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STUDY IX
THE CONFLICT IRREPRESSIBLE
THE TESTIMONY OF THE WORLDLY-WISE
General Intelligence a New Factor in all Reckonings--Senator Ingall's
Views--Views of Rev. Lyman Abbott--Views of Bishop Newman
(M.E.)--Views of a Noted Jurist--Views of Col. Robert Ingersoll--
Hon. J. L. Thomas on Labor Legislation--Wendell Phillips' View--Historian
Macaulay's Prediction--Hon. Chauncey Depew's Hopes--Bishop
Worthington (P.E.) Interviewed--W. J. Bryan's Reply--An English
View--Edward Bellamy's Statement of the situation--Rev. J. T.
McGlynn's Opinion--Prof. Graham's Outlook--Views of a Justice of
the Supreme Court--A French View, a "Social Melee."
"Men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking forward to
those things coming upon the earth [society]: because the powers
of heaven [government--ecclesiastical and civil] shall be shaken."
Luke 21:26
WISE men of the world, everywhere, recognize that a great
social conflict is approaching, and that it is irrepressible--
that nothing can be done to avert it. They have sought remedies,
but have found none adequate to the malady, and,
giving up hope, they have concluded that the suggestion of
Evolution must be correct; namely, that "All nature operates
under a law for the survival of the stronger as the fittest,
and the destruction of the weaker as unfit to live."
They are told by philosophers that "that which is hath been
before," that our civilization is but a repetition of the civilizations
of Greece and Rome, and that similarly it will fall
to pieces so far as the masses are concerned, and that wealth
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and government will gravitate again into the hands of a
few, while the masses, as in the earlier civilizations of the
East, will merely exist.
They very generally fail to note the new element in the
conflict never before encountered; viz., the more general
spread of intelligence throughout the world, especially
throughout Christendom. This, which many men forget, is
brought to the attention of those wise enough to seek true
wisdom at the fountain--God's Word. These are informed
that "In the time of the end many shall run to and fro, and
knowledge shall be increased,...and there shall be a time
of trouble such as was not since there was a nation." (Dan. 12:1-4)
They see the predicted running to and fro of mankind
astoundingly fulfilled; they see also the general increase
of knowledge; and to these the time of trouble
predicted in the same connection means, not a repetition of
history, not a submission of the masses to a favored few, but
a stupendous reversal of history brought about by the new
conditions noted. And the statement by the same prophet,
in the same connection, that "at that time Michael [Christ]
shall stand forth" and take his glorious power and reign, is
in harmony with the thought that the coming trouble will
end the rule of selfishness under the "prince of this world"
[Satan], and introduce Immanuel's Kingdom of blessing.
But let us hear some of the world's wise men tell us of what
they see!
A wide view and a broad and very dispassionate statement
of the struggle for wealth and the consequent crush of
the lower classes has been furnished to the press by Hon. J.
J. Ingalls, a man of broad sentiments, of moderate wealth
and an ex-Senator of the United States. We make liberal
extracts from it, because it is a moderate statement of the
case, and because it shows that even wide-awake statesmen
who see the difficulty know of no remedy that can be applied
to heal the malady and save the victims.
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SENATOR INGALLS wrote:
"Liberty is something more than a name. He who depends
upon the will of another for shelter, clothing and food
cannot be a free man in the broad, full meaning of that
word. The man whose daily bread for himself and family
depends upon wages that an employer may give or withhold
at pleasure is not free. The alternative between starvation
and submission to a schedule is slavery.
"Freedom does not consist in definitions. The declaration
that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are the inalienable
rights of every human being makes no man independent.
The right to liberty is an empty mockery and
delusion unless the power to be free exists also. Freedom is
not merely the removal of legal restraints, the permission to
come or go. Added to these must be the capacity and the
opportunity, which only exemption from the necessity of
incessant daily labor can bring. To paraphrase Shakespeare,
Poverty and Liberty are an ill-matched pair. Freedom
and dependence are incompatible. The abolition of
poverty has been the dream of visionaries and the hope of
philanthropists from the dawn of time.
"The inequality of fortunes and the obvious injustice of
the unequal distribution of wealth among men have been
the perplexity of philosophers. It is the unsolved enigma of political
economy! Civilization has no paradox so mysterious as
the existence of hunger when there is an excess of food--of
want in the midst of superfluity. That one man should have
possessions beyond the capacity of extravagance to squander,
and another, able and willing to work, should perish
for want of embers, rags and a crust, renders society unintelligible.
It makes the charter of human rights a logogriph.
So long as such conditions continue the key to the cipher in
which destiny is written is not revealed--the brotherhood of
man is a phrase, justice is a formula, and the divine code is
illegible.
"The exasperation of the poor at the insolent ostentation
of the rich has overthrown empires. The relief of the needy
has been the object of statutes human and divine. The complaints
of the wretched are the burden of history. Job was a
millionaire. Whether that incomparable production bearing
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his name is a parable or a biography, it is of profound
interest, because it shows that the patriarch was occupied
with the same questions that disturb us now. He describes
like a Populist those who take the ass of the orphan and the
ox of the widow, remove the landmarks, reap the field and
gather the vintage of the poor, whom they deprive of their
garments and leave naked to the showers of the mountains
and the shelter of the rocks.
"The Hebrew prophets reserved their choicest maledictions
for the extortions and luxury of the rich, and Moses
prescribed regulations for the remission of debts, the redistribution
of lands and the restriction of private fortunes. In
Rome, for centuries, the ownership of real estate was limited
to 300 acres to each citizen, and the number of cattle
and slaves was restricted to the area cultivated. But the laws
given by the Almighty, through Moses, to the Jews, were as
inoperative as the codes of Lycurgus and Licinius against
the indomitable energies of man and the organic conditions
of his being.
"At the time of Caesar 2,000 plutocrats practically
owned the Roman Empire, and more than 100,000 heads
of families were mendicants, supported by donations from
the public treasury. The same struggle has continued
through the Middle Ages into the nineteenth century.
There is no remedy prescribed today that has not been ineffectually
administered to innumerable patients before:
no experiment in finance and political economy proposed
that has not been repeatedly tried, with no result but individual
disaster and national ruin.
"At last, after much random groping and many bloody
and desperate combats with kings and dynasties, privilege,
caste and prerogative, old abuses, formidably intrenched
orders, titles and classes, the ultimate ideal of Government
has here been realized, and the people are supreme. The
poor, the toilers, the laborers are the rulers. They make the
laws, they form the institutions. Louis xiv said, 'I am the
State.' Here the wage-workers, the farmers, the blacksmiths,
the fishermen, the artisans say, 'We are the State.'
Confiscation and pillage and the enrichment of royal favorites
are unknown. Every man, whatever may be his nativity,
his faculty, education or morality, has an equal chance
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with every other in the race of life. Legislation, whether
good or bad, is enacted by the majority.
"Less than a century ago the social condition in the
United States was one of practical equality. In our first
census period there was neither a millionaire, a pauper nor
a tramp in the country. The first American citizen to pass
the million-dollar goal was the original Astor, about 1806,
who had migrated from Germany not many years before,
the son of a butcher, with a pack of pelts as the foundation
of his fortune. The largest estate before this time belonged
to George Washington, which at his death, in 1799, was appraised
at about $650,000.
"The mass of the people were farmers and fishermen, living
contentedly upon the products of their toil. The development
of the continent by the introduction of railroads,
agricultural machinery and the scientific applications of
modern life has made us the richest nation on earth. The
aggregate possessions of the country probably exceed
$100,000,000,000, one-half of which is said to be under the
direct control of less than 30,000 persons and corporations.
The largest private fortunes in the world have been accumulated
in the last half century in the United States.
"And our material resources are yet hardly touched. Less
than a fourth part of our arable area has been ploughed.
Our mines hide treasures richer than those of Ophir and
Potosi. Our manufactures and commerce are adolescent,
but they already have established an aristocracy of wealth
that wears neither garter nor coronet, and is proclaimed by
no herald, but often is welcomed in the courts of princes
and the palaces of kings.
"If the unequal distribution of the burdens and benefits of
society depends upon legislation, institution and government,
then under a system like ours the equilibrium should be restored.
If wealth results from unjust laws, and poverty from
legislative oppression, the remedy is in the hands of the victims.
If they suffer it is from self-inflicted wounds. We have
no feudal tenures, nor primogeniture, nor entail; no opportunities
that are not open to all. Justice, equality, liberty and
fraternity are the foundations of the State. In every man's
hand is the ballot. The school offers education to all. The
press is free. Speech, thought and conscience are unfettered.
[D418]
"But universal suffrage has not proved a panacea for the
evils of society. Poverty is not abolished. Though wealth
has accumulated beyond the dreams of avarice, the inequality
of distribution is as great as in the time of Job and
Solomon and Agis. Not only is the old problem unsolved,
but its conditions are complicated and intensified. Vaster
political power is consolidated in the hands of the few, and
more stupendous fortunes acquired by individuals under a
republic than under a monarchy.
"The great gulf between the rich and the poor yawns
wider and wider day by day. The forces of labor and capital,
which should be allies, auxiliaries and friends are arrayed
against each other like hostile armies in fortified
camps, preparing for siege or battle. Millions of money are
annually lost in wages, the destruction of perishable property,
the deterioration of plants and the decrease of profits
by the strikes and lockouts which have become the normal
condition of the war between employers and employees.
"Utopia is yet an undiscovered country. Ideal perfection
in society, like the mirage of the desert, recedes as it is
approached. Human nature remains unchanged in every
environment.
"The condition of the masses is immeasurably bettered
with the advance of civilization. The poorest artisan today
has free enjoyment of comforts and conveniences that monarchs
with their treasures could not purchase five centuries
ago. But De Toqueville observed the singular anomaly that
as the state of the masses improves, they find it more intolerable,
and discontent increases. Wants and desires are
multiplied more rapidly than the means of gratification.
Education, daily newspapers, travel, libraries, parks, galleries
and shop windows have widened the horizon of workingmen
and women, increased their capacity for
enjoyment, familiarized them with luxuries and the advantages
of wealth. Political instruction has taught them the
equality of man and made them acquainted with the power
of the ballot. False teachers have convinced them that all
wealth is created by labor, and that every man who has
more than he can earn with his hands by daily wages is a
thief, that the capitalist is a foe, and the millionaire a public
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enemy who should be outlawed and shot at sight.
"Great private fortunes are inseparable from high civilization.
The richest community in the world, per capita,
at this time is the tribe of Osage Indians. Its aggregate
wealth is ten times greater, proportionally, than that of
the United States. It is held in common. Community of
property may not be the cause of barbarism, but in every
State, as social and economic equality is approached, and
wealth 'created by labor' without the intervention of capital,
as in China and India, wages are low, the laborer is
degraded and progress impossible. Were the wealth of the
United States equally distributed among its inhabitants at
this time the sum that each would possess, according to the
census, would be about $1,000.
"Were this equation to continue, progress obviously
would cease. Had this been the prevalent condition from
the beginning, we should have remained stationary. Only
as wealth becomes concentrated can nature be subjugated
and its forces made subservient to civilization. Until capital,
through machinery, harnesses steam, electricity and
gravitation, and exempts man from the necessity of constant
toil to procure subsistence, humanity stands still or
retrogrades. Railroads, telegraphs, fleets, cities, libraries,
museums, universities, cathedrals, hospitals--all the great
enterprises that exalt and embellish existence and ameliorate
the conditions of human life--come from the concentration
of money in the hands of the few.
"Even if it were desirable to limit accumulations, society
possesses no agency by which it can be done. The mind is
indomitable. The differences between men are organic and
fundamental. They are established by ordinances of the Supreme
Power and cannot be repealed by act of Congress. In
the contest between brains and numbers, brains have always
won, and always will.
"The social malady is grave and menacing, but the disease
is not so dangerous as the doctors and the drugs. The
political quacks, with their sarsaparilla and plasters and
pills, are treating the symptoms instead of the complaint.
The free coinage of silver, the increase of the per capita, the
restriction of immigration, the Australian ballot and qualified
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suffrage are important questions, but they might all be
accomplished without effecting the slightest amelioration
of the condition of the great masses of the wage-workers of
the United States. Instead of disfranchising the poor ignorant,
it would be well to increase their wealth and their intelligence,
and make them fit to vote. A proscribed class
inevitably become conspirators, and free institutions can
only be made secure by the education, prosperity and contentment
of those upon whom their existence depends."
Here is a statement of facts; but where is the statement of
the remedy? There is none. Yet the writer is not in sympathy
with the facts to which he calls attention: he would prefer,
if he could, to call attention to a way of escape from
what he sees to be inevitable. So would all men who are
worthy of the human form and nature. So far as Mr. Ingalls
is concerned, this is evidenced by the following extract from
one of his speeches in the United States' Senate.* He said:
*Congressional Record, Vol. 7, pp. 1054-5.
"We cannot disguise the truth that we are on the verge of
an impending revolution. Old issues are dead. The people
are arraying themselves on one side or the other of a portentous
contest. On one side is capital, formidably intrenched
in privilege, arrogant from continued triumph,
conservative, tenacious of old theories, demanding new
concessions, enriched by domestic levy and foreign commerce,
and struggling to adjust all values to its own gold
standard. On the other side is labor asking for employment,
striving to develop domestic industries, battling with the
forces of nature and subduing the wilderness. Labor, starving
and sullen in the cities, resolutely determined to overthrow
a system under which the rich are growing richer and
the poor are growing poorer--a system which gives to a
Vanderbilt and a Gould wealth beyond the dreams of avarice,
and condemns the poor to poverty from which there is
no escape or refuge but the grave. Demands for justice have
been met with indifference and disdain. The laborers of the
country, asking for employment, are treated like impudent
mendicants begging for bread."
[D421]
Thus he distinctly declares that he can see no hope. He
knows of no remedy for the awful disease--selfishness.
Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott on the Situation
In an old issue of the Literary Digest we find the following
synopsis of the view of Dr. Abbott, the celebrated preacher,
editor and co-worker with Theodore Roosevelt, on The
Relationship between Capital and Labor:
"Dr. Abbott asserts that the question whether the wage
system is better than feudalism or slavery has been settled;
but against the present industrial system as either final or
true he makes these counts: (1) That it is not giving steady
and permanent employment to all willing laborers. (2)
That it also fails to give all those who are employed under it
wages adequate for true livelihood. (3) That it is insufficiently
educative in itself and fails to allow adequate
leisure for educative processes. (4) That pure, good homes
are in many instances impossible under present conditions.
Dr. Abbott believes that the precepts of Jesus Christ and
the principles of a sound political economy coincide; he insists
that it is ruinous to grind up men, women and children
in order to make cheap goods. Labor is not a 'commodity,'
he declares. To quote:
"'I believe that the system which divides society into two
classes, capitalists and laborers, is but a temporary one, and
that the industrial unrest of our time is the result of a blind
struggle toward a democracy of wealth, in which the tool-users
will also be the tool-owners, in which labor will hire capital,
not capital labor; in which men, not money, will control in
industry, as they now control in government. But the doctrine
that labor is a commodity, and that capital is to buy
in the cheapest market, is not even temporarily sound; it is
economically false as it is ethically unjust.
"'There is no such commodity as labor; it does not exist.
When a workingman comes to the factory on a Monday
morning he has nothing to sell, he is empty-handed; he has
come in order to produce something by his exertion, and
that something, when it is produced, is to be sold, and part
of the proceeds of that sale will of right belong to him, because
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he has helped to produce it. And as there is no labor
commodity to be sold, so there is no labor market in which
to sell it. A free market assumes a variety of sellers with
different commodities and a variety of buyers with different
needs, the seller at perfect liberty to sell or not to sell, the
buyer at perfect liberty to buy or not to buy. There is no
such market for labor. The laborers are in a great majority
of cases as firmly attached to their town by prejudice, by
ignorance of the outside world and its needs, by home considerations,
by their little possessions--their house and lot--
and by religious ties, as if they were rooted to the soil. They
have no variety of skill to offer; as a rule the laborer knows
how to do well only one thing, uses well only one tool, and
must find an owner for that tool who wishes a laborer to use
it, or must be idle. 'A merchant,' says Frederic Harrison,
'sits in his counting-house, and by a few letters or forms,
transports and distributes the contents of a whole city from
continent to continent. In other cases, as the shopkeeper,
ebb and flow of passing multitudes supplies the want of locomotion
in his wares. His customers supply the locomotion
for him. This is a true market. Here competition acts
rapidly, fully, simply, fairly. It is totally otherwise with a
day-laborer, who has no commodity to sell. He must himself
be present at every market, which means costly, personal
locomotion. He cannot correspond with his
employer; he cannot send a sample of his strength; nor do
employers knock at his cottage door.' There is neither a labor
commodity to sell nor a labor market in which to sell it.
Both are fictions of political economy. The actual facts are
as follows:
"'Most commodities in our time--even agricultural commodities
are gradually coming under these conditions--are
produced by an organized body of workingmen, carrying
on their work under the superintendence of a 'captain of industry,'
and by the use of costly tools. This requires the cooperation
of three classes--the tool-owner or capitalist, the
superintendent or manager, and the tool-user or laborer.
The result is the joint product of their industry--for the tool
itself is only a reservoired product of industry--and therefore
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belongs to them jointly. It is the business of political
economy to ascertain how values can be equitably divided
between these partners in a common enterprise. This is the
labor question in a sentence. It is not true that the laborer is
entitled to the whole, nor does he demand it, whatever some
of the wild advocates of his cause may have claimed for
him. The superintendent is entitled to his share, and a large
share. To direct such an industry, to know what products
are needed in the world, to find a purchaser for them at a
price that will give a fair return for the labor of producing
them, requires itself labor of a high quality, and one which
deserves a generous compensation. The tool-owner is entitled
to a remuneration. Presumptively he, or some one
from whom he has received his tool, has saved the money
which his companions spent either in present comfort or in
doubtful pleasure, and he is entitled to a reward for his
economy and thrift, though it may be a question whether
our modern industrial system does not sometimes give a reward
too great for the virtue of acquisition, and so transform
virtue into a vice. The laborer is entitled to a
compensation. Since the abolition of slavery no one denies
this right. The determination how the division of the product
of this joint industry shall be made is a difficult one. But
it is certain that it is not to be made by a system which bids
the capitalist pay as little wages as possible for the services
rendered, and the laborer render as little service as possible
for the wages received. Whatever may be the right way, this
is the wrong way.'"
Dr. Abbott seems to have a warm, sympathetic heart for
the masses and to have grasped their situation clearly. He
diagnoses the politico-social-financial disease, but fails to
find a remedy. He does indeed hint at what would be a remedy
if it could be gotten at, but suggests no way of securing
it--that is, he thinks he sees in progress,
"A blind struggle toward a democracy of wealth in which the tool-users
will be the tool-owners; in which labor will hire capital."
This sentence reads as though its writer had recently read
the story of Aladdin's Lamp in the Arabian Nights, and
[D424]
hoped to find and use a "magic wand." It shows that the
gentleman either has but a limited knowledge of finances,
or else that he is expecting a revolution in which the tool-users
will take the tools by force from capital, and in violation of
all the laws of society at present recognized. And if such a
transfer of tools from the control of present owners to the
ownership of tool-users were effected in any manner, cannot
all see that the new tool-owners would promptly, by
reason of that ownership, become capitalists? Have we any
reason to suppose that the new tool-owners would be more
generous or less selfish than present tool-owners? Have we
any reason to suppose that the natural heart has changed
more in tool-owners than in tool-users, or that all labor
would be invited by the new tool-users to share alike the
benefits of machinery? All experience with human nature
says, No! The malady is seen, the necessity for a prompt
cure is seen, but no remedy can cure the "groaning creation."
Its groaning and travailing must continue and increase,
as the Apostle indicates, until the manifestation of
the sons of God--the Kingdom of God. Rom. 8:22,19
The denial of any trouble does not cure it. The affirmation
that "there is no such commodity as labor" will not
correct or alter the sad fact that labor is a commodity, and
can be nothing else under our present social laws and conditions.
Slavery, at one time and respecting certain peoples,
may have been a beneficial institution under kind and considerate
masters. Serfdom under the feudal system of semi-civilization
may have had good features adapted to its time
and conditions; and likewise the wage system. Labor as a
commodity, subject to purchase and sale, has some excellent
features, and has done much to develop mental and physical
skill, and has, indeed, been a very precious boon to Labor
in the past. Nor would it be wise to destroy this
commodity feature even now, for those laborers who possess
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and exercise brain and skill and energy deserve to be in
better demand and to be able to dispose of their labor at
better prices than the unskilled and stupid: this is needful
also for the spurring of the stupid and indolent. The need
is--a just, wise, paternal government, which will continue
wholesome restraints and incentives and add thereto, while
at the same time protecting each class of labor from the arrogance
of the class next above it, and shielding all from the
herculean power of present-day Capital with its vast and
increasing army of machine slaves; and, ultimately, after
full and general practical instructions in righteousness, under
the law of love, would destroy all in sympathy with selfishness
and sin. Such a government is suggested nowhere
except in the Bible, and there it is accurately described and
positively promised and waits only for the selection of
God's Church--to be its kings and priests as joint-heirs with
Immanuel. Rev. 5:10; 20:6
The Late Bishop J. P. Newman's Outlook
The irrepressible conflict between Capital and Labor
was seen by Bishop Newman, of the Methodist Episcopal
Church. He saw rights and wrongs on both sides of the
question. In an article once published in the journals of his
denomination, he sets forth the following propositions and
suggestions:
"Is it impiety to be rich? Is poverty essential to godliness?
Are beggars the only saints? Is heaven a poorhouse? What
then shall we do with Abraham, who was very rich in cattle,
in silver and in gold? What then shall we do with Job, who
had 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 4,000 oxen, 500 asses; who
had 30,000 acres and 3,000 household servants?...
"The acquisition of wealth is a divine gift. Industry and
frugality are the laws of thrift. To amass great fortunes is a
special endowment. As poets, philosophers and orators are
born such, so the financier has a genius for wealth. By intuition
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he is familiar with the laws of supply and demand;
he seems gifted with the vision of a seer of the coming
changes in the market; he knows when to buy and when to
sell, and when to hold fast. He anticipates the flow of population
and its effect upon real estate. As the poet must sing
because the muse is in him, so the financier must make
money. He cannot help it. The endowment of this gift is announced
in Scripture: 'The Lord thy God giveth thee the
power to get wealth.' (Deut. 8:18) And all these promises
are illustrated in the present financial condition of Christian
nations, who control the finances of the world.
