The social capital and civic engagement in the United States has been declining since the 1950s as younger generations have become more focused on individualism and less involved in their communities. Technology and social media use has increased dramatically and some argue this contributes to declines in social and political engagement as people interact face-to-face less. While new technologies provide opportunities for political information and organizing, they can also distract people and political decisions are sometimes based on superficial factors rather than issues. Scholars debate the causes and consequences of declining social capital for democracy.
Sports, Business, Theatre or Drama; change seldom discriminates. It resonates in each and every walk of life. On the brink of a terrific change is Politics, courtesy the social media. Social media has rapidly grown as a forum for political discourse and activism. Its various platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube etc. are providing a plethora of new ways to engage citizens in politics (Benkler, 2006). A great advantage inherent in social media is the possibility of personal, ie., one to one communication. Politicians as well as political parties are seemingly benefitting with this new found ability to reach out to their potential voters. It has become possible for politicians to reach voters in a well targeted manner without relying on the media as an intermediary (Gentle, 2012). Various reactions, messages, feedbacks and debates are generated online. In addition to this, support for offline causes of a political party are also generated through social media petitions
From Consumer to Citizen - Digital Media and Youth Civic Engagement- Mark - Fullbright
company names mentioned herein are for identification and educational purposes only and are the property of, and may be trademarks of, their respective owners.
Drafted first chapter of Welcome to the Fifth Estate by Geoff Livingston before editorial review. This document discusses Fifth Estate, Long Tail and social media control theories.
Sports, Business, Theatre or Drama; change seldom discriminates. It resonates in each and every walk of life. On the brink of a terrific change is Politics, courtesy the social media. Social media has rapidly grown as a forum for political discourse and activism. Its various platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube etc. are providing a plethora of new ways to engage citizens in politics (Benkler, 2006). A great advantage inherent in social media is the possibility of personal, ie., one to one communication. Politicians as well as political parties are seemingly benefitting with this new found ability to reach out to their potential voters. It has become possible for politicians to reach voters in a well targeted manner without relying on the media as an intermediary (Gentle, 2012). Various reactions, messages, feedbacks and debates are generated online. In addition to this, support for offline causes of a political party are also generated through social media petitions
From Consumer to Citizen - Digital Media and Youth Civic Engagement- Mark - Fullbright
company names mentioned herein are for identification and educational purposes only and are the property of, and may be trademarks of, their respective owners.
Drafted first chapter of Welcome to the Fifth Estate by Geoff Livingston before editorial review. This document discusses Fifth Estate, Long Tail and social media control theories.
The Kids Aren’t Happy: How Unemployed Youth and Social Media Are Remaking The...Daniel Drache
A Digital Report from the Robarts Counterpublics Working Group
Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies
Daniel Drache
Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies
Daniel Joseph
Research Associate
April 2011
The Dress vs. Ebola: The Effect of Different News Sources on Social Action.Deborah Tuggy
Abstract
Abstract
This study looks at how different types of news sources affects social action. It predicts that infotainment consumption is related inversely with social action, while news consumption is positively correlated with societal action. Findings show that most respondents use both social media and online news as news sources, and that while there is a relationship between different types of news media sources and different types and varying frequencies of social action, other factors such as religiosity, political party, sex, SES and class year have an impact as well. Thus the casual model is a much more complex and complicated one than expected, and it would be fascinating to further explore this phenomenon.
Rob Autry – Founder, Meeting Street Research
Rob is working on a project with HLN Cable News Network tracking millennial voter attitudes during the 2016 elections, and will share insights from the polling and the focus group work he’s been doing across the country.
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The Kids Aren’t Happy: How Unemployed Youth and Social Media Are Remaking The...Daniel Drache
A Digital Report from the Robarts Counterpublics Working Group
Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies
Daniel Drache
Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies
Daniel Joseph
Research Associate
April 2011
The Dress vs. Ebola: The Effect of Different News Sources on Social Action.Deborah Tuggy
Abstract
Abstract
This study looks at how different types of news sources affects social action. It predicts that infotainment consumption is related inversely with social action, while news consumption is positively correlated with societal action. Findings show that most respondents use both social media and online news as news sources, and that while there is a relationship between different types of news media sources and different types and varying frequencies of social action, other factors such as religiosity, political party, sex, SES and class year have an impact as well. Thus the casual model is a much more complex and complicated one than expected, and it would be fascinating to further explore this phenomenon.
