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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">War of the Classes, by Jack London</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, War of the Classes, by Jack London
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: War of the Classes
+
+
+Author: Jack London
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 6, 2007 [eBook #1187]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WAR OF THE CLASSES***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1912 Macmillan edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>WAR OF THE CLASSES</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+JACK LONDON<br />
+<span class="smcap">author of &ldquo;the sea-wolf,&rdquo; &ldquo;call of
+the wild,&rdquo; etc.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE REGENT PRESS<br />
+NEW YORK</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Copyright, 1905,<br />
+<span class="smcap">By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Set up and electrotyped.&nbsp; Published
+April, 1905.&nbsp; Reprinted June, October, November, 1905; January, 1906;
+May, 1907; April, 1908; March, 19010; April, 1912.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Printed and Bound by<br />
+J. J. Little &amp; Ives Company<br />
+New York</p>
+<p>Contents:</p>
+<p>Preface<br />
+The Class Struggle<br />
+The Tramp<br />
+The Scab<br />
+The Question of the Maximum<br />
+A Review<br />
+Wanted: A New Land of Development<br />
+How I Became a Socialist</p>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+<p>When I was a youngster I was looked upon as a weird sort of creature,
+because, forsooth, I was a socialist.&nbsp; Reporters from local papers
+interviewed me, and the interviews, when published, were pathological
+studies of a strange and abnormal specimen of man.&nbsp; At that time (nine
+or ten years ago), because I made a stand in my native town for municipal
+ownership of public utilities, I was branded a &ldquo;red-shirt,&rdquo; a
+&ldquo;dynamiter,&rdquo; and an &ldquo;anarchist&rdquo;; and really decent
+fellows, who liked me very well, drew the line at my appearing in public
+with their sisters.</p>
+<p>But the times changed.&nbsp; There came a day when I heard, in my native
+town, a Republican mayor publicly proclaim that &ldquo;municipal ownership
+was a fixed American policy.&rdquo;&nbsp; And in that day I found myself
+picking up in the world.&nbsp; No longer did the pathologist study me,
+while the really decent fellows did not mind in the least the propinquity
+of myself and their sisters in the public eye.&nbsp; My political and
+sociological ideas were ascribed to the vagaries of youth, and good-natured
+elderly men patronized me and told me that I would grow up some day and
+become an unusually intelligent member of the community.&nbsp; Also they
+told me that my views were biassed by my empty pockets, and that some day,
+when I had gathered to me a few dollars, my views would be wholly
+different,&mdash;in short, that my views would be their views.</p>
+<p>And then came the day when my socialism grew respectable,&mdash;still a
+vagary of youth, it was held, but romantically respectable.&nbsp; Romance,
+to the bourgeois mind, was respectable because it was not dangerous.&nbsp;
+As a &ldquo;red-shirt,&rdquo; with bombs in all his pockets, I was
+dangerous.&nbsp; As a youth with nothing more menacing than a few
+philosophical ideas, Germanic in their origin, I was an interesting and
+pleasing personality.</p>
+<p>Through all this experience I noted one thing.&nbsp; It was not I that
+changed, but the community.&nbsp; In fact, my socialistic views grew
+solider and more pronounced.&nbsp; I repeat, it was the community that
+changed, and to my chagrin I discovered that the community changed to such
+purpose that it was not above stealing my thunder.&nbsp; The community
+branded me a &ldquo;red-shirt&rdquo; because I stood for municipal
+ownership; a little later it applauded its mayor when he proclaimed
+municipal ownership to be a fixed American policy.&nbsp; He stole my
+thunder, and the community applauded the theft.&nbsp; And today the
+community is able to come around and give me points on municipal
+ownership.</p>
+<p>What happened to me has been in no wise different from what has happened
+to the socialist movement as a whole in the United States.&nbsp; In the
+bourgeois mind socialism has changed from a terrible disease to a youthful
+vagary, and later on had its thunder stolen by the two old
+parties,&mdash;socialism, like a meek and thrifty workingman, being
+exploited became respectable.</p>
+<p>Only dangerous things are abhorrent.&nbsp; The thing that is not
+dangerous is always respectable.&nbsp; And so with socialism in the United
+States.&nbsp; For several years it has been very respectable,&mdash;a sweet
+and beautiful Utopian dream, in the bourgeois mind, yet a dream, only a
+dream.&nbsp; During this period, which has just ended, socialism was
+tolerated because it was impossible and non-menacing.&nbsp; Much of its
+thunder had been stolen, and the workingmen had been made happy with full
+dinner-pails.&nbsp; There was nothing to fear.&nbsp; The kind old world
+spun on, coupons were clipped, and larger profits than ever were extracted
+from the toilers.&nbsp; Coupon-clipping and profit-extracting would
+continue to the end of time.&nbsp; These were functions divine in origin
+and held by divine right.&nbsp; The newspapers, the preachers, and the
+college presidents said so, and what they say, of course, is so&mdash;to
+the bourgeois mind.</p>
+<p>Then came the presidential election of 1904.&nbsp; Like a bolt out of a
+clear sky was the socialist vote of 435,000,&mdash;an increase of nearly
+400 per cent in four years, the largest third-party vote, with one
+exception, since the Civil War.&nbsp; Socialism had shown that it was a
+very live and growing revolutionary force, and all its old menace
+revived.&nbsp; I am afraid that neither it nor I are any longer
+respectable.&nbsp; The capitalist press of the country confirms me in my
+opinion, and herewith I give a few post-election utterances of the
+capitalist press:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The Democratic party of the constitution is dead.&nbsp; The
+Social-Democratic party of continental Europe, preaching discontent and
+class hatred, assailing law, property, and personal rights, and insinuating
+confiscation and plunder, is here.&rdquo;&mdash;Chicago Chronicle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That over forty thousand votes should have been cast in this city
+to make such a person as Eugene V. Debs the President of the United States
+is about the worst kind of advertising that Chicago could
+receive.&rdquo;&mdash;Chicago Inter-Ocean.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We cannot blink the fact that socialism is making rapid growth in
+this country, where, of all others, there would seem to be less inspiration
+for it.&rdquo;&mdash;Brooklyn Daily Eagle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon the hands of the Republican party an awful responsibility
+was placed last Tuesday. . . It knows that reforms&mdash;great,
+far-sweeping reforms&mdash;are necessary, and it has the power to make
+them.&nbsp; God help our civilization if it does not! . . . It must repress
+the trusts or stand before the world responsible for our system of
+government being changed into a social republic.&nbsp; The arbitrary
+cutting down of wages must cease, or socialism will seize another lever to
+lift itself into power.&rdquo;&mdash;The Chicago New World.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Scarcely any phase of the election is more sinisterly interesting
+than the increase in the socialist vote.&nbsp; Before election we said that
+we could not afford to give aid and comfort to the socialists in any
+manner. . . It (socialism) must be fought in all its phases, in its every
+manifestation.&rdquo;&mdash;San Francisco Argonaut.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And far be it from me to deny that socialism is a menace.&nbsp; It is
+its purpose to wipe out, root and branch, all capitalistic institutions of
+present-day society.&nbsp; It is distinctly revolutionary, and in scope and
+depth is vastly more tremendous than any revolution that has ever occurred
+in the history of the world.&nbsp; It presents a new spectacle to the
+astonished world,&mdash;that of an <i>organized</i>, <i>international</i>,
+<i>revolutionary movement</i>.&nbsp; In the bourgeois mind a class struggle
+is a terrible and hateful thing, and yet that is precisely what socialism
+is,&mdash;a world-wide class struggle between the propertyless workers and
+the propertied masters of workers.&nbsp; It is the prime preachment of
+socialism that the struggle is a class struggle.&nbsp; The working class,
+in the process of social evolution, (in the very nature of things), is
+bound to revolt from the sway of the capitalist class and to overthrow the
+capitalist class.&nbsp; This is the menace of socialism, and in affirming
+it and in tallying myself an adherent of it, I accept my own consequent
+unrespectability.</p>
+<p>As yet, to the average bourgeois mind, socialism is merely a menace,
+vague and formless.&nbsp; The average member of the capitalist class, when
+he discusses socialism, is condemned an ignoramus out of his own
+mouth.&nbsp; He does not know the literature of socialism, its philosophy,
+nor its politics.&nbsp; He wags his head sagely and rattles the dry bones
+of dead and buried ideas.&nbsp; His lips mumble mouldy phrases, such as,
+&ldquo;Men are not born equal and never can be;&rdquo; &ldquo;It is Utopian
+and impossible;&rdquo; &ldquo;Abstinence should be rewarded;&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Man will first have to be born again;&rdquo; &ldquo;Co&ouml;perative
+colonies have always failed;&rdquo; and &ldquo;What if we do divide up? in
+ten years there would be rich and poor men such as there are
+today.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It surely is time that the capitalists knew something about this
+socialism that they feel menaces them.&nbsp; And it is the hope of the
+writer that the socialistic studies in this volume may in some slight
+degree enlighten a few capitalistic minds.&nbsp; The capitalist must learn,
+first and for always, that socialism is based, not upon the equality, but
+upon the inequality, of men.&nbsp; Next, he must learn that no new birth
+into spiritual purity is necessary before socialism becomes possible.&nbsp;
+He must learn that socialism deals with what is, not with what ought to be;
+and that the material with which it deals is the &ldquo;clay of the common
+road,&rdquo; the warm human, fallible and frail, sordid and petty, absurd
+and contradictory, even grotesque, and yet, withal, shot through with
+flashes and glimmerings of something finer and God-like, with here and
+there sweetnesses of service and unselfishness, desires for goodness, for
+renunciation and sacrifice, and with conscience, stern and awful, at times
+blazingly imperious, demanding the right,&mdash;the right, nothing more nor
+less than the right.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">JACK LONDON.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Oakland</span>, <span
+class="smcap">California</span>.<br />
+January 12, 1905.</p>
+<h2>THE CLASS STRUGGLE</h2>
+<p>Unfortunately or otherwise, people are prone to believe in the reality
+of the things they think ought to be so.&nbsp; This comes of the cheery
+optimism which is innate with life itself; and, while it may sometimes be
+deplored, it must never be censured, for, as a rule, it is productive of
+more good than harm, and of about all the achievement there is in the
+world.&nbsp; There are cases where this optimism has been disastrous, as
+with the people who lived in Pompeii during its last quivering days; or
+with the aristocrats of the time of Louis XVI, who confidently expected the
+Deluge to overwhelm their children, or their children&rsquo;s children, but
+never themselves.&nbsp; But there is small likelihood that the case of
+perverse optimism here to be considered will end in such disaster, while
+there is every reason to believe that the great change now manifesting
+itself in society will be as peaceful and orderly in its culmination as it
+is in its present development.</p>
+<p>Out of their constitutional optimism, and because a class struggle is an
+abhorred and dangerous thing, the great American people are unanimous in
+asserting that there is no class struggle.&nbsp; And by &ldquo;American
+people&rdquo; is meant the recognized and authoritative mouth-pieces of the
+American people, which are the press, the pulpit, and the university.&nbsp;
+The journalists, the preachers, and the professors are practically of one
+voice in declaring that there is no such thing as a class struggle now
+going on, much less that a class struggle will ever go on, in the United
+States.&nbsp; And this declaration they continually make in the face of a
+multitude of facts which impeach, not so much their sincerity, as affirm,
+rather, their optimism.</p>
+<p>There are two ways of approaching the subject of the class
+struggle.&nbsp; The existence of this struggle can be shown theoretically,
+and it can be shown actually.&nbsp; For a class struggle to exist in
+society there must be, first, a class inequality, a superior class and an
+inferior class (as measured by power); and, second, the outlets must be
+closed whereby the strength and ferment of the inferior class have been
+permitted to escape.</p>
+<p>That there are even classes in the United States is vigorously denied by
+many; but it is incontrovertible, when a group of individuals is formed,
+wherein the members are bound together by common interests which are
+peculiarly their interests and not the interests of individuals outside the
+group, that such a group is a class.&nbsp; The owners of capital, with
+their dependents, form a class of this nature in the United States; the
+working people form a similar class.&nbsp; The interest of the capitalist
+class, say, in the matter of income tax, is quite contrary to the interest
+of the laboring class; and, <i>vice versa</i>, in the matter of
+poll-tax.</p>
+<p>If between these two classes there be a clear and vital conflict of
+interest, all the factors are present which make a class struggle; but this
+struggle will lie dormant if the strong and capable members of the inferior
+class be permitted to leave that class and join the ranks of the superior
+class.&nbsp; The capitalist class and the working class have existed side
+by side and for a long time in the United States; but hitherto all the
+strong, energetic members of the working class have been able to rise out
+of their class and become owners of capital.&nbsp; They were enabled to do
+this because an undeveloped country with an expanding frontier gave
+equality of opportunity to all.&nbsp; In the almost lottery-like scramble
+for the ownership of vast unowned natural resources, and in the
+exploitation of which there was little or no competition of capital, (the
+capital itself rising out of the exploitation), the capable, intelligent
+member of the working class found a field in which to use his brains to his
+own advancement.&nbsp; Instead of being discontented in direct ratio with
+his intelligence and ambitions, and of radiating amongst his fellows a
+spirit of revolt as capable as he was capable, he left them to their fate
+and carved his own way to a place in the superior class.</p>
+<p>But the day of an expanding frontier, of a lottery-like scramble for the
+ownership of natural resources, and of the upbuilding of new industries, is
+past.&nbsp; Farthest West has been reached, and an immense volume of
+surplus capital roams for investment and nips in the bud the patient
+efforts of the embryo capitalist to rise through slow increment from small
+beginnings.&nbsp; The gateway of opportunity after opportunity has been
+closed, and closed for all time.&nbsp; Rockefeller has shut the door on
+oil, the American Tobacco Company on tobacco, and Carnegie on steel.&nbsp;
+After Carnegie came Morgan, who triple-locked the door.&nbsp; These doors
+will not open again, and before them pause thousands of ambitious young men
+to read the placard: <span class="smcap">No Thorough-fare</span>.</p>
+<p>And day by day more doors are shut, while the ambitious young men
+continue to be born.&nbsp; It is they, denied the opportunity to rise from
+the working class, who preach revolt to the working class.&nbsp; Had he
+been born fifty years later, Andrew Carnegie, the poor Scotch boy, might
+have risen to be president of his union, or of a federation of unions; but
+that he would never have become the builder of Homestead and the founder of
+multitudinous libraries, is as certain as it is certain that some other man
+would have developed the steel industry had Andrew Carnegie never been
+born.</p>
+<p>Theoretically, then, there exist in the United States all the factors
+which go to make a class struggle.&nbsp; There are the capitalists and
+working classes, the interests of which conflict, while the working class
+is no longer being emasculated to the extent it was in the past by having
+drawn off from it its best blood and brains.&nbsp; Its more capable members
+are no longer able to rise out of it and leave the great mass leaderless
+and helpless.&nbsp; They remain to be its leaders.</p>
+<p>But the optimistic mouthpieces of the great American people, who are
+themselves deft theoreticians, are not to be convinced by mere
+theoretics.&nbsp; So it remains to demonstrate the existence of the class
+struggle by a marshalling of the facts.</p>
+<p>When nearly two millions of men, finding themselves knit together by
+certain interests peculiarly their own, band together in a strong
+organization for the aggressive pursuit of those interests, it is evident
+that society has within it a hostile and warring class.&nbsp; But when the
+interests which this class aggressively pursues conflict sharply and
+vitally with the interests of another class, class antagonism arises and a
+class struggle is the inevitable result.&nbsp; One great organization of
+labor alone has a membership of 1,700,000 in the United States.&nbsp; This
+is the American Federation of Labor, and outside of it are many other large
+organizations.&nbsp; All these men are banded together for the frank
+purpose of bettering their condition, regardless of the harm worked thereby
+upon all other classes.&nbsp; They are in open antagonism with the
+capitalist class, while the manifestos of their leaders state that the
+struggle is one which can never end until the capitalist class is
+exterminated.</p>
+<p>Their leaders will largely deny this last statement, but an examination
+of their utterances, their actions, and the situation will forestall such
+denial.&nbsp; In the first place, the conflict between labor and capital is
+over the division of the join product.&nbsp; Capital and labor apply
+themselves to raw material and make it into a finished product.&nbsp; The
+difference between the value of the raw material and the value of the
+finished product is the value they have added to it by their joint
+effort.&nbsp; This added value is, therefore, their joint product, and it
+is over the division of this joint product that the struggle between labor
+and capital takes place.&nbsp; Labor takes its share in wages; capital
+takes its share in profits.&nbsp; It is patent, if capital took in profits
+the whole joint product, that labor would perish.&nbsp; And it is equally
+patent, if labor took in wages the whole joint product, that capital would
+perish.&nbsp; Yet this last is the very thing labor aspires to do, and that
+it will never be content with anything less than the whole joint product is
+evidenced by the words of its leaders.</p>
+<p>Mr. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, has
+said: &ldquo;The workers want more wages; more of the comforts of life;
+more leisure; more chance for self-improvement as men, as trade-unionists,
+as citizens.&nbsp; <i>These were the wants of yesterday</i>; <i>they are
+the wants of today</i>; <i>they will be the wants of tomorrow</i>, <i>and
+of tomorrow&rsquo;s morrow</i>.&nbsp; The struggle may assume new forms,
+but the issue is the immemorial one,&mdash;an effort of the producers to
+obtain an increasing measure of the wealth that flows from their
+production.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Henry White, secretary of the United Garment Workers of America and
+a member of the Industrial Committee of the National Civic Federation,
+speaking of the National Civic Federation soon after its inception, said:
+&ldquo;To fall into one another&rsquo;s arms, to avow friendship, to
+express regret at the injury which has been done, would not alter the facts
+of the situation.&nbsp; Workingmen will continue to demand more pay, and
+the employer will naturally oppose them.&nbsp; The readiness and ability of
+the workmen to fight will, as usual, largely determine the amount of their
+wages or their share in the product. . . But when it comes to dividing the
+proceeds, there is the rub.&nbsp; We can also agree that the larger the
+product through the employment of labor-saving methods the better, as there
+will be more to be divided, but again the question of the division. . . . A
+Conciliation Committee, having the confidence of the community, and
+composed of men possessing practical knowledge of industrial affairs, can
+therefore aid in mitigating this antagonism, in preventing avoidable
+conflicts, in bringing about a <i>truce</i>; I use the word
+&lsquo;truce&rsquo; because understandings can only be
+temporary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here is a man who might have owned cattle on a thousand hills, been a
+lumber baron or a railroad king, had he been born a few years sooner.&nbsp;
+As it is, he remains in his class, is secretary of the United Garment
+Workers of America, and is so thoroughly saturated with the class struggle
+that he speaks of the dispute between capital and labor in terms of
+war,&mdash;workmen <i>fight</i> with employers; it is possible to avoid
+some <i>conflicts</i>; in certain cases <i>truces</i> may be, for the time
+being, effected.</p>
+<p>Man being man and a great deal short of the angels, the quarrel over the
+division of the joint product is irreconcilable.&nbsp; For the last twenty
+years in the United States, there has been an average of over a thousand
+strikes per year; and year by year these strikes increase in magnitude, and
+the front of the labor army grows more imposing.&nbsp; And it is a class
+struggle, pure and simple.&nbsp; Labor as a class is fighting with capital
+as a class.</p>
+<p>Workingmen will continue to demand more pay, and employers will continue
+to oppose them.&nbsp; This is the key-note to <i>laissez
+faire</i>,&mdash;everybody for himself and devil take the hindmost.&nbsp;
+It is upon this that the rampant individualist bases his
+individualism.&nbsp; It is the let-alone policy, the struggle for
+existence, which strengthens the strong, destroys the weak, and makes a
+finer and more capable breed of men.&nbsp; But the individual has passed
+away and the group has come, for better or worse, and the struggle has
+become, not a struggle between individuals, but a struggle between
+groups.&nbsp; So the query rises: Has the individualist never speculated
+upon the labor group becoming strong enough to destroy the capitalist
+group, and take to itself and run for itself the machinery of
+industry?&nbsp; And, further, has the individualist never speculated upon
+this being still a triumphant expression of individualism,&mdash;of group
+individualism,&mdash;if the confusion of terms may be permitted?</p>
+<p>But the facts of the class struggle are deeper and more significant than
+have so far been presented.&nbsp; A million or so of workmen may organize
+for the pursuit of interests which engender class antagonism and strife,
+and at the same time be unconscious of what is engendered.&nbsp; But when a
+million or so of workmen show unmistakable signs of being conscious of
+their class,&mdash;of being, in short, class conscious,&mdash;then the
+situation grows serious.&nbsp; The uncompromising and terrible hatred of
+the trade-unionist for a scab is the hatred of a class for a traitor to
+that class,&mdash;while the hatred of a trade-unionist for the militia is
+the hatred of a class for a weapon wielded by the class with which it is
+fighting.&nbsp; No workman can be true to his class and at the same time be
+a member of the militia: this is the dictum of the labor leaders.</p>
+<p>In the town of the writer, the good citizens, when they get up a Fourth
+of July parade and invite the labor unions to participate, are informed by
+the unions that they will not march in the parade if the militia
+marches.&nbsp; Article 8 of the constitution of the Painters&rsquo; and
+Decorators&rsquo; Union of Schenectady provides that a member must not be a
+&ldquo;militiaman, special police officer, or deputy marshal in the employ
+of corporations or individuals during strikes, lockouts, or other labor
+difficulties, and any member occupying any of the above positions will be
+debarred from membership.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr. William Potter was a member of
+this union and a member of the National Guard.&nbsp; As a result, because
+he obeyed the order of the Governor when his company was ordered out to
+suppress rioting, he was expelled from his union.&nbsp; Also his union
+demanded his employers, Shafer &amp; Barry, to discharge him from their
+service.&nbsp; This they complied with, rather than face the threatened
+strike.</p>
+<p>Mr. Robert L. Walker, first lieutenant of the Light Guards, a New Haven
+militia company, recently resigned.&nbsp; His reason was, that he was a
+member of the Car Builders&rsquo; Union, and that the two organizations
+were antagonistic to each other.&nbsp; During a New Orleans street-car
+strike not long ago, a whole company of militia, called out to protect
+non-union men, resigned in a body.&nbsp; Mr. John Mulholland, president of
+the International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics, has stated that he
+does not want the members to join the militia.&nbsp; The Local
+Trades&rsquo; Assembly of Syracuse, New York, has passed a resolution, by
+unanimous vote, requiring union men who are members of the National Guard
+to resign, under pain of expulsion, from the unions.&nbsp; The Amalgamated
+Sheet Metal Workers&rsquo; Association has incorporated in its constitution
+an amendment excluding from membership in its organization &ldquo;any
+person a member of the regular army, or of the State militia or naval
+reserve.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Illinois State Federation of Labor, at a recent
+convention, passed without a dissenting vote a resolution declaring that
+membership in military organizations is a violation of labor union
+obligations, and requesting all union men to withdraw from the
+militia.&nbsp; The president of the Federation, Mr. Albert Young, declared
+that the militia was a menace not only to unions, but to all workers
+throughout the country.</p>
+<p>These instances may be multiplied a thousand fold.&nbsp; The union
+workmen are becoming conscious of their class, and of the struggle their
+class is waging with the capitalist class.&nbsp; To be a member of the
+militia is to be a traitor to the union, for the militia is a weapon
+wielded by the employers to crush the workers in the struggle between the
+warring groups.</p>
+<p>Another interesting, and even more pregnant, phase of the class struggle
+is the political aspect of it as displayed by the socialists.&nbsp; Five
+men, standing together, may perform prodigies; 500 men, marching as marched
+the historic Five Hundred of Marseilles, may sack a palace and destroy a
+king; while 500,000 men, passionately preaching the propaganda of a class
+struggle, waging a class struggle along political lines, and backed by the
+moral and intellectual support of 10,000,000 more men of like convictions
+throughout the world, may come pretty close to realizing a class struggle
+in these United States of ours.</p>
+<p>In 1900 these men cast 150,000 votes; two years later, in 1902, they
+cast 300,000 votes; and in 1904 they cast 450,000.&nbsp; They have behind
+them a most imposing philosophic and scientific literature; they own
+illustrated magazines and reviews, high in quality, dignity, and restraint;
+they possess countless daily and weekly papers which circulate throughout
+the land, and single papers which have subscribers by the hundreds of
+thousands; and they literally swamp the working classes in a vast sea of
+tracts and pamphlets.&nbsp; No political party in the United States, no
+church organization nor mission effort, has as indefatigable workers as has
+the socialist party.&nbsp; They multiply themselves, know of no effort nor
+sacrifice too great to make for the Cause; and &ldquo;Cause,&rdquo; with
+them, is spelled out in capitals.&nbsp; They work for it with a religious
+zeal, and would die for it with a willingness similar to that of the
+Christian martyrs.</p>
+<p>These men are preaching an uncompromising and deadly class
+struggle.&nbsp; In fact, they are organized upon the basis of a class
+struggle.&nbsp; &ldquo;The history of society,&rdquo; they say, &ldquo;is a
+history of class struggles.&nbsp; Patrician struggled with plebeian in
+early Rome; the king and the burghers, with the nobles in the Middle Ages;
+later on, the king and the nobles with the bourgeoisie; and today the
+struggle is on between the triumphant bourgeoisie and the rising
+proletariat.&nbsp; By &lsquo;proletariat&rsquo; is meant the class of
+people without capital which sells its labor for a living.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That the proletariat shall conquer,&rdquo; (mark the note of
+fatalism), &ldquo;is as certain as the rising sun.&nbsp; Just as the
+bourgeoisie of the eighteenth century wanted democracy applied to politics,
+so the proletariat of the twentieth century wants democracy applied to
+industry.&nbsp; As the bourgeoisie complained against the government being
+run by and for the nobles, so the proletariat complains against the
+government and industry being run by and for the bourgeoisie; and so,
+following in the footsteps of its predecessor, the proletariat will possess
+itself of the government, apply democracy to industry, abolish wages, which
+are merely legalized robbery, and run the business of the country in its
+own interest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their aim,&rdquo; they say, &ldquo;is to organize the working
+class, and those in sympathy with it, into a political party, with the
+object of conquering the powers of government and of using them for the
+purpose of transforming the present system of private ownership of the
+means of production and distribution into collective ownership by the
+entire people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Briefly stated, this is the battle plan of these 450,000 men who call
+themselves &ldquo;socialists.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, in the face of the
+existence of such an aggressive group of men, a class struggle cannot very
+well be denied by the optimistic Americans who say: &ldquo;A class struggle
+is monstrous.&nbsp; Sir, there is no class struggle.&rdquo;&nbsp; The class
+struggle is here, and the optimistic American had better gird himself for
+the fray and put a stop to it, rather than sit idly declaiming that what
+ought not to be is not, and never will be.</p>
+<p>But the socialists, fanatics and dreamers though they may well be,
+betray a foresight and insight, and a genius for organization, which put to
+shame the class with which they are openly at war.&nbsp; Failing of rapid
+success in waging a sheer political propaganda, and finding that they were
+alienating the most intelligent and most easily organized portion of the
+voters, the socialists lessoned from the experience and turned their
+energies upon the trade-union movement.&nbsp; To win the trade unions was
+well-nigh to win the war, and recent events show that they have done far
+more winning in this direction than have the capitalists.</p>
+<p>Instead of antagonizing the unions, which had been their previous
+policy, the socialists proceeded to conciliate the unions.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let
+every good socialist join the union of his trade,&rdquo; the edict went
+forth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bore from within and capture the trade-union
+movement.&rdquo;&nbsp; And this policy, only several years old, has reaped
+fruits far beyond their fondest expectations.&nbsp; Today the great labor
+unions are honeycombed with socialists, &ldquo;boring from within,&rdquo;
+as they picturesquely term their undermining labor.&nbsp; At work and at
+play, at business meeting and council, their insidious propaganda goes
+on.&nbsp; At the shoulder of the trade-unionist is the socialist,
+sympathizing with him, aiding him with head and hand,
+suggesting&mdash;perpetually suggesting&mdash;the necessity for political
+action.&nbsp; As the <i>Journal</i>, of Lansing, Michigan, a republican
+paper, has remarked: &ldquo;The socialists in the labor unions are tireless
+workers.&nbsp; They are sincere, energetic, and self-sacrificing. . . .
+They stick to the union and work all the while, thus making a showing
+which, reckoned by ordinary standards, is out of all proportion to their
+numbers.&nbsp; Their cause is growing among union laborers, and their long
+fight, intended to turn the Federation into a political organization, is
+likely to win.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They miss no opportunity of driving home the necessity for political
+action, the necessity for capturing the political machinery of society
+whereby they may master society.&nbsp; As an instance of this is the
+avidity with which the American socialists seized upon the famous Taft-Vale
+Decision in England, which was to the effect that an unincorporated union
+could be sued and its treasury rifled by process of law.&nbsp; Throughout
+the United States, the socialists pointed the moral in similar fashion to
+the way it was pointed by the Social-Democratic Herald, which advised the
+trade-unionists, in view of the decision, to stop trying to fight capital
+with money, which they lacked, and to begin fighting with the ballot, which
+was their strongest weapon.</p>
+<p>Night and day, tireless and unrelenting, they labor at their
+self-imposed task of undermining society.&nbsp; Mr. M. G. Cunniff, who
+lately made an intimate study of trade-unionism, says: &ldquo;All through
+the unions socialism filters.&nbsp; Almost every other man is a socialist,
+preaching that unionism is but a makeshift.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Malthus be
+damned,&rdquo; they told him, &ldquo;for the good time was coming when
+every man should be able to rear his family in comfort.&rdquo;&nbsp; In one
+union, with two thousand members, Mr. Cunniff found every man a socialist,
+and from his experiences Mr. Cunniff was forced to confess, &ldquo;I lived
+in a world that showed our industrial life a-tremble from beneath with a
+never-ceasing ferment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The socialists have already captured the Western Federation of Miners,
+the Western Hotel and Restaurant Employees&rsquo; Union, and the
+Patternmakers&rsquo; National Association.&nbsp; The Western Federation of
+Miners, at a recent convention, declared: &ldquo;The strike has failed to
+secure to the working classes their liberty; we therefore call upon the
+workers to strike as one man for their liberties at the ballot box. . . .
+We put ourselves on record as committed to the programme of independent
+political action. . . . We indorse the platform of the socialist party, and
+accept it as the declaration of principles of our organization.&nbsp; We
+call upon our members as individuals to commence immediately the
+organization of the socialist movement in their respective towns and
+states, and to co&ouml;perate in every way for the furtherance of the
+principles of socialism and of the socialist party.&nbsp; In states where
+the socialist party has not perfected its organization, we advise that
+every assistance be given by our members to that end. . . . We therefore
+call for organizers, capable and well-versed in the whole programme of the
+labor movement, to be sent into each state to preach the necessity of
+organization on the political as well as on the economic field.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The capitalist class has a glimmering consciousness of the class
+struggle which is shaping itself in the midst of society; but the
+capitalists, as a class, seem to lack the ability for organizing, for
+coming together, such as is possessed by the working class.&nbsp; No
+American capitalist ever aids an English capitalist in the common fight,
+while workmen have formed international unions, the socialists a world-wide
+international organization, and on all sides space and race are bridged in
+the effort to achieve solidarity.&nbsp; Resolutions of sympathy, and, fully
+as important, donations of money, pass back and forth across the sea to
+wherever labor is fighting its pitched battles.</p>
+<p>For divers reasons, the capitalist class lacks this cohesion or
+solidarity, chief among which is the optimism bred of past success.&nbsp;
+And, again, the capitalist class is divided; it has within itself a class
+struggle of no mean proportions, which tends to irritate and harass it and
+to confuse the situation.&nbsp; The small capitalist and the large
+capitalist are grappled with each other, struggling over what Achille Loria
+calls the &ldquo;bi-partition of the revenues.&rdquo;&nbsp; Such a
+struggle, though not precisely analogous, was waged between the landlords
+and manufacturers of England when the one brought about the passage of the
+Factory Acts and the other the abolition of the Corn Laws.</p>
+<p>Here and there, however, certain members of the capitalist class see
+clearly the cleavage in society along which the struggle is beginning to
+show itself, while the press and magazines are beginning to raise an
+occasional and troubled voice.&nbsp; Two leagues of class-conscious
+capitalists have been formed for the purpose of carrying on their side of
+the struggle.&nbsp; Like the socialists, they do not mince matters, but
+state boldly and plainly that they are fighting to subjugate the opposing
+class.&nbsp; It is the barons against the commons.&nbsp; One of these
+leagues, the National Association of Manufacturers, is stopping short of
+nothing in what it conceives to be a life-and-death struggle.&nbsp; Mr. D.
+M. Parry, who is the president of the league, as well as president of the
+National Metal Trades&rsquo; Association, is leaving no stone unturned in
+what he feels to be a desperate effort to organize his class.&nbsp; He has
+issued the call to arms in terms everything but ambiguous: &ldquo;<i>There
+is still time in the United States to head off the socialistic
+programme</i>, <i>which</i>, <i>unrestrained</i>, <i>is sure to wreck our
+country</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he says, the work is for &ldquo;federating employers in order that we
+may meet with a united front all issues that affect us.&nbsp; We must come
+to this sooner or later. . . . The work immediately before the National
+Association of Manufacturers is, first, <i>keep the vicious eight-hour Bill
+off the books</i>; second, to <i>destroy the Anti-injunction Bill</i>,
+which wrests your business from you and places it in the hands of your
+employees; third, to secure the <i>passage of the Department of Commerce
+and Industry Bill</i>; the latter would go through with a rush were it not
+for the hectoring opposition of Organized Labor.&rdquo;&nbsp; By this
+department, he further says, &ldquo;business interests would have direct
+and sympathetic representation at Washington.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a later letter, issued broadcast to the capitalists outside the
+League, President Parry points out the success which is already beginning
+to attend the efforts of the League at Washington.&nbsp; &ldquo;We have
+contributed more than any other influence to the quick passage of the new
+Department of Commerce Bill.&nbsp; It is said that the activities of this
+office are numerous and satisfactory; but of that I must not say too
+much&mdash;or anything. . . . At Washington the Association is not
+represented too much, either directly or indirectly.&nbsp; Sometimes it is
+known in a most powerful way that it is represented vigorously and
+unitedly.&nbsp; Sometimes it is not known that it is represented at
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The second class-conscious capitalist organization is called the
+National Economic League.&nbsp; It likewise manifests the frankness of men
+who do not dilly-dally with terms, but who say what they mean, and who mean
+to settle down to a long, hard fight.&nbsp; Their letter of invitation to
+prospective members opens boldly.&nbsp; &ldquo;We beg to inform you that
+the National Economic League will render its services in an impartial
+educational movement <i>to oppose socialism and class
+hatred</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Among its class-conscious members, men who
+recognize that the opening guns of the class struggle have been fired, may
+be instanced the following names: Hon. Lyman J. Gage, Ex-Secretary U. S.
+Treasury; Hon. Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, Ex-Minister to France; Rev. Henry
+C. Potter, Bishop New York Diocese; Hon. John D. Long, Ex-Secretary U. S.
+Navy; Hon. Levi P. Morton, Ex-Vice President United States; Henry Clews;
+John F. Dryden, President Prudential Life Insurance Co.; John A. McCall,
+President New York Life Insurance Co.; J. L. Greatsinger, President
+Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co.; the shipbuilding firm of William Cramp &amp;
+Sons, the Southern Railway system, and the Atchison, Topeka, &amp; Santa
+F&eacute; Railway Company.</p>
+<p>Instances of the troubled editorial voice have not been rare during the
+last several years.&nbsp; There were many cries from the press during the
+last days of the anthracite coal strike that the mine owners, by their
+stubbornness, were sowing the regrettable seeds of socialism.&nbsp; The
+World&rsquo;s Work for December, 1902, said: &ldquo;The next significant
+fact is the recommendation by the Illinois State Federation of Labor that
+all members of labor unions who are also members of the state militia shall
+resign from the militia.&nbsp; This proposition has been favorably regarded
+by some other labor organizations.&nbsp; It has done more than any other
+single recent declaration or action to cause a public distrust of such
+unions as favor it.&nbsp; <i>It hints of a class separation that in turn
+hints of anarchy</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The <i>Outlook</i>, February 14, 1903, in reference to the rioting at
+Waterbury, remarks, &ldquo;That all this disorder should have occurred in a
+city of the character and intelligence of Waterbury indicates that the
+industrial war spirit is by no means confined to the immigrant or ignorant
+working classes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That President Roosevelt has smelt the smoke from the firing line of the
+class struggle is evidenced by his words, &ldquo;Above all we need to
+remember that any kind of <i>class animosity in the political world</i> is,
+if possible, even more destructive to national welfare than sectional,
+race, or religious animosity.&rdquo;&nbsp; The chief thing to be noted here
+is President Roosevelt&rsquo;s tacit recognition of class animosity in the
+industrial world, and his fear, which language cannot portray stronger,
+that this class animosity may spread to the political world.&nbsp; Yet this
+is the very policy which the socialists have announced in their declaration
+of war against present-day society&mdash;to capture the political machinery
+of society and by that machinery destroy present-day society.</p>
+<p>The New York Independent for February 12, 1903, recognized without
+qualification the class struggle.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is impossible fairly to
+pass upon the methods of labor unions, or to devise plans for remedying
+their abuses, until it is recognized, to begin with, that unions are based
+upon class antagonism and that their policies are dictated by the
+necessities of social warfare.&nbsp; A strike is a rebellion against the
+owners of property.&nbsp; The rights of property are protected by
+government.&nbsp; And a strike, under certain provocation, may extend as
+far as did the general strike in Belgium a few years since, when
+practically the entire wage-earning population stopped work in order to
+force political concessions from the property-owning classes.&nbsp; This is
+an extreme case, but it brings out vividly the real nature of labor
+organization as a species of warfare whose object is the coercion of one
+class by another class.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It has been shown, theoretically and actually, that there is a class
+struggle in the United States.&nbsp; The quarrel over the division of the
+joint product is irreconcilable.&nbsp; The working class is no longer
+losing its strongest and most capable members.&nbsp; These men, denied room
+for their ambition in the capitalist ranks, remain to be the leaders of the
+workers, to spur them to discontent, to make them conscious of their class,
+to lead them to revolt.</p>
+<p>This revolt, appearing spontaneously all over the industrial field in
+the form of demands for an increased share of the joint product, is being
+carefully and shrewdly shaped for a political assault upon society.&nbsp;
+The leaders, with the carelessness of fatalists, do not hesitate for an
+instant to publish their intentions to the world.&nbsp; They intend to
+direct the labor revolt to the capture of the political machinery of
+society.&nbsp; With the political machinery once in their hands, which will
+also give them the control of the police, the army, the navy, and the
+courts, they will confiscate, with or without remuneration, all the
+possessions of the capitalist class which are used in the production and
+distribution of the necessaries and luxuries of life.&nbsp; By this, they
+mean to apply the law of eminent domain to the land, and to extend the law
+of eminent domain till it embraces the mines, the factories, the railroads,
+and the ocean carriers.&nbsp; In short, they intend to destroy present-day
+society, which they contend is run in the interest of another class, and
+from the materials to construct a new society, which will be run in their
+interest.</p>
+<p>On the other hand, the capitalist class is beginning to grow conscious
+of itself and of the struggle which is being waged.&nbsp; It is already
+forming offensive and defensive leagues, while some of the most prominent
+figures in the nation are preparing to lead it in the attack upon
+socialism.</p>
+<p>The question to be solved is not one of Malthusianism, &ldquo;projected
+efficiency,&rdquo; nor ethics.&nbsp; It is a question of might.&nbsp;
+Whichever class is to win, will win by virtue of superior strength; for the
+workers are beginning to say, as they said to Mr. Cunniff, &ldquo;Malthus
+be damned.&rdquo;&nbsp; In their own minds they find no sanction for
+continuing the individual struggle for the survival of the fittest.&nbsp;
+As Mr. Gompers has said, they want more, and more, and more.&nbsp; The
+ethical import of Mr. Kidd&rsquo;s plan of the present generation putting
+up with less in order that race efficiency may be projected into a remote
+future, has no bearing upon their actions.&nbsp; They refuse to be the
+&ldquo;glad perishers&rdquo; so glowingly described by Nietzsche.</p>
+<p>It remains to be seen how promptly the capitalist class will respond to
+the call to arms.&nbsp; Upon its promptness rests its existence, for if it
+sits idly by, soothfully proclaiming that what ought not to be cannot be,
+it will find the roof beams crashing about its head.&nbsp; The capitalist
+class is in the numerical minority, and bids fair to be outvoted if it does
+not put a stop to the vast propaganda being waged by its enemy.&nbsp; It is
+no longer a question of whether or not there is a class struggle.&nbsp; The
+question now is, what will be the outcome of the class struggle?</p>
+<h2>THE TRAMP</h2>
+<p>Mr. Francis O&rsquo;Neil, General Superintendent of Police, Chicago,
+speaking of the tramp, says: &ldquo;Despite the most stringent police
+regulations, a great city will have a certain number of homeless vagrants
+to shelter through the winter.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Despite,&rdquo;&mdash;mark the word, a confession of organized
+helplessness as against unorganized necessity.&nbsp; If police regulations
+are stringent and yet fail, then that which makes them fail, namely, the
+tramp, must have still more stringent reasons for succeeding.&nbsp; This
+being so, it should be of interest to inquire into these reasons, to
+attempt to discover why the nameless and homeless vagrant sets at naught
+the right arm of the corporate power of our great cities, why all that is
+weak and worthless is stronger than all that is strong and of value.</p>
+<p>Mr. O&rsquo;Neil is a man of wide experience on the subject of
+tramps.&nbsp; He may be called a specialist.&nbsp; As he says of himself:
+&ldquo;As an old-time desk sergeant and police captain, I have had almost
+unlimited opportunity to study and analyze this class of floating
+population, which seeks the city in winter and scatters abroad through the
+country in the spring.&rdquo;&nbsp; He then continues: &ldquo;This
+experience reiterated the lesson that the vast majority of these wanderers
+are of the class with whom a life of vagrancy is a chosen means of living
+without work.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not only is it to be inferred from this that
+there is a large class in society which lives without work, for Mr.
