Biden’s Democracy Summit suggests that things are about to get a lot worse for democracy
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — How precious is it that President Joe Biden still seems to genuinely 
believe that the United States is the ultimate guardian and arbiter of democracy 
worldwide? It’s not like the U.S. itself isn’t struggling with the concept – and 
Biden really isn’t making things better.
American voters have long realized that those who are ultimately elected have 
the kind of financial hurdles to overcome that make it incredibly difficult for 
the Average Joe to participate, let alone win. Then, once they get to 
Washington, these elected representatives often succumb to the seductive siren 
song of special interests with deep pockets and an agenda that serves the elites 
to the detriment of the average citizen’s interests.
The average voter ends up feeling like the democratic process and those selected 
through it are serving other masters. They sense that there’s an ever-growing 
discrepancy between the daily lives of the people and the focus of those who are 
supposed to represent them. They’ve grown skeptical of lawmakers’ motivations. 
All of this bears out in the hard data.
As Biden himself pointed out in his opening remarks at his inaugural “Democracy 
Summit” last week, “more than half of all democracies have experienced a decline 
in at least one aspect of their democracy over the last 10 years, including the 
United States.”
It’s no thanks to Biden himself, frankly, that democracy in the U.S. has taken a 
hit. Consider, for example, the COVID-19 vaccine mandates that Biden tried to 
unilaterally foist on private-sector workers — a move that was ultimately clawed 
back by the U.S. courts. Thankfully, Republican-appointed judges seem to be 
acting as the true gatekeepers of U.S. democracy and its associated freedoms 
these days.
But instead of giving himself a spanking for his own attempt at undermining 
democratic freedoms, or admitting that Washington hasn’t done itself any favors 
when it comes to inspiring confidence in the American system of governance, 
Biden found a scapegoat for the current failures of democracy, both in the U.S. 
and abroad: “outside pressure from autocrats.” Seriously. “They seek to advance 
their own power, export and expand their influence around the world, and justify 
their repressive policies and practices as a more efficient way to address 
today’s challenges,” Biden said, in what actually sounds like a pretty accurate 
description of Washington’s own foreign policy.
Washington has advanced and expanded its own power worldwide to the point of 
provoking endless foreign wars in attempts to ultimately upend the apple carts 
in various countries enough to hoard and sell all the apples. And Biden has used 
his own unilateral COVID mandates as a means of imposing his own will on those 
who deviate from the official Washington narrative, using necessity and 
efficiency of pandemic management as justification for these repressive measures 
that infringe on basic rights and freedoms. So how about cleaning up your own 
room first before tackling the rest of the world, Joe?
Biden used his “Democracy Summit” as a sort of in-crowd slumber party, divvying 
up the world into bad guys and good guys (strictly according to Washington 
ethos). Except the world is far more complex and interconnected than that. For 
example, uninvited Russia is a bad guy, except apparently for all those times 
when their government space agency was needed to carry American astronauts to 
and from the International Space Station. China is also a bad guy, except for 
when it’s needed to make, say, iPhones that make U.S. shareholders rich. Turkey, 
a NATO ally that was also left on the other side of the velvet rope outside the 
Democracy Summit, is apparently good enough to purchase U.S. weapons, but not 
good enough to be included in Biden’s virtual sleepover.
And if all this isn’t hypocritical enough, Biden didn’t miss the chance to 
announce more spending of U.S. taxpayer money — $424 million of it, to be exact 
— on what sounds a lot like propaganda and interference initiatives. Biden said 
that the funding, which would be funneled through organizations and agencies 
close to the federal government, would all happen “in the next year to shore up 
transparent and accountable governance, including supporting media freedom, 
fighting international corruption, standing with democratic reformers, promoting 
technology that advances democracy, and defining and defending what a fair 
election is.”
Look, the average person doesn’t need or want their reality filtered or 
denatured by and through government agencies, arms-length proxies, or 
“reformers” as part of some misguided effort to save democracy. Biden, 
apparently, however well-intentioned he may be, doesn’t understand that it’s 
exactly the sort of interference that he’s proposing that has fueled the 
skepticism that caused this western democratic crisis in the first place. And as 
long as Washington keeps playing the people for fools, “democracy” still has 
many miles of rough road ahead.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN