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STUDY X
PROPOSED REMEDIES--SOCIAL AND FINANCIAL
Prohibition and Female Suffrage--Free Silver and Protective Tariff--
"Communism"--"They Had All Things in
Common"--"Anarchism"--"Socialism"
or "Collectivism"--Babbitt on Social Upbuilding--Herbert
Spencer on Socialism--Examples of Two Socialist
Communities--"Nationalism"
--General Mechanical Education as a Remedy--The "Single
Tax" Remedy--Henry George's Answer to Pope Leo XIII on Labor--Dr.
Lyman Abbott on the Situation--An M. E. Bishop's Suggestions--Other
Hopes and Fears--The Only Hope--"That Blessed Hope"--The Attitude
Proper for God's People Who See These Things--In the World
but Not of It.
"Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there?" "We
would have healed Babylon, but she is not healed: forsake her,
and let us go every one unto his own country: for her judgment
reacheth unto heaven." Jer. 8:22; 51:7-9
VARIOUS are the remedies advocated as "cure-alls" for
the relief of the groaning creation in its present, admittedly
serious, condition; and all who sympathize with the suffering
body-politic must sympathize also with the endeavors
of its various doctors, who, having diagnosed the case, are
severally anxious that the patient should try their prescriptions.
The attempts to find a cure and to apply it are
surely commendable, and have the appreciation of all
kind-hearted people. Nevertheless, sober judgment, enlightened
by God's Word, tells us that none of the proposed
remedies will cure the malady. The presence and services of
the Great Physician with his remedies--medicines, splints,
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bandages, straitjackets and lancets will be requisite; and
nothing short of their efficient and persistent use will effect
a cure of the malady of human depravity and selfishness.
But let us briefly examine the prescriptions of other doctors,
that we may note how some of them approximate the wisdom
of God and yet how far they all fall short of it--not for
the sake of controversy, but in order that all may the more
clearly see the one and only direction from which help need
be expected.
Prohibition and Female Suffrage as Remedies
These two remedies are usually compounded, it being
conceded that prohibition can never command a majority
support unless women have a free ballot--and doubtful
even then. The advocates of this remedy show statistics to
prove that much of the trouble and poverty of Christendom
are traceable to the liquor traffic, and they aver that if
it were abolished, peace and plenty would be the rule and
not the exception.
We heartily sympathize with much that is claimed along
this line: drunkenness is certainly one of the most noxious
fruits of civilization; it is rapidly spreading, too, to the semi-civilized
and barbarous. We would rejoice to see it abolished
now and forever. We are willing to grant, too, that its
abolition would relieve much of the poverty of today, and
that by it hundreds of millions of wealth are annually far
worse than wasted. But this is not the remedy to cure the
evils arising from present, selfish social conditions, and to
meet and parry the grinding pressure of the "Law of Supply
and Demand," which would progress as relentlessly as
ever, squeezing the lifeblood from the masses.
Who, indeed, squander the millions of money spent annually
on liquors?--the very poor? No, indeed; the rich! The
rich specially, and secondly the middle class. If the liquor
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traffic were abolished tomorrow, so far from relieving the
financial pressure, upon the very poor, it would have the reverse
effect. Thousands of farmers who now grow the millions
of bushels of barley and rye and grapes and hops used
in the manufacture of liquor would be obliged to cultivate
other crops, and thus in turn further depress farm produce
prices in general. The vast army of tens of thousands of distillers,
coopers, bottlers, glassworkers, teamsters, saloon-keepers
and bartenders, now employed in and by this traffic,
would be forced to find other employment and would
further depress the labor market, and hence the scale of
daily wages. The millions on millions of capital now invested
in this traffic would enter other lines and force business
competition.
All this should not deter us from desiring the removal of
the curse, if it were possible to get a majority to consent to it.
But a majority will never be found (save in exceptional localities).
The majority is composed of slaves to this appetite
and those interested in it financially, either directly or indirectly.
Prohibition will not be established until the Kingdom
of God is established. We merely point out here that
the removal of this curse, even if practicable, would not
cure the present social-financial malady.
The Free Silver and Protective Tariff Remedies
We freely concede that the demonetization of silver by
Christendom was a masterstroke of selfish policy on the
part of money-lenders to decrease the volume of standard
money and thus to increase the value of their loans; to permit
the maintenance of high rates of interest on such debts
because of the curtailment of the legal money, while all
other business investments, as well as labor, are suffering
constant depreciation as the results of increasing supply
and competition. Many bankers and money-lenders are
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"honest" men according to the legal standard of honesty;
but, alas! the standard of some is too low. It says, Let us
bankers and money-lenders look out for our interests, and
let the farmers, less shrewd, look out for themselves. Let us
delude the poorer and less shrewd by calling gold "honest
money" and silver "dishonest money." Many of the poor
desire to be honest, and can thus be brow-beaten and cajoled
into supporting our plans, which, however, will go
hard with the "reapers." Under the influence of our talk
about "honest money," and our prestige as honorable men,
our standing as financiers and wealthy men, they will conclude
that any views contrary to ours must be wrong; they
will forget that silver money has been the standard of the
world from earliest history, and that gold, like precious
stones, was formerly merchandise, until added to silver to
meet the increasing demand for money sufficient to do the
world's business. As it is the rate of interest is falling in our
money centers; how much lower the rate of interest would
be if all silver had a coin value and money were thus more
plentiful! Our next move must be to retire all paper money
and thus bolster up the rate of interest.
Under the law of supply and demand every borrower is
interested in having plenty of money--silver, gold and paper;
under the same law every banker and money-lender is
interested in abolishing paper money and in discrediting
silver; for the less money there is of a debt-canceling value,
the more that little is demanded. Hence, while labor and
commercial values are dropping, money is in demand and
interest nearly holds its own.
As already shown, the indications of prophecy seem to be
that silver will not be restored to equal privileges with gold
as standard money in the civilized world. But it is manifest
that, even if it were fully restored, its relief would be but
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temporary: it would remove the peculiar incentive now
being given to manufacturers in Japan, India, China and
Mexico; it would relieve the farming element of Christendom,
and thus remove part of the present pressure under
which every one labors "to make both ends meet"; and thus
it might put off the crash for a while longer. But apparently
God does not wish to thus postpone the "evil day"; and
hence human selfishness, blind to all reason, will rule and
ruin the more quickly; as it is written, "the wisdom of their
wise men shall perish"; and "neither their silver nor their
gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lord's
wrath." Zeph. 1:18; Ezek. 7:19; Isa. 14:4-7, margin; 29:14
Protection, wisely gauged so as to avoid creating monopolies
and to develop all the natural resources of a land, is
undoubtedly of some advantage in preventing the rapid
leveling of labor the world over. However, at the very most
it is but an inclined plane down which wages will go to the
lower level, instead of with a ruder jolt over the precipice.
Soon or later, under the competitive system now controlling,
goods as well as wages will be forced to nearly a
common level the world over.
Neither "Free Silver" nor Protective Tariff, therefore,
can claim to be remedies for present and impending evils, but
merely palliatives.
Communism as a Remedy
Communism proposes a social system in which there will
be community of goods; in which all property shall be
owned in common and operated in the general interest, and
all profits from all labor be devoted to the general welfare--
"to each according to his needs." The tendency of Communism
was illustrated in the French Commune. Its definition
by Rev. Joseph Cook, is--"Communism means the abolition
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of inheritance, the abolition of the family, the abolition of
nationalities, the abolition of religion, the abolition of
property."
Some features of Communism we could commend (see
Socialism), but as a whole it is quite impracticable. Such an
arrangement would probably do very well for heaven,
where all are perfect, pure and good, and where love reigns;
but a moment's reflection should prove to any man of judgment
and experience that in the present condition of men's
hearts such a scheme is thoroughly impracticable. The
tendency would be to make drones of all. We would soon
have a competition as to who could do the least and the
worst work; and society would soon lapse into barbarism
and immorality, tending to the rapid extinction of the race.
But some fancy that Communism is taught in the Bible
and that consequently it must be the true remedy--God's
remedy. With many this is the strongest argument in its favor.
The supposition that it was instituted by our Lord and
the Apostles, and that it should have continued to be the
rule and practice of Christians since, is very common. We
therefore present below an article on this phase of the subject
from our own magazine:
"They Had All Things in Common"
"And all that believed were together, and had all things common;
and sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all
men, as every man had need. And they, continuing daily with one
accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house,
did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart, praising
God, and having favor with all the people." Acts 2:44-47
Such was the spontaneous sentiment of the early
Church: selfishness gave place to love and general interest.
Blessed experience! And without doubt a similar sentiment,
more or less clearly defined, comes to the hearts of all who
are truly converted. When first we got a realizing sense of
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God's love and salvation, when we gave ourselves completely
to the Lord and realized his gifts to us, which pertain
not only to the life that now is, but also to that which is
to come--we felt an exuberance of joy, which found in every
fellow-pilgrim toward the heavenly Canaan a brother or a
sister in whom we trusted as related to the Lord and having
his spirit; and we were disposed to deal with them all as we
would with the Lord, and to share with them our all, as we
would share all with our Redeemer. And in many instances
it was by a rude shock that we were awakened to the fact
that neither we nor others are perfect in the flesh; and that
no matter how much of the Master's spirit his people now
possess, they "have this treasure in earthen vessels" of human
frailty and defection.
Then we learned, not only that the weaknesses of the
flesh of other men had to be taken into account, but that
our own weaknesses of the flesh needed constant guarding.
We found that whilst all had shared Adam's fall, all had not
fallen alike, or in exactly the same particulars. All have
fallen from God's likeness and spirit of love, to Satan's
likeness and spirit of selfishness; and as love has diversities
of operations, so has selfishness. Consequently, selfishness
working in one has wrought a desire for ease, sloth, indolence;
in another it produced energy, labor for the pleasures
of this life, self-gratification, etc.
Among those actively selfish some take self-gratification in
amassing a fortune, and having it said, He is wealthy; others
gratify their selfishness by seeking honor of men; others
in dress, others in travel, others in debauchery and the lowest
and meanest forms of selfishness.
Each one begotten to the new life in Christ, with its new
spirit of love, finds a conflict begun, fightings within and
without; for the new spirit wars with whatever form of selfishness
or depravity formerly had control of us. The "new
mind of Christ," whose principles are justice and love, asserts
itself; and reminds the will that it has assented to and
convenanted to this change. The desires of the flesh (the selfish
desires, whatever their bent), aided by the outside influence
of friends, argue and discuss the question, urging
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that no radical measures must be taken--that such a course
would be foolish, insane, impossible. The flesh insists that
the old course cannot be changed, but will agree to slight
modifications, and to do nothing so extreme as before.