+O&rsquo;Neil&rsquo;s testimony further shows that this class is forced to
+live without work.</p>
+<p>He says: &ldquo;I have been astonished at the multitude of those who
+have unfortunately engaged in occupations which practically force them to
+become loafers for at least a third of the year.&nbsp; And it is from this
+class that the tramps are largely recruited.&nbsp; I recall a certain
+winter when it seemed to me that a large portion of the inhabitants of
+Chicago belonged to this army of unfortunates.&nbsp; I was stationed at a
+police station not far from where an ice harvest was ready for the
+cutters.&nbsp; The ice company advertised for helpers, and the very night
+this call appeared in the newspapers our station was packed with homeless
+men, who asked shelter in order to be at hand for the morning&rsquo;s
+work.&nbsp; Every foot of floor space was given over to these lodgers and
+scores were still unaccommodated.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And again: &ldquo;And it must be confessed that the man who is willing
+to do honest labor for food and shelter is a rare specimen in this vast
+army of shabby and tattered wanderers who seek the warmth of the city with
+the coming of the first snow.&rdquo;&nbsp; Taking into consideration the
+crowd of honest laborers that swamped Mr. O&rsquo;Neil&rsquo;s
+station-house on the way to the ice-cutting, it is patent, if all tramps
+were looking for honest labor instead of a small minority, that the honest
+laborers would have a far harder task finding something honest to do for
+food and shelter.&nbsp; If the opinion of the honest laborers who swamped
+Mr. O&rsquo;Neil&rsquo;s station-house were asked, one could rest confident
+that each and every man would express a preference for fewer honest
+laborers on the morrow when he asked the ice foreman for a job.</p>
+<p>And, finally, Mr. O&rsquo;Neil says: &ldquo;The humane and generous
+treatment which this city has accorded the great army of homeless
+unfortunates has made it the victim of wholesale imposition, and this
+well-intended policy of kindness has resulted in making Chicago the winter
+Mecca of a vast and undesirable floating population.&rdquo;&nbsp; That is
+to say, because of her kindness, Chicago had more than her fair share of
+tramps; because she was humane and generous she suffered whole-sale
+imposition.&nbsp; From this we must conclude that it does not do to be
+<i>humane</i> and <i>generous</i> to our fellow-men&mdash;when they are
+tramps.&nbsp; Mr. O&rsquo;Neil is right, and that this is no sophism it is
+the intention of this article, among other things, to show.</p>
+<p>In a general way we may draw the following inferences from the remarks
+of Mr. O&rsquo;Neil: (1) The tramp is stronger than organized society and
+cannot be put down; (2) The tramp is &ldquo;shabby,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;tattered,&rdquo; &ldquo;homeless,&rdquo; &ldquo;unfortunate&rdquo;;
+(3) There is a &ldquo;vast&rdquo; number of tramps; (4) Very few tramps are
+willing to do honest work; (5) Those tramps who are willing to do honest
+work have to hunt very hard to find it; (6) The tramp is undesirable.</p>
+<p>To this last let the contention be appended that the tramp is only
+<i>personally</i> undesirable; that he is <i>negatively</i> desirable; that
+the function he performs in society is a negative function; and that he is
+the by-product of economic necessity.</p>
+<p>It is very easy to demonstrate that there are more men than there is
+work for men to do.&nbsp; For instance, what would happen tomorrow if one
+hundred thousand tramps should become suddenly inspired with an
+overmastering desire for work?&nbsp; It is a fair question.&nbsp; &ldquo;Go
+to work&rdquo; is preached to the tramp every day of his life.&nbsp; The
+judge on the bench, the pedestrian in the street, the housewife at the
+kitchen door, all unite in advising him to go to work.&nbsp; So what would
+happen tomorrow if one hundred thousand tramps acted upon this advice and
+strenuously and indomitably sought work?&nbsp; Why, by the end of the week
+one hundred thousand workers, their places taken by the tramps, would
+receive their time and be &ldquo;hitting the road&rdquo; for a job.</p>
+<p>Ella Wheeler Wilcox unwittingly and uncomfortably demonstrated the
+disparity between men and work. <a name="citation1"></a><a
+href="#footnote1" class="citation">[1]</a>&nbsp; She made a casual
+reference, in a newspaper column she conducts, to the difficulty two
+business men found in obtaining good employees.&nbsp; The first morning
+mail brought her seventy-five applications for the position, and at the end
+of two weeks over two hundred people had applied.</p>
+<p>Still more strikingly was the same proposition recently demonstrated in
+San Francisco.&nbsp; A sympathetic strike called out a whole federation of
+trades&rsquo; unions.&nbsp; Thousands of men, in many branches of trade,
+quit work,&mdash;draymen, sand teamsters, porters and packers,
+longshoremen, stevedores, warehousemen, stationary engineers, sailors,
+marine firemen, stewards, sea-cooks, and so forth,&mdash;an interminable
+list.&nbsp; It was a strike of large proportions.&nbsp; Every Pacific coast
+shipping city was involved, and the entire coasting service, from San Diego
+to Puget Sound, was virtually tied up.&nbsp; The time was considered
+auspicious.&nbsp; The Philippines and Alaska had drained the Pacific coast
+of surplus labor.&nbsp; It was summer-time, when the agricultural demand
+for laborers was at its height, and when the cities were bare of their
+floating populations.&nbsp; And yet there remained a body of surplus labor
+sufficient to take the places of the strikers.&nbsp; No matter what
+occupation, sea-cook or stationary engineer, sand teamster or warehouseman,
+in every case there was an idle worker ready to do the work.&nbsp; And not
+only ready but anxious.&nbsp; They fought for a chance to work.&nbsp; Men
+were killed, hundreds of heads were broken, the hospitals were filled with
+injured men, and thousands of assaults were committed.&nbsp; And still
+surplus laborers, &ldquo;scabs,&rdquo; came forward to replace the
+strikers.</p>
+<p>The question arises: <i>Whence came this second army of workers to
+replace the first army</i>?&nbsp; One thing is certain: the trades&rsquo;
+unions did not scab on one another.&nbsp; Another thing is certain: no
+industry on the Pacific slope was crippled in the slightest degree by its
+workers being drawn away to fill the places of the strikers.&nbsp; A third
+thing is certain: the agricultural workers did not flock to the cities to
+replace the strikers.&nbsp; In this last instance it is worth while to note
+that the agricultural laborers wailed to High Heaven when a few of the
+strikers went into the country to compete with them in unskilled
+employments.&nbsp; So there is no accounting for this second army of
+workers.&nbsp; It simply was.&nbsp; It was there all this time, a surplus
+labor army in the year of our Lord 1901, a year adjudged most prosperous in
+the annals of the United States. <a name="citation2"></a><a
+href="#footnote2" class="citation">[2]</a></p>
+<p>The existence of the surplus labor army being established, there remains
+to be established the economic necessity for the surplus labor army.&nbsp;
+The simplest and most obvious need is that brought about by the fluctuation
+of production.&nbsp; If, when production is at low ebb, all men are at
+work, it necessarily follows that when production increases there will be
+no men to do the increased work.&nbsp; This may seem almost childish, and,
+if not childish, at least easily remedied.&nbsp; At low ebb let the men
+work shorter time; at high flood let them work overtime.&nbsp; The main
+objection to this is, that it is not done, and that we are considering what
+is, not what might be or should be.</p>
+<p>Then there are great irregular and periodical demands for labor which
+must be met.&nbsp; Under the first head come all the big building and
+engineering enterprises.&nbsp; When a canal is to be dug or a railroad put
+through, requiring thousands of laborers, it would be hurtful to withdraw
+these laborers from the constant industries.&nbsp; And whether it is a
+canal to be dug or a cellar, whether five thousand men are required or
+five, it is well, in society as at present organized, that they be taken
+from the surplus labor army.&nbsp; The surplus labor army is the reserve
+fund of social energy, and this is one of the reasons for its
+existence.</p>
+<p>Under the second head, periodical demands, come the harvests.&nbsp;
+Throughout the year, huge labor tides sweep back and forth across the
+United States.&nbsp; That which is sown and tended by few men, comes to
+sudden ripeness and must be gathered by many men; and it is inevitable that
+these many men form floating populations.&nbsp; In the late spring the
+berries must be picked, in the summer the grain garnered, in the fall, the
+hops gathered, in the winter the ice harvested.&nbsp; In California a man
+may pick berries in Siskiyou, peaches in Santa Clara, grapes in the San
+Joaquin, and oranges in Los Angeles, going from job to job as the season
+advances, and travelling a thousand miles ere the season is done.&nbsp; But
+the great demand for agricultural labor is in the summer.&nbsp; In the
+winter, work is slack, and these floating populations eddy into the cities
+to eke out a precarious existence and harrow the souls of the police
+officers until the return of warm weather and work.&nbsp; If there were
+constant work at good wages for every man, who would harvest the crops?</p>
+<p>But the last and most significant need for the surplus labor army
+remains to be stated.&nbsp; This surplus labor acts as a check upon all
+employed labor.&nbsp; It is the lash by which the masters hold the workers
+to their tasks, or drive them back to their tasks when they have
+revolted.&nbsp; It is the goad which forces the workers into the compulsory
+&ldquo;free contracts&rdquo; against which they now and again rebel.&nbsp;
+There is only one reason under the sun that strikes fail, and that is
+because there are always plenty of men to take the strikers&rsquo;
+places.</p>
+<p>The strength of the union today, other things remaining equal, is
+proportionate to the skill of the trade, or, in other words, proportionate
+to the pressure the surplus labor army can put upon it.&nbsp; If a thousand
+ditch-diggers strike, it is easy to replace them, wherefore the
+ditch-diggers have little or no organized strength.&nbsp; But a thousand
+highly skilled machinists are somewhat harder to replace, and in
+consequence the machinist unions are strong.&nbsp; The ditch-diggers are
+wholly at the mercy of the surplus labor army, the machinists only
+partly.&nbsp; To be invincible, a union must be a monopoly.&nbsp; It must
+control every man in its particular trade, and regulate apprentices so that
+the supply of skilled workmen may remain constant; this is the dream of the
+&ldquo;Labor Trust&rdquo; on the part of the captains of labor.</p>
+<p>Once, in England, after the Great Plague, labor awoke to find there was
+more work for men than there were men to work.&nbsp; Instead of workers
+competing for favors from employers, employers were competing for favors
+from the workers.&nbsp; Wages went up and up, and continued to go up, until
+the workers demanded the full product of their toil.&nbsp; Now it is clear
+that, when labor receives its full product capital must perish.&nbsp; And
+so the pygmy capitalists of that post-Plague day found their existence
+threatened by this untoward condition of affairs.&nbsp; To save themselves,
+they set a maximum wage, restrained the workers from moving about from
+place to place, smashed incipient organization, refused to tolerate idlers,
+and by most barbarous legal penalties punished those who disobeyed.&nbsp;
+After that, things went on as before.</p>
+<p>The point of this, of course, is to demonstrate the need of the surplus
+labor army.&nbsp; Without such an army, our present capitalist society
+would be powerless.&nbsp; Labor would organize as it never organized
+before, and the last least worker would be gathered into the unions.&nbsp;
+The full product of toil would be demanded, and capitalist society would
+crumble away.&nbsp; Nor could capitalist society save itself as did the
+post-Plague capitalist society.&nbsp; The time is past when a handful of
+masters, by imprisonment and barbarous punishment, can drive the legions of
+the workers to their tasks.&nbsp; Without a surplus labor army, the courts,
+police, and military are impotent.&nbsp; In such matters the function of
+the courts, police, and military is to preserve order, and to fill the
+places of strikers with surplus labor.&nbsp; If there be no surplus labor
+to instate, there is no function to perform; for disorder arises only
+during the process of instatement, when the striking labor army and the
+surplus labor army clash together.&nbsp; That is to say, that which
+maintains the integrity of the present industrial society more potently
+than the courts, police, and military is the surplus labor army.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>It has been shown that there are more men than there is work for men,
+and that the surplus labor army is an economic necessity.&nbsp; To show how
+the tramp is a by-product of this economic necessity, it is necessary to
+inquire into the composition of the surplus labor army.&nbsp; What men form
+it?&nbsp; Why are they there?&nbsp; What do they do?</p>
+<p>In the first place, since the workers must compete for employment, it
+inevitably follows that it is the fit and efficient who find
+employment.&nbsp; The skilled worker holds his place by virtue of his skill
+and efficiency.&nbsp; Were he less skilled, or were he unreliable or
+erratic, he would be swiftly replaced by a stronger competitor.&nbsp; The
+skilled and steady employments are not cumbered with clowns and
+idiots.&nbsp; A man finds his place according to his ability and the needs
+of the system, and those without ability, or incapable of satisfying the
+needs of the system, have no place.&nbsp; Thus, the poor telegrapher may
+develop into an excellent wood-chopper.&nbsp; But if the poor telegrapher
+cherishes the delusion that he is a good telegrapher, and at the same time
+disdains all other employments, he will have no employment at all, or he
+will be so poor at all other employments that he will work only now and
+again in lieu of better men.&nbsp; He will be among the first let off when
+times are dull, and among the last taken on when times are good.&nbsp; Or,
+to the point, he will be a member of the surplus labor army.</p>
+<p>So the conclusion is reached that the less fit and less efficient, or
+the unfit and inefficient, compose the surplus labor army.&nbsp; Here are
+to be found the men who have tried and failed, the men who cannot hold
+jobs,&mdash;the plumber apprentice who could not become a journeyman, and
+the plumber journeyman too clumsy and dull to retain employment; switchmen
+who wreck trains; clerks who cannot balance books; blacksmiths who lame
+horses; lawyers who cannot plead; in short, the failures of every trade and
+profession, and failures, many of them, in divers trades and
+professions.&nbsp; Failure is writ large, and in their wretchedness they
+bear the stamp of social disapprobation.&nbsp; Common work, any kind of
+work, wherever or however they can obtain it, is their portion.</p>
+<p>But these hereditary inefficients do not alone compose the surplus labor
+army.&nbsp; There are the skilled but unsteady and unreliable men; and the
+old men, once skilled, but, with dwindling powers, no longer skilled. <a
+name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3" class="citation">[3]</a>&nbsp;
+And there are good men, too, splendidly skilled and efficient, but thrust
+out of the employment of dying or disaster-smitten industries.&nbsp; In
+this connection it is not out of place to note the misfortune of the
+workers in the British iron trades, who are suffering because of American
+inroads.&nbsp; And, last of all, are the unskilled laborers, the hewers of
+wood and drawers of water, the ditch-diggers, the men of pick and shovel,
+the helpers, lumpers, roustabouts.&nbsp; If trade is slack on a seacoast of
+two thousand miles, or the harvests are light in a great interior valley,
+myriads of these laborers lie idle, or make life miserable for their
+fellows in kindred unskilled employments.</p>
+<p>A constant filtration goes on in the working world, and good material is
+continually drawn from the surplus labor army.&nbsp; Strikes and industrial
+dislocations shake up the workers, bring good men to the surface and sink
+men as good or not so good.&nbsp; The hope of the skilled striker is in
+that the scabs are less skilled, or less capable of becoming skilled; yet
+each strike attests to the efficiency that lurks beneath.&nbsp; After the
+Pullman strike, a few thousand railroad men were chagrined to find the work
+they had flung down taken up by men as good as themselves.</p>
+<p>But one thing must be considered here.&nbsp; Under the present system,
+if the weakest and least fit were as strong and fit as the best, and the
+best were correspondingly stronger and fitter, the same condition would
+obtain.&nbsp; There would be the same army of employed labor, the same army
+of surplus labor.&nbsp; The whole thing is relative.&nbsp; There is no
+absolute standard of efficiency.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Comes now the tramp.&nbsp; And all conclusions may be anticipated by
+saying at once that he is a tramp because some one has to be a tramp.&nbsp;
+If he left the &ldquo;road&rdquo; and became a <i>very</i> efficient common
+laborer, some <i>ordinarily efficient</i> common laborer would have to take
+to the &ldquo;road.&rdquo;&nbsp; The nooks and crannies are crowded by the
+surplus laborers; and when the first snow flies, and the tramps are driven
+into the cities, things become overcrowded and stringent police regulations
+are necessary.</p>
+<p>The tramp is one of two kinds of men: he is either a discouraged worker
+or a discouraged criminal.&nbsp; Now a discouraged criminal, on
+investigation, proves to be a discouraged worker, or the descendant of
+discouraged workers; so that, in the last analysis, the tramp is a
+discouraged worker.&nbsp; Since there is not work for all, discouragement
+for some is unavoidable.&nbsp; How, then, does this process of
+discouragement operate?</p>
+<p>The lower the employment in the industrial scale, the harder the
+conditions.&nbsp; The finer, the more delicate, the more skilled the trade,
+the higher is it lifted above the struggle.&nbsp; There is less pressure,
+less sordidness, less savagery.&nbsp; There are fewer glass-blowers
+proportionate to the needs of the glass-blowing industry than there are
+ditch-diggers proportionate to the needs of the ditch-digging
+industry.&nbsp; And not only this, for it requires a glass-blower to take
+the place of a striking glass-blower, while any kind of a striker or
+out-of-work can take the place of a ditch-digger.&nbsp; So the skilled
+trades are more independent, have more individuality and latitude.&nbsp;
+They may confer with their masters, make demands, assert themselves.&nbsp;
+The unskilled laborers, on the other hand, have no voice in their
+affairs.&nbsp; The settlement of terms is none of their business.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Free contract&rdquo; is all that remains to them.&nbsp; They may
+take what is offered, or leave it.&nbsp; There are plenty more of their
+kind.&nbsp; They do not count.&nbsp; They are members of the surplus labor
+army, and must be content with a hand-to-mouth existence.</p>
+<p>The reward is likewise proportioned.&nbsp; The strong, fit worker in a
+skilled trade, where there is little labor pressure, is well
+compensated.&nbsp; He is a king compared with his less fortunate brothers
+in the unskilled occupations where the labor pressure is great.&nbsp; The
+mediocre worker not only is forced to be idle a large portion of the time,
+but when employed is forced to accept a pittance.&nbsp; A dollar a day on
+some days and nothing on other days will hardly support a man and wife and
+send children to school.&nbsp; And not only do the masters bear heavily
+upon him, and his own kind struggle for the morsel at his mouth, but all
+skilled and organized labor adds to his woe.&nbsp; Union men do not scab on
+one another, but in strikes, or when work is slack, it is considered
+&ldquo;fair&rdquo; for them to descend and take away the work of the common
+laborers.&nbsp; And take it away they do; for, as a matter of fact, a
+well-fed, ambitious machinist or a core-maker will transiently shovel coal
+better than an ill-fed, spiritless laborer.</p>
+<p>Thus there is no encouragement for the unfit, inefficient, and
+mediocre.&nbsp; Their very inefficiency and mediocrity make them helpless
+as cattle and add to their misery.&nbsp; And the whole tendency for such is
+downward, until, at the bottom of the social pit, they are wretched,
+inarticulate beasts, living like beasts, breeding like beasts, dying like
+beasts.&nbsp; And how do they fare, these creatures born mediocre, whose
+heritage is neither brains nor brawn nor endurance?&nbsp; They are sweated
+in the slums in an atmosphere of discouragement and despair.&nbsp; There is
+no strength in weakness, no encouragement in foul air, vile food, and dank
+dens.&nbsp; They are there because they are so made that they are not fit
+to be higher up; but filth and obscenity do not strengthen the neck, nor
+does chronic emptiness of belly stiffen the back.</p>
+<p>For the mediocre there is no hope.&nbsp; Mediocrity is a sin.&nbsp;
+Poverty is the penalty of failure,&mdash;poverty, from whose loins spring
+the criminal and the tramp, both failures, both discouraged workers.&nbsp;
+Poverty is the inferno where ignorance festers and vice corrodes, and where
+the physical, mental, and moral parts of nature are aborted and denied.</p>
+<p>That the charge of rashness in splashing the picture be not incurred,
+let the following authoritative evidence be considered: first, the work and
+wages of mediocrity and inefficiency, and, second, the habitat:</p>
+<p>The New York Sun of February 28, 1901, describes the opening of a
+factory in New York City by the American Tobacco Company.&nbsp; Cheroots
+were to be made in this factory in competition with other factories which
+refused to be absorbed by the trust.&nbsp; The trust advertised for
+girls.&nbsp; The crowd of men and boys who wanted work was so great in
+front of the building that the police were forced with their clubs to clear
+them away.&nbsp; The wage paid the girls was $2.50 per week, sixty cents of
+which went for car fare. <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4"
+class="citation">[4]</a></p>
+<p>Miss Nellie Mason Auten, a graduate student of the department of
+sociology at the University of Chicago, recently made a thorough
+investigation of the garment trades of Chicago.&nbsp; Her figures were
+published in the American Journal of Sociology, and commented upon by the
+Literary Digest.&nbsp; She found women working ten hours a day, six days a
+week, for forty cents per week (a rate of two-thirds of a cent an
+hour).&nbsp; Many women earned less than a dollar a week, and none of them
+worked every week.&nbsp; The following table will best summarize Miss
+Auten&rsquo;s investigations among a portion of the garment-workers:</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Industry</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Average Individual Weekly Wages</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Average Number Of Weeks Employed</span></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="smcap">Average Yearly Earnings</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Dressmakers</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>$.90</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>42.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>$37.00</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Pants-Finishers</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1.31</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>27.58</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>42.41</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Housewives and Pants-Finishers</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1.58</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>30.21</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>47.49</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Seamstresses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2.03</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>32.78</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>64.10</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Pants-makers</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2.13</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>30.77</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>75.61</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Miscellaneous</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2.77</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>29.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>81.80</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Tailors</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>6.22</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>31.96</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>211.92</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>General Averages </p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2.48</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>31.18</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>76.74</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>Walter A. Wyckoff, who is as great an authority upon the worker as
+Josiah Flynt is on the tramp, furnishes the following Chicago
+experience:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Many of the men were so weakened by the want and hardship of the
+winter that they were no longer in condition for effective labor.&nbsp;
+Some of the bosses who were in need of added hands were obliged to turn men
+away because of physical incapacity.&nbsp; One instance of this I shall not
+soon forget.&nbsp; It was when I overheard, early one morning at a factory
+gate, an interview between a would-be laborer and the boss.&nbsp; I knew
+the applicant for a Russian Jew, who had at home an old mother and a wife
+and two young children to support.&nbsp; He had had intermittent employment
+throughout the winter in a sweater&rsquo;s den, <a name="citation5"></a><a
+href="#footnote5" class="citation">[5]</a> barely enough to keep them all
+alive, and, after the hardships of the cold season, he was again in
+desperate straits for work.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The boss had all but agreed to take him on for some sort of
+unskilled labor, when, struck by the cadaverous look of the man, he told
+him to bare his arm.&nbsp; Up went the sleeve of his coat and his ragged
+flannel shirt, exposing a naked arm with the muscles nearly gone, and the
+blue-white transparent skin stretched over sinews and the outlines of the
+bones.&nbsp; Pitiful beyond words was his effort to give a semblance of
+strength to the biceps which rose faintly to the upward movement of the
+forearm.&nbsp; But the boss sent him off with an oath and a contemptuous
+laugh; and I watched the fellow as he turned down the street, facing the
+fact of his starving family with a despair at his heart which only mortal
+man can feel and no mortal tongue can speak.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Concerning habitat, Mr. Jacob Riis has stated that in New York City, in
+the block bounded by Stanton, Houston, Attorney, and Ridge streets, the
+size of which is 200 by 300, there is a warren of 2244 human beings.</p>
+<p>In the block bounded by Sixty-first and Sixty-second streets, and
+Amsterdam and West End avenues, are over four thousand human
+creatures,&mdash;quite a comfortable New England village to crowd into one
+city block.</p>
+<p>The Rev. Dr. Behrends, speaking of the block bounded by Canal, Hester,
+Eldridge, and Forsyth streets, says: &ldquo;In a room 12 by 8 and 5&frac12;
+feet high, it was found that nine persons slept and prepared their food. .
+. . In another room, located in a dark cellar, without screens or
+partitions, were together two men with their wives and a girl of fourteen,
+two single men and a boy of seventeen, two women and four boys,&mdash;nine,
+ten, eleven, and fifteen years old,&mdash;fourteen persons in
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here humanity rots.&nbsp; Its victims, with grim humor, call it
+&ldquo;tenant-house rot.&rdquo;&nbsp; Or, as a legislative report puts it:
+&ldquo;Here infantile life unfolds its bud, but perishes before its first
+anniversary.&nbsp; Here youth is ugly with loathsome disease, and the
+deformities which follow physical degeneration.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These are the men and women who are what they are because they were not
+better born, or because they happened to be unluckily born in time and
+space.&nbsp; Gauged by the needs of the system, they are weak and
+worthless.&nbsp; The hospital and the pauper&rsquo;s grave await them, and
+they offer no encouragement to the mediocre worker who has failed higher up
+in the industrial structure.&nbsp; Such a worker, conscious that he has
+failed, conscious from the hard fact that he cannot obtain work in the
+higher employments, finds several courses open to him.&nbsp; He may come
+down and be a beast in the social pit, for instance; but if he be of a
+certain caliber, the effect of the social pit will be to discourage him
+from work.&nbsp; In his blood a rebellion will quicken, and he will elect
+to become either a felon or a tramp.</p>
+<p>If he have fought the hard fight he is not unacquainted with the lure of
+the &ldquo;road.&rdquo;&nbsp; When out of work and still undiscouraged, he
+has been forced to &ldquo;hit the road&rdquo; between large cities in his
+quest for a job.&nbsp; He has loafed, seen the country and green things,
+laughed in joy, lain on his back and listened to the birds singing
+overhead, unannoyed by factory whistles and bosses&rsquo; harsh commands;
+and, most significant of all, <i>he has lived</i>!&nbsp; That is the
+point!&nbsp; He has not starved to death.&nbsp; Not only has he been
+care-free and happy, but he has lived!&nbsp; And from the knowledge that he
+has idled and is still alive, he achieves a new outlook on life; and the
+more he experiences the unenviable lot of the poor worker, the more the
+blandishments of the &ldquo;road&rdquo; take hold of him.&nbsp; And finally
+he flings his challenge in the face of society, imposes a valorous boycott
+on all work, and joins the far-wanderers of Hoboland, the gypsy folk of
+this latter day.</p>
+<p>But the tramp does not usually come from the slums.&nbsp; His place of
+birth is ordinarily a bit above, and sometimes a very great bit
+above.&nbsp; A confessed failure, he yet refuses to accept the punishment,
+and swerves aside from the slum to vagabondage.&nbsp; The average beast in
+the social pit is either too much of a beast, or too much of a slave to the
+bourgeois ethics and ideals of his masters, to manifest this flicker of
+rebellion.&nbsp; But the social pit, out of its discouragement and
+viciousness, breeds criminals, men who prefer being beasts of prey to being
+beasts of work.&nbsp; And the mediocre criminal, in turn, the unfit and
+inefficient criminal, is discouraged by the strong arm of the law and goes
+over to trampdom.</p>
+<p>These men, the discouraged worker and the discouraged criminal,
+voluntarily withdraw themselves from the struggle for work.&nbsp; Industry
+does not need them.&nbsp; There are no factories shut down through lack of
+labor, no projected railroads unbuilt for want of pick-and-shovel
+men.&nbsp; Women are still glad to toil for a dollar a week, and men and
+boys to clamor and fight for work at the factory gates.&nbsp; No one misses
+these discouraged men, and in going away they have made it somewhat easier
+for those that remain.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>So the case stands thus: There being more men than there is work for men
+to do, a surplus labor army inevitably results.&nbsp; The surplus labor
+army is an economic necessity; without it, present society would fall to
+pieces.&nbsp; Into the surplus labor army are herded the mediocre, the
+inefficient, the unfit, and those incapable of satisfying the industrial
+needs of the system.&nbsp; The struggle for work between the members of the
+surplus labor army is sordid and savage, and at the bottom of the social
+pit the struggle is vicious and beastly.&nbsp; This struggle tends to
+discouragement, and the victims of this discouragement are the criminal and
+the tramp.&nbsp; The tramp is not an economic necessity such as the surplus
+labor army, but he is the by-product of an economic necessity.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;road&rdquo; is one of the safety-valves through which the
+waste of the social organism is given off.&nbsp; And <i>being given off</i>
+constitutes the negative function of the tramp.&nbsp; Society, as at
+present organized, makes much waste of human life.&nbsp; This waste must be
+eliminated.&nbsp; Chloroform or electrocution would be a simple, merciful
+solution of this problem of elimination; but the ruling ethics, while
+permitting the human waste, will not permit a humane elimination of that
+waste.&nbsp; This paradox demonstrates the irreconcilability of theoretical
+ethics and industrial need.</p>
+<p>And so the tramp becomes self-eliminating.&nbsp; And not only
+self!&nbsp; Since he is manifestly unfit for things as they are, and since
+kind is prone to beget kind, it is necessary that his kind cease with him,
+that his progeny shall not be, that he play the eunuch&rsquo;s part in this
+twentieth century after Christ.&nbsp; And he plays it.&nbsp; He does not
+breed.&nbsp; Sterility is his portion, as it is the portion of the woman on
+the street.&nbsp; They might have been mates, but society has decreed
+otherwise.</p>
+<p>And, while it is not nice that these men should die, it is ordained that
+they must die, and we should not quarrel with them if they cumber our
+highways and kitchen stoops with their perambulating carcasses.&nbsp; This
+is a form of elimination we not only countenance but compel.&nbsp;
+Therefore let us be cheerful and honest about it.&nbsp; Let us be as
+stringent as we please with our police regulations, but for goodness&rsquo;
+sake let us refrain from telling the tramp to go to work.&nbsp; Not only is
+it unkind, but it is untrue and hypocritical.&nbsp; We know there is no
+work for him.&nbsp; As the scapegoat to our economic and industrial
+sinning, or to the plan of things, if you will, we should give him
+credit.&nbsp; Let us be just.&nbsp; He is so made.&nbsp; Society made
+him.&nbsp; He did not make himself.</p>
+<h2>THE SCAB</h2>
+<p>In a competitive society, where men struggle with one another for food
+and shelter, what is more natural than that generosity, when it diminishes
+the food and shelter of men other than he who is generous, should be held
+an accursed thing?&nbsp; Wise old saws to the contrary, he who takes from a
+man&rsquo;s purse takes from his existence.&nbsp; To strike at a
+man&rsquo;s food and shelter is to strike at his life; and in a society
+organized on a tooth-and-nail basis, such an act, performed though it may
+be under the guise of generosity, is none the less menacing and
+terrible.</p>
+<p>It is for this reason that a laborer is so fiercely hostile to another
+laborer who offers to work for less pay or longer hours.&nbsp; To hold his
+place, (which is to live), he must offset this offer by another equally
+liberal, which is equivalent to giving away somewhat from the food and
+shelter he enjoys.&nbsp; To sell his day&rsquo;s work for $2, instead of
+$2.50, means that he, his wife, and his children will not have so good a
+roof over their heads, so warm clothes on their backs, so substantial food
+in their stomachs.&nbsp; Meat will be bought less frequently and it will be
+tougher and less nutritious, stout new shoes will go less often on the
+children&rsquo;s feet, and disease and death will be more imminent in a
+cheaper house and neighborhood.</p>
+<p>Thus the generous laborer, giving more of a day&rsquo;s work for less
+return, (measured in terms of food and shelter), threatens the life of his
+less generous brother laborer, and at the best, if he does not destroy that
+life, he diminishes it.&nbsp; Whereupon the less generous laborer looks
+upon him as an enemy, and, as men are inclined to do in a tooth-and-nail
+society, he tries to kill the man who is trying to kill him.</p>
+<p>When a striker kills with a brick the man who has taken his place, he
+has no sense of wrong-doing.&nbsp; In the deepest holds of his being,
+though he does not reason the impulse, he has an ethical sanction.&nbsp; He
+feels dimly that he has justification, just as the home-defending Boer
+felt, though more sharply, with each bullet he fired at the invading
+English.&nbsp; Behind every brick thrown by a striker is the selfish will
+&ldquo;to live&rdquo; of himself, and the slightly altruistic will
+&ldquo;to live&rdquo; of his family.&nbsp; The family group came into the
+world before the State group, and society, being still on the primitive
+basis of tooth and nail, the will &ldquo;to live&rdquo; of the State is not
+so compelling to the striker as is the will &ldquo;to live&rdquo; of his
+family and himself.</p>
+<p>In addition to the use of bricks, clubs, and bullets, the selfish
+laborer finds it necessary to express his feelings in speech.&nbsp; Just as
+the peaceful country-dweller calls the sea-rover a &ldquo;pirate,&rdquo;
+and the stout burgher calls the man who breaks into his strong-box a
+&ldquo;robber,&rdquo; so the selfish laborer applies the opprobrious
+epithet a &ldquo;scab&rdquo; to the laborer who takes from him food and
+shelter by being more generous in the disposal of his labor power.&nbsp;
+The sentimental connotation of &ldquo;scab&rdquo; is as terrific as that of
+&ldquo;traitor&rdquo; or &ldquo;Judas,&rdquo; and a sentimental definition
+would be as deep and varied as the human heart.&nbsp; It is far easier to
+arrive at what may be called a technical definition, worded in commercial
+terms, as, for instance, that <i>a scab is one who gives more value for the
+same price than another</i>.</p>
+<p>The laborer who gives more time or strength or skill for the same wage
+than another, or equal time or strength or skill for a less wage, is a
+scab.&nbsp; This generousness on his part is hurtful to his
+fellow-laborers, for it compels them to an equal generousness which is not
+to their liking, and which gives them less of food and shelter.&nbsp; But a
+word may be said for the scab.&nbsp; Just as his act makes his rivals
+compulsorily generous, so do they, by fortune of birth and training, make
+compulsory his act of generousness.&nbsp; He does not scab because he wants
+to scab.&nbsp; No whim of the spirit, no burgeoning of the heart, leads him
+to give more of his labor power than they for a certain sum.</p>
+<p>It is because he cannot get work on the same terms as they that he is a
+scab.&nbsp; There is less work than there are men to do work.&nbsp; This is
+patent, else the scab would not loom so large on the labor-market
+horizon.&nbsp; Because they are stronger than he, or more skilled, or more
+energetic, it is impossible for him to take their places at the same
+wage.&nbsp; To take their places he must give more value, must work longer
+hours or receive a smaller wage.&nbsp; He does so, and he cannot help it,
+for his will &ldquo;to live&rdquo; is driving him on as well as they are
+being driven on by their will &ldquo;to live&rdquo;; and to live he must
+win food and shelter, which he can do only by receiving permission to work
+from some man who owns a bit of land or a piece of machinery.&nbsp; And to
+receive permission from this man, he must make the transaction profitable
+for him.</p>
+<p>Viewed in this light, the scab, who gives more labor power for a certain
+price than his fellows, is not so generous after all.&nbsp; He is no more
+generous with his energy than the chattel slave and the convict laborer,
+who, by the way, are the almost perfect scabs.&nbsp; They give their labor
+power for about the minimum possible price.&nbsp; But, within limits, they
+may loaf and malinger, and, as scabs, are exceeded by the machine, which
+never loafs and malingers and which is the ideally perfect scab.</p>
+<p>It is not nice to be a scab.&nbsp; Not only is it not in good social
+taste and comradeship, but, from the standpoint of food and shelter, it is
+bad business policy.&nbsp; Nobody desires to scab, to give most for
+least.&nbsp; The ambition of every individual is quite the opposite, to
+give least for most; and, as a result, living in a tooth-and-nail society,
+battle royal is waged by the ambitious individuals.&nbsp; But in its most
+salient aspect, that of the struggle over the division of the joint
+product, it is no longer a battle between individuals, but between groups
+of individuals.&nbsp; Capital and labor apply themselves to raw material,
+make something useful out of it, add to its value, and then proceed to
+quarrel over the division of the added value.&nbsp; Neither cares to give
+most for least.&nbsp; Each is intent on giving less than the other and on
+receiving more.</p>
+<p>Labor combines into its unions, capital into partnerships, associations,
+corporations, and trusts.&nbsp; A group-struggle is the result, in which
+the individuals, as individuals, play no part.&nbsp; The Brotherhood of
+Carpenters and Joiners, for instance, serves notice on the Master
+Builders&rsquo; Association that it demands an increase of the wage of its
+members from $3.50 a day to $4, and a Saturday half-holiday without
+pay.&nbsp; This means that the carpenters are trying to give less for
+more.&nbsp; Where they received $21 for six full days, they are endeavoring
+to get $22 for five days and a half,&mdash;that is, they will work half a
+day less each week and receive a dollar more.</p>
+<p>Also, they expect the Saturday half-holiday to give work to one
+additional man for each eleven previously employed.&nbsp; This last affords
+a splendid example of the development of the group idea.&nbsp; In this
+particular struggle the individual has no chance at all for life.&nbsp; The
+individual carpenter would be crushed like a mote by the Master
+Builders&rsquo; Association, and like a mote the individual master builder
+would be crushed by the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners.</p>
+<p>In the group-struggle over the division of the joint product, labor
+utilizes the union with its two great weapons, the strike and the boycott;
+while capital utilizes the trust and the association, the weapons of which
+are the black-list, the lockout, and the scab.&nbsp; The scab is by far the
+most formidable weapon of the three.&nbsp; He is the man who breaks strikes
+and causes all the trouble.&nbsp; Without him there would be no trouble,
+for the strikers are willing to remain out peacefully and indefinitely so
+long as other men are not in their places, and so long as the particular
+aggregation of capital with which they are fighting is eating its head off
+in enforced idleness.</p>
+<p>But both warring groups have reserve weapons.&nbsp; Were it not for the
+scab, these weapons would not be brought into play.&nbsp; But the scab
+takes the place of the striker, who begins at once to wield a most powerful
+weapon, terrorism.&nbsp; The will &ldquo;to live&rdquo; of the scab recoils
+from the menace of broken bones and violent death.&nbsp; With all due
+respect to the labor leaders, who are not to be blamed for volubly
+asseverating otherwise, terrorism is a well-defined and eminently
+successful policy of the labor unions.&nbsp; It has probably won them more
+strikes than all the rest of the weapons in their arsenal.&nbsp; This
+terrorism, however, must be clearly understood.&nbsp; It is directed solely
+against the scab, placing him in such fear for life and limb as to drive
+him out of the contest.&nbsp; But when terrorism gets out of hand and
+inoffensive non-combatants are injured, law and order threatened, and
+property destroyed, it becomes an edged tool that cuts both ways.&nbsp;
+This sort of terrorism is sincerely deplored by the labor leaders, for it
+has probably lost them as many strikes as have been lost by any other
+single cause.</p>
+<p>The scab is powerless under terrorism.&nbsp; As a rule, he is not so
+good nor gritty a man as the men he is displacing, and he lacks their
+fighting organization.&nbsp; He stands in dire need of stiffening and
+backing.&nbsp; His employers, the capitalists, draw their two remaining
+weapons, the ownership of which is debatable, but which they for the time
+being happen to control.&nbsp; These two weapons may be called the
+political and judicial machinery of society.&nbsp; When the scab crumples
+up and is ready to go down before the fists, bricks, and bullets of the
+labor group, the capitalist group puts the police and soldiers into the
+field, and begins a general bombardment of injunctions.&nbsp; Victory
+usually follows, for the labor group cannot withstand the combined assault
+of gatling guns and injunctions.</p>
+<p>But it has been noted that the ownership of the political and judicial
+machinery of society is debatable.&nbsp; In the Titanic struggle over the
+division of the joint product, each group reaches out for every available
+weapon.&nbsp; Nor are they blinded by the smoke of conflict.&nbsp; They
+fight their battles as coolly and collectedly as ever battles were fought
+on paper.&nbsp; The capitalist group has long since realized the immense
+importance of controlling the political and judicial machinery of
+society.</p>
+<p>Taught by gatlings and injunctions, which have smashed many an otherwise
+successful strike, the labor group is beginning to realize that it all
+depends upon who is behind and who is before the gatlings and the
+injunctions.&nbsp; And he who knows the labor movement knows that there is
+slowly growing up and being formulated a clear and definite policy for the
+capture of the political and judicial machinery.</p>
+<p>This is the terrible spectre which Mr. John Graham Brooks sees looming
+portentously over the twentieth century world.&nbsp; No man may boast a
+more intimate knowledge of the labor movement than he; and he reiterates
+again and again the dangerous likelihood of the whole labor group capturing
+the political machinery of society.&nbsp; As he says in his recent book: <a
+name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6" class="citation">[6]</a>
+&ldquo;It is not probable that employers can destroy unionism in the United
+States.&nbsp; Adroit and desperate attempts will, however, be made, if we
+mean by unionism the undisciplined and aggressive fact of vigorous and
+determined organizations.&nbsp; If capital should prove too strong in this
+struggle, the result is easy to predict.&nbsp; The employers have only to
+convince organized labor that it cannot hold its own against the capitalist
+manager, and the whole energy that now goes to the union will turn to an
+aggressive political socialism.&nbsp; It will not be the harmless sympathy
+with increased city and state functions which trade unions already feel; it
+will become a turbulent political force bent upon using every weapon of
+taxation against the rich.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This struggle not to be a scab, to avoid giving more for less and to
+succeed in giving less for more, is more vital than it would appear on the
+surface.&nbsp; The capitalist and labor groups are locked together in
+desperate battle, and neither side is swayed by moral considerations more
+than skin-deep.&nbsp; The labor group hires business agents, lawyers, and
+organizers, and is beginning to intimidate legislators by the strength of
+its solid vote; and more directly, in the near future, it will attempt to
+control legislation by capturing it bodily through the ballot-box.&nbsp; On
+the other hand, the capitalist group, numerically weaker, hires newspapers,
+universities, and legislatures, and strives to bend to its need all the
+forces which go to mould public opinion.</p>
+<p>The only honest morality displayed by either side is white-hot
+indignation at the iniquities of the other side.&nbsp; The striking
+teamster complacently takes a scab driver into an alley, and with an iron
+bar breaks his arms, so that he can drive no more, but cries out to high
+Heaven for justice when the capitalist breaks his skull by means of a club
+in the hands of a policeman.&nbsp; Nay, the members of a union will declaim
+in impassioned rhetoric for the God-given right of an eight-hour day, and
+at the time be working their own business agent seventeen hours out of the
+twenty-four.</p>
+<p>A capitalist such as Collis P. Huntington, and his name is Legion, after
+a long life spent in buying the aid of countless legislatures, will wax
+virtuously wrathful, and condemn in unmeasured terms &ldquo;the dangerous
+tendency of crying out to the Government for aid&rdquo; in the way of labor
+legislation.&nbsp; Without a quiver, a member of the capitalist group will
+run tens of thousands of pitiful child-laborers through his life-destroying
+cotton factories, and weep maudlin and constitutional tears over one scab
+hit in the back with a brick.&nbsp; He will drive a
+&ldquo;compulsory&rdquo; free contract with an unorganized laborer on the
+basis of a starvation wage, saying, &ldquo;Take it or leave it,&rdquo;
+knowing that to leave it means to die of hunger, and in the next breath,
+when the organizer entices that laborer into a union, will storm
+patriotically about the inalienable right of all men to work.&nbsp; In
+short, the chief moral concern of either side is with the morals of the
+other side.&nbsp; They are not in the business for their moral welfare, but
+to achieve the enviable position of the non-scab who gets more than he
+gives.</p>
+<p>But there is more to the question than has yet been discussed.&nbsp; The
+labor scab is no more detestable to his brother laborers than is the
+capitalist scab to his brother capitalists.&nbsp; A capitalist may get most
+for least in dealing with his laborers, and in so far be a non-scab; but at
+the same time, in his dealings with his fellow-capitalists, he may give
+most for least and be the very worst kind of scab.&nbsp; The most heinous
+crime an employer of labor can commit is to scab on his fellow-employers of
+labor.&nbsp; Just as the individual laborers have organized into groups to
+protect themselves from the peril of the scab laborer, so have the
+employers organized into groups to protect themselves from the peril of the
+scab employer.&nbsp; The employers&rsquo; federations, associations, and
+trusts are nothing more nor less than unions.&nbsp; They are organized to
+destroy scabbing amongst themselves and to encourage scabbing amongst
+others.&nbsp; For this reason they pool interests, determine prices, and
+present an unbroken and aggressive front to the labor group.</p>
+<p>As has been said before, nobody likes to play the compulsorily generous
+role of scab.&nbsp; It is a bad business proposition on the face of
+it.&nbsp; And it is patent that there would be no capitalist scabs if there
+were not more capital than there is work for capital to do.&nbsp; When
+there are enough factories in existence to supply, with occasional
+stoppages, a certain commodity, the building of new factories by a rival
+concern, for the production of that commodity, is plain advertisement that
+that capital is out of a job.&nbsp; The first act of this new aggregation
+of capital will be to cut prices, to give more for less,&mdash;in short to
+scab, to strike at the very existence of the less generous aggregation of
+capital the work of which it is trying to do.</p>
+<p>No scab capitalist strives to give more for less for any other reason
+than that he hopes, by undercutting a competitor and driving that
+competitor out of the market, to get that market and its profits for
+himself.&nbsp; His ambition is to achieve the day when he shall stand alone
+in the field both as buyer and seller,&mdash;when he will be the royal
+non-scab, buying most for least, selling least for most, and reducing all
+about him, the small buyers and sellers, (the consumers and the laborers),
+to a general condition of scabdom.&nbsp; This, for example, has been the
+history of Mr. Rockefeller and the Standard Oil Company.&nbsp; Through all
+the sordid villanies of scabdom he has passed, until today he is a most
+regal non-scab.&nbsp; However, to continue in this enviable position, he
+must be prepared at a moment&rsquo;s notice to go scabbing again.&nbsp; And
+he is prepared.&nbsp; Whenever a competitor arises, Mr. Rockefeller changes
+about from giving least for most and gives most for least with such a
+vengeance as to drive the competitor out of existence.</p>
+<p>The banded capitalists discriminate against a scab capitalist by
+refusing him trade advantages, and by combining against him in most
+relentless fashion.&nbsp; The banded laborers, discriminating against a
+scab laborer in more primitive fashion, with a club, are no more merciless
+than the banded capitalists.</p>
+<p>Mr. Casson tells of a New York capitalist who withdrew from the Sugar
+Union several years ago and became a scab.&nbsp; He was worth something
+like twenty millions of dollars.&nbsp; But the Sugar Union, standing
+shoulder to shoulder with the Railroad Union and several other unions, beat
+him to his knees till he cried, &ldquo;Enough.&rdquo;&nbsp; So frightfully
+did they beat him that he was obliged to turn over to his creditors his
+home, his chickens, and his gold watch.&nbsp; In point of fact, he was as
+thoroughly bludgeoned by the Federation of Capitalist Unions as ever scab
+workman was bludgeoned by a labor union.&nbsp; The intent in either case is
+the same,&mdash;to destroy the scab&rsquo;s producing power.&nbsp; The
+labor scab with concussion of the brain is put out of business, and so is
+the capitalist scab who has lost all his dollars down to his chickens and
+his watch.</p>
+<p>But the r&ocirc;le of scab passes beyond the individual.&nbsp; Just as
+individuals scab on other individuals, so do groups scab on other
+groups.&nbsp; And the principle involved is precisely the same as in the
+case of the simple labor scab.&nbsp; A group, in the nature of its
+organization, is often compelled to give most for least, and, so doing, to
+strike at the life of another group.&nbsp; At the present moment all Europe
+is appalled by that colossal scab, the United States.&nbsp; And Europe is
+clamorous with agitation for a Federation of National Unions to protect her
+from the United States.&nbsp; It may be remarked, in passing, that in its
+prime essentials this agitation in no wise differs from the trade-union
+agitation among workmen in any industry.&nbsp; The trouble is caused by the
+scab who is giving most for least.&nbsp; The result of the American
+scab&rsquo;s nefarious actions will be to strike at the food and shelter of
+Europe.&nbsp; The way for Europe to protect herself is to quit bickering
+among her parts and to form a union against the scab.&nbsp; And if the
+union is formed, armies and navies may be expected to be brought into play
+in fashion similar to the bricks and clubs in ordinary labor struggles.</p>
+<p>In this connection, and as one of many walking delegates for the
+nations, M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the noted French economist, may well be
+quoted.&nbsp; In a letter to the Vienna Tageblatt, he advocates an economic
+alliance among the Continental nations for the purpose of barring out
+American goods, an economic alliance, in his own language, &ldquo;<i>which
+may possibly and desirably develop into a political
+alliance</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It will be noted, in the utterances of the Continental walking
+delegates, that, one and all, they leave England out of the proposed
+union.&nbsp; And in England herself the feeling is growing that her days
+are numbered if she cannot unite for offence and defence with the great
+American scab.&nbsp; As Andrew Carnegie said some time ago, &ldquo;The only
+course for Great Britain seems to be reunion with her grandchild or sure
+decline to a secondary place, and then to comparative insignificance in the
+future annals of the English-speaking race.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cecil Rhodes, speaking of what would have obtained but for the
+pig-headedness of George III, and of what will obtain when England and the
+United States are united, said, &ldquo;<i>No cannon would. . . be fired on
+either hemisphere but by permission of The English race</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+It would seem that England, fronted by the hostile Continental Union and
+flanked by the great American scab, has nothing left but to join with the
+scab and play the historic labor r&ocirc;le of armed Pinkerton.&nbsp;
+Granting the words of Cecil Rhodes, the United States would be enabled to
+scab without let or hindrance on Europe, while England, as professional
+strike-breaker and policeman, destroyed the unions and kept order.</p>
+<p>All this may appear fantastic and erroneous, but there is in it a soul
+of truth vastly more significant than it may seem.&nbsp; Civilization may
+be expressed today in terms of trade-unionism.&nbsp; Individual struggles
+have largely passed away, but group-struggles increase prodigiously.&nbsp;
+And the things for which the groups struggle are the same as of old.&nbsp;
+Shorn of all subtleties and complexities, the chief struggle of men, and of
+groups of men, is for food and shelter.&nbsp; And, as of old they struggled
+with tooth and nail, so today they struggle with teeth and nails elongated
+into armies and navies, machines, and economic advantages.</p>
+<p>Under the definition that a scab is <i>one who gives more value for the
+same price than another</i>, it would seem that society can be generally
+divided into the two classes of the scabs and the non-scabs.&nbsp; But on
+closer investigation, however, it will be seen that the non-scab is a
+vanishing quantity.&nbsp; In the social jungle, everybody is preying upon
+everybody else.&nbsp; As in the case of Mr. Rockefeller, he who was a scab
+yesterday is a non-scab today, and tomorrow may be a scab again.</p>
+<p>The woman stenographer or book-keeper who receives forty dollars per
+month where a man was receiving seventy-five is a scab.&nbsp; So is the
+woman who does a man&rsquo;s work at a weaving-machine, and the child who
+goes into the mill or factory.&nbsp; And the father, who is scabbed out of
+work by the wives and children of other men, sends his own wife and
+children to scab in order to save himself.</p>
+<p>When a publisher offers an author better royalties than other publishers
+have been paying him, he is scabbing on those other publishers.&nbsp; The
+reporter on a newspaper, who feels he should be receiving a larger salary
+for his work, says so, and is shown the door, is replaced by a reporter who
+is a scab; whereupon, when the belly-need presses, the displaced reporter
+goes to another paper and scabs himself.&nbsp; The minister who hardens his
+heart to a call, and waits for a certain congregation to offer him say $500
+a year more, often finds himself scabbed upon by another and more
+impecunious minister; and the next time it is <i>his</i> turn to scab while
+a brother minister is hardening his heart to a call.&nbsp; The scab is
+everywhere.&nbsp; The professional strike-breakers, who as a class receive
+large wages, will scab on one another, while scab unions are even formed to
+prevent scabbing upon scabs.</p>
+<p>There are non-scabs, but they are usually born so, and are protected by
+the whole might of society in the possession of their food and
+shelter.&nbsp; King Edward is such a type, as are all individuals who
+receive hereditary food-and-shelter privileges,&mdash;such as the present
+Duke of Bedford, for instance, who yearly receives $75,000 from the good
+people of London because some former king gave some former ancestor of his
+the market privileges of Covent Garden.&nbsp; The irresponsible rich are
+likewise non-scabs,&mdash;and by them is meant that coupon-clipping class
+which hires its managers and brains to invest the money usually left it by
+its ancestors.</p>
+<p>Outside these lucky creatures, all the rest, at one time or another in
+their lives, are scabs, at one time or another are engaged in giving more
+for a certain price than any one else.&nbsp; The meek professor in some
+endowed institution, by his meek suppression of his convictions, is giving
+more for his salary than gave the other and more outspoken professor whose
+chair he occupies.&nbsp; And when a political party dangles a full
+dinner-pail in the eyes of the toiling masses, it is offering more for a
+vote than the dubious dollar of the opposing party.&nbsp; Even a
+money-lender is not above taking a slightly lower rate of interest and
+saying nothing about it.</p>
+<p>Such is the tangle of conflicting interests in a tooth-and-nail society
+that people cannot avoid being scabs, are often made so against their
+desires, and are often unconsciously made so.&nbsp; When several trades in
+a certain locality demand and receive an advance in wages, they are
+unwittingly making scabs of their fellow-laborers in that district who have
+received no advance in wages.&nbsp; In San Francisco the barbers,
+laundry-workers, and milk-wagon drivers received such an advance in
+wages.&nbsp; Their employers promptly added the amount of this advance to
+the selling price of their wares.&nbsp; The price of shaves, of washing,
+and of milk went up.&nbsp; This reduced the purchasing power of the
+unorganized laborers, and, in point of fact, reduced their wages and made
+them greater scabs.</p>
+<p>Because the British laborer is disinclined to scab,&mdash;that is,
+because he restricts his output in order to give less for the wage he
+receives,&mdash;it is to a certain extent made possible for the American
+capitalist, who receives a less restricted output from his laborers, to
+play the scab on the English capitalist.&nbsp; As a result of this, (of
+course combined with other causes), the American capitalist and the
+American laborer are striking at the food and shelter of the English
+capitalist and laborer.</p>
+<p>The English laborer is starving today because, among other things, he is
+not a scab.&nbsp; He practises the policy of &ldquo;ca&rsquo; canny,&rdquo;
+which may be defined as &ldquo;go easy.&rdquo;&nbsp; In order to get most
+for least, in many trades he performs but from one-fourth to one-sixth of
+the labor he is well able to perform.&nbsp; An instance of this is found in
+the building of the Westinghouse Electric Works at Manchester.&nbsp; The
+British limit per man was 400 bricks per day.&nbsp; The Westinghouse
+Company imported a &ldquo;driving&rdquo; American contractor, aided by half
+a dozen &ldquo;driving&rdquo; American foremen, and the British bricklayer
+swiftly attained an average of 1800 bricks per day, with a maximum of 2500
+bricks for the plainest work.</p>
+<p>But, the British laborer&rsquo;s policy of &ldquo;ca&rsquo;
+canny,&rdquo; which is the very honorable one of giving least for most, and
+which is likewise the policy of the English capitalist, is nevertheless
+frowned upon by the English capitalist, whose business existence is
+threatened by the great American scab.&nbsp; From the rise of the factory
+system, the English capitalist gladly embraced the opportunity, wherever he
+found it, of giving least for most.&nbsp; He did it all over the world
+whenever he enjoyed a market monopoly, and he did it at home with the
+laborers employed in his mills, destroying them like flies till prevented,
+within limits, by the passage of the Factory Acts.&nbsp; Some of the
+proudest fortunes of England today may trace their origin to the giving of
+least for most to the miserable slaves of the factory towns.&nbsp; But at
+the present time the English capitalist is outraged because his laborers
+are employing against him precisely the same policy he employed against
+them, and which he would employ again did the chance present itself.</p>
+<p>Yet &ldquo;ca&rsquo; canny&rdquo; is a disastrous thing to the British
+laborer.&nbsp; It has driven ship-building from England to Scotland,
+bottle-making from Scotland to Belgium, flint-glass-making from England to
+Germany, and today is steadily driving industry after industry to other
+countries.&nbsp; A correspondent from Northampton wrote not long ago:
+&ldquo;Factories are working half and third time. . . . There is no strike,
+there is no real labor trouble, but the masters and men are alike suffering
+from sheer lack of employment.&nbsp; Markets which were once theirs are now
+American.&rdquo;&nbsp; It would seem that the unfortunate British laborer
+is &rsquo;twixt the devil and the deep sea.&nbsp; If he gives most for
+least, he faces a frightful slavery such as marked the beginning of the
+factory system.&nbsp; If he gives least for most, he drives industry away
+to other countries and has no work at all.</p>
+<p>But the union laborers of the United States have nothing of which to
+boast, while, according to their trade-union ethics, they have a great deal
+of which to be ashamed.&nbsp; They passionately preach short hours and big
+wages, the shorter the hours and the bigger the wages the better.&nbsp;
+Their hatred for a scab is as terrible as the hatred of a patriot for a
+traitor, of a Christian for a Judas.&nbsp; And in the face of all this,
+they are as colossal scabs as the United States is a colossal scab.&nbsp;
+For all of their boasted unions and high labor ideals, they are about the
+most thoroughgoing scabs on the planet.</p>
+<p>Receiving $4.50 per day, because of his proficiency and immense working
+power, the American laborer has been known to scab upon scabs (so called)
+who took his place and received only $0.90 per day for a longer day.&nbsp;
+In this particular instance, five Chinese coolies, working longer hours,
+gave less value for the price received from their employer than did one
+American laborer.</p>
+<p>It is upon his brother laborers overseas that the American laborer most
+outrageously scabs.&nbsp; As Mr. Casson has shown, an English nail-maker
+gets $3 per week, while an American nail-maker gets $30.&nbsp; But the
+English worker turns out 200 pounds of nails per week, while the American
+turns out 5500 pounds.&nbsp; If he were as &ldquo;fair&rdquo; as his
+English brother, other things being equal, he would be receiving, at the
+English worker&rsquo;s rate of pay, $82.50.&nbsp; As it is, he is scabbing
+upon his English brother to the tune of $79.50 per week.&nbsp; Dr.
+Schultze-Gaevernitz has shown that a German weaver produces 466 yards of
+cotton a week at a cost of .303 per yard, while an American weaver produces
+1200 yards at a cost of .02 per yard.</p>
+<p>But, it may be objected, a great part of this is due to the more
+improved American machinery.&nbsp; Very true, but none the less a great
+part is still due to the superior energy, skill, and willingness of the
+American laborer.&nbsp; The English laborer is faithful to the policy of
+&ldquo;ca&rsquo; canny.&rdquo;&nbsp; He refuses point-blank to get the work
+out of a machine that the New World scab gets out of a machine.&nbsp; Mr.
+Maxim, observing a wasteful hand-labor process in his English factory,
+invented a machine which he proved capable of displacing several men.&nbsp;
+But workman after workman was put at the machine, and without exception
+they turned out neither more nor less than a workman turned out by
+hand.&nbsp; They obeyed the mandate of the union and went easy, while Mr.
