Ever since I became politically aware, I’ve been bothered by the accepted flexibility of certain political terms. It seems to me the source of enormous confusion-and more than that, of dangerous evasion. I’ve come to believe that unless we clarify what we mean by the concepts we use, no serious political conversation is possible.
One such term is democracy. Today, it’s not so much a clearly defined concept as a rallying cry or an emotionally charged buzzword used to signal virtue and legitimacy. We’re told that democracy is the ideal we must defend, the system we must perfect, the direction in which all moral progress flows. But rarely, if ever, do we ask what democracy actually is. It’s treated as a moral axiom, not a political concept.
Not too long ago, there was at least some open debate about whether America should be understood as a constitutional republic or a democracy-or perhaps a hybrid, a “constitutional democracy.” That debate has mostly faded, but it once produced memorable sound bites: “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what’s for dinner,” or references to ancient Athens, where the people famously voted for Socrates to drink poison-a decision he accepted in the name of democratic legitimacy. These anecdotes were often contrasted with the Roman republic, held up as the model of representative government. The point of these contrasts was always the same: to define what makes the American system distinctive.
You can still see traces of this today, but I’ve noticed something troubling in a domain I know fairly well: the writing of American historians, especially those focused on the 19th century. Among these scholars, democracy appears constantly praised, tracked, analyzed-but almost never defined. Rarely do these historians make clear what they mean by the term, nor do they seriously engage its historical or philosophical roots. Instead, the concept is used as a placeholder for moral progress. The more “democracy,” the better the society. But what exactly is being measured?
I believe this conceptual slippage distorts our understanding of American history and more importantly, it distorts our understanding of progress. When people speak of America’s moral advancement, the watchword is democracy. America, they say, is at its best when it lives up to its “democratic foundations.” And by this, they often mean the extension of voting rights: to propertyless white men, to women, to Black Americans. There is something deeply right about celebrating those milestones. The inclusion of those once excluded is monumental. But what makes it right?
That question demands a clearer understanding of democracy. And here’s the uncomfortable truth: democracy, properly and historically defined, means unlimited majority rule. That is the phenomenon the concept was originally coined to explain: the rule of the demos-the people-not in the sense of equal legal protection for all, but in the sense that whatever the majority wills, the state may do. This is not a distortion or abuse of democracy, it is its essential nature and philosophical meaning.
In modern times, the term has been blurred and softened to mean universal suffrage or equal participation, but that is a different concept entirely. Universal suffrage is a voting procedure; democracy is a theory of authority. Expanding the vote says nothing about what the government may or may not do with that power. A system where everyone can vote to violate your rights is not more democratic in a morally admirable sense; it is simply democracy, fully applied.
That’s why the great expansions of liberty in American history, abolition, civil rights, women’s suffrage were not democratic victories in essence. They were victories against the rule of the group, and for the principle that every individual has rights no majority may infringe. They were victories for the corollary idea that a government that protects individual rights is one that doesn’t function on arbitrary whims, prejudice, or bigotry. In other words, they were not steps toward democracy. They were steps toward a limited government grounded in the protection of individual rights.
This is why the standard we must use to evaluate political progress is not democracy, but individual rights. And it is why the true direction of moral and institutional advancement in America has been, not toward democracy as unlimited majority rule, but toward capitalism—properly understood as a political system rooted in the protection of the individual.
Yet many historians obscure this. They often frame the explosion of American wealth, productivity, and industrial growth in the 19th century as a threat to democracy—as if economic advancement stood in tension with political justice. In this framing, “democracy” is reduced to universal suffrage and vague notions of popular inclusion, while capitalism becomes a stand-in for inequality, exploitation, or unchecked power. This false dichotomy—capitalism vs. democracy—serves to denigrate capitalism’s moral and historical achievements while smuggling in anti-capitalist ideas under the banner of egalitarian justice.
But this is a distortion. The real meaning of progress in voting rights is not that more people gained access to democratic power, but that fewer people were excluded from the moral protection of the law. When women gained the vote, when Black Americans secured the franchise, when property requirements were eliminated—these were not expansions of mob rule. They were eliminations of arbitrary, collectivist barriers to the recognition of each person’s equal status as a sovereign, reasoning individual. In this sense, the victories of suffrage are not democratic victories—they are capitalist victories: steps toward a political system that recognizes the individual human being as the political unit, and his right to act, choose, and produce free from coercion as the moral foundation of a just society.
This is what capitalism, as a political system, uniquely makes possible: a government whose sole purpose is to protect rights, not grant privileges. A system not built for “white men” or “propertied males” or any collective identity, but for the individual—the person capable of reasoning, producing, and making moral choices. And that requires a government constrained by objective law—a system of just laws, not the arbitrary commands of men—where no group, majority, or institution may wield power by whim.
This was the genius the Founders were and the the 19th century heroes of the Reconstruction era were groping toward : a society in which law was not the tool of power, but the restraint of it. A government that did not exist to serve the tribe, the class, the majority, or even the vote—but to protect the freedom of each individual to live as a rational being. That ideal was never fully achieved—but the steps we have taken toward it have been the moments of true American greatness.
That is the standard we must reclaim. Not “democracy,” not vague appeals to inclusion, but the clear, radical principle that no one—no king, no mob, no majority—may rule over individual people’s lives. And that the only just form of government is one that exists, not to express the will of the people, but to secure the rights of the individual.
Good article Ibis, and an important point!
Excellent! Needs to be said, repeatedly.