Rob Autry – Founder, Meeting Street Research
Rob is working on a project with HLN Cable News Network tracking millennial voter attitudes during the 2016 elections, and will share insights from the polling and the focus group work he’s been doing across the country.
Amando cada vez mais minhas makes BIOEMOTION!!!! ADQUIRE VC TAMBÉM A SUA!!
http://www.polishop.vc/beleza/cosmeticos-bioemotion?utm_source=PolishopComVC&utm_campaign=173196
Quer ser uma consultor(a)/revendedor(a) , ter 43% de margem de lucro , com preço competitivo , de alta qualidade , ter um plano de carreira e ganhar viagens incríveis...
Quer saber mais? Acesse uma de nossas lojas online. E faça seu cadastro: http://www.polishop.vc/voce/oportunidade?utm_source=PolishopComVC&utm_campaign=173196
E-mail: raquelsrocha@zipmail.com.br
(55) 9977-6756
Post disaster shelter assistance to affected population living in informal and/or illegal settlements has been always a challenge In the context of the Philippines tenure arrangements vary greatly. Owing to a complicated and lengthy legal process involved in securing tenure a dynamic informal land market exists and this cause limited assistance the most deserving population. Shelter cluster figure expressing the analysis of vulnerability Vs Assistance shows that informal/illegal settlers regardless of recognized vulnerability not always on priority for shelter assistance considering the complex land ownership challenges. There is a huge need for an innovative sheltering solution to address land ownership challenges.
a collapsible shelter with the following features:
Rapid collapsing time of about 2-3 hours to minimize worst destruction in case of typhoon/ tsunami evacuation situation.
Quick and easy to build, detach and rebuild.
Portability and transportability through the use of collapsible panels
Attuned to local practices. No skilled labour required in collapsing and rebuilding the structure.
Use of local materials such as nipa shingles, amakan and coco lumber. No sophisticated materials and contraptions involved. No extraordinary costs required.
Apresentação do ministro do Desenvolvimento Agrário, Patrus Ananias, durante o lançamento do Plano Safra da Agricultura Familiar 2016/17, nesta terça-feira (3), no Palácio do Planalto.
Saiba mais no Blog do Planalto: http://blog.planalto.gov.br/
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The Internet is a revolutionary force. If it means more significant participation in politics rather than a commitment to democratic values, it is democratization. Extremist groups that reject these values benefit from the "democratization" of knowledge and communication. The direct political impact of the Internet has been to strengthen the views of extremists and increase the number of people who represent them. According to Wajid khan's point of view, New political mechanisms are needed to control participation and dissent.
The decline in content moderation
The Internet's impact on content delivery has been particularly pronounced, with decentralized media replacing editors and fact-checkers of the past. Social media has become more and more disinterested. Facebook has become a primary news source for many Americans, but word on Facebook is automatically selected and tailored to group preferences, resulting in information that contradicts established beliefs. Are often included.
Companies design algorithms that maximize user engagement. Algorithms do this by selecting information based on the user's interests. Wajid Khan Mp concludes that User interests can automatically reflect and unwittingly reinforce biases.
Some studies suggest that the information overload unleashed by the internet fuels the spread of conspiracy theories that offer simple and coherent explanations for complex and unpredictable events. I'm here. The Internet provides proponents of these theories with a broader audience and an uncritical medium to disseminate them.
Legitimacy and Consent of Rulers
Legitimacy arises from the consent of the ruled to recognize authority and agree to its rules (often by voting, a symbolic act of affirmation). Permission can be obtained through moral authority, such as religion, coercion, or violence (where the subject does not oppose the issue out of fear) or through participation mechanisms. Moral authority and expertise can also exert influence, but this influence is most effective when reinforced or "operationalized" through formal institutions.
Communities where the consent of the governed is insufficient to confer authority, become unstable. The challenges to liberal democracy began before the Internet, but the online environment has reinforced them, allowing for competing narratives and unfiltered information, amplifying extremism and conspiracy theories.