+Maxim gave up in despair.&nbsp; Nor will the British workman run machines
+at as high speed as the American, nor will he run so many.&nbsp; An
+American workman will &ldquo;give equal attention simultaneously to three,
+four, or six machines or tools, while the British workman is compelled by
+his trade union to limit his attention to one, so that employment may be
+given to half a dozen men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But for scabbing, no blame attaches itself anywhere.&nbsp; With rare
+exceptions, all the people in the world are scabs.&nbsp; The strong,
+capable workman gets a job and holds it because of his strength and
+capacity.&nbsp; And he holds it because out of his strength and capacity he
+gives a better value for his wage than does the weaker and less capable
+workman.&nbsp; Therefore he is scabbing upon his weaker and less capable
+brother workman.&nbsp; He is giving more value for the price paid by the
+employer.</p>
+<p>The superior workman scabs upon the inferior workman because he is so
+constituted and cannot help it.&nbsp; The one, by fortune of birth and
+upbringing, is strong and capable; the other, by fortune of birth and
+upbringing, is not so strong nor capable.&nbsp; It is for the same reason
+that one country scabs upon another.&nbsp; That country which has the good
+fortune to possess great natural resources, a finer sun and soil,
+unhampering institutions, and a deft and intelligent labor class and
+capitalist class is bound to scab upon a country less fortunately
+situated.&nbsp; It is the good fortune of the United States that is making
+her the colossal scab, just as it is the good fortune of one man to be born
+with a straight back while his brother is born with a hump.</p>
+<p>It is not good to give most for least, not good to be a scab.&nbsp; The
+word has gained universal opprobrium.&nbsp; On the other hand, to be a
+non-scab, to give least for most, is universally branded as stingy,
+selfish, and unchristian-like.&nbsp; So all the world, like the British
+workman, is &rsquo;twixt the devil and the deep sea.&nbsp; It is treason to
+one&rsquo;s fellows to scab, it is unchristian-like not to scab.</p>
+<p>Since to give least for most, and to give most for least, are
+universally bad, what remains?&nbsp; Equity remains, which is to give like
+for like, the same for the same, neither more nor less.&nbsp; But this
+equity, society, as at present constituted, cannot give.&nbsp; It is not in
+the nature of present-day society for men to give like for like, the same
+for the same.&nbsp; And so long as men continue to live in this competitive
+society, struggling tooth and nail with one another for food and shelter,
+(which is to struggle tooth and nail with one another for life), that long
+will the scab continue to exist.&nbsp; His will &ldquo;to live&rdquo; will
+force him to exist.&nbsp; He may be flouted and jeered by his brothers, he
+may be beaten with bricks and clubs by the men who by superior strength and
+capacity scab upon him as he scabs upon them by longer hours and smaller
+wages, but through it all he will persist, giving a bit more of most for
+least than they are giving.</p>
+<h2>THE QUESTION OF THE MAXIMUM</h2>
+<p>For any social movement or development there must be a maximum limit
+beyond which it cannot proceed.&nbsp; That civilization which does not
+advance must decline, and so, when the maximum of development has been
+reached in any given direction, society must either retrograde or change
+the direction of its advance.&nbsp; There are many families of men that
+have failed, in the critical period of their economic evolution, to effect
+a change in direction, and were forced to fall back.&nbsp; Vanquished at
+the moment of their maximum, they have dropped out of the whirl of the
+world.&nbsp; There was no room for them.&nbsp; Stronger competitors have
+taken their places, and they have either rotted into oblivion or remain to
+be crushed under the iron heel of the dominant races in as remorseless a
+struggle as the world has yet witnessed.&nbsp; But in this struggle fair
+women and chivalrous men will play no part.&nbsp; Types and ideals have
+changed.&nbsp; Helens and Launcelots are anachronisms.&nbsp; Blows will be
+given and taken, and men fight and die, but not for faiths and
+altars.&nbsp; Shrines will be desecrated, but they will be the shrines, not
+of temples, but market-places.&nbsp; Prophets will arise, but they will be
+the prophets of prices and products.&nbsp; Battles will be waged, not for
+honor and glory, nor for thrones and sceptres, but for dollars and cents
+and for marts and exchanges.&nbsp; Brain and not brawn will endure, and the
+captains of war will be commanded by the captains of industry.&nbsp; In
+short, it will be a contest for the mastery of the world&rsquo;s commerce
+and for industrial supremacy.</p>
+<p>It is more significant, this struggle into which we have plunged, for
+the fact that it is the first struggle to involve the globe.&nbsp; No
+general movement of man has been so wide-spreading, so far-reaching.&nbsp;
+Quite local was the supremacy of any ancient people; likewise the rise to
+empire of Macedonia and Rome, the waves of Arabian valor and fanaticism,
+and the medi&aelig;val crusades to the Holy Sepulchre.&nbsp; But since
+those times the planet has undergone a unique shrinkage.</p>
+<p>The world of Homer, limited by the coast-lines of the Mediterranean and
+Black seas, was a far vaster world than ours of today, which we weigh,
+measure, and compute as accurately and as easily as if it were a
+child&rsquo;s play-ball.&nbsp; Steam has made its parts accessible and
+drawn them closer together.&nbsp; The telegraph annihilates space and
+time.&nbsp; Each morning, every part knows what every other part is
+thinking, contemplating, or doing.&nbsp; A discovery in a German laboratory
+is being demonstrated in San Francisco within twenty-four hours.&nbsp; A
+book written in South Africa is published by simultaneous copyright in
+every English-speaking country, and on the day following is in the hands of
+the translators.&nbsp; The death of an obscure missionary in China, or of a
+whiskey-smuggler in the South Seas, is served, the world over, with the
+morning toast.&nbsp; The wheat output of Argentine or the gold of Klondike
+are known wherever men meet and trade.&nbsp; Shrinkage, or centralization,
+has become such that the humblest clerk in any metropolis may place his
+hand on the pulse of the world.&nbsp; The planet has indeed grown very
+small; and because of this, no vital movement can remain in the clime or
+country where it takes its rise.</p>
+<p>And so today the economic and industrial impulse is world-wide.&nbsp; It
+is a matter of import to every people.&nbsp; None may be careless of
+it.&nbsp; To do so is to perish.&nbsp; It is become a battle, the fruits of
+which are to the strong, and to none but the strongest of the strong.&nbsp;
+As the movement approaches its maximum, centralization accelerates and
+competition grows keener and closer.&nbsp; The competitor nations cannot
+all succeed.&nbsp; So long as the movement continues its present direction,
+not only will there not be room for all, but the room that is will become
+less and less; and when the moment of the maximum is at hand, there will be
+no room at all.&nbsp; Capitalistic production will have overreached itself,
+and a change of direction will then be inevitable.</p>
+<p>Divers queries arise: What is the maximum of commercial development the
+world can sustain?&nbsp; How far can it be exploited?&nbsp; How much
+capital is necessary?&nbsp; Can sufficient capital be accumulated?&nbsp; A
+brief r&eacute;sum&eacute; of the industrial history of the last one
+hundred years or so will be relevant at this stage of the discussion.&nbsp;
+Capitalistic production, in its modern significance, was born of the
+industrial revolution in England in the latter half of the eighteenth
+century.&nbsp; The great inventions of that period were both its father and
+its mother, while, as Mr. Brooks Adams has shown, the looted treasure of
+India was the potent midwife.&nbsp; Had there not been an unwonted increase
+of capital, the impetus would not have been given to invention, while even
+steam might have languished for generations instead of at once becoming, as
+it did, the most prominent factor in the new method of production.&nbsp;
+The improved application of these inventions in the first decades of the
+nineteenth century mark the transition from the domestic to the factory
+system of manufacture and inaugurated the era of capitalism.&nbsp; The
+magnitude of this revolution is manifested by the fact that England alone
+had invented the means and equipped herself with the machinery whereby she
+could overstock the world&rsquo;s markets.&nbsp; The home market could not
+consume a tithe of the home product.&nbsp; To manufacture this home product
+she had sacrificed her agriculture.&nbsp; She must buy her food from
+abroad, and to do so she must sell her goods abroad.</p>
+<p>But the struggle for commercial supremacy had not yet really
+begun.&nbsp; England was without a rival.&nbsp; Her navies controlled the
+sea.&nbsp; Her armies and her insular position gave her peace at
+home.&nbsp; The world was hers to exploit.&nbsp; For nearly fifty years she
+dominated the European, American, and Indian trade, while the great wars
+then convulsing society were destroying possible competitive capital and
+straining consumption to its utmost.&nbsp; The pioneer of the industrial
+nations, she thus received such a start in the new race for wealth that it
+is only today the other nations have succeeded in overtaking her.&nbsp; In
+1820 the volume of her trade (imports and exports) was
+&pound;68,000,000.&nbsp; In 1899 it had increased to
+&pound;815,000,000,&mdash;an increase of 1200 per cent in the volume of
+trade.</p>
+<p>For nearly one hundred years England has been producing surplus
+value.&nbsp; She has been producing far more than she consumes, and this
+excess has swelled the volume of her capital.&nbsp; This capital has been
+invested in her enterprises at home and abroad, and in her shipping.&nbsp;
+In 1898 the Stock Exchange estimated British capital invested abroad at
+&pound;1,900,000,000.&nbsp; But hand in hand with her foreign investments
+have grown her adverse balances of trade.&nbsp; For the ten years ending
+with 1868, her average yearly adverse balance was &pound;52,000,000; ending
+with 1878, &pound;81,000,000; ending with 1888, &pound;101,000,000; and
+ending with 1898, &pound;133,000,000.&nbsp; In the single year of 1897 it
+reached the portentous sum of &pound;157,000,000.</p>
+<p>But England&rsquo;s adverse balances of trade in themselves are nothing
+at which to be frightened.&nbsp; Hitherto they have been paid from out the
+earnings of her shipping and the interest on her foreign investments.&nbsp;
+But what does cause anxiety, however, is that, relative to the trade
+development of other countries, her export trade is falling off, without a
+corresponding diminution of her imports, and that her securities and
+foreign holdings do not seem able to stand the added strain.&nbsp; These
+she is being forced to sell in order to pull even.&nbsp; As the London
+Times gloomily remarks, &ldquo;We are entering the twentieth century on the
+down grade, after a prolonged period of business activity, high wages, high
+profits, and overflowing revenue.&rdquo;&nbsp; In other words, the mighty
+grasp England held over the resources and capital of the world is being
+relaxed.&nbsp; The control of its commerce and banking is slipping through
+her fingers.&nbsp; The sale of her foreign holdings advertises the fact
+that other nations are capable of buying them, and, further, that these
+other nations are busily producing surplus value.</p>
+<p>The movement has become general.&nbsp; Today, passing from country to
+country, an ever-increasing tide of capital is welling up.&nbsp; Production
+is doubling and quadrupling upon itself.&nbsp; It used to be that the
+impoverished or undeveloped nations turned to England when it came to
+borrowing, but now Germany is competing keenly with her in this
+matter.&nbsp; France is not averse to lending great sums to Russia, and
+Austria-Hungary has capital and to spare for foreign holdings.</p>
+<p>Nor has the United States failed to pass from the side of the debtor to
+that of the creditor nations.&nbsp; She, too, has become wise in the way of
+producing surplus value.&nbsp; She has been successful in her efforts to
+secure economic emancipation.&nbsp; Possessing but 5 per cent of the
+world&rsquo;s population and producing 32 per cent of the world&rsquo;s
+food supply, she has been looked upon as the world&rsquo;s farmer; but now,
+amidst general consternation, she comes forward as the world&rsquo;s
+manufacturer.&nbsp; In 1888 her manufactured exports amounted to
+$130,300,087; in 1896, to $253,681,541; in 1897, to $279,652,721; in 1898,
+to $307,924,994; in 1899, to $338,667,794; and in 1900, to
+$432,000,000.&nbsp; Regarding her growing favorable balances of trade, it
+may be noted that not only are her imports not increasing, but they are
+actually falling off, while her exports in the last decade have increased
+72.4 per cent.&nbsp; In ten years her imports from Europe have been reduced
+from $474,000,000 to $439,000,000; while in the same time her exports have
+increased from $682,000,000 to $1,111,000,000.&nbsp; Her balance of trade
+in her favor in 1895 was $75,000,000; in 1896, over $100,000,000; in 1897,
+nearly $300,000,000; in 1898, $615,000,000; in 1899, $530,000,000; and in
+1900, $648,000,000.</p>
+<p>In the matter of iron, the United States, which in 1840 had not dreamed
+of entering the field of international competition, in 1897, as much to her
+own surprise as any one else&rsquo;s, undersold the English in their own
+London market.&nbsp; In 1899 there was but one American locomotive in Great
+Britain; but, of the five hundred locomotives sold abroad by the United
+States in 1902, England bought more than any other country.&nbsp; Russia is
+operating a thousand of them on her own roads today.&nbsp; In one instance
+the American manufacturers contracted to deliver a locomotive in four and
+one-half months for $9250, the English manufacturers requiring twenty-four
+months for delivery at $14,000.&nbsp; The Clyde shipbuilders recently
+placed orders for 150,000 tons of plates at a saving of $250,000, and the
+American steel going into the making of the new London subway is taken as a
+matter of course.&nbsp; American tools stand above competition the world
+over.&nbsp; Ready-made boots and shoes are beginning to flood
+Europe,&mdash;the same with machinery, bicycles, agricultural implements,
+and all kinds of manufactured goods.&nbsp; A correspondent from Hamburg,
+speaking of the invasion of American trade, says: &ldquo;Incidentally, it
+may be remarked that the typewriting machine with which this article is
+written, as well as the thousands&mdash;nay, hundreds of thousands&mdash;of
+others that are in use throughout the world, were made in America; that it
+stands on an American table, in an office furnished with American desks,
+bookcases, and chairs, which cannot be made in Europe of equal quality, so
+practical and convenient, for a similar price.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In 1893 and 1894, because of the distrust of foreign capital, the United
+States was forced to buy back American securities held abroad; but in 1897
+and 1898 she bought back American securities held abroad, not because she
+had to, but because she chose to.&nbsp; And not only has she bought back
+her own securities, but in the last eight years she has become a buyer of
+the securities of other countries.&nbsp; In the money markets of London,
+Paris, and Berlin she is a lender of money.&nbsp; Carrying the largest
+stock of gold in the world, the world, in moments of danger, when crises of
+international finance loom large, looks to her vast lending ability for
+safety.</p>
+<p>Thus, in a few swift years, has the United States drawn up to the van
+where the great industrial nations are fighting for commercial and
+financial empire.&nbsp; The figures of the race, in which she passed
+England, are interesting:</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Year</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>United States Exports</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>United Kingdom Exports</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1875</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>$497,263,737</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>$1,087,497,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1885</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>673,593,506</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,037,124,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1895</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>807,742,415</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,100,452,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1896</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>986,830,080</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,168,671,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1897</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,079,834,296</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,139,882,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1898</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,233,564,828</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,135,642,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1899</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,253,466,000</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,287,971,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>1900</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,453,013,659</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1,418,348,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>As Mr. Henry Demarest Lloyd has noted, &ldquo;When the news reached
+Germany of the new steel trust in America, the stocks of the iron and steel
+mills listed on the Berlin Bourse fell.&rdquo;&nbsp; While Europe has been
+talking and dreaming of the greatness which was, the United States has been
+thinking and planning and doing for the greatness to be.&nbsp; Her captains
+of industry and kings of finance have toiled and sweated at organizing and
+consolidating production and transportation.&nbsp; But this has been merely
+the developmental stage, the tuning-up of the orchestra.&nbsp; With the
+twentieth century rises the curtain on the play,&mdash;a play which shall
+have much in it of comedy and a vast deal of tragedy, and which has been
+well named The Capitalistic Conquest of Europe by America.&nbsp; Nations do
+not die easily, and one of the first moves of Europe will be the erection
+of tariff walls.&nbsp; America, however, will fittingly reply, for already
+her manufacturers are establishing works in France and Germany.&nbsp; And
+when the German trade journals refused to accept American advertisements,
+they found their country flamingly bill-boarded in buccaneer American
+fashion.</p>
+<p>M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the French economist, is passionately preaching a
+commercial combination of the whole Continent against the United
+States,&mdash;a commercial alliance which, he boldly declares, should
+become a political alliance.&nbsp; And in this he is not alone, finding
+ready sympathy and ardent support in Austria, Italy, and Germany.&nbsp;
+Lord Rosebery said, in a recent speech before the Wolverhampton Chamber of
+Commerce: &ldquo;The Americans, with their vast and almost incalculable
+resources, their acuteness and enterprise, and their huge population, which
+will probably be 100,000,000 in twenty years, together with the plan they
+have adopted for putting accumulated wealth into great co&ouml;perative
+syndicates or trusts for the purpose of carrying on this great commercial
+warfare, are the most formidable . . . rivals to be feared.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The London Times says: &ldquo;It is useless to disguise the fact that
+Great Britain is being outdistanced.&nbsp; The competition does not come
+from the glut caused by miscalculation as to the home demand.&nbsp; Our own
+steel-makers know better and are alarmed.&nbsp; The threatened competition
+in markets hitherto our own comes from efficiency in production such as
+never before has been seen.&rdquo;&nbsp; Even the British naval supremacy
+is in danger, continues the same paper, &ldquo;for, if we lose our
+engineering supremacy, our naval supremacy will follow, unless held on
+sufferance by our successful rivals.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the Edinburgh Evening News says, with editorial gloom: &ldquo;The
+iron and steel trades have gone from us.&nbsp; When the fictitious
+prosperity caused by the expenditure of our own Government and that of
+European nations on armaments ceases, half of the men employed in these
+industries will be turned into the streets.&nbsp; The outlook is
+appalling.&nbsp; What suffering will have to be endured before the workers
+realize that there is nothing left for them but emigration!&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>That there must be a limit to the accumulation of capital is
+obvious.&nbsp; The downward course of the rate of interest, notwithstanding
+that many new employments have been made possible for capital, indicates
+how large is the increase of surplus value.&nbsp; This decline of the
+interest rate is in accord with Bohm-Bawerk&rsquo;s law of
+&ldquo;diminishing returns.&rdquo;&nbsp; That is, when capital, like
+anything else, has become over-plentiful, less lucrative use can only be
+found for the excess.&nbsp; This excess, not being able to earn so much as
+when capital was less plentiful, competes for safe investments and forces
+down the interest rate on all capital.&nbsp; Mr. Charles A. Conant has well
+described the keenness of the scramble for safe investments, even at the
+prevailing low rates of interest.&nbsp; At the close of the war with
+Turkey, the Greek loan, guaranteed by Great Britain, France, and Russia,
+was floated with striking ease.&nbsp; Regardless of the small return, the
+amount offered at Paris, (41,000,000 francs), was subscribed for
+twenty-three times over.&nbsp; Great Britain, France, Germany, Holland, and
+the Scandinavian States, of recent years, have all engaged in converting
+their securities from 5 per cents to 4 per cents, from 4&frac12; per cents
+to 3&frac12; per cents, and the 3&frac12; per cents into 3 per cents.</p>
+<p>Great Britain, France, Germany, and Austria-Hungary, according to the
+calculation taken in 1895 by the International Statistical Institute, hold
+forty-six billions of capital invested in negotiable securities
+alone.&nbsp; Yet Paris subscribed for her portion of the Greek loan
+twenty-three times over!&nbsp; In short, money is cheap.&nbsp; Andrew
+Carnegie and his brother bourgeois kings give away millions annually, but
+still the tide wells up.&nbsp; These vast accumulations have made possible
+&ldquo;wild-catting,&rdquo; fraudulent combinations, fake enterprises,
+Hooleyism; but such stealings, great though they be, have little or no
+effect in reducing the volume.&nbsp; The time is past when startling
+inventions, or revolutions in the method of production, can break up the
+growing congestion; yet this saved capital demands an outlet, somewhere,
+somehow.</p>
+<p>When a great nation has equipped itself to produce far more than it can,
+under the present division of the product, consume, it seeks other markets
+for its surplus products.&nbsp; When a second nation finds itself similarly
+circumstanced, competition for these other markets naturally follows.&nbsp;
+With the advent of a third, a fourth, a fifth, and of divers other nations,
+the question of the disposal of surplus products grows serious.&nbsp; And
+with each of these nations possessing, over and beyond its active capital,
+great and growing masses of idle capital, and when the very foreign markets
+for which they are competing are beginning to produce similar wares for
+themselves, the question passes the serious stage and becomes critical.</p>
+<p>Never has the struggle for foreign markets been sharper than at the
+present.&nbsp; They are the one great outlet for congested
+accumulations.&nbsp; Predatory capital wanders the world over, seeking
+where it may establish itself.&nbsp; This urgent need for foreign markets
+is forcing upon the world-stage an era of great colonial empire.&nbsp; But
+this does not stand, as in the past, for the subjugation of peoples and
+countries for the sake of gaining their products, but for the privilege of
+selling them products.&nbsp; The theory once was, that the colony owed its
+existence and prosperity to the mother country; but today it is the mother
+country that owes its existence and prosperity to the colony.&nbsp; And in
+the future, when that supporting colony becomes wise in the way of
+producing surplus value and sends its goods back to sell to the mother
+country, what then?&nbsp; Then the world will have been exploited, and
+capitalistic production will have attained its maximum development.</p>
+<p>Foreign markets and undeveloped countries largely retard that
+moment.&nbsp; The favored portions of the earth&rsquo;s surface are already
+occupied, though the resources of many are yet virgin.&nbsp; That they have
+not long since been wrested from the hands of the barbarous and decadent
+peoples who possess them is due, not to the military prowess of such
+peoples, but to the jealous vigilance of the industrial nations.&nbsp; The
+powers hold one another back.&nbsp; The Turk lives because the way is not
+yet clear to an amicable division of him among the powers.&nbsp; And the
+United States, supreme though she is, opposes the partition of China, and
+intervenes her huge bulk between the hungry nations and the mongrel Spanish
+republics.&nbsp; Capital stands in its own way, welling up and welling up
+against the inevitable moment when it shall burst all bonds and sweep
+resistlessly across such vast stretches as China and South America.&nbsp;
+And then there will be no more worlds to exploit, and capitalism will
+either fall back, crushed under its own weight, or a change of direction
+will take place which will mark a new era in history.</p>
+<p>The Far East affords an illuminating spectacle.&nbsp; While the Western
+nations are crowding hungrily in, while the Partition of China is
+commingled with the clamor for the Spheres of Influence and the Open Door,
+other forces are none the less potently at work.&nbsp; Not only are the
+young Western peoples pressing the older ones to the wall, but the East
+itself is beginning to awake.&nbsp; American trade is advancing, and
+British trade is losing ground, while Japan, China, and India are taking a
+hand in the game themselves.</p>
+<p>In 1893, 100,000 pieces of American drills were imported into China; in
+1897, 349,000.&nbsp; In 1893, 252,000 pieces of American sheetings were
+imported against 71,000 British; but in 1897, 566,000 pieces of American
+sheetings were imported against only 10,000 British.&nbsp; The cotton goods
+and yarn trade (which forms 40 per cent of the whole trade with China)
+shows a remarkable advance on the part of the United States.&nbsp; During
+the last ten years America has increased her importation of plain goods by
+121 per cent in quantity and 59&frac12; per cent in value, while that of
+England and India combined has decreased 13&frac34; per cent in quantity
+and 8 per cent in value.&nbsp; Lord Charles Beresford, from whose
+&ldquo;Break-up of China&rdquo; these figures are taken, states that
+English yarn has receded and Indian yarn advanced to the front.&nbsp; In
+1897, 140,000 piculs of Indian yarn were imported, 18,000 of Japanese, 4500
+of Shanghai-manufactured, and 700 of English.</p>
+<p>Japan, who but yesterday emerged from the medi&aelig;val rule of the
+Shogunate and seized in one fell swoop the scientific knowledge and culture
+of the Occident, is already today showing what wisdom she has acquired in
+the production of surplus value, and is preparing herself that she may
+tomorrow play the part to Asia that England did to Europe one hundred years
+ago.&nbsp; That the difference in the world&rsquo;s affairs wrought by
+those one hundred years will prevent her succeeding is manifest; but it is
+equally manifest that they cannot prevent her playing a leading part in the
+industrial drama which has commenced on the Eastern stage.&nbsp; Her
+imports into the port of Newchang in 1891 amounted to but 22,000 taels; but
+in 1897 they had increased to 280,000 taels.&nbsp; In manufactured goods,
+from matches, watches, and clocks to the rolling stock of railways, she has
+already given stiff shocks to her competitors in the Asiatic markets; and
+this while she is virtually yet in the equipment stage of production.&nbsp;
+Erelong she, too, will be furnishing her share to the growing mass of the
+world&rsquo;s capital.</p>
+<p>As regards Great Britain, the giant trader who has so long overshadowed
+Asiatic commerce, Lord Charles Beresford says: &ldquo;But competition is
+telling adversely; the energy of the British merchant is being equalled by
+other nationals. . . The competition of the Chinese and the introduction of
+steam into the country are also combining to produce changed conditions in
+China.&rdquo;&nbsp; But far more ominous is the plaintive note he sounds
+when he says: &ldquo;New industries must be opened up, and I would
+especially direct the attention of the Chambers of Commerce (British) to .
+. . the fact that the more the native competes with the British
+manufacturer in certain classes of trade, the more machinery he will need,
+and the orders for such machinery will come to this country if our
+machinery manufacturers are enterprising enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Orient is beginning to show what an important factor it will become,
+under Western supervision, in the creation of surplus value.&nbsp; Even
+before the barriers which restrain Western capital are removed, the East
+will be in a fair way toward being exploited.&nbsp; An analysis of Lord
+Beresford&rsquo;s message to the Chambers of Commerce discloses, first,
+that the East is beginning to manufacture for itself; and, second, that
+there is a promise of keen competition in the West for the privilege of
+selling the required machinery.&nbsp; The inexorable query arises: <i>What
+is the West to do when it has furnished this machinery</i>?&nbsp; And when
+not only the East, but all the now undeveloped countries, confront, with
+surplus products in their hands, the old industrial nations, capitalistic
+production will have attained its maximum development.</p>
+<p>But before that time must intervene a period which bids one pause for
+breath.&nbsp; A new romance, like unto none in all the past, the economic
+romance, will be born.&nbsp; For the dazzling prize of world-empire will
+the nations of the earth go up in harness.&nbsp; Powers will rise and fall,
+and mighty coalitions shape and dissolve in the swift whirl of
+events.&nbsp; Vassal nations and subject territories will be bandied back
+and forth like so many articles of trade.&nbsp; And with the inevitable
+displacement of economic centres, it is fair to presume that populations
+will shift to and fro, as they once did from the South to the North of
+England on the rise of the factory towns, or from the Old World to the
+New.&nbsp; Colossal enterprises will be projected and carried through, and
+combinations of capital and federations of labor be effected on a cyclopean
+scale.&nbsp; Concentration and organization will be perfected in ways
+hitherto undreamed.&nbsp; The nation which would keep its head above the
+tide must accurately adjust supply to demand, and eliminate waste to the
+last least particle.&nbsp; Standards of living will most likely descend for
+millions of people.&nbsp; With the increase of capital, the competition for
+safe investments, and the consequent fall of the interest rate, the
+principal which today earns a comfortable income would not then support a
+bare existence.&nbsp; Saving toward old age would cease among the working
+classes.&nbsp; And as the merchant cities of Italy crashed when trade
+slipped from their hands on the discovery of the new route to the Indies by
+way of the Cape of Good Hope, so will there come times of trembling for
+such nations as have failed to grasp the prize of world-empire.&nbsp; In
+that given direction they will have attained their maximum development,
+before the whole world, in the same direction, has attained its.&nbsp;
+There will no longer be room for them.&nbsp; But if they can survive the
+shock of being flung out of the world&rsquo;s industrial orbit, a change in
+direction may then be easily effected.&nbsp; That the decadent and
+barbarous peoples will be crushed is a fair presumption; likewise that the
+stronger breeds will survive, entering upon the transition stage to which
+all the world must ultimately come.</p>
+<p>This change of direction must be either toward industrial oligarchies or
+socialism.&nbsp; Either the functions of private corporations will increase
+till they absorb the central government, or the functions of government
+will increase till it absorbs the corporations.&nbsp; Much may be said on
+the chance of the oligarchy.&nbsp; Should an old manufacturing nation lose
+its foreign trade, it is safe to predict that a strong effort would be made
+to build a socialistic government, but it does not follow that this effort
+would be successful.&nbsp; With the moneyed class controlling the State and
+its revenues and all the means of subsistence, and guarding its own
+interests with jealous care, it is not at all impossible that a strong curb
+could be put upon the masses till the crisis were past.&nbsp; It has been
+done before.&nbsp; There is no reason why it should not be done
+again.&nbsp; At the close of the last century, such a movement was crushed
+by its own folly and immaturity.&nbsp; In 1871 the soldiers of the economic
+rulers stamped out, root and branch, a whole generation of militant
+socialists.</p>
+<p>Once the crisis were past, the ruling class, still holding the curb in
+order to make itself more secure, would proceed to readjust things and to
+balance consumption with production.&nbsp; Having a monopoly of the safe
+investments, the great masses of unremunerative capital would be directed,
+not to the production of more surplus value, but to the making of permanent
+improvements, which would give employment to the people, and make them
+content with the new order of things.&nbsp; Highways, parks, public
+buildings, monuments, could be builded; nor would it be out of place to
+give better factories and homes to the workers.&nbsp; Such in itself would
+be socialistic, save that it would be done by the oligarchs, a class
+apart.&nbsp; With the interest rate down to zero, and no field for the
+investment of sporadic capital, savings among the people would utterly
+cease, and old-age pensions be granted as a matter of course.&nbsp; It is
+also a logical necessity of such a system that, when the population began
+to press against the means of subsistence, (expansion being impossible),
+the birth rate of the lower classes would be lessened.&nbsp; Whether by
+their own initiative, or by the interference of the rulers, it would have
+to be done, and it would be done.&nbsp; In other words, the oligarchy would
+mean the capitalization of labor and the enslavement of the whole
+population.&nbsp; But it would be a fairer, juster form of slavery than any
+the world has yet seen.&nbsp; The per capita wage and consumption would be
+increased, and, with a stringent control of the birth rate, there is no
+reason why such a country should not be so ruled through many
+generations.</p>
+<p>On the other hand, as the capitalistic exploitation of the planet
+approaches its maximum, and countries are crowded out of the field of
+foreign exchanges, there is a large likelihood that their change in
+direction will be toward socialism.&nbsp; Were the theory of collective
+ownership and operation then to arise for the first time, such a movement
+would stand small chance of success.&nbsp; But such is not the case.&nbsp;
+The doctrine of socialism has flourished and grown throughout the
+nineteenth century; its tenets have been preached wherever the interests of
+labor and capital have clashed; and it has received exemplification time
+and again by the State&rsquo;s assumption of functions which had always
+belonged solely to the individual.</p>
+<p>When capitalistic production has attained its maximum development, it
+must confront a dividing of the ways; and the strength of capital on the
+one hand, and the education and wisdom of the workers on the other, will
+determine which path society is to travel.&nbsp; It is possible,
+considering the inertia of the masses, that the whole world might in time
+come to be dominated by a group of industrial oligarchies, or by one great
+oligarchy, but it is not probable.&nbsp; That sporadic oligarchies may
+flourish for definite periods of time is highly possible; that they may
+continue to do so is as highly improbable.&nbsp; The procession of the ages
+has marked not only the rise of man, but the rise of the common man.&nbsp;
+From the chattel slave, or the serf chained to the soil, to the highest
+seats in modern society, he has risen, rung by rung, amid the crumbling of
+the divine right of kings and the crash of falling sceptres.&nbsp; That he
+has done this, only in the end to pass into the perpetual slavery of the
+industrial oligarch, is something at which his whole past cries in
+protest.&nbsp; The common man is worthy of a better future, or else he is
+not worthy of his past.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;The above article was written as
+long ago as 1898.&nbsp; The only alteration has been the bringing up to
+1900 of a few of its statistics.&nbsp; As a commercial venture of an
+author, it has an interesting history.&nbsp; It was promptly accepted by
+one of the leading magazines and paid for.&nbsp; The editor confessed that
+it was &ldquo;one of those articles one could not possibly let go of after
+it was once in his possession.&rdquo;&nbsp; Publication was voluntarily
+promised to be immediate.&nbsp; Then the editor became afraid of its too
+radical nature, forfeited the sum paid for it, and did not publish
+it.&nbsp; Nor, offered far and wide, could any other editor of bourgeois
+periodicals be found who was rash enough to publish it.&nbsp; Thus, for the
+first time, after seven years, it appears in print.</p>
+<h2>A REVIEW</h2>
+<p>Two remarkable books are Ghent&rsquo;s &ldquo;Our Benevolent
+Feudalism&rdquo; <a name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7"
+class="citation">[7]</a> and Brooks&rsquo;s &ldquo;The Social
+Unrest.&rdquo; <a name="citation8"></a><a href="#footnote8"
+class="citation">[8]</a>&nbsp; In these two books the opposite sides of the
+labor problem are expounded, each writer devoting himself with apprehension
+to the side he fears and views with disfavor.&nbsp; It would appear that
+they have set themselves the task of collating, as a warning, the phenomena
+of two counter social forces.&nbsp; Mr. Ghent, who is sympathetic with the
+socialist movement, follows with cynic fear every aggressive act of the
+capitalist class.&nbsp; Mr. Brooks, who yearns for the perpetuation of the
+capitalist system as long as possible, follows with grave dismay each
+aggressive act of the labor and socialist organizations.&nbsp; Mr. Ghent
+traces the emasculation of labor by capital, and Mr. Brooks traces the
+emasculation of independent competing capital by labor.&nbsp; In short,
+each marshals the facts of a side in the two sides which go to make a
+struggle so great that even the French Revolution is insignificant beside
+it; for this later struggle, for the first time in the history of
+struggles, is not confined to any particular portion of the globe, but
+involves the whole of it.</p>
+<p>Starting on the assumption that society is at present in a state of
+flux, Mr. Ghent sees it rapidly crystallizing into a status which can best
+be described as something in the nature of a benevolent feudalism.&nbsp; He
+laughs to scorn any immediate realization of the Marxian dream, while
+Tolstoyan utopias and Kropotkinian communistic unions of shop and farm are
+too wild to merit consideration.&nbsp; The coming status which Mr. Ghent
+depicts is a class domination by the capitalists.&nbsp; Labor will take its
+definite place as a dependent class, living in a condition of machine
+servitude fairly analogous to the land servitude of the Middle Ages.&nbsp;
+That is to say, labor will be bound to the machine, though less harshly, in
+fashion somewhat similar to that in which the earlier serf was bound to the
+soil.&nbsp; As he says, &ldquo;Bondage to the land was the basis of
+villeinage in the old regime; bondage to the job will be the basis of
+villeinage in the new.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the top of the new society will tower the magnate, the new feudal
+baron; at the bottom will be found the wastrels and the inefficients.&nbsp;
+The new society he grades as follows:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;I.&nbsp; The barons, graded on the basis of possessions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;II.&nbsp; The court agents and retainers.&nbsp; (This class will
+include the editors of &lsquo;respectable&rsquo; and &lsquo;safe&rsquo;
+newspapers, the pastors of &lsquo;conservative&rsquo; and
+&lsquo;wealthy&rsquo; churches, the professors and teachers in endowed
+colleges and schools, lawyers generally, and most judges and
+politicians).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;III.&nbsp; The workers in pure and applied science, artists, and
+physicians.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;IV.&nbsp; The entrepreneurs, the managers of the great
+industries, transformed into a salaried class.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;V.&nbsp; The foremen and superintendents.&nbsp; This class has
+heretofore been recruited largely from the skilled workers, but with the
+growth of technical education in schools and colleges, and the development
+of fixed caste, it is likely to become entirely differentiated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;VI.&nbsp; The villeins of the cities and towns, more or less
+regularly employed, who do skilled work and are partially protected by
+organization.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;VII.&nbsp; The villeins of the cities and towns who do unskilled
+work and are unprotected by organization.&nbsp; They will comprise the
+laborers, domestics, and clerks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;VIII.&nbsp; The villeins of the manorial estates, of the great
+farms, the mines, and the forests.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;IX.&nbsp; The small-unit farmers (land-owning), the petty
+tradesmen, and manufacturers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;X.&nbsp; The subtenants of the manorial estates and great farms
+(corresponding to the class of &lsquo;free tenants&rsquo; in the old
+Feudalism).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;XI.&nbsp; The cotters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;XII.&nbsp; The tramps, the occasionally employed, the
+unemployed&mdash;the wastrels of the city and country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The new Feudalism, like most autocracies, will foster not only
+the arts, but also certain kinds of learning&mdash;particularly the kinds
+which are unlikely to disturb the minds of the multitude.&nbsp; A future
+Marsh, or Cope, or Le Comte will be liberally patronized and left free to
+discover what he will; and so, too, an Edison or a Marconi.&nbsp; Only they
+must not meddle with anything relating to social science.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It must be confessed that Mr. Ghent&rsquo;s arguments are cunningly
+contrived and arrayed.&nbsp; They must be read to be appreciated.&nbsp; As
+an example of his style, which at the same time generalizes a portion of
+his argument, the following may well be given:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The new Feudalism will be but an orderly outgrowth of present
+tendencies and conditions.&nbsp; All societies evolve naturally out of
+their predecessors.&nbsp; In sociology, as in biology, there is no cell
+without a parent cell.&nbsp; The society of each generation develops a
+multitude of spontaneous and acquired variations, and out of these, by a
+blending process of natural and conscious selection, the succeeding society
+is evolved.&nbsp; The new order will differ in no important respects from
+the present, except in the completer development of its more salient
+features.&nbsp; The visitor from another planet who had known the old and
+should see the new would note but few changes.&nbsp; Alter et
+Idem&mdash;another yet the same&mdash;he would say.&nbsp; From magnate to
+baron, from workman to villein, from publicist to court agent and retainer,
+will be changes of state and function so slight as to elude all but the
+keenest eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And in conclusion, to show how benevolent and beautiful this new
+feudalism of ours will be, Mr. Ghent says: &ldquo;Peace and stability it
+will maintain at all hazards; and the mass, remembering the chaos, the
+turmoil, the insecurity of the past, will bless its reign. . . .
+Efficiency&mdash;the faculty of getting things&mdash;is at last rewarded as
+it should be, for the efficient have inherited the earth and its
+fulness.&nbsp; The lowly, whose happiness is greater and whose welfare is
+more thoroughly conserved when governed than when governing, as a
+twentieth-century philosopher said of them, are settled and happy in the
+state which reason and experience teach is their God-appointed lot.&nbsp;
+They are comfortable too; and if the patriarchal ideal of a vine and fig
+tree for each is not yet attained, at least each has his rented patch in
+the country or his rented cell in a city building.&nbsp; Bread and the
+circus are freely given to the deserving, and as for the undeserving, they
+are merely reaping the rewards of their contumacy and pride.&nbsp; Order
+reigns, each has his justly appointed share, and the state rests, in
+security, &lsquo;lapt in universal law.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Brooks, on the other hand, sees rising and dissolving and rising
+again in the social flux the ominous forms of a new society which is the
+direct antithesis of a benevolent feudalism.&nbsp; He trembles at the rash
+intrepidity of the capitalists who fight the labor unions, for by such
+rashness he greatly fears that labor will be driven to express its aims and
+strength in political terms, which terms will inevitably be socialistic
+terms.</p>
+<p>To keep down the rising tide of socialism, he preaches greater meekness
+and benevolence to the capitalists.&nbsp; No longer may they claim the
+right to run their own business, to beat down the laborer&rsquo;s standard
+of living for the sake of increased profits, to dictate terms of employment
+to individual workers, to wax righteously indignant when organized labor
+takes a hand in their business.&nbsp; No longer may the capitalist say
+&ldquo;my&rdquo; business, or even think &ldquo;my&rdquo; business; he must
+say &ldquo;our&rdquo; business, and think &ldquo;our&rdquo; business as
+well, accepting labor as a partner whose voice must be heard.&nbsp; And if
+the capitalists do not become more meek and benevolent in their dealings
+with labor, labor will be antagonized and will proceed to wreak terrible
+political vengeance, and the present social flux will harden into a status
+of socialism.</p>
+<p>Mr. Brooks dreams of a society at which Mr. Ghent sneers as &ldquo;a
+slightly modified individualism, wherein each unit secures the just reward
+of his capacity and service.&rdquo;&nbsp; To attain this happy state, Mr.
+Brooks imposes circumspection upon the capitalists in their relations with
+labor.&nbsp; &ldquo;If the socialistic spirit is to be held in abeyance in
+this country, businesses of this character (anthracite coal mining) must be
+handled with extraordinary caution.&rdquo;&nbsp; Which is to say, that to
+withstand the advance of socialism, a great and greater measure of Mr.
+Ghent&rsquo;s <i>benevolence</i> will be required.</p>
+<p>Again and again, Mr. Brooks reiterates the danger he sees in harshly
+treating labor.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is not probable that employers can destroy
+unionism in the United States.&nbsp; Adroit and desperate attempts will,
+however, be made, if we mean by unionism the undisciplined and aggressive
+fact of vigorous and determined organizations.&nbsp; If capital should
+prove too strong in this struggle, the result is easy to predict.&nbsp; The
+employers have only to convince organized labor that it cannot hold its own
+against the capitalist manager, and the whole energy that now goes to the
+union will turn to an aggressive political socialism.&nbsp; It will not be
+the harmless sympathy with increased city and state functions which trade
+unions already feel; it will become a turbulent political force bent upon
+using every weapon of taxation against the rich.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The most concrete impulse that now favors socialism in this
+country is the insane purpose to deprive labor organizations of the full
+and complete rights that go with federated unionism.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That which teaches a union that it cannot succeed as a union
+turns it toward socialism.&nbsp; In long strikes in towns like Marlboro and
+Brookfield strong unions are defeated.&nbsp; Hundreds of men leave these
+towns for shoe-centres like Brockton, where they are now voting the
+socialist ticket.&nbsp; The socialist mayor of this city tells me,
+&lsquo;The men who come to us now from towns where they have been
+thoroughly whipped in a strike are among our most active working
+socialists.&rsquo;&nbsp; The bitterness engendered by this sense of defeat
+is turned to politics, as it will throughout the whole country, if
+organization of labor is deprived of its rights.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This enmity of capital to the trade union is watched with glee by
+every intelligent socialist in our midst.&nbsp; Every union that is beaten
+or discouraged in its struggle is ripening fruit for socialism.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The real peril which we now face is the threat of a class
+conflict.&nbsp; If capitalism insists upon the policy of outraging the
+saving aspiration of the American workman to raise his standard of comfort
+and leisure, every element of class conflict will strengthen among
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have only to humiliate what is best in the trade union, and
+then every worst feature of socialism is fastened upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This strong tendency in the ranks of the workers toward socialism is
+what Mr. Brooks characterizes the &ldquo;social unrest&rdquo;; and he hopes
+to see the Republican, the Cleveland Democrat, and the conservative and
+large property interests &ldquo;band together against this common
+foe,&rdquo; which is socialism.&nbsp; And he is not above feeling grave and
+well-contained satisfaction wherever the socialist doctrinaire has been
+contradicted by men attempting to practise co&ouml;peration in the midst of
+the competitive system, as in Belgium.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, he catches fleeting glimpses of an extreme and
+tyrannically benevolent feudalism very like to Mr. Ghent&rsquo;s, as
+witness the following:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I asked one of the largest employers of labor in the South if he
+feared the coming of the trade union.&nbsp; &lsquo;No,&rsquo; he said,
+&lsquo;it is one good result of race prejudice, that the negro will enable
+us in the long run to weaken the trade union so that it cannot harm
+us.&nbsp; We can keep wages down with the negro and we can prevent too much
+organization.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is in this spirit that the lower standards are to be
+used.&nbsp; If this purpose should succeed, it has but one issue,&mdash;the
+immense strengthening of a plutocratic administration at the top, served by
+an army of high-salaried helpers, with an elite of skilled and well-paid
+workmen, but all resting on what would essentially be a serf class of
+low-paid labor and this mass kept in order by an increased use of military
+force.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In brief summary of these two notable books, it may be said that Mr.
+Ghent is alarmed, (though he does not flatly say so), at the too great
+social restfulness in the community, which is permitting the capitalists to
+form the new society to their liking; and that Mr. Brooks is alarmed, (and
+he flatly says so), at the social unrest which threatens the modified
+individualism into which he would like to see society evolve.&nbsp; Mr.
