsibilities are anchored
in community. Reflecting the diverse moral voices of their citizens,
responsive communities define what is expected of people; they
educate their members to accept these values; and they praise
them when they do and frown upon them when they do not. Although
the ultimate foundation of morality may be commitments of individual
conscience, it is communities that help introduce and sustain
these commitments. Hence the urgent need for communities to articulate
the responsibilities they expect their members to discharge, especially
in times, such as our own, in which the understanding of these
responsibilities has weakened and their reach has grown unclear.
Further Work
This is only a beginning. This platform is but a point in dialogue,
part of an ongoing process of deliberation. It should not be viewed
as a series of final conclusions but ideas for additional discussion.
We do not claim to have the answers to all that troubles America
these days. However, we are heartened by the groundswell of support
that our initial efforts have brought to the communitarian perspective.
If more and more Americans come forward and join together to form
active communities that seek to reinvigorate the moral and social
order, we will be able to deal better with many of our communities'
problems while reducing our reliance on governmental regulation,
controls, and force. We will have a greater opportunity to work
out shared public policy based on broad consensus and shared moral
and legal traditions. And we will have many more ways to make
our society a place in which individual rights are vigilantly
maintained, while the seedbeds of civic virtue are patiently nurtured.
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