We are governed by mediocrities.
I scored 97% on this incredibly easy civics test. I blew the final question - actually I knew that I picked the wrong answer but it seemed better than the alternative "right" answer - and, so, scored 32 out of 33 answers.
This isn't to blow my own horn inasmuch as the questions seemed obvious; everyone should score similarly.
On the other hand, apparently not. According to the results page:
Of the 2,508 People surveyed, 164 say they have held an elected government office at least once in their life. Their average score on the civic literacy test is 44%, compared to 49% for those who have not held an elected office. Officeholders are less likely than other respondents to correctly answer 29 of the 33 test questions. This table shows the “knowledge gap” for each question: the difference between the percentage of common citizens who answered correctly and the percentage of officeholders who answered correctly.
And:
In each of the following areas, for example, officeholders do more poorly than non-officeholders:The nasty secret is that when Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachman and other politicians garble some obvious bit of American history, they are not exceptional. They are simply betraying the fact that politicians lack the rudimentary knowledge they were exposed to in high school.
On some questions, Americans who have held elected office do better than Americans who have not. They are a little more likely, for example, to recognize the language of the Gettysburg Address (23% to 21%) and to know that the question of whether slavery should be allowed to expand into new territories was the main issue in the Lincoln–Douglas debates (25% to 20%).
- Seventy-nine percent of those who have been elected to government office do not know the Bill of Rights expressly prohibits establishing an official religion for the U.S.
- Thirty percent do not know that “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” are the inalienable rights referred to in the Declaration of Independence.
- Twenty-seven percent cannot name even one right or freedom guaranteed by the First Amendment.
- Forty-three percent do not know what the Electoral College does. One in five thinks it either “trains those aspiring for higher political office” or “was established to supervise the first televised presidential debates.”
- Fifty-four percent do not know the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war. Thirty-nine percent think that power belongs to the president, and 10% think it belongs to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
- Only 32% can properly define the free enterprise system, and only 41% can identify business profit as “revenue minus expenses.”
Officeholders and non-officeholders find it equally difficult to identify the three branches of government. Only 49% of each group can name the legislative, executive, and judicial.
We only hear about it, however, when it's Sarah Palin or Michelle Bachman.