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Democracy In The Dark: Why Democratic Wisdom Fails in Politics

by Booker Terrell Franklin
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₹3,657.00
Original price ₹3,657.00
Original price ₹3,657.00
₹3,657.00
Current price ₹3,657.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798249321178
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 134
  • Original Price: USD 34.99
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 191 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): History & Theory

You already recognize democracy. The question is whether you'll act on it when your tribe demands otherwise.

Watch A Few Good Men and you instantly see the tension between authority and accountability. See Dead Poets Societyand you understand the conflict between individual conscience and community pressure. Analyze The Dark Knight and you grasp the impossible choice between security and liberty.

Then you walk out of the theater.

The same principles you just identified become tribally conditional-not because you forgot them, but because acting on recognized principles when your political team violates them carries real cost. Social isolation. Professional consequences. Loss of tribal belonging.

Democracy in the Dark demonstrates that Americans already possess sophisticated democratic wisdom. We prove it every time we analyze a film. What fails isn't recognition-it's that democratic institutions make acting on that recognition irrational. The system rewards tribal loyalty and punishes principled consistency.

Through eight films-including 1984, Loving, All the President's Men, Norma Rae, and Minority Report-this book examines recurring democratic tensions and why people abandon principles they clearly recognize:

  • Authority vs. Accountability
  • Conscience vs. Community
  • Truth vs. Tribal Narrative
  • Emergency vs. Constitutional Limits
  • Inclusion vs. Exclusion
  • Transparency vs. Selective Disclosure
  • Economic Security and Democratic Participation
  • Algorithmic Control vs. Human Agency

This is not a partisan argument. It doesn't tell you which positions to hold. It clarifies why democratic principles that everyone recognizes in films get abandoned in politics-and why that's an institutional failure, not a moral one.

The wisdom is already yours. What's missing is a system that makes using it rational instead of suicidal.

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