The vast majority of God's people seem to agree to this
partnership, which is really still the reign of selfishness. But
others insist that the spirit or mind of Christ shall have the
control. The battle which ensues is a hard one (Gal. 5:16,17);
but the new will should conquer, and self with its own
selfishness, or depraved desires, be reckoned dead. Col. 2:20; 3:3;
Rom. 6:2-8
But does this end the battle forever? No--
"Ne'er think the victory won,
Nor once at ease sit down;
Thine arduous task will not be done
Till thou hast gained thy crown."
Ah, yes, we must renew the battle daily, and help divine
implore and receive, that we may finish our course with joy.
We must not only conquer self, but, as the Apostle did, we
must keep our bodies under. (1 Cor. 9:27) And this, our
experience,
that we must be constantly on the alert against
the spirit of selfishness, and to support and promote in ourselves
the spirit of love, is the experience of all who likewise
have "put on Christ" and taken his will to be theirs. Hence
the propriety of the Apostle's remark, "Henceforth know
we no man [in Christ] after the flesh." We know those in
Christ according to their new spirit, and not according to
their fallen flesh. And if we see them fail sometimes, or always
to some degree, and yet see evidences that the new
mind is wrestling for the mastery, we are properly disposed
to sympathize with them rather than to berate them for
little failures; "remembering ourselves, lest we also be
tempted [of our old selfish nature in violation of some of the
requirements of the perfect law of love]."
Under "the present distress," therefore, while each has all
that he can do to keep his own body under and the spirit of
love in control, sound judgment, as well as experience and
the Bible, tells us that we would best not complicate matters
by attempting communistic schemes; but each make as
straight paths as possible for his own feet, that that which is
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lame in our fallen flesh be not turned entirely out of the
way, but that it be healed.
(1) Sound judgment says that if the saints with divine help
have a constant battle to keep selfishness subject to love, a
promiscuous colony or community would certainly not succeed
in ruling itself by a law utterly foreign to the spirit of
the majority of its members. And it would be impossible to
establish a communism of saints only, because we cannot
read the hearts--only "the Lord knoweth them that are
his." And if such a colony of saints could be gotten together,
and if it should prosper with all things in common, all sorts
of evil persons would seek to get their possessions or to share
them; and if successfully excluded they would say all manner
of evil against them; and so, if it held together at all, the
enterprise would not be a real success.
Some saints, as well as many of the world, are so fallen
into selfish indolence that nothing but necessity will help
them to be, "not slothful in business, but fervent in spirit,
serving the Lord." And many others are so selfishly ambitious
that they need the buffetings of failure and adversity
to mellow them and enable them to sympathize with
others, or even to bring them to deal justly with others. For
both these classes "community" would merely serve to hinder
the learning of the proper and needed lessons.
Such communities, if left to the rule of the majority,
would sink to the level of the majority; for the progressive,
active minority, finding that nothing could be gained by
energy and thrift over carelessness and sloth, would also
grow careless and indolent. If governed by organizers of
strong will, as Life Trustees and Managers, on a paternal
principle, the result would be more favorable financially;
but the masses, deprived of personal responsibility, would
degenerate into mere tools and slaves of the Trustees.
To sound judgment it therefore appears that the method
of individualism, with its liberty and responsibility, is the
best one for the development of intelligent beings; even
though it may work hardships many times to all, and sometimes
to many.
Sound judgment can see that if the Millennial Kingdom
were established on the earth, with the divine rulers then
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promised, backed by unerring wisdom and full power to
use it, laying "judgment to the line and righteousness to the
plummet," and ruling not by consent of majorities, but by
righteous judgment, as "with a rod of iron"--then communism
could succeed; probably it would be the very best condition,
and if so it will be the method chosen by the King of
kings. But for that we wait; and not having the power or the
wisdom to use such theocratic power, the spirit of a sound
mind simply bides the Lord's time, praying meanwhile,
"Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is done
in heaven." And after Christ's Kingdom shall have brought
all the willing back to God and righteousness, and shall
have destroyed all the unwilling, then, with Love the rule of
earth as it is of heaven, we may suppose that men will share
earth's mercies in common, as do the angels the bounties of
heaven.
(2) Experience proves the failure of communistic methods
in the present time. There have been several such communities;
and the result has always been failure. The Oneida
community of New York is one whose failure has long been
recognized. Another, the Harmony Society of Pennsylvania,
soon disappointed the hopes of its founders, for so
much discord prevailed that it divided. The branch known
as Economites located near Pittsburgh, Pa. It flourished for
a while, after a fashion, but is now quite withered; and possession
of its property is now being disputed in the Society
and in the courts of law.
Other communistic societies are starting now, which will
be far less successful than these because the times are different;
independence is greater, respect and reverence are less,
majorities will rule, and without superhuman leaders are
sure to fail. Wise worldly leaders are looking out for themselves,
while wise Christians are busy in other channels--
obeying the Lord's command, "Go thou and preach the
Gospel."
(3) The Bible does not teach Communism, but does teach
loving, considerate Individualism, except in the sense of
family communism--each family acting as a unit, of which
the father is the head and the wife one with him, his fellow-heir
of the grace of life, his partner in every joy and benefit
as well as in every adversity and sorrow.
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True, God permitted a communistic arrangement in the
primitive Church, referred to at the beginning of this article;
but this may have been for the purpose of illustrating
to us the unwisdom of the method; and lest some, thinking
of the scheme now, should conclude that the apostles did
not command and organize communities, because they
lacked the wisdom to devise and carry out such methods;
for not a word can be quoted from our Lord or the apostles
advocating the communistic principles; but much can be
quoted to the contrary.
True, the Apostle Peter (and probably other apostles)
knew of, and cooperated in, that first communistic arrangement,
even if he did not teach the system. It has been
inferred, too, that the death of Ananias and Sapphira was
an indication that the giving of all the goods of the believers
was compulsory; but not so: their sin was that of lying, as
Peter declared in reviewing the case. While they had the
land there was no harm in keeping it if they got it honestly;
and even after they had sold it no harm was done: the
wrong was in misrepresenting that the sum of money
turned in was their all, when it was not their all. They were
attempting to cheat the others by getting a share of their
alls without giving their own all.
As a matter of fact, the Christian Community at Jerusalem
was a failure. "There arose a murmuring"--"Because
their widows were neglected in the daily ministrations." Although
under the Apostolic inspection the Church was
pure, free from "tares," and all had the treasure of the new
spirit or "mind of Christ," yet evidently that treasure was
only in warped and twisted earthen vessels which could not
get along well together.
The apostles soon found that the management of the
community would greatly interfere with their real work--
the preaching of the gospel. So they abandoned those
things to others. The Apostle Paul and others traveled from
city to city preaching Christ and him crucified; but, so far
as the record shows, they never mentioned communism and
never organized a community; and yet St. Paul declares, "I
have not shunned to declare unto you the whole counsel of
God." This proves that Communism is no part of the gospel,
nor of the counsel of God for this age.
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On the contrary, the Apostle Paul exhorted and instructed
the Church to do things which it would be wholly
impossible to do as members of a communistic society--to
each "provide for his own"; to "lay by on the first day of the
week" money for the Lord's service, according as the Lord
had prospered them; that servants should obey their masters,
rendering the service with a double good will if the
master were also a brother in Christ; and how masters
should treat their servants, as those who must themselves
give an account to the great Master, Christ. 1 Tim. 5:8; 6:1;
1 Cor. 16:2; Eph. 6:5-9
Our Lord Jesus not only did not establish a Community
while he lived, but he never taught that such should be established.
On the contrary, in his parables he taught that
all have not the same number of pounds or talents given
them, but each is a steward and should individually (not collectively,
as a commune) manage his own affairs, and render
his own account. (Matt. 25:14-28; Luke 19:12-24.
See
also James 4:13,15.) When dying, our Lord commended
his mother to the care of his disciple John, and the record of
John (19:27)is, "And from that hour that disciple took her
unto his own home." John, therefore, had a home, so had
Martha, Mary and Lazarus. Had our Lord formed a Community
he would doubtless have commended his mother to
it instead of to John.
Moreover, the forming of a Commune of believers is opposed
to the purpose and methods of the Gospel age. The
object of this age is to witness Christ to the world, and thus
to "take out a people for his name"; and to this end each
believer is exhorted to be a burning and a shining light before
men--the world in general--and not before and to each
other merely. Hence, after permitting the first Christian
Community to be established, to show that the failure to
establish Communities generally was not an oversight, the
Lord broke it up, and scattered the believers everywhere, to
preach the gospel to every creature. We read--"And at that
time there was a great persecution against the Church
which was at Jerusalem; and they were all scattered abroad
throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the
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apostles," and they went everywhere preaching the gospel.
Acts 8:1,4; 11:19
It is still the work of God's people to shine as lights in the
midst of the world, and not to shut themselves up in convents
and cloisters or as communities. The promises of Paradise
will not be realized by joining such communities. The
desire to join such "confederacies" is but a part of the general
spirit of our day, against which we are forewarned. (Isa. 8:12)
"Trust in the Lord, and wait patiently for him."
"Watch ye, therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted
worthy to escape all these things, and to stand before
the Son of Man." Luke 21:36
Anarchy as a Remedy
Anarchists want liberty to the extent of lawlessness. They
have apparently reached the conclusion that every method
of human cooperation has proved a failure, and they propose
to destroy all cooperative human restraints. Anarchy
is therefore the exact opposite of Communism, although
some confound them. While Communism would destroy
all Individualism and compel the whole world to share
alike, Anarchy would destroy all laws and social restraints
so that each individual might do as he please. Anarchism is
merely destructive: so far as we can ascertain, it has no constructive
features. It probably considers that it has a sufficient
task on hand to destroy the world, and will better let
the future battle for itself in the matter of reconstruction.
The following extracts from a sixteen page booklet published
by the London Anarchists and distributed at their
great May-day parade, gives some idea of their wild and
desperate notions:
"The belief that there must be authority somewhere, and
submission to authority, are at the root of all our misery. As
a remedy we advise a struggle for life or death against all
authority--physical authority, as embodied in the State, or
doctrinary authority, the result of centuries of ignorance
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and superstition, such as religion, patriotism, obedience to
laws, belief in the usefulness of government, submission to
the wealthy and to those in office--in short, a struggle
against all and every humbug designed to stupefy and enslave
the workingmen. The workingmen necessarily must
destroy authority: those who are benefited by it certainly
will not. Patriotism and religion are sanctuaries and bulwarks
of rascals; religion is the greatest curse of the human
race. Yet there are to be found men who prostitute the
noble word 'labor' by combining it with the nauseating
term 'church' into 'Labor-Church.' One might just as well
speak of a 'Labor-Police.'