+Ghent beholds the capitalist class rising to dominate the state and the
+working class; Mr. Brooks beholds the working class rising to dominate the
+state and the capitalist class.&nbsp; One fears the paternalism of a class;
+the other, the tyranny of the mass.</p>
+<h2>WANTED: A NEW LAW OF DEVELOPMENT</h2>
+<p>Evolution is no longer a mere tentative hypothesis.&nbsp; One by one,
+step by step, each division and subdivision of science has contributed its
+evidence, until now the case is complete and the verdict rendered.&nbsp;
+While there is still discussion as to the method of evolution, none the
+less, as a process sufficient to explain all biological phenomena, all
+differentiations of life into widely diverse species, families, and even
+kingdoms, evolution is flatly accepted.&nbsp; Likewise has been accepted
+its law of development: <i>That</i>, <i>in the struggle for existence</i>,
+<i>the strong and fit and the progeny of the strong and fit have a better
+opportunity for survival than the weak and less fit and the progeny of the
+weak and less fit</i>.</p>
+<p>It is in the struggle of the species with other species and against all
+other hostile forces in the environment, that this law operates; also in
+the struggle between the individuals of the same species.&nbsp; In this
+struggle, which is for food and shelter, the weak individuals must
+obviously win less food and shelter than the strong.&nbsp; Because of this,
+their hold on life relaxes and they are eliminated.&nbsp; And for the same
+reason that they may not win for themselves adequate food and shelter, the
+weak cannot give to their progeny the chance for survival that the strong
+give.&nbsp; And thus, since the weak are prone to beget weakness, the
+species is constantly purged of its inefficient members.</p>
+<p>Because of this, a premium is placed upon strength, and so long as the
+struggle for food and shelter obtains, just so long will the average
+strength of each generation increase.&nbsp; On the other hand, should
+conditions so change that all, and the progeny of all, the weak as well as
+the strong, have an equal chance for survival, then, at once, the average
+strength of each generation will begin to diminish.&nbsp; Never yet,
+however, in animal life, has there been such a state of affairs.&nbsp;
+Natural selection has always obtained.&nbsp; The strong and their progeny,
+at the expense of the weak, have always survived.&nbsp; This law of
+development has operated down all the past upon all life; it so operates
+today, and it is not rash to say that it will continue to operate in the
+future&mdash;at least upon all life existing in a state of nature.</p>
+<p>Man, pre&euml;minent though he is in the animal kingdom, capable of
+reacting upon and making suitable an unsuitable environment, nevertheless
+remains the creature of this same law of development.&nbsp; The social
+selection to which he is subject is merely another form of natural
+selection.&nbsp; True, within certain narrow limits he modifies the
+struggle for existence and renders less precarious the tenure of life for
+the weak.&nbsp; The extremely weak, diseased, and inefficient are housed in
+hospitals and asylums.&nbsp; The strength of the viciously strong, when
+inimical to society, is tempered by penal institutions and by the
+gallows.&nbsp; The short-sighted are provided with spectacles, and the
+sickly (when they can pay for it) with sanitariums.&nbsp; Pestilential
+marshes are drained, plagues are checked, and disasters averted.&nbsp; Yet,
+for all that, the strong and the progeny of the strong survive, and the
+weak are crushed out.&nbsp; The men strong of brain are masters as of
+yore.&nbsp; They dominate society and gather to themselves the wealth of
+society.&nbsp; With this wealth they maintain themselves and equip their
+progeny for the struggle.&nbsp; They build their homes in healthful places,
+purchase the best fruits, meats, and vegetables the market affords, and buy
+themselves the ministrations of the most brilliant and learned of the
+professional classes.&nbsp; The weak man, as of yore, is the servant, the
+doer of things at the master&rsquo;s call.&nbsp; The weaker and less
+efficient he is, the poorer is his reward.&nbsp; The weakest work for a
+living wage, (when they can get work), live in unsanitary slums, on vile
+and insufficient food, at the lowest depths of human degradation.&nbsp;
+Their grasp on life is indeed precarious, their mortality excessive, their
+infant death-rate appalling.</p>
+<p>That some should be born to preferment and others to ignominy in order
+that the race may progress, is cruel and sad; but none the less they are so
+born.&nbsp; The weeding out of human souls, some for fatness and smiles,
+some for leanness and tears, is surely a heartless selective
+process&mdash;as heartless as it is natural.&nbsp; And the human family,
+for all its wonderful record of adventure and achievement, has not yet
+succeeded in avoiding this process.&nbsp; That it is incapable of doing
+this is not to be hazarded.&nbsp; Not only is it capable, but the whole
+trend of society is in that direction.&nbsp; All the social forces are
+driving man on to a time when the old selective law will be annulled.&nbsp;
+There is no escaping it, save by the intervention of catastrophes and
+cataclysms quite unthinkable.&nbsp; It is inexorable.&nbsp; It is
+inexorable because the common man demands it.&nbsp; The twentieth century,
+the common man says, is his day; the common man&rsquo;s day, or, rather,
+the dawning of the common man&rsquo;s day.</p>
+<p>Nor can it be denied.&nbsp; The evidence is with him.&nbsp; The previous
+centuries, and more notably the nineteenth, have marked the rise of the
+common man.&nbsp; From chattel slavery to serfdom, and from serfdom to what
+he bitterly terms &ldquo;wage slavery,&rdquo; he has risen.&nbsp; Never was
+he so strong as he is today, and never so menacing.&nbsp; He does the work
+of the world, and he is beginning to know it.&nbsp; The world cannot get
+along without him, and this also he is beginning to know.&nbsp; All the
+human knowledge of the past, all the scientific discovery, governmental
+experiment, and invention of machinery, have tended to his
+advancement.&nbsp; His standard of living is higher.&nbsp; His common
+school education would shame princes ten centuries past.&nbsp; His civil
+and religious liberty makes him a free man, and his ballot the peer of his
+betters.&nbsp; And all this has tended to make him conscious, conscious of
+himself, conscious of his class.&nbsp; He looks about him and questions
+that ancient law of development.&nbsp; It is cruel and wrong, he is
+beginning to declare.&nbsp; It is an anachronism.&nbsp; Let it be
+abolished.&nbsp; Why should there be one empty belly in all the world, when
+the work of ten men can feed a hundred?&nbsp; What if my brother be not so
+strong as I?&nbsp; He has not sinned.&nbsp; Wherefore should he
+hunger&mdash;he and his sinless little ones?&nbsp; Away with the old
+law.&nbsp; There is food and shelter for all, therefore let all receive
+food and shelter.</p>
+<p>As fast as labor has become conscious it has organized.&nbsp; The
+ambition of these class-conscious men is that the movement shall become
+general, that all labor shall become conscious of itself and its class
+interests.&nbsp; And the day that witnesses the solidarity of labor, they
+triumphantly affirm, will be a day when labor dominates the world.&nbsp;
+This growing consciousness has led to the organization of two movements,
+both separate and distinct, but both converging toward a common
+goal&mdash;one, the labor movement, known as Trade Unionism; the other, the
+political movement, known as Socialism.&nbsp; Both are grim and silent
+forces, unheralded and virtually unknown to the general public save in
+moments of stress.&nbsp; The sleeping labor giant receives little notice
+from the capitalistic press, and when he stirs uneasily, a column of
+surprise, indignation, and horror suffices.</p>
+<p>It is only now and then, after long periods of silence, that the labor
+movement puts in its claim for notice.&nbsp; All is quiet.&nbsp; The kind
+old world spins on, and the bourgeois masters clip their coupons in smug
+complacency.&nbsp; But the grim and silent forces are at work.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, like a clap of thunder from a clear sky, comes a disruption of
+industry.&nbsp; From ocean to ocean the wheels of a great chain of
+railroads cease to run.&nbsp; A quarter of a million miners throw down pick
+and shovel and outrage the sun with their pale, bleached faces.&nbsp; The
+street railways of a swarming metropolis stand idle, or the rumble of
+machinery in vast manufactories dies away to silence.&nbsp; There is alarm
+and panic.&nbsp; Arson and homicide stalk forth.&nbsp; There is a cry in
+the night, and quick anger and sudden death.&nbsp; Peaceful cities are
+affrighted by the crack of rifles and the snarl of machine-guns, and the
+hearts of the shuddering are shaken by the roar of dynamite.&nbsp; There is
+hurrying and skurrying.&nbsp; The wires are kept hot between the centre of
+government and the seat of trouble.&nbsp; The chiefs of state ponder
+gravely and advise, and governors of states implore.&nbsp; There is
+assembling of militia and massing of troops, and the streets resound to the
+tramp of armed men.&nbsp; There are separate and joint conferences between
+the captains of industry and the captains of labor.&nbsp; And then,
+finally, all is quiet again, and the memory of it is like the memory of a
+bad dream.</p>
+<p>But these strikes become olympiads, things to date from; and common on
+the lips of men become such phrases as &ldquo;The Great Dock Strike,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;The Great Coal Strike,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Great Railroad
+Strike.&rdquo;&nbsp; Never before did labor do these things.&nbsp; After
+the Great Plague in England, labor, finding itself in demand and innocently
+obeying the economic law, asked higher wages.&nbsp; But the masters set a
+maximum wage, restrained workingmen from moving about from place to place,
+refused to tolerate idlers, and by most barbarous legal methods punished
+those who disobeyed.&nbsp; But labor is accorded greater respect
+today.&nbsp; Such a policy, put into effect in this the first decade of the
+twentieth century, would sweep the masters from their seats in one mighty
+crash.&nbsp; And the masters know it and are respectful.</p>
+<p>A fair instance of the growing solidarity of labor is afforded by an
+unimportant recent strike in San Francisco.&nbsp; The restaurant cooks and
+waiters were completely unorganized, working at any and all hours for
+whatever wages they could get.&nbsp; A representative of the American
+Federation of Labor went among them and organized them.&nbsp; Within a few
+weeks nearly two thousand men were enrolled, and they had five thousand
+dollars on deposit.&nbsp; Then they put in their demand for increased wages
+and shorter hours.&nbsp; Forthwith their employers organized.&nbsp; The
+demand was denied, and the Cooks&rsquo; and Waiters&rsquo; Union walked
+out.</p>
+<p>All organized employers stood back of the restaurant owners, in sympathy
+with them and willing to aid them if they dared.&nbsp; And at the back of
+the Cooks&rsquo; and Waiters&rsquo; Union stood the organized labor of the
+city, 40,000 strong.&nbsp; If a business man was caught patronizing an
+&ldquo;unfair&rdquo; restaurant, he was boycotted; if a union man was
+caught, he was fined heavily by his union or expelled.&nbsp; The oyster
+companies and the slaughter houses made an attempt to refuse to sell
+oysters and meat to union restaurants.&nbsp; The Butchers and Meat Cutters,
+and the Teamsters, in retaliation, refused to work for or to deliver to
+non-union restaurants.&nbsp; Upon this the oyster companies and slaughter
+houses acknowledged themselves beaten and peace reigned.&nbsp; But the
+Restaurant Bakers in non-union places were ordered out, and the Bakery
+Wagon Drivers declined to deliver to unfair houses.</p>
+<p>Every American Federation of Labor union in the city was prepared to
+strike, and waited only the word.&nbsp; And behind all, a handful of men,
+known as the Labor Council, directed the fight.&nbsp; One by one, blow upon
+blow, they were able if they deemed it necessary to call out the
+unions&mdash;the Laundry Workers, who do the washing; the Hackmen, who haul
+men to and from restaurants; the Butchers, Meat Cutters, and Teamsters; and
+the Milkers, Milk Drivers, and Chicken Pickers; and after that, in pure
+sympathy, the Retail Clerks, the Horse Shoers, the Gas and Electrical
+Fixture Hangers, the Metal Roofers, the Blacksmiths, the Blacksmiths&rsquo;
+Helpers, the Stablemen, the Machinists, the Brewers, the Coast Seamen, the
+Varnishers and Polishers, the Confectioners, the Upholsterers, the Paper
+Hangers and Fresco Painters, the Drug Clerks, the Fitters and Helpers, the
+Metal Workers, the Boiler Makers and Iron Ship Builders, the Assistant
+Undertakers, the Carriage and Wagon Workers, and so on down the lengthy
+list of organizations.</p>
+<p>For, over all these trades, over all these thousands of men, is the
+Labor Council.&nbsp; When it speaks its voice is heard, and when it orders
+it is obeyed.&nbsp; But it, in turn, is dominated by the National Labor
+Council, with which it is constantly in touch.&nbsp; In this wholly
+unimportant little local strike it is of interest to note the stands taken
+by the different sides.&nbsp; The legal representative and official
+mouthpiece of the Employers&rsquo; Association said: &ldquo;This
+organization is formed for defensive purposes, and it may be driven to take
+offensive steps, and if so, will be strong enough to follow them up.&nbsp;
+Labor cannot be allowed to dictate to capital and say how business shall be
+conducted.&nbsp; There is no objection to the formation of unions and
+trades councils, but membership must not be compulsory.&nbsp; It is
+repugnant to the American idea of liberty and cannot be
+tolerated.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the other hand, the president of the Team Drivers&rsquo; Union said:
+&ldquo;The employers of labor in this city are generally against the
+trade-union movement and there seems to be a concerted effort on their part
+to check the progress of organized labor.&nbsp; Such action as has been
+taken by them in sympathy with the present labor troubles may, if
+continued, lead to a serious conflict, the outcome of which might be most
+calamitous for the business and industrial interests of San
+Francisco.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the secretary of the United Brewery Workmen: &ldquo;I regard a
+sympathetic strike as the last weapon which organized labor should use in
+its defence.&nbsp; When, however, associations of employers band together
+to defeat organized labor, or one of its branches, then we should not and
+will not hesitate ourselves to employ the same instrument in
+retaliation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, in a little corner of the world, is exemplified the growing
+solidarity of labor.&nbsp; The organization of labor has not only kept pace
+with the organization of industry, but it has gained upon it.&nbsp; In one
+winter, in the anthracite coal region, $160,000,000 in mines and
+$600,000,000 in transportation and distribution consolidated its ownership
+and control.&nbsp; And at once, arrayed as solidly on the other side, were
+the 150,000 anthracite miners.&nbsp; The bituminous mines, however, were
+not consolidated; yet the 250,000 men employed therein were already
+combined.&nbsp; And not only that, but they were also combined with the
+anthracite miners, these 400,000 men being under the control and direction
+of one supreme labor council.&nbsp; And in this and the other great
+councils are to be found captains of labor of splendid abilities, who, in
+understanding of economic and industrial conditions, are undeniably the
+equals of their opponents, the captains of industry.</p>
+<p>The United States is honeycombed with labor organizations.&nbsp; And the
+big federations which these go to compose aggregate millions of members,
+and in their various branches handle millions of dollars yearly.&nbsp; And
+not only this; for the international brotherhoods and unions are forming,
+and moneys for the aid of strikers pass back and forth across the
+seas.&nbsp; The Machinists, in their demand for a nine-hour day, affected
+500,000 men in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.&nbsp; In England the
+membership of working-class organizations is approximated by Keir Hardie at
+2,500,000, with reserve funds of $18,000,000.&nbsp; There the
+co&ouml;perative movement has a membership of 1,500,000, and every year
+turns over in distribution more than $100,000,000.&nbsp; In France,
+one-eighth of the whole working class is unionized.&nbsp; In Belgium the
+unions are very rich and powerful, and so able to defy the masters that
+many of the smaller manufacturers, unable to resist, &ldquo;are removing
+their works to other countries where the workmen&rsquo;s organizations are
+not so potential.&rdquo;&nbsp; And in all other countries, according to the
+stage of their economic and political development, like figures
+obtain.&nbsp; And Europe, today, confesses that her greatest social problem
+is the labor problem, and that it is the one most closely engrossing the
+attention of her statesmen.</p>
+<p>The organization of labor is one of the chief acknowledged factors in
+the retrogression of British trade.&nbsp; The workers have become class
+conscious as never before.&nbsp; The wrong of one is the wrong of
+all.&nbsp; They have come to realize, in a short-sighted way, that their
+masters&rsquo; interests are not their interests.&nbsp; The harder they
+work, they believe, the more wealth they create for their masters.&nbsp;
+Further, the more work they do in one day, the fewer men will be needed to
+do the work.&nbsp; So the unions place a day&rsquo;s stint upon their
+members, beyond which they are not permitted to go.&nbsp; In &ldquo;A Study
+of Trade Unionism,&rdquo; by Benjamin Taylor in the &ldquo;Nineteenth
+Century&rdquo; of April, 1898, are furnished some interesting
+corroborations.&nbsp; The facts here set forth were collected by the
+Executive Board of the Employers&rsquo; Federation, the documentary proofs
+of which are in the hands of the secretaries.&nbsp; In a certain firm the
+union workmen made eight ammunition boxes a day.&nbsp; Nor could they be
+persuaded into making more.&nbsp; A young Swiss, who could not speak
+English, was set to work, and in the first day he made fifty boxes.&nbsp;
+In the same firm the skilled union hands filed up the outside handles of
+one machine-gun a day.&nbsp; That was their stint.&nbsp; No one was known
+ever to do more.&nbsp; A non-union filer came into the shop and did twelve
+a day.&nbsp; A Manchester firm found that to plane a large bed-casting took
+union workmen one hundred and ninety hours, and non-union workmen one
+hundred and thirty-five hours.&nbsp; In another instance a man, resigning
+from his union, day by day did double the amount of work he had done
+formerly.&nbsp; And to cap it all, an English gentleman, going out to look
+at a wall being put up for him by union bricklayers, found one of their
+number with his right arm strapped to his body, doing all the work with his
+left arm&mdash;forsooth, because he was such an energetic fellow that
+otherwise he would involuntarily lay more bricks than his union
+permitted.</p>
+<p>All England resounds to the cry, &ldquo;Wake up, England!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But the sulky giant is not stirred.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let England&rsquo;s trade
+go to pot,&rdquo; he says; &ldquo;what have I to lose?&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+England is powerless.&nbsp; The capacity of her workmen is represented by
+1, in comparison with the 2&frac14; capacity of the American workman.&nbsp;
+And because of the solidarity of labor and the destructiveness of strikes,
+British capitalists dare not even strive to emulate the enterprise of
+American capitalists.&nbsp; So England watches trade slipping through her
+fingers and wails unavailingly.&nbsp; As a correspondent writes: &ldquo;The
+enormous power of the trade unions hangs, a sullen cloud, over the whole
+industrial world here, affecting men and masters alike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The political movement known as Socialism is, perhaps, even less
+realized by the general public.&nbsp; The great strides it has taken and
+the portentous front it today exhibits are not comprehended; and, fastened
+though it is in every land, it is given little space by the capitalistic
+press.&nbsp; For all its plea and passion and warmth, it wells upward like
+a great, cold tidal wave, irresistible, inexorable, ingulfing present-day
+society level by level.&nbsp; By its own preachment it is inexorable.&nbsp;
+Just as societies have sprung into existence, fulfilled their function, and
+passed away, it claims, just as surely is present society hastening on to
+its dissolution.&nbsp; This is a transition period&mdash;and destined to be
+a very short one.&nbsp; Barely a century old, capitalism is ripening so
+rapidly that it can never live to see a second birthday.&nbsp; There is no
+hope for it, the Socialists say.&nbsp; It is doomed.</p>
+<p>The cardinal tenet of Socialism is that forbidding doctrine, the
+materialistic conception of history.&nbsp; Men are not the masters of their
+souls.&nbsp; They are the puppets of great, blind forces.&nbsp; The lives
+they live and the deaths they die are compulsory.&nbsp; All social codes
+are but the reflexes of existing economic conditions, plus certain
+survivals of past economic conditions.&nbsp; The institutions men build
+they are compelled to build.&nbsp; Economic laws determine at any given
+time what these institutions shall be, how long they shall operate, and by
+what they shall be replaced.&nbsp; And so, through the economic process,
+the Socialist preaches the ripening of the capitalistic society and the
+coming of the new co&ouml;perative society.</p>
+<p>The second great tenet of Socialism, itself a phase of the materialistic
+conception of history, is the class struggle.&nbsp; In the social struggle
+for existence, men are forced into classes.&nbsp; &ldquo;The history of all
+society thus far is the history of class strife.&rdquo;&nbsp; In existing
+society the capitalist class exploits the working class, the
+proletariat.&nbsp; The interests of the exploiter are not the interests of
+the exploited.&nbsp; &ldquo;Profits are legitimate,&rdquo; says the
+one.&nbsp; &ldquo;Profits are unpaid wages,&rdquo; replies the other, when
+he has become conscious of his class, &ldquo;therefore profits are
+robbery.&rdquo;&nbsp; The capitalist enforces his profits because he is the
+legal owner of all the means of production.&nbsp; He is the legal owner
+because he controls the political machinery of society.&nbsp; The Socialist
+sets to work to capture the political machinery, so that he may make
+illegal the capitalist&rsquo;s ownership of the means of production, and
+make legal his own ownership of the means of production.&nbsp; And it is
+this struggle, between these two classes, upon which the world has at last
+entered.</p>
+<p>Scientific Socialism is very young.&nbsp; Only yesterday it was in
+swaddling clothes.&nbsp; But today it is a vigorous young giant, well
+braced to battle for what it wants, and knowing precisely what it
+wants.&nbsp; It holds its international conventions, where world-policies
+are formulated by the representatives of millions of Socialists.&nbsp; In
+little Belgium there are three-quarters of a million of men who work for
+the cause; in Germany, 3,000,000; Austria, between 1895 and 1897, raised
+her socialist vote from 90,000 to 750,000.&nbsp; France in 1871 had a whole
+generation of Socialists wiped out; yet in 1885 there were 30,000, and in
+1898, 1,000,000.</p>
+<p>Ere the last Spaniard had evacuated Cuba, Socialist groups were
+forming.&nbsp; And from far Japan, in these first days of the twentieth
+century, writes one Tomoyoshi Murai: &ldquo;The interest of our people on
+Socialism has been greatly awakened these days, especially among our
+laboring people on one hand and young students&rsquo; circle on the other,
+as much as we can draw an earnest and enthusiastic audience and fill our
+hall, which holds two thousand. . . . It is gratifying to say that we have
+a number of fine and well-trained public orators among our leaders of
+Socialism in Japan.&nbsp; The first speaker tonight is Mr. Kiyoshi
+Kawakami, editor of one of our city (Tokyo) dailies, a strong, independent,
+and decidedly socialistic paper, circulated far and wide.&nbsp; Mr.
+Kawakami is a scholar as well as a popular writer.&nbsp; He is going to
+speak tonight on the subject, &lsquo;The Essence of Socialism&mdash;the
+Fundamental Principles.&rsquo;&nbsp; The next speaker is Professor Iso Abe,
+president of our association, whose subject of address is, &lsquo;Socialism
+and the Existing Social System.&rsquo;&nbsp; The third speaker is Mr. Naoe
+Kinosita, the editor of another strong journal of the city.&nbsp; He speaks
+on the subject, &lsquo;How to Realize the Socialist Ideals and
+Plans.&rsquo;&nbsp; Next is Mr. Shigeyoshi Sugiyama, a graduate of Hartford
+Theological Seminary and an advocate of Social Christianity, who is to
+speak on &lsquo;Socialism and Municipal Problems.&rsquo;&nbsp; And the last
+speaker is the editor of the &lsquo;Labor World,&rsquo; the foremost leader
+of the labor-union movement in our country, Mr. Sen Katayama, who speaks on
+the subject, &lsquo;The Outlook of Socialism in Europe and
+America.&rsquo;&nbsp; These addresses are going to be published in book
+form and to be distributed among our people to enlighten their minds on the
+subject.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And in the struggle for the political machinery of society, Socialism is
+no longer confined to mere propaganda.&nbsp; Italy, Austria, Belgium,
+England, have Socialist members in their national bodies.&nbsp; Out of the
+one hundred and thirty-two members of the London County Council, ninety-one
+are denounced by the conservative element as Socialists.&nbsp; The Emperor
+of Germany grows anxious and angry at the increasing numbers which are
+returned to the Reichstag.&nbsp; In France, many of the large cities, such
+as Marseilles, are in the hands of the Socialists.&nbsp; A large body of
+them is in the Chamber of Deputies, and Millerand, Socialist, sits in the
+cabinet.&nbsp; Of him M. Leroy-Beaulieu says with horror: &ldquo;M.
+Millerand is the open enemy of private property, private capital, the
+resolute advocate of the socialization of production . . . a constant
+incitement to violence . . . a collectivist, avowed and militant, taking
+part in the government, dominating the departments of commerce and
+industry, preparing all the laws and presiding at the passage of all
+measures which should be submitted to merchants and tradesmen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the United States there are already Socialist mayors of towns and
+members of State legislatures, a vast literature, and single Socialist
+papers with subscription lists running up into the hundreds of
+thousands.&nbsp; In 1896, 36,000 votes were cast for the Socialist
+candidate for President; in 1900, nearly 200,000; in 1904, 450,000.&nbsp;
+And the United States, young as it is, is ripening rapidly, and the
+Socialists claim, according to the materialistic conception of history,
+that the United States will be the first country in the world wherein the
+toilers will capture the political machinery and expropriate the
+bourgeoisie.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>But the Socialist and labor movements have recently entered upon a new
+phase.&nbsp; There has been a remarkable change in attitude on both
+sides.&nbsp; For a long time the labor unions refrained from going in for
+political action.&nbsp; On the other hand, the Socialists claimed that
+without political action labor was powerless.&nbsp; And because of this
+there was much ill feeling between them, even open hostilities, and no
+concerted action.&nbsp; But now the Socialists grant that the labor
+movement has held up wages and decreased the hours of labor, and the labor
+unions find that political action is necessary.&nbsp; Today both parties
+have drawn closely together in the common fight.&nbsp; In the United States
+this friendly feeling grows.&nbsp; The Socialist papers espouse the cause
+of labor, and the unions have opened their ears once more to the wiles of
+the Socialists.&nbsp; They are all leavened with Socialist workmen,
+&ldquo;boring from within,&rdquo; and many of their leaders have already
+succumbed.&nbsp; In England, where class consciousness is more developed,
+the name &ldquo;Unionism&rdquo; has been replaced by &ldquo;The New
+Unionism,&rdquo; the main object of which is &ldquo;to capture existing
+social structures in the interests of the wage-earners.&rdquo;&nbsp; There
+the Socialist, the trade-union, and other working-class organizations are
+beginning to co&ouml;perate in securing the return of representatives to
+the House of Commons.&nbsp; And in France, where the city councils and
+mayors of Marseilles and Monteaules-Mines are Socialistic, thousands of
+francs of municipal money were voted for the aid of the unions in the
+recent great strikes.</p>
+<p>For centuries the world has been preparing for the coming of the common
+man.&nbsp; And the period of preparation virtually past, labor, conscious
+of itself and its desires, has begun a definite movement toward
+solidarity.&nbsp; It believes the time is not far distant when the
+historian will speak not only of the dark ages of feudalism, but of the
+dark ages of capitalism.&nbsp; And labor sincerely believes itself
+justified in this by the terrible indictment it brings against capitalistic
+society.&nbsp; In the face of its enormous wealth, capitalistic society
+forfeits its right to existence when it permits widespread, bestial
+poverty.&nbsp; The philosophy of the survival of the fittest does not
+soothe the class-conscious worker when he learns through his class
+literature that among the Italian pants-finishers of Chicago <a
+name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9" class="citation">[9]</a> the
+average weekly wage is $1.31, and the average number of weeks employed in
+the year is 27.85.&nbsp; Likewise when he reads: <a
+name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10" class="citation">[10]</a>
+&ldquo;Every room in these reeking tenements houses a family or two.&nbsp;
+In one room a missionary found a man ill with small-pox, his wife just
+recovering from her confinement, and the children running about half naked
+and covered with dirt.&nbsp; Here are seven people living in one
+underground kitchen, and a little dead child lying in the same room.&nbsp;
+Here live a widow and her six children, two of whom are ill with scarlet
+fever.&nbsp; In another, nine brothers and sisters, from twenty-nine years
+of age downward, live, eat, and sleep together.&rdquo;&nbsp; And likewise,
+when he reads: <a name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11"
+class="citation">[11]</a> &ldquo;When one man, fifty years old, who has
+worked all his life, is compelled to beg a little money to bury his dead
+baby, and another man, fifty years old, can give ten million dollars to
+enable his daughter to live in luxury and bolster up a decaying foreign
+aristocracy, do you see nothing amiss?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And on the other hand, the class-conscious worker reads the statistics
+of the wealthy classes, knows what their incomes are, and how they get
+them.&nbsp; True, down all the past he has known his own material misery
+and the material comfort of the dominant classes, and often has this
+knowledge led him to intemperate acts and unwise rebellion.&nbsp; But
+today, and for the first time, because both society and he have evolved, he
+is beginning to see a possible way out.&nbsp; His ears are opening to the
+propaganda of Socialism, the passionate gospel of the dispossessed.&nbsp;
+But it does not inculcate a turning back.&nbsp; The way through is the way
+out, he understands, and with this in mind he draws up the programme.</p>
+<p>It is quite simple, this programme.&nbsp; Everything is moving in his
+direction, toward the day when he will take charge.&nbsp; The trust?&nbsp;
+Ah, no.&nbsp; Unlike the trembling middle-class man and the small
+capitalist, he sees nothing at which to be frightened.&nbsp; He likes the
+trust.&nbsp; He exults in the trust, for it is largely doing the task for
+him.&nbsp; It socializes production; this done, there remains nothing for
+him to do but socialize distribution, and all is accomplished.&nbsp; The
+trust?&nbsp; &ldquo;It organizes industry on an enormous, labor-saving
+scale, and abolishes childish, wasteful competition.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is a
+gigantic object lesson, and it preaches his political economy far more
+potently than he can preach it.&nbsp; He points to the trust, laughing
+scornfully in the face of the orthodox economists.&nbsp; &ldquo;You told me
+this thing could not be,&rdquo; <a name="citation12"></a><a
+href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</a> he thunders.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Behold, the thing is!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He sees competition in the realm of production passing away.&nbsp; When
+the captains of industry have thoroughly organized production, and got
+everything running smoothly, it will be very easy for him to eliminate the
+profits by stepping in and having the thing run for himself.&nbsp; And the
+captain of industry, if he be good, may be given the privilege of
+continuing the management on a fair salary.&nbsp; The sixty millions of
+dividends which the Standard Oil Company annually declares will be
+distributed among the workers.&nbsp; The same with the great United States
+Steel Corporation.&nbsp; The president of that corporation knows his
+business.&nbsp; Very good.&nbsp; Let him become Secretary of the Department
+of Iron and Steel of the United States.&nbsp; But, since the chief
+executive of a nation of seventy-odd millions works for $50,000 a year, the
+Secretary of the Department of Iron and Steel must expect to have his
+salary cut accordingly.&nbsp; And not only will the workers take to
+themselves the profits of national and municipal monopolies, but also the
+immense revenues which the dominant classes today draw from rents, and
+mines, and factories, and all manner of enterprises.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>All this would seem very like a dream, even to the worker, if it were
+not for the fact that like things have been done before.&nbsp; He points
+triumphantly to the aristocrat of the eighteenth century, who fought,
+legislated, governed, and dominated society, but who was shorn of power and
+displaced by the rising bourgeoisie.&nbsp; Ay, the thing was done, he
+holds.&nbsp; And it shall be done again, but this time it is the
+proletariat who does the shearing.&nbsp; Sociology has taught him that
+m-i-g-h-t spells &ldquo;right.&rdquo;&nbsp; Every society has been ruled by
+classes, and the classes have ruled by sheer strength, and have been
+overthrown by sheer strength.&nbsp; The bourgeoisie, because it was the
+stronger, dragged down the nobility of the sword; and the proletariat,
+because it is the strongest of all, can and will drag down the
+bourgeoisie.</p>
+<p>And in that day, for better or worse, the common man becomes the
+master&mdash;for better, he believes.&nbsp; It is his intention to make the
+sum of human happiness far greater.&nbsp; No man shall work for a bare
+living wage, which is degradation.&nbsp; Every man shall have work to do,
+and shall be paid exceedingly well for doing it.&nbsp; There shall be no
+slum classes, no beggars.&nbsp; Nor shall there be hundreds of thousands of
+men and women condemned, for economic reasons, to lives of celibacy or
+sexual infertility.&nbsp; Every man shall be able to marry, to live in
+healthy, comfortable quarters, and to have all he wants to eat as many
+times a day as he wishes.&nbsp; There shall no longer be a life-and-death
+struggle for food and shelter.&nbsp; The old heartless law of development
+shall be annulled.</p>
+<p>All of which is very good and very fine.&nbsp; And when these things
+have come to pass, what then?&nbsp; Of old, by virtue of their weakness and
+inefficiency in the struggle for food and shelter, the race was purged of
+its weak and inefficient members.&nbsp; But this will no longer
+obtain.&nbsp; Under the new order the weak and the progeny of the weak will
+have a chance for survival equal to that of the strong and the progeny of
+the strong.&nbsp; This being so, the premium upon strength will have been
+withdrawn, and on the face of it the average strength of each generation,
+instead of continuing to rise, will begin to decline.</p>
+<p>When the common man&rsquo;s day shall have arrived, the new social
+institutions of that day will prevent the weeding out of weakness and
+inefficiency.&nbsp; All, the weak and the strong, will have an equal chance
+for procreation.&nbsp; And the progeny of all, of the weak as well as the
+strong, will have an equal chance for survival.&nbsp; This being so, and if
+no new effective law of development be put into operation, then progress
+must cease.&nbsp; And not only progress, for deterioration would at once
+set in.&nbsp; It is a pregnant problem.&nbsp; What will be the nature of
+this new and most necessary law of development?&nbsp; Can the common man
+pause long enough from his undermining labors to answer?&nbsp; Since he is
+bent upon dragging down the bourgeoisie and reconstructing society, can he
+so reconstruct that a premium, in some unguessed way or other, will still
+be laid upon the strong and efficient so that the human type will continue
+to develop?&nbsp; Can the common man, or the uncommon men who are allied
+with him, devise such a law?&nbsp; Or have they already devised one?&nbsp;
+And if so, what is it?</p>
+<h2>HOW I BECAME A SOCIALIST</h2>
+<p>It is quite fair to say that I became a Socialist in a fashion somewhat
+similar to the way in which the Teutonic pagans became Christians&mdash;it
+was hammered into me.&nbsp; Not only was I not looking for Socialism at the
+time of my conversion, but I was fighting it.&nbsp; I was very young and
+callow, did not know much of anything, and though I had never even heard of
+a school called &ldquo;Individualism,&rdquo; I sang the p&aelig;an of the
+strong with all my heart.</p>
+<p>This was because I was strong myself.&nbsp; By strong I mean that I had
+good health and hard muscles, both of which possessions are easily
+accounted for.&nbsp; I had lived my childhood on California ranches, my
+boyhood hustling newspapers on the streets of a healthy Western city, and
+my youth on the ozone-laden waters of San Francisco Bay and the Pacific
+Ocean.&nbsp; I loved life in the open, and I toiled in the open, at the
+hardest kinds of work.&nbsp; Learning no trade, but drifting along from job
+to job, I looked on the world and called it good, every bit of it.&nbsp;
+Let me repeat, this optimism was because I was healthy and strong, bothered
+with neither aches nor weaknesses, never turned down by the boss because I
+did not look fit, able always to get a job at shovelling coal, sailorizing,
+or manual labor of some sort.</p>
+<p>And because of all this, exulting in my young life, able to hold my own
+at work or fight, I was a rampant individualist.&nbsp; It was very
+natural.&nbsp; I was a winner.&nbsp; Wherefore I called the game, as I saw
+it played, or thought I saw it played, a very proper game for MEN.&nbsp; To
+be a MAN was to write man in large capitals on my heart.&nbsp; To adventure
+like a man, and fight like a man, and do a man&rsquo;s work (even for a
+boy&rsquo;s pay)&mdash;these were things that reached right in and gripped
+hold of me as no other thing could.&nbsp; And I looked ahead into long
+vistas of a hazy and interminable future, into which, playing what I
+conceived to be MAN&rsquo;S game, I should continue to travel with
+unfailing health, without accidents, and with muscles ever vigorous.&nbsp;
+As I say, this future was interminable.&nbsp; I could see myself only
+raging through life without end like one of Nietzsche&rsquo;s
+<i>blond-beasts</i>, lustfully roving and conquering by sheer superiority
+and strength.</p>
+<p>As for the unfortunates, the sick, and ailing, and old, and maimed, I
+must confess I hardly thought of them at all, save that I vaguely felt that
+they, barring accidents, could be as good as I if they wanted to real hard,
+and could work just as well.&nbsp; Accidents?&nbsp; Well, they represented
+FATE, also spelled out in capitals, and there was no getting around
+FATE.&nbsp; Napoleon had had an accident at Waterloo, but that did not
+dampen my desire to be another and later Napoleon.&nbsp; Further, the
+optimism bred of a stomach which could digest scrap iron and a body which
+flourished on hardships did not permit me to consider accidents as even
+remotely related to my glorious personality.</p>
+<p>I hope I have made it clear that I was proud to be one of Nature&rsquo;s
+strong-armed noblemen.&nbsp; The dignity of labor was to me the most
+impressive thing in the world.&nbsp; Without having read Carlyle, or
+Kipling, I formulated a gospel of work which put theirs in the shade.&nbsp;
+Work was everything.&nbsp; It was sanctification and salvation.&nbsp; The
+pride I took in a hard day&rsquo;s work well done would be inconceivable to
+you.&nbsp; It is almost inconceivable to me as I look back upon it.&nbsp; I
+was as faithful a wage slave as ever capitalist exploited.&nbsp; To shirk
+or malinger on the man who paid me my wages was a sin, first, against
+myself, and second, against him.&nbsp; I considered it a crime second only
+to treason and just about as bad.</p>
+<p>In short, my joyous individualism was dominated by the orthodox
+bourgeois ethics.&nbsp; I read the bourgeois papers, listened to the
+bourgeois preachers, and shouted at the sonorous platitudes of the
+bourgeois politicians.&nbsp; And I doubt not, if other events had not
+changed my career, that I should have evolved into a professional
+strike-breaker, (one of President Eliot&rsquo;s American heroes), and had
+my head and my earning power irrevocably smashed by a club in the hands of
+some militant trades-unionist.</p>
+<p>Just about this time, returning from a seven months&rsquo; voyage before
+the mast, and just turned eighteen, I took it into my head to go
+tramping.&nbsp; On rods and blind baggages I fought my way from the open
+West where men bucked big and the job hunted the man, to the congested
+labor centres of the East, where men were small potatoes and hunted the job
+for all they were worth.&nbsp; And on this new <i>blond-beast</i> adventure
+I found myself looking upon life from a new and totally different
+angle.&nbsp; I had dropped down from the proletariat into what sociologists
+love to call the &ldquo;submerged tenth,&rdquo; and I was startled to
+discover the way in which that submerged tenth was recruited.</p>
+<p>I found there all sorts of men, many of whom had once been as good as
+myself and just as <i>blond-beast</i>; sailor-men, soldier-men, labor-men,
+all wrenched and distorted and twisted out of shape by toil and hardship
+and accident, and cast adrift by their masters like so many old
+horses.&nbsp; I battered on the drag and slammed back gates with them, or
+shivered with them in box cars and city parks, listening the while to
+life-histories which began under auspices as fair as mine, with digestions
+and bodies equal to and better than mine, and which ended there before my
+eyes in the shambles at the bottom of the Social Pit.</p>
+<p>And as I listened my brain began to work.&nbsp; The woman of the streets
+and the man of the gutter drew very close to me.&nbsp; I saw the picture of
+the Social Pit as vividly as though it were a concrete thing, and at the
+bottom of the Pit I saw them, myself above them, not far, and hanging on to
+the slippery wall by main strength and sweat.&nbsp; And I confess a terror
+seized me.&nbsp; What when my strength failed? when I should be unable to
+work shoulder to shoulder with the strong men who were as yet babes
+unborn?&nbsp; And there and then I swore a great oath.&nbsp; It ran
+something like this: <i>All my days I have worked hard with my body</i>,
+<i>and according to the number of days I have worked</i>, <i>by just that
+much am I nearer the bottom of the Pit</i>.&nbsp; <i>I shall climb out of
+the Pit</i>, <i>but not by the muscles of my body shall I climb
+out</i>.&nbsp; <i>I shall do no more hard work</i>, <i>and may God strike
+me dead if I do another day&rsquo;s hard work with my body more than I
+absolutely have to do</i>.&nbsp; And I have been busy ever since running
+away from hard work.</p>
+<p>Incidentally, while tramping some ten thousand miles through the United
+States and Canada, I strayed into Niagara Falls, was nabbed by a
+fee-hunting constable, denied the right to plead guilty or not guilty,
+sentenced out of hand to thirty days&rsquo; imprisonment for having no
+fixed abode and no visible means of support, handcuffed and chained to a
+bunch of men similarly circumstanced, carted down country to Buffalo,
+registered at the Erie County Penitentiary, had my head clipped and my
+budding mustache shaved, was dressed in convict stripes, compulsorily
+vaccinated by a medical student who practised on such as we, made to march
+the lock-step, and put to work under the eyes of guards armed with
+Winchester rifles&mdash;all for adventuring in <i>blond-beastly</i>
+fashion.&nbsp; Concerning further details deponent sayeth not, though he
+may hint that some of his plethoric national patriotism simmered down and
+leaked out of the bottom of his soul somewhere&mdash;at least, since that
+experience he finds that he cares more for men and women and little
+children than for imaginary geographical lines.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>To return to my conversion.&nbsp; I think it is apparent that my rampant
+individualism was pretty effectively hammered out of me, and something else
+as effectively hammered in.&nbsp; But, just as I had been an individualist
+without knowing it, I was now a Socialist without knowing it, withal, an
+unscientific one.&nbsp; I had been reborn, but not renamed, and I was
+running around to find out what manner of thing I was.&nbsp; I ran back to
+California and opened the books.&nbsp; I do not remember which ones I
+opened first.&nbsp; It is an unimportant detail anyway.&nbsp; I was already
+It, whatever It was, and by aid of the books I discovered that It was a
+Socialist.&nbsp; Since that day I have opened many books, but no economic
+argument, no lucid demonstration of the logic and inevitableness of
+Socialism affects me as profoundly and convincingly as I was affected on
+the day when I first saw the walls of the Social Pit rise around me and
+felt myself slipping down, down, into the shambles at the bottom.</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1"
+class="footnote">[1]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;From 43 to 52 per cent of all
+applicants need work rather than relief.&rdquo;&mdash;Report of the Charity
+Organization Society of New York City.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2"
+class="footnote">[2]</a>&nbsp; Mr. Leiter, who owns a coal mine at the town
+of Zeigler, Illinois, in an interview printed in the Chicago Record-Herald
+of December 6, 1904, said: &ldquo;When I go into the market to purchase
+labor, I propose to retain just as much freedom as does a purchaser in any
+other kind of a market. . . . There is no difficulty whatever in obtaining
+labor, <i>for the country is full of unemployed men</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3"
+class="footnote">[3]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Despondent and weary with vain
+attempts to struggle against an unsympathetic world, two old men were
+brought before Police Judge McHugh this afternoon to see whether some means
+could not be provided for their support, at least until springtime.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;George Westlake was the first one to receive the consideration of
+the court.&nbsp; Westlake is seventy-two years old.&nbsp; A charge of
+habitual drunkenness was placed against him, and he was sentenced to a term
+in the county jail, though it is more than probable that he was never under
+the influence of intoxicating liquor in his life.&nbsp; The act on the part
+of the authorities was one of kindness for him, as in the county jail he
+will be provided with a good place to sleep and plenty to eat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe Coat, aged sixty-nine years, will serve ninety days in the
+county jail for much the same reason as Westlake.&nbsp; He states that, if
+given a chance to do so, he will go out to a wood-camp and cut timber
+during the winter, but the police authorities realize that he could not
+long survive such a task.&rdquo;&mdash;From the Butte (Montana) Miner,
+December 7th, 1904.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I end my life because I have reached the age limit, and
+there is no place for me in this world.&nbsp; Please notify my wife, No.
+222 West 129th Street, New York.&rsquo;&nbsp; Having summed up the cause of
+his despondency in this final message, James Hollander, fifty-six years
+old, shot himself through the left temple, in his room at the Stafford
+Hotel today.&rdquo;&mdash;New York Herald.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4"
+class="footnote">[4]</a>&nbsp; In the San Francisco Examiner of November
+16, 1904, there is an account of the use of fire-hose to drive away three
+hundred men who wanted work at unloading a vessel in the harbor.&nbsp; So
+anxious were the men to get the two or three hours&rsquo; job that they
+made a veritable mob and had to be driven off.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5"
+class="footnote">[5]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;It was no uncommon thing in these
+sweatshops for men to sit bent over a sewing-machine continuously from
+eleven to fifteen hours a day in July weather, operating a sewing-machine
+by foot-power, and often so driven that they could not stop for
+lunch.&nbsp; The seasonal character of the work meant demoralizing toil for
+a few months in the year, and a not less demoralizing idleness for the
+remainder of the time.&nbsp; Consumption, the plague of the tenements and
+the especial plague of the garment industry, carried off many of these
+workers; poor nutrition and exhaustion, many more.&rdquo;&mdash;From
+McClure&rsquo;s Magazine.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6"
+class="footnote">[6]</a>&nbsp; The Social Unrest.&nbsp; Macmillan
+Company.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7"
+class="footnote">[7]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Our Benevolent
+Feudalism.&rdquo;&nbsp; By W. J. Ghent.&nbsp; The Macmillan Company.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8"
+class="footnote">[8]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The Social Unrest.&rdquo;&nbsp; By
+John Graham Brooks.&nbsp; The Macmillan Company.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9"
+class="footnote">[9]</a>&nbsp; From figures presented by Miss Nellie Mason
+Auten in the American Journal of Sociology, and copied extensively by the
+trade-union and Socialist press.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10"
+class="footnote">[10]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;The Bitter Cry of Outcast
+London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11"
+class="footnote">[11]</a>&nbsp; An item from the Social Democratic
+Herald.&nbsp; Hundreds of these items, culled from current happenings, are
+published weekly in the papers of the workers.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12"
+class="footnote">[12]</a>&nbsp; Karl Marx, the great Socialist, worked out
+the trust development forty years ago, for which he was laughed at by the
+orthodox economists.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WAR OF THE CLASSES***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, War of the Classes, by Jack London
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: War of the Classes
+
+
+Author: Jack London
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 6, 2007 [eBook #1187]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WAR OF THE CLASSES***
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1912 Macmillan edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+WAR OF THE CLASSES
+
+
+ BY
+ JACK LONDON
+ AUTHOR OF "THE SEA-WOLF," "CALL OF THE WILD," ETC.
+
+ THE REGENT PRESS
+ NEW YORK
+
+ Copyright, 1905,
+ BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
+
+ Set up and electrotyped. Published April, 1905. Reprinted June,
+ October, November, 1905; January, 1906; May, 1907; April, 1908; March,
+ 19010; April, 1912.
+
+ Printed and Bound by
+ J. J. Little & Ives Company
+ New York
+
+Contents:
+
+Preface
+The Class Struggle
+The Tramp
+The Scab
+The Question of the Maximum
+A Review
+Wanted: A New Land of Development
+How I Became a Socialist
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+When I was a youngster I was looked upon as a weird sort of creature,
+because, forsooth, I was a socialist. Reporters from local papers
+interviewed me, and the interviews, when published, were pathological
+studies of a strange and abnormal specimen of man. At that time (nine or
+ten years ago), because I made a stand in my native town for municipal
+ownership of public utilities, I was branded a "red-shirt," a
+"dynamiter," and an "anarchist"; and really decent fellows, who liked me
+very well, drew the line at my appearing in public with their sisters.
+
+But the times changed. There came a day when I heard, in my native town,
+a Republican mayor publicly proclaim that "municipal ownership was a
+fixed American policy." And in that day I found myself picking up in the
+world. No longer did the pathologist study me, while the really decent
+fellows did not mind in the least the propinquity of myself and their
+sisters in the public eye. My political and sociological ideas were
+ascribed to the vagaries of youth, and good-natured elderly men
+patronized me and told me that I would grow up some day and become an
+unusually intelligent member of the community. Also they told me that my
+views were biassed by my empty pockets, and that some day, when I had
+gathered to me a few dollars, my views would be wholly different,--in
+short, that my views would be their views.
+
+And then came the day when my socialism grew respectable,--still a vagary
+of youth, it was held, but romantically respectable. Romance, to the
+bourgeois mind, was respectable because it was not dangerous. As a
+"red-shirt," with bombs in all his pockets, I was dangerous. As a youth
+with nothing more menacing than a few philosophical ideas, Germanic in
+their origin, I was an interesting and pleasing personality.
+
+Through all this experience I noted one thing. It was not I that
+changed, but the community. In fact, my socialistic views grew solider
+and more pronounced. I repeat, it was the community that changed, and to
+my chagrin I discovered that the community changed to such purpose that
+it was not above stealing my thunder. The community branded me a
+"red-shirt" because I stood for municipal ownership; a little later it
+applauded its mayor when he proclaimed municipal ownership to be a fixed
+American policy. He stole my thunder, and the community applauded the
+theft. And today the community is able to come around and give me points
+on municipal ownership.
+
+What happened to me has been in no wise different from what has happened
+to the socialist movement as a whole in the United States. In the
+bourgeois mind socialism has changed from a terrible disease to a
+youthful vagary, and later on had its thunder stolen by the two old
+parties,--socialism, like a meek and thrifty workingman, being exploited
+became respectable.
+
+Only dangerous things are abhorrent. The thing that is not dangerous is
+always respectable. And so with socialism in the United States. For
+several years it has been very respectable,--a sweet and beautiful
+Utopian dream, in the bourgeois mind, yet a dream, only a dream. During
+this period, which has just ended, socialism was tolerated because it was
+impossible and non-menacing. Much of its thunder had been stolen, and
+the workingmen had been made happy with full dinner-pails. There was
+nothing to fear. The kind old world spun on, coupons were clipped, and
+larger profits than ever were extracted from the toilers.
+Coupon-clipping and profit-extracting would continue to the end of time.
+These were functions divine in origin and held by divine right. The
+newspapers, the preachers, and the college presidents said so, and what
+they say, of course, is so--to the bourgeois mind.
+
+Then came the presidential election of 1904. Like a bolt out of a clear
+sky was the socialist vote of 435,000,--an increase of nearly 400 per
+cent in four years, the largest third-party vote, with one exception,
+since the Civil War. Socialism had shown that it was a very live and
+growing revolutionary force, and all its old menace revived. I am afraid
+that neither it nor I are any longer respectable. The capitalist press
+of the country confirms me in my opinion, and herewith I give a few
+post-election utterances of the capitalist press:--
+
+ "The Democratic party of the constitution is dead. The
+ Social-Democratic party of continental Europe, preaching discontent
+ and class hatred, assailing law, property, and personal rights, and
+ insinuating confiscation and plunder, is here."--Chicago Chronicle.
+
+ "That over forty thousand votes should have been cast in this city to
+ make such a person as Eugene V. Debs the President of the United
+ States is about the worst kind of advertising that Chicago could
+ receive."--Chicago Inter-Ocean.
+
+ "We cannot blink the fact that socialism is making rapid growth in
+ this country, where, of all others, there would seem to be less
+ inspiration for it."--Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
+
+ "Upon the hands of the Republican party an awful responsibility was
+ placed last Tuesday. . . It knows that reforms--great, far-sweeping
+ reforms--are necessary, and it has the power to make them. God help
+ our civilization if it does not! . . . It must repress the trusts or
+ stand before the world responsible for our system of government being
+ changed into a social republic. The arbitrary cutting down of wages
+ must cease, or socialism will seize another lever to lift itself into
+ power."--The Chicago New World.
+
+ "Scarcely any phase of the election is more sinisterly interesting
+ than the increase in the socialist vote. Before election we said
+ that we could not afford to give aid and comfort to the socialists in
+ any manner. . . It (socialism) must be fought in all its phases, in
+ its every manifestation."--San Francisco Argonaut.
+
+And far be it from me to deny that socialism is a menace. It is its
+purpose to wipe out, root and branch, all capitalistic institutions of
+present-day society. It is distinctly revolutionary, and in scope and
+depth is vastly more tremendous than any revolution that has ever
+occurred in the history of the world. It presents a new spectacle to the
+astonished world,--that of an _organized_, _international_,
+_revolutionary movement_. In the bourgeois mind a class struggle is a
+terrible and hateful thing, and yet that is precisely what socialism
+is,--a world-wide class struggle between the propertyless workers and the
+propertied masters of workers. It is the prime preachment of socialism
+that the struggle is a class struggle. The working class, in the process
+of social evolution, (in the very nature of things), is bound to revolt
+from the sway of the capitalist class and to overthrow the capitalist
+class. This is the menace of socialism, and in affirming it and in
+tallying myself an adherent of it, I accept my own consequent
+unrespectability.
+
+As yet, to the average bourgeois mind, socialism is merely a menace,
+vague and formless. The average member of the capitalist class, when he
+discusses socialism, is condemned an ignoramus out of his own mouth. He
+does not know the literature of socialism, its philosophy, nor its
+politics. He wags his head sagely and rattles the dry bones of dead and
+buried ideas. His lips mumble mouldy phrases, such as, "Men are not born
+equal and never can be;" "It is Utopian and impossible;" "Abstinence
+should be rewarded;" "Man will first have to be born again;" "Cooperative
+colonies have always failed;" and "What if we do divide up? in ten years
+there would be rich and poor men such as there are today."
+
+It surely is time that the capitalists knew something about this
+socialism that they feel menaces them. And it is the hope of the writer
+that the socialistic studies in this volume may in some slight degree
+enlighten a few capitalistic minds. The capitalist must learn, first and
+for always, that socialism is based, not upon the equality, but upon the
+inequality, of men. Next, he must learn that no new birth into spiritual
+purity is necessary before socialism becomes possible. He must learn
+that socialism deals with what is, not with what ought to be; and that
+the material with which it deals is the "clay of the common road," the
+warm human, fallible and frail, sordid and petty, absurd and
+contradictory, even grotesque, and yet, withal, shot through with flashes
+and glimmerings of something finer and God-like, with here and there
+sweetnesses of service and unselfishness, desires for goodness, for
+renunciation and sacrifice, and with conscience, stern and awful, at
+times blazingly imperious, demanding the right,--the right, nothing more
+nor less than the right.
+
+ JACK LONDON.
+
+OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA.
+January 12, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+THE CLASS STRUGGLE
+
+
+Unfortunately or otherwise, people are prone to believe in the reality of
+the things they think ought to be so. This comes of the cheery optimism
+which is innate with life itself; and, while it may sometimes be
+deplored, it must never be censured, for, as a rule, it is productive of
+more good than harm, and of about all the achievement there is in the
+world. There are cases where this optimism has been disastrous, as with
+the people who lived in Pompeii during its last quivering days; or with
+the aristocrats of the time of Louis XVI, who confidently expected the
+Deluge to overwhelm their children, or their children's children, but
+never themselves. But there is small likelihood that the case of
+perverse optimism here to be considered will end in such disaster, while
+there is every reason to believe that the great change now manifesting
+itself in society will be as peaceful and orderly in its culmination as
+it is in its present development.
+
+Out of their constitutional optimism, and because a class struggle is an
+abhorred and dangerous thing, the great American people are unanimous in
+asserting that there is no class struggle. And by "American people" is
+meant the recognized and authoritative mouth-pieces of the American
+people, which are the press, the pulpit, and the university. The
+journalists, the preachers, and the professors are practically of one
+voice in declaring that there is no such thing as a class struggle now
+going on, much less that a class struggle will ever go on, in the United
+States. And this declaration they continually make in the face of a
+multitude of facts which impeach, not so much their sincerity, as affirm,
+rather, their optimism.
+
+There are two ways of approaching the subject of the class struggle. The
+existence of this struggle can be shown theoretically, and it can be
+shown actually. For a class struggle to exist in society there must be,
+first, a class inequality, a superior class and an inferior class (as
+measured by power); and, second, the outlets must be closed whereby the
+strength and ferment of the inferior class have been permitted to escape.
+
+That there are even classes in the United States is vigorously denied by
+many; but it is incontrovertible, when a group of individuals is formed,
+wherein the members are bound together by common interests which are
+peculiarly their interests and not the interests of individuals outside
+the group, that such a group is a class. The owners of capital, with
+their dependents, form a class of this nature in the United States; the
+working people form a similar class. The interest of the capitalist
+class, say, in the matter of income tax, is quite contrary to the
+interest of the laboring class; and, _vice versa_, in the matter of
+poll-tax.
+
+If between these two classes there be a clear and vital conflict of
+interest, all the factors are present which make a class struggle; but
+this struggle will lie dormant if the strong and capable members of the
+inferior class be permitted to leave that class and join the ranks of the
+superior class. The capitalist class and the working class have existed
+side by side and for a long time in the United States; but hitherto all
+the strong, energetic members of the working class have been able to rise
+out of their class and become owners of capital. They were enabled to do
+this because an undeveloped country with an expanding frontier gave
+equality of opportunity to all. In the almost lottery-like scramble for
+the ownership of vast unowned natural resources, and in the exploitation
+of which there was little or no competition of capital, (the capital
+itself rising out of the exploitation), the capable, intelligent member
+of the working class found a field in which to use his brains to his own
+advancement. Instead of being discontented in direct ratio with his
+intelligence and ambitions, and of radiating amongst his fellows a spirit
+of revolt as capable as he was capable, he left them to their fate and
+carved his own way to a place in the superior class.
+
+But the day of an expanding frontier, of a lottery-like scramble for the
+ownership of natural resources, and of the upbuilding of new industries,
+is past. Farthest West has been reached, and an immense volume of
+surplus capital roams for investment and nips in the bud the patient
+efforts of the embryo capitalist to rise through slow increment from
+small beginnings. The gateway of opportunity after opportunity has been
+closed, and closed for all time. Rockefeller has shut the door on oil,
+the American Tobacco Company on tobacco, and Carnegie on steel. After
+Carnegie came Morgan, who triple-locked the door. These doors will not
+open again, and before them pause thousands of ambitious young men to
+read the placard: NO THOROUGH-FARE.
+
+And day by day more doors are shut, while the ambitious young men
+continue to be born. It is they, denied the opportunity to rise from the
+working class, who preach revolt to the working class. Had he been born
+fifty years later, Andrew Carnegie, the poor Scotch boy, might have risen
+to be president of his union, or of a federation of unions; but that he
+would never have become the builder of Homestead and the founder of
+multitudinous libraries, is as certain as it is certain that some other
+man would have developed the steel industry had Andrew Carnegie never
+been born.
+
+Theoretically, then, there exist in the United States all the factors
+which go to make a class struggle. There are the capitalists and working
+classes, the interests of which conflict, while the working class is no
+longer being emasculated to the extent it was in the past by having drawn
+off from it its best blood and brains. Its more capable members are no
+longer able to rise out of it and leave the great mass leaderless and
+helpless. They remain to be its leaders.
+
+But the optimistic mouthpieces of the great American people, who are
+themselves deft theoreticians, are not to be convinced by mere
+theoretics. So it remains to demonstrate the existence of the class
+struggle by a marshalling of the facts.
+
+When nearly two millions of men, finding themselves knit together by
+certain interests peculiarly their own, band together in a strong
+organization for the aggressive pursuit of those interests, it is evident
+that society has within it a hostile and warring class. But when the
+interests which this class aggressively pursues conflict sharply and
+vitally with the interests of another class, class antagonism arises and
+a class struggle is the inevitable result. One great organization of
+labor alone has a membership of 1,700,000 in the United States. This is
+the American Federation of Labor, and outside of it are many other large
+organizations. All these men are banded together for the frank purpose
+of bettering their condition, regardless of the harm worked thereby upon
+all other classes. They are in open antagonism with the capitalist
+class, while the manifestos of their leaders state that the struggle is
+one which can never end until the capitalist class is exterminated.
+
+Their leaders will largely deny this last statement, but an examination
+of their utterances, their actions, and the situation will forestall such
+denial. In the first place, the conflict between labor and capital is
+over the division of the join product. Capital and labor apply
+themselves to raw material and make it into a finished product. The
+difference between the value of the raw material and the value of the
+finished product is the value they have added to it by their joint
+effort. This added value is, therefore, their joint product, and it is
+over the division of this joint product that the struggle between labor
+and capital takes place. Labor takes its share in wages; capital takes
+its share in profits. It is patent, if capital took in profits the whole
+joint product, that labor would perish. And it is equally patent, if
+labor took in wages the whole joint product, that capital would perish.
+Yet this last is the very thing labor aspires to do, and that it will
+never be content with anything less than the whole joint product is
+evidenced by the words of its leaders.
+
+Mr. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, has
+said: "The workers want more wages; more of the comforts of life; more
+leisure; more chance for self-improvement as men, as trade-unionists, as
+citizens. _These were the wants of yesterday_; _they are the wants of
+today_; _they will be the wants of tomorrow_, _and of tomorrow's morrow_.