The Internet has changed the requirements of political legitimacy and democratic consent. Currently, structured representative democracies have not fully lived up to the expectations that the Internet has brought to citizens regarding access to information, a voice in decision-making, and direct contact with political leaders.
Canadian Politician Wajid khan says the same pressures pushing companies to become flatter, less hierarchical organizations are also putting pressure on governance structures. Citizens also expect immediacy and authenticity of their messages. The
Impact of the Internet on politics
The Internet is a revolutionary force. If it means more significant participation in politics rather than a commitment to democratic values, it is democratization. Extremist groups that reject these values benefit from the "democratization" of knowledge and communication. The direct political impact of the Internet has been to strengthen the views of extremists and increase the number of people who represent them. According to Wajid khan's point of view, New political mechanisms are needed to control participation and dissent.
The decline in content moderation
The Internet's impact on content delivery has been particularly pronounced, with decentralized media replacing editors and fact-checkers of the past. Social media has become more and more disinterested. Facebook has become a primary news source for many Americans, but word on Facebook is automatically selected and tailored to group preferences, resulting in information that contradicts established beliefs. Are often included.
Companies design algorithms that maximize user engagement. Algorithms do this by selecting information based on the user's interests. Wajid Khan Mp concludes that User interests can automatically reflect and unwittingly reinforce biases.
Some studies suggest that the information overload unleashed by the internet fuels the spread of conspiracy theories that offer simple and coherent explanations for complex and unpredictable events. I'm here. The Internet provides proponents of these theories with a broader audience and an uncritical medium to disseminate them.
Legitimacy and Consent of Rulers
Legitimacy arises from the consent of the ruled to recognize authority and agree to its rules (often by voting, a symbolic act of affirmation). Permission can be obtained through moral authority, such as religion, coercion, or violence (where the subject does not oppose the issue out of fear) or through participation mechanisms. Moral authority and expertise can also exert influence, but this influence is most effective when reinforced or "operationalized" through formal institutions.
Communities where the consent of the governed is insufficient to confer authority, become unstable. The challenges to liberal democracy began before the Internet, but the online environment has reinforced them, allowing for competing narratives and unfiltered information, amplifying extremism and conspiracy theories.
The Internet has changed the requirements of political legitimacy and democratic consent. Currently, structured representative democracies have not fully lived up to the expectations that the Internet has brought to citizens regarding access to information, a voice in decision-making, and direct contact with political leaders.
Canadian Politician Wajid khan says the same pressures pushing companies to become flatter, less hierarchical organizations are also putting pressure on governance structures. Citizens also expect immediacy an
Week 3Rational and Expressive Choice Rational Choice The.docxmelbruce90096
Week 3
Rational and Expressive Choice
Rational Choice Theory and the Rational Voter Model (P = B > C; or Participation or voter choice (P) = perceived benefits of participation or choice (B) > perceived costs of participation or choice (C)) became popular in the 1970s. Pursuant to this theory and model, voters decide whether to vote and which candidate to vote for on some rational basis, usually on the basis of which action gives them greater expected benefits. The model lends itself more than others to predicting what effects changes in external conditions will have on the vote. A major contribution of the model was to emphasize the role of issues in voter choice.
The paradox of participation calls into question this theoretical perspective. The paradox theorizes that the rational individual will not waste resources by bearing the costs of taking part in the voting process but will instead take a free ride on the efforts of others. This is known as the free rider problem. The problem is especially acute when the individual does not perceive their vote as being decisive to the election outcome.
Some have used rational choice theory to argue that those in a high socio-economic class would be less active “because they have the education and intellectual sophistication to comprehend the free-rider problem and because their high salaries raise the opportunity cost of participation” (Verba 1995, 284). The facts however suggest this hypothesis is false. In fact, strong empirical evidence demonstrates that those in a high socio-economic class are actually the most likely to be active.
Other rational choice proponents, including Anthony Downs, have argued that lower information and transaction costs for the well educated imply that it is actually easier for them to participate in politics. Verba (1995) notes “[t]his approach has the virtue of fitting the facts but seems somewhat post hoc” (284).