"We do not share the views of those who believe that the
State may be converted into a beneficent institution. The
change would be as difficult as to convert a wolf into a
lamb. Nor do we believe in the centralization of all production
and consumption, as aimed at by the Socialists. That
would be nothing but the present State in a new form, with
increased authority, a veritable monstrosity of tyranny and
slavery.
"What the Anarchists want is equal liberty for all. The
talents and inclination of all men differ from each other.
Every one knows best what he can do and what he wants;
laws and regulations only hamper, and forced labor is
never pleasant. In the state aimed at by the Anarchists, every
one will do the work that pleases him best, and will satisfy
his wants out of the common store as pleases him best."
It would seem that even the poorest judgment and the
least experience would see in this proposal nothing but the
sheerest folly. In it there is no remedy either proposed or expected:
it is but the gnashing of teeth of the hopeless and
despairing; yet it is the extremity toward which multitudes
are being driven by the force of circumstances propelled by
selfishness.
Socialism or Collectivism as a Remedy
Socialism as a civil government would propose to secure
the reconstruction of society, the increase of wealth, and a
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more nearly equal distribution of the products of labor
through the public collective ownership of land and capital
(wealth other than real estate), and the management of all
industries by the public collectively. Its motto is, "Every
one according to his deeds."
It differs from "Nationalism" in that it does not propose
to reward all individuals alike. It differs from "Communism"
in that it does not advocate a community of goods or
property. It thus, in our judgment, avoids the errors of
both, and is a very practical theory if it could be introduced
gradually and by wise, moderate, unselfish men. This principle
has already accomplished much on a small scale in
various localities. In many cities in the United States the
water supply, street improvements, schools and fire and police
departments are so conducted, to the general welfare.
But Europe is in advance of us along these lines; for many
of their railroads and telegraphs are so conducted. In
France the tobacco business with all its profits belongs to
the government, the people. In Russia the liquor business
has been seized by the government and is hereafter to be
conducted by it for the public benefit financially, and it is
claimed also morally.
The following interesting statistics are from
"Social Upbuilding"
by E. D. Babbitt, LL. D., of the College of Fine Forces, New
Jersey:
"Sixty-eight governments own their telegraph lines.
"Fifty-four governments own their railroads in whole or
in part, while only nineteen, the United States among
them, do not.
"In Australia one can ride 1,000 miles (first class) across
the country for $5.50, or six miles for 2 cents, and railroad
men are paid more for eight hours labor than in the United
States for ten hours. Does this impoverish the country? In
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Victoria, where these rates prevail, the net income for 1894
was sufficient to pay the federal taxes.
"In Hungary, where the roads are state-owned, one can
ride six miles for a cent, and since the government bought
the roads, wages have doubled.
"In Belgium, fares and freight rates have been cut down
one-half and wages doubled. But for all that the roads pay
a yearly revenue to the government of $4,000,000.
"In Germany, the government-owned roads will carry a
person four miles for a cent, while the wages of the employees
are 120 per cent higher than when the corporations
owned them. Has such a system proved ruinous? No. During
the last ten years the net profits have increased 41 per
cent. Last year (1894), the roads paid the German government
a net profit of $25,000,000.
"It has been estimated that government ownership of
railroads would save the people of the United States a billion
dollars in money and give better wages to its employees,
two millions of whom would doubtless then be needed
instead of 700,000 as at present.
"Berlin, Germany, is called the cleanest, best paved and
best governed city in the world. It owns its gas works, electric
lights, water works, street railways, city telephones, and
even its fire insurance, and thus makes a profit every year of
5,000,000 mark, or $1,250,000, over all expenses. In that
city the citizens can ride five miles as often as they please
every day in the whole year for $4.50, while two trips a day
on the elevated railroads of New York would cost $36.50.
"Mr. F. G. R. Gordon has given in the Twentieth Century
the statistics with reference to lighting a number of American
cities and finds that the average price of each arc light
by the year, when under municipal control, is $52.12 1/2
while the average price paid to private parties by the various
cities is $105.13 per light each year, or a little more than
twice as much as when run by the cities themselves.
"The average price for telegrams in the United States in
1891 was thirty-two and a half cents. In Germany, where
the telegraphs are owned by the government, messages of
ten words are sent to all parts of the country for five cents.
[D485]
From the greater distances and higher prices for labor, here,
we would probably have to pay from five to twenty cents,
according to the distance. The remarkable advantage of
having each municipality control its own gas, water, coal
and street railways, has been demonstrated by Birmingham,
Glasgow and other cities in Great Britain."
Very good, we answer, so far as it goes. But still no sane
man will claim that the poor of Europe are enjoying the
Millennial blessings, even with all these Socialist theories in
operation in their midst. No well informed man will undertake
to say that the working classes of Europe are anywhere
near on a par with workmen in general in the United
States. This is still their Paradise, and laws are even now
being formed to limit the thousands who desire still to come
to share this Paradise.
But while we rejoice in every amelioration of the condition
of Europe's poor, let us not forget that the nationalization
movement, except in Great Britain, results not
from greater sagacity on the part of the people, nor from
benevolence or indolence on the part of Capital, but from
another cause which does not operate in the United States--
from the governments themselves. They have taken possession
of these to avoid bankruptcy. They are under immense
expense in supporting armies, navies, fortresses, etc., and
must have a source of revenue. The cheap rates of travel are
with a view to please the people and also to draw business;
for if the rates were not low the many who earn small wages
could not ride. As it is, the fourth-class cars in Germany are
merely freight cars, without seats of any kind.
In full view of such facts let us not delude ourselves with
the supposition that such measures would solve the Labor
Problem, or even relieve matters for more than six years,
and that but slightly.
We have reason to believe that Socialism will make great
progress during the next few years. But frequently it will
[D486]
not be wisely or moderately advanced: success will intoxicate
some of its advocates, and failure render others
desperate, and as a result impatience will lead to calamity.
Capitalism and Monarchism see in Socialism a foe, and already
they oppose it as much as they dare in view of public
opinion. The Church nominal, though full of tares and
worldliness, is still a powerful factor in the case; for she represents
and largely controls the middle classes in whose
hands is the balance of power as between the upper and the
lower classes of society. To these Socialism has hitherto
been considerably misrepresented by its friends, who hitherto
have generally been infidels. Rulers, capitalists and
clergymen, with few exceptions, will seize upon the first
extremes of Socialism to assault it and brand it with infamy,
and temporarily throttle it, encouraging themselves
with specious arguments which self-interest and fear will
suggest.
We can but rejoice to see principles of equity set in motion,
even though they be but temporary and partial. And
all whose interests would be affected thereby should endeavor
to take a broad view, and to relinquish a portion of
their personal advantage for the general good.
As intimated the movement will be crushed under the
combined power of Church, State and Capital and later
lead to the great explosion of anarchy, in which, as indicated
in the Scriptures, all present institutions will be
wrecked--"a time of trouble such as was not since there was
a nation."
But even should Socialism have its own way entirely, it
would prove to be but a temporary relief, so long as selfishness
is the ruling principle in the hearts of the majority of
mankind. There are "born schemers" who would speedily
find ways of getting the cream of public works and compensations
for themselves; parasites on the social structure
[D487]
would multiply and flourish and "rings" would be everywhere.
So long as people recognize and worship a principle,
they will more or less conform to it: hence Socialism at first
might be comparatively pure, and its representatives in office
faithful servants of the public for the public good. But
let Socialism become popular, and the same shrewd, selfish
schemers who now oppose it would get inside and control it
for their own selfish ends.
Communists and Nationalists see that so long as
differences of compensation are permitted selfishness will
warp and twist truth and justice; and in order to gratify
pride and ambition it will surmount every barrier against
poverty that men can erect. To meet this difficulty they go
to the impractical extremes which their claims present--
impractical because men are sinners, not saints; selfish, not
loving.
Herbert Spencer's View of Socialism
Mr. Herbert Spencer, the noted English philosopher and
economist, noticing the statement that the Italian Socialist
Ferri supports his theories, wrote: "The assertion that any
of my views favor Socialism causes me great irritation. I believe
the advent of Socialism to be the greatest disaster the
world has ever known."
While great thinkers agree that competition or "individualism"
has its evils that require drastic remedies, they
deprecate the enslavement of the individual to social organization:
or rather the burial of all individuality in Socialism,
as eventually the greater disaster; since it would
create armies of public employees, make politics still more
of a trade than at present, and consequently open the way
more than ever to rings and general corruption.
The following from the Literary Digest (Aug. 10, 1895),
has a bearing upon the subject in hand as going to show
[D488]
that Socialistic principles would not endure unless supported
by some kind of force--so strong is selfishness in all
mankind:
"Two Socialist Communities"
"Two practical trials of Socialism attract the attention of
students of social economy abroad. In both cases the original
promoters of Socialist communities are doing fairly
well, in one they are even prosperous. But the attempt to
live up to the teachings of Socialistic theorists has failed in
both instances. The erstwhile communists have returned to
methods which scarcely differ from those of the bourgeoise
around them. A little more than two years ago a party of
Australian workingmen, tired of a life of wage-slavery relieved
only by the hardships of enforced idleness, set out for
Paraguay, where they obtained land suitable for farmers
who have no large machines at their disposal. They called
their settlement New Australia, and hoped to convert it
into a Utopia for workingmen. The British foreign Office,
in its latest official report, gives a short history of the movement
which caused many men to exchange Australia, 'the
workingman's Eldorado,' for South America. We take the
following from the report mentioned:
"The aims of the colony were set forth in its constitution,
in which one of the articles runs as follows: 'It is our intention
to form a community in which all labor will be for
the benefit of every member, and in which it will be impossible
for one to tyrannize another. It will be the duty of each
individual to regard the well-being of the community as his
chief aim, thus insuring a degree of comfort, happiness and
education which is impossible in a state of society where no
one is certain that he will not starve.'
"This ideal was not realized. Eighty-five of the colonists
soon tired of the restrictions imposed upon them by the majority,
and refused to obey. New arrivals from Australia
made up the loss occasioned by this secession; but the new
arrivals, dissatisfied with the leader of the movement,
elected a chief of their own, so that there were now three
parties in the colony. The equal division of the proceeds of
[D489]
their labor soon dissatisfied a number of the workers, who,
in opposition to Socialist rules, demanded a share in proportion
to the work they had done. The strict enforcement
of Prohibition was another cause of dissatisfaction, especially
as its infringement was punishable by expulsion without
a chance of getting the original capital sunk in the
undertaking refunded. The colony was on the point of
breaking up, when the erstwhile leader of the movement
succeeded in getting himself appointed judge by the Paraguayan
authorities, and surrounded himself with a police
force. There is hope that the colony will now become prosperous,
but Socialistic regulations have been discarded.