+The struggle may assume new forms, but the issue is the immemorial
+one,--an effort of the producers to obtain an increasing measure of the
+wealth that flows from their production."
+
+Mr. Henry White, secretary of the United Garment Workers of America and a
+member of the Industrial Committee of the National Civic Federation,
+speaking of the National Civic Federation soon after its inception, said:
+"To fall into one another's arms, to avow friendship, to express regret
+at the injury which has been done, would not alter the facts of the
+situation. Workingmen will continue to demand more pay, and the employer
+will naturally oppose them. The readiness and ability of the workmen to
+fight will, as usual, largely determine the amount of their wages or
+their share in the product. . . But when it comes to dividing the
+proceeds, there is the rub. We can also agree that the larger the
+product through the employment of labor-saving methods the better, as
+there will be more to be divided, but again the question of the
+division. . . . A Conciliation Committee, having the confidence of the
+community, and composed of men possessing practical knowledge of
+industrial affairs, can therefore aid in mitigating this antagonism, in
+preventing avoidable conflicts, in bringing about a _truce_; I use the
+word 'truce' because understandings can only be temporary."
+
+Here is a man who might have owned cattle on a thousand hills, been a
+lumber baron or a railroad king, had he been born a few years sooner. As
+it is, he remains in his class, is secretary of the United Garment
+Workers of America, and is so thoroughly saturated with the class
+struggle that he speaks of the dispute between capital and labor in terms
+of war,--workmen _fight_ with employers; it is possible to avoid some
+_conflicts_; in certain cases _truces_ may be, for the time being,
+effected.
+
+Man being man and a great deal short of the angels, the quarrel over the
+division of the joint product is irreconcilable. For the last twenty
+years in the United States, there has been an average of over a thousand
+strikes per year; and year by year these strikes increase in magnitude,
+and the front of the labor army grows more imposing. And it is a class
+struggle, pure and simple. Labor as a class is fighting with capital as
+a class.
+
+Workingmen will continue to demand more pay, and employers will continue
+to oppose them. This is the key-note to _laissez faire_,--everybody for
+himself and devil take the hindmost. It is upon this that the rampant
+individualist bases his individualism. It is the let-alone policy, the
+struggle for existence, which strengthens the strong, destroys the weak,
+and makes a finer and more capable breed of men. But the individual has
+passed away and the group has come, for better or worse, and the struggle
+has become, not a struggle between individuals, but a struggle between
+groups. So the query rises: Has the individualist never speculated upon
+the labor group becoming strong enough to destroy the capitalist group,
+and take to itself and run for itself the machinery of industry? And,
+further, has the individualist never speculated upon this being still a
+triumphant expression of individualism,--of group individualism,--if the
+confusion of terms may be permitted?
+
+But the facts of the class struggle are deeper and more significant than
+have so far been presented. A million or so of workmen may organize for
+the pursuit of interests which engender class antagonism and strife, and
+at the same time be unconscious of what is engendered. But when a
+million or so of workmen show unmistakable signs of being conscious of
+their class,--of being, in short, class conscious,--then the situation
+grows serious. The uncompromising and terrible hatred of the
+trade-unionist for a scab is the hatred of a class for a traitor to that
+class,--while the hatred of a trade-unionist for the militia is the
+hatred of a class for a weapon wielded by the class with which it is
+fighting. No workman can be true to his class and at the same time be a
+member of the militia: this is the dictum of the labor leaders.
+
+In the town of the writer, the good citizens, when they get up a Fourth
+of July parade and invite the labor unions to participate, are informed
+by the unions that they will not march in the parade if the militia
+marches. Article 8 of the constitution of the Painters' and Decorators'
+Union of Schenectady provides that a member must not be a "militiaman,
+special police officer, or deputy marshal in the employ of corporations
+or individuals during strikes, lockouts, or other labor difficulties, and
+any member occupying any of the above positions will be debarred from
+membership." Mr. William Potter was a member of this union and a member
+of the National Guard. As a result, because he obeyed the order of the
+Governor when his company was ordered out to suppress rioting, he was
+expelled from his union. Also his union demanded his employers, Shafer &
+Barry, to discharge him from their service. This they complied with,
+rather than face the threatened strike.
+
+Mr. Robert L. Walker, first lieutenant of the Light Guards, a New Haven
+militia company, recently resigned. His reason was, that he was a member
+of the Car Builders' Union, and that the two organizations were
+antagonistic to each other. During a New Orleans street-car strike not
+long ago, a whole company of militia, called out to protect non-union
+men, resigned in a body. Mr. John Mulholland, president of the
+International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics, has stated that he
+does not want the members to join the militia. The Local Trades'
+Assembly of Syracuse, New York, has passed a resolution, by unanimous
+vote, requiring union men who are members of the National Guard to
+resign, under pain of expulsion, from the unions. The Amalgamated Sheet
+Metal Workers' Association has incorporated in its constitution an
+amendment excluding from membership in its organization "any person a
+member of the regular army, or of the State militia or naval reserve."
+The Illinois State Federation of Labor, at a recent convention, passed
+without a dissenting vote a resolution declaring that membership in
+military organizations is a violation of labor union obligations, and
+requesting all union men to withdraw from the militia. The president of
+the Federation, Mr. Albert Young, declared that the militia was a menace
+not only to unions, but to all workers throughout the country.
+
+These instances may be multiplied a thousand fold. The union workmen are
+becoming conscious of their class, and of the struggle their class is
+waging with the capitalist class. To be a member of the militia is to be
+a traitor to the union, for the militia is a weapon wielded by the
+employers to crush the workers in the struggle between the warring
+groups.
+
+Another interesting, and even more pregnant, phase of the class struggle
+is the political aspect of it as displayed by the socialists. Five men,
+standing together, may perform prodigies; 500 men, marching as marched
+the historic Five Hundred of Marseilles, may sack a palace and destroy a
+king; while 500,000 men, passionately preaching the propaganda of a class
+struggle, waging a class struggle along political lines, and backed by
+the moral and intellectual support of 10,000,000 more men of like
+convictions throughout the world, may come pretty close to realizing a
+class struggle in these United States of ours.
+
+In 1900 these men cast 150,000 votes; two years later, in 1902, they cast
+300,000 votes; and in 1904 they cast 450,000. They have behind them a
+most imposing philosophic and scientific literature; they own illustrated
+magazines and reviews, high in quality, dignity, and restraint; they
+possess countless daily and weekly papers which circulate throughout the
+land, and single papers which have subscribers by the hundreds of
+thousands; and they literally swamp the working classes in a vast sea of
+tracts and pamphlets. No political party in the United States, no church
+organization nor mission effort, has as indefatigable workers as has the
+socialist party. They multiply themselves, know of no effort nor
+sacrifice too great to make for the Cause; and "Cause," with them, is
+spelled out in capitals. They work for it with a religious zeal, and
+would die for it with a willingness similar to that of the Christian
+martyrs.
+
+These men are preaching an uncompromising and deadly class struggle. In
+fact, they are organized upon the basis of a class struggle. "The
+history of society," they say, "is a history of class struggles.
+Patrician struggled with plebeian in early Rome; the king and the
+burghers, with the nobles in the Middle Ages; later on, the king and the
+nobles with the bourgeoisie; and today the struggle is on between the
+triumphant bourgeoisie and the rising proletariat. By 'proletariat' is
+meant the class of people without capital which sells its labor for a
+living.
+
+"That the proletariat shall conquer," (mark the note of fatalism), "is as
+certain as the rising sun. Just as the bourgeoisie of the eighteenth
+century wanted democracy applied to politics, so the proletariat of the
+twentieth century wants democracy applied to industry. As the
+bourgeoisie complained against the government being run by and for the
+nobles, so the proletariat complains against the government and industry
+being run by and for the bourgeoisie; and so, following in the footsteps
+of its predecessor, the proletariat will possess itself of the
+government, apply democracy to industry, abolish wages, which are merely
+legalized robbery, and run the business of the country in its own
+interest."
+
+"Their aim," they say, "is to organize the working class, and those in
+sympathy with it, into a political party, with the object of conquering
+the powers of government and of using them for the purpose of
+transforming the present system of private ownership of the means of
+production and distribution into collective ownership by the entire
+people."
+
+Briefly stated, this is the battle plan of these 450,000 men who call
+themselves "socialists." And, in the face of the existence of such an
+aggressive group of men, a class struggle cannot very well be denied by
+the optimistic Americans who say: "A class struggle is monstrous. Sir,
+there is no class struggle." The class struggle is here, and the
+optimistic American had better gird himself for the fray and put a stop
+to it, rather than sit idly declaiming that what ought not to be is not,
+and never will be.
+
+But the socialists, fanatics and dreamers though they may well be, betray
+a foresight and insight, and a genius for organization, which put to
+shame the class with which they are openly at war. Failing of rapid
+success in waging a sheer political propaganda, and finding that they
+were alienating the most intelligent and most easily organized portion of
+the voters, the socialists lessoned from the experience and turned their
+energies upon the trade-union movement. To win the trade unions was
+well-nigh to win the war, and recent events show that they have done far
+more winning in this direction than have the capitalists.
+
+Instead of antagonizing the unions, which had been their previous policy,
+the socialists proceeded to conciliate the unions. "Let every good
+socialist join the union of his trade," the edict went forth. "Bore from
+within and capture the trade-union movement." And this policy, only
+several years old, has reaped fruits far beyond their fondest
+expectations. Today the great labor unions are honeycombed with
+socialists, "boring from within," as they picturesquely term their
+undermining labor. At work and at play, at business meeting and council,
+their insidious propaganda goes on. At the shoulder of the
+trade-unionist is the socialist, sympathizing with him, aiding him with
+head and hand, suggesting--perpetually suggesting--the necessity for
+political action. As the _Journal_, of Lansing, Michigan, a republican
+paper, has remarked: "The socialists in the labor unions are tireless
+workers. They are sincere, energetic, and self-sacrificing. . . . They
+stick to the union and work all the while, thus making a showing which,
+reckoned by ordinary standards, is out of all proportion to their
+numbers. Their cause is growing among union laborers, and their long
+fight, intended to turn the Federation into a political organization, is
+likely to win."
+
+They miss no opportunity of driving home the necessity for political
+action, the necessity for capturing the political machinery of society
+whereby they may master society. As an instance of this is the avidity
+with which the American socialists seized upon the famous Taft-Vale
+Decision in England, which was to the effect that an unincorporated union
+could be sued and its treasury rifled by process of law. Throughout the
+United States, the socialists pointed the moral in similar fashion to the
+way it was pointed by the Social-Democratic Herald, which advised the
+trade-unionists, in view of the decision, to stop trying to fight capital
+with money, which they lacked, and to begin fighting with the ballot,
+which was their strongest weapon.
+
+Night and day, tireless and unrelenting, they labor at their self-imposed
+task of undermining society. Mr. M. G. Cunniff, who lately made an
+intimate study of trade-unionism, says: "All through the unions socialism
+filters. Almost every other man is a socialist, preaching that unionism
+is but a makeshift." "Malthus be damned," they told him, "for the good
+time was coming when every man should be able to rear his family in
+comfort." In one union, with two thousand members, Mr. Cunniff found
+every man a socialist, and from his experiences Mr. Cunniff was forced to
+confess, "I lived in a world that showed our industrial life a-tremble
+from beneath with a never-ceasing ferment."
+
+The socialists have already captured the Western Federation of Miners,
+the Western Hotel and Restaurant Employees' Union, and the Patternmakers'
+National Association. The Western Federation of Miners, at a recent
+convention, declared: "The strike has failed to secure to the working
+classes their liberty; we therefore call upon the workers to strike as
+one man for their liberties at the ballot box. . . . We put ourselves on
+record as committed to the programme of independent political action. . . .
+We indorse the platform of the socialist party, and accept it as the
+declaration of principles of our organization. We call upon our members
+as individuals to commence immediately the organization of the socialist
+movement in their respective towns and states, and to cooperate in every
+way for the furtherance of the principles of socialism and of the
+socialist party. In states where the socialist party has not perfected
+its organization, we advise that every assistance be given by our members
+to that end. . . . We therefore call for organizers, capable and
+well-versed in the whole programme of the labor movement, to be sent into
+each state to preach the necessity of organization on the political as
+well as on the economic field."
+
+The capitalist class has a glimmering consciousness of the class struggle
+which is shaping itself in the midst of society; but the capitalists, as
+a class, seem to lack the ability for organizing, for coming together,
+such as is possessed by the working class. No American capitalist ever
+aids an English capitalist in the common fight, while workmen have formed
+international unions, the socialists a world-wide international
+organization, and on all sides space and race are bridged in the effort
+to achieve solidarity. Resolutions of sympathy, and, fully as important,
+donations of money, pass back and forth across the sea to wherever labor
+is fighting its pitched battles.
+
+For divers reasons, the capitalist class lacks this cohesion or
+solidarity, chief among which is the optimism bred of past success. And,
+again, the capitalist class is divided; it has within itself a class
+struggle of no mean proportions, which tends to irritate and harass it
+and to confuse the situation. The small capitalist and the large
+capitalist are grappled with each other, struggling over what Achille
+Loria calls the "bi-partition of the revenues." Such a struggle, though
+not precisely analogous, was waged between the landlords and
+manufacturers of England when the one brought about the passage of the
+Factory Acts and the other the abolition of the Corn Laws.
+
+Here and there, however, certain members of the capitalist class see
+clearly the cleavage in society along which the struggle is beginning to
+show itself, while the press and magazines are beginning to raise an
+occasional and troubled voice. Two leagues of class-conscious
+capitalists have been formed for the purpose of carrying on their side of
+the struggle. Like the socialists, they do not mince matters, but state
+boldly and plainly that they are fighting to subjugate the opposing
+class. It is the barons against the commons. One of these leagues, the
+National Association of Manufacturers, is stopping short of nothing in
+what it conceives to be a life-and-death struggle. Mr. D. M. Parry, who
+is the president of the league, as well as president of the National
+Metal Trades' Association, is leaving no stone unturned in what he feels
+to be a desperate effort to organize his class. He has issued the call
+to arms in terms everything but ambiguous: "_There is still time in the
+United States to head off the socialistic programme_, _which_,
+_unrestrained_, _is sure to wreck our country_."
+
+As he says, the work is for "federating employers in order that we may
+meet with a united front all issues that affect us. We must come to this
+sooner or later. . . . The work immediately before the National
+Association of Manufacturers is, first, _keep the vicious eight-hour Bill
+off the books_; second, to _destroy the Anti-injunction Bill_, which
+wrests your business from you and places it in the hands of your
+employees; third, to secure the _passage of the Department of Commerce
+and Industry Bill_; the latter would go through with a rush were it not
+for the hectoring opposition of Organized Labor." By this department, he
+further says, "business interests would have direct and sympathetic
+representation at Washington."
+
+In a later letter, issued broadcast to the capitalists outside the
+League, President Parry points out the success which is already beginning
+to attend the efforts of the League at Washington. "We have contributed
+more than any other influence to the quick passage of the new Department
+of Commerce Bill. It is said that the activities of this office are
+numerous and satisfactory; but of that I must not say too much--or
+anything. . . . At Washington the Association is not represented too
+much, either directly or indirectly. Sometimes it is known in a most
+powerful way that it is represented vigorously and unitedly. Sometimes
+it is not known that it is represented at all."
+
+The second class-conscious capitalist organization is called the National
+Economic League. It likewise manifests the frankness of men who do not
+dilly-dally with terms, but who say what they mean, and who mean to
+settle down to a long, hard fight. Their letter of invitation to
+prospective members opens boldly. "We beg to inform you that the
+National Economic League will render its services in an impartial
+educational movement _to oppose socialism and class hatred_." Among its
+class-conscious members, men who recognize that the opening guns of the
+class struggle have been fired, may be instanced the following names:
+Hon. Lyman J. Gage, Ex-Secretary U. S. Treasury; Hon. Thomas Jefferson
+Coolidge, Ex-Minister to France; Rev. Henry C. Potter, Bishop New York
+Diocese; Hon. John D. Long, Ex-Secretary U. S. Navy; Hon. Levi P. Morton,
+Ex-Vice President United States; Henry Clews; John F. Dryden, President
+Prudential Life Insurance Co.; John A. McCall, President New York Life
+Insurance Co.; J. L. Greatsinger, President Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co.;
+the shipbuilding firm of William Cramp & Sons, the Southern Railway
+system, and the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railway Company.
+
+Instances of the troubled editorial voice have not been rare during the
+last several years. There were many cries from the press during the last
+days of the anthracite coal strike that the mine owners, by their
+stubbornness, were sowing the regrettable seeds of socialism. The
+World's Work for December, 1902, said: "The next significant fact is the
+recommendation by the Illinois State Federation of Labor that all members
+of labor unions who are also members of the state militia shall resign
+from the militia. This proposition has been favorably regarded by some
+other labor organizations. It has done more than any other single recent
+declaration or action to cause a public distrust of such unions as favor
+it. _It hints of a class separation that in turn hints of anarchy_."
+
+The _Outlook_, February 14, 1903, in reference to the rioting at
+Waterbury, remarks, "That all this disorder should have occurred in a
+city of the character and intelligence of Waterbury indicates that the
+industrial war spirit is by no means confined to the immigrant or
+ignorant working classes."
+
+That President Roosevelt has smelt the smoke from the firing line of the
+class struggle is evidenced by his words, "Above all we need to remember
+that any kind of _class animosity in the political world_ is, if
+possible, even more destructive to national welfare than sectional, race,
+or religious animosity." The chief thing to be noted here is President
+Roosevelt's tacit recognition of class animosity in the industrial world,
+and his fear, which language cannot portray stronger, that this class
+animosity may spread to the political world. Yet this is the very policy
+which the socialists have announced in their declaration of war against
+present-day society--to capture the political machinery of society and by
+that machinery destroy present-day society.
+
+The New York Independent for February 12, 1903, recognized without
+qualification the class struggle. "It is impossible fairly to pass upon
+the methods of labor unions, or to devise plans for remedying their
+abuses, until it is recognized, to begin with, that unions are based upon
+class antagonism and that their policies are dictated by the necessities
+of social warfare. A strike is a rebellion against the owners of
+property. The rights of property are protected by government. And a
+strike, under certain provocation, may extend as far as did the general
+strike in Belgium a few years since, when practically the entire
+wage-earning population stopped work in order to force political
+concessions from the property-owning classes. This is an extreme case,
+but it brings out vividly the real nature of labor organization as a
+species of warfare whose object is the coercion of one class by another
+class."
+
+It has been shown, theoretically and actually, that there is a class
+struggle in the United States. The quarrel over the division of the
+joint product is irreconcilable. The working class is no longer losing
+its strongest and most capable members. These men, denied room for their
+ambition in the capitalist ranks, remain to be the leaders of the
+workers, to spur them to discontent, to make them conscious of their
+class, to lead them to revolt.
+
+This revolt, appearing spontaneously all over the industrial field in the
+form of demands for an increased share of the joint product, is being
+carefully and shrewdly shaped for a political assault upon society. The
+leaders, with the carelessness of fatalists, do not hesitate for an
+instant to publish their intentions to the world. They intend to direct
+the labor revolt to the capture of the political machinery of society.
+With the political machinery once in their hands, which will also give
+them the control of the police, the army, the navy, and the courts, they
+will confiscate, with or without remuneration, all the possessions of the
+capitalist class which are used in the production and distribution of the
+necessaries and luxuries of life. By this, they mean to apply the law of
+eminent domain to the land, and to extend the law of eminent domain till
+it embraces the mines, the factories, the railroads, and the ocean
+carriers. In short, they intend to destroy present-day society, which
+they contend is run in the interest of another class, and from the
+materials to construct a new society, which will be run in their
+interest.
+
+On the other hand, the capitalist class is beginning to grow conscious of
+itself and of the struggle which is being waged. It is already forming
+offensive and defensive leagues, while some of the most prominent figures
+in the nation are preparing to lead it in the attack upon socialism.
+
+The question to be solved is not one of Malthusianism, "projected
+efficiency," nor ethics. It is a question of might. Whichever class is
+to win, will win by virtue of superior strength; for the workers are
+beginning to say, as they said to Mr. Cunniff, "Malthus be damned." In
+their own minds they find no sanction for continuing the individual
+struggle for the survival of the fittest. As Mr. Gompers has said, they
+want more, and more, and more. The ethical import of Mr. Kidd's plan of
+the present generation putting up with less in order that race efficiency
+may be projected into a remote future, has no bearing upon their actions.
+They refuse to be the "glad perishers" so glowingly described by
+Nietzsche.
+
+It remains to be seen how promptly the capitalist class will respond to
+the call to arms. Upon its promptness rests its existence, for if it
+sits idly by, soothfully proclaiming that what ought not to be cannot be,
+it will find the roof beams crashing about its head. The capitalist
+class is in the numerical minority, and bids fair to be outvoted if it
+does not put a stop to the vast propaganda being waged by its enemy. It
+is no longer a question of whether or not there is a class struggle. The
+question now is, what will be the outcome of the class struggle?
+
+
+
+
+THE TRAMP
+
+
+Mr. Francis O'Neil, General Superintendent of Police, Chicago, speaking
+of the tramp, says: "Despite the most stringent police regulations, a
+great city will have a certain number of homeless vagrants to shelter
+through the winter." "Despite,"--mark the word, a confession of
+organized helplessness as against unorganized necessity. If police
+regulations are stringent and yet fail, then that which makes them fail,
+namely, the tramp, must have still more stringent reasons for succeeding.
+This being so, it should be of interest to inquire into these reasons, to
+attempt to discover why the nameless and homeless vagrant sets at naught
+the right arm of the corporate power of our great cities, why all that is
+weak and worthless is stronger than all that is strong and of value.
+
+Mr. O'Neil is a man of wide experience on the subject of tramps. He may
+be called a specialist. As he says of himself: "As an old-time desk
+sergeant and police captain, I have had almost unlimited opportunity to
+study and analyze this class of floating population, which seeks the city
+in winter and scatters abroad through the country in the spring." He
+then continues: "This experience reiterated the lesson that the vast
+majority of these wanderers are of the class with whom a life of vagrancy
+is a chosen means of living without work." Not only is it to be inferred
+from this that there is a large class in society which lives without
+work, for Mr. O'Neil's testimony further shows that this class is forced
+to live without work.
+
+He says: "I have been astonished at the multitude of those who have
+unfortunately engaged in occupations which practically force them to
+become loafers for at least a third of the year. And it is from this
+class that the tramps are largely recruited. I recall a certain winter
+when it seemed to me that a large portion of the inhabitants of Chicago
+belonged to this army of unfortunates. I was stationed at a police
+station not far from where an ice harvest was ready for the cutters. The
+ice company advertised for helpers, and the very night this call appeared
+in the newspapers our station was packed with homeless men, who asked
+shelter in order to be at hand for the morning's work. Every foot of
+floor space was given over to these lodgers and scores were still
+unaccommodated."
+
+And again: "And it must be confessed that the man who is willing to do
+honest labor for food and shelter is a rare specimen in this vast army of
+shabby and tattered wanderers who seek the warmth of the city with the
+coming of the first snow." Taking into consideration the crowd of honest
+laborers that swamped Mr. O'Neil's station-house on the way to the
+ice-cutting, it is patent, if all tramps were looking for honest labor
+instead of a small minority, that the honest laborers would have a far
+harder task finding something honest to do for food and shelter. If the
+opinion of the honest laborers who swamped Mr. O'Neil's station-house
+were asked, one could rest confident that each and every man would
+express a preference for fewer honest laborers on the morrow when he
+asked the ice foreman for a job.
+
+And, finally, Mr. O'Neil says: "The humane and generous treatment which
+this city has accorded the great army of homeless unfortunates has made
+it the victim of wholesale imposition, and this well-intended policy of
+kindness has resulted in making Chicago the winter Mecca of a vast and
+undesirable floating population." That is to say, because of her
+kindness, Chicago had more than her fair share of tramps; because she was
+humane and generous she suffered whole-sale imposition. From this we
+must conclude that it does not do to be _humane_ and _generous_ to our
+fellow-men--when they are tramps. Mr. O'Neil is right, and that this is
+no sophism it is the intention of this article, among other things, to
+show.
+
+In a general way we may draw the following inferences from the remarks of
+Mr. O'Neil: (1) The tramp is stronger than organized society and cannot
+be put down; (2) The tramp is "shabby," "tattered," "homeless,"
+"unfortunate"; (3) There is a "vast" number of tramps; (4) Very few
+tramps are willing to do honest work; (5) Those tramps who are willing to
+do honest work have to hunt very hard to find it; (6) The tramp is
+undesirable.
+
+To this last let the contention be appended that the tramp is only
+_personally_ undesirable; that he is _negatively_ desirable; that the
+function he performs in society is a negative function; and that he is
+the by-product of economic necessity.
+
+It is very easy to demonstrate that there are more men than there is work
+for men to do. For instance, what would happen tomorrow if one hundred
+thousand tramps should become suddenly inspired with an overmastering
+desire for work? It is a fair question. "Go to work" is preached to the
+tramp every day of his life. The judge on the bench, the pedestrian in
+the street, the housewife at the kitchen door, all unite in advising him
+to go to work. So what would happen tomorrow if one hundred thousand
+tramps acted upon this advice and strenuously and indomitably sought
+work? Why, by the end of the week one hundred thousand workers, their
+places taken by the tramps, would receive their time and be "hitting the
+road" for a job.
+
+Ella Wheeler Wilcox unwittingly and uncomfortably demonstrated the
+disparity between men and work. {1} She made a casual reference, in a
+newspaper column she conducts, to the difficulty two business men found
+in obtaining good employees. The first morning mail brought her
+seventy-five applications for the position, and at the end of two weeks
+over two hundred people had applied.
+
+Still more strikingly was the same proposition recently demonstrated in
+San Francisco. A sympathetic strike called out a whole federation of
+trades' unions. Thousands of men, in many branches of trade, quit
+work,--draymen, sand teamsters, porters and packers, longshoremen,
+stevedores, warehousemen, stationary engineers, sailors, marine firemen,
+stewards, sea-cooks, and so forth,--an interminable list. It was a
+strike of large proportions. Every Pacific coast shipping city was
+involved, and the entire coasting service, from San Diego to Puget Sound,
+was virtually tied up. The time was considered auspicious. The
+Philippines and Alaska had drained the Pacific coast of surplus labor.
+It was summer-time, when the agricultural demand for laborers was at its
+height, and when the cities were bare of their floating populations. And
+yet there remained a body of surplus labor sufficient to take the places
+of the strikers. No matter what occupation, sea-cook or stationary
+engineer, sand teamster or warehouseman, in every case there was an idle
+worker ready to do the work. And not only ready but anxious. They
+fought for a chance to work. Men were killed, hundreds of heads were
+broken, the hospitals were filled with injured men, and thousands of
+assaults were committed. And still surplus laborers, "scabs," came
+forward to replace the strikers.
+
+The question arises: _Whence came this second army of workers to replace
+the first army_? One thing is certain: the trades' unions did not scab
+on one another. Another thing is certain: no industry on the Pacific
+slope was crippled in the slightest degree by its workers being drawn
+away to fill the places of the strikers. A third thing is certain: the
+agricultural workers did not flock to the cities to replace the strikers.
+In this last instance it is worth while to note that the agricultural
+laborers wailed to High Heaven when a few of the strikers went into the
+country to compete with them in unskilled employments. So there is no
+accounting for this second army of workers. It simply was. It was there
+all this time, a surplus labor army in the year of our Lord 1901, a year
+adjudged most prosperous in the annals of the United States. {2}
+
+The existence of the surplus labor army being established, there remains
+to be established the economic necessity for the surplus labor army. The
+simplest and most obvious need is that brought about by the fluctuation
+of production. If, when production is at low ebb, all men are at work,
+it necessarily follows that when production increases there will be no
+men to do the increased work. This may seem almost childish, and, if not
+childish, at least easily remedied. At low ebb let the men work shorter
+time; at high flood let them work overtime. The main objection to this
+is, that it is not done, and that we are considering what is, not what
+might be or should be.
+
+Then there are great irregular and periodical demands for labor which
+must be met. Under the first head come all the big building and
+engineering enterprises. When a canal is to be dug or a railroad put
+through, requiring thousands of laborers, it would be hurtful to withdraw
+these laborers from the constant industries. And whether it is a canal
+to be dug or a cellar, whether five thousand men are required or five, it
+is well, in society as at present organized, that they be taken from the
+surplus labor army. The surplus labor army is the reserve fund of social
+energy, and this is one of the reasons for its existence.
+
+Under the second head, periodical demands, come the harvests. Throughout
+the year, huge labor tides sweep back and forth across the United States.
+That which is sown and tended by few men, comes to sudden ripeness and
+must be gathered by many men; and it is inevitable that these many men
+form floating populations. In the late spring the berries must be
+picked, in the summer the grain garnered, in the fall, the hops gathered,
+in the winter the ice harvested. In California a man may pick berries in
+Siskiyou, peaches in Santa Clara, grapes in the San Joaquin, and oranges
+in Los Angeles, going from job to job as the season advances, and
+travelling a thousand miles ere the season is done. But the great demand
+for agricultural labor is in the summer. In the winter, work is slack,
+and these floating populations eddy into the cities to eke out a
+precarious existence and harrow the souls of the police officers until
+the return of warm weather and work. If there were constant work at good
+wages for every man, who would harvest the crops?
+
+But the last and most significant need for the surplus labor army remains
+to be stated. This surplus labor acts as a check upon all employed
+labor. It is the lash by which the masters hold the workers to their
+tasks, or drive them back to their tasks when they have revolted. It is
+the goad which forces the workers into the compulsory "free contracts"
+against which they now and again rebel. There is only one reason under
+the sun that strikes fail, and that is because there are always plenty of
+men to take the strikers' places.
+
+The strength of the union today, other things remaining equal, is
+proportionate to the skill of the trade, or, in other words,
+proportionate to the pressure the surplus labor army can put upon it. If
+a thousand ditch-diggers strike, it is easy to replace them, wherefore
+the ditch-diggers have little or no organized strength. But a thousand
+highly skilled machinists are somewhat harder to replace, and in
+consequence the machinist unions are strong. The ditch-diggers are
+wholly at the mercy of the surplus labor army, the machinists only
+partly. To be invincible, a union must be a monopoly. It must control
+every man in its particular trade, and regulate apprentices so that the
+supply of skilled workmen may remain constant; this is the dream of the
+"Labor Trust" on the part of the captains of labor.
+
+Once, in England, after the Great Plague, labor awoke to find there was
+more work for men than there were men to work. Instead of workers
+competing for favors from employers, employers were competing for favors
+from the workers. Wages went up and up, and continued to go up, until
+the workers demanded the full product of their toil. Now it is clear
+that, when labor receives its full product capital must perish. And so
+the pygmy capitalists of that post-Plague day found their existence
+threatened by this untoward condition of affairs. To save themselves,
+they set a maximum wage, restrained the workers from moving about from
+place to place, smashed incipient organization, refused to tolerate
+idlers, and by most barbarous legal penalties punished those who
+disobeyed. After that, things went on as before.
+
+The point of this, of course, is to demonstrate the need of the surplus
+labor army. Without such an army, our present capitalist society would
+be powerless. Labor would organize as it never organized before, and the
+last least worker would be gathered into the unions. The full product of
+toil would be demanded, and capitalist society would crumble away. Nor
+could capitalist society save itself as did the post-Plague capitalist
+society. The time is past when a handful of masters, by imprisonment and
+barbarous punishment, can drive the legions of the workers to their
+tasks. Without a surplus labor army, the courts, police, and military
+are impotent. In such matters the function of the courts, police, and
+military is to preserve order, and to fill the places of strikers with
+surplus labor. If there be no surplus labor to instate, there is no
+function to perform; for disorder arises only during the process of
+instatement, when the striking labor army and the surplus labor army
+clash together. That is to say, that which maintains the integrity of
+the present industrial society more potently than the courts, police, and
+military is the surplus labor army.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It has been shown that there are more men than there is work for men, and
+that the surplus labor army is an economic necessity. To show how the
+tramp is a by-product of this economic necessity, it is necessary to
+inquire into the composition of the surplus labor army. What men form
+it? Why are they there? What do they do?
+
+In the first place, since the workers must compete for employment, it
+inevitably follows that it is the fit and efficient who find employment.
+The skilled worker holds his place by virtue of his skill and efficiency.
+Were he less skilled, or were he unreliable or erratic, he would be
+swiftly replaced by a stronger competitor. The skilled and steady
+employments are not cumbered with clowns and idiots. A man finds his
+place according to his ability and the needs of the system, and those
+without ability, or incapable of satisfying the needs of the system, have
+no place. Thus, the poor telegrapher may develop into an excellent
+wood-chopper. But if the poor telegrapher cherishes the delusion that he
+is a good telegrapher, and at the same time disdains all other
+employments, he will have no employment at all, or he will be so poor at
+all other employments that he will work only now and again in lieu of
+better men. He will be among the first let off when times are dull, and
+among the last taken on when times are good. Or, to the point, he will
+be a member of the surplus labor army.
+
+So the conclusion is reached that the less fit and less efficient, or the
+unfit and inefficient, compose the surplus labor army. Here are to be
+found the men who have tried and failed, the men who cannot hold
+jobs,--the plumber apprentice who could not become a journeyman, and the
+plumber journeyman too clumsy and dull to retain employment; switchmen
+who wreck trains; clerks who cannot balance books; blacksmiths who lame
+horses; lawyers who cannot plead; in short, the failures of every trade
+and profession, and failures, many of them, in divers trades and
+professions. Failure is writ large, and in their wretchedness they bear
+the stamp of social disapprobation. Common work, any kind of work,
+wherever or however they can obtain it, is their portion.
+
+But these hereditary inefficients do not alone compose the surplus labor
+army. There are the skilled but unsteady and unreliable men; and the old
+men, once skilled, but, with dwindling powers, no longer skilled. {3}
+And there are good men, too, splendidly skilled and efficient, but thrust
+out of the employment of dying or disaster-smitten industries. In this
+connection it is not out of place to note the misfortune of the workers
+in the British iron trades, who are suffering because of American
+inroads. And, last of all, are the unskilled laborers, the hewers of
+wood and drawers of water, the ditch-diggers, the men of pick and shovel,
+the helpers, lumpers, roustabouts. If trade is slack on a seacoast of
+two thousand miles, or the harvests are light in a great interior valley,
+myriads of these laborers lie idle, or make life miserable for their
+fellows in kindred unskilled employments.
+
+A constant filtration goes on in the working world, and good material is
+continually drawn from the surplus labor army. Strikes and industrial
+dislocations shake up the workers, bring good men to the surface and sink
+men as good or not so good. The hope of the skilled striker is in that
+the scabs are less skilled, or less capable of becoming skilled; yet each
+strike attests to the efficiency that lurks beneath. After the Pullman
+strike, a few thousand railroad men were chagrined to find the work they
+had flung down taken up by men as good as themselves.
+
+But one thing must be considered here. Under the present system, if the
+weakest and least fit were as strong and fit as the best, and the best
+were correspondingly stronger and fitter, the same condition would
+obtain. There would be the same army of employed labor, the same army of
+surplus labor. The whole thing is relative. There is no absolute
+standard of efficiency.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Comes now the tramp. And all conclusions may be anticipated by saying at
+once that he is a tramp because some one has to be a tramp. If he left
+the "road" and became a _very_ efficient common laborer, some _ordinarily
+efficient_ common laborer would have to take to the "road." The nooks
+and crannies are crowded by the surplus laborers; and when the first snow
+flies, and the tramps are driven into the cities, things become
+overcrowded and stringent police regulations are necessary.
+
+The tramp is one of two kinds of men: he is either a discouraged worker
+or a discouraged criminal. Now a discouraged criminal, on investigation,
+proves to be a discouraged worker, or the descendant of discouraged
+workers; so that, in the last analysis, the tramp is a discouraged
+worker. Since there is not work for all, discouragement for some is
+unavoidable. How, then, does this process of discouragement operate?
+
+The lower the employment in the industrial scale, the harder the
+conditions. The finer, the more delicate, the more skilled the trade,
+the higher is it lifted above the struggle. There is less pressure, less
+sordidness, less savagery. There are fewer glass-blowers proportionate
+to the needs of the glass-blowing industry than there are ditch-diggers
+proportionate to the needs of the ditch-digging industry. And not only
+this, for it requires a glass-blower to take the place of a striking
+glass-blower, while any kind of a striker or out-of-work can take the
+place of a ditch-digger. So the skilled trades are more independent,
+have more individuality and latitude. They may confer with their
+masters, make demands, assert themselves. The unskilled laborers, on the
+other hand, have no voice in their affairs. The settlement of terms is
+none of their business. "Free contract" is all that remains to them.
+They may take what is offered, or leave it. There are plenty more of
+their kind. They do not count. They are members of the surplus labor
+army, and must be content with a hand-to-mouth existence.
+
+The reward is likewise proportioned. The strong, fit worker in a skilled
+trade, where there is little labor pressure, is well compensated. He is
+a king compared with his less fortunate brothers in the unskilled
+occupations where the labor pressure is great. The mediocre worker not
+only is forced to be idle a large portion of the time, but when employed
+is forced to accept a pittance. A dollar a day on some days and nothing
+on other days will hardly support a man and wife and send children to
+school. And not only do the masters bear heavily upon him, and his own
+kind struggle for the morsel at his mouth, but all skilled and organized
+labor adds to his woe. Union men do not scab on one another, but in
+strikes, or when work is slack, it is considered "fair" for them to
+descend and take away the work of the common laborers. And take it away
+they do; for, as a matter of fact, a well-fed, ambitious machinist or a
+core-maker will transiently shovel coal better than an ill-fed,
+spiritless laborer.
+
+Thus there is no encouragement for the unfit, inefficient, and mediocre.
+Their very inefficiency and mediocrity make them helpless as cattle and
+add to their misery. And the whole tendency for such is downward, until,
+at the bottom of the social pit, they are wretched, inarticulate beasts,
+living like beasts, breeding like beasts, dying like beasts. And how do
+they fare, these creatures born mediocre, whose heritage is neither
+brains nor brawn nor endurance? They are sweated in the slums in an
+atmosphere of discouragement and despair. There is no strength in
+weakness, no encouragement in foul air, vile food, and dank dens. They
+are there because they are so made that they are not fit to be higher up;
+but filth and obscenity do not strengthen the neck, nor does chronic
+emptiness of belly stiffen the back.
+
+For the mediocre there is no hope. Mediocrity is a sin. Poverty is the
+penalty of failure,--poverty, from whose loins spring the criminal and
+the tramp, both failures, both discouraged workers. Poverty is the
+inferno where ignorance festers and vice corrodes, and where the
+physical, mental, and moral parts of nature are aborted and denied.
+
+That the charge of rashness in splashing the picture be not incurred, let
+the following authoritative evidence be considered: first, the work and
+wages of mediocrity and inefficiency, and, second, the habitat:
+
+The New York Sun of February 28, 1901, describes the opening of a factory
+in New York City by the American Tobacco Company. Cheroots were to be
+made in this factory in competition with other factories which refused to
+be absorbed by the trust. The trust advertised for girls. The crowd of
+men and boys who wanted work was so great in front of the building that
+the police were forced with their clubs to clear them away. The wage
+paid the girls was $2.50 per week, sixty cents of which went for car
+fare. {4}
+
+Miss Nellie Mason Auten, a graduate student of the department of
+sociology at the University of Chicago, recently made a thorough
+investigation of the garment trades of Chicago. Her figures were
+published in the American Journal of Sociology, and commented upon by the
+Literary Digest. She found women working ten hours a day, six days a
+week, for forty cents per week (a rate of two-thirds of a cent an hour).
+Many women earned less than a dollar a week, and none of them worked
+every week. The following table will best summarize Miss Auten's
+investigations among a portion of the garment-workers:
+
+
+INDUSTRY AVERAGE AVERAGE NUMBER AVERAGE YEARLY
+ INDIVIDUAL OF WEEKS EARNINGS
+ WEEKLY WAGES EMPLOYED
+Dressmakers $.90 42. $37.00
+Pants-Finishers 1.31 27.58 42.41
+Housewives and 1.58 30.21 47.49
+Pants-Finishers
+Seamstresses 2.03 32.78 64.10
+Pants-makers 2.13 30.77 75.61
+Miscellaneous 2.77 29. 81.80
+Tailors 6.22 31.96 211.92
+General 2.48 31.18 76.74
+Averages
+
+
+Walter A. Wyckoff, who is as great an authority upon the worker as Josiah
+Flynt is on the tramp, furnishes the following Chicago experience:
+
+ "Many of the men were so weakened by the want and hardship of the
+ winter that they were no longer in condition for effective labor.
+ Some of the bosses who were in need of added hands were obliged to
+ turn men away because of physical incapacity. One instance of this I
+ shall not soon forget. It was when I overheard, early one morning at
+ a factory gate, an interview between a would-be laborer and the boss.
+ I knew the applicant for a Russian Jew, who had at home an old mother
+ and a wife and two young children to support. He had had
+ intermittent employment throughout the winter in a sweater's den, {5}
+ barely enough to keep them all alive, and, after the hardships of the
+ cold season, he was again in desperate straits for work.
+
+ "The boss had all but agreed to take him on for some sort of
+ unskilled labor, when, struck by the cadaverous look of the man, he
+ told him to bare his arm. Up went the sleeve of his coat and his
+ ragged flannel shirt, exposing a naked arm with the muscles nearly
+ gone, and the blue-white transparent skin stretched over sinews and
+ the outlines of the bones. Pitiful beyond words was his effort to
+ give a semblance of strength to the biceps which rose faintly to the
+ upward movement of the forearm. But the boss sent him off with an
+ oath and a contemptuous laugh; and I watched the fellow as he turned
+ down the street, facing the fact of his starving family with a
+ despair at his heart which only mortal man can feel and no mortal
+ tongue can speak."
+
+Concerning habitat, Mr. Jacob Riis has stated that in New York City, in
+the block bounded by Stanton, Houston, Attorney, and Ridge streets, the
+size of which is 200 by 300, there is a warren of 2244 human beings.
+
+In the block bounded by Sixty-first and Sixty-second streets, and
+Amsterdam and West End avenues, are over four thousand human
+creatures,--quite a comfortable New England village to crowd into one
+city block.
+
+The Rev. Dr. Behrends, speaking of the block bounded by Canal, Hester,
+Eldridge, and Forsyth streets, says: "In a room 12 by 8 and 5.5 feet
+high, it was found that nine persons slept and prepared their food. . . .
+In another room, located in a dark cellar, without screens or partitions,
+were together two men with their wives and a girl of fourteen, two single
+men and a boy of seventeen, two women and four boys,--nine, ten, eleven,
+and fifteen years old,--fourteen persons in all."
+
+Here humanity rots. Its victims, with grim humor, call it "tenant-house
+rot." Or, as a legislative report puts it: "Here infantile life unfolds
+its bud, but perishes before its first anniversary. Here youth is ugly
+with loathsome disease, and the deformities which follow physical
+degeneration."
+
+These are the men and women who are what they are because they were not
+better born, or because they happened to be unluckily born in time and
+space. Gauged by the needs of the system, they are weak and worthless.
+The hospital and the pauper's grave await them, and they offer no
+encouragement to the mediocre worker who has failed higher up in the
+industrial structure. Such a worker, conscious that he has failed,
+conscious from the hard fact that he cannot obtain work in the higher
+employments, finds several courses open to him. He may come down and be
+a beast in the social pit, for instance; but if he be of a certain
+caliber, the effect of the social pit will be to discourage him from
+work. In his blood a rebellion will quicken, and he will elect to become
+either a felon or a tramp.
+
+If he have fought the hard fight he is not unacquainted with the lure of
+the "road." When out of work and still undiscouraged, he has been forced
+to "hit the road" between large cities in his quest for a job. He has
+loafed, seen the country and green things, laughed in joy, lain on his
+back and listened to the birds singing overhead, unannoyed by factory
+whistles and bosses' harsh commands; and, most significant of all, _he
+has lived_! That is the point! He has not starved to death. Not only
+has he been care-free and happy, but he has lived! And from the
+knowledge that he has idled and is still alive, he achieves a new outlook
+on life; and the more he experiences the unenviable lot of the poor
+worker, the more the blandishments of the "road" take hold of him. And
+finally he flings his challenge in the face of society, imposes a
+valorous boycott on all work, and joins the far-wanderers of Hoboland,
+the gypsy folk of this latter day.
+
+But the tramp does not usually come from the slums. His place of birth
+is ordinarily a bit above, and sometimes a very great bit above. A
+confessed failure, he yet refuses to accept the punishment, and swerves
+aside from the slum to vagabondage. The average beast in the social pit
+is either too much of a beast, or too much of a slave to the bourgeois
+ethics and ideals of his masters, to manifest this flicker of rebellion.
+But the social pit, out of its discouragement and viciousness, breeds
+criminals, men who prefer being beasts of prey to being beasts of work.
+And the mediocre criminal, in turn, the unfit and inefficient criminal,
+is discouraged by the strong arm of the law and goes over to trampdom.
+
+These men, the discouraged worker and the discouraged criminal,
+voluntarily withdraw themselves from the struggle for work. Industry
+does not need them. There are no factories shut down through lack of
+labor, no projected railroads unbuilt for want of pick-and-shovel men.
+Women are still glad to toil for a dollar a week, and men and boys to
+clamor and fight for work at the factory gates. No one misses these
+discouraged men, and in going away they have made it somewhat easier for
+those that remain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So the case stands thus: There being more men than there is work for men
+to do, a surplus labor army inevitably results. The surplus labor army
+is an economic necessity; without it, present society would fall to
+pieces. Into the surplus labor army are herded the mediocre, the
+inefficient, the unfit, and those incapable of satisfying the industrial
+needs of the system. The struggle for work between the members of the
+surplus labor army is sordid and savage, and at the bottom of the social
+pit the struggle is vicious and beastly. This struggle tends to
+discouragement, and the victims of this discouragement are the criminal
+and the tramp. The tramp is not an economic necessity such as the
+surplus labor army, but he is the by-product of an economic necessity.
+
+The "road" is one of the safety-valves through which the waste of the
+social organism is given off. And _being given off_ constitutes the
+negative function of the tramp. Society, as at present organized, makes
+much waste of human life. This waste must be eliminated. Chloroform or
+electrocution would be a simple, merciful solution of this problem of
+elimination; but the ruling ethics, while permitting the human waste,
+will not permit a humane elimination of that waste. This paradox
+demonstrates the irreconcilability of theoretical ethics and industrial
+need.
+
+And so the tramp becomes self-eliminating. And not only self! Since he
+is manifestly unfit for things as they are, and since kind is prone to
+beget kind, it is necessary that his kind cease with him, that his
+progeny shall not be, that he play the eunuch's part in this twentieth
+century after Christ. And he plays it. He does not breed. Sterility is
+his portion, as it is the portion of the woman on the street. They might
+have been mates, but society has decreed otherwise.
+
+And, while it is not nice that these men should die, it is ordained that
+they must die, and we should not quarrel with them if they cumber our
+highways and kitchen stoops with their perambulating carcasses. This is
+a form of elimination we not only countenance but compel. Therefore let
+us be cheerful and honest about it. Let us be as stringent as we please
+with our police regulations, but for goodness' sake let us refrain from
+telling the tramp to go to work. Not only is it unkind, but it is untrue
+and hypocritical. We know there is no work for him. As the scapegoat to
+our economic and industrial sinning, or to the plan of things, if you
+will, we should give him credit. Let us be just. He is so made.
+Society made him. He did not make himself.
+
+
+
+
+THE SCAB
+
+
+In a competitive society, where men struggle with one another for food
+and shelter, what is more natural than that generosity, when it
+diminishes the food and shelter of men other than he who is generous,
+should be held an accursed thing? Wise old saws to the contrary, he who
+takes from a man's purse takes from his existence. To strike at a man's
+food and shelter is to strike at his life; and in a society organized on
+a tooth-and-nail basis, such an act, performed though it may be under the
+guise of generosity, is none the less menacing and terrible.
+
+It is for this reason that a laborer is so fiercely hostile to another
+laborer who offers to work for less pay or longer hours. To hold his
+place, (which is to live), he must offset this offer by another equally
+liberal, which is equivalent to giving away somewhat from the food and
+shelter he enjoys. To sell his day's work for $2, instead of $2.50,
+means that he, his wife, and his children will not have so good a roof
+over their heads, so warm clothes on their backs, so substantial food in
+their stomachs. Meat will be bought less frequently and it will be
+tougher and less nutritious, stout new shoes will go less often on the
+children's feet, and disease and death will be more imminent in a cheaper
+house and neighborhood.
+
+Thus the generous laborer, giving more of a day's work for less return,
+(measured in terms of food and shelter), threatens the life of his less
+generous brother laborer, and at the best, if he does not destroy that
+life, he diminishes it. Whereupon the less generous laborer looks upon
+him as an enemy, and, as men are inclined to do in a tooth-and-nail
+society, he tries to kill the man who is trying to kill him.
+
+When a striker kills with a brick the man who has taken his place, he has
+no sense of wrong-doing. In the deepest holds of his being, though he
+does not reason the impulse, he has an ethical sanction. He feels dimly
+that he has justification, just as the home-defending Boer felt, though
+more sharply, with each bullet he fired at the invading English. Behind
+every brick thrown by a striker is the selfish will "to live" of himself,
+and the slightly altruistic will "to live" of his family. The family
+group came into the world before the State group, and society, being
+still on the primitive basis of tooth and nail, the will "to live" of the
+State is not so compelling to the striker as is the will "to live" of his
+family and himself.
+
+In addition to the use of bricks, clubs, and bullets, the selfish laborer
+finds it necessary to express his feelings in speech. Just as the
+peaceful country-dweller calls the sea-rover a "pirate," and the stout
+burgher calls the man who breaks into his strong-box a "robber," so the
+selfish laborer applies the opprobrious epithet a "scab" to the laborer
+who takes from him food and shelter by being more generous in the
+disposal of his labor power. The sentimental connotation of "scab" is as
+terrific as that of "traitor" or "Judas," and a sentimental definition
+would be as deep and varied as the human heart. It is far easier to
+arrive at what may be called a technical definition, worded in commercial
+terms, as, for instance, that _a scab is one who gives more value for the
+same price than another_.
+
+The laborer who gives more time or strength or skill for the same wage
+than another, or equal time or strength or skill for a less wage, is a
+scab. This generousness on his part is hurtful to his fellow-laborers,
+for it compels them to an equal generousness which is not to their
+liking, and which gives them less of food and shelter. But a word may be
+said for the scab. Just as his act makes his rivals compulsorily
+generous, so do they, by fortune of birth and training, make compulsory
+his act of generousness. He does not scab because he wants to scab. No
+whim of the spirit, no burgeoning of the heart, leads him to give more of
+his labor power than they for a certain sum.
+
+It is because he cannot get work on the same terms as they that he is a
+scab. There is less work than there are men to do work. This is patent,
+else the scab would not loom so large on the labor-market horizon.
+Because they are stronger than he, or more skilled, or more energetic, it
+is impossible for him to take their places at the same wage. To take
+their places he must give more value, must work longer hours or receive a
+smaller wage. He does so, and he cannot help it, for his will "to live"
+is driving him on as well as they are being driven on by their will "to
+live"; and to live he must win food and shelter, which he can do only by
+receiving permission to work from some man who owns a bit of land or a
+piece of machinery. And to receive permission from this man, he must
+make the transaction profitable for him.