"Against these natural and lawful rights to the possession
of property is the clamor for the distribution of property
among those who have not acquired it either by inheritance
or skill or industry. It is a communism that has no foundation
either in the constitution of nature or in the social order
of mankind. It is the wild, irrational cry of Labor
against Capital, between which, in the economy of nature
and in political economy, there should be no common
antagonism."
The Bishop affirms that "the employer and the employed
have inviolable rights; the former to employ whom he can
for what he can, and the latter to respond when he can." The
bishop asserts that the envy and jealousy of laboring classes
are not excited against those who possess vast fortunes, but
against the supreme ease and the supreme indifference of
the rich. He continues:
"Wealth has the noblest of missions. It is not given to
hoard, nor to gratify, nor for the show of pomp and power.
The rich are the almoners of the Almighty. They are his disbursing
agents. They are the guardians of the poor. They
are to inaugurate those great enterprises which will bring
thrift to the masses; not the largest dividends, but the largest
prosperity.
Capital makes it possible for the laborer to enjoy a
happiness that waits upon honest industry. It is for the rich
to improve the homes of the poor, but many a rich man's
[D427]
stable is a palace compared to the abode of the honest and
intelligent mechanic.
"When the wealthy are the patrons of those social reforms that elevate
society, then they will receive the benediction of the poor. It is for
them to give direction to the legislator essential for the protection of all
the rights and interests of a community. When they build libraries of
learning, museums of art and temples of piety they will be esteemed the
benefactors of their kind. When the wealth of Capital joins hands
with the wealth of intellect, the wealth of muscle, and the wealth of
goodness for the common good, then Labor and Capital will be esteemed
the equal factors in giving every man life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness."
The Bishop evidently endeavored to take a fair view of
both sides of the present controversy and approaching
struggle, but association with and dependence upon wealth
evidently gave bias, no doubt unconsciously, to his judgment.
It is a fact that many of the ancients were very rich;
Abraham, for instance. Yet the story of the sojourn of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob in the land of Canaan shows that although
land was owned in those days, it was nevertheless not
fenced but free to the users. These three patriarchs with their
servants and herds and flocks roamed at will through the
land of the Canaanites for nearly two centuries, and yet did
not claim to own a foot of it. (Acts 7:5) And in God's typical
kingdom, Israel, the code of laws provided for the poor,
home-born and foreigner. None need starve: the fields must
not be gleaned closely, but the corners must be left for the
poor to glean. The hungry might enter an orchard, a
vineyard or a field and eat on the spot to satisfaction. And
when the land of Palestine was divided amongst the tribes
and families of Israel, the special provision for the cancellation
of mortgages on all lands, and all debts, every fiftieth
year, prevented the impoverishment and practical enslavement
of the people as a whole to a wealthy few.
[D428]
The Bishop seemed to forget that the laws and arrangements
of Christendom are not a divinely arranged code;
that like all the devices of imperfect heads and hearts these
laws are not infallible; that although at one time no better
could be devised, the changes of social and financial conditions
made changes necessary in the past; that other
changes are now recognized as proper, though opposed by
selfishness and ultraconservatism in their day. If, then, our
laws are conceded to be merely human and fallible, and if
they have already been changed and amended to suit
changed conditions, is it not inconsistent for the Bishop to
threat them now as sacred, unquestionable, unalterable; and to
claim that rights once conceded are therefore "inviolable,"
"natural" and indisputable "either in the order of nature or
in the constitution of mankind"; and that the very suggestion
of a modification of the laws and social regulations
to better adapt them to present conditions is "wild" and
"irrational"?
The Bishop, it will be noted, took opposite ground from
that taken by Dr. Abbott on the question of labor as a commodity,
subject to the conditions of supply and demand. He
saw in this the law of our present social system, and said
that it must continue. He was correct in seeing that Labor
must continue a commodity (to be bought as cheap as Capital
can purchase it, and to be sold at as high a price as Labor
can obtain for it) so long as the present social system continues.
This, however, will not be for many years, as indicated by
prophecy and as discerned by other able minds in closer
touch with the people and their unrest.
From the Bishop's standpoint the only hope of a peaceful
solution of the differences between Capital and Labor is, (1)
a conversion of all the wealthy to the loving and benevolent
conditions particularized in the last two paragraphs above
quoted; and (2) a conversion of all the poor and middle classes
[D429]
to that godliness and contentment where they can accept
with thanks whatever the wealthy are pleased to let
them have of the earth and the fulness thereof, and shout
"Blessed are we poor!" This, we admit, would solve the Labor
Question, quickly and thoroughly; but no sane people
are looking for such a solution in the near future; nor do the
Scriptures so portray. We cannot suppose that this intelligent
Bishop really offers his suggestions as a remedy;
rather we assume him to mean, that he sees no other than
this impossible solution, and that hence civilization will
shortly be smitten with the curse of Anarchy. Would that
the gentleman might see God's remedy for which our Lord
taught us to hope and pray--"Thy Kingdom come"--and
the way in which that Kingdom is to be set up in power and
dominion. Dan. 2:44,45; 7:22,27; Rev. 2:27.
A Learned Jurist's Views
A jurist of world-wide fame, addressing a graduating law
class of a prominent College in the United States, expressed
himself as follows, as reported by the Kansas City Journal:
"The history of the arrogant and rapacious race to which
we belong has been the record of incessant and bloody
struggles for personal liberty. Wars have been waged, dynasties
overthrown and monarchs beheaded, not for
conquest, for ambition, for glory, but that man might be
free. Privilege and prerogative have stubbornly and reluctantly
yielded through many sanguinary centuries to the
indomitable passion for individual liberty. From the
Magna Charta to Appomattox is a far cry; but there was no
moment of that 652 years in which the race ceased or hesitated
in its resolute and unflinching battle for the equality
of all men before the law. It was for this that the barons
bullied King John; that Latimer burned; that Hampden
fell; that the compact in the cabin of the Mayflower was
drawn; that the Declaration of Independence was promulgated;
that John Brown, of Osawatomie, died; that the legions
[D430]
of Grant and Sheridan marched and conquered,
willing to relinquish life and all its possessions rather than
surrender the franchises of liberty.
'Of what avail are plow and sail
Or life or land, if freedom fail?'
"The dream of the centuries has at last been realized.
From the brutal and bloody tumult of history, man has at
last emerged lord of himself; but the perplexing enigmas of
faith remain. Men are equal, but there is no equality. Suffrage
is universal but political power is exerted by a few;
poverty has not been abolished. The burdens and privileges
of society are unequally borne. Some have wealth beyond
the capacity of extravagance to squander, and others pray
in vain for daily bread. Baffled and thwarted by these incongruities,
exasperated it may be by suffering and want,
disappointed in the effects of political liberty upon individual
happiness and prosperity, many have yielded to a disquietude
so searching and profound as to indicate the
necessity for the active coalition of the conservative forces
in our society.
"In the evolutionary movement, upon which society of
the United States has entered, there are no precedents in
history, because the conditions are anomalous, and a scientific
solution is therefore impossible. While the conditions of
the masses of the people have been enormously improved
by social progress, the application of science to industry,
and the invention of machinery, it cannot be doubted that
poverty is more hostile to society, more dangerous to the institutions
of self-government and to the personal liberty
that has been gained after so many centuries of conflict
than ever before. The reasons are obvious. The laborer is
free; he is a voter; his self-respect is increased; his sensibility
has become acute; his wants have been multiplied more
rapidly than the means of gratification; education has elevated
him above the condition of menial toil. The daily
newspaper has familiarized him with the advantages that
wealth gives its possessors. He has been taught that all men
have been created equal, and he believes that while rights
are equaled, opportunities are not. Modern science has
[D431]
armed him with formidable weapons, and when hunger
comes nothing is so sacred as the necessities of wife and
children.
"The social crisis in all civilized countries, and especially
in ours, is becoming more formidable. The muttered thunder
of sullen discontent grows nearer hour by hour. While I
believe that the serene and resolute genius of the Anglo-Saxon
race will prove equal to this, as it has to every other
emergency, and that it will not relinquish the possessions it
has acquired by incredible sacrifices, yet it is apparent that
the battle is not ended; that man is no longer content with
equality of rights and with equality of opportunity, but that he
will demand equality of conditions as the law of the ideal state.
"It is obvious also that social degradation is inconsistent
with self-government, and that hopeless and helpless poverty
is incompatible with personal freedom. The man who
is absolutely dependent upon another for means of subsistence
for himself and family, which may be taken away altogether
by the employer at pleasure, is not in any just sense
free. In one hundred years we have become the wealthiest
of all the nations. Our resources are gigantic. The statistics
of our earnings and accumulations astonish even credulity.
Money is abundant, food is plentiful; fabrics and labor are
in ample supply; but notwithstanding this fecundity the
paradox of civilization remains: the majority of the people
struggle for existence, and a fraction subsists in abject and
wretched penury.
"That such conditions should exist seems to impeach Supreme
Wisdom. To admit that want, misery or ignorance
are an inevitable inheritance makes the brotherhood of
man sardonic irony and the code of the moral universe
unintelligible. The disappointment engendered by these
conditions is deepening into distrust of the principles upon
which society is founded and a disposition to change the basis
upon which it rests. This distrust it is your most important
mission to allay, and this revolution it is your most important
duty to resist.
"The popular remedies proposed for the reformation of
the evils and defects and infirmities of modern society may
[D432]
be roughly classed in two groups, the first of which proposes
to redress grievance by changing political institutions. This
method is erroneous and must be ineffectual, because it
rests upon the fallacy that material prosperity is a result of
freedom, the truth being that political liberty is the consequence
and not the cause of material progress. Much has
been written by poets and dreamers in praise of poverty,
and the love of money has been denounced as the root of all
evil, but the fact remains that, honestly acquired and wisely
employed, there is no form of power so substantial, positive
and palpable as that which accompanies the possession of
money.
"There is no condition so deplorable, so depressing, so
destructive of all that is noblest in man, all that is most elevating
in domestic life, all that is most inspiring in destiny,
as hopeless, squalid, helpless poverty, want, hunger, the
wages of the sweatshop, embers, rags and a crust. As your
trained intelligence is directed to the investigation of the
problems of the times, you will not fail to observe that this
element of our society is constantly increasing."
Here we have a clear and able statement of facts, as all,
rich or poor, must acknowledge. But it contains no remedy:
not even the suggestion that the new batch of lawyers and
politicians should seek a remedy. They are merely counseled
to allay distrust in others, however much they feel it
themselves, and to resist every change of the present system
while they seek to keep above its grind themselves.
Why this advice? Is it because this able man despises his
humbler brother? By no means; but because he sees the inevitable
operation of liberty--"individualism"--selfishness--
with its implied liberty to compete, and for each to
do the best he can for himself. Looking into the past he says,
"What hath been shall be." He does not see that we are in
the end of the present age, in the dawn of the Millennium,
that only the power of the Lord's Anointed King of all the
earth can bring order out of all this confusion; and that, in
[D433]
God's wise providence, men are now brought face to face
with these perplexing problems which no human wisdom
can solve, and with calamitous conditions which no human
foresight or policy can avert or dispel, so that in due time, in
their extremity and peril, they will be glad to recognize and
submit to the divine intervention and to cease from their
own works and be taught of God. He whose right the kingdom
is is about to "take unto himself his great power and
reign," to bring order out of chaos, to glorify his Church, as
his "bride," and with and through her to end the woes of
the sin-burdened, groaning creation and bless all the families
of the earth. Only those who have the "true light" can
see the glorious outcome of this present dark time, which is
puzzling the wise.