"The experience of the miners of Monthieux is somewhat
different. In their case it was prosperity that caused the
Socialistic theories to be set aside. The Gewerbe Zeitung, Berlin,
tells their story as follows:
"'At Monthieux, near St. Etienne, is a pit which was
given up by the company which owned it a couple of years
ago, and the miners were discharged. As there was no
chance for employment in the neighborhood, the workmen
begged the company to turn over the pit to them, and as the
owners did not believe that the pit could be made to pay,
they consented. The miners had no machinery, but they
worked with a will and managed to find new veins. They
made almost superhuman efforts and managed to save
enough of their earnings to purchase machinery, and the
discarded mines of Monthieux became a source of wealth
to the new owners. The former owners then endeavored to
regain possession, but lost their suit, and the labor press did
not fail to contrast the avarice of the capitalists with the
nobility of the miners who shared alike the proceeds of their
labor. The mines of Monthieux were pointed out as an instance
of the triumph of Collectivism over the exploitation
of private capital.
"'Meanwhile the miners extended their operations until
they could no longer do all the work without help. Other
miners were called in, and did their best to further the work.
But the men who had first undertaken to make the pit a
paying one refused to share alike with the newcomers. They
knew that the wealth which lay beneath their feet had been
[D490]
discovered by them with almost superhuman efforts; they
had, so to speak, made something out of nothing, why
should they share the results of their labors with the newcomers,
who had, indeed, worked all this time, but elsewhere?
Why should they give to the new comrades of the
harvest they had not planted? The newcomers should be
paid well, better than in other mines, but they should not
become joint owners. And when the newcomers created a
disturbance, the 'capitalistic' workingmen fetched police
and had them thrown out of their council room.'"
Nationalism as a Remedy
Nationalism is a later development of theory along the
lines of socialism. It claims that all industries should be conducted
by the nation, on the basis of common obligation to
work and a general guarantee of livelihood; all workers to
do the same amount of work, and to get the same wages.
Nationalists claim that--
"The combinations, trusts and syndicates, of which the
people at present complain, demonstrate the practicability
of our basic principle of association. We merely seek to push
this principle a little further and have all industries operated
in the interest of all, by the nation--the people organized
--the organic unity of the whole people.
"The present industrial system proves itself wrong by the
immense wrongs it produces; it proves itself absurd by the
immense waste of energy and material which is admitted to
be its concomitant. Against this system we raise our protest:
for the abolition of the slavery it has wrought and would
perpetuate, we pledge our best efforts."
Some favorable points, common to both, we have mentioned
favorably under the caption "Socialism or Collectivism
as a remedy"; as a whole, however, Nationalism is
quite impracticable; the objections to it being in general
the same that we urged foregoing against Communism. Although
Nationalism does not, like Communism, directly
threaten the destruction of the family, its tendency would
[D491]
surely be in that direction. Among its advocates are many
broadminded, philanthropic souls, some of whom have
helped, without hope of personal advantage, to found colonies
where the principles of Nationalism were to be
worked out as public examples. Some of these have been utter
failures, and even the practically successful have been
forced to ignore Nationalist principles in dealing with the
world outside their colonies: and, as might be expected,
they have all had considerable internal friction. If, with
"one Lord, one faith and one baptism" God's saints find it
difficult to "preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of
peace," and need to be exhorted to forbear one another in
love; how could it be expected that mixed companies,
claiming no such spirit as a bond, could succeed in vanquishing
the selfish spirit of the world, the flesh and the
devil?
Several colonies on this Nationalist plan have started
and failed within the past few years, in the United States.
One of the most noted failures is that known as the Altruria
Colony, of California, founded by Rev. E. B. Payne, on the
theory "One for all and all for one." It had many advantages
over other colonies in that it picked out its members,
and did not accept all sorts. Moreover, it had a Lodge form
of government of very thorough control. Its founder, giving
the reasons for the failure, in the San Francisco Examiner,
Dec. 10, 1896, said:
"Altruria was not a complete failure;...we demonstrated
that trust, good will and sincerity--which prevailed
for a part of the time--made a happy community life, and
on the other side, that suspicion, envy and selfish motives
diabolize human nature and make life not worth while....
We did not continue to trust and consider one another as we
did at first, but fell back into the ways of the rest of the
world."
What some people demonstrate by experience others
know by inductive reasoning, based upon knowledge of human
[D492]
nature. Any one wanting a lesson on the futility of
hope from such a quarter while selfishness still controls the
hearts of men, can get his experience cheaply by boarding
for a week each at three or four second-class "boarding
houses."
General Education of Mechanics a Remedy
In The Forum some years ago an article appeared by Mr.
Henry Holt, in which he endeavored to show that education
should be largely industrial, to fit a mechanic to readily
turn from one employment to another--he should "learn
a dozen" trades. While this might for a time help a few individuals,
it is manifest that such a measure would not solve
the problem. It is bad enough as it is, when plasterers and
bricklayers may be busy while shoemakers and weavers are
idle; but what would be the effect if the latter also understood
bricklaying and plastering? It would multiply competition
in every trade, if all the unemployed could compete
for the busy jobs. The gentleman, however, deals well
with two comprehensive truths, respecting which education
is needed. He said:
"The simpler of these truths is the inevitable, even if
cruel--the necessity of Natural Selection. I do not say it's
justice. Nature knows nothing of justice. Her machinery
pounds remorselessly along in a set of hard conditions, but,
after all, pounds out of those conditions the best they will
yield. True, she has evolved in us intelligences to slightly direct
her course; and it is in using them the function of justice
comes up. But we can direct her only in channels fitted
to her own currents: otherwise we are overwhelmed. Now,
no one of her courses is broader and more clearly marked
than that of Natural Selection, and in the exercise of our
little liberties and suffrages, we are never so wise as when we
fall in with it--when, for example, we raise a Lincoln from
his cabin. But so far, we are vastly more apt to prefer the
demagogue, and then we suffer. Socialism proposes to extend
[D493]
the danger of this suffering into the field of production.
The captains of industry are now chosen purely by
natural selection--at least with a very moderate abnormality
in the action of heredity, which rapidly cures itself:
if the son does not inherit fitness, he soon ceases to survive.
But with increasing freedom of competition, and increasing
facilities for able men without capital, to hire it, it is substantially
true that industry is at present directed by Natural
Selection. For this, the Socialist proposes to substitute
artificial selection, and that by popular vote. A general
knowledge of the superiority of Nature's way would cure
this madness.
"The other truth so difficult to impart clearly, but not
impossible to give some conception of, is the more important.
It is difficult, not so much because it calls for some
preliminary education, as because dogma has been fighting
it for thousands of years, and fights it still. To most who
read this, every one of these assertions will probably appear
strange, when the truth is named in the familiar phraseology
--The Universal Reign of Law. Yet it is the fact that
hosts of men who think they believe in it, pray every day
that it may not be--that exceptions may be made in their
cases. People generally--and legislators generally--in a matter
of physiology, would send for a doctor; or in a matter
of machinery, for an engineer; or in chemistry, for a chemist;
and would follow his opinion with childlike faith; but in
economics they want no opinions but their own. They have
no idea that such matters are, like physical matters, under
the control of natural laws--that to find those laws, or learn
those already found, requires special study; and that to go
counter to them, in ignorance, must bring disaster as fatal
as in perversity...
"The workingman needs, then, not only instruction in
the trade-school and in certain economic facts, but the kind
of instruction in science and history that will give him some
conception of Natural Law. On the basis thus provided
could be built some notion of its control in the social as well
as in the material world; and also some realization that human
law is futile, or worse, except as, by close study and
[D494]
cautious experiment, it is made to conform to the Natural
Law. Hence would come the faith that no human law could
make the unfit survive, except at somebody else's expense;
and that the only way to enable them to survive at their
own, is to make them fit."
Yes, it is well that all should learn that these two laws
control in our present social system, and that it is not in the
power of man to change nature or nature's laws; and hence
that it is impossible for him to do more than tinker present
social conditions, and temporarily improve them a little.
The new and more desirable laws necessary to the perfect,
the ideal society, will require supernatural powers for their
introduction. Learning this lesson will help to bring (instead
of a discontent which aggravates itself) "godliness
with contentment," while waiting for the Kingdom of God
and praying, "Thy Kingdom come; thy will be done on
earth as in heaven."
The Single Tax Remedy
Doubtless because he saw the effects of Communism and
Nationalism and Socialism, as pointed out above, Mr.
Henry George devised a scheme of some merit, known as
the "Single Tax Theory." This may be said to be the reverse
of Socialism in some respects. It is Individualism in many important
features. It leaves the individual to the resources of
his own character, efforts and environment; except that it
would preserve to each an inalienable right to share, as the
common blessings of the Creator--air, water and land. It
proposes very little direct alteration of the present social
system. Claiming that the present inequalities of fortune, so
far as they are oppressive and injurious, are wholly the results
of private ownership of the land, this theory proposes
that all lands become once more the property of Adam's
race as a whole; and claims that thus the evils of our present
social system would speedily right themselves. It proposes
[D495]
that this re-distribution of the land shall be accomplished,
not by dividing it proportionately among the human family,
but by considering it all as one vast estate, and permitting
each person as a tenant to use as much as he may
choose of what he now possesses, and to collect a land-tax or
rental from each occupant proportional to the value of
the land (aside from the value of the buildings or other improvements
thereon). Thus a vacant lot would be assessed
as heavy a rental or tax as an adjoining lot, built upon, and
the untilled field as much as the adjoining fruitful one. The
tax thus raised would constitute a fund for every purpose
for the general welfare--for schools, streets, roads, water,
etc., and for local and general government; hence the name
of the theory, "Single Tax."
The effect would of course be to open to actual settlement
thousands of town lots and barren fields now held for speculative
purposes; because all taxes being consolidated into
one, and being removed from cattle, machinery, business
and improvements of every kind, and all concentrated
upon the land would make the land-tax quite an item;
graduated, however, so as to show no favoritism, poor farm
lands or remote from transportation being taxed less in proportion
than better lands, and those nearer to transportation.
City lots similarly would be assessed according to
value, location and surroundings considered.
Such a law, made to become operative ten years after its
passage, would have the immediate effect of reducing real
estate values, and by the time it would become operative
millions of acres and thousands of town-lots would be open
to any one who could make use of them and pay the assessed
rents. Mr. Henry George took advantage of the fact
that Pope Leo XIII issued an Encyclical on Labor, to publish
a pamphlet in reply, entitled, "An Open Letter to Pope
Leo XIII," etc. As it contains some good thoughts along
the lines of our topic and besides is a further statement of
[D496]
the theory under discussion, we make liberal extracts as
follows:
An Extract from an Open Letter
by Mr. Henry George to Pope Leo XIII, in Answer
to the Latter's Encyclical on the
Perplexing Labor Question.