+
+Viewed in this light, the scab, who gives more labor power for a certain
+price than his fellows, is not so generous after all. He is no more
+generous with his energy than the chattel slave and the convict laborer,
+who, by the way, are the almost perfect scabs. They give their labor
+power for about the minimum possible price. But, within limits, they may
+loaf and malinger, and, as scabs, are exceeded by the machine, which
+never loafs and malingers and which is the ideally perfect scab.
+
+It is not nice to be a scab. Not only is it not in good social taste and
+comradeship, but, from the standpoint of food and shelter, it is bad
+business policy. Nobody desires to scab, to give most for least. The
+ambition of every individual is quite the opposite, to give least for
+most; and, as a result, living in a tooth-and-nail society, battle royal
+is waged by the ambitious individuals. But in its most salient aspect,
+that of the struggle over the division of the joint product, it is no
+longer a battle between individuals, but between groups of individuals.
+Capital and labor apply themselves to raw material, make something useful
+out of it, add to its value, and then proceed to quarrel over the
+division of the added value. Neither cares to give most for least. Each
+is intent on giving less than the other and on receiving more.
+
+Labor combines into its unions, capital into partnerships, associations,
+corporations, and trusts. A group-struggle is the result, in which the
+individuals, as individuals, play no part. The Brotherhood of Carpenters
+and Joiners, for instance, serves notice on the Master Builders'
+Association that it demands an increase of the wage of its members from
+$3.50 a day to $4, and a Saturday half-holiday without pay. This means
+that the carpenters are trying to give less for more. Where they
+received $21 for six full days, they are endeavoring to get $22 for five
+days and a half,--that is, they will work half a day less each week and
+receive a dollar more.
+
+Also, they expect the Saturday half-holiday to give work to one
+additional man for each eleven previously employed. This last affords a
+splendid example of the development of the group idea. In this
+particular struggle the individual has no chance at all for life. The
+individual carpenter would be crushed like a mote by the Master Builders'
+Association, and like a mote the individual master builder would be
+crushed by the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners.
+
+In the group-struggle over the division of the joint product, labor
+utilizes the union with its two great weapons, the strike and the
+boycott; while capital utilizes the trust and the association, the
+weapons of which are the black-list, the lockout, and the scab. The scab
+is by far the most formidable weapon of the three. He is the man who
+breaks strikes and causes all the trouble. Without him there would be no
+trouble, for the strikers are willing to remain out peacefully and
+indefinitely so long as other men are not in their places, and so long as
+the particular aggregation of capital with which they are fighting is
+eating its head off in enforced idleness.
+
+But both warring groups have reserve weapons. Were it not for the scab,
+these weapons would not be brought into play. But the scab takes the
+place of the striker, who begins at once to wield a most powerful weapon,
+terrorism. The will "to live" of the scab recoils from the menace of
+broken bones and violent death. With all due respect to the labor
+leaders, who are not to be blamed for volubly asseverating otherwise,
+terrorism is a well-defined and eminently successful policy of the labor
+unions. It has probably won them more strikes than all the rest of the
+weapons in their arsenal. This terrorism, however, must be clearly
+understood. It is directed solely against the scab, placing him in such
+fear for life and limb as to drive him out of the contest. But when
+terrorism gets out of hand and inoffensive non-combatants are injured,
+law and order threatened, and property destroyed, it becomes an edged
+tool that cuts both ways. This sort of terrorism is sincerely deplored
+by the labor leaders, for it has probably lost them as many strikes as
+have been lost by any other single cause.
+
+The scab is powerless under terrorism. As a rule, he is not so good nor
+gritty a man as the men he is displacing, and he lacks their fighting
+organization. He stands in dire need of stiffening and backing. His
+employers, the capitalists, draw their two remaining weapons, the
+ownership of which is debatable, but which they for the time being happen
+to control. These two weapons may be called the political and judicial
+machinery of society. When the scab crumples up and is ready to go down
+before the fists, bricks, and bullets of the labor group, the capitalist
+group puts the police and soldiers into the field, and begins a general
+bombardment of injunctions. Victory usually follows, for the labor group
+cannot withstand the combined assault of gatling guns and injunctions.
+
+But it has been noted that the ownership of the political and judicial
+machinery of society is debatable. In the Titanic struggle over the
+division of the joint product, each group reaches out for every available
+weapon. Nor are they blinded by the smoke of conflict. They fight their
+battles as coolly and collectedly as ever battles were fought on paper.
+The capitalist group has long since realized the immense importance of
+controlling the political and judicial machinery of society.
+
+Taught by gatlings and injunctions, which have smashed many an otherwise
+successful strike, the labor group is beginning to realize that it all
+depends upon who is behind and who is before the gatlings and the
+injunctions. And he who knows the labor movement knows that there is
+slowly growing up and being formulated a clear and definite policy for
+the capture of the political and judicial machinery.
+
+This is the terrible spectre which Mr. John Graham Brooks sees looming
+portentously over the twentieth century world. No man may boast a more
+intimate knowledge of the labor movement than he; and he reiterates again
+and again the dangerous likelihood of the whole labor group capturing the
+political machinery of society. As he says in his recent book: {6} "It
+is not probable that employers can destroy unionism in the United States.
+Adroit and desperate attempts will, however, be made, if we mean by
+unionism the undisciplined and aggressive fact of vigorous and determined
+organizations. If capital should prove too strong in this struggle, the
+result is easy to predict. The employers have only to convince organized
+labor that it cannot hold its own against the capitalist manager, and the
+whole energy that now goes to the union will turn to an aggressive
+political socialism. It will not be the harmless sympathy with increased
+city and state functions which trade unions already feel; it will become
+a turbulent political force bent upon using every weapon of taxation
+against the rich."
+
+This struggle not to be a scab, to avoid giving more for less and to
+succeed in giving less for more, is more vital than it would appear on
+the surface. The capitalist and labor groups are locked together in
+desperate battle, and neither side is swayed by moral considerations more
+than skin-deep. The labor group hires business agents, lawyers, and
+organizers, and is beginning to intimidate legislators by the strength of
+its solid vote; and more directly, in the near future, it will attempt to
+control legislation by capturing it bodily through the ballot-box. On
+the other hand, the capitalist group, numerically weaker, hires
+newspapers, universities, and legislatures, and strives to bend to its
+need all the forces which go to mould public opinion.
+
+The only honest morality displayed by either side is white-hot
+indignation at the iniquities of the other side. The striking teamster
+complacently takes a scab driver into an alley, and with an iron bar
+breaks his arms, so that he can drive no more, but cries out to high
+Heaven for justice when the capitalist breaks his skull by means of a
+club in the hands of a policeman. Nay, the members of a union will
+declaim in impassioned rhetoric for the God-given right of an eight-hour
+day, and at the time be working their own business agent seventeen hours
+out of the twenty-four.
+
+A capitalist such as Collis P. Huntington, and his name is Legion, after
+a long life spent in buying the aid of countless legislatures, will wax
+virtuously wrathful, and condemn in unmeasured terms "the dangerous
+tendency of crying out to the Government for aid" in the way of labor
+legislation. Without a quiver, a member of the capitalist group will run
+tens of thousands of pitiful child-laborers through his life-destroying
+cotton factories, and weep maudlin and constitutional tears over one scab
+hit in the back with a brick. He will drive a "compulsory" free contract
+with an unorganized laborer on the basis of a starvation wage, saying,
+"Take it or leave it," knowing that to leave it means to die of hunger,
+and in the next breath, when the organizer entices that laborer into a
+union, will storm patriotically about the inalienable right of all men to
+work. In short, the chief moral concern of either side is with the
+morals of the other side. They are not in the business for their moral
+welfare, but to achieve the enviable position of the non-scab who gets
+more than he gives.
+
+But there is more to the question than has yet been discussed. The labor
+scab is no more detestable to his brother laborers than is the capitalist
+scab to his brother capitalists. A capitalist may get most for least in
+dealing with his laborers, and in so far be a non-scab; but at the same
+time, in his dealings with his fellow-capitalists, he may give most for
+least and be the very worst kind of scab. The most heinous crime an
+employer of labor can commit is to scab on his fellow-employers of labor.
+Just as the individual laborers have organized into groups to protect
+themselves from the peril of the scab laborer, so have the employers
+organized into groups to protect themselves from the peril of the scab
+employer. The employers' federations, associations, and trusts are
+nothing more nor less than unions. They are organized to destroy
+scabbing amongst themselves and to encourage scabbing amongst others.
+For this reason they pool interests, determine prices, and present an
+unbroken and aggressive front to the labor group.
+
+As has been said before, nobody likes to play the compulsorily generous
+role of scab. It is a bad business proposition on the face of it. And
+it is patent that there would be no capitalist scabs if there were not
+more capital than there is work for capital to do. When there are enough
+factories in existence to supply, with occasional stoppages, a certain
+commodity, the building of new factories by a rival concern, for the
+production of that commodity, is plain advertisement that that capital is
+out of a job. The first act of this new aggregation of capital will be
+to cut prices, to give more for less,--in short to scab, to strike at the
+very existence of the less generous aggregation of capital the work of
+which it is trying to do.
+
+No scab capitalist strives to give more for less for any other reason
+than that he hopes, by undercutting a competitor and driving that
+competitor out of the market, to get that market and its profits for
+himself. His ambition is to achieve the day when he shall stand alone in
+the field both as buyer and seller,--when he will be the royal non-scab,
+buying most for least, selling least for most, and reducing all about
+him, the small buyers and sellers, (the consumers and the laborers), to a
+general condition of scabdom. This, for example, has been the history of
+Mr. Rockefeller and the Standard Oil Company. Through all the sordid
+villanies of scabdom he has passed, until today he is a most regal
+non-scab. However, to continue in this enviable position, he must be
+prepared at a moment's notice to go scabbing again. And he is prepared.
+Whenever a competitor arises, Mr. Rockefeller changes about from giving
+least for most and gives most for least with such a vengeance as to drive
+the competitor out of existence.
+
+The banded capitalists discriminate against a scab capitalist by refusing
+him trade advantages, and by combining against him in most relentless
+fashion. The banded laborers, discriminating against a scab laborer in
+more primitive fashion, with a club, are no more merciless than the
+banded capitalists.
+
+Mr. Casson tells of a New York capitalist who withdrew from the Sugar
+Union several years ago and became a scab. He was worth something like
+twenty millions of dollars. But the Sugar Union, standing shoulder to
+shoulder with the Railroad Union and several other unions, beat him to
+his knees till he cried, "Enough." So frightfully did they beat him that
+he was obliged to turn over to his creditors his home, his chickens, and
+his gold watch. In point of fact, he was as thoroughly bludgeoned by the
+Federation of Capitalist Unions as ever scab workman was bludgeoned by a
+labor union. The intent in either case is the same,--to destroy the
+scab's producing power. The labor scab with concussion of the brain is
+put out of business, and so is the capitalist scab who has lost all his
+dollars down to his chickens and his watch.
+
+But the role of scab passes beyond the individual. Just as individuals
+scab on other individuals, so do groups scab on other groups. And the
+principle involved is precisely the same as in the case of the simple
+labor scab. A group, in the nature of its organization, is often
+compelled to give most for least, and, so doing, to strike at the life of
+another group. At the present moment all Europe is appalled by that
+colossal scab, the United States. And Europe is clamorous with agitation
+for a Federation of National Unions to protect her from the United
+States. It may be remarked, in passing, that in its prime essentials
+this agitation in no wise differs from the trade-union agitation among
+workmen in any industry. The trouble is caused by the scab who is giving
+most for least. The result of the American scab's nefarious actions will
+be to strike at the food and shelter of Europe. The way for Europe to
+protect herself is to quit bickering among her parts and to form a union
+against the scab. And if the union is formed, armies and navies may be
+expected to be brought into play in fashion similar to the bricks and
+clubs in ordinary labor struggles.
+
+In this connection, and as one of many walking delegates for the nations,
+M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the noted French economist, may well be quoted. In a
+letter to the Vienna Tageblatt, he advocates an economic alliance among
+the Continental nations for the purpose of barring out American goods, an
+economic alliance, in his own language, "_which may possibly and
+desirably develop into a political alliance_."
+
+It will be noted, in the utterances of the Continental walking delegates,
+that, one and all, they leave England out of the proposed union. And in
+England herself the feeling is growing that her days are numbered if she
+cannot unite for offence and defence with the great American scab. As
+Andrew Carnegie said some time ago, "The only course for Great Britain
+seems to be reunion with her grandchild or sure decline to a secondary
+place, and then to comparative insignificance in the future annals of the
+English-speaking race."
+
+Cecil Rhodes, speaking of what would have obtained but for the
+pig-headedness of George III, and of what will obtain when England and
+the United States are united, said, "_No cannon would. . . be fired on
+either hemisphere but by permission of The English race_." It would seem
+that England, fronted by the hostile Continental Union and flanked by the
+great American scab, has nothing left but to join with the scab and play
+the historic labor role of armed Pinkerton. Granting the words of Cecil
+Rhodes, the United States would be enabled to scab without let or
+hindrance on Europe, while England, as professional strike-breaker and
+policeman, destroyed the unions and kept order.
+
+All this may appear fantastic and erroneous, but there is in it a soul of
+truth vastly more significant than it may seem. Civilization may be
+expressed today in terms of trade-unionism. Individual struggles have
+largely passed away, but group-struggles increase prodigiously. And the
+things for which the groups struggle are the same as of old. Shorn of
+all subtleties and complexities, the chief struggle of men, and of groups
+of men, is for food and shelter. And, as of old they struggled with
+tooth and nail, so today they struggle with teeth and nails elongated
+into armies and navies, machines, and economic advantages.
+
+Under the definition that a scab is _one who gives more value for the
+same price than another_, it would seem that society can be generally
+divided into the two classes of the scabs and the non-scabs. But on
+closer investigation, however, it will be seen that the non-scab is a
+vanishing quantity. In the social jungle, everybody is preying upon
+everybody else. As in the case of Mr. Rockefeller, he who was a scab
+yesterday is a non-scab today, and tomorrow may be a scab again.
+
+The woman stenographer or book-keeper who receives forty dollars per
+month where a man was receiving seventy-five is a scab. So is the woman
+who does a man's work at a weaving-machine, and the child who goes into
+the mill or factory. And the father, who is scabbed out of work by the
+wives and children of other men, sends his own wife and children to scab
+in order to save himself.
+
+When a publisher offers an author better royalties than other publishers
+have been paying him, he is scabbing on those other publishers. The
+reporter on a newspaper, who feels he should be receiving a larger salary
+for his work, says so, and is shown the door, is replaced by a reporter
+who is a scab; whereupon, when the belly-need presses, the displaced
+reporter goes to another paper and scabs himself. The minister who
+hardens his heart to a call, and waits for a certain congregation to
+offer him say $500 a year more, often finds himself scabbed upon by
+another and more impecunious minister; and the next time it is _his_ turn
+to scab while a brother minister is hardening his heart to a call. The
+scab is everywhere. The professional strike-breakers, who as a class
+receive large wages, will scab on one another, while scab unions are even
+formed to prevent scabbing upon scabs.
+
+There are non-scabs, but they are usually born so, and are protected by
+the whole might of society in the possession of their food and shelter.
+King Edward is such a type, as are all individuals who receive hereditary
+food-and-shelter privileges,--such as the present Duke of Bedford, for
+instance, who yearly receives $75,000 from the good people of London
+because some former king gave some former ancestor of his the market
+privileges of Covent Garden. The irresponsible rich are likewise
+non-scabs,--and by them is meant that coupon-clipping class which hires
+its managers and brains to invest the money usually left it by its
+ancestors.
+
+Outside these lucky creatures, all the rest, at one time or another in
+their lives, are scabs, at one time or another are engaged in giving more
+for a certain price than any one else. The meek professor in some
+endowed institution, by his meek suppression of his convictions, is
+giving more for his salary than gave the other and more outspoken
+professor whose chair he occupies. And when a political party dangles a
+full dinner-pail in the eyes of the toiling masses, it is offering more
+for a vote than the dubious dollar of the opposing party. Even a
+money-lender is not above taking a slightly lower rate of interest and
+saying nothing about it.
+
+Such is the tangle of conflicting interests in a tooth-and-nail society
+that people cannot avoid being scabs, are often made so against their
+desires, and are often unconsciously made so. When several trades in a
+certain locality demand and receive an advance in wages, they are
+unwittingly making scabs of their fellow-laborers in that district who
+have received no advance in wages. In San Francisco the barbers,
+laundry-workers, and milk-wagon drivers received such an advance in
+wages. Their employers promptly added the amount of this advance to the
+selling price of their wares. The price of shaves, of washing, and of
+milk went up. This reduced the purchasing power of the unorganized
+laborers, and, in point of fact, reduced their wages and made them
+greater scabs.
+
+Because the British laborer is disinclined to scab,--that is, because he
+restricts his output in order to give less for the wage he receives,--it
+is to a certain extent made possible for the American capitalist, who
+receives a less restricted output from his laborers, to play the scab on
+the English capitalist. As a result of this, (of course combined with
+other causes), the American capitalist and the American laborer are
+striking at the food and shelter of the English capitalist and laborer.
+
+The English laborer is starving today because, among other things, he is
+not a scab. He practises the policy of "ca' canny," which may be defined
+as "go easy." In order to get most for least, in many trades he performs
+but from one-fourth to one-sixth of the labor he is well able to perform.
+An instance of this is found in the building of the Westinghouse Electric
+Works at Manchester. The British limit per man was 400 bricks per day.
+The Westinghouse Company imported a "driving" American contractor, aided
+by half a dozen "driving" American foremen, and the British bricklayer
+swiftly attained an average of 1800 bricks per day, with a maximum of
+2500 bricks for the plainest work.
+
+But, the British laborer's policy of "ca' canny," which is the very
+honorable one of giving least for most, and which is likewise the policy
+of the English capitalist, is nevertheless frowned upon by the English
+capitalist, whose business existence is threatened by the great American
+scab. From the rise of the factory system, the English capitalist gladly
+embraced the opportunity, wherever he found it, of giving least for most.
+He did it all over the world whenever he enjoyed a market monopoly, and
+he did it at home with the laborers employed in his mills, destroying
+them like flies till prevented, within limits, by the passage of the
+Factory Acts. Some of the proudest fortunes of England today may trace
+their origin to the giving of least for most to the miserable slaves of
+the factory towns. But at the present time the English capitalist is
+outraged because his laborers are employing against him precisely the
+same policy he employed against them, and which he would employ again did
+the chance present itself.
+
+Yet "ca' canny" is a disastrous thing to the British laborer. It has
+driven ship-building from England to Scotland, bottle-making from
+Scotland to Belgium, flint-glass-making from England to Germany, and
+today is steadily driving industry after industry to other countries. A
+correspondent from Northampton wrote not long ago: "Factories are working
+half and third time. . . . There is no strike, there is no real labor
+trouble, but the masters and men are alike suffering from sheer lack of
+employment. Markets which were once theirs are now American." It would
+seem that the unfortunate British laborer is 'twixt the devil and the
+deep sea. If he gives most for least, he faces a frightful slavery such
+as marked the beginning of the factory system. If he gives least for
+most, he drives industry away to other countries and has no work at all.
+
+But the union laborers of the United States have nothing of which to
+boast, while, according to their trade-union ethics, they have a great
+deal of which to be ashamed. They passionately preach short hours and
+big wages, the shorter the hours and the bigger the wages the better.
+Their hatred for a scab is as terrible as the hatred of a patriot for a
+traitor, of a Christian for a Judas. And in the face of all this, they
+are as colossal scabs as the United States is a colossal scab. For all
+of their boasted unions and high labor ideals, they are about the most
+thoroughgoing scabs on the planet.
+
+Receiving $4.50 per day, because of his proficiency and immense working
+power, the American laborer has been known to scab upon scabs (so called)
+who took his place and received only $0.90 per day for a longer day. In
+this particular instance, five Chinese coolies, working longer hours,
+gave less value for the price received from their employer than did one
+American laborer.
+
+It is upon his brother laborers overseas that the American laborer most
+outrageously scabs. As Mr. Casson has shown, an English nail-maker gets
+$3 per week, while an American nail-maker gets $30. But the English
+worker turns out 200 pounds of nails per week, while the American turns
+out 5500 pounds. If he were as "fair" as his English brother, other
+things being equal, he would be receiving, at the English worker's rate
+of pay, $82.50. As it is, he is scabbing upon his English brother to the
+tune of $79.50 per week. Dr. Schultze-Gaevernitz has shown that a German
+weaver produces 466 yards of cotton a week at a cost of .303 per yard,
+while an American weaver produces 1200 yards at a cost of .02 per yard.
+
+But, it may be objected, a great part of this is due to the more improved
+American machinery. Very true, but none the less a great part is still
+due to the superior energy, skill, and willingness of the American
+laborer. The English laborer is faithful to the policy of "ca' canny."
+He refuses point-blank to get the work out of a machine that the New
+World scab gets out of a machine. Mr. Maxim, observing a wasteful
+hand-labor process in his English factory, invented a machine which he
+proved capable of displacing several men. But workman after workman was
+put at the machine, and without exception they turned out neither more
+nor less than a workman turned out by hand. They obeyed the mandate of
+the union and went easy, while Mr. Maxim gave up in despair. Nor will
+the British workman run machines at as high speed as the American, nor
+will he run so many. An American workman will "give equal attention
+simultaneously to three, four, or six machines or tools, while the
+British workman is compelled by his trade union to limit his attention to
+one, so that employment may be given to half a dozen men."
+
+But for scabbing, no blame attaches itself anywhere. With rare
+exceptions, all the people in the world are scabs. The strong, capable
+workman gets a job and holds it because of his strength and capacity.
+And he holds it because out of his strength and capacity he gives a
+better value for his wage than does the weaker and less capable workman.
+Therefore he is scabbing upon his weaker and less capable brother
+workman. He is giving more value for the price paid by the employer.
+
+The superior workman scabs upon the inferior workman because he is so
+constituted and cannot help it. The one, by fortune of birth and
+upbringing, is strong and capable; the other, by fortune of birth and
+upbringing, is not so strong nor capable. It is for the same reason that
+one country scabs upon another. That country which has the good fortune
+to possess great natural resources, a finer sun and soil, unhampering
+institutions, and a deft and intelligent labor class and capitalist class
+is bound to scab upon a country less fortunately situated. It is the
+good fortune of the United States that is making her the colossal scab,
+just as it is the good fortune of one man to be born with a straight back
+while his brother is born with a hump.
+
+It is not good to give most for least, not good to be a scab. The word
+has gained universal opprobrium. On the other hand, to be a non-scab, to
+give least for most, is universally branded as stingy, selfish, and
+unchristian-like. So all the world, like the British workman, is 'twixt
+the devil and the deep sea. It is treason to one's fellows to scab, it
+is unchristian-like not to scab.
+
+Since to give least for most, and to give most for least, are universally
+bad, what remains? Equity remains, which is to give like for like, the
+same for the same, neither more nor less. But this equity, society, as
+at present constituted, cannot give. It is not in the nature of
+present-day society for men to give like for like, the same for the same.
+And so long as men continue to live in this competitive society,
+struggling tooth and nail with one another for food and shelter, (which
+is to struggle tooth and nail with one another for life), that long will
+the scab continue to exist. His will "to live" will force him to exist.
+He may be flouted and jeered by his brothers, he may be beaten with
+bricks and clubs by the men who by superior strength and capacity scab
+upon him as he scabs upon them by longer hours and smaller wages, but
+through it all he will persist, giving a bit more of most for least than
+they are giving.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUESTION OF THE MAXIMUM
+
+
+For any social movement or development there must be a maximum limit
+beyond which it cannot proceed. That civilization which does not advance
+must decline, and so, when the maximum of development has been reached in
+any given direction, society must either retrograde or change the
+direction of its advance. There are many families of men that have
+failed, in the critical period of their economic evolution, to effect a
+change in direction, and were forced to fall back. Vanquished at the
+moment of their maximum, they have dropped out of the whirl of the world.
+There was no room for them. Stronger competitors have taken their
+places, and they have either rotted into oblivion or remain to be crushed
+under the iron heel of the dominant races in as remorseless a struggle as
+the world has yet witnessed. But in this struggle fair women and
+chivalrous men will play no part. Types and ideals have changed. Helens
+and Launcelots are anachronisms. Blows will be given and taken, and men
+fight and die, but not for faiths and altars. Shrines will be
+desecrated, but they will be the shrines, not of temples, but
+market-places. Prophets will arise, but they will be the prophets of
+prices and products. Battles will be waged, not for honor and glory, nor
+for thrones and sceptres, but for dollars and cents and for marts and
+exchanges. Brain and not brawn will endure, and the captains of war will
+be commanded by the captains of industry. In short, it will be a contest
+for the mastery of the world's commerce and for industrial supremacy.
+
+It is more significant, this struggle into which we have plunged, for the
+fact that it is the first struggle to involve the globe. No general
+movement of man has been so wide-spreading, so far-reaching. Quite local
+was the supremacy of any ancient people; likewise the rise to empire of
+Macedonia and Rome, the waves of Arabian valor and fanaticism, and the
+mediaeval crusades to the Holy Sepulchre. But since those times the
+planet has undergone a unique shrinkage.
+
+The world of Homer, limited by the coast-lines of the Mediterranean and
+Black seas, was a far vaster world than ours of today, which we weigh,
+measure, and compute as accurately and as easily as if it were a child's
+play-ball. Steam has made its parts accessible and drawn them closer
+together. The telegraph annihilates space and time. Each morning, every
+part knows what every other part is thinking, contemplating, or doing. A
+discovery in a German laboratory is being demonstrated in San Francisco
+within twenty-four hours. A book written in South Africa is published by
+simultaneous copyright in every English-speaking country, and on the day
+following is in the hands of the translators. The death of an obscure
+missionary in China, or of a whiskey-smuggler in the South Seas, is
+served, the world over, with the morning toast. The wheat output of
+Argentine or the gold of Klondike are known wherever men meet and trade.
+Shrinkage, or centralization, has become such that the humblest clerk in
+any metropolis may place his hand on the pulse of the world. The planet
+has indeed grown very small; and because of this, no vital movement can
+remain in the clime or country where it takes its rise.
+
+And so today the economic and industrial impulse is world-wide. It is a
+matter of import to every people. None may be careless of it. To do so
+is to perish. It is become a battle, the fruits of which are to the
+strong, and to none but the strongest of the strong. As the movement
+approaches its maximum, centralization accelerates and competition grows
+keener and closer. The competitor nations cannot all succeed. So long
+as the movement continues its present direction, not only will there not
+be room for all, but the room that is will become less and less; and when
+the moment of the maximum is at hand, there will be no room at all.
+Capitalistic production will have overreached itself, and a change of
+direction will then be inevitable.
+
+Divers queries arise: What is the maximum of commercial development the
+world can sustain? How far can it be exploited? How much capital is
+necessary? Can sufficient capital be accumulated? A brief resume of the
+industrial history of the last one hundred years or so will be relevant
+at this stage of the discussion. Capitalistic production, in its modern
+significance, was born of the industrial revolution in England in the
+latter half of the eighteenth century. The great inventions of that
+period were both its father and its mother, while, as Mr. Brooks Adams
+has shown, the looted treasure of India was the potent midwife. Had
+there not been an unwonted increase of capital, the impetus would not
+have been given to invention, while even steam might have languished for
+generations instead of at once becoming, as it did, the most prominent
+factor in the new method of production. The improved application of
+these inventions in the first decades of the nineteenth century mark the
+transition from the domestic to the factory system of manufacture and
+inaugurated the era of capitalism. The magnitude of this revolution is
+manifested by the fact that England alone had invented the means and
+equipped herself with the machinery whereby she could overstock the
+world's markets. The home market could not consume a tithe of the home
+product. To manufacture this home product she had sacrificed her
+agriculture. She must buy her food from abroad, and to do so she must
+sell her goods abroad.
+
+But the struggle for commercial supremacy had not yet really begun.
+England was without a rival. Her navies controlled the sea. Her armies
+and her insular position gave her peace at home. The world was hers to
+exploit. For nearly fifty years she dominated the European, American,
+and Indian trade, while the great wars then convulsing society were
+destroying possible competitive capital and straining consumption to its
+utmost. The pioneer of the industrial nations, she thus received such a
+start in the new race for wealth that it is only today the other nations
+have succeeded in overtaking her. In 1820 the volume of her trade
+(imports and exports) was 68,000,000 pounds. In 1899 it had increased to
+815,000,000 pounds,--an increase of 1200 per cent in the volume of trade.
+
+For nearly one hundred years England has been producing surplus value.
+She has been producing far more than she consumes, and this excess has
+swelled the volume of her capital. This capital has been invested in her
+enterprises at home and abroad, and in her shipping. In 1898 the Stock
+Exchange estimated British capital invested abroad at 1,900,000,000
+pounds. But hand in hand with her foreign investments have grown her
+adverse balances of trade. For the ten years ending with 1868, her
+average yearly adverse balance was 52,000,000 pounds; ending with 1878,
+81,000,000 pounds; ending with 1888, 101,000,000 pounds; and ending with
+1898, 133,000,000 pounds. In the single year of 1897 it reached the
+portentous sum of 157,000,000 pounds.
+
+But England's adverse balances of trade in themselves are nothing at
+which to be frightened. Hitherto they have been paid from out the
+earnings of her shipping and the interest on her foreign investments.
+But what does cause anxiety, however, is that, relative to the trade
+development of other countries, her export trade is falling off, without
+a corresponding diminution of her imports, and that her securities and
+foreign holdings do not seem able to stand the added strain. These she
+is being forced to sell in order to pull even. As the London Times
+gloomily remarks, "We are entering the twentieth century on the down
+grade, after a prolonged period of business activity, high wages, high
+profits, and overflowing revenue." In other words, the mighty grasp
+England held over the resources and capital of the world is being
+relaxed. The control of its commerce and banking is slipping through her
+fingers. The sale of her foreign holdings advertises the fact that other
+nations are capable of buying them, and, further, that these other
+nations are busily producing surplus value.
+
+The movement has become general. Today, passing from country to country,
+an ever-increasing tide of capital is welling up. Production is doubling
+and quadrupling upon itself. It used to be that the impoverished or
+undeveloped nations turned to England when it came to borrowing, but now
+Germany is competing keenly with her in this matter. France is not
+averse to lending great sums to Russia, and Austria-Hungary has capital
+and to spare for foreign holdings.
+
+Nor has the United States failed to pass from the side of the debtor to
+that of the creditor nations. She, too, has become wise in the way of
+producing surplus value. She has been successful in her efforts to
+secure economic emancipation. Possessing but 5 per cent of the world's
+population and producing 32 per cent of the world's food supply, she has
+been looked upon as the world's farmer; but now, amidst general
+consternation, she comes forward as the world's manufacturer. In 1888
+her manufactured exports amounted to $130,300,087; in 1896, to
+$253,681,541; in 1897, to $279,652,721; in 1898, to $307,924,994; in
+1899, to $338,667,794; and in 1900, to $432,000,000. Regarding her
+growing favorable balances of trade, it may be noted that not only are
+her imports not increasing, but they are actually falling off, while her
+exports in the last decade have increased 72.4 per cent. In ten years
+her imports from Europe have been reduced from $474,000,000 to
+$439,000,000; while in the same time her exports have increased from
+$682,000,000 to $1,111,000,000. Her balance of trade in her favor in
+1895 was $75,000,000; in 1896, over $100,000,000; in 1897, nearly
+$300,000,000; in 1898, $615,000,000; in 1899, $530,000,000; and in 1900,
+$648,000,000.
+
+In the matter of iron, the United States, which in 1840 had not dreamed
+of entering the field of international competition, in 1897, as much to
+her own surprise as any one else's, undersold the English in their own
+London market. In 1899 there was but one American locomotive in Great
+Britain; but, of the five hundred locomotives sold abroad by the United
+States in 1902, England bought more than any other country. Russia is
+operating a thousand of them on her own roads today. In one instance the
+American manufacturers contracted to deliver a locomotive in four and
+one-half months for $9250, the English manufacturers requiring
+twenty-four months for delivery at $14,000. The Clyde shipbuilders
+recently placed orders for 150,000 tons of plates at a saving of
+$250,000, and the American steel going into the making of the new London
+subway is taken as a matter of course. American tools stand above
+competition the world over. Ready-made boots and shoes are beginning to
+flood Europe,--the same with machinery, bicycles, agricultural
+implements, and all kinds of manufactured goods. A correspondent from
+Hamburg, speaking of the invasion of American trade, says: "Incidentally,
+it may be remarked that the typewriting machine with which this article
+is written, as well as the thousands--nay, hundreds of thousands--of
+others that are in use throughout the world, were made in America; that
+it stands on an American table, in an office furnished with American
+desks, bookcases, and chairs, which cannot be made in Europe of equal
+quality, so practical and convenient, for a similar price."
+
+In 1893 and 1894, because of the distrust of foreign capital, the United
+States was forced to buy back American securities held abroad; but in
+1897 and 1898 she bought back American securities held abroad, not
+because she had to, but because she chose to. And not only has she
+bought back her own securities, but in the last eight years she has
+become a buyer of the securities of other countries. In the money
+markets of London, Paris, and Berlin she is a lender of money. Carrying
+the largest stock of gold in the world, the world, in moments of danger,
+when crises of international finance loom large, looks to her vast
+lending ability for safety.
+
+Thus, in a few swift years, has the United States drawn up to the van
+where the great industrial nations are fighting for commercial and
+financial empire. The figures of the race, in which she passed England,
+are interesting:
+
+
+Year United States Exports United Kingdom Exports
+1875 $497,263,737 $1,087,497,000
+1885 673,593,506 1,037,124,000
+1895 807,742,415 1,100,452,000
+1896 986,830,080 1,168,671,000
+1897 1,079,834,296 1,139,882,000
+1898 1,233,564,828 1,135,642,000
+1899 1,253,466,000 1,287,971,000
+1900 1,453,013,659 1,418,348,000
+
+
+As Mr. Henry Demarest Lloyd has noted, "When the news reached Germany of
+the new steel trust in America, the stocks of the iron and steel mills
+listed on the Berlin Bourse fell." While Europe has been talking and
+dreaming of the greatness which was, the United States has been thinking
+and planning and doing for the greatness to be. Her captains of industry
+and kings of finance have toiled and sweated at organizing and
+consolidating production and transportation. But this has been merely
+the developmental stage, the tuning-up of the orchestra. With the
+twentieth century rises the curtain on the play,--a play which shall have
+much in it of comedy and a vast deal of tragedy, and which has been well
+named The Capitalistic Conquest of Europe by America. Nations do not die
+easily, and one of the first moves of Europe will be the erection of
+tariff walls. America, however, will fittingly reply, for already her
+manufacturers are establishing works in France and Germany. And when the
+German trade journals refused to accept American advertisements, they
+found their country flamingly bill-boarded in buccaneer American fashion.
+
+M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the French economist, is passionately preaching a
+commercial combination of the whole Continent against the United
+States,--a commercial alliance which, he boldly declares, should become a
+political alliance. And in this he is not alone, finding ready sympathy
+and ardent support in Austria, Italy, and Germany. Lord Rosebery said,
+in a recent speech before the Wolverhampton Chamber of Commerce: "The
+Americans, with their vast and almost incalculable resources, their
+acuteness and enterprise, and their huge population, which will probably
+be 100,000,000 in twenty years, together with the plan they have adopted
+for putting accumulated wealth into great cooperative syndicates or
+trusts for the purpose of carrying on this great commercial warfare, are
+the most formidable . . . rivals to be feared."
+
+The London Times says: "It is useless to disguise the fact that Great
+Britain is being outdistanced. The competition does not come from the
+glut caused by miscalculation as to the home demand. Our own
+steel-makers know better and are alarmed. The threatened competition in
+markets hitherto our own comes from efficiency in production such as
+never before has been seen." Even the British naval supremacy is in
+danger, continues the same paper, "for, if we lose our engineering
+supremacy, our naval supremacy will follow, unless held on sufferance by
+our successful rivals."
+
+And the Edinburgh Evening News says, with editorial gloom: "The iron and
+steel trades have gone from us. When the fictitious prosperity caused by
+the expenditure of our own Government and that of European nations on
+armaments ceases, half of the men employed in these industries will be
+turned into the streets. The outlook is appalling. What suffering will
+have to be endured before the workers realize that there is nothing left
+for them but emigration!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That there must be a limit to the accumulation of capital is obvious.
+The downward course of the rate of interest, notwithstanding that many
+new employments have been made possible for capital, indicates how large
+is the increase of surplus value. This decline of the interest rate is
+in accord with Bohm-Bawerk's law of "diminishing returns." That is, when
+capital, like anything else, has become over-plentiful, less lucrative
+use can only be found for the excess. This excess, not being able to
+earn so much as when capital was less plentiful, competes for safe
+investments and forces down the interest rate on all capital. Mr.
+Charles A. Conant has well described the keenness of the scramble for
+safe investments, even at the prevailing low rates of interest. At the
+close of the war with Turkey, the Greek loan, guaranteed by Great
+Britain, France, and Russia, was floated with striking ease. Regardless
+of the small return, the amount offered at Paris, (41,000,000 francs),
+was subscribed for twenty-three times over. Great Britain, France,
+Germany, Holland, and the Scandinavian States, of recent years, have all
+engaged in converting their securities from 5 per cents to 4 per cents,
+from 4.5 per cents to 3.5 per cents, and the 3.5 per cents into 3 per
+cents.
+
+Great Britain, France, Germany, and Austria-Hungary, according to the
+calculation taken in 1895 by the International Statistical Institute,
+hold forty-six billions of capital invested in negotiable securities
+alone. Yet Paris subscribed for her portion of the Greek loan
+twenty-three times over! In short, money is cheap. Andrew Carnegie and
+his brother bourgeois kings give away millions annually, but still the
+tide wells up. These vast accumulations have made possible
+"wild-catting," fraudulent combinations, fake enterprises, Hooleyism; but
+such stealings, great though they be, have little or no effect in
+reducing the volume. The time is past when startling inventions, or
+revolutions in the method of production, can break up the growing
+congestion; yet this saved capital demands an outlet, somewhere, somehow.
+
+When a great nation has equipped itself to produce far more than it can,
+under the present division of the product, consume, it seeks other
+markets for its surplus products. When a second nation finds itself
+similarly circumstanced, competition for these other markets naturally
+follows. With the advent of a third, a fourth, a fifth, and of divers
+other nations, the question of the disposal of surplus products grows
+serious. And with each of these nations possessing, over and beyond its
+active capital, great and growing masses of idle capital, and when the
+very foreign markets for which they are competing are beginning to
+produce similar wares for themselves, the question passes the serious
+stage and becomes critical.
+
+Never has the struggle for foreign markets been sharper than at the
+present. They are the one great outlet for congested accumulations.
+Predatory capital wanders the world over, seeking where it may establish
+itself. This urgent need for foreign markets is forcing upon the
+world-stage an era of great colonial empire. But this does not stand, as
+in the past, for the subjugation of peoples and countries for the sake of
+gaining their products, but for the privilege of selling them products.
+The theory once was, that the colony owed its existence and prosperity to
+the mother country; but today it is the mother country that owes its
+existence and prosperity to the colony. And in the future, when that
+supporting colony becomes wise in the way of producing surplus value and
+sends its goods back to sell to the mother country, what then? Then the
+world will have been exploited, and capitalistic production will have
+attained its maximum development.
+
+Foreign markets and undeveloped countries largely retard that moment.
+The favored portions of the earth's surface are already occupied, though
+the resources of many are yet virgin. That they have not long since been
+wrested from the hands of the barbarous and decadent peoples who possess
+them is due, not to the military prowess of such peoples, but to the
+jealous vigilance of the industrial nations. The powers hold one another
+back. The Turk lives because the way is not yet clear to an amicable
+division of him among the powers. And the United States, supreme though
+she is, opposes the partition of China, and intervenes her huge bulk
+between the hungry nations and the mongrel Spanish republics. Capital
+stands in its own way, welling up and welling up against the inevitable
+moment when it shall burst all bonds and sweep resistlessly across such
+vast stretches as China and South America. And then there will be no
+more worlds to exploit, and capitalism will either fall back, crushed
+under its own weight, or a change of direction will take place which will
+mark a new era in history.
+
+The Far East affords an illuminating spectacle. While the Western
+nations are crowding hungrily in, while the Partition of China is
+commingled with the clamor for the Spheres of Influence and the Open
+Door, other forces are none the less potently at work. Not only are the
+young Western peoples pressing the older ones to the wall, but the East
+itself is beginning to awake. American trade is advancing, and British
+trade is losing ground, while Japan, China, and India are taking a hand
+in the game themselves.
+
+In 1893, 100,000 pieces of American drills were imported into China; in
+1897, 349,000. In 1893, 252,000 pieces of American sheetings were
+imported against 71,000 British; but in 1897, 566,000 pieces of American
+sheetings were imported against only 10,000 British. The cotton goods
+and yarn trade (which forms 40 per cent of the whole trade with China)
+shows a remarkable advance on the part of the United States. During the
+last ten years America has increased her importation of plain goods by
+121 per cent in quantity and 59.5 per cent in value, while that of
+England and India combined has decreased 13.75 per cent in quantity and 8
+per cent in value. Lord Charles Beresford, from whose "Break-up of
+China" these figures are taken, states that English yarn has receded and
+Indian yarn advanced to the front. In 1897, 140,000 piculs of Indian
+yarn were imported, 18,000 of Japanese, 4500 of Shanghai-manufactured,
+and 700 of English.
+
+Japan, who but yesterday emerged from the mediaeval rule of the Shogunate
+and seized in one fell swoop the scientific knowledge and culture of the
+Occident, is already today showing what wisdom she has acquired in the
+production of surplus value, and is preparing herself that she may
+tomorrow play the part to Asia that England did to Europe one hundred
+years ago. That the difference in the world's affairs wrought by those
+one hundred years will prevent her succeeding is manifest; but it is
+equally manifest that they cannot prevent her playing a leading part in
+the industrial drama which has commenced on the Eastern stage. Her
+imports into the port of Newchang in 1891 amounted to but 22,000 taels;
+but in 1897 they had increased to 280,000 taels. In manufactured goods,
+from matches, watches, and clocks to the rolling stock of railways, she
+has already given stiff shocks to her competitors in the Asiatic markets;
+and this while she is virtually yet in the equipment stage of production.
+Erelong she, too, will be furnishing her share to the growing mass of the
+world's capital.
+
+As regards Great Britain, the giant trader who has so long overshadowed
+Asiatic commerce, Lord Charles Beresford says: "But competition is
+telling adversely; the energy of the British merchant is being equalled
+by other nationals. . . The competition of the Chinese and the
+introduction of steam into the country are also combining to produce
+changed conditions in China." But far more ominous is the plaintive note
+he sounds when he says: "New industries must be opened up, and I would
+especially direct the attention of the Chambers of Commerce (British) to
+. . . the fact that the more the native competes with the British
+manufacturer in certain classes of trade, the more machinery he will
+need, and the orders for such machinery will come to this country if our
+machinery manufacturers are enterprising enough."
+
+The Orient is beginning to show what an important factor it will become,
+under Western supervision, in the creation of surplus value. Even before
+the barriers which restrain Western capital are removed, the East will be
+in a fair way toward being exploited. An analysis of Lord Beresford's
+message to the Chambers of Commerce discloses, first, that the East is
+beginning to manufacture for itself; and, second, that there is a promise
+of keen competition in the West for the privilege of selling the required
+machinery. The inexorable query arises: _What is the West to do when it
+has furnished this machinery_? And when not only the East, but all the
+now undeveloped countries, confront, with surplus products in their
+hands, the old industrial nations, capitalistic production will have
+attained its maximum development.
+
+But before that time must intervene a period which bids one pause for
+breath. A new romance, like unto none in all the past, the economic
+romance, will be born. For the dazzling prize of world-empire will the
+nations of the earth go up in harness. Powers will rise and fall, and
+mighty coalitions shape and dissolve in the swift whirl of events.
+Vassal nations and subject territories will be bandied back and forth
+like so many articles of trade. And with the inevitable displacement of
+economic centres, it is fair to presume that populations will shift to
+and fro, as they once did from the South to the North of England on the
+rise of the factory towns, or from the Old World to the New. Colossal
+enterprises will be projected and carried through, and combinations of
+capital and federations of labor be effected on a cyclopean scale.
+Concentration and organization will be perfected in ways hitherto
+undreamed. The nation which would keep its head above the tide must
+accurately adjust supply to demand, and eliminate waste to the last least
+particle. Standards of living will most likely descend for millions of
+people. With the increase of capital, the competition for safe
+investments, and the consequent fall of the interest rate, the principal
+which today earns a comfortable income would not then support a bare
+existence. Saving toward old age would cease among the working classes.
+And as the merchant cities of Italy crashed when trade slipped from their
+hands on the discovery of the new route to the Indies by way of the Cape
+of Good Hope, so will there come times of trembling for such nations as
+have failed to grasp the prize of world-empire. In that given direction
+they will have attained their maximum development, before the whole
+world, in the same direction, has attained its. There will no longer be
+room for them. But if they can survive the shock of being flung out of
+the world's industrial orbit, a change in direction may then be easily
+effected. That the decadent and barbarous peoples will be crushed is a
+fair presumption; likewise that the stronger breeds will survive,
+entering upon the transition stage to which all the world must ultimately
+come.
+
+This change of direction must be either toward industrial oligarchies or
+socialism. Either the functions of private corporations will increase
+till they absorb the central government, or the functions of government
+will increase till it absorbs the corporations. Much may be said on the
+chance of the oligarchy. Should an old manufacturing nation lose its
+foreign trade, it is safe to predict that a strong effort would be made
+to build a socialistic government, but it does not follow that this
+effort would be successful. With the moneyed class controlling the State
+and its revenues and all the means of subsistence, and guarding its own
+interests with jealous care, it is not at all impossible that a strong
+curb could be put upon the masses till the crisis were past. It has been
+done before. There is no reason why it should not be done again. At the
+close of the last century, such a movement was crushed by its own folly
+and immaturity. In 1871 the soldiers of the economic rulers stamped out,
+root and branch, a whole generation of militant socialists.
+
+Once the crisis were past, the ruling class, still holding the curb in
+order to make itself more secure, would proceed to readjust things and to
+balance consumption with production. Having a monopoly of the safe
+investments, the great masses of unremunerative capital would be
+directed, not to the production of more surplus value, but to the making
+of permanent improvements, which would give employment to the people, and
+make them content with the new order of things. Highways, parks, public
+buildings, monuments, could be builded; nor would it be out of place to
+give better factories and homes to the workers. Such in itself would be
+socialistic, save that it would be done by the oligarchs, a class apart.
+With the interest rate down to zero, and no field for the investment of
+sporadic capital, savings among the people would utterly cease, and
+old-age pensions be granted as a matter of course. It is also a logical
+necessity of such a system that, when the population began to press
+against the means of subsistence, (expansion being impossible), the birth
+rate of the lower classes would be lessened. Whether by their own
+initiative, or by the interference of the rulers, it would have to be
+done, and it would be done. In other words, the oligarchy would mean the
+capitalization of labor and the enslavement of the whole population. But
+it would be a fairer, juster form of slavery than any the world has yet
+seen. The per capita wage and consumption would be increased, and, with
+a stringent control of the birth rate, there is no reason why such a
+country should not be so ruled through many generations.
+
+On the other hand, as the capitalistic exploitation of the planet
+approaches its maximum, and countries are crowded out of the field of
+foreign exchanges, there is a large likelihood that their change in
+direction will be toward socialism. Were the theory of collective
+ownership and operation then to arise for the first time, such a movement
+would stand small chance of success. But such is not the case. The
+doctrine of socialism has flourished and grown throughout the nineteenth
+century; its tenets have been preached wherever the interests of labor
+and capital have clashed; and it has received exemplification time and
+again by the State's assumption of functions which had always belonged
+solely to the individual.
+
+When capitalistic production has attained its maximum development, it
+must confront a dividing of the ways; and the strength of capital on the
+one hand, and the education and wisdom of the workers on the other, will
+determine which path society is to travel. It is possible, considering
+the inertia of the masses, that the whole world might in time come to be
+dominated by a group of industrial oligarchies, or by one great
+oligarchy, but it is not probable. That sporadic oligarchies may
+flourish for definite periods of time is highly possible; that they may
+continue to do so is as highly improbable. The procession of the ages
+has marked not only the rise of man, but the rise of the common man.
+From the chattel slave, or the serf chained to the soil, to the highest
+seats in modern society, he has risen, rung by rung, amid the crumbling
+of the divine right of kings and the crash of falling sceptres. That he
+has done this, only in the end to pass into the perpetual slavery of the
+industrial oligarch, is something at which his whole past cries in
+protest. The common man is worthy of a better future, or else he is not
+worthy of his past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NOTE.--The above article was written as long ago as 1898. The only
+alteration has been the bringing up to 1900 of a few of its statistics.
+As a commercial venture of an author, it has an interesting history. It
+was promptly accepted by one of the leading magazines and paid for. The
+editor confessed that it was "one of those articles one could not
+possibly let go of after it was once in his possession." Publication was
+voluntarily promised to be immediate. Then the editor became afraid of
+its too radical nature, forfeited the sum paid for it, and did not
+publish it. Nor, offered far and wide, could any other editor of
+bourgeois periodicals be found who was rash enough to publish it. Thus,
+for the first time, after seven years, it appears in print.
+
+
+
+
+A REVIEW
+
+
+Two remarkable books are Ghent's "Our Benevolent Feudalism" {7} and
+Brooks's "The Social Unrest." {8} In these two books the opposite sides
+of the labor problem are expounded, each writer devoting himself with
+apprehension to the side he fears and views with disfavor. It would
+appear that they have set themselves the task of collating, as a warning,
+the phenomena of two counter social forces. Mr. Ghent, who is
+sympathetic with the socialist movement, follows with cynic fear every
+aggressive act of the capitalist class. Mr. Brooks, who yearns for the
+perpetuation of the capitalist system as long as possible, follows with
+grave dismay each aggressive act of the labor and socialist
+organizations. Mr. Ghent traces the emasculation of labor by capital,
+and Mr. Brooks traces the emasculation of independent competing capital
+by labor. In short, each marshals the facts of a side in the two sides
+which go to make a struggle so great that even the French Revolution is
+insignificant beside it; for this later struggle, for the first time in
+the history of struggles, is not confined to any particular portion of
+the globe, but involves the whole of it.
+
+Starting on the assumption that society is at present in a state of flux,
+Mr. Ghent sees it rapidly crystallizing into a status which can best be
+described as something in the nature of a benevolent feudalism. He
+laughs to scorn any immediate realization of the Marxian dream, while
+Tolstoyan utopias and Kropotkinian communistic unions of shop and farm
+are too wild to merit consideration. The coming status which Mr. Ghent
+depicts is a class domination by the capitalists. Labor will take its
+definite place as a dependent class, living in a condition of machine
+servitude fairly analogous to the land servitude of the Middle Ages.
+That is to say, labor will be bound to the machine, though less harshly,
+in fashion somewhat similar to that in which the earlier serf was bound
+to the soil. As he says, "Bondage to the land was the basis of
+villeinage in the old regime; bondage to the job will be the basis of
+villeinage in the new."
+
+At the top of the new society will tower the magnate, the new feudal
+baron; at the bottom will be found the wastrels and the inefficients.
+The new society he grades as follows:
+
+ "I. The barons, graded on the basis of possessions.
+
+ "II. The court agents and retainers. (This class will include the
+ editors of 'respectable' and 'safe' newspapers, the pastors of
+ 'conservative' and 'wealthy' churches, the professors and teachers in
+ endowed colleges and schools, lawyers generally, and most judges and
+ politicians).