Mr. Robert G. Ingersoll, Like Others, Saw the Condition
of Things and Deplored it, but Suggested No Remedy
Col. Ingersoll was known as a wise man according to the
course of this world. Although a noted infidel, he was a man
of marked ability and of more than usual sound judgment,
except in religious matters, where no man's judgment is
sound except as informed and guided by the Word and
spirit of the Lord. As a lawyer, Mr. Ingersoll's advice was so
highly esteemed that he has been known to receive $250 for
thirty minutes counsel. This active brain has also been employed
in grappling with the great problems of this perplexing
time; yet neither had he any remedy to suggest. He
expressed his views of the situation in a lengthy article in
the Twentieth Century, from which we give a brief extract. He
said:
"Invention has filled the world with competitors, not
only of laborers, but of mechanics--mechanics of the highest
skill. Today the ordinary laborer is, for the most part, a
[D434]
cog in the wheel. He works with the tireless, he feeds the insatiable.
When the monster stops the man is out of employment
--out of bread. He has not saved anything. The
machine that he fed was not feeding him--the invention
was not for his benefit. The other day I heard a man say
that for thousands of good mechanics it was almost impossible
to get employment, and that in his judgment the government
ought to furnish employment to the people. A few
minutes after I heard another say that he was selling a patent
for cutting out clothes; that one of the machines could
do the work of twenty tailors, and that only the week before
he had sold two to a great house in New York, and that over
forty cutters had been discharged. The capitalist comes forward
with his specific. He tells the workingman that he
must be economical--and yet, under the present system,
economy would only lessen wages. Under the great law of
supply and demand every saving, frugal, self-denying
workingman is unconsciously doing what little he can to reduce
the compensation of himself and his fellows. The saving
mechanic is a certificate that wages are high enough.
"Capital has always claimed, and still claims, the right to
combine. Manufacturers meet and determine prices, even
in spite of the great law of supply and demand. Have the
laborers the same right to consult and combine? The rich
meet in the bank, clubhouse or parlor. Workingmen, when
they combine, gather in the street. All the organized forces
of society are against them. Capital has the army and the
navy, the legislature, the judicial and executive departments.
When the rich combine, it is for the purpose of
'exchanging ideas.' When the poor combine, it is a 'conspiracy.'
If they act in concert, if they really do something,
it is a 'mob.' If they defend themselves, it is 'treason.' How
is it that the rich control the departments of government?
There are times when mendicants become revolutionists--
when a rag becomes a banner, under which the noblest and
the bravest battle for the right.
"How are we to settle the unequal contest between man
and machine? Will the machines finally go into partnership
with the laborer? Can these forces of nature be controlled
[D435]
for the benefit of nature's suffering children? Will extravagance
keep pace with ingenuity? Will the workmen become
intelligent enough and strong enough to become the owners
of machines? Can man become intelligent enough to be
generous, to be just; or does the same law or fact control
him that controls the animal or vegetable world? In the
days of cannibalism the strong devoured the weak--actually
ate their flesh. In spite of all the laws that man has
made, in spite of all advances in science, the strong, the
heartless, still live on the weak, the unfortunate, and the
foolish. When I take into consideration the agony of civilized
life--the failures, the anxieties, the tears, the withered
hopes, the bitter realities, the hunger, the crime, the humiliation,
the shame--I am almost forced to say that cannibalism,
after all, is the most merciful form in which man has
ever lived upon his fellowman.
"It is impossible for a man with a good heart to be satisfied
with the world as it now is. No man can truly enjoy
even what he earns--what he knows to be his own--knowing
that millions of his fellowmen are in misery and want.
When we think of the famished, we feel that it is almost
heartless to eat. To meet the ragged and shivering makes
one almost ashamed to be well dressed and warm--one feels
as though his heart were as cold as their bodies.
"Is there to be no change? Are the 'laws of supply and
demand,' invention and science, monopoly and competition,
capital and legislation, always to be the enemies of
those who toil? Will the workers always be ignorant enough
and stupid enough to give their earnings for the useless?
Will they support millions of soldiers to kill the sons of other
workingmen? Will they always build temples and live in
dens and huts themselves? Will they forever allow parasites
and vampires to live upon their blood? Will they remain
the slaves of the beggars they support? Will honest men
stop taking off their hats to successful fraud? Will industry,
in the presence of crowned idleness, forever fall upon its
knees? Will they understand that beggars cannot be generous,
and that every healthy man must earn the right to live?
Will they finally say that the man who has had equal privileges
[D436]
with all others has no right to complain, or will they
follow the example set by their oppressors? Will they learn
that force, to succeed, must have thought behind it, and
that anything done in order that it may endure must rest
upon the cornerstone of justice?"
The argument here set forth is poor, weak, hopeless and
suggestionless; and coming from a wise man and a fine logician
merely shows that the wise men of this world see the
malady but can see no remedy. The learned gentleman
points out the causes of the difficulty clearly enough, and
their inevitableness, and then says, to workmen, practically
--"Don't you let them (invention, science, competition,
etc.) crowd you down and hurt you!" But he
suggests no means of deliverance, except it be in the query,
"Will the workmen become intelligent enough and strong
enough to become the owners of machines?"
But suppose they had machines and quite sufficient capital
to operate them! Could such factories and machines be
operated more successfully than others? Could they long be
successfully operated as benevolent concerns and not for
profit? Would they not do their share to increase "overproduction"
and cause "shutdowns," making their own
and other workmen idle? Do we not know that if the mill or
shop were run on the principle of equal pay for all employed,
it would speedily either become bankrupt because
it paid too much for wages, or else the more skillful would
be drawn by better pay to other situations, or to private
operations on their individual account? In a word, self-interest,
selfishness, is so ingrained in fallen human nature
and so much a part of the present social structure that whoever
does not count on it will quickly learn his mistake.
The closing sentence quoted is very smooth, but very barren
of help for the emergency. It is like a glass nest egg. It
serves instead of a solution, until you break it open and attempt
to eat it. "Will they [the workmen] learn that force,
[D437]
to succeed, must have thought behind it?" Yes; all know
that; and that thought must have brains; and that the
brains must be of good quality and arrangement. All can
see that if all had brains of equal caliber and force the
battle between man and man would be so equal that a
truce would be speedily arranged, and each other's rights
and interests provided for; or, more probably, the fight
would have come sooner and been severer. But no one
knows better than did Mr. Ingersoll that no earthly power
could produce such a condition of mental equality.
The fourth paragraph quoted is most creditable to the
great man. It finds an echo in every noble soul, of which we
trust there are many. But others, in moderate circumstances,
or even wealthy like Mr. Ingersoll, decide as he no
doubt did decide, that they are as powerless to obstruct or
to alter the social trend which sweeps along the channel of
the fallen human nature, by casting into it their money and
influence, as they would be to stop Niagara Falls by casting
their bodies thereinto. A momentary splash and commotion
is all that there would be in either case.
Hon. J. L. Thomas on Labor Legislation
The claim is frequently made that Labor has been discriminated
against by legislation favoring the rich and injurious
to the interests of the poor; and that a reversal of
this would be a cure-all remedy. Nothing could be further
from the truth, and we are glad to have a summary of
United States Labor legislation by so well qualified a gentleman
as former U. S. Assistant Attorney General Thomas,
in the New York Tribune, Oct. 17, 1896, as follows:
"To write the history of the legislation for the last fifty
years for the amelioration of the conditions of the poorer
and laboring classes would require volumes, but it may be
summarized as follows:
[D438]
"Imprisonment for debt has been abolished.
"Laws have been passed exempting homesteads and a
large amount of personal property from execution against
debtors who are heads of families, their widows and orphans.
"Liens have been given by law to mechanics and laborers
on the land or thing on which they bestow labor for their
wages.
"Poor persons are allowed to sue in the courts, State and
National, without the payment of costs or the giving of
security for costs.
"The courts, State and National, appoint attorneys to
defend, without compensation, poor persons in the criminal
courts and in some instances in the civil courts.
"The courts in many instances are directed to enter judgment
in favor of a laborer who has to bring suit to recover
his wages or enforce his rights against a corporation for a
stated sum to cover his attorney's fees.
"Seven hours, in some cases, and eight or nine in others,
have been declared by law a day's labor for public service
or on public works.
"In the administration of insolvent estates the wages of
labor are preferred claims, and in some cases wages are
made preferred claims generally.
"Laws have been passed regulating passenger and freight
charges on railroads and other transportation lines, and also
of public warehouses and elevators, and National and State
commissions have been created to supervise railway traffic,
by which charges have been reduced two-thirds or more.
"Laws reducing the rate of interest have been passed in
nearly all of the States, and extending the time for redemption
after the foreclosure of mortgages or deeds of trust.
"Railroads are required to fence their roads or pay
double damages resulting from a failure to fence; they are
also required to furnish safe places and appliances for their
workmen.
"Manufacturers and mine operators are required to provide
places and machinery for the safety and comfort of
their employees.
"The incorporation of labor organizations has been authorized
by law.
"Labor Day has been made a national holiday.
[D439]
"Commissioners of Labor, State and National, are appointed
to gather statistics and, so far as possible, ameliorate
the condition of the working classes.
"The Department of Agriculture has been established,
and the head thereof made a Cabinet officer
"Seeds costing $150,000 annually are distributed free to
the people.
"It is made a misdemeanor in many of the States to
blacklist a poor man who has been discharged from service
or has failed to pay his debts, and it is made a misdemeanor
to threaten by postal card through the mails to sue a
debtor, or by the use of any device to reflect on him.
"In order to protect the imprudent and unwary, the use
of the mails is denied to those who would operate fraudulent
or lottery schemes through this medium.
"Postages have been reduced, entailing a loss to the government
of $8,000,000 annually in carrying the mails, under
the operation of which the people get the country
newspapers free of postage, and the best magazines and periodicals
have been made so cheap as to put them within
the reach of the poor.
"Policies of life insurance and shares in building and
loan associations are made non-forfeitable for non-payment
of premiums or dues after a limited time.
"Banks, whether State or National, are subject to public
supervision, and their accounts to public inspection.
"The employees in the public service are allowed leave of
absence with pay for thirty days in some instances, and fifteen
days in others, and an additional thirty days for sickness
of themselves or families.
"The coolie trade, the importation of laborers under contract,
the labor of convicts of the United States, the further
immigration of Chinese, the importation of convict-labor-made-goods,
and the peonage system have been forbidden
by law.
"Boards of Arbitration, State and National, for the settlement
of labor disputes have been created.
"Those employed in the public service are allowed pay
for the National holidays--the first day of January, the
22nd of February, Decoration Day, the 4th of July, Labor
Day, Thanksgiving Day, and the 25th of December.
[D440]
"Homesteads have been given to those who would go
and settle on them, and other lands have been given to
those who would plant and grow trees thereon.
"The Australian ballot and other laws for the protection
of the people in their right to vote unmolested and unawed,
have been passed.
"Four millions of slaves have been freed, by which hundreds
of thousands of property-owners were impoverished.
"Public libraries have been established at public
expense.
"Public hospitals have been multiplied for the care of the
sick and poor.
"One hundred and forty million dollars are annually
paid out of the public Treasury to the soldiers of our wars,
their widows and orphans.
"Last, though not least, public schools have been established,
so that now the annual expenditure for tuition alone
in them is more than $160,000,000, and for buildings, interest
on loans and other expenses, probably the further sum
of $40,000,000 or more.
