“The most powerful force possessed by the individual citizen is her own government. ... Government is the only organized mechanism that makes possible that level of shared disinterest known as the public good.”
Quote by John Ralston Saul
Work
The book analyzes the transformation of Western democracies into systems where power operates through structured group negotiations rather than through active citizen participation. It explores how corporatist structures—encompassing business, labor, and government elites—have gradually supplanted genuine public discourse with technocratic management. The author argues that this arrangement produces a society of unconscious citizens who mistake the consumption of goods and media for meaningful civic involvement. The work traces historical developments in political philosophy and institutional design to show how language of individual rights and market freedom has been co-opted to serve concentrated power. It examines the role of managerial expertise in depoliticizing fundamental social choices, presenting policy decisions as neutral technical matters beyond ordinary comprehension. The text considers how education, journalism, and cultural production reinforce this unconscious state by narrowing the range of conceivable alternatives to existing arrangements. It discusses the tension between formal democratic procedures and substantive democratic practice, noting how electoral rituals persist while actual deliberation diminishes. The book reflects on possibilities for reawakening civic consciousness through renewed attention to the public good as distinct from aggregated private interests. It draws upon traditions of civic republicanism and social contract theory to suggest frameworks for more deliberate collective self-governance. The work has been discussed in contexts of political theory, media studies, and critiques of neoliberal governance. It emerged from concerns about declining voter engagement, rising inequality, and the perceived hollowing out of democratic institutions during the late twentieth century. The author's perspective as a former public servant and academic informs the analysis of how institutional incentives shape political behavior across multiple sectors of society. more
Author
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