Overall, rational choice theory must be praised for its theoretical elegance. But, the theory has done a poor job of predicting political participation. More specifically, the theory has failed to predict how much political activity and who will take part.
Some have argued that expressive choice theory can provide a more compelling explanation of voter behavior. According to Schuessler in A Logic of Expressive Choice (2000), individuals do not necessarily participate in collective action in order to produce outcomes but instead often do so in order to express who they are by attaching themselves to such outcomes.
Because under Schuessler’s perspective the value of participation emerges not from the outcome but from the process of participation itself, the free-rider problem is no longer a concern. Participation therefore is not a form of investment but rather a form of consumption. Schuessler wrote, “Consumption benefits are inextricably tied to expression: the sports fan’s expression of team support is required for him to enjoy his.
The age of fractured truth – subhash dhuliyaGmeconline
This first phase of the information and technological revolution was facilitated by the integration of computers, telecommunication and satellite. A networked global ‘village’ had emerged. People had access to diverse sources of news and information. The Internet created numerous platforms of political, social and cultural interactions. There were high expectations that information will be democratized... Read More
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2. The social capital has been declining ever since the 1950’s. The generation before WWII
was more engaged and helpful to assist in society, while the baby boomers and Generation X’s
are more focused on individualism and tend to become less involved with community and civics.
There is a substantial increase of liberalism between young individuals whereas older
generations lean towards conservatism. The fact that younger generations are becoming more
technologically educated, technology may not be as “smart” as many people might think. In
current time, social media is a huge benefactor on politics and the outcome as well. In the United
States, 65% of Americans own smartphones, and technology is becoming a huge popular
demand upon companies.1 The use of technology has increased every year with new phones,
tablets, laptops, and other technological media streaming. The digital society we live in today
surrounds us all with its brilliance, but it’s what it does to us inadvertently that may be a cause
for concern.
In Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, Robert D.
Putnam was an individual who believed that the decline of social engagement during the
twentieth century was tragic. He explained that social capital and engagement have fallen in
areas such as attending religious services, interacting with others face-to-face in communities,
and organizational memberships. Putnam suggested that generational succession accounts for
1 Plumer, Brad. "Why More than 80 Million Americans Won't Vote on Election Day." Vox. N.p.,
2016. Web. 01 Dec. 2016.
3. about half of the overall change of this decline.2 Within the community, he found that
participation decreased in areas including connections in the workplace and with family and
friends, volunteering, and even the trust among others declined as well. In doing so, he found
that older individuals are more engaged than younger Americans. Could it be that the older
generations are more experienced, or that younger people, when they are in small groups, social
movements, and the internet are the only things younger generations know how to be engaged
in? Many young adults are starting to develop social anxiety from the constant use of electronics,
which causes them to have nervous breakdowns when needed to talk face-to-face with someone.
The decline in engagement has enormous consequences for society. Robert D. Putnam found
that when social capital has a deficit, that leads to more suicide, crime, and other social
problems. On the other hand, when social capital is high, children do better in school, people
prosper, and the government tends to be better overall. It is when a society starts to crumble, so
does the government. The fewer people that are in involved in the community, the weaker the
democratic system becomes, so there has to be some kind of change because the number one
growing industry is technology and advancements. In the same way as other specialized
advancements, the web was welcomed eagerly by the individuals who thought it would "change
everything" with regards to law based administration. Among its anticipated accommodating
impacts, it is the limit of the web to allow standard locals to cut off elites and arrangement
2 "Robert Putnam, Social Capital and Civic Community." Infed.org. N.p., 2013. Web. 01 Dec.
2016.
4. straightforwardly with each other and open powers; to cultivate the spread of ideas, upgrade
trust, and make groups; and one unique accordance to encourage political interest. The majority
of the unique enthusiasm for new technology increased, which also depends on how they utilize
their broad spectrum of technology, whereas the political engagement decreased drastically.
The biggest decline during the past years is the problem with the number of people
engaging in the voting process for a new president. Approximately, 40% of the population in the
United States do not vote. Financial anxiety and the changing workplace may account for up to
ten percent of the change. Sprawl and suburbanization account for another ten percent.