+
+ "III. The workers in pure and applied science, artists, and
+ physicians.
+
+ "IV. The entrepreneurs, the managers of the great industries,
+ transformed into a salaried class.
+
+ "V. The foremen and superintendents. This class has heretofore been
+ recruited largely from the skilled workers, but with the growth of
+ technical education in schools and colleges, and the development of
+ fixed caste, it is likely to become entirely differentiated.
+
+ "VI. The villeins of the cities and towns, more or less regularly
+ employed, who do skilled work and are partially protected by
+ organization.
+
+ "VII. The villeins of the cities and towns who do unskilled work and
+ are unprotected by organization. They will comprise the laborers,
+ domestics, and clerks.
+
+ "VIII. The villeins of the manorial estates, of the great farms, the
+ mines, and the forests.
+
+ "IX. The small-unit farmers (land-owning), the petty tradesmen, and
+ manufacturers.
+
+ "X. The subtenants of the manorial estates and great farms
+ (corresponding to the class of 'free tenants' in the old Feudalism).
+
+ "XI. The cotters.
+
+ "XII. The tramps, the occasionally employed, the unemployed--the
+ wastrels of the city and country."
+
+ "The new Feudalism, like most autocracies, will foster not only the
+ arts, but also certain kinds of learning--particularly the kinds
+ which are unlikely to disturb the minds of the multitude. A future
+ Marsh, or Cope, or Le Comte will be liberally patronized and left
+ free to discover what he will; and so, too, an Edison or a Marconi.
+ Only they must not meddle with anything relating to social science."
+
+It must be confessed that Mr. Ghent's arguments are cunningly contrived
+and arrayed. They must be read to be appreciated. As an example of his
+style, which at the same time generalizes a portion of his argument, the
+following may well be given:
+
+ "The new Feudalism will be but an orderly outgrowth of present
+ tendencies and conditions. All societies evolve naturally out of
+ their predecessors. In sociology, as in biology, there is no cell
+ without a parent cell. The society of each generation develops a
+ multitude of spontaneous and acquired variations, and out of these,
+ by a blending process of natural and conscious selection, the
+ succeeding society is evolved. The new order will differ in no
+ important respects from the present, except in the completer
+ development of its more salient features. The visitor from another
+ planet who had known the old and should see the new would note but
+ few changes. Alter et Idem--another yet the same--he would say.
+ From magnate to baron, from workman to villein, from publicist to
+ court agent and retainer, will be changes of state and function so
+ slight as to elude all but the keenest eyes."
+
+And in conclusion, to show how benevolent and beautiful this new
+feudalism of ours will be, Mr. Ghent says: "Peace and stability it will
+maintain at all hazards; and the mass, remembering the chaos, the
+turmoil, the insecurity of the past, will bless its reign. . . .
+Efficiency--the faculty of getting things--is at last rewarded as it
+should be, for the efficient have inherited the earth and its fulness.
+The lowly, whose happiness is greater and whose welfare is more
+thoroughly conserved when governed than when governing, as a
+twentieth-century philosopher said of them, are settled and happy in the
+state which reason and experience teach is their God-appointed lot. They
+are comfortable too; and if the patriarchal ideal of a vine and fig tree
+for each is not yet attained, at least each has his rented patch in the
+country or his rented cell in a city building. Bread and the circus are
+freely given to the deserving, and as for the undeserving, they are
+merely reaping the rewards of their contumacy and pride. Order reigns,
+each has his justly appointed share, and the state rests, in security,
+'lapt in universal law.'"
+
+Mr. Brooks, on the other hand, sees rising and dissolving and rising
+again in the social flux the ominous forms of a new society which is the
+direct antithesis of a benevolent feudalism. He trembles at the rash
+intrepidity of the capitalists who fight the labor unions, for by such
+rashness he greatly fears that labor will be driven to express its aims
+and strength in political terms, which terms will inevitably be
+socialistic terms.
+
+To keep down the rising tide of socialism, he preaches greater meekness
+and benevolence to the capitalists. No longer may they claim the right
+to run their own business, to beat down the laborer's standard of living
+for the sake of increased profits, to dictate terms of employment to
+individual workers, to wax righteously indignant when organized labor
+takes a hand in their business. No longer may the capitalist say "my"
+business, or even think "my" business; he must say "our" business, and
+think "our" business as well, accepting labor as a partner whose voice
+must be heard. And if the capitalists do not become more meek and
+benevolent in their dealings with labor, labor will be antagonized and
+will proceed to wreak terrible political vengeance, and the present
+social flux will harden into a status of socialism.
+
+Mr. Brooks dreams of a society at which Mr. Ghent sneers as "a slightly
+modified individualism, wherein each unit secures the just reward of his
+capacity and service." To attain this happy state, Mr. Brooks imposes
+circumspection upon the capitalists in their relations with labor. "If
+the socialistic spirit is to be held in abeyance in this country,
+businesses of this character (anthracite coal mining) must be handled
+with extraordinary caution." Which is to say, that to withstand the
+advance of socialism, a great and greater measure of Mr. Ghent's
+_benevolence_ will be required.
+
+Again and again, Mr. Brooks reiterates the danger he sees in harshly
+treating labor. "It is not probable that employers can destroy unionism
+in the United States. Adroit and desperate attempts will, however, be
+made, if we mean by unionism the undisciplined and aggressive fact of
+vigorous and determined organizations. If capital should prove too
+strong in this struggle, the result is easy to predict. The employers
+have only to convince organized labor that it cannot hold its own against
+the capitalist manager, and the whole energy that now goes to the union
+will turn to an aggressive political socialism. It will not be the
+harmless sympathy with increased city and state functions which trade
+unions already feel; it will become a turbulent political force bent upon
+using every weapon of taxation against the rich."
+
+"The most concrete impulse that now favors socialism in this country is
+the insane purpose to deprive labor organizations of the full and
+complete rights that go with federated unionism."
+
+"That which teaches a union that it cannot succeed as a union turns it
+toward socialism. In long strikes in towns like Marlboro and Brookfield
+strong unions are defeated. Hundreds of men leave these towns for
+shoe-centres like Brockton, where they are now voting the socialist
+ticket. The socialist mayor of this city tells me, 'The men who come to
+us now from towns where they have been thoroughly whipped in a strike are
+among our most active working socialists.' The bitterness engendered by
+this sense of defeat is turned to politics, as it will throughout the
+whole country, if organization of labor is deprived of its rights."
+
+"This enmity of capital to the trade union is watched with glee by every
+intelligent socialist in our midst. Every union that is beaten or
+discouraged in its struggle is ripening fruit for socialism."
+
+"The real peril which we now face is the threat of a class conflict. If
+capitalism insists upon the policy of outraging the saving aspiration of
+the American workman to raise his standard of comfort and leisure, every
+element of class conflict will strengthen among us."
+
+"We have only to humiliate what is best in the trade union, and then
+every worst feature of socialism is fastened upon us."
+
+This strong tendency in the ranks of the workers toward socialism is what
+Mr. Brooks characterizes the "social unrest"; and he hopes to see the
+Republican, the Cleveland Democrat, and the conservative and large
+property interests "band together against this common foe," which is
+socialism. And he is not above feeling grave and well-contained
+satisfaction wherever the socialist doctrinaire has been contradicted by
+men attempting to practise cooperation in the midst of the competitive
+system, as in Belgium.
+
+Nevertheless, he catches fleeting glimpses of an extreme and tyrannically
+benevolent feudalism very like to Mr. Ghent's, as witness the following:
+
+"I asked one of the largest employers of labor in the South if he feared
+the coming of the trade union. 'No,' he said, 'it is one good result of
+race prejudice, that the negro will enable us in the long run to weaken
+the trade union so that it cannot harm us. We can keep wages down with
+the negro and we can prevent too much organization.'
+
+"It is in this spirit that the lower standards are to be used. If this
+purpose should succeed, it has but one issue,--the immense strengthening
+of a plutocratic administration at the top, served by an army of
+high-salaried helpers, with an elite of skilled and well-paid workmen,
+but all resting on what would essentially be a serf class of low-paid
+labor and this mass kept in order by an increased use of military force."
+
+In brief summary of these two notable books, it may be said that Mr.
+Ghent is alarmed, (though he does not flatly say so), at the too great
+social restfulness in the community, which is permitting the capitalists
+to form the new society to their liking; and that Mr. Brooks is alarmed,
+(and he flatly says so), at the social unrest which threatens the
+modified individualism into which he would like to see society evolve.
+Mr. Ghent beholds the capitalist class rising to dominate the state and
+the working class; Mr. Brooks beholds the working class rising to
+dominate the state and the capitalist class. One fears the paternalism
+of a class; the other, the tyranny of the mass.
+
+
+
+
+WANTED: A NEW LAW OF DEVELOPMENT
+
+
+Evolution is no longer a mere tentative hypothesis. One by one, step by
+step, each division and subdivision of science has contributed its
+evidence, until now the case is complete and the verdict rendered. While
+there is still discussion as to the method of evolution, none the less,
+as a process sufficient to explain all biological phenomena, all
+differentiations of life into widely diverse species, families, and even
+kingdoms, evolution is flatly accepted. Likewise has been accepted its
+law of development: _That_, _in the struggle for existence_, _the strong
+and fit and the progeny of the strong and fit have a better opportunity
+for survival than the weak and less fit and the progeny of the weak and
+less fit_.
+
+It is in the struggle of the species with other species and against all
+other hostile forces in the environment, that this law operates; also in
+the struggle between the individuals of the same species. In this
+struggle, which is for food and shelter, the weak individuals must
+obviously win less food and shelter than the strong. Because of this,
+their hold on life relaxes and they are eliminated. And for the same
+reason that they may not win for themselves adequate food and shelter,
+the weak cannot give to their progeny the chance for survival that the
+strong give. And thus, since the weak are prone to beget weakness, the
+species is constantly purged of its inefficient members.
+
+Because of this, a premium is placed upon strength, and so long as the
+struggle for food and shelter obtains, just so long will the average
+strength of each generation increase. On the other hand, should
+conditions so change that all, and the progeny of all, the weak as well
+as the strong, have an equal chance for survival, then, at once, the
+average strength of each generation will begin to diminish. Never yet,
+however, in animal life, has there been such a state of affairs. Natural
+selection has always obtained. The strong and their progeny, at the
+expense of the weak, have always survived. This law of development has
+operated down all the past upon all life; it so operates today, and it is
+not rash to say that it will continue to operate in the future--at least
+upon all life existing in a state of nature.
+
+Man, preeminent though he is in the animal kingdom, capable of reacting
+upon and making suitable an unsuitable environment, nevertheless remains
+the creature of this same law of development. The social selection to
+which he is subject is merely another form of natural selection. True,
+within certain narrow limits he modifies the struggle for existence and
+renders less precarious the tenure of life for the weak. The extremely
+weak, diseased, and inefficient are housed in hospitals and asylums. The
+strength of the viciously strong, when inimical to society, is tempered
+by penal institutions and by the gallows. The short-sighted are provided
+with spectacles, and the sickly (when they can pay for it) with
+sanitariums. Pestilential marshes are drained, plagues are checked, and
+disasters averted. Yet, for all that, the strong and the progeny of the
+strong survive, and the weak are crushed out. The men strong of brain
+are masters as of yore. They dominate society and gather to themselves
+the wealth of society. With this wealth they maintain themselves and
+equip their progeny for the struggle. They build their homes in
+healthful places, purchase the best fruits, meats, and vegetables the
+market affords, and buy themselves the ministrations of the most
+brilliant and learned of the professional classes. The weak man, as of
+yore, is the servant, the doer of things at the master's call. The
+weaker and less efficient he is, the poorer is his reward. The weakest
+work for a living wage, (when they can get work), live in unsanitary
+slums, on vile and insufficient food, at the lowest depths of human
+degradation. Their grasp on life is indeed precarious, their mortality
+excessive, their infant death-rate appalling.
+
+That some should be born to preferment and others to ignominy in order
+that the race may progress, is cruel and sad; but none the less they are
+so born. The weeding out of human souls, some for fatness and smiles,
+some for leanness and tears, is surely a heartless selective process--as
+heartless as it is natural. And the human family, for all its wonderful
+record of adventure and achievement, has not yet succeeded in avoiding
+this process. That it is incapable of doing this is not to be hazarded.
+Not only is it capable, but the whole trend of society is in that
+direction. All the social forces are driving man on to a time when the
+old selective law will be annulled. There is no escaping it, save by the
+intervention of catastrophes and cataclysms quite unthinkable. It is
+inexorable. It is inexorable because the common man demands it. The
+twentieth century, the common man says, is his day; the common man's day,
+or, rather, the dawning of the common man's day.
+
+Nor can it be denied. The evidence is with him. The previous centuries,
+and more notably the nineteenth, have marked the rise of the common man.
+From chattel slavery to serfdom, and from serfdom to what he bitterly
+terms "wage slavery," he has risen. Never was he so strong as he is
+today, and never so menacing. He does the work of the world, and he is
+beginning to know it. The world cannot get along without him, and this
+also he is beginning to know. All the human knowledge of the past, all
+the scientific discovery, governmental experiment, and invention of
+machinery, have tended to his advancement. His standard of living is
+higher. His common school education would shame princes ten centuries
+past. His civil and religious liberty makes him a free man, and his
+ballot the peer of his betters. And all this has tended to make him
+conscious, conscious of himself, conscious of his class. He looks about
+him and questions that ancient law of development. It is cruel and
+wrong, he is beginning to declare. It is an anachronism. Let it be
+abolished. Why should there be one empty belly in all the world, when
+the work of ten men can feed a hundred? What if my brother be not so
+strong as I? He has not sinned. Wherefore should he hunger--he and his
+sinless little ones? Away with the old law. There is food and shelter
+for all, therefore let all receive food and shelter.
+
+As fast as labor has become conscious it has organized. The ambition of
+these class-conscious men is that the movement shall become general, that
+all labor shall become conscious of itself and its class interests. And
+the day that witnesses the solidarity of labor, they triumphantly affirm,
+will be a day when labor dominates the world. This growing consciousness
+has led to the organization of two movements, both separate and distinct,
+but both converging toward a common goal--one, the labor movement, known
+as Trade Unionism; the other, the political movement, known as Socialism.
+Both are grim and silent forces, unheralded and virtually unknown to the
+general public save in moments of stress. The sleeping labor giant
+receives little notice from the capitalistic press, and when he stirs
+uneasily, a column of surprise, indignation, and horror suffices.
+
+It is only now and then, after long periods of silence, that the labor
+movement puts in its claim for notice. All is quiet. The kind old world
+spins on, and the bourgeois masters clip their coupons in smug
+complacency. But the grim and silent forces are at work.
+
+Suddenly, like a clap of thunder from a clear sky, comes a disruption of
+industry. From ocean to ocean the wheels of a great chain of railroads
+cease to run. A quarter of a million miners throw down pick and shovel
+and outrage the sun with their pale, bleached faces. The street railways
+of a swarming metropolis stand idle, or the rumble of machinery in vast
+manufactories dies away to silence. There is alarm and panic. Arson and
+homicide stalk forth. There is a cry in the night, and quick anger and
+sudden death. Peaceful cities are affrighted by the crack of rifles and
+the snarl of machine-guns, and the hearts of the shuddering are shaken by
+the roar of dynamite. There is hurrying and skurrying. The wires are
+kept hot between the centre of government and the seat of trouble. The
+chiefs of state ponder gravely and advise, and governors of states
+implore. There is assembling of militia and massing of troops, and the
+streets resound to the tramp of armed men. There are separate and joint
+conferences between the captains of industry and the captains of labor.
+And then, finally, all is quiet again, and the memory of it is like the
+memory of a bad dream.
+
+But these strikes become olympiads, things to date from; and common on
+the lips of men become such phrases as "The Great Dock Strike," "The
+Great Coal Strike," "The Great Railroad Strike." Never before did labor
+do these things. After the Great Plague in England, labor, finding
+itself in demand and innocently obeying the economic law, asked higher
+wages. But the masters set a maximum wage, restrained workingmen from
+moving about from place to place, refused to tolerate idlers, and by most
+barbarous legal methods punished those who disobeyed. But labor is
+accorded greater respect today. Such a policy, put into effect in this
+the first decade of the twentieth century, would sweep the masters from
+their seats in one mighty crash. And the masters know it and are
+respectful.
+
+A fair instance of the growing solidarity of labor is afforded by an
+unimportant recent strike in San Francisco. The restaurant cooks and
+waiters were completely unorganized, working at any and all hours for
+whatever wages they could get. A representative of the American
+Federation of Labor went among them and organized them. Within a few
+weeks nearly two thousand men were enrolled, and they had five thousand
+dollars on deposit. Then they put in their demand for increased wages
+and shorter hours. Forthwith their employers organized. The demand was
+denied, and the Cooks' and Waiters' Union walked out.
+
+All organized employers stood back of the restaurant owners, in sympathy
+with them and willing to aid them if they dared. And at the back of the
+Cooks' and Waiters' Union stood the organized labor of the city, 40,000
+strong. If a business man was caught patronizing an "unfair" restaurant,
+he was boycotted; if a union man was caught, he was fined heavily by his
+union or expelled. The oyster companies and the slaughter houses made an
+attempt to refuse to sell oysters and meat to union restaurants. The
+Butchers and Meat Cutters, and the Teamsters, in retaliation, refused to
+work for or to deliver to non-union restaurants. Upon this the oyster
+companies and slaughter houses acknowledged themselves beaten and peace
+reigned. But the Restaurant Bakers in non-union places were ordered out,
+and the Bakery Wagon Drivers declined to deliver to unfair houses.
+
+Every American Federation of Labor union in the city was prepared to
+strike, and waited only the word. And behind all, a handful of men,
+known as the Labor Council, directed the fight. One by one, blow upon
+blow, they were able if they deemed it necessary to call out the
+unions--the Laundry Workers, who do the washing; the Hackmen, who haul
+men to and from restaurants; the Butchers, Meat Cutters, and Teamsters;
+and the Milkers, Milk Drivers, and Chicken Pickers; and after that, in
+pure sympathy, the Retail Clerks, the Horse Shoers, the Gas and
+Electrical Fixture Hangers, the Metal Roofers, the Blacksmiths, the
+Blacksmiths' Helpers, the Stablemen, the Machinists, the Brewers, the
+Coast Seamen, the Varnishers and Polishers, the Confectioners, the
+Upholsterers, the Paper Hangers and Fresco Painters, the Drug Clerks, the
+Fitters and Helpers, the Metal Workers, the Boiler Makers and Iron Ship
+Builders, the Assistant Undertakers, the Carriage and Wagon Workers, and
+so on down the lengthy list of organizations.
+
+For, over all these trades, over all these thousands of men, is the Labor
+Council. When it speaks its voice is heard, and when it orders it is
+obeyed. But it, in turn, is dominated by the National Labor Council,
+with which it is constantly in touch. In this wholly unimportant little
+local strike it is of interest to note the stands taken by the different
+sides. The legal representative and official mouthpiece of the
+Employers' Association said: "This organization is formed for defensive
+purposes, and it may be driven to take offensive steps, and if so, will
+be strong enough to follow them up. Labor cannot be allowed to dictate
+to capital and say how business shall be conducted. There is no
+objection to the formation of unions and trades councils, but membership
+must not be compulsory. It is repugnant to the American idea of liberty
+and cannot be tolerated."
+
+On the other hand, the president of the Team Drivers' Union said: "The
+employers of labor in this city are generally against the trade-union
+movement and there seems to be a concerted effort on their part to check
+the progress of organized labor. Such action as has been taken by them
+in sympathy with the present labor troubles may, if continued, lead to a
+serious conflict, the outcome of which might be most calamitous for the
+business and industrial interests of San Francisco."
+
+And the secretary of the United Brewery Workmen: "I regard a sympathetic
+strike as the last weapon which organized labor should use in its
+defence. When, however, associations of employers band together to
+defeat organized labor, or one of its branches, then we should not and
+will not hesitate ourselves to employ the same instrument in
+retaliation."
+
+Thus, in a little corner of the world, is exemplified the growing
+solidarity of labor. The organization of labor has not only kept pace
+with the organization of industry, but it has gained upon it. In one
+winter, in the anthracite coal region, $160,000,000 in mines and
+$600,000,000 in transportation and distribution consolidated its
+ownership and control. And at once, arrayed as solidly on the other
+side, were the 150,000 anthracite miners. The bituminous mines, however,
+were not consolidated; yet the 250,000 men employed therein were already
+combined. And not only that, but they were also combined with the
+anthracite miners, these 400,000 men being under the control and
+direction of one supreme labor council. And in this and the other great
+councils are to be found captains of labor of splendid abilities, who, in
+understanding of economic and industrial conditions, are undeniably the
+equals of their opponents, the captains of industry.
+
+The United States is honeycombed with labor organizations. And the big
+federations which these go to compose aggregate millions of members, and
+in their various branches handle millions of dollars yearly. And not
+only this; for the international brotherhoods and unions are forming, and
+moneys for the aid of strikers pass back and forth across the seas. The
+Machinists, in their demand for a nine-hour day, affected 500,000 men in
+the United States, Mexico, and Canada. In England the membership of
+working-class organizations is approximated by Keir Hardie at 2,500,000,
+with reserve funds of $18,000,000. There the cooperative movement has a
+membership of 1,500,000, and every year turns over in distribution more
+than $100,000,000. In France, one-eighth of the whole working class is
+unionized. In Belgium the unions are very rich and powerful, and so able
+to defy the masters that many of the smaller manufacturers, unable to
+resist, "are removing their works to other countries where the workmen's
+organizations are not so potential." And in all other countries,
+according to the stage of their economic and political development, like
+figures obtain. And Europe, today, confesses that her greatest social
+problem is the labor problem, and that it is the one most closely
+engrossing the attention of her statesmen.
+
+The organization of labor is one of the chief acknowledged factors in the
+retrogression of British trade. The workers have become class conscious
+as never before. The wrong of one is the wrong of all. They have come
+to realize, in a short-sighted way, that their masters' interests are not
+their interests. The harder they work, they believe, the more wealth
+they create for their masters. Further, the more work they do in one
+day, the fewer men will be needed to do the work. So the unions place a
+day's stint upon their members, beyond which they are not permitted to
+go. In "A Study of Trade Unionism," by Benjamin Taylor in the
+"Nineteenth Century" of April, 1898, are furnished some interesting
+corroborations. The facts here set forth were collected by the Executive
+Board of the Employers' Federation, the documentary proofs of which are
+in the hands of the secretaries. In a certain firm the union workmen
+made eight ammunition boxes a day. Nor could they be persuaded into
+making more. A young Swiss, who could not speak English, was set to
+work, and in the first day he made fifty boxes. In the same firm the
+skilled union hands filed up the outside handles of one machine-gun a
+day. That was their stint. No one was known ever to do more. A
+non-union filer came into the shop and did twelve a day. A Manchester
+firm found that to plane a large bed-casting took union workmen one
+hundred and ninety hours, and non-union workmen one hundred and
+thirty-five hours. In another instance a man, resigning from his union,
+day by day did double the amount of work he had done formerly. And to
+cap it all, an English gentleman, going out to look at a wall being put
+up for him by union bricklayers, found one of their number with his right
+arm strapped to his body, doing all the work with his left arm--forsooth,
+because he was such an energetic fellow that otherwise he would
+involuntarily lay more bricks than his union permitted.
+
+All England resounds to the cry, "Wake up, England!" But the sulky giant
+is not stirred. "Let England's trade go to pot," he says; "what have I
+to lose?" And England is powerless. The capacity of her workmen is
+represented by 1, in comparison with the 2.25 capacity of the American
+workman. And because of the solidarity of labor and the destructiveness
+of strikes, British capitalists dare not even strive to emulate the
+enterprise of American capitalists. So England watches trade slipping
+through her fingers and wails unavailingly. As a correspondent writes:
+"The enormous power of the trade unions hangs, a sullen cloud, over the
+whole industrial world here, affecting men and masters alike."
+
+The political movement known as Socialism is, perhaps, even less realized
+by the general public. The great strides it has taken and the portentous
+front it today exhibits are not comprehended; and, fastened though it is
+in every land, it is given little space by the capitalistic press. For
+all its plea and passion and warmth, it wells upward like a great, cold
+tidal wave, irresistible, inexorable, ingulfing present-day society level
+by level. By its own preachment it is inexorable. Just as societies
+have sprung into existence, fulfilled their function, and passed away, it
+claims, just as surely is present society hastening on to its
+dissolution. This is a transition period--and destined to be a very
+short one. Barely a century old, capitalism is ripening so rapidly that
+it can never live to see a second birthday. There is no hope for it, the
+Socialists say. It is doomed.
+
+The cardinal tenet of Socialism is that forbidding doctrine, the
+materialistic conception of history. Men are not the masters of their
+souls. They are the puppets of great, blind forces. The lives they live
+and the deaths they die are compulsory. All social codes are but the
+reflexes of existing economic conditions, plus certain survivals of past
+economic conditions. The institutions men build they are compelled to
+build. Economic laws determine at any given time what these institutions
+shall be, how long they shall operate, and by what they shall be
+replaced. And so, through the economic process, the Socialist preaches
+the ripening of the capitalistic society and the coming of the new
+cooperative society.
+
+The second great tenet of Socialism, itself a phase of the materialistic
+conception of history, is the class struggle. In the social struggle for
+existence, men are forced into classes. "The history of all society thus
+far is the history of class strife." In existing society the capitalist
+class exploits the working class, the proletariat. The interests of the
+exploiter are not the interests of the exploited. "Profits are
+legitimate," says the one. "Profits are unpaid wages," replies the
+other, when he has become conscious of his class, "therefore profits are
+robbery." The capitalist enforces his profits because he is the legal
+owner of all the means of production. He is the legal owner because he
+controls the political machinery of society. The Socialist sets to work
+to capture the political machinery, so that he may make illegal the
+capitalist's ownership of the means of production, and make legal his own
+ownership of the means of production. And it is this struggle, between
+these two classes, upon which the world has at last entered.
+
+Scientific Socialism is very young. Only yesterday it was in swaddling
+clothes. But today it is a vigorous young giant, well braced to battle
+for what it wants, and knowing precisely what it wants. It holds its
+international conventions, where world-policies are formulated by the
+representatives of millions of Socialists. In little Belgium there are
+three-quarters of a million of men who work for the cause; in Germany,
+3,000,000; Austria, between 1895 and 1897, raised her socialist vote from
+90,000 to 750,000. France in 1871 had a whole generation of Socialists
+wiped out; yet in 1885 there were 30,000, and in 1898, 1,000,000.
+
+Ere the last Spaniard had evacuated Cuba, Socialist groups were forming.
+And from far Japan, in these first days of the twentieth century, writes
+one Tomoyoshi Murai: "The interest of our people on Socialism has been
+greatly awakened these days, especially among our laboring people on one
+hand and young students' circle on the other, as much as we can draw an
+earnest and enthusiastic audience and fill our hall, which holds two
+thousand. . . . It is gratifying to say that we have a number of fine and
+well-trained public orators among our leaders of Socialism in Japan. The
+first speaker tonight is Mr. Kiyoshi Kawakami, editor of one of our city
+(Tokyo) dailies, a strong, independent, and decidedly socialistic paper,
+circulated far and wide. Mr. Kawakami is a scholar as well as a popular
+writer. He is going to speak tonight on the subject, 'The Essence of
+Socialism--the Fundamental Principles.' The next speaker is Professor
+Iso Abe, president of our association, whose subject of address is,
+'Socialism and the Existing Social System.' The third speaker is Mr.
+Naoe Kinosita, the editor of another strong journal of the city. He
+speaks on the subject, 'How to Realize the Socialist Ideals and Plans.'
+Next is Mr. Shigeyoshi Sugiyama, a graduate of Hartford Theological
+Seminary and an advocate of Social Christianity, who is to speak on
+'Socialism and Municipal Problems.' And the last speaker is the editor
+of the 'Labor World,' the foremost leader of the labor-union movement in
+our country, Mr. Sen Katayama, who speaks on the subject, 'The Outlook of
+Socialism in Europe and America.' These addresses are going to be
+published in book form and to be distributed among our people to
+enlighten their minds on the subject."
+
+And in the struggle for the political machinery of society, Socialism is
+no longer confined to mere propaganda. Italy, Austria, Belgium, England,
+have Socialist members in their national bodies. Out of the one hundred
+and thirty-two members of the London County Council, ninety-one are
+denounced by the conservative element as Socialists. The Emperor of
+Germany grows anxious and angry at the increasing numbers which are
+returned to the Reichstag. In France, many of the large cities, such as
+Marseilles, are in the hands of the Socialists. A large body of them is
+in the Chamber of Deputies, and Millerand, Socialist, sits in the
+cabinet. Of him M. Leroy-Beaulieu says with horror: "M. Millerand is the
+open enemy of private property, private capital, the resolute advocate of
+the socialization of production . . . a constant incitement to violence . . .
+a collectivist, avowed and militant, taking part in the government,
+dominating the departments of commerce and industry, preparing all the
+laws and presiding at the passage of all measures which should be
+submitted to merchants and tradesmen."
+
+In the United States there are already Socialist mayors of towns and
+members of State legislatures, a vast literature, and single Socialist
+papers with subscription lists running up into the hundreds of thousands.
+In 1896, 36,000 votes were cast for the Socialist candidate for
+President; in 1900, nearly 200,000; in 1904, 450,000. And the United
+States, young as it is, is ripening rapidly, and the Socialists claim,
+according to the materialistic conception of history, that the United
+States will be the first country in the world wherein the toilers will
+capture the political machinery and expropriate the bourgeoisie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the Socialist and labor movements have recently entered upon a new
+phase. There has been a remarkable change in attitude on both sides.
+For a long time the labor unions refrained from going in for political
+action. On the other hand, the Socialists claimed that without political
+action labor was powerless. And because of this there was much ill
+feeling between them, even open hostilities, and no concerted action.
+But now the Socialists grant that the labor movement has held up wages
+and decreased the hours of labor, and the labor unions find that
+political action is necessary. Today both parties have drawn closely
+together in the common fight. In the United States this friendly feeling
+grows. The Socialist papers espouse the cause of labor, and the unions
+have opened their ears once more to the wiles of the Socialists. They
+are all leavened with Socialist workmen, "boring from within," and many
+of their leaders have already succumbed. In England, where class
+consciousness is more developed, the name "Unionism" has been replaced by
+"The New Unionism," the main object of which is "to capture existing
+social structures in the interests of the wage-earners." There the
+Socialist, the trade-union, and other working-class organizations are
+beginning to cooperate in securing the return of representatives to the
+House of Commons. And in France, where the city councils and mayors of
+Marseilles and Monteaules-Mines are Socialistic, thousands of francs of
+municipal money were voted for the aid of the unions in the recent great
+strikes.
+
+For centuries the world has been preparing for the coming of the common
+man. And the period of preparation virtually past, labor, conscious of
+itself and its desires, has begun a definite movement toward solidarity.
+It believes the time is not far distant when the historian will speak not
+only of the dark ages of feudalism, but of the dark ages of capitalism.
+And labor sincerely believes itself justified in this by the terrible
+indictment it brings against capitalistic society. In the face of its
+enormous wealth, capitalistic society forfeits its right to existence
+when it permits widespread, bestial poverty. The philosophy of the
+survival of the fittest does not soothe the class-conscious worker when
+he learns through his class literature that among the Italian
+pants-finishers of Chicago {9} the average weekly wage is $1.31, and the
+average number of weeks employed in the year is 27.85. Likewise when he
+reads: {10} "Every room in these reeking tenements houses a family or
+two. In one room a missionary found a man ill with small-pox, his wife
+just recovering from her confinement, and the children running about half
+naked and covered with dirt. Here are seven people living in one
+underground kitchen, and a little dead child lying in the same room.
+Here live a widow and her six children, two of whom are ill with scarlet
+fever. In another, nine brothers and sisters, from twenty-nine years of
+age downward, live, eat, and sleep together." And likewise, when he
+reads: {11} "When one man, fifty years old, who has worked all his life,
+is compelled to beg a little money to bury his dead baby, and another
+man, fifty years old, can give ten million dollars to enable his daughter
+to live in luxury and bolster up a decaying foreign aristocracy, do you
+see nothing amiss?"
+
+And on the other hand, the class-conscious worker reads the statistics of
+the wealthy classes, knows what their incomes are, and how they get them.
+True, down all the past he has known his own material misery and the
+material comfort of the dominant classes, and often has this knowledge
+led him to intemperate acts and unwise rebellion. But today, and for the
+first time, because both society and he have evolved, he is beginning to
+see a possible way out. His ears are opening to the propaganda of
+Socialism, the passionate gospel of the dispossessed. But it does not
+inculcate a turning back. The way through is the way out, he
+understands, and with this in mind he draws up the programme.
+
+It is quite simple, this programme. Everything is moving in his
+direction, toward the day when he will take charge. The trust? Ah, no.
+Unlike the trembling middle-class man and the small capitalist, he sees
+nothing at which to be frightened. He likes the trust. He exults in the
+trust, for it is largely doing the task for him. It socializes
+production; this done, there remains nothing for him to do but socialize
+distribution, and all is accomplished. The trust? "It organizes
+industry on an enormous, labor-saving scale, and abolishes childish,
+wasteful competition." It is a gigantic object lesson, and it preaches
+his political economy far more potently than he can preach it. He points
+to the trust, laughing scornfully in the face of the orthodox economists.
+"You told me this thing could not be," {12} he thunders. "Behold, the
+thing is!"
+
+He sees competition in the realm of production passing away. When the
+captains of industry have thoroughly organized production, and got
+everything running smoothly, it will be very easy for him to eliminate
+the profits by stepping in and having the thing run for himself. And the
+captain of industry, if he be good, may be given the privilege of
+continuing the management on a fair salary. The sixty millions of
+dividends which the Standard Oil Company annually declares will be
+distributed among the workers. The same with the great United States
+Steel Corporation. The president of that corporation knows his business.
+Very good. Let him become Secretary of the Department of Iron and Steel
+of the United States. But, since the chief executive of a nation of
+seventy-odd millions works for $50,000 a year, the Secretary of the
+Department of Iron and Steel must expect to have his salary cut
+accordingly. And not only will the workers take to themselves the
+profits of national and municipal monopolies, but also the immense
+revenues which the dominant classes today draw from rents, and mines, and
+factories, and all manner of enterprises.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All this would seem very like a dream, even to the worker, if it were not
+for the fact that like things have been done before. He points
+triumphantly to the aristocrat of the eighteenth century, who fought,
+legislated, governed, and dominated society, but who was shorn of power
+and displaced by the rising bourgeoisie. Ay, the thing was done, he
+holds. And it shall be done again, but this time it is the proletariat
+who does the shearing. Sociology has taught him that m-i-g-h-t spells
+"right." Every society has been ruled by classes, and the classes have
+ruled by sheer strength, and have been overthrown by sheer strength. The
+bourgeoisie, because it was the stronger, dragged down the nobility of
+the sword; and the proletariat, because it is the strongest of all, can
+and will drag down the bourgeoisie.
+
+And in that day, for better or worse, the common man becomes the
+master--for better, he believes. It is his intention to make the sum of
+human happiness far greater. No man shall work for a bare living wage,
+which is degradation. Every man shall have work to do, and shall be paid
+exceedingly well for doing it. There shall be no slum classes, no
+beggars. Nor shall there be hundreds of thousands of men and women
+condemned, for economic reasons, to lives of celibacy or sexual
+infertility. Every man shall be able to marry, to live in healthy,
+comfortable quarters, and to have all he wants to eat as many times a day
+as he wishes. There shall no longer be a life-and-death struggle for
+food and shelter. The old heartless law of development shall be
+annulled.
+
+All of which is very good and very fine. And when these things have come
+to pass, what then? Of old, by virtue of their weakness and inefficiency
+in the struggle for food and shelter, the race was purged of its weak and
+inefficient members. But this will no longer obtain. Under the new
+order the weak and the progeny of the weak will have a chance for
+survival equal to that of the strong and the progeny of the strong. This
+being so, the premium upon strength will have been withdrawn, and on the
+face of it the average strength of each generation, instead of continuing
+to rise, will begin to decline.
+
+When the common man's day shall have arrived, the new social institutions
+of that day will prevent the weeding out of weakness and inefficiency.
+All, the weak and the strong, will have an equal chance for procreation.
+And the progeny of all, of the weak as well as the strong, will have an
+equal chance for survival. This being so, and if no new effective law of
+development be put into operation, then progress must cease. And not
+only progress, for deterioration would at once set in. It is a pregnant
+problem. What will be the nature of this new and most necessary law of
+development? Can the common man pause long enough from his undermining
+labors to answer? Since he is bent upon dragging down the bourgeoisie
+and reconstructing society, can he so reconstruct that a premium, in some
+unguessed way or other, will still be laid upon the strong and efficient
+so that the human type will continue to develop? Can the common man, or
+the uncommon men who are allied with him, devise such a law? Or have
+they already devised one? And if so, what is it?
+
+
+
+
+HOW I BECAME A SOCIALIST
+
+
+It is quite fair to say that I became a Socialist in a fashion somewhat
+similar to the way in which the Teutonic pagans became Christians--it was
+hammered into me. Not only was I not looking for Socialism at the time
+of my conversion, but I was fighting it. I was very young and callow,
+did not know much of anything, and though I had never even heard of a
+school called "Individualism," I sang the paean of the strong with all my
+heart.
+
+This was because I was strong myself. By strong I mean that I had good
+health and hard muscles, both of which possessions are easily accounted
+for. I had lived my childhood on California ranches, my boyhood hustling
+newspapers on the streets of a healthy Western city, and my youth on the
+ozone-laden waters of San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. I loved
+life in the open, and I toiled in the open, at the hardest kinds of work.
+Learning no trade, but drifting along from job to job, I looked on the
+world and called it good, every bit of it. Let me repeat, this optimism
+was because I was healthy and strong, bothered with neither aches nor
+weaknesses, never turned down by the boss because I did not look fit,
+able always to get a job at shovelling coal, sailorizing, or manual labor
+of some sort.
+
+And because of all this, exulting in my young life, able to hold my own
+at work or fight, I was a rampant individualist. It was very natural. I
+was a winner. Wherefore I called the game, as I saw it played, or
+thought I saw it played, a very proper game for MEN. To be a MAN was to
+write man in large capitals on my heart. To adventure like a man, and
+fight like a man, and do a man's work (even for a boy's pay)--these were
+things that reached right in and gripped hold of me as no other thing
+could. And I looked ahead into long vistas of a hazy and interminable
+future, into which, playing what I conceived to be MAN'S game, I should
+continue to travel with unfailing health, without accidents, and with
+muscles ever vigorous. As I say, this future was interminable. I could
+see myself only raging through life without end like one of Nietzsche's
+_blond-beasts_, lustfully roving and conquering by sheer superiority and
+strength.
+
+As for the unfortunates, the sick, and ailing, and old, and maimed, I
+must confess I hardly thought of them at all, save that I vaguely felt
+that they, barring accidents, could be as good as I if they wanted to
+real hard, and could work just as well. Accidents? Well, they
+represented FATE, also spelled out in capitals, and there was no getting
+around FATE. Napoleon had had an accident at Waterloo, but that did not
+dampen my desire to be another and later Napoleon. Further, the optimism
+bred of a stomach which could digest scrap iron and a body which
+flourished on hardships did not permit me to consider accidents as even
+remotely related to my glorious personality.
+
+I hope I have made it clear that I was proud to be one of Nature's
+strong-armed noblemen. The dignity of labor was to me the most
+impressive thing in the world. Without having read Carlyle, or Kipling,
+I formulated a gospel of work which put theirs in the shade. Work was
+everything. It was sanctification and salvation. The pride I took in a
+hard day's work well done would be inconceivable to you. It is almost
+inconceivable to me as I look back upon it. I was as faithful a wage
+slave as ever capitalist exploited. To shirk or malinger on the man who
+paid me my wages was a sin, first, against myself, and second, against
+him. I considered it a crime second only to treason and just about as
+bad.
+
+In short, my joyous individualism was dominated by the orthodox bourgeois
+ethics. I read the bourgeois papers, listened to the bourgeois
+preachers, and shouted at the sonorous platitudes of the bourgeois
+politicians. And I doubt not, if other events had not changed my career,
+that I should have evolved into a professional strike-breaker, (one of
+President Eliot's American heroes), and had my head and my earning power
+irrevocably smashed by a club in the hands of some militant
+trades-unionist.
+
+Just about this time, returning from a seven months' voyage before the
+mast, and just turned eighteen, I took it into my head to go tramping.
+On rods and blind baggages I fought my way from the open West where men
+bucked big and the job hunted the man, to the congested labor centres of
+the East, where men were small potatoes and hunted the job for all they
+were worth. And on this new _blond-beast_ adventure I found myself
+looking upon life from a new and totally different angle. I had dropped
+down from the proletariat into what sociologists love to call the
+"submerged tenth," and I was startled to discover the way in which that
+submerged tenth was recruited.
+
+I found there all sorts of men, many of whom had once been as good as
+myself and just as _blond-beast_; sailor-men, soldier-men, labor-men, all
+wrenched and distorted and twisted out of shape by toil and hardship and
+accident, and cast adrift by their masters like so many old horses. I
+battered on the drag and slammed back gates with them, or shivered with
+them in box cars and city parks, listening the while to life-histories
+which began under auspices as fair as mine, with digestions and bodies
+equal to and better than mine, and which ended there before my eyes in
+the shambles at the bottom of the Social Pit.
+
+And as I listened my brain began to work. The woman of the streets and
+the man of the gutter drew very close to me. I saw the picture of the
+Social Pit as vividly as though it were a concrete thing, and at the
+bottom of the Pit I saw them, myself above them, not far, and hanging on
+to the slippery wall by main strength and sweat. And I confess a terror
+seized me. What when my strength failed? when I should be unable to work
+shoulder to shoulder with the strong men who were as yet babes unborn?
+And there and then I swore a great oath. It ran something like this:
+_All my days I have worked hard with my body_, _and according to the
+number of days I have worked_, _by just that much am I nearer the bottom
+of the Pit_. _I shall climb out of the Pit_, _but not by the muscles of
+my body shall I climb out_. _I shall do no more hard work_, _and may God
+strike me dead if I do another day's hard work with my body more than I
+absolutely have to do_. And I have been busy ever since running away
+from hard work.
+
+Incidentally, while tramping some ten thousand miles through the United
+States and Canada, I strayed into Niagara Falls, was nabbed by a
+fee-hunting constable, denied the right to plead guilty or not guilty,
+sentenced out of hand to thirty days' imprisonment for having no fixed
+abode and no visible means of support, handcuffed and chained to a bunch
+of men similarly circumstanced, carted down country to Buffalo,
+registered at the Erie County Penitentiary, had my head clipped and my
+budding mustache shaved, was dressed in convict stripes, compulsorily
+vaccinated by a medical student who practised on such as we, made to
+march the lock-step, and put to work under the eyes of guards armed with
+Winchester rifles--all for adventuring in _blond-beastly_ fashion.
+Concerning further details deponent sayeth not, though he may hint that
+some of his plethoric national patriotism simmered down and leaked out of
+the bottom of his soul somewhere--at least, since that experience he
+finds that he cares more for men and women and little children than for
+imaginary geographical lines.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To return to my conversion. I think it is apparent that my rampant
+individualism was pretty effectively hammered out of me, and something
+else as effectively hammered in. But, just as I had been an
+individualist without knowing it, I was now a Socialist without knowing
+it, withal, an unscientific one. I had been reborn, but not renamed, and
+I was running around to find out what manner of thing I was. I ran back
+to California and opened the books. I do not remember which ones I
+opened first. It is an unimportant detail anyway. I was already It,
+whatever It was, and by aid of the books I discovered that It was a
+Socialist. Since that day I have opened many books, but no economic
+argument, no lucid demonstration of the logic and inevitableness of
+Socialism affects me as profoundly and convincingly as I was affected on
+the day when I first saw the walls of the Social Pit rise around me and
+felt myself slipping down, down, into the shambles at the bottom.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+{1} "From 43 to 52 per cent of all applicants need work rather than
+relief."--Report of the Charity Organization Society of New York City.
+
+{2} Mr. Leiter, who owns a coal mine at the town of Zeigler, Illinois,
+in an interview printed in the Chicago Record-Herald of December 6, 1904,
+said: "When I go into the market to purchase labor, I propose to retain
+just as much freedom as does a purchaser in any other kind of a market. . . .
+There is no difficulty whatever in obtaining labor, _for the country
+is full of unemployed men_."
+
+{3} "Despondent and weary with vain attempts to struggle against an
+unsympathetic world, two old men were brought before Police Judge McHugh
+this afternoon to see whether some means could not be provided for their
+support, at least until springtime.
+
+"George Westlake was the first one to receive the consideration of the
+court. Westlake is seventy-two years old. A charge of habitual
+drunkenness was placed against him, and he was sentenced to a term in the
+county jail, though it is more than probable that he was never under the
+influence of intoxicating liquor in his life. The act on the part of the
+authorities was one of kindness for him, as in the county jail he will be
+provided with a good place to sleep and plenty to eat.
+
+"Joe Coat, aged sixty-nine years, will serve ninety days in the county
+jail for much the same reason as Westlake. He states that, if given a
+chance to do so, he will go out to a wood-camp and cut timber during the
+winter, but the police authorities realize that he could not long survive
+such a task."--From the Butte (Montana) Miner, December 7th, 1904.
+
+"'I end my life because I have reached the age limit, and there is no
+place for me in this world. Please notify my wife, No. 222 West 129th
+Street, New York.' Having summed up the cause of his despondency in this
+final message, James Hollander, fifty-six years old, shot himself through
+the left temple, in his room at the Stafford Hotel today."--New York
+Herald.
+
+{4} In the San Francisco Examiner of November 16, 1904, there is an
+account of the use of fire-hose to drive away three hundred men who
+wanted work at unloading a vessel in the harbor. So anxious were the men
+to get the two or three hours' job that they made a veritable mob and had
+to be driven off.
+
+{5} "It was no uncommon thing in these sweatshops for men to sit bent
+over a sewing-machine continuously from eleven to fifteen hours a day in
+July weather, operating a sewing-machine by foot-power, and often so
+driven that they could not stop for lunch. The seasonal character of the
+work meant demoralizing toil for a few months in the year, and a not less
+demoralizing idleness for the remainder of the time. Consumption, the
+plague of the tenements and the especial plague of the garment industry,
+carried off many of these workers; poor nutrition and exhaustion, many
+more."--From McClure's Magazine.
+
+{6} The Social Unrest. Macmillan Company.
+
+{7} "Our Benevolent Feudalism." By W. J. Ghent. The Macmillan Company.
+
+{8} "The Social Unrest." By John Graham Brooks. The Macmillan Company.
+
+{9} From figures presented by Miss Nellie Mason Auten in the American
+Journal of Sociology, and copied extensively by the trade-union and
+Socialist press.
+
+{10} "The Bitter Cry of Outcast London."
+
+{11} An item from the Social Democratic Herald. Hundreds of these
+items, culled from current happenings, are published weekly in the papers
+of the workers.
+
+{12} Karl Marx, the great Socialist, worked out the trust development
+forty years ago, for which he was laughed at by the orthodox economists.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WAR OF THE CLASSES***
+
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+
+
+
+
+
+War of the Classes
+
+by Jack London
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+
+
+Preface
+The Class Struggle
+The Tramp
+The Scab
+The Question of the Maximum
+A Review
+Wanted: A New Land of Development
+How I Became a Socialist
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+When I was a youngster I was looked upon as a weird sort of
+creature, because, forsooth, I was a socialist. Reporters from
+local papers interviewed me, and the interviews, when published,
+were pathological studies of a strange and abnormal specimen of man.
+At that time (nine or ten years ago), because I made a stand in my
+native town for municipal ownership of public utilities, I was
+branded a "red-shirt," a "dynamiter," and an "anarchist"; and really
+decent fellows, who liked me very well, drew the line at my
+appearing in public with their sisters.
+
+But the times changed. There came a day when I heard, in my native
+town, a Republican mayor publicly proclaim that "municipal ownership
+was a fixed American policy." And in that day I found myself
+picking up in the world. No longer did the pathologist study me,
+while the really decent fellows did not mind in the least the
+propinquity of myself and their sisters in the public eye. My
+political and sociological ideas were ascribed to the vagaries of
+youth, and good-natured elderly men patronized me and told me that I
+would grow up some day and become an unusually intelligent member of
+the community. Also they told me that my views were biassed by my
+empty pockets, and that some day, when I had gathered to me a few
+dollars, my views would be wholly different,--in short, that my
+views would be their views.
+
+And then came the day when my socialism grew respectable,--still a
+vagary of youth, it was held, but romantically respectable.
+Romance, to the bourgeois mind, was respectable because it was not
+dangerous. As a "red-shirt," with bombs in all his pockets, I was
+dangerous. As a youth with nothing more menacing than a few
+philosophical ideas, Germanic in their origin, I was an interesting
+and pleasing personality.
+
+Through all this experience I noted one thing. It was not I that
+changed, but the community. In fact, my socialistic views grew
+solider and more pronounced. I repeat, it was the community that
+changed, and to my chagrin I discovered that the community changed
+to such purpose that it was not above stealing my thunder. The
+community branded me a "red-shirt" because I stood for municipal
+ownership; a little later it applauded its mayor when he proclaimed
+municipal ownership to be a fixed American policy. He stole my
+thunder, and the community applauded the theft. And today the
+community is able to come around and give me points on municipal
+ownership.
+
+What happened to me has been in no wise different from what has
+happened to the socialist movement as a whole in the United States.
+In the bourgeois mind socialism has changed from a terrible disease
+to a youthful vagary, and later on had its thunder stolen by the two
+old parties,--socialism, like a meek and thrifty workingman, being
+exploited became respectable.
+
+Only dangerous things are abhorrent. The thing that is not
+dangerous is always respectable. And so with socialism in the
+United States. For several years it has been very respectable,--a
+sweet and beautiful Utopian dream, in the bourgeois mind, yet a
+dream, only a dream. During this period, which has just ended,
+socialism was tolerated because it was impossible and non-menacing.
+Much of its thunder had been stolen, and the workingmen had been
+made happy with full dinner-pails. There was nothing to fear. The
+kind old world spun on, coupons were clipped, and larger profits
+than ever were extracted from the toilers. Coupon-clipping and
+profit-extracting would continue to the end of time. These were
+functions divine in origin and held by divine right. The
+newspapers, the preachers, and the college presidents said so, and
+what they say, of course, is so--to the bourgeois mind.
+
+Then came the presidential election of 1904. Like a bolt out of a
+clear sky was the socialist vote of 435,000,--an increase of nearly
+400 per cent in four years, the largest third-party vote, with one
+exception, since the Civil War. Socialism had shown that it was a
+very live and growing revolutionary force, and all its old menace
+revived. I am afraid that neither it nor I are any longer
+respectable. The capitalist press of the country confirms me in my
+opinion, and herewith I give a few post-election utterances of the
+capitalist press:-
+
+
+"The Democratic party of the constitution is dead. The Social-
+Democratic party of continental Europe, preaching discontent and
+class hatred, assailing law, property, and personal rights, and
+insinuating confiscation and plunder, is here."--Chicago Chronicle.
+
+"That over forty thousand votes should have been cast in this city
+to make such a person as Eugene V. Debs the President of the United
+States is about the worst kind of advertising that Chicago could
+receive."--Chicago Inter-Ocean.