"It seems to us that your Holiness misses its real significance
in intimating that Christ, in becoming the son of a
carpenter and himself working as a carpenter, showed
merely that 'there is nothing to be ashamed of in seeking
one's bread by labor.' To say that is almost like saying that
by not robbing people he showed that there is nothing to be
ashamed of in honesty. If you will consider how true in any
large view is the classification of all men into workingmen,
beggarmen and thieves, you will see that it was morally impossible
that Christ, during his stay on earth, should have
been anything else than a workingman, since he who came
to fulfil the law must by deed as well as word obey God's
law of labor.
"See how fully and how beautifully Christ's life on earth
illustrated this law. Entering our earthly life in the weakness
of infancy, as it is appointed that all should enter it, He
lovingly took what in the natural order is lovingly rendered,
the sustenance, secured by labor, that one generation
owes to its immediate successors. Arrived at maturity he
earned his own subsistence by that common labor in which
the majority of men must and do earn it. Then passing to a
higher--to the very highest--sphere of labor, he earned his
subsistence by the teaching of moral and spiritual truths,
receiving its material wages in the love offerings of grateful
hearers, and not refusing the costly spikenard with which
Mary anointed his feet. So, when he chose his disciples, he
did not go to land owners or other monopolists who live on
the labor of others, but to common laboring men. And
when he called them to a higher sphere of labor and sent
them out to teach moral and spiritual truths, he told them
to take, without condescension on the one hand, or sense of
degradation on the other, the loving return for such labor,
[D497]
saying to them that the 'laborer is worthy of his hire,' thus
showing, what we hold, that all labor does not consist in
what is called manual labor, but that whoever helps to add
to the material, intellectual, moral or spiritual fulness of life
is also a laborer.*
*"Nor should it be forgotten that the investigator, the philosopher, the
teacher, the artist, the poet, the priest, though not engaged in the production
of wealth, are not only engaged in the production of utilities and
satisfactions to which the production of wealth is only a means, but by
acquiring and diffusing knowledge, stimulating mental powers and elevating
the moral sense, may greatly increase the ability to produce
wealth. For man does not live by bread alone...He who by any exertion
of mind or body adds to the aggregate of enjoyable wealth increases
the sum of human knowledge, or gives to human life higher elevation or
greater fulness--he is, in the large meaning of the words, a 'producer,' a
'working man,' a 'laborer,' and is honestly earning honest wages. But
he who without doing aught to make mankind richer, wiser, better, happier,
lives on the toil of others--he, no matter by what name of honor he
may be called, or how lustily the priests of Mammon may swing their
censers before him, is in the last analysis but a beggarman or a thief."
"In assuming that laborers, even ordinary manual laborers,
are naturally poor, you ignore the fact that labor is the
producer of wealth, and attribute to the natural law of the
Creator an injustice that comes from man's impious violation
of his benevolent intention. In the rudest state of the
arts it is possible, where justice prevails, for all well men to
earn a living. With the labor-saving appliances of our time
it should be possible for all to earn much more. And so, in
saying that poverty is no disgrace, you convey an unreasonable
implication. For poverty ought to be a disgrace, because
in a condition of social justice, it would, where unimposed
by unavoidable misfortune, imply recklessness or laziness.
"The sympathy of your Holiness seems exclusively directed
to the poor, the workers. Ought this to be so? Are not
rich idlers to be pitied also? By the word of the Gospel it is
the rich rather than the poor who call for pity. And to any
one who believes in a future life, the condition of him who
wakes to find his cherished millions left behind must seem
pitiful. But even in this life, how really pitiable are the rich.
The evil is not in wealth in itself--in its command over material
[D498]
things; it is in the possession of wealth while others are
steeped in poverty; in being raised above touch with the life
of humanity, from its work and its struggles, its hopes and
its fears, and above all, from the love that sweetens life, and
the kindly sympathies and generous acts that strengthen
faith in man and trust in God. Consider how the rich see the
meaner side of human nature; how they are surrounded by
flatterers and sycophants; how they find ready instruments
not only to gratify vicious impulses, but to prompt and
stimulate them; how they must constantly be on guard lest
they be swindled; how often they must suspect an ulterior
motive behind kindly deed or friendly word; how if they try
to be generous they are beset by shameless beggars and
scheming impostors; how often the family affections are
chilled for them, and their deaths anticipated with the ill-concealed
joy of expectant possession. The worst evil of
poverty is not in the want of material things, but in the
stunting and distortion of the higher qualities. So, though
in another way, the possession of unearned wealth likewise
stunts and distorts what is noblest in man.
"God's commands cannot be evaded with impunity. If it
be God's command that men shall earn their bread by labor,
the idle rich must suffer. And they do. See the utter vacancy
of the lives of those who live for pleasure; see the
loathsome vices bred in a class who, surrounded by poverty,
are sated with wealth. See that terrible punishment of ennui
of which the poor know so little that they cannot understand
it; see the pessimism that grows among the wealthy
classes--that shuts out God, that despises men, that deems
existence in itself an evil, and fearing death yet longs for
annihilation.
"When Christ told the rich young man who sought him
to sell all he had and to give it to the poor, he was not thinking
of the poor, but of the young man. And I doubt not that
among the rich, and especially among the self-made rich,
there are many who at times, at least, feel keenly the folly of
their riches and fear for the dangers and temptations to
which these expose their children. But the strength of long
habit, the promptings of pride, the excitement of making
and holding what has become for them the counters in a
game of cards, the family expectations that have assumed
[D499]
the character of rights, and the real difficulty they find in
making any good use of their wealth, bind them to their
burden, like a weary donkey to his pack, till they stumble
on the precipice that bounds this life.
"Men who are sure of getting food when they shall need
it eat only what appetite dictates. But with the sparse tribes
who exist on the verge of the habitable globe, life is either a
famine or a feast. Enduring hunger for days, the fear of it
prompts them to gorge like anacondas when successful in
their quest of game. And so, what gives wealth its curse is
what drives men to seek it, what makes it so envied and admired
--the fear of want. As the unduly rich are the corollary
of the unduly poor, so is the soul-destroying quality of
riches but the reflex of the want that imbrutes and degrades.
The real evil lies in the injustice from which unnatural
possession and unnatural deprivation both spring.
"But this injustice can hardly be charged on individuals
or classes. The existence of private property in land is a
great social wrong from which society at large suffers, and
of which the very rich and the very poor are alike victims,
though at the opposite extremes. Seeing this, it seems to us
like a violation of Christian charity to speak of the rich as
though they individually were responsible for the sufferings
of the poor. Yet, while you do this, you insist that the cause of
monstrous wealth and degrading poverty shall not be
touched. Here is a man with a disfiguring and dangerous
excrescence. One physician would kindly, gently, but
firmly remove it. Another insists that it shall not be removed,
but at the same time holds up the poor victim to
hatred and ridicule. Which is right?
"In seeking to restore all men to their equal and natural
rights we do not seek the benefit of any class, but of all. For
we both know by faith and see by fact that injustice can
profit no one and that justice must benefit all.
"Nor do we seek any 'futile and ridiculous equality.'...
The equality we would bring about is not the equality of
fortune, but the equality of natural opportunity...
"And in taking for the uses of society what we clearly see
is the great fund intended for society in the divine order, we
would not levy the slightest tax on the possessors of wealth,
no matter how rich they might be. Not only do we deem
[D500]
such taxes a violation of the right of property, but we see
that by virtue of beautiful adaptations in the economic
laws of the Creator it is impossible for any one honestly to
acquire wealth, without at the same time adding to the
wealth of the world...
"Your Holiness in the Encyclical gives an example of
this. Denying the equality of right to the material basis of
life, and yet conscious that there is a right to live, you assert
the right of laborers to employment, and their right to receive
from their employers a certain indefinite wage. No
such rights exist. No one has a right to demand employment
of another, or to demand higher wages than the other
is willing to give, or in any way to put pressure on another
to make him raise such wages against his will. There can be
no better moral justification for such demands on employers
by workingmen than there would be for employers to
demand that workingmen shall be compelled to work for
them when they do not want to and to accept wages lower
than they are willing to take. Any seeming justification
springs from a prior wrong, the denial to workingmen of
their natural rights...
"Christ justified David, who when pressed by hunger
committed what ordinarily would be sacrilege, by taking
from the temple the loaves of proposition. But in this he was
far from saying that the robbing of temples was a proper
way of getting a living.
"In the Encyclical, however, you commend the application
to the ordinary relations of life, under normal conditions,
of principles that in ethics are only to be tolerated
under extraordinary conditions. You are driven to this assertion
of false rights by your denial of true rights. The natural
right which each man has is not that of demanding
employment or wages from another man; but that of employing
himself--that of applying by his own labor to the
inexhaustible storehouse which the Creator has in the land
provided for all men. Were that storehouse open, as by the
single tax we would open it, the natural demand for labor
would keep pace with the supply, the man who sold labor
and the man who bought it would become free exchangers
for mutual advantage, and all cause for dispute between
workman and employer would be gone. For then, all being
[D501]
free to employ themselves, the mere opportunity to labor
would cease to seem a boon; and since no one would work
for another for less, all things considered, than he could
earn by working for himself, wages would necessarily rise to
their full value, and the relations of workman and employer
be regulated by mutual interest and convenience.
"This is the only way in which they can be satisfactorily
regulated.
"Your Holiness seems to assume that there is some just
rate of wages that employers ought to be willing to pay and
that laborers should be content to receive, and to imagine
that if this were secured there would be an end of strife.
This rate you evidently think of as that which will give
workingmen a frugal living, and perhaps enable them by
hard work and strict economy to lay by a little something.
"But how can a just rate of wages be fixed without the
'higgling of the market' any more than the just price of corn
or pigs or ships or paintings can be so fixed? And would not
arbitrary regulation in the one case as in the other check
that interplay that most effectively promotes the economical
adjustment of productive forces? Why should buyers of
labor any more than buyers of commodities, be called on to
pay higher prices than in a free market they are compelled
to pay? Why should the sellers of labor be content with anything
less than in a free market they can obtain? Why
should workingmen be content with frugal fare when the
world is so rich? Why should they be satisfied with a lifetime
of toil and stinting, when the world is so bountiful?
Why should not they also desire to gratify the higher instincts,
the finer tastes? Why should they be forever content
to travel in the steerage when others find the cabin more
enjoyable?
"Nor will they. The ferment of our time does not arise
merely from the fact that workingmen find it harder to live
on the same scale of comfort. It is also, and perhaps still
more largely, due to the increase of their desires with an improved
scale of comfort. This increase of desire must continue;
for workingmen are men, and man is the unsatisfied
animal.