Technology also accounts for some of the change; however, the largest factor appears to be
generational succession. There are three main factors to the decline of engagement throughout
the United States, first being social influence; the peer pressure and influences of political parties
around an individual with their busy lifestyles and their explanation about their willingness to
vote. Second is the growth of modern technology; technology incorporated into every
American’s life cause them to decrease in their engagement overall. Lastly, the decline in faith
of populism; individuals do not know the right to have control over their government rather than
a small group of political insiders or a wealthy elite.
Social media has been ever growing all around the world with Facebook, Twitter,
Instagram, and other influential sites. The fact that the Internet is a vast web of connections and
massive amounts of information allows an individual to grasp onto anything they desire. When it
5. comes to political engagement, people have access to candidate information about their
campaigns, videos, and even interviews with well-known individuals. That access to their
information and profile can be a good thing or a bad thing. It would all depend on the political
campaigns and how they are trying to win over one another. For example, like scandals and tax
evasion. Many people watch the presidential debate online or live on television, but many people
do not know the beliefs of each candidate, or their goals. Some people are just absent minded
about politics. Most Americans who make their political decisions and voting decisions are
based on facts other than the issues at hand. People just do not care about who wins or get
influenced by others to vote for the opposite political party than the one they desired. Educated
engagement is obviously preferable to uninformed. The examination is obvious that voters settle
on various decisions and consider a more extensive scope of points of view when they are all
around educated. However, wellsprings of substantive news are in decay, and numerous
residents are losing the hard news propensity—or never building up a desire for quality data by
any stretch of the imagination. For instance, an individual might want to vote for a Republican
party, but their peers (who are also connected online through social media) will explain that
there would be some conflict, so that they will vote for the different party absent-mindedly.
Voter behavior is an examination of why people voted the way they did.3 Robert D. Putnam
3 Dugger, Ashley. "Factors That Influence Voters During Presidential Elections." Study.com.
N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Dec. 2016.
6. explains in his book, Bowling Alone, about the differences in a person that is an intracohort, they
change their habits and tastes of individuals in a single direction simultaneously, those people
evolve fast as well, but he also said that people are easy to reverse back into habits that helped
social capital.
Robert D. Putnam notes [p. 77]:
The concept of “civil society” has played a central role in the recent global
debate about the preconditions for democracy and democratization. In the newer
democracies, this phrase has properly focused attention on the need to foster a
vibrant civic life in soils traditionally inhospitable to self-government. In the
established democracies, ironically, growing numbers of citizens are questioning
the effectiveness of their public institutions at the very moment when liberal
democracy has swept the battlefield. . . . High on America’s agenda should be the
question of how to reverse these adverse trends in social connectedness, thus
restoring civic engagement and civic trust.4
Other people are intercohorts, they have physiological change, they are detectable by
comparing generations, they evolve slowly, but hard to reverse. These two cohorts, intracohort
and intercohort, causes fewer people to vote. The people who are both are the ones that cause the
4 Putnam, Robert D. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New
York: Touchstone, 2001. Print.
7. harsh drastic change in civil engagement and many people are questioning the effectiveness of
their government. These people are social network geniuses, and they use a social network for
responding to other party’s attacks and spreading of own party ideas like jungle fire. As
explained earlier, people can use their information for a good cause or use their information
against political candidates. Mobile campaigns will help manage perceptions. The political
commentary and fundraising will help refine the opinions. Political campaigns can use the
internet as a source of expansion, but the internet can either make or break their chances of
success. Distinctive onlookers have been unrealistic about the ordinary focal points, pointing out
that each inventive advancement has been invited with the swelled longings that faster
transportation and less requesting correspondence will sire local fortifying and urban restoration.
This understanding prompts to the warier assessment that, instead of changing notoriety based
administrative issues, it would end up being the same old thing and fortifying developed political
illustrations and regular political elites. Fundamentally more quiet were the people who expected
that, far from creating social capital, the web would energize undemocratic inclinations: more
imperative political break, "hacktivism," and incivility. Though, many people question the
reasoning behind the geniuses that know all about technology and if their mindset is just about
helping themselves, rather than helping out the community.
