000 01852nam a2200181Ia 4500
999 _c9976
_d9976
005 20220313161138.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
082 _a321.40973 Hav
100 _aHavens, Murray Clark
245 0 _aChallenges to democracy : consensus and extremism in American politics
260 _aCalcutta
260 _bScientific Book Agency
260 _c0
300 _a119 p.
520 _aTHE ASSASSINATION of President Kennedy, the tension of current racial strife, the political extremes of the Radical Right with its John Birchers and the Radical Left with its threat of Communism all raise critically urgent questions relative to our national unity, to our political stability, and to our vaunted respect for the rule of law. The Challenges to Democracy is an assessment of the foundations of political unity in the United States. The American consensus, as Professor Havens defines it, emphasizes a set of values and procedures which most Americans, since the adoption of the Constitution, have accepted in principle religious tolerance, individual freedom in intellectual and cultural matters, the importance of education and intellectual effort, settlement of internal conflict through peaceful and political processes, the supremacy of law, a high and generally rising standard of living, and, since the Civil War, racial compatibility. Never in our history have the ideals of this consensus been fully achieved, but so long as the majority of our citizens accept the validity of those ideals and the democratic procedures for realizing them the basic American political unity is not threatened. However, when citizens who cannot accept the elements of the American consensus become influential enough to block the democratic process, then that consensus is threatened.
650 _aDemocracy
942 _cB
_2ddc