"Innumerable other laws of less importance, looking in
the same direction as the above, and extending into the
minutest details of the relations between employers of labor,
whether corporations, partnerships or individuals, and
employees, have been passed by Congress and by the Legislatures
of the various States.
"All these laws were passed and these benefactions
granted by the rich as well as the poor. Indeed, the history
of this country for the last quarter of a century shows that
men and women of all classes alike have taxed their ingenuity
to the utmost limit to devise laws for the benefit, education
and elevation of the masses of the people, and this
has been carried so far that many thoughtful men fear that
it will, if the present course continues, land in State Socialism.
There is no question that the trend of public opinion
among the people has been for many years in that
direction."
So then, if all has been done by legislation that can be
done, and still the unrest increases, it is evidently hopeless
[D441]
to look in that direction for a remedy. Mr. Thomas evidently
had also reached the conclusion that the conflict is
irrepressible.
Note the words in which that able and noble man,
Wendell Phillips, Expressed His Opinion.
"No reform, moral or intellectual, ever came from the
upper class of society. Each and all came from the protest of
the martyr and victim. The emancipation of the working
people must be achieved by the working people
themselves."
Very true; very wise; but neither did Mr. Phillips offer
any practical suggestion as to how the working-people are
to emancipate themselves from the sure outcome on selfish
principles of the Law of Supply and Demand (backed by
mental and physical inequalities), inexorable as the law of
gravitation. He knew not what to recommend. Revolution,
as all know, might work local and temporary changes, beneficial
or otherwise, but what would revolution avail
against universal conditions and competition? As well
might we revolt against the rising of the ocean tide, and attempt
to sweep it back with brooms, or to gather the surplus
in barrels.
Macaulay's Prediction
The Paris Figaro quotes the following extracts of a letter
written in 1857 by Mr. Macaulay, the great English historian,
to a friend in the United States:
"It is clear as the daylight that your government will
never be able to hold under control a suffering and angry
majority, because in your country the government is in the
hands of the masses, and the rich, who are in the minority,
are absolutely at their mercy. A day will come in the state of
New York when the multitude, between half a breakfast
and the hope of half a dinner, will elect your legislators. Is it
[D442]
possible to have any doubt as to the kind of legislators that
will be elected?
"You will be obliged to do those things which render
prosperity impossible. Then some Caesar or Napoleon will
take the reins of government in hand. Your Republic will
be pillaged and ravaged in the twentieth century, just as
the Roman empire was by the barbarians of the fifth century,
with this difference, that the devastators of the Roman
empire, the Huns and Vandals, came from abroad,
while your barbarians will be the natives of your own country,
and the product of your own institutions."
It did not occur to this man of large acquaintance with
human nature, in both rich and poor, to suggest as a probability
that the rich might unselfishly espouse the cause of
the majority and acquiesce in the enactment of such large
and benevolent laws as would lift the masses gradually to
competency and render it impossible for anyone to amass
more than half a million dollars worth of wealth. No; Mr.
Macaulay knew that such a proposition was unworthy of
consideration, and hence his prediction, which is in line
with God's testimony as to the results of selfishness, a great
time of trouble.
Moreover, since he thus wrote, the ballot has been demanded
by Mr. Macaulay's own countrymen, the British
public, and they got their demand. It has been demanded
by the Belgians and the Germans, and has been granted. It
was demanded and taken by force by the French. It is being
demanded in Austro-Hungary, and will be exercised ere
long by the Italians. So that the very catastrophe so confidently
predicted for the United States impends also over
"Christendom" entire. Macaulay saw no hope, and had no
suggestions to offer, except what others also offered;
namely, that the rich and influential forcibly take control
and sit on the safety valve as long as possible--until the explosion
occurs.
[D443]
Mr. Chauncey M. Depew's Hopes
Amongst the able and broad thinkers of the world today
is also the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew, LL. D. A wise man,
he frequently gives good advice; and we are glad to have his
views of the present situation. Speaking to the graduating
class of the Chicago University, and others, as orator of its
Tenth Convocation, he said, among other things:
"Education has not only made possible the marvelous
growth of our country, and the wonderful opportunity it
affords for employment and fortunes, but it has lifted our
people out of the methods and habits of the past, and we
can no longer live as our fathers did.
"The common school and the high school, with their superior
advantages, have cultivated us so that the refinements
of life make broader and more intelligent men, and
brighter, more beautiful and more large-souled women. It
lifts them above the plane of the European peasant. While
education and liberty have made the Americans a phenomenal
people, they have also, in a measure, raised the standards
of living and its demands in the older countries of
Europe. The Indian laborer can live under a thatch in a
single room with breech clout for clothes and a pan of rice
for food. But the American mechanic wants his home with
its several rooms. He has learned, and his children have
learned, the value of works of art. They have all become familiar
with the better food and the better clothing and the
better life which constitute not luxury but comfort, and
which make up and ought to make up the citizens of our
Republic.
"Masterful men of great foresight and courage have
seized upon the American opportunity to accumulate vast
fortunes. The masses, who have not been equally fortunate,
look upon them and say: 'We have not an equal share in
these opportunities.' This is not the place nor have I time to
even hint at the solution of these difficulties, or the solving
of these problems. That the genius exists among us to meet
them if need be by legislation, if need be by other processes,
no man in his senses can doubt. We require for our time
[D444]
more education, more college students and more college
opportunities. Every young man who goes out from these
foundations into the world goes out as a missionary of light
and knowledge. He will stand in the community where he
will settle, for an intelligent, broad and patriotic appreciation
of the situation in the country and in the neighborhood.
The graduates of the four hundred universities of the
country are the lieutenants and the captains, the colonels,
the brigadier-generals and the major-generals of that army
of American progress to which we all belong.
"The world which our young man enters today is a very
different one from that which his father or grandfather or
ancestors of one hundred years ago knew anything about.
Fifty years ago he would have graduated at a denominational
college and fallen into the church of his fathers and
of his faculty. Fifty years ago he would have dropped into
the party to which his father belonged. He would have accepted
his religious creed from the village pastor and his political
principles from the National platform of his father's
party. But today he graduates at a college where the denominational
line is loosely drawn, and finds that the members
of his family have drifted into all churches and are
professing all creeds, and he must select for himself the
church in which he shall find his home, and the doctrines
upon which he shall base his faith. He discovers that the ties
of party have been loosened by false leaders or incompetent
ones, and by the failure of party organizations to meet the
exigencies of the country and the demands of the tremendous
development of the times. Those who should be
his advisers say to him, 'Son, judge for thyself and for thy
country.' Thus, at the very threshold, he requires an equipment
which his father did not need for his duties as a citizen
or for the foundations of his faith and principles. He starts
out at the close of this marvelous nineteenth century to be
told from the pulpit and the platform and by the press, and
to see from his own observations, that there are revolutionary
conditions in the political, the financial and the industrial
world which threaten the stability of the State, the
position of the church, the foundations of society and the
safety of property. But while precept and prophecy are of
[D445]
disaster, he should not despair. Every young man should be
an optimist. Every young man should believe that tomorrow
will be better than today, and look forward with unfaltering
hope for the morrow, while doing his full duty for
today.
"That the problems are difficult and the situation acute,
we all admit. But it is the province of education to solve
problems and remove acute conditions. Our period is the
paradox of civilization. Heretofore our course has been a
matter of easy interpretation and plain sailing by the navigation
books of the past. But we stand five years from the
twentieth century, facing conditions which are almost as
novel as if a vast convulsion had hurled us through space
and we found ourselves sitting beside one of the canals of
Mars.
"Steam and electricity have made the centuries of the
Christian era down to ours count for nothing. They have
brought about a unity of production and markets which
upsets all the calculations and all the principles of action of
the past. They have united the world in an instantaneous
communication which has overthrown the limitations
which formerly were controlled by time and distance, or
could be fixed by legislation. The prices of cotton on the
Ganges or the Amazon, of wheat on the plateaus of the Himalayas
or in the delta of the Nile, or in the Argentines, of
this morning, with all the factors of currency, of climate
and wages, which control the cost of their production, are
instantly reflected at noon at Liverpool, at New Orleans, at
Savannah, at Mobile, at Chicago and at New York. They
send a thrill or a chill through the plantations of the South
and the farmhouses of the West. The farmers of Europe
and America are justly complaining of their condition. The
rural populations are rushing to the cities and infinitely increasing
the difficulties of municipal government. Capitalists
are striving to form combinations which shall float with
the tide or stem it, and labor organizations, with limited
success, are endeavoring to create a situation which they
believe will be best for themselves. The tremendous progress
of the last fifty years, the revolutions which have been
worked by steam, electricity and invention, the correlation
[D446]
of forces working on one side of the globe and producing
instantaneous effects on the other, have so changed the relations
of peoples and industries that the world has not yet
adjusted itself to them. The reliance of the present and future
must be upon education, so that supreme intelligence
may bring order out of the chaos produced by this nineteenth
century earthquake of opportunities and powers.
"There have always been crises in the world. They have
been the efforts and aspirations of mankind for something
better and higher, and have ultimately culminated in some
tremendous movement for liberty. These revolutions have
been attended by infinite suffering, the slaughter of millions
and the devastation of provinces and kingdoms. The
Crusades lifted Europe out of the slavery of feudalism, the
French revolution broke the bonds of caste. Napoleon was
the leader and wonder worker, though selfishly so, of modern
universal suffrage and parliamentary government. The
aspiration of all the centuries has been for liberty, and more
liberty. The expectation has been that when liberty was
gained there would be universal happiness and peace. The
English speaking peoples have secured liberty in its largest
and fullest sense; that liberty where the people are their
own governors, legislators and masters. The paradox of it
all is that with the liberty which we all hold as our greatest
blessing has come a discontent greater than the world has
ever known. The socialist movement in Germany grows
from one hundred thousand votes ten years ago to some
millions in 1894. The Republican elements in France become
more radical and threatening month by month. The
agrarian and labor troubles of Great Britain are beyond
any ability of her statesmen to overcome except by makeshifts
from day to day. There was an Anarchist riot in Chicago,
when only the disciplined valor of a small corps of
policemen saved the great city from the horrors of pillage
and the sack. A single man created an organization of
railway employees in a few months, so strong that under his
order twenty millions of people were paralyzed in their industries
and their movements, and all the elements which
constitute the support of communities temporarily suspended.
So potential was the uprising that two Governors
[D447]
surrendered, and the Mayor of our Western metropolis took
his orders from the leader of the revolt. Industrial and commercial
losses of incalculable extent were averted only by
the strong arm of the Federal Government.
"Another of the paradoxes of our quarter of a century is
that every artisan and mechanic and the laborer in every
department today, with shorter hours of labor, receives
twenty-five per cent, and in many cases fifty per cent, more
than he did thirty years ago. While he receives thus one-third
more than he did thirty years ago, his dollar will buy
in clothes and food twice as much as it did thirty years ago.
One would think that the laborer ought to be supremely
happy when he compares the past with the present, and
that beyond his living he ought to be laying up in savings
bank the fund which would speedily make him a capitalist.
And yet he feels a discontent which his father, thirty years
ago, with one-third the wages and his dollar buying one-half
as much, never knew. This all comes of education!"
[Mr. Depew takes no notice of the fact that thirty years
ago there was an abundance of work. The supply of human
skill and muscle being far less than the demand, men were
urged to work "double turn" on railroads as well as in mills
and factories; while immigrants also came by the million
and promptly found employment. But now the labor supply
greatly exceeds the demand in every direction, being superseded
by machinery. Now, although wages are not bad,
the people, the masses, cannot secure steady demand and
employment for their services; and, inevitably, wages are
falling.]