"He is not an ox, of whom it may be said, so much grass,
so much grain, so much water, and a little salt, and he will
[D502]
be content. On the contrary, the more man gets the more he
craves. When he has enough food, then he wants better
food. When he gets a shelter, then he wants a more commodious
and tasty one. When his animal needs are satisfied,
then mental and spiritual desires arise.
"This restless discontent is of the nature of man--of that
nobler nature that raises him above the animals by so immeasurable
a gulf, and shows him to be indeed created in
the likeness of God. It is not to be quarreled with, for it is the
motor of all progress. It is this that has raised St. Peter's
dome, and on dull, dead canvas made the angelic face of
the Madonna to glow; it is this that has weighed suns and
analyzed stars, and opened page after page of the wonderful
works of creative intelligence; it is this that has narrowed
the Atlantic to an ocean ferry and trained the
lightning to carry our messages to the remotest lands; it is
this that is opening to us possibilities beside which all that
our modern civilization has as yet accomplished seem
small. Nor can it be repressed save by degrading and imbruting
men; by reducing Europe to Asia.
"Hence, short of what wages may be earned when all restrictions
on labor are removed, and access to natural opportunities
on equal terms secured to all, it is impossible to
fix any rate of wages that will be deemed just, or any rate of
wages that can prevent workingmen striving to get more.
So far from it making workingmen more contented to improve
their condition a little, it is certain to make them
more discontented.
"Nor are you asking justice when you ask employers to
pay their workingmen more than they are compelled to
pay--more than they could get others to do the work for.
You are asking charity. For the surplus that the rich employer
thus gives is not in reality wages, it is essentially
alms.
"In speaking of the practical measures for the improvement
of the condition of labor which your Holiness suggests,
I have not mentioned what you place much stress
upon--charity. But there is nothing practical in such recommendations
as a cure for poverty, nor will any one so
consider them. If it were possible for the giving of alms to
abolish poverty there would be no poverty in Christendom.
[D503]
"Charity is indeed a noble and beautiful virtue, grateful
to man and approved by God. But charity must be built on
justice. It cannot supersede justice.
"What is wrong in the condition of labor through the
Christian world is that labor is robbed. And while you justify
the continuance of that robbery it is idle to urge charity.
To do so--to commend charity as a substitute for
justice, is indeed something akin in essence to those heresies,
condemned by your predecessors, that taught that the gospel
had superseded the law, and that the love of God
exempted men from moral obligations.
"All that charity can do where injustice exists is here and
there to somewhat mollify the effects of injustice. It cannot
cure them. Nor is even what little it can do to mollify the
effects of injustice without evil. For what may be called the
superimposed, as in this sense, secondary virtues, work evil
where the fundamental or primary virtues are absent. Thus
sobriety is a virtue, and diligence is a virtue. But a sober
and diligent thief is all the more dangerous. Thus patience
is a virtue. But patience under wrong is the condoning of
wrong. Thus it is a virtue to seek knowledge and to endeavor
to cultivate the mental powers. But the wicked man
becomes more capable of evil by reason of his intelligence.
Devils we always think of as intelligent.
"And thus that pseudo charity that discards and denies
justice works evil. On the one side it demoralizes its recipients,
outraging that human dignity, which, as you say,
'God himself treats with reverence,' and turning into beggars
and paupers men who, to become self-supporting, self-respecting
citizens, only need the restitution of what God
has given them. On the other side it acts as an anodyne to
the consciences of those who are living on the robbery of
their fellows, and fosters that moral delusion and spiritual
pride that Christ doubtless had in mind when he said it was
easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than
for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. For it leads
men, steeped in injustice, and using their money and their
influence to bolster up injustice, to think that in giving alms
they are doing something more than their duty towards
man and deserve to be very well thought of by God, and in
a vague way to attribute to their own goodness what really
[D504]
belongs to God's goodness. For consider: Who is the All-provider?
Who is it that as you say, 'owes to man a storehouse
that shall never fail,' and which 'he finds only in the
inexhaustible fertility of the earth.' Is it not God? And
when, therefore, men, deprived of the bounty of their God,
are made dependent on the bounty of their fellow-creatures,
are not these creatures, as it were, put in the place of
God, to take credit to themselves for paying obligations
that you yourself say God owes?
"But worse, perhaps, than all else is the way in which this
substituting of vague injunctions to charity for the clear-cut
demands of justice opens an easy means for the professed
teachers of the Christian religion of all branches and communions
to placate Mammon while persuading themselves
that they are serving God...
"No, your Holiness, as faith without works is dead, as
men cannot give to God his due while denying to their fellows
the rights he gave them, so charity, unsupported by
justice, can do nothing to solve the problem of the existing
condition of labor. Though the rich were to 'bestow all their
goods to feed the poor and give their bodies to be burned,'
poverty would continue while property in land continues.
"Take the case of the rich man today who is honestly desirous
of devoting his wealth to the improvement of the
condition of labor. What can he do?
"Bestow his wealth on those who need it? He may help
some who deserve it, but he will not improve general conditions.
And against the good he may do will be the danger of
doing harm.
"Build churches? Under the shadow of churches poverty
festers, and the vice that is born of it breeds.
"Build schools and colleges? Save as it may lead men to
see the iniquity of private property in land, increased education
can effect nothing for mere laborers, for as education
is diffused the wages of education sink.
"Establish hospitals? Why, already it seems to laborers
that there are too many seeking work, and to save and prolong
life is to add to the pressure.
"Build model tenements? Unless he cheapens house accommodations
he but drives further the class he would benefit,
[D505]
and as he cheapens house accommodations he brings
more to seek employment and cheapens wages.
"Institute laboratories, scientific schools, workshops for
physical experiments? He but stimulates invention and discovery,
the very forces that, acting on a society based on
private property in land, are crushing labor as between the
upper and the nether millstone.
"Promote emigration from places where wages are low to
places where they are somewhat higher? If he does, even
those whom he at first helps to emigrate will soon turn on
him to demand that such emigration shall be stopped, as it
is reducing their wages.
"Give away what land he may have, or refuse to take rent
for it, or let it at lower rents than the market price? He will
simply make new land owners or partial land owners; he
may make some individuals the richer, but he will do nothing
to improve the general condition of labor.
"Or bethinking himself of those public-spirited citizens
of classic times who spent great sums in improving their native
cities, shall he try to beautify the city of his birth or
adoption? Let him widen and straighten narrow and
crooked streets, let him build parks and erect fountains, let
him open tramways and bring in railroads, or in any way
make beautiful and attractive his chosen city, and what
will be the result? Must it not be those who appropriate
God's bounty will take his also? Will it not be that the value
of land will go up, and that the net result of his benefactions
will be an increase of rents and a bounty to land owners?
Why, even the mere announcement that he is going to do
such things will start speculation and send up the value of
land by leaps and bounds.
"What, then, can the rich man do to improve the condition
of labor?
"He can do nothing at all except to use his strength for
the abolition of the great primary wrong that robs men of
their birthright. The justice of God laughs at the attempts
of men to substitute anything else for it."
* * *
"While within narrow lines trades unionism promotes
the idea of the mutuality of interests, and often helps to
[D506]
raise courage and further political education, and while it
has enabled limited bodies of workingmen to improve
somewhat their condition, and gain, as it were, breathing
space, yet it takes no note of the general causes that determine
the conditions of labor, and strives for the elevation of
only a small part of the great body by means that cannot
help the rest. Aiming at the restriction of competition--the
limitation of the right to labor, its methods are like those of
an army, which even in a righteous cause are subversive of
liberty and liable to abuse, while its weapon, the strike, is
destructive in its nature, both to combatants and non-combatants,
being a form of passive war. To apply the principle
of trades unions to all industry, as some dream of doing,
would be to enthrall men in a caste system.
"Or take even such moderate measures as the limitation
of working hours and of the labor of women and children.
They are superficial in looking no further than to the eagerness
of men and women and little children to work unduly,
and in proposing forcibly to restrain overwork while utterly
ignoring its cause, the sting of poverty that forces human
beings to it. And the methods by which these restraints
must be enforced, multiply officials, interfere with personal
liberty, tend to corruption and are liable to abuse.
"As for thorough going socialism, which is the more to be
honored as having the courage of its convictions, it would
carry these vices to full expression. Jumping to conclusions
without effort to discover causes, it fails to see that oppression
does not come from the nature of capital, but from the
wrong that robs labor of capital by divorcing it from land,
and that creates a fictitious capital that is really capitalized
monopoly. It fails to see that it would be impossible for capital
to oppress labor were labor free to the natural material
of production; that the wage system in itself springs from
mutual convenience, being a form of cooperation in which
one of the parties prefers a certain to a contingent result;
and that what it calls the 'iron law of wages' is not the natural
law of wages, but only the law of wages in that unnatural
condition in which men are made helpless by being
deprived of the material for life and work. It fails to see that
what it mistakes for the evils of competition are really the
evils of restricted competition--are due to a one-sided competition
[D507]
to which men are forced when deprived of land;
while its methods, the organization of men into industrial
armies, the direction and control of all production and
exchange by governmental or semi-governmental bureaus,
would, if carried to full expression, mean Egyptian
despotism.
"We differ from the Socialists in our diagnosis of the evil,
and we differ from them as to remedies. We have no fear of
capital, regarding it as the natural handmaiden of labor;
we look on interest in itself as natural and just; we would
set no limit to accumulation, nor impose on the rich any
burden that is not equally placed on the poor; we see no evil
in competition, but deem unrestricted competition to be as
necessary to the health of the industrial and social organism
as the free circulation of the blood is to the health of the
bodily organism--to be the agency whereby the fullest cooperation
is to be secured. We would simply take for the
community what belongs to the community; the value that
attaches to land by the growth of the community; leave sacredly
to the individual all that belongs to the individual;
and, treating necessary monopolies as functions of the state,
abolish all restrictions and prohibitions save those required
for public health, safety, morals and convenience.
"But the fundamental difference--the difference I ask
your Holiness specially to note, is in this: Socialism in all its
phases looks on the evils of our civilization as springing
from the inadequacy or inharmony of natural relations,
which must be artificially organized or improved. In its
idea there devolves on the state the necessity of intelligently
organizing the industrial relations of men; the construction,
as it were, of a great machine whose complicated parts
shall properly work together under the direction of human
intelligence. This is the reason why socialism tends toward
atheism. Failing to see the order and symmetry of natural
law, it fails to recognize God.