The increase in technology causes people to work less, and become more
unproductive. Populations in the modern world do not have to spend one ounce of energy
to get groceries or leave the house to go to work. Many Americans have very busy
8. lifestyles that fracture their knowledge about hot-button topics of politics and intercepts
their chance of giving to the community. Because of this unproductive lifestyles, people
are becoming more unengaged and have no motivation to change their lifestyle and
habits. Alexis de Tocqueville saw clearly an importance of mass communication for civic
engagement [2, paragraph 1, p.218]:
When no firm and lasting ties any longer unite men, it is impossible to obtain
the cooperation of any significant number of them unless you can persuade every
man whose help is required that he serves his private interests by voluntarily
uniting his efforts to those of all the others. That cannot be done habitually and
conveniently without the help of a newspaper. Only a newspaper can put the same
thought at the same time before a thousand readers .... So hardly any free
association can carry without a newspaper.5
There is always a relationship with people who watch television throughout the
day and the current television shows. Individuals who follow news on television
(compared with those who do not) are more knowledgeable about public affairs, vote
more regularly, and are more active in community affairs, though they are not quite as
civic as newspaper readers.6 The regular amount of “screen time” for individuals has
5 Tocqueville, Alexis De, Phillips Bradley, Henry Reeve, and Francis Bowen. Democracy in
America. New York: A.A. Knopf, 1945. Print.
6 Putnam, Robert D. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New
York: Touchstone, 2001. Print.
9. steadily starting to expand just as technology is expanding. There have been so many
new opportunities that arose for an average American to increase their screen time, which
causes Americans to watch roughly four hours of television per day, that is the highest
viewership anywhere in the world.7 The steady increase of unproductiveness due to more
technology, which is being exposed to everyday life is making many Americans tired of
channel surfing. They would much rather have a regular viewing habit, that would
normally be a television playing in the background rather than paying attention to it.
Putnam explains that “busy people tend to forgo the one activity, TV watching, that is
most lethal to community involvement.” That alone shows the decline of engagement in
everyday life, let alone politics and the community. People are more likely to get
brainwashed by the ignorance of entertainment channels on television, rather than
educating themselves in news and politics. It is an easy choice for many Americans to
choose the entertainment over education because it is what they desire more. One
interesting variable that arises about many young adults is that they are tending to rely on
groups because of their social anxiety, but populism is one thing that can help with the up
rise of many individuals with opinions that can change political laws and ideas.
Is populism set to prevail in American politics? The expression itself is famously
difficult to define. It is a language, in a way, of talking about individuals and the elites. It
7 Ibid., 222.
10. does not make a difference if the elites being the ultimate possessor of Wall Street or the
Education Department. By this measure, the United States is close to the triumph of
logical populism. In any case, it is more boisterous and irritating than progressive.8
However, populism likewise has a significance established in American history.
Populism is the development of average people whose interests are disregarded in times
of monetary anxiety and change. The development picked up support among workers and
independent company proprietors. Its requests were not necessary: more liberated cash,
coordinate race of legislatures, the government protecting of banks and controls on the
share trading system. One important property of populism is radically simplifying
politics and (appearing to) adapt to popular opinion. People need to understand that
politicians are going to be motivated more to actually change things. Otherwise, the
“knocking at their gates” is going to get louder and louder, until the populist party
actually gets enough followers to change things itself. It is a very powerful tool for
political change. This year’s election can be a perfect example on how things could have
been different for the outcome on election day. Stephen L. Carter explains that “there’s a
problem with rebuilding this moral consensus, even with aspirational leadership, and the
problem is not just that politics have changed but that we’ve changed as a people; we’ve
8 Gerson, Michael. "Is Populism on the Rise in America?" The Washington Post. WP Company,
1 Oct. 2015. Web. 08 Dec. 2016.
11. changed in the sense of how we get along with each other.”9 With more citizens that
could have participated and would have had enough followers to vote their potential
party, there might have been a change in candidates. Everyone has something in
common, that is why democracy can keep thriving, everyone needs something that can
benefit someone else.