"We are fighting the battles not only of today, but for all
time; we are developing this country not only for ourselves
but for posterity. We have overcome slavery, we have extirpated
polygamy, and our only remaining enemy is
ignorance.
[But if the partial destruction of ignorance by education
has brought all the discontent and ills above recounted,
how much anarchy and what awful trouble would a thorough
[D448]
education cost! Mr. Depew declares that he is not here
discussing the remedy for all these ills and discontent, but
doubtless he would have been glad to do so if he knew a
remedy; and here he declares that it will be remedied "in
some way or other" which is a tacit admission that he knows
no specific remedy to suggest.]
"The people who are discontented are the governors and
rulers, and must solve their own problems. They can elect
their own Congresses and presidents. They cannot revolt
against themselves nor cut their own throats. Sooner or
later, and in some way or other, they will solve their problems,
but it will be by and through the law. It will be by destructive
or constructive methods.
"The inquiry is natural, 'With all the prosperity and
progress of the world, why this discontent?' The rapidity of
invention and the opportunities afforded by electricity and
steam have destroyed in the last twenty-five years sixty per
cent of the capital of the world and thrown forty per cent of
its labor out of employment. The triple expansion engine,
the invention of a new motor, the reduplication of forces by
a new application of machinery makes useless all the old
ones. It does more, it compels the skilled artisan, in the loss
of the tool by which he earned his living, and which is no
longer of any use, to fall back into the vast mass of common
laborers. At the same time these very forces, which have
thus destroyed the majority of values and thrown out of
employment so many people, have created new conditions
which have added beyond the power of calculation to the
wealth of the world and the opportunities of its people for
living, comfort and happiness. But to enjoy its opportunities,
its comforts and its happiness a better education becomes
necessary."
It is very evident that Mr. Depew is well posted in labor
matters and that he has made a study of the conditions
which have led up to the status which now confronts the
world. But what remedy does he offer? It was perhaps only
courtesy and a sense of propriety that led the gentleman, in
addressing a college class, to suggest that ignorance is the
"enemy" causing present ills and threatening the future.
[D449]
But that education cannot prove a remedy no one should
know better than Mr. Depew. Very few of the millionaires
of today ever received a college education. Cornelius Vanderbilt
was uneducated, a ferryman, whose keen business
instincts guided him to wealth. He foresaw the increase of
travel, and invested in steamboats and railroads. The original
John Jacob Astor was uneducated, a trader in furs and
skins. Foreseeing the growth of New York City he invested
in its real estate and thus laid the basis of the fortunes of the
present generation of Astors.
The following list of American millionaires who have
given a million dollars or more to colleges has gone the
rounds of the press, together with the statement that not
one of these wealthy and intelligent men ever enjoyed a college
education:
"Stephen Girard, to Girard College, $8,000,000; John D.
Rockefeller, to Chicago University, $7,000,000; George
Peabody, to various foundations, $6,000,000; Leland Stanford,
to Stanford University, $5,000,000; Asa Parker, to Lehigh
University, $3,500,000; Paul Tulane, to Tulane
University, New Orleans, $2,500,000; Isaac Rich, to Boston
University, $2,000,000; Jonas G. Clark, to Clark University,
Worcester, Mass., $2,000,000; the Vanderbilts, to Vanderbilt
University, at least $1,775,000; James Lick, to the
University of California, $1,600,000; John C. Green, to
Princeton, $1,500,000; William C. DePauw, to Asbury, now
DePauw University, $1,500,000; A. J. Drexel, to the Drexel
Industrial School, $1,500,000; Leonard Case, to the Cleveland
School of Applied Sciences, $1,500,000; Peter Cooper,
to Cooper Union, $1,200,000; Ezra Cornell and Henry W.
Sage, to Cornell University, each $1,000,000; Charles
Pratt, to the Pratt Institute of Brooklyn, $2,700,000."
As though to prove the exception to this rule, Mr. Seth
Low, a college graduate and President, at one time donated
a million dollars to Columbia College for a library.
Although a college education is valuable, it is by no
means a remedy for present conditions. Indeed, if every man
[D450]
in Europe and America were a college graduate today, the
conditions would be worse, instead of better, than they now
are. Mr. Depew admits this in the above quotations, when
he says that the mechanic "feels a discontent which his father,
thirty years ago, with one-third the wages, and his dollar
buying one-half as much, never knew. All this comes of
education." Yes, indeed, and the more general the education
the more general the discontent. Education is excellent, and
greatly to be desired; but it is not the remedy. While it is
true that some righteous, noble men have been rich, it is
also true that some of the most wicked men have been educated
men and some of the most holy men have been "unlearned,"
like the apostles. The more education a wicked
man has the greater his discontent and the greater his
power for evil. The world needs new hearts--"Create in me
a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me!"
(Psa. 51:10) The world's need is thus prophetically declared,
and the demonstrations that much more than education
and intelligence is necessary to happiness and peace,
are coming, and will ultimately be generally recognized.
"Godliness with contentment is great gain"; and only if this
foundation be first laid can education be guaranteed to be
a great blessing. The selfish hearts and the spirit of the
world are at variance with the spirit of love, and no compromise
will avail. Education, "knowledge increased,"
among the masses is bringing the social crisis and its ultimate
result, anarchy.
Bishop Worthington Interviewed
While attending a convocation of the Protestant Episcopal
Church in New York City, Bishop Worthington's views
respecting the social commotion were gleaned by a newspaper
man and published broadcast on Oct. 25, 1896. He is
reported to have said:
[D451]
"The trouble with the farmer, in my judgment, is that we
have carried our free educational system entirely too far. Of
course, I know that this view will be considered as a bit of
heresy, but still I believe it. The farmer's sons--a great
many of them--who have absolutely no ability to rise, get a
taste of education and follow it up. They will never amount
to anything--that is, many of them--and they become dissatisfied
to follow in the walk of life that God intended they
should, and drift into the cities. It is the overeducation of
those who are not qualified to receive it that fills our cities
while the farms lie idle."
The Bishop takes an opposite view from that advocated
by Mr. Depew. He agrees better with the Director General
of Education in Russia, to whose declaration against educating
the poorer classes we have already referred. We agree
with both as to the fact that education generally enlarges
the ambitions and restless discontent. But surely the Bishop
will concede that matters have already gone too far, in this
land of liberty and education, to hope to stifle the rising discontent
by extinguishing the lamp of knowledge. Good or
bad, the education and the discontent are here and cannot
and will not be ignored.
Hon. W. J. Bryan's Reply
As to the justice of the Bishop's suggestion, we leave it for
Mr. W. J. Bryan to answer, quoting from his press-reported
reply as follows:
"To talk about the overeducation of the farmer's sons
and to attribute the difficulties which surround us today to
overeducation, is, to my mind, one of the most cruel things
a man ever uttered. The idea of saying that farmers' sons,
who are not able to rise in life, get a taste of education, and
enjoy the taste so much that they follow it up and become
dissatisfied with the farm and drift into the cities! The idea
of saying that there is overeducation among our farmers'
sons! My friends, do you know what that language means?
[D452]
It means a reversal of the progress of civilization and a
march toward the Dark Ages again.
"How can you tell which one of the farmers' sons is going
to prove a great man until you have educated them all? Are
we to select a commission to go around and pick out the
ones that are to be educated?
"Ah, my friends, there is another reason why people have
gone into the cities and left the farms. It is because your legislation
has been causing the foreclosure of mortgages on
the farmers and the farms. It is because your legislation has
been making the farmer's life harder for the farmer; it is because
the non-producing classes have been producing the
laws and making it more profitable to gamble in farm
products than to produce them.
"The idea of laying the blame of the present condition at
the farmer's door! The idea of suggesting as a remedy the
closing of schools in order that the people may not become
dissatisfied! Why, my friends, there will be dissatisfaction so
long as the cause for dissatisfaction exists. Instead of attempting
to prevent people realizing their condition, why
don't these critics try to improve the condition of the farmers
of this country?"
An English journal, The Rock, inquired for light but obtained
none. We quote:
"Throughout the world seething unrest, conflicting interests,
and cross currents keep civilized mankind in a perpetual
state of excitement. The tension of nerve and mind
becomes more intense week by week almost; at short intervals
some startling event shakes the political and commercial
world with seismic force, and men realize what
accumulated elements of disaster lurk beneath the surface
of society. Politicians, while they strive to modify the course
of these forces, frankly admit they cannot thoroughly control
them or foretell their results.
"In the confusion of endless theories, proposals, experiments
and prophecies, on two points the greatest thinkers
are agreed. On the one hand they see impending a great catastrophe
which shall convulse the whole world and shatter
the present structure of political and social life, the forces of
[D453]
destruction having to exhaust themselves before the formative
ones can reconstruct the social fabric on a surer foundation.
On the other hand they agree that never did nations
more long for peace, or more clearly see the duty and advantages
of cultivating unity and fraternal concord, than
at the present moment."
It is the same throughout the whole civilized world. All
intelligent people see the dilemma more or less clearly, but
few have anything to suggest as a remedy. Not all however:
some well-meaning people think that they can solve the
problem, but only because they fail to get the situation
clearly outlined before their mental optics. These will be examined
in a subsequent chapter.
Mr. Bellamy's Statement of the Situation
The following, culled from an address by Mr. Edward
Bellamy, at Boston, will be read with interest. He said:
"If you would form a vivid conception of the economical
absurdity of the competitive system in industry, consider
merely the fact that its only method of improving the quality
or reducing the price of goods is by overdoing their production.
Cheapness, in other words, can only result under
competition from duplication and waste of effort. But
things which are produced with waste of effort are really
dear, whatever they may be called. Therefore goods produced
under competition are being made cheap only by
being made dear. Such is the reductio ad absurdum of the system.
It is a fact often true that the goods which we pay the
least for, are in the end the most expensive to the nation owing
to the wasteful competition which keeps down the price.
All waste must in the end mean loss, and therefore about
once in seven years the country has to go into insolvency as
the result of a system which sets three men to fighting for
work which one man could do.
"To speak of the moral iniquities of competition would
be to enter on too large a theme for this time, and I only
advert in passing to one feature of our present industrial
system, in which it would be hard to say whether inhumanity
[D454]
or economic folly predominated, and refer to the
grotesque manner in which the burden of work is distributed.
The industrial press-gang robs the cradle and the
grave, takes the wife and mother from the fireside, and old
age from the chimney-corner, while at the same time hundreds
of thousands of strong men fill the land with clamors
for an opportunity to work. The women and children are
delivered to the taskmasters, while the men can find nothing
to do. There is no work for the fathers, but there is
plenty for the babies.
"What, then, is the secret of this alarm over the approaching
doom of a system under which nothing can be
done properly without doing it twice, which can do no business
without overdoing it, which can produce nothing without
overproduction, which in a land full of want cannot
find employment for strong and eager hands, and finally
which gets along at all only at the cost of a total collapse
every few years, followed by a lingering convalescence?
"When a bad king is mourned by his people, the conclusion
must be that the heir to the throne is a still worse
case. That appears to be, in fact, the explanation of the
present distress over the decay of the competitive system. It
is because there is fear of going from bad to worse, and that
the little finger of combination will be thicker than the loins
of competition; that while the latter system has chastised
the people with whips, the Trusts will scourge them with
scorpions. Like the children of Israel in the desert, this new
and strange peril causes the timid to sigh even for the iron
rule of Pharaoh. Let us see if there be not also in this case a
promised land, by the prospect of which faint hearts may
be encouraged.