"On the other hand, we who call ourselves Single Tax
Men (a name which expresses merely our practical propositions)
see in the social and industrial relations of men not a
machine which requires construction, but an organism
which needs only to be suffered to grow. We see in the natural,
social and industrial laws such harmony as we see in the
[D508]
adjustments of the human body, and that as far transcends
the power of man's intelligence to order and direct as it is
beyond man's intelligence to order and direct the vital
movements of his frame. We see in these social and industrial
laws so close a relation to the moral law as must spring
from the same Authorship, and that proves the moral law
to be the sure guide of man, where his intelligence would
wander and go astray. Thus, to us, all that is needed to remedy
the evils of our time is to do justice and give freedom.
This is the reason why our beliefs tend towards, nay, are indeed
the only beliefs consistent with a firm and reverent
faith in God, and with the recognition of his law as the supreme
law which men must follow if they would secure
prosperity and avoid destruction. This is the reason why to
us political economy only serves to show the depth of wisdom
in the simple truths which common people heard from
the lips of Him of whom it was said with wonder, 'Is not this
the Carpenter of Nazareth?'
"And it is because that in what we propose--the securing
to all men of equal natural opportunities for the exercise of
their powers and the removal of all legal restriction on the
legitimate exercise of those powers--we see the conformation
of human law to the moral law, that we hold
with confidence, not merely that this is the sufficient remedy
for all the evils you so strikingly portray, but that it is
the only possible remedy.
"Nor is there any other. The organization of man is such,
his relations to the world in which he is placed are such--
that is to say, the immutable laws of God are such--that it is
beyond the power of human ingenuity to devise any way
by which the evils born of the injustice that robs men of
their birthright can be removed otherwise than by doing
justice, by opening to all the bounty that God has provided
for all.
"Since man can only live on land and from land, since
land is the reservoir of matter and force from which man's
body itself is taken, and on which he must draw for all that
he can produce, does it not irresistibly follow that to give
the land in ownership to some men and to deny to others all
right to it is to divide mankind into the rich and the poor,
the privileged and the helpless? Does it not follow that
[D509]
those who have no rights to the use of land can live only by
selling their power to labor to those who own the land?
Does it not follow that what the Socialists call 'the iron law
of wages,' what the political economists term 'the tendency
of wages to a minimum,' must take from the landless masses
--the mere laborers, who of themselves have no power to
use their labor--all the benefits of any possible advance or
improvement that does not alter this unjust division of
land? For, having no power to employ themselves, they
must, either as labor-sellers or land-renters, compete with
one another for permission to labor. This competition with
one another of men, shut out from God's inexhaustible
storehouse, has no limit but starvation, and must ultimately
force wages to their lowest point, the point at which
life can just be maintained and reproduction carried on.
"This is not to say that all wages must fall to this point,
but that the wages of that necessarily largest stratum of laborers
who have only ordinary knowledge, skill and aptitude
must so fall. The wages of special classes, who are
fenced off from competition by peculiar knowledge, skill or
other causes, may remain above that ordinary level. Thus,
where the ability to read and write is rare, its possession enables
a man to obtain higher wages than the ordinary laborer.
But as the diffusion of education makes the ability to
read and write general, this advantage is lost. So, when a
vocation requires special training or skill, or is made difficult
of access by artificial restrictions, the checking of competition
tends to keep wages in it at a higher level. But as
the progress of invention dispenses with peculiar skill, or artificial
restrictions are broken down, these higher wages
sink to the ordinary level. And so, it is only so long as they
are special that such qualities as industry, prudence and
thrift can enable the ordinary laborer to maintain a condition
above that which gives a mere living. Where they become
general, the law of competition must reduce the
earnings or savings of such qualities to the general level--
which, land being monopolized and labor helpless, can be
only that at which the next lowest point is the cessation of
life.
"Or, to state the same thing in another way: land being
necessary to life and labor, its owners will be able, in return
[D510]
for permission to use it, to obtain from mere laborers all
that labor can produce, save enough to enable such of them
to maintain life as are wanted by the land-owners and their
dependents.
"Thus, where private property in land has divided society
into a land-owning class and a landless class, there is
no possible invention or improvement, whether it be industrial,
social or moral, which, so long as it does not affect the
ownership of land, can prevent poverty or relieve the general
condition of mere laborers. For whether the effect of
any invention or improvement be to increase what labor
can produce or to decrease what is required to support the
laborer, it can, so soon as it becomes general, result only in
increasing the income of the owners of land, without at all
benefiting the mere laborers. In no events can those possessed
of the mere ordinary power to labor, a power utterly
useless without the means necessary to labor, keep more of
their earnings than enough to enable them to live.
"How true this is we may see in the facts of today. In our
own time invention and discovery have enormously increased
the productive power of labor, and at the same time
greatly reduced the cost of many things necessary to the
support of the laborer. Have these improvements anywhere
raised the earnings of the mere laborer? Have not their benefits
mainly gone to the owners of land--enormously increased
land values?
"I say mainly, for some part of the benefit has gone to the
cost of monstrous standing armies and warlike preparations;
to the payment of interest on great public debts; and,
largely disguised as interest on fictitious capital, to the owners
of monopolies other than that of land. But improvements
that would do away with these wastes would not
benefit labor; they would simply increase the profits of land
owners. Were standing armies and all their incidents abolished,
were all monopolies other than that of land done
away with, were governments to become models of economy,
were the profits of speculators, of middlemen, of all
sorts of exchangers saved, were every one to become so
strictly honest that no policemen, no courts, no prisons, no
precautions against dishonesty would be needed--the result
[D511]
would not differ from that which has followed the increase
of productive power.
"Nay, would not these very blessings bring starvation to
many of those who now manage to live? Is it not true, that if
there were proposed today, what all Christian men ought to
pray for, the complete disbandment of all the armies of Europe,
the greatest fears would be aroused for the consequences
of throwing on the labor market so many
unemployed laborers?
"The explanation of this and of similar paradoxes that in
our time perplex on every side may be easily seen. The effect
of all inventions and improvements that increase productive
power, that save waste and economize effort, is to
lessen the labor required for a given result, and thus to save
labor, so that we speak of them as labor-saving inventions
or improvements. Now, in a natural state of society where
the rights of all to the use of the earth are acknowledged,
labor-saving improvements might go to the very utmost
that can be imagined without lessening the demand for
men, since in such natural conditions the demand for men
lies in their own enjoyment of life and the strong instincts
that the Creator has implanted in the human breast. But in
that unnatural state of society where the masses of men are
disinherited of all but the power to labor when opportunity
to labor is given them by others, there the demand for them
becomes simply the demand for their services by those who
hold this opportunity, and man himself becomes a commodity.
Hence, although the natural effect of labor-saving
improvement is to increase wages, yet in the unnatural condition
which private ownership of the land begets, the effect,
even of such moral improvements as the disbandment
of armies and the saving of the labor that vice entails, is by
lessening the commercial demand, to lower wages and reduce
mere laborers to starvation or pauperism. If labor-saving
inventions and improvements could be carried to the
very abolition of the necessity for labor, what would be the
result? Would it not be that land owners could then get all
the wealth the land is capable of producing, and would
have no need at all for laborers, who must then either starve
or live as pensioners on the bounty of the land owners?
[D512]
"Thus, so long as private property in land continues--so
long as some men are treated as owners of the earth and
other men can live on it only by their sufferance--human
wisdom can devise no means by which the evils of our present
condition may be avoided."
This theory of free land (except for taxes thereon) is a
broad and a just theory which we would be pleased to see
put into operation at once, although we would not profit by
it personally. It would doubtless prove a temporary relief to
society, although its destruction of land values would create
as much or more of a shock than Socialism proposes, unless
graduated, as above suggested, by previous announcement.
It would readily combine with the more moderate features
of Socialism and would give them greater lasting quality;
because, the land, one source of wealth, being in the hands
of all the people on such conditions, it never would be necessary
for healthy, industrious people to starve: all could at
least grow crops sufficient to feed themselves. While this, we
believe, would be a wise and just measure, and one in accordance
with the divine law, as very ably shown by Mr.
George, yet it would not be the panacea for all the ills of
humanity. The groaning creation would still groan until
righteousness and truth are fully established in the earth
and all hearts are brought into accord with it, and selfishness
would still find opportunity to take all the cream,
and leave only enough skimmed milk for the barest necessities
of others.
As a proof that a single tax upon land would not alone
meet the exigencies of the social and financial trouble, nor
avert the coming disaster and social wreck, we cite an instance
of its marked failure. India, for long centuries, has
had a single tax, a land-tax only--the soil being held in
common and operated under village control. As a result
about two-thirds of its population are agriculturalists--a
larger proportion than with any other people in the world.
[D513]
Only of late years has private ownership of land been introduced
there by the English, and thus far over a very limited
area only. The people of India may be said to be
contented and comfortable; but it certainly is not because they
are rich and supplied with luxuries and conveniences.
Modern machinery is speedily revolutionizing their affairs
and cutting down their already meager earnings and compelling
them to live on still less or else starve. We have already
quoted good authority showing that the poor masses
can but seldom afford to eat the plainest food to satisfaction.
See page 381.
When we grant that the single tax or free land proposition
would prove to be only one factor of a temporary relief, it
is all that we can grant; for if selfishness be thwarted in one
direction it will only break out in another: nothing will effectually
avail but "new hearts" and "right spirits"; and
these neither the Single Tax theory nor any other human
theory can produce.
Suppose, for instance, that the people had the land; it
would be an easy matter for a combination of capital to refuse
to purchase the farm products except at their own figures
--barely enough to permit the producers to live--and
on the other hand to control and fix high prices upon all the
agriculturalist needs to purchase--from the farm fertilizer
and farm implements to his family clothing and home
furnishments.
This very condition is surely approaching--the Law of
Supply and Demand operates too slowly to satisfy the
greed for wealth today. Labor cannot stop the operation of
this law, and is crowded both by machinery and growing
population; but Capital can counteract it at least partially
by forming Trusts, Combines, Syndicates, etc., for nearly or
quite controlling supplies and prices. The Coal Combine is
an illustration.
[D514]
Of what avail, we ask, would Single Tax be against this
spirit of selfishness? It would be powerless!
But suppose that the free land and single tax proposition
were to go into operation tomorrow; suppose that tilled
lands were exempted from all taxes; that each farm were
provided with a house, horse, cow, plow and other necessities;
suppose this meant the doubling of the present area of
cultivation and doubling of present crops. It would insure
plenty of corn and wheat and vegetables for the healthy
and thrifty to eat; but the great overplus would bring so
small a price that it would not pay to send it to market, except
under favorable conditions. It is sometimes so, even
under present conditions: thousands of bushels of potatoes
and cabbage being left to rot, because it does not pay to
handle them. The first year might draw from the cities to
the aforesaid farms thousands of strong and willing men
anxious to serve themselves: this would free the city labor
market and temporarily raise the wages of those who would
remain in the cities, but it would last only one year. The
farmers, finding that they could not make clothing and
household necessities out of corn and potatoes, either directly
or by exchange, would quit farming and go back to
the cities and compete vigorously for whatever they could
get that would provide more for them than mere sustenance;
for whatever would grant them a share of life's
comforts and luxuries.
