Saving Public Space
by Paul M. Weyrich
Let me raise an issue that is not yet on many radar screens but I think may
come to be: the public space.
What is the public space? It is the space outside our homes, schools or
offices where people intermingle. It is streets with sidewalks, where people
not only walk but stop, talk and listen. It is malls and town commons. It is
restaurants and stores, churches and movie theaters, trains and buses and
even airports. Essentially, it is anyplace where we do not control who we
might meet.
Why is it important? Because if we are to be citizens of a republic and not
mere consumers in an administered state, we need to both have and want
contact with our fellow-citizens. When life is privatized, lived largely or
almost wholly behind walls, doors and security control points, society
withers. We come only to care about ourselves and those who share our
private space. What happens to the rest of the society is not our concern,
so long as we are OK.
There is no question that American life is being privatized this way. If you
go to Europe, you will see that people there spend much more of their time
in the public space. The same used to be true in this country. Even the
front porches of old houses, where families often spent their evenings
before air conditioning and television, were part of the public space.
I do not think that the loss of the public space in America is part of any
kind of deliberate effort. There are many reasons for it. I already
mentioned air conditioning and television. Other causes include the
increasing coarseness of dress, manners and behavior; when the public space
is filled with people who look bad and often behave badly, people avoid it.
Noise is another factor. Blaring boom-boxes were bad enough, but just as
that curse seems to have faded somewhat, cell phones have come along. Too
often, if you are in the public space, you find yourself having to listen to
one-half of a private phone conversation. Many people now dread the prospect
of cell phones on airplanes.
Whatever the reasons for it, the destruction of the public space should be
recognized by the next conservatism as not a good thing. It happened in
Rome, too, towards the end of the Empire. People stopped going to the forum
and other public spaces, while private life became much more opulent. When
that happens in any society, it makes it easier for those who want power to
grab it, because people only care about their private lives.
I have talked in several previous columns about some things that could help
revitalize the public space and draw Americans back into it. The New
Urbanism can help, because it makes cities into places where people want to
go. High quality public transportation can help (in most cases that means
rail transit, not buses), because it both takes people to public spaces and
is itself a public space.
Probably nothing would help as much as the return of good manners and decent
dress. Should both perhaps be part of the next conservatism's agenda? They
have nothing to do with politics. But as I have pointed out over and over,
culture is more powerful than politics, and the next conservatism must be at
least as much a cultural as a political movement.
Developing the next conservatism is not just a matter of offering new
answers to old questions (re reminding people of the old, right answers
which have been forgotten). It also requires asking some new questions. One
of those questions needs to be, is restoring the public space important to
the future of our republic? If we are in fact to be a republic, I think the
answer is yes.
Paul M. Weyrich is the Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation.
Email
the Editor
|