"Let us first inquire whether a return to the old order of
things, the free competitive system, is possible. A brief consideration
of the causes which have led to the present
world-wide movement for the substitution of combination
in business for competition will surely convince any one
that, of all revolutions, this is the least likely to go backward.
It is a result of the increase in the efficiency of capital
in great masses, consequent upon the invention of the last
and present generations. In former epochs the size and
[D455]
scope of business enterprises were subject to natural restrictions.
There were limits to the amount of capital that could
be used to advantage by one management. Today there are
no limits, save the earth's confines, to the scope of any business
undertaking; and not only no limit to the amount of
capital that can be used by one concern, but an increase in
the efficiency and security of the business proportionate to
the amount of capital in it. The economics in management
resulting from consolidation, as well as the control over the
market resulting from the monopoly of a staple, are also
solid business reasons for the advent of the Trust. It must
not be supposed, however, that the principle of combination
has been extended to those businesses only which
call themselves Trusts. That would be greatly to underestimate
the movement. There are many forms of combination
less close than the Trust, and comparatively few
businesses are now conducted without some understanding
approaching to a combination with its former competitors
--a combination tending constantly to become
closer.
"From the time that these new conditions began to prevail,
the small businesses have been disappearing before the
larger; the process has not been so rapid as people fancy
whose attention has but lately been called to it. For twenty
years past the great corporations have been carrying on a
war of extermination against the swarm of small industrial
enterprises which are the red blood corpuscles of a free competitive
system, and with the decay of which it dies. While
the economists have been wisely debating whether we could
dispense with the principle of individual initiative in business,
that principle has passed away, and now belongs to
history. Except in a few obscure corners of the business
world there is at present no opportunity for individual initiative
in business unless backed by a large capital; and the
size of the capital needed is rapidly increasing. Meanwhile
the same increase in the efficiency of capital in masses,
which has destroyed the small businesses, has reduced the
giants which have destroyed them to the necessity of making
terms with one another. As in Bulwer Lytton's fancy of
the coming race, the people of the Vril-ya had to give up
[D456]
war because their arms became so destructive as to threaten
mutual annihilation, so the modern business world finds
that the increase in the size and powers of the organizations
of capital, demands the suppression of competition between
them for the sake of self-preservation.
"The first great group of business enterprises which
adopted the principle of combining instead of competing,
made it necessary for every other group sooner or later to do
the same or perish. For as the corporation is more powerful
than the individual, so the syndicate overtops the corporation.
The action of governments to check this logical necessity
of economical evolution can produce nothing more
than eddies in a current which nothing can check. Every
week sees some new tract of what was once the great open
sea of competition, wherein merchant adventurers used to
fare forth with little capital beside their courage and come
home loaded--every week now sees some new tract of this
once open sea inclosed, dammed up, and turned into the
private fish-pond of a syndicate. To say that from the present
look of things the substantial consolidation of the various
groups of industries in the country, under a few score
great syndicates, is likely to be complete within fifteen
years (1889-1905) is certainly not to venture a wholly rash
statement.
"So great an economic change as is involved in taking
the conduct of the country's industries out of the hands of
the people and concentrating them in the management of a
few great Trusts, could not of course be without important
social reaction; and this is a reaction which is going to effect
peculiarly what is called the middle class. It is no longer a
question merely for the poor and uneducated, what they
are to do with their work; but for the educated and well-to-do,
also, where they are to find business to do and business
investments to make. This difficulty cannot fail constantly
to increase, as one tract after another of the formerly free
field of competition is inclosed by a new syndicate. The
middle class, the business class, is being turned into a proletarian
class.
"It is not difficult to forecast the ultimate issue of the concentration
of industry if carried out on the lines at present
[D457]
indicated. Eventually, and at no very remote period, society
must be divided into a few hundred families of prodigious
wealth on the one hand, a professional class
dependent upon their favor but excluded from equality
with them and reduced to the state of lackeys, and, underneath,
a vast population of working men and women, absolutely
without a hope of bettering a condition which would
year by year sink more and more hopelessly into serfdom.
This is not a pleasant picture, but I am sure it is not an exaggerated
statement of the social consequences of the syndicate
system."
Mr. Bellamy suggests Nationalism as the cure for all
these evils. We will examine it later.
Rev. Dr. Edward McGlynn's View
It will be remembered that some years ago Dr. McGlynn
came in conflict with his ecclesiastical superiors in the Roman
Catholic Church, because of his advocacy of Labor
Reform, and specially of Single Tax theories. Although reconciled
to the Church of Rome, he remained a Single
Taxer. The following extracts are from an article from his
pen in Donahoe's Magazine (Boston, July, 1895). Introducing
his subject, "The Prevention of Large Fortunes, and Raising
the Standard of the Laboring People," he said:
"It is possible for men to make honestly, as the world
holds business honesty at present, fortunes such as the Vanderbilts
possess, or the Astors, which run into the hundreds
of millions. It is not because these people are dishonest that
their fortunes grow, but that the leaders of the people are
either ignorant or indifferent in watching the channels
through which wealth flows from the individual laborer
into the common treasury. It is the machinery of distribution
which is at fault. When, therefore, labor has made its
daily contribution to the world's support, if the processes of
that contribution are carefully studied, from the moment
the laborer touches the raw material which he is to convert
into wealth until the finished product is placed in the hands
[D458]
of its user, it will be seen that the makers of colossal fortunes
have, under cover of law and custom, taken possession of
every important point of the process, and are turning the
wealth, which should fall into the treasuries of the millions,
into their own."
Dr. McGlynn urges that in seeking to account for large
fortunes and low wages three principal matters should be
carefully studied: (1) land and other natural bounties upon
which man exercises his faculties; (2) the means of transportation;
and (3) money, the medium which facilitates the exchanges
of products. It will be found, he says, that the
people have been indifferent to these points to which
money-makers have been exceedingly attentive. We quote:
"To take possession of these natural bounties, to monopolize
them under cover of law and custom, and to make all
men who would use them pay beforehand for the privilege,
have been the aim of the money-makers since time began.
It is an easy matter to run up a fortune of one hundred millions
when you can tax for two or three decades the millions
who must buy bread and meat, timber and coal, cotton and
wool, which all come from the land. This is what has been
done directly in European countries, where, as in the British
nation and in Ireland, millions of acres have been seized
by the few under cover of the law, and the people have been
compelled to pay first for permission to get at the land, then
for permission to continue their labor on it.
"The same thing happened indirectly in this country
when millions of acres were given to the great railroads, and
capitalists were permitted to get hold of millions more by
various subterfuges, all to be held with a tight grip until the
tide of immigration had swelled these properties to untold
values, when they were sold off at rates that made millionaires
as common in this country and in Europe as knights in
England. The readers of newspapers are well acquainted
with the career and the methods of the coal-barons of Pennsylvania
and elsewhere, who got hold of the great coal-producing
districts under cover of law, and for forty years have
levied tribute on consumers and miners alike by every device
[D459]
that human ingenuity could invent without regard to
justice...
"Just as the few get control, almost absolute control, of
the natural bounties, so they also get control of the means of
transportation in a country. What this means is best comprehended
by the statement that society makes no advance
without a proper exchange of commodities; for civilization
to improve on every side, men must have the greatest facilities
for exchanging the work of their hands...Ease of
transportation is, therefore, as vitally necessary to the laborer
as ease in getting at the natural bounties; and as all
men are laborers in the true sense of the word, the few who
have placed themselves in charge of the transportation facilities
of a nation get incredibly rich in the briefest time,
because they tax more thoroughly and absolutely every human
being in their jurisdiction than does the government
itself.
"The Vanderbilts are worth perhaps a third of a billion
today. How did they get it? By hard labor? No. By using
the privileges foolishly granted them by the foolish people:
the right of way over the state of New York; the right to fix
what rates of freight and passage the citizens of the community
must pay to use their own roads; the right to hold immense
domains of the State as the creation of their own
hands...No individual or corporation should be allowed
to amass billions out of these public properties...
"The same may be said of the medium of exchange--
money. Here again the world seems to be all at sea as to the
elementary principles of this problem; the money-lenders
alone have fixed and profitable principles, which enable
them to tax every human being who uses money, for the use
and for the continuance of the favor to use it. They have
placed themselves between men and the medium of exchange,
just as others have placed themselves between men
and the natural bounties, between men and the facilities of
transporting goods to market. How can they help getting
millions together as the Rothschilds have done; millions,
again, that should be in greater part passing into the treasury
of the community."
Dr. McGlynn summarizes his conclusions thus:
[D460]
"Organization is good to keep up the price of labor, to
secure sound legislation, to force employers to house their
workers well, landlords to provide good tenements, and so
on; but the root of all our difficulties, the explanation of our
unequal social conditions, and the cause of our large fortunes
and low wages, is to be found in the common indifference
to the three necessities of social and civilized life.
Before we can raise wages permanently, and make the Vanderbilt
and the Carnegie fortunes as impossible as they are
unnecessary, we must learn how to keep the natural
bounties, the means of exchange, and the medium of exchange
free from the speculator's tax, his interference, his
tyranny."
Dr. McGlynn's remedy is a "Single Tax," which we will
examine in the chapter following. It is but proper here,
however, to call attention to the fact that the Astors and
Vanderbilts have gained their wealth under the same laws
that controlled their fellow citizens, and which heretofore
have been esteemed the most just and equitable laws that
the world has ever known. It is to be noted, also, that the
Vanderbilt millions were won in connection with great
public service and great public benefit; although self-interest
and not interest in the public welfare was the inspiring motive.
The important point to be noted is, that science and
invention have wrought a complete revolution in the social
equilibrium, by which both brain and muscle are discounted
by the possession of land, machinery, wealth. A
properly adjusted new code of laws, suited to the new conditions,
is needed. But here lies the difficulty: a satisfactory
adjustment cannot be made because the parties interested--
Capital and Labor--will neither of them take a moderate,
reasonable view of the situation. It may indeed be said that
neither can view the matter righteously because both are
governed by selfishness which is generally quite blind to
equity until compelled to see it. The new conditions call for
a readjustment of affairs on a basis of love; and because this
[D461]
quality is possessed by but a small minority in either party
to the controversy, therefore the trouble will come, which
will not only wreck the present social order based on selfishness,
but will prepare all classes by experience to appreciate
the new social order, the "new heavens and new
earth" to be established under the dominion of Messiah.
Professor W. Graham's Outlook
Another writer, Prof. W. Graham, in The Nineteenth Century
(Feb. 1895), discussed the social question from the
standpoint known in England as "Collectivism"--the doctrine
that the people as a whole should own or control the
material and means of production: opposed to individualism.
Prof. Graham's conclusion is that, since a transformation
of the hearts of men is not supposable, the method
could only be introduced to a limited degree and after a
long time. He said:
"It is impracticable, at least, unless human nature in its
fundamental essence and desires, either eternally innate or
deeply rooted as the result of thousands of years of slow social
evolution tending to intensify them, be simultaneously
changed in the majority of men by a sort of general miracle.