I think that people in this modern world do know the true meaning of democracy. The
fact that people have the ability to participate, as citizens, in politics and civic life, profoundly
explains the benefit of the power of the people. Putnam argues that “the performance of our
democratic institutions depends in measurable ways upon social capital”.10 As described earlier,
many people do not believe in populism. They do not think that their opinion matters, although,
it was difficult to voice a single opinion when there are 318.9 million individuals amongst each
other. It is almost a bystander effect in action or a domino effect as well; one person will not
vote because they assume that other people will decide for them. That is why there is a huge
decrease in voting behavior over the past years, and that shows that democracy is a steady
decline because if a nation is dissatisfied with their government, the citizens are the only ones
with the power to change the way the nation will be run. Winston Churchill quoted, “The best
9 Gould, J.J. "Why Is Populism Winning on the American Right." The Atlantic. Atlantic Media
Company, 2 July 2016. Web. 13 Dec. 2016.
10 Putnam, Robert D. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New
York: Touchstone, 2001. Print.
12. argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter.”11 Democracy
is failing, and it shows by just talking to an average citizen about politics, their knowledge about
global strife is exceedingly shocking. They allow all of these freedoms for citizens but it is as if
no one is listening to the people’s complaints. At many protests, people hold up signs that say
“Dictatorial Democracy…is where you have freedom of speech but the administration doesn’t
listen.” From that quote, that has to say all about our government. Political systems wonder why
many people do not vote, they wonder why many people do not participate, ultimately, how can
a nation have people play a role when people do not even trust their democratic system? Putnam
also explains his views on the distrustful society and how it is less efficient than a generalized
society, “A society that relies on generalized reciprocity is more efficient than a distrustful
society, for the same reason that money is more efficient than barter. Trust lubricates social life.
Networks of civic engagement also facilitates coordination and communication and amplify
information about the trustworthiness of other individuals”.12 In fact, only 20% of Americans
would describe the government as well run. That is where the decline in engagement comes from
including the exposition of technology and busy lifestyles.13 It is hard to trust the government let
alone the information that politics are revealing to the public, their promises they make, the
11 "Finest Hour." History Detectives - Red Herrings: Famous Words Churchill Never Said. N.p.,
n.d. Web. 08 Dec. 2016.
12 Putnam, Robert D. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New
York: Touchstone, 2001. Print.
13 "Poll: Americans Distrust Their Government." VOA. N.p., n.d. Web. 08 Dec. 2016.
13. changes that will be overbearing for some individuals and so on. I would believe that back in the
1950’s, many citizens trusted their government, they did not have much technology at the time,
and everything was different back then. At this day and age, democracy is not what it used to be,
people have other responsibilities now, and the clash between the social authority and
government authority will always be the problem on why voting for presidential candidates are
so unengaged. Americans interests are not in politics anymore; they figure that the older
generations will decide on political subjects because they sub sequentially have more knowledge
about politics than younger generations.
While expanding social capital is not a simple errand, there is a way to shape new
organizations and associations can get individuals included once more. Putnam contends that
society can take after this case right to the issue of declining social capital in the United States.
America has always been a nation of organizations. Americans are more likely to participate in
voluntary agencies with people than any other country. Though, not all the organizations have
the mass membership. The peril is that our aggregate loss of affiliation makes issues both for our
general public and for our majority rules system. At the exact crossroads in our history when
movement is swelling the quantity of Americans of various ethnicities and societies, innovation,
work and different variables are isolating us as neighbors and residents. Group and neighborhood
groups, alongside the government funded schools, used to serve as specialists in teaching vote
based qualities and beliefs. These associations and affiliations connected nationals from various
14. foundations and points of view, making a feeling of aggregate responsibility to each other all
together that we as Americans could live respectively successfully as neighbors, and as taking
part natives in an extraordinary majority rules system. The peer pressure that influences opinions
around an individual with their willingness to vote, the growth of modern technology that has
been incorporated into every-day life, and the decrease in the faith of populism to have control
over their government are the reasons why many Americans are individualistic and that is what
makes civic engagement at its all-time low. The loss of a feeling of a group, and the
accompanying commitment to act in support of that group, decreases the adequacy of the group
to finish aggregate objectives. Moreover, it makes a descending winding of chance: a decrease in
gatherings and associations lessens open doors for natives to represent the collective good.
Communities need to come together and help each other to make people trust in the government
again.
15. Bibliography
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Plumer, Brad. "Why More than 80 Million Americans Won't Vote on Election Day." Vox. N.p.,
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