No; free land is good as a preventive of starvation, and it
is a proper condition in view of the fact that our bountiful
Creator gave the land to Adam and his family as a common
inheritance; and it would greatly help our present difficulties,
if the whole world had a Jubilee of restitution of the
land and remission of debts every fifty years, as the Jews
had. But such things would be merely palliatives now, as
they were with the Jews, and as they still are in India. The
[D515]
only real cure is the great antitypical Jubilee which will be
established by earth's coming King--Immanuel.
Other Hopes and Fears
We have hastily scanned the principal theories advanced
for the betterment of present conditions, but it is manifest
that none of them are adequate to the necessities of the case.
Besides these there are any number of people who incessantly
preach and pray about what they see wrong, and
who want somebody to stop the course of the world, but
who neither see nor suggest anything even simulating practicability.
But in this connection we should not forget to mention
some honest but thoroughly impractical souls who vainly
imagine that the churches, if awakened to the situation,
could avert the impending social calamity, revolutionize
society and re-establish it upon a new and better basis.
They say, If only the churches could be awakened, they
could conquer the world for Christ and could themselves establish
on earth a Kingdom of God upon a basis of love and
loyalty to God and equal love for fellowmen. Some of them
even claim that this, the Christ-spirit in the churches,
would be the second coming of Christ.
How hopelessly impracticable this theory is, need
scarcely be pointed out. What they consider its strength is
really its weakness--numbers. They look at the figures
300,000,000 Christians and say, What a power! We look at
the same figures and say, What a weakness!
If this vast number were saints, moved and controlled by
love, there would indeed be force behind the argument, and
it would seem thoroughly practical to say that if these were
awakened to the true situation they could and would revolutionize
society at once. But alas! "tares" and "chaff" predominate,
and the "wheat" class is small. As the great
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Shepherd declared, his is but a "little flock," like their Master
of "no reputation" or influence, and amongst them are
"not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not
many noble." (1 Cor. 1:26) "Hearken, my beloved
brethren,
hath not God chosen the poor of this world, rich in
faith, and heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to
them that love him?" James 2:5
No, no! The spirit of Christ in his little flock is not sufficient
to give them the Kingdom! The Church has never
been without those who had this spirit. As our Lord declared
before he left us, that he would be with us to the end
of the age, so it has been fulfilled. But he also promised that
as he went away (personally) in the end of the Jewish age, so
he would come again (personally) in the end of this age. He
assured us that during his absence all who would be faithful
to him would "suffer persecution"--that his Kingdom joint-heirs
would "suffer violence" until he should come again
and receive them unto himself. Then he would reward their
faithfulness and sufferings with glory, honor and immortality,
and a share in his throne and its power to bless the
world with righteous government and knowledge of the
truth, and finally to destroy the wilful workers of iniquity
from among the workers of righteousness. For this not only
the groaning creation, but ourselves also, which have the
first-fruits of the spirit (Rom. 8:23) must groan and wait--
for the Father's time and the Father's manner of bestowal.
He has shown clearly that the time for these blessings is now
at hand, and that they will be introduced by scourging the
world with an awful time of trouble, which the saints, the
little flock, are to escape by being changed and glorified in
the Kingdom.
But lest any should ever say that wealth and educational
advantages would have permitted them to conquer the
world, God has given the nominal church--"Christendom"
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--these very advantages. Yet these opportunities seem
to operate reversely, to cultivate pride, superciliousness,
and infidelity called "higher criticism"--and will eventuate
in the wreck of society. "When the Son of Man cometh,
shall he find [the] faith on the earth?"
The Only Hope--"That Blessed Hope"
"Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great
God and our Savior Jesus Christ." "Which hope we have as an anchor to
the soul, both sure and steadfast." "Wherefore gird up the loins of
your
mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought
unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ." Titus 2:13;
Heb. 6:19;
1 Pet. 1:13
In considering this vexed question of Supply and Demand
which is doing so much to divide humanity into two
classes, the rich and the poor, we have as far as possible
avoided harsh criticism of either side; firmly believing, as
we have endeavored to show, that present conditions are
the results of the constitutional law of selfishness (the result
of the Adamic fall) which dominates the vast majority of
the human family, rich and poor alike. These deep-seated
laws of constitutional selfishness are detested by a small
number (chiefly the poor) who, having found Christ and
come heartily under his spirit and law of love, would gladly
abandon all selfishness, but cannot. These laws often crowd
small merchants and contractors as well as employees. Yet
so certain is their operation that, if all the rich were dead
today, and their wealth distributed pro rata, those laws
would within a few years reproduce the very conditions of
today. Indeed, many of the millionaires of today were poor
boys. And any system of laws that the majority of men
might enact, which would deprive men of the opportunities
for exercising their acquisitive and selfish propensities,
would sap the life of progress and rapidly turn civilization
back toward improvidence, indolence and barbarism.
The only hope for the world is in the Kingdom of our
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Lord Jesus Christ--the Millennial Kingdom. It is God's
long promised remedy, delayed until its due time, and now,
thank God, nigh, even at the door. Once more man's extremity
will be God's opportunity--"The desire of all nations
shall come," at a juncture when human ingenuity and
skill will have exhausted themselves in seeking relief without
avail. Indeed, it would seem to be the divine method, to
teach great lessons in schools of experience. Thus the Jews
directly (and we and all men indirectly) were taught by
their Law Covenant the great lesson that by the deeds of
the Law no (fallen) flesh could be justified before God.
Thus did the Lord point his pupils to the better New Covenant
of Grace through Christ.
The time of trouble, the "day of vengeance," with which
this age will close and the Millennial age will open, will not
only be a just recompense for misused privileges, but it will
tend to humble the arrogance of men and to make them
"poor in spirit," and ready for the great blessings God is
ready to pour upon all flesh. (Joel 2:28) Thus he wounds to
heal.
But someone unfamiliar with the divine program may
perhaps inquire, How can the Kingdom of God be established
if all these human methods fail? What different
scheme does it propose? If its scheme is declared in the
Word of God, why cannot men put it into operation at once
and thus avoid the trouble?
We answer, God's Kingdom will not be established by a
vote of the people, nor by the vote of the aristocracy and
rulers. In due time He "whose right it is," he who bought it
with his own precious blood, will "take the Kingdom." He
will "take unto himself his great power and reign." Force
will be used, "He shall rule them [the nations] with a rod of
iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers."
(Rev. 2:27) He will "gather the nations and assemble
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the kingdoms and pour upon them his fierce anger, and the
whole earth shall be devoured with the fire of his jealousy;
and then [after they are humbled and ready to hear and
heed his counsel] he will turn unto them a pure language
that they may all call upon the Lord to serve him with one
consent. Zeph. 3:8,9
Not only will the Kingdom be established with force, and
be a power that men cannot resist, but it will so continue
throughout the entire Millennial age; for the entire reign is
for the specific purpose of vanquishing the enemies of righteousness.
"He must reign, till he hath put all enemies under
his feet." "His enemies shall lick the dust." "The soul
that
will not hear [obey] that Prophet [the glorious Christ--antitype
of Moses] shall be destroyed from among the people,"
in the Second Death.
Satan will be bound--his every deceptive and misleading
influence will be restrained--so that evil shall no longer appear
to men to be good, nor good appear undesirable, evil;
truth shall no longer appear to men untrue nor falsehoods
be caused to appear true. Rev. 20:2
But as heretofore shown, the reign will not be one of force
only; side by side with the force will be the olive branch of
mercy and peace for all the inhabitants of the world, who,
when the judgments of the Lord are abroad in the earth,
will learn righteousness. (Isa. 26:9) The sin-blinded eyes
shall be opened; and the world will see right and wrong,
justice and injustice, in a light quite different from now--
in "seven-fold" light. (Isa. 30:26; 29:18-20) The
outward
temptations of the present will largely be done away, evils
will neither be licensed nor permitted: but a penalty sure
and swift will fall upon transgressors, meted out with unerring
justice by the glorified and competent judges of that
time who will also have compassion upon the weak. 1 Cor. 6:2;
Psa. 96:13; Acts 17:31
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These judges shall not judge by the hearing of the ear nor
by the sight of the eye, but shall judge righteous judgment.
(Isa. 11:3) No mistakes will be made; no evil deed shall fail
of its just recompense: even attempts to commit crimes must
speedily cease under such conditions. Every knee shall bow
[to the power then in control] and every tongue shall confess
[to the justice of the arrangement]. (Phil. 2:10,11)
Then, gradually probably with many, the new order of
things will begin to appeal to the hearts of some, and what
at first was obedience by force will become obedience
from love, and appreciation of righteousness. And eventually
all others--all who obey merely because compelled
by force--will be cut off in the Second Death. Rev. 20:7-9;
Acts 3:23
The rule and law of Love will thus be enforced; not by
consent of the majority, but in opposition to it. It will be
turning civilization back from its republican ideas and
placing mankind temporarily under an autocratic rule--for
a thousand years. Such autocratic power would be terrible
in the hands of either a vicious or an incompetent ruler; but
God relieves us of all fear when he informs us that the Dictator
of that age will be the Prince of Peace, our Lord Jesus
Christ, who has the welfare of man so at heart that he laid
down his life as our ransom price in order that he might have
the authority to lift out of our sin-defilement and restore to
perfection and divine favor all who will accept his grace by
obedience to the New Covenant.
Early in the Millennium it will become apparent to all
that this course which God has outlined is the only one
adapted to the exigencies of the case of the sin-sick, selfish
world. Indeed, some already see that the world's great need
is a strong and righteous government: they begin to see,
more and more, that the only persons who can safely be entrusted
with absolute liberty are those who have been
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soundly converted--who have renewed wills, renewed
hearts, the spirit of Christ.
The Proper Attitude for God's People
But some may inquire, What must we who see these
things in their true light do now? Shall we if we own vacant
land give it away or abandon it? No; that would serve no
good purpose unless you gave it to some poor neighbor actually
needing it: and then, should he make a failure of its
use, he doubtless would censure you as the author of his
misfortunes.
If we are farmers or merchants or manufacturers, shall
we attempt to do business on the Millennium basis? No;
for, as already shown, to do so would bring upon you financial
disaster, injurious to your creditors and to those dependent
on you, as well as upon your employees.
We suggest that all that can now be done is to let our moderation
be known unto all men: avoid grinding anybody;
pay a reasonable wage or a share of the profits or else do not
hire; avoid dishonesty of every form; "provide things honest
in the sight of all men"; set an example of "Godliness
with contentment," and always by word as well as by example
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