I believe, further, that if anything resembling Collectivism
in its fulness were ever attempted to be established in this
country, even by a supposed majority in some new 'Mad'
Parliament representing even a majority of voters, that it
would be forcibly resisted by the minority, which, on the
boldest supposition, can never be a small one; and it would
be resisted because it would necessarily involve confiscation
as well as revolution, political, economical and social. If, finally,
it were ever, by any extraordinary combination of
chances, momentarily established, as it might conceivably
be in a country like France, which has a great leaning toward
it, as well as some Collectivist memories, it could not
possibly last. It could not even be reduced to practice save
nominally, owing to its inherent impracticability; while, so
long as it did exist, even partially or nominally, it would
[D462]
bring, after the first grand general division, the shares of
which would soon be dissipated, in addition to general social
chaos, evils including poverty to all classes, and greater
poverty than now prevails."
The Professor proceeded to offer proof of the correctness
of these views, and then inquired, Would Collectivism operate
satisfactorily even if it were somehow installed and set
in motion? He answers in the negative. He says:
"There would be slackness of effort all throughout, in inventors,
organizers, foremen, even in the better class of
workers, if they were not stimulated by extra remuneration
to put forth their utmost and their best efforts; in short, if
the present enormous and far-extending stimulus of private
interest be removed or ever seriously lessened, the inevitable
result would be a production greatly reduced in quantity
and inferior in kind. There would have to be given at
least 'bounties on production,' and so long as men are as
they are, and are long likely to be, they would have to be on
a liberal scale--that is to say, equality of remuneration
would have to be departed from as respects these higher laborers.
Otherwise there would be poverty in which all
would equally share, and ordinary laborers would have to
set against their poverty only the poor satisfaction that the
former rich classes had all been dragged down to share it
with them."
To prevent the decline of civilization and a return to barbarism,
the Professor continued, it would soon be necessary
to reintroduce inequality of wages and private enterprise.
Gradually competition, private loans, exchange, interest,
would have to be allowed, and in the end the new system
would be found to differ but little from the present order.
He concluded:
"Things would be modified more and more and more in
the old direction, till, finally, there would be the inevitable
counter-revolution, probably without any fresh civil war,
for which the governing class would no longer have heart in
face of the falling-off of their supporters and their own failing
[D463]
fanaticism. There would be a grand restoration, not of a
dynasty, but of a Social System; the old system based on
private property and contracts, which has emerged, as a
slow evolution under every civilization, as the system most
suited to human nature in a state of aggregation, and
which is still more suitable and more necessary under the
circumstances, physical and social, of our complex modern
civilization."
We believe that considerable has already been done for
the masses by Collectivism, as for instance in the Public
School system of the United States, the postal systems of
the civilized world, municipal ownership of waterworks,
etc., and that much more could yet be accomplished along
the same lines. Yet all reasonable people must consent to
the argument that if the sinews of selfishness, which now
move the world, be cut, by putting all men on the same
level, a new motive power (Love) would need to take their
place, or the world's business would suddenly come to a
standstill: sloth would take the place of industry, and poverty
and want would supplant comfort and affluence.
But we present these difficulties not because we have a
"patent" theory of our own to advocate, but that those
looking for the wisdom which cometh from above, through
the Bible, may the more clearly see the helplessness of mankind
in the present crisis, and that they may the more confidently
and more firmly lay hold by faith upon the Lord
and the remedy which he will apply in due season.
The Views of a Member of the Supreme Court
Justice Henry B. Brown, addressing the Alumni of the
Law Department of Yale College, took as his theme, "The
Twentieth Century." He pointed out that the changes of the
twentieth century promise to be social rather than political
or legal, and then named the three most prominent perils
which threaten the immediate future of the United States--
[D464]
(1) Municipal Corruption, (2) Corporate Greed, and (3)
The Tyranny of Labor. Among other things he said:
"Probably in no country in the world is the influence of
wealth more potent than in this, and in no period of our
history has it been more powerful than now. Mobs are
never logical, and are prone to seize upon pretexts rather
than upon reasons to wreak their vengeance upon whole
classes of society. There was probably never a flimsier excuse
for a great riot than the sympathetic strike of last summer
[1895], but back of it were substantial grievances. If
wealth will not respect the rules of common honesty in
the use of its power, it will have no reason to expect moderation
or discretion on the part of those who resist its
encroachments.
"I have spoken of corporate greed as another source of
peril to the state. The ease with which charters are procured
has produced great abuses. Corporations are formed under
the laws of one state for the sole purpose of doing business
in another, and railways are built in California under charters
granted by the states east of the Mississippi for the purpose
of removing their litigation to federal courts. The
greatest frauds are perpetrated in the construction of such
roads by the directors themselves, under guise of a construction
company, another corporation, to which is turned over
all the bonds, mortgages and other securities, regardless of
the actual cost of the road. The road is equipped in the
same way by another corporation, formed of the directors,
which buys the rolling stock and leases it to the road, so
that when the inevitable foreclosure comes the stockholders
are found to have been defrauded for the benefit of the
mortgagees, and the mortgagees defrauded for the benefit
of the directors. Property thus acquired in defiance of honesty
and morality does not stand in a favorable position to
invoke the aid of the law for its protection.
"Worse than this, however, is the combination of corporations
in so-called trusts, to limit production, stifle competition
and monopolize the necessaries of life. The extent
to which this has already been carried is alarming; the extent
to which it may hereafter be carried is revolutionary.
[D465]
The truth is that the entire corporate legislation is sadly in
need of overhauling, but the difficulty of procuring concurrent
action on the part of the forty-four states is apparently
insuperable.
"From a wholly different quarter proceeds the third and
most immediate peril to which I have called your attention
--the tyranny of labor. It arises from the apparent inability
of the laboring man to perceive that the rights he
exacts he must also concede. Laboring men may defy the
laws of the land and pull down their own houses and those
of their employers about their heads, but they are powerless
to control the laws of nature--that great law of supply and
demand, in obedience to which industries arise, flourish for
a season, and decay, and both capital and labor receive
their appropriate rewards."
Judge Brown sees no hope of a reconciliation between
Capital and Labor, being of too logical a mind to suppose
that bodies moving in opposite directions would ever come
together. He says further:
"The conflict between them has been going on and increasing
in bitterness for thousands of years, and a settlement
seems further off than ever. Compulsory arbitration is
a misnomer--a contradiction in terms. One might as well
speak of an amicable murder or a friendly war. It is possible
that a compromise may finally be effected upon the basis
of cooperation or profit-sharing, under which every laborer
shall become, to a certain extent, a capitalist. Perhaps, with
superior education, wider experience and larger intelligence,
the laboring man of the twentieth century may
attain the summit of his ambition in his ability to command
the entire profits of his toil."
In referring to the social disquietude arising from the
corporate evils mentioned he proposes as a palliative, but
not as a remedy, the public ownership of what are called
"natural monopolies." He thinks these privileges should be
exercised by the state or the municipality directly, rather
than that corporations should compete and quarrel for
franchises with bribes. He says:
[D466]
"There would seem to be no sound reason why such franchises,
which are for the supposed benefit of the public,
should not be exercised directly by the public. Such is, at
least, the tendency in modern legislation in nearly every
highly civilized state but our own. Here great corporate interests,
by parading the dangers of paternalism and socialism,
have succeeded in securing franchises which properly
belong to the public."
The gentleman evidently speaks forth his honest convictions,
untrammeled--membership in the United States
Supreme Court being of life tenure. He therefore could,
and probably did, suggest everything he has knowledge of
in the nature of a remedy for the conditions he deplores.
But what is the suggested temporary relief? Only an item of
Socialism (the public ownership of "national monopolies")
which all men except bankers and corporation stockholders
admit would be a temporary benefit--nothing more; and
even this he seems to concede is doubtful of accomplishment,
so powerfully entrenched is Capital.
Clemenceau's "Social Melee"
The editor of La Justice, Paris, some time ago published
a book, Le Melee Sociale, which received much attention because
of the prominence of its author as a legislator and
editor. It deals with the social question vigorously, maintaining
that cruel, remorseless struggling for existence is as
characteristic of human society as in the animal and vegetable
kingdoms, and that civilization, so-called, is but a
thin veneer which disguises man's essential brutality. He
sees the whole history of society symbolized in Cain, the
first murderer, and claims that while the modern Cain does
not murder his brother directly, he systematically endeavors
to crush his brother over whom, by force or fraud, he
has gained an advantage of power. We give a few striking
extracts from this book, as follows:
[D467]
"It seems to me remarkable that humanity should have
needed the meditation of centuries and the investigation of
the greatest minds to discover the simple and apparent fact
that man has ever been at war with man, and that this war
has lasted ever since the human race began. Indeed, the
imagination fails to completely conjure up a vision of the
tremendous, the bloody and universal slaughter which has
been going on upon this earth ever since it first emerged
from chaos.
"The forced labor of the chained slave and the free toil of
the paid workman both rest on the common basis of the defeat
of the weakest and his exploitation by the strongest.
Evolution has changed the conditions of the battle, but under
a more pacific appearance the mortal strife is still going
on. To seize the life and body of others to turn them to one's
own purposes--that is what has been the aim and fixed purpose
of the majority of men from the savage cannibal, the
feudal baron, the slave proprietor, down to the employer of
our own day."
The chief problem of civilization is thus stated by M.
Clemenceau:
"Hunger is the enemy of the human race. As long as man
shall not have conquered this cruel and degrading enemy
the discoveries of science will appear only as irony on his
sad lot. It is like giving a man luxuries when he is not even
provided with the necessaries of life. It is the law of nature,
and the cruelest of all her laws. She forces mankind to contrive,
to torture itself and destroy itself, to preserve at any
cost that supreme good or evil called life.
"Other lives dispute man's right to life. He defends himself
by organizing into communities. To his physical weakness,
the first cause of his defeat, is now added his social
weakness. And now the question can be asked, Have we arrived
at such a degree of civilization that we can conceive of
and establish a social organization in which the possibility
of death by poverty or hunger may be eliminated?
The economists do not hesitate. They reply boldly in the
negative."
[D468]
It is the duty of the State and of the rich members of the
community, in M. Clemenceau's view, to abolish hunger
and recognize the "right to live." Not only as a matter of
right, but of expediency as well, should the community take
care of the unfortunate and incapable. We quote again:
"Is it not the duty of the rich to succor the unfortunate?
The day will come when the spectacle of one man dying [of
hunger], while another man has more millions than he
knows what to do with, will be intolerable to all civilized
communities--as intolerable, in fact, as the institution of
slavery would be in this community today. The troubles of
the proletariat are by no means restricted to Europe. They
seem to be just as bad in 'free' America, the paradise of every
poor wretch on this side of the Atlantic."
The foregoing is a French view. It may or may not imply
that matters are worse in France than in the United States.
Of one thing, at least, we are thankful--that here, by liberal
taxation as well as by generous contributions, death by
starvation is not necessary. What is desired is something
more than bare existence. Happiness is necessary to make
existence desirable.
M. Clemenceau sees and denounces the faults of the present
social system, but he offers no reasonable solution of
them; hence his book is but a firebrand and disquieter. It is
easy enough to make ourselves and others more dissatisfied
and uncomfortable; and every book or article that offers no
healing balm, no theory or hope of escape from the troubles
would far better be unwritten, unpublished. The Scriptures,
thank God, supply not only a comforting balm, but the
only and infallible cure for the world's disease, sin, selfish-depravity
and death, at the hands of the great Mediator,
the Good Physician and Life-Giver. And this very volume
endeavors to call attention to these heavenly specifics. But
incidentally we are presenting the desperate character of
the disease and the hopelessness of the world's available
remedies.
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