+
+"We cannot blink the fact that socialism is making rapid growth in
+this country, where, of all others, there would seem to be less
+inspiration for it."--Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
+
+"Upon the hands of the Republican party an awful responsibility was
+placed last Tuesday. . . It knows that reforms--great, far-sweeping
+reforms--are necessary, and it has the power to make them. God help
+our civilization if it does not! . . . It must repress the trusts or
+stand before the world responsible for our system of government
+being changed into a social republic. The arbitrary cutting down of
+wages must cease, or socialism will seize another lever to lift
+itself into power."--The Chicago New World.
+
+"Scarcely any phase of the election is more sinisterly interesting
+than the increase in the socialist vote. Before election we said
+that we could not afford to give aid and comfort to the socialists
+in any manner. . . It (socialism) must be fought in all its phases,
+in its every manifestation."--San Francisco Argonaut.
+
+
+And far be it from me to deny that socialism is a menace. It is its
+purpose to wipe out, root and branch, all capitalistic institutions
+of present-day society. It is distinctly revolutionary, and in
+scope and depth is vastly more tremendous than any revolution that
+has ever occurred in the history of the world. It presents a new
+spectacle to the astonished world,--that of an ORGANIZED,
+INTERNATIONAL, REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT. In the bourgeois mind a
+class struggle is a terrible and hateful thing, and yet that is
+precisely what socialism is,--a world-wide class struggle between
+the propertyless workers and the propertied masters of workers. It
+is the prime preachment of socialism that the struggle is a class
+struggle. The working class, in the process of social evolution,
+(in the very nature of things), is bound to revolt from the sway of
+the capitalist class and to overthrow the capitalist class. This is
+the menace of socialism, and in affirming it and in tallying myself
+an adherent of it, I accept my own consequent unrespectability.
+
+As yet, to the average bourgeois mind, socialism is merely a menace,
+vague and formless. The average member of the capitalist class,
+when he discusses socialism, is condemned an ignoramus out of his
+own mouth. He does not know the literature of socialism, its
+philosophy, nor its politics. He wags his head sagely and rattles
+the dry bones of dead and buried ideas. His lips mumble mouldy
+phrases, such as, "Men are not born equal and never can be;" "It is
+Utopian and impossible;" "Abstinence should be rewarded;" "Man will
+first have to be born again;" "Cooperative colonies have always
+failed;" and "What if we do divide up? in ten years there would be
+rich and poor men such as there are today."
+
+It surely is time that the capitalists knew something about this
+socialism that they feel menaces them. And it is the hope of the
+writer that the socialistic studies in this volume may in some
+slight degree enlighten a few capitalistic minds. The capitalist
+must learn, first and for always, that socialism is based, not upon
+the equality, but upon the inequality, of men. Next, he must learn
+that no new birth into spiritual purity is necessary before
+socialism becomes possible. He must learn that socialism deals with
+what is, not with what ought to be; and that the material with which
+it deals is the "clay of the common road," the warm human, fallible
+and frail, sordid and petty, absurd and contradictory, even
+grotesque, and yet, withal, shot through with flashes and
+glimmerings of something finer and God-like, with here and there
+sweetnesses of service and unselfishness, desires for goodness, for
+renunciation and sacrifice, and with conscience, stern and awful, at
+times blazingly imperious, demanding the right,--the right, nothing
+more nor less than the right.
+
+JACK LONDON.
+OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA.
+January 12, 1905.
+
+
+
+THE CLASS STRUGGLE
+
+
+
+Unfortunately or otherwise, people are prone to believe in the
+reality of the things they think ought to be so. This comes of the
+cheery optimism which is innate with life itself; and, while it may
+sometimes be deplored, it must never be censured, for, as a rule, it
+is productive of more good than harm, and of about all the
+achievement there is in the world. There are cases where this
+optimism has been disastrous, as with the people who lived in
+Pompeii during its last quivering days; or with the aristocrats of
+the time of Louis XVI, who confidently expected the Deluge to
+overwhelm their children, or their children's children, but never
+themselves. But there is small likelihood that the case of perverse
+optimism here to be considered will end in such disaster, while
+there is every reason to believe that the great change now
+manifesting itself in society will be as peaceful and orderly in its
+culmination as it is in its present development.
+
+Out of their constitutional optimism, and because a class struggle
+is an abhorred and dangerous thing, the great American people are
+unanimous in asserting that there is no class struggle. And by
+"American people" is meant the recognized and authoritative mouth-
+pieces of the American people, which are the press, the pulpit, and
+the university. The journalists, the preachers, and the professors
+are practically of one voice in declaring that there is no such
+thing as a class struggle now going on, much less that a class
+struggle will ever go on, in the United States. And this
+declaration they continually make in the face of a multitude of
+facts which impeach, not so much their sincerity, as affirm, rather,
+their optimism.
+
+There are two ways of approaching the subject of the class struggle.
+The existence of this struggle can be shown theoretically, and it
+can be shown actually. For a class struggle to exist in society
+there must be, first, a class inequality, a superior class and an
+inferior class (as measured by power); and, second, the outlets must
+be closed whereby the strength and ferment of the inferior class
+have been permitted to escape.
+
+That there are even classes in the United States is vigorously
+denied by many; but it is incontrovertible, when a group of
+individuals is formed, wherein the members are bound together by
+common interests which are peculiarly their interests and not the
+interests of individuals outside the group, that such a group is a
+class. The owners of capital, with their dependents, form a class
+of this nature in the United States; the working people form a
+similar class. The interest of the capitalist class, say, in the
+matter of income tax, is quite contrary to the interest of the
+laboring class; and, VICE VERSA, in the matter of poll-tax.
+
+If between these two classes there be a clear and vital conflict of
+interest, all the factors are present which make a class struggle;
+but this struggle will lie dormant if the strong and capable members
+of the inferior class be permitted to leave that class and join the
+ranks of the superior class. The capitalist class and the working
+class have existed side by side and for a long time in the United
+States; but hitherto all the strong, energetic members of the
+working class have been able to rise out of their class and become
+owners of capital. They were enabled to do this because an
+undeveloped country with an expanding frontier gave equality of
+opportunity to all. In the almost lottery-like scramble for the
+ownership of vast unowned natural resources, and in the exploitation
+of which there was little or no competition of capital, (the capital
+itself rising out of the exploitation), the capable, intelligent
+member of the working class found a field in which to use his brains
+to his own advancement. Instead of being discontented in direct
+ratio with his intelligence and ambitions, and of radiating amongst
+his fellows a spirit of revolt as capable as he was capable, he left
+them to their fate and carved his own way to a place in the superior
+class.
+
+But the day of an expanding frontier, of a lottery-like scramble for
+the ownership of natural resources, and of the upbuilding of new
+industries, is past. Farthest West has been reached, and an immense
+volume of surplus capital roams for investment and nips in the bud
+the patient efforts of the embryo capitalist to rise through slow
+increment from small beginnings. The gateway of opportunity after
+opportunity has been closed, and closed for all time. Rockefeller
+has shut the door on oil, the American Tobacco Company on tobacco,
+and Carnegie on steel. After Carnegie came Morgan, who triple-
+locked the door. These doors will not open again, and before them
+pause thousands of ambitious young men to read the placard: NO
+THOROUGH-FARE.
+
+And day by day more doors are shut, while the ambitious young men
+continue to be born. It is they, denied the opportunity to rise
+from the working class, who preach revolt to the working class. Had
+he been born fifty years later, Andrew Carnegie, the poor Scotch
+boy, might have risen to be president of his union, or of a
+federation of unions; but that he would never have become the
+builder of Homestead and the founder of multitudinous libraries, is
+as certain as it is certain that some other man would have developed
+the steel industry had Andrew Carnegie never been born.
+
+Theoretically, then, there exist in the United States all the
+factors which go to make a class struggle. There are the
+capitalists and working classes, the interests of which conflict,
+while the working class is no longer being emasculated to the extent
+it was in the past by having drawn off from it its best blood and
+brains. Its more capable members are no longer able to rise out of
+it and leave the great mass leaderless and helpless. They remain to
+be its leaders.
+
+But the optimistic mouthpieces of the great American people, who are
+themselves deft theoreticians, are not to be convinced by mere
+theoretics. So it remains to demonstrate the existence of the class
+struggle by a marshalling of the facts.
+
+When nearly two millions of men, finding themselves knit together by
+certain interests peculiarly their own, band together in a strong
+organization for the aggressive pursuit of those interests, it is
+evident that society has within it a hostile and warring class. But
+when the interests which this class aggressively pursues conflict
+sharply and vitally with the interests of another class, class
+antagonism arises and a class struggle is the inevitable result.
+One great organization of labor alone has a membership of 1,700,000
+in the United States. This is the American Federation of Labor, and
+outside of it are many other large organizations. All these men are
+banded together for the frank purpose of bettering their condition,
+regardless of the harm worked thereby upon all other classes. They
+are in open antagonism with the capitalist class, while the
+manifestos of their leaders state that the struggle is one which can
+never end until the capitalist class is exterminated.
+
+Their leaders will largely deny this last statement, but an
+examination of their utterances, their actions, and the situation
+will forestall such denial. In the first place, the conflict
+between labor and capital is over the division of the join product.
+Capital and labor apply themselves to raw material and make it into
+a finished product. The difference between the value of the raw
+material and the value of the finished product is the value they
+have added to it by their joint effort. This added value is,
+therefore, their joint product, and it is over the division of this
+joint product that the struggle between labor and capital takes
+place. Labor takes its share in wages; capital takes its share in
+profits. It is patent, if capital took in profits the whole joint
+product, that labor would perish. And it is equally patent, if
+labor took in wages the whole joint product, that capital would
+perish. Yet this last is the very thing labor aspires to do, and
+that it will never be content with anything less than the whole
+joint product is evidenced by the words of its leaders.
+
+Mr. Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor,
+has said: "The workers want more wages; more of the comforts of
+life; more leisure; more chance for self-improvement as men, as
+trade-unionists, as citizens. THESE WERE THE WANTS OF YESTERDAY;
+THEY ARE THE WANTS OF TODAY; THEY WILL BE THE WANTS OF TOMORROW, AND
+OF TOMORROW'S MORROW. The struggle may assume new forms, but the
+issue is the immemorial one,--an effort of the producers to obtain
+an increasing measure of the wealth that flows from their
+production."
+
+Mr. Henry White, secretary of the United Garment Workers of America
+and a member of the Industrial Committee of the National Civic
+Federation, speaking of the National Civic Federation soon after its
+inception, said: "To fall into one another's arms, to avow
+friendship, to express regret at the injury which has been done,
+would not alter the facts of the situation. Workingmen will
+continue to demand more pay, and the employer will naturally oppose
+them. The readiness and ability of the workmen to fight will, as
+usual, largely determine the amount of their wages or their share in
+the product. . . But when it comes to dividing the proceeds, there
+is the rub. We can also agree that the larger the product through
+the employment of labor-saving methods the better, as there will be
+more to be divided, but again the question of the division. . . . A
+Conciliation Committee, having the confidence of the community, and
+composed of men possessing practical knowledge of industrial
+affairs, can therefore aid in mitigating this antagonism, in
+preventing avoidable conflicts, in bringing about a TRUCE; I use the
+word 'truce' because understandings can only be temporary."
+
+Here is a man who might have owned cattle on a thousand hills, been
+a lumber baron or a railroad king, had he been born a few years
+sooner. As it is, he remains in his class, is secretary of the
+United Garment Workers of America, and is so thoroughly saturated
+with the class struggle that he speaks of the dispute between
+capital and labor in terms of war,--workmen FIGHT with employers; it
+is possible to avoid some CONFLICTS; in certain cases TRUCES may be,
+for the time being, effected.
+
+Man being man and a great deal short of the angels, the quarrel over
+the division of the joint product is irreconcilable. For the last
+twenty years in the United States, there has been an average of over
+a thousand strikes per year; and year by year these strikes increase
+in magnitude, and the front of the labor army grows more imposing.
+And it is a class struggle, pure and simple. Labor as a class is
+fighting with capital as a class.
+
+Workingmen will continue to demand more pay, and employers will
+continue to oppose them. This is the key-note to LAISSEZ FAIRE,--
+everybody for himself and devil take the hindmost. It is upon this
+that the rampant individualist bases his individualism. It is the
+let-alone policy, the struggle for existence, which strengthens the
+strong, destroys the weak, and makes a finer and more capable breed
+of men. But the individual has passed away and the group has come,
+for better or worse, and the struggle has become, not a struggle
+between individuals, but a struggle between groups. So the query
+rises: Has the individualist never speculated upon the labor group
+becoming strong enough to destroy the capitalist group, and take to
+itself and run for itself the machinery of industry? And, further,
+has the individualist never speculated upon this being still a
+triumphant expression of individualism,--of group individualism,--if
+the confusion of terms may be permitted?
+
+But the facts of the class struggle are deeper and more significant
+than have so far been presented. A million or so of workmen may
+organize for the pursuit of interests which engender class
+antagonism and strife, and at the same time be unconscious of what
+is engendered. But when a million or so of workmen show
+unmistakable signs of being conscious of their class,--of being, in
+short, class conscious,--then the situation grows serious. The
+uncompromising and terrible hatred of the trade-unionist for a scab
+is the hatred of a class for a traitor to that class,--while the
+hatred of a trade-unionist for the militia is the hatred of a class
+for a weapon wielded by the class with which it is fighting. No
+workman can be true to his class and at the same time be a member of
+the militia: this is the dictum of the labor leaders.
+
+In the town of the writer, the good citizens, when they get up a
+Fourth of July parade and invite the labor unions to participate,
+are informed by the unions that they will not march in the parade if
+the militia marches. Article 8 of the constitution of the Painters'
+and Decorators' Union of Schenectady provides that a member must not
+be a "militiaman, special police officer, or deputy marshal in the
+employ of corporations or individuals during strikes, lockouts, or
+other labor difficulties, and any member occupying any of the above
+positions will be debarred from membership." Mr. William Potter was
+a member of this union and a member of the National Guard. As a
+result, because he obeyed the order of the Governor when his company
+was ordered out to suppress rioting, he was expelled from his union.
+Also his union demanded his employers, Shafer & Barry, to discharge
+him from their service. This they complied with, rather than face
+the threatened strike.
+
+Mr. Robert L. Walker, first lieutenant of the Light Guards, a New
+Haven militia company, recently resigned. His reason was, that he
+was a member of the Car Builders' Union, and that the two
+organizations were antagonistic to each other. During a New Orleans
+street-car strike not long ago, a whole company of militia, called
+out to protect non-union men, resigned in a body. Mr. John
+Mulholland, president of the International Association of Allied
+Metal Mechanics, has stated that he does not want the members to
+join the militia. The Local Trades' Assembly of Syracuse, New York,
+has passed a resolution, by unanimous vote, requiring union men who
+are members of the National Guard to resign, under pain of
+expulsion, from the unions. The Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers'
+Association has incorporated in its constitution an amendment
+excluding from membership in its organization "any person a member
+of the regular army, or of the State militia or naval reserve." The
+Illinois State Federation of Labor, at a recent convention, passed
+without a dissenting vote a resolution declaring that membership in
+military organizations is a violation of labor union obligations,
+and requesting all union men to withdraw from the militia. The
+president of the Federation, Mr. Albert Young, declared that the
+militia was a menace not only to unions, but to all workers
+throughout the country.
+
+These instances may be multiplied a thousand fold. The union
+workmen are becoming conscious of their class, and of the struggle
+their class is waging with the capitalist class. To be a member of
+the militia is to be a traitor to the union, for the militia is a
+weapon wielded by the employers to crush the workers in the struggle
+between the warring groups.
+
+Another interesting, and even more pregnant, phase of the class
+struggle is the political aspect of it as displayed by the
+socialists. Five men, standing together, may perform prodigies; 500
+men, marching as marched the historic Five Hundred of Marseilles,
+may sack a palace and destroy a king; while 500,000 men,
+passionately preaching the propaganda of a class struggle, waging a
+class struggle along political lines, and backed by the moral and
+intellectual support of 10,000,000 more men of like convictions
+throughout the world, may come pretty close to realizing a class
+struggle in these United States of ours.
+
+In 1900 these men cast 150,000 votes; two years later, in 1902, they
+cast 300,000 votes; and in 1904 they cast 450,000. They have behind
+them a most imposing philosophic and scientific literature; they own
+illustrated magazines and reviews, high in quality, dignity, and
+restraint; they possess countless daily and weekly papers which
+circulate throughout the land, and single papers which have
+subscribers by the hundreds of thousands; and they literally swamp
+the working classes in a vast sea of tracts and pamphlets. No
+political party in the United States, no church organization nor
+mission effort, has as indefatigable workers as has the socialist
+party. They multiply themselves, know of no effort nor sacrifice
+too great to make for the Cause; and "Cause," with them, is spelled
+out in capitals. They work for it with a religious zeal, and would
+die for it with a willingness similar to that of the Christian
+martyrs.
+
+These men are preaching an uncompromising and deadly class struggle.
+In fact, they are organized upon the basis of a class struggle.
+"The history of society," they say, "is a history of class
+struggles. Patrician struggled with plebeian in early Rome; the
+king and the burghers, with the nobles in the Middle Ages; later on,
+the king and the nobles with the bourgeoisie; and today the struggle
+is on between the triumphant bourgeoisie and the rising proletariat.
+By 'proletariat' is meant the class of people without capital which
+sells its labor for a living.
+
+"That the proletariat shall conquer," (mark the note of fatalism),
+"is as certain as the rising sun. Just as the bourgeoisie of the
+eighteenth century wanted democracy applied to politics, so the
+proletariat of the twentieth century wants democracy applied to
+industry. As the bourgeoisie complained against the government
+being run by and for the nobles, so the proletariat complains
+against the government and industry being run by and for the
+bourgeoisie; and so, following in the footsteps of its predecessor,
+the proletariat will possess itself of the government, apply
+democracy to industry, abolish wages, which are merely legalized
+robbery, and run the business of the country in its own interest."
+
+"Their aim," they say, "is to organize the working class, and those
+in sympathy with it, into a political party, with the object of
+conquering the powers of government and of using them for the
+purpose of transforming the present system of private ownership of
+the means of production and distribution into collective ownership
+by the entire people."
+
+Briefly stated, this is the battle plan of these 450,000 men who
+call themselves "socialists." And, in the face of the existence of
+such an aggressive group of men, a class struggle cannot very well
+be denied by the optimistic Americans who say: "A class struggle is
+monstrous. Sir, there is no class struggle." The class struggle is
+here, and the optimistic American had better gird himself for the
+fray and put a stop to it, rather than sit idly declaiming that what
+ought not to be is not, and never will be.
+
+But the socialists, fanatics and dreamers though they may well be,
+betray a foresight and insight, and a genius for organization, which
+put to shame the class with which they are openly at war. Failing
+of rapid success in waging a sheer political propaganda, and finding
+that they were alienating the most intelligent and most easily
+organized portion of the voters, the socialists lessoned from the
+experience and turned their energies upon the trade-union movement.
+To win the trade unions was well-nigh to win the war, and recent
+events show that they have done far more winning in this direction
+than have the capitalists.
+
+Instead of antagonizing the unions, which had been their previous
+policy, the socialists proceeded to conciliate the unions. "Let
+every good socialist join the union of his trade," the edict went
+forth. "Bore from within and capture the trade-union movement."
+And this policy, only several years old, has reaped fruits far
+beyond their fondest expectations. Today the great labor unions are
+honeycombed with socialists, "boring from within," as they
+picturesquely term their undermining labor. At work and at play, at
+business meeting and council, their insidious propaganda goes on.
+At the shoulder of the trade-unionist is the socialist, sympathizing
+with him, aiding him with head and hand, suggesting--perpetually
+suggesting--the necessity for political action. As the JOURNAL, of
+Lansing, Michigan, a republican paper, has remarked: "The
+socialists in the labor unions are tireless workers. They are
+sincere, energetic, and self-sacrificing. . . . They stick to the
+union and work all the while, thus making a showing which, reckoned
+by ordinary standards, is out of all proportion to their numbers.
+Their cause is growing among union laborers, and their long fight,
+intended to turn the Federation into a political organization, is
+likely to win."
+
+They miss no opportunity of driving home the necessity for political
+action, the necessity for capturing the political machinery of
+society whereby they may master society. As an instance of this is
+the avidity with which the American socialists seized upon the
+famous Taft-Vale Decision in England, which was to the effect that
+an unincorporated union could be sued and its treasury rifled by
+process of law. Throughout the United States, the socialists
+pointed the moral in similar fashion to the way it was pointed by
+the Social-Democratic Herald, which advised the trade-unionists, in
+view of the decision, to stop trying to fight capital with money,
+which they lacked, and to begin fighting with the ballot, which was
+their strongest weapon.
+
+Night and day, tireless and unrelenting, they labor at their self-
+imposed task of undermining society. Mr. M. G. Cunniff, who lately
+made an intimate study of trade-unionism, says: "All through the
+unions socialism filters. Almost every other man is a socialist,
+preaching that unionism is but a makeshift." "Malthus be damned,"
+they told him, "for the good time was coming when every man should
+be able to rear his family in comfort." In one union, with two
+thousand members, Mr. Cunniff found every man a socialist, and from
+his experiences Mr. Cunniff was forced to confess, "I lived in a
+world that showed our industrial life a-tremble from beneath with a
+never-ceasing ferment."
+
+The socialists have already captured the Western Federation of
+Miners, the Western Hotel and Restaurant Employees' Union, and the
+Patternmakers' National Association. The Western Federation of
+Miners, at a recent convention, declared: "The strike has failed to
+secure to the working classes their liberty; we therefore call upon
+the workers to strike as one man for their liberties at the ballot
+box. . . . We put ourselves on record as committed to the programme
+of independent political action. . . . We indorse the platform of
+the socialist party, and accept it as the declaration of principles
+of our organization. We call upon our members as individuals to
+commence immediately the organization of the socialist movement in
+their respective towns and states, and to cooperate in every way for
+the furtherance of the principles of socialism and of the socialist
+party. In states where the socialist party has not perfected its
+organization, we advise that every assistance be given by our
+members to that end. . . . We therefore call for organizers, capable
+and well-versed in the whole programme of the labor movement, to be
+sent into each state to preach the necessity of organization on the
+political as well as on the economic field."
+
+The capitalist class has a glimmering consciousness of the class
+struggle which is shaping itself in the midst of society; but the
+capitalists, as a class, seem to lack the ability for organizing,
+for coming together, such as is possessed by the working class. No
+American capitalist ever aids an English capitalist in the common
+fight, while workmen have formed international unions, the
+socialists a world-wide international organization, and on all sides
+space and race are bridged in the effort to achieve solidarity.
+Resolutions of sympathy, and, fully as important, donations of
+money, pass back and forth across the sea to wherever labor is
+fighting its pitched battles.
+
+For divers reasons, the capitalist class lacks this cohesion or
+solidarity, chief among which is the optimism bred of past success.
+And, again, the capitalist class is divided; it has within itself a
+class struggle of no mean proportions, which tends to irritate and
+harass it and to confuse the situation. The small capitalist and
+the large capitalist are grappled with each other, struggling over
+what Achille Loria calls the "bi-partition of the revenues." Such a
+struggle, though not precisely analogous, was waged between the
+landlords and manufacturers of England when the one brought about
+the passage of the Factory Acts and the other the abolition of the
+Corn Laws.
+
+Here and there, however, certain members of the capitalist class see
+clearly the cleavage in society along which the struggle is
+beginning to show itself, while the press and magazines are
+beginning to raise an occasional and troubled voice. Two leagues of
+class-conscious capitalists have been formed for the purpose of
+carrying on their side of the struggle. Like the socialists, they
+do not mince matters, but state boldly and plainly that they are
+fighting to subjugate the opposing class. It is the barons against
+the commons. One of these leagues, the National Association of
+Manufacturers, is stopping short of nothing in what it conceives to
+be a life-and-death struggle. Mr. D. M. Parry, who is the president
+of the league, as well as president of the National Metal Trades'
+Association, is leaving no stone unturned in what he feels to be a
+desperate effort to organize his class. He has issued the call to
+arms in terms everything but ambiguous: "THERE IS STILL TIME IN THE
+UNITED STALES TO HEAD OFF THE SOCIALISTIC PROGRAMME, WHICH,
+UNRESTRAINED, IS SURE TO WRECK OUR COUNTRY."
+
+As he says, the work is for "federating employers in order that we
+may meet with a united front all issues that affect us. We must
+come to this sooner or later. . . . The work immediately before the
+National Association of Manufacturers is, first, KEEP THE VICIOUS
+EIGHT-HOUR BILL OFF THE BOOKS; second, to DESTROY THE ANTI-
+INJUNCTION BILL, which wrests your business from you and places it
+in the hands of your employees; third, to secure the PASSAGE OF THE
+DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY BILL; the latter would go
+through with a rush were it not for the hectoring opposition of
+Organized Labor." By this department, he further says, "business
+interests would have direct and sympathetic representation at
+Washington."
+
+In a later letter, issued broadcast to the capitalists outside the
+League, President Parry points out the success which is already
+beginning to attend the efforts of the League at Washington. "We
+have contributed more than any other influence to the quick passage
+of the new Department of Commerce Bill. It is said that the
+activities of this office are numerous and satisfactory; but of that
+I must not say too much--or anything. . . . At Washington the
+Association is not represented too much, either directly or
+indirectly. Sometimes it is known in a most powerful way that it is
+represented vigorously and unitedly. Sometimes it is not known that
+it is represented at all."
+
+The second class-conscious capitalist organization is called the
+National Economic League. It likewise manifests the frankness of
+men who do not dilly-dally with terms, but who say what they mean,
+and who mean to settle down to a long, hard fight. Their letter of
+invitation to prospective members opens boldly. "We beg to inform
+you that the National Economic League will render its services in an
+impartial educational movement TO OPPOSE SOCIALISM AND CLASS
+HATRED." Among its class-conscious members, men who recognize that
+the opening guns of the class struggle have been fired, may be
+instanced the following names: Hon. Lyman J. Gage, Ex-Secretary U.
+S. Treasury; Hon. Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, Ex-Minister to France;
+Rev. Henry C. Potter, Bishop New York Diocese; Hon. John D. Long,
+Ex-Secretary U. S. Navy; Hon. Levi P. Morton, Ex-Vice President
+United States; Henry Clews; John F. Dryden, President Prudential
+Life Insurance Co.; John A. McCall, President New York Life
+Insurance Co.; J. L. Greatsinger, President Brooklyn Rapid Transit
+Co.; the shipbuilding firm of William Cramp & Sons, the Southern
+Railway system, and the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railway
+Company.
+
+Instances of the troubled editorial voice have not been rare during
+the last several years. There were many cries from the press during
+the last days of the anthracite coal strike that the mine owners, by
+their stubbornness, were sowing the regrettable seeds of socialism.
+The World's Work for December, 1902, said: "The next significant
+fact is the recommendation by the Illinois State Federation of Labor
+that all members of labor unions who are also members of the state
+militia shall resign from the militia. This proposition has been
+favorably regarded by some other labor organizations. It has done
+more than any other single recent declaration or action to cause a
+public distrust of such unions as favor it. IT HINTS OF A CLASS
+SEPARATION THAT IN TURN HINTS OF ANARCHY."
+
+The OUTLOOK, February 14, 1903, in reference to the rioting at
+Waterbury, remarks, "That all this disorder should have occurred in
+a city of the character and intelligence of Waterbury indicates that
+the industrial war spirit is by no means confined to the immigrant
+or ignorant working classes."
+
+That President Roosevelt has smelt the smoke from the firing line of
+the class struggle is evidenced by his words, "Above all we need to
+remember that any kind of CLASS ANIMOSITY IN THE POLITICAL WORLD is,
+if possible, even more destructive to national welfare than
+sectional, race, or religious animosity." The chief thing to be
+noted here is President Roosevelt's tacit recognition of class
+animosity in the industrial world, and his fear, which language
+cannot portray stronger, that this class animosity may spread to the
+political world. Yet this is the very policy which the socialists
+have announced in their declaration of war against present-day
+society--to capture the political machinery of society and by that
+machinery destroy present-day society.
+
+The New York Independent for February 12, 1903, recognized without
+qualification the class struggle. "It is impossible fairly to pass
+upon the methods of labor unions, or to devise plans for remedying
+their abuses, until it is recognized, to begin with, that unions are
+based upon class antagonism and that their policies are dictated by
+the necessities of social warfare. A strike is a rebellion against
+the owners of property. The rights of property are protected by
+government. And a strike, under certain provocation, may extend as
+far as did the general strike in Belgium a few years since, when
+practically the entire wage-earning population stopped work in order
+to force political concessions from the property-owning classes.
+This is an extreme case, but it brings out vividly the real nature
+of labor organization as a species of warfare whose object is the
+coercion of one class by another class."
+
+It has been shown, theoretically and actually, that there is a class
+struggle in the United States. The quarrel over the division of the
+joint product is irreconcilable. The working class is no longer
+losing its strongest and most capable members. These men, denied
+room for their ambition in the capitalist ranks, remain to be the
+leaders of the workers, to spur them to discontent, to make them
+conscious of their class, to lead them to revolt.
+
+This revolt, appearing spontaneously all over the industrial field
+in the form of demands for an increased share of the joint product,
+is being carefully and shrewdly shaped for a political assault upon
+society. The leaders, with the carelessness of fatalists, do not
+hesitate for an instant to publish their intentions to the world.
+They intend to direct the labor revolt to the capture of the
+political machinery of society. With the political machinery once
+in their hands, which will also give them the control of the police,
+the army, the navy, and the courts, they will confiscate, with or
+without remuneration, all the possessions of the capitalist class
+which are used in the production and distribution of the necessaries
+and luxuries of life. By this, they mean to apply the law of
+eminent domain to the land, and to extend the law of eminent domain
+till it embraces the mines, the factories, the railroads, and the
+ocean carriers. In short, they intend to destroy present-day
+society, which they contend is run in the interest of another class,
+and from the materials to construct a new society, which will be run
+in their interest.
+
+On the other hand, the capitalist class is beginning to grow
+conscious of itself and of the struggle which is being waged. It is
+already forming offensive and defensive leagues, while some of the
+most prominent figures in the nation are preparing to lead it in the
+attack upon socialism.
+
+The question to be solved is not one of Malthusianism, "projected
+efficiency," nor ethics. It is a question of might. Whichever
+class is to win, will win by virtue of superior strength; for the
+workers are beginning to say, as they said to Mr. Cunniff, "Malthus
+be damned." In their own minds they find no sanction for continuing
+the individual struggle for the survival of the fittest. As Mr.
+Gompers has said, they want more, and more, and more. The ethical
+import of Mr. Kidd's plan of the present generation putting up with
+less in order that race efficiency may be projected into a remote
+future, has no bearing upon their actions. They refuse to be the
+"glad perishers" so glowingly described by Nietzsche.
+
+It remains to be seen how promptly the capitalist class will respond
+to the call to arms. Upon its promptness rests its existence, for
+if it sits idly by, soothfully proclaiming that what ought not to be
+cannot be, it will find the roof beams crashing about its head. The
+capitalist class is in the numerical minority, and bids fair to be
+outvoted if it does not put a stop to the vast propaganda being
+waged by its enemy. It is no longer a question of whether or not
+there is a class struggle. The question now is, what will be the
+outcome of the class struggle?
+
+
+
+THE TRAMP
+
+
+
+Mr. Francis O'Neil, General Superintendent of Police, Chicago,
+speaking of the tramp, says: "Despite the most stringent police
+regulations, a great city will have a certain number of homeless
+vagrants to shelter through the winter." "Despite,"--mark the word,
+a confession of organized helplessness as against unorganized
+necessity. If police regulations are stringent and yet fail, then
+that which makes them fail, namely, the tramp, must have still more
+stringent reasons for succeeding. This being so, it should be of
+interest to inquire into these reasons, to attempt to discover why
+the nameless and homeless vagrant sets at naught the right arm of
+the corporate power of our great cities, why all that is weak and
+worthless is stronger than all that is strong and of value.
+
+Mr. O'Neil is a man of wide experience on the subject of tramps. He
+may be called a specialist. As he says of himself: "As an old-time
+desk sergeant and police captain, I have had almost unlimited
+opportunity to study and analyze this class of floating population,
+which seeks the city in winter and scatters abroad through the
+country in the spring." He then continues: "This experience
+reiterated the lesson that the vast majority of these wanderers are
+of the class with whom a life of vagrancy is a chosen means of
+living without work." Not only is it to be inferred from this that
+there is a large class in society which lives without work, for Mr.
+O'Neil's testimony further shows that this class is forced to live
+without work.
+
+He says: "I have been astonished at the multitude of those who have
+unfortunately engaged in occupations which practically force them to
+become loafers for at least a third of the year. And it is from
+this class that the tramps are largely recruited. I recall a
+certain winter when it seemed to me that a large portion of the
+inhabitants of Chicago belonged to this army of unfortunates. I was
+stationed at a police station not far from where an ice harvest was
+ready for the cutters. The ice company advertised for helpers, and
+the very night this call appeared in the newspapers our station was
+packed with homeless men, who asked shelter in order to be at hand
+for the morning's work. Every foot of floor space was given over to
+these lodgers and scores were still unaccommodated."
+
+And again: "And it must be confessed that the man who is willing to
+do honest labor for food and shelter is a rare specimen in this vast
+army of shabby and tattered wanderers who seek the warmth of the
+city with the coming of the first snow." Taking into consideration
+the crowd of honest laborers that swamped Mr. O'Neil's station-house
+on the way to the ice-cutting, it is patent, if all tramps were
+looking for honest labor instead of a small minority, that the
+honest laborers would have a far harder task finding something
+honest to do for food and shelter. If the opinion of the honest
+laborers who swamped Mr. O'Neil's station-house were asked, one
+could rest confident that each and every man would express a
+preference for fewer honest laborers on the morrow when he asked the
+ice foreman for a job.
+
+And, finally, Mr. O'Neil says: "The humane and generous treatment
+which this city has accorded the great army of homeless unfortunates
+has made it the victim of wholesale imposition, and this well-
+intended policy of kindness has resulted in making Chicago the
+winter Mecca of a vast and undesirable floating population." That
+is to say, because of her kindness, Chicago had more than her fair
+share of tramps; because she was humane and generous she suffered
+whole-sale imposition. From this we must conclude that it does not
+do to be HUMANE and GENEROUS to our fellow-men--when they are
+tramps. Mr. O'Neil is right, and that this is no sophism it is the
+intention of this article, among other things, to show.
+
+In a general way we may draw the following inferences from the
+remarks of Mr. O'Neil: (1) The tramp is stronger than organized
+society and cannot be put down; (2) The tramp is "shabby,"
+"tattered," "homeless," "unfortunate"; (3) There is a "vast" number
+of tramps; (4) Very few tramps are willing to do honest work; (5)
+Those tramps who are willing to do honest work have to hunt very
+hard to find it; (6) The tramp is undesirable.
+
+To this last let the contention be appended that the tramp is only
+PERSONALLY undesirable; that he is NEGATIVELY desirable; that the
+function he performs in society is a negative function; and that he
+is the by-product of economic necessity.
+
+It is very easy to demonstrate that there are more men than there is
+work for men to do. For instance, what would happen tomorrow if one
+hundred thousand tramps should become suddenly inspired with an
+overmastering desire for work? It is a fair question. "Go to work"
+is preached to the tramp every day of his life. The judge on the
+bench, the pedestrian in the street, the housewife at the kitchen
+door, all unite in advising him to go to work. So what would happen
+tomorrow if one hundred thousand tramps acted upon this advice and
+strenuously and indomitably sought work? Why, by the end of the
+week one hundred thousand workers, their places taken by the tramps,
+would receive their time and be "hitting the road" for a job.
+
+Ella Wheeler Wilcox unwittingly and uncomfortably demonstrated the
+disparity between men and work. {1} She made a casual reference, in
+a newspaper column she conducts, to the difficulty two business men
+found in obtaining good employees. The first morning mail brought
+her seventy-five applications for the position, and at the end of
+two weeks over two hundred people had applied.
+
+Still more strikingly was the same proposition recently demonstrated
+in San Francisco. A sympathetic strike called out a whole
+federation of trades' unions. Thousands of men, in many branches of
+trade, quit work,--draymen, sand teamsters, porters and packers,
+longshoremen, stevedores, warehousemen, stationary engineers,
+sailors, marine firemen, stewards, sea-cooks, and so forth,--an
+interminable list. It was a strike of large proportions. Every
+Pacific coast shipping city was involved, and the entire coasting
+service, from San Diego to Puget Sound, was virtually tied up. The
+time was considered auspicious. The Philippines and Alaska had
+drained the Pacific coast of surplus labor. It was summer-time,
+when the agricultural demand for laborers was at its height, and
+when the cities were bare of their floating populations. And yet
+there remained a body of surplus labor sufficient to take the places
+of the strikers. No matter what occupation, sea-cook or stationary
+engineer, sand teamster or warehouseman, in every case there was an
+idle worker ready to do the work. And not only ready but anxious.
+They fought for a chance to work. Men were killed, hundreds of
+heads were broken, the hospitals were filled with injured men, and
+thousands of assaults were committed. And still surplus laborers,
+"scabs," came forward to replace the strikers.
+
+The question arises: WHENCE CAME THIS SECOND ARMY OF WORKERS TO
+REPLACE THE FIRST ARMY? One thing is certain: the trades' unions
+did not scab on one another. Another thing is certain: no industry
+on the Pacific slope was crippled in the slightest degree by its
+workers being drawn away to fill the places of the strikers. A
+third thing is certain: the agricultural workers did not flock to
+the cities to replace the strikers. In this last instance it is
+worth while to note that the agricultural laborers wailed to High
+Heaven when a few of the strikers went into the country to compete
+with them in unskilled employments. So there is no accounting for
+this second army of workers. It simply was. It was there all this
+time, a surplus labor army in the year of our Lord 1901, a year
+adjudged most prosperous in the annals of the United States. {2}
+
+The existence of the surplus labor army being established, there
+remains to be established the economic necessity for the surplus
+labor army. The simplest and most obvious need is that brought
+about by the fluctuation of production. If, when production is at
+low ebb, all men are at work, it necessarily follows that when
+production increases there will be no men to do the increased work.
+This may seem almost childish, and, if not childish, at least easily
+remedied. At low ebb let the men work shorter time; at high flood
+let them work overtime. The main objection to this is, that it is
+not done, and that we are considering what is, not what might be or
+should be.
+
+Then there are great irregular and periodical demands for labor
+which must be met. Under the first head come all the big building
+and engineering enterprises. When a canal is to be dug or a
+railroad put through, requiring thousands of laborers, it would be
+hurtful to withdraw these laborers from the constant industries.
+And whether it is a canal to be dug or a cellar, whether five
+thousand men are required or five, it is well, in society as at
+present organized, that they be taken from the surplus labor army.
+The surplus labor army is the reserve fund of social energy, and
+this is one of the reasons for its existence.
+
+Under the second head, periodical demands, come the harvests.
+Throughout the year, huge labor tides sweep back and forth across
+the United States. That which is sown and tended by few men, comes
+to sudden ripeness and must be gathered by many men; and it is
+inevitable that these many men form floating populations. In the
+late spring the berries must be picked, in the summer the grain
+garnered, in the fall, the hops gathered, in the winter the ice
+harvested. In California a man may pick berries in Siskiyou,
+peaches in Santa Clara, grapes in the San Joaquin, and oranges in
+Los Angeles, going from job to job as the season advances, and
+travelling a thousand miles ere the season is done. But the great
+demand for agricultural labor is in the summer. In the winter, work
+is slack, and these floating populations eddy into the cities to eke
+out a precarious existence and harrow the souls of the police
+officers until the return of warm weather and work. If there were
+constant work at good wages for every man, who would harvest the
+crops?
+
+But the last and most significant need for the surplus labor army
+remains to be stated. This surplus labor acts as a check upon all
+employed labor. It is the lash by which the masters hold the
+workers to their tasks, or drive them back to their tasks when they
+have revolted. It is the goad which forces the workers into the
+compulsory "free contracts" against which they now and again rebel.
+There is only one reason under the sun that strikes fail, and that
+is because there are always plenty of men to take the strikers'
+places.
+
+The strength of the union today, other things remaining equal, is
+proportionate to the skill of the trade, or, in other words,
+proportionate to the pressure the surplus labor army can put upon
+it. If a thousand ditch-diggers strike, it is easy to replace them,
+wherefore the ditch-diggers have little or no organized strength.
+But a thousand highly skilled machinists are somewhat harder to
+replace, and in consequence the machinist unions are strong. The
+ditch-diggers are wholly at the mercy of the surplus labor army, the
+machinists only partly. To be invincible, a union must be a
+monopoly. It must control every man in its particular trade, and
+regulate apprentices so that the supply of skilled workmen may
+remain constant; this is the dream of the "Labor Trust" on the part
+of the captains of labor.
+
+Once, in England, after the Great Plague, labor awoke to find there
+was more work for men than there were men to work. Instead of
+workers competing for favors from employers, employers were
+competing for favors from the workers. Wages went up and up, and
+continued to go up, until the workers demanded the full product of
+their toil. Now it is clear that, when labor receives its full
+product capital must perish. And so the pygmy capitalists of that
+post-Plague day found their existence threatened by this untoward
+condition of affairs. To save themselves, they set a maximum wage,
+restrained the workers from moving about from place to place,
+smashed incipient organization, refused to tolerate idlers, and by
+most barbarous legal penalties punished those who disobeyed. After
+that, things went on as before.
+
+The point of this, of course, is to demonstrate the need of the
+surplus labor army. Without such an army, our present capitalist
+society would be powerless. Labor would organize as it never
+organized before, and the last least worker would be gathered into
+the unions. The full product of toil would be demanded, and
+capitalist society would crumble away. Nor could capitalist society
+save itself as did the post-Plague capitalist society. The time is
+past when a handful of masters, by imprisonment and barbarous
+punishment, can drive the legions of the workers to their tasks.
+Without a surplus labor army, the courts, police, and military are
+impotent. In such matters the function of the courts, police, and
+military is to preserve order, and to fill the places of strikers
+with surplus labor. If there be no surplus labor to instate, there
+is no function to perform; for disorder arises only during the
+process of instatement, when the striking labor army and the surplus
+labor army clash together. That is to say, that which maintains the
+integrity of the present industrial society more potently than the
+courts, police, and military is the surplus labor army.
+
+
+It has been shown that there are more men than there is work for
+men, and that the surplus labor army is an economic necessity. To
+show how the tramp is a by-product of this economic necessity, it is
+necessary to inquire into the composition of the surplus labor army.
+What men form it? Why are they there? What do they do?
+
+In the first place, since the workers must compete for employment,
+it inevitably follows that it is the fit and efficient who find
+employment. The skilled worker holds his place by virtue of his
+skill and efficiency. Were he less skilled, or were he unreliable
+or erratic, he would be swiftly replaced by a stronger competitor.
+The skilled and steady employments are not cumbered with clowns and
+idiots. A man finds his place according to his ability and the
+needs of the system, and those without ability, or incapable of
+satisfying the needs of the system, have no place. Thus, the poor
+telegrapher may develop into an excellent wood-chopper. But if the
+poor telegrapher cherishes the delusion that he is a good
+telegrapher, and at the same time disdains all other employments, he
+will have no employment at all, or he will be so poor at all other
+employments that he will work only now and again in lieu of better
+men. He will be among the first let off when times are dull, and
+among the last taken on when times are good. Or, to the point, he
+will be a member of the surplus labor army.
+
+So the conclusion is reached that the less fit and less efficient,
+or the unfit and inefficient, compose the surplus labor army. Here
+are to be found the men who have tried and failed, the men who
+cannot hold jobs,--the plumber apprentice who could not become a
+journeyman, and the plumber journeyman too clumsy and dull to retain
+employment; switchmen who wreck trains; clerks who cannot balance
+books; blacksmiths who lame horses; lawyers who cannot plead; in
+short, the failures of every trade and profession, and failures,
+many of them, in divers trades and professions. Failure is writ
+large, and in their wretchedness they bear the stamp of social
+disapprobation. Common work, any kind of work, wherever or however
+they can obtain it, is their portion.
+
+But these hereditary inefficients do not alone compose the surplus
+labor army. There are the skilled but unsteady and unreliable men;
+and the old men, once skilled, but, with dwindling powers, no longer
+skilled. {3} And there are good men, too, splendidly skilled and
+efficient, but thrust out of the employment of dying or disaster-
+smitten industries. In this connection it is not out of place to
+note the misfortune of the workers in the British iron trades, who
+are suffering because of American inroads. And, last of all, are
+the unskilled laborers, the hewers of wood and drawers of water, the
+ditch-diggers, the men of pick and shovel, the helpers, lumpers,
+roustabouts. If trade is slack on a seacoast of two thousand miles,
+or the harvests are light in a great interior valley, myriads of
+these laborers lie idle, or make life miserable for their fellows in
+kindred unskilled employments.
+
+A constant filtration goes on in the working world, and good
+material is continually drawn from the surplus labor army. Strikes
+and industrial dislocations shake up the workers, bring good men to
+the surface and sink men as good or not so good. The hope of the
+skilled striker is in that the scabs are less skilled, or less
+capable of becoming skilled; yet each strike attests to the
+efficiency that lurks beneath. After the Pullman strike, a few
+thousand railroad men were chagrined to find the work they had flung
+down taken up by men as good as themselves.
+
+But one thing must be considered here. Under the present system, if
+the weakest and least fit were as strong and fit as the best, and
+the best were correspondingly stronger and fitter, the same
+condition would obtain. There would be the same army of employed
+labor, the same army of surplus labor. The whole thing is relative.
+There is no absolute standard of efficiency.
+
+
+Comes now the tramp. And all conclusions may be anticipated by
+saying at once that he is a tramp because some one has to be a
+tramp. If he left the "road" and became a VERY efficient common
+laborer, some ORDINARILY EFFICIENT common laborer would have to take
+to the "road." The nooks and crannies are crowded by the surplus
+laborers; and when the first snow flies, and the tramps are driven
+into the cities, things become overcrowded and stringent police
+regulations are necessary.
+
+The tramp is one of two kinds of men: he is either a discouraged
+worker or a discouraged criminal. Now a discouraged criminal, on
+investigation, proves to be a discouraged worker, or the descendant
+of discouraged workers; so that, in the last analysis, the tramp is
+a discouraged worker. Since there is not work for all,
+discouragement for some is unavoidable. How, then, does this
+process of discouragement operate?
+
+The lower the employment in the industrial scale, the harder the
+conditions. The finer, the more delicate, the more skilled the
+trade, the higher is it lifted above the struggle. There is less
+pressure, less sordidness, less savagery. There are fewer glass-
+blowers proportionate to the needs of the glass-blowing industry
+than there are ditch-diggers proportionate to the needs of the
+ditch-digging industry. And not only this, for it requires a glass-
+blower to take the place of a striking glass-blower, while any kind
+of a striker or out-of-work can take the place of a ditch-digger.
+So the skilled trades are more independent, have more individuality
+and latitude. They may confer with their masters, make demands,
+assert themselves. The unskilled laborers, on the other hand, have
+no voice in their affairs. The settlement of terms is none of their
+business. "Free contract" is all that remains to them. They may
+take what is offered, or leave it. There are plenty more of their
+kind. They do not count. They are members of the surplus labor
+army, and must be content with a hand-to-mouth existence.
+
+The reward is likewise proportioned. The strong, fit worker in a
+skilled trade, where there is little labor pressure, is well
+compensated. He is a king compared with his less fortunate brothers
+in the unskilled occupations where the labor pressure is great. The
+mediocre worker not only is forced to be idle a large portion of the
+time, but when employed is forced to accept a pittance. A dollar a
+day on some days and nothing on other days will hardly support a man
+and wife and send children to school. And not only do the masters
+bear heavily upon him, and his own kind struggle for the morsel at
+his mouth, but all skilled and organized labor adds to his woe.
+Union men do not scab on one another, but in strikes, or when work
+is slack, it is considered "fair" for them to descend and take away
+the work of the common laborers. And take it away they do; for, as
+a matter of fact, a well-fed, ambitious machinist or a core-maker
+will transiently shovel coal better than an ill-fed, spiritless
+laborer.
+
+Thus there is no encouragement for the unfit, inefficient, and
+mediocre. Their very inefficiency and mediocrity make them helpless
+as cattle and add to their misery. And the whole tendency for such
+is downward, until, at the bottom of the social pit, they are
+wretched, inarticulate beasts, living like beasts, breeding like
+beasts, dying like beasts. And how do they fare, these creatures
+born mediocre, whose heritage is neither brains nor brawn nor
+endurance? They are sweated in the slums in an atmosphere of
+discouragement and despair. There is no strength in weakness, no
+encouragement in foul air, vile food, and dank dens. They are there
+because they are so made that they are not fit to be higher up; but
+filth and obscenity do not strengthen the neck, nor does chronic
+emptiness of belly stiffen the back.
+
+For the mediocre there is no hope. Mediocrity is a sin. Poverty is
+the penalty of failure,--poverty, from whose loins spring the
+criminal and the tramp, both failures, both discouraged workers.
+Poverty is the inferno where ignorance festers and vice corrodes,
+and where the physical, mental, and moral parts of nature are
+aborted and denied.
+
+That the charge of rashness in splashing the picture be not
+incurred, let the following authoritative evidence be considered:
+first, the work and wages of mediocrity and inefficiency, and,
+second, the habitat:
+
+The New York Sun of February 28, 1901, describes the opening of a
+factory in New York City by the American Tobacco Company. Cheroots
+were to be made in this factory in competition with other factories
+which refused to be absorbed by the trust. The trust advertised for
+girls. The crowd of men and boys who wanted work was so great in
+front of the building that the police were forced with their clubs
+to clear them away. The wage paid the girls was $2.50 per week,
+sixty cents of which went for car fare. {4}
+
+Miss Nellie Mason Auten, a graduate student of the department of
+sociology at the University of Chicago, recently made a thorough
+investigation of the garment trades of Chicago. Her figures were
+published in the American Journal of Sociology, and commented upon
+by the Literary Digest. She found women working ten hours a day,
+six days a week, for forty cents per week (a rate of two-thirds of a
+cent an hour). Many women earned less than a dollar a week, and
+none of them worked every week. The following table will best
+summarize Miss Auten's investigations among a portion of the
+garment-workers:
+
+Industry Average Average Average
+ Individual Number of Yearly
+ Weekly Weeks Earnings
+ Wages Employed
+Dressmakers $.90 42. $37.00
+Pants-Finishers 1.31 27.58 42.41
+Housewives and 1.58 30.21 47.49
+Pants-Finishers
+Seamstresses 2.03 32.78 64.10
+Pants-makers 2.13 30.77 75.61
+Miscellaneous 2.77 29. 81.80
+Tailors 6.22 31.96 211.92
+General Averages 2.48 31.18 76.74
+
+Walter A. Wyckoff, who is as great an authority upon the worker as
+Josiah Flynt is on the tramp, furnishes the following Chicago
+experience:
+
+"Many of the men were so weakened by the want and hardship of the
+winter that they were no longer in condition for effective labor.
+Some of the bosses who were in need of added hands were obliged to
+turn men away because of physical incapacity. One instance of this
+I shall not soon forget. It was when I overheard, early one morning
+at a factory gate, an interview between a would-be laborer and the
+boss. I knew the applicant for a Russian Jew, who had at home an
+old mother and a wife and two young children to support. He had had
+intermittent employment throughout the winter in a sweater's den,
+{5} barely enough to keep them all alive, and, after the hardships
+of the cold season, he was again in desperate straits for work.
+
+"The boss had all but agreed to take him on for some sort of
+unskilled labor, when, struck by the cadaverous look of the man, he
+told him to bare his arm. Up went the sleeve of his coat and his
+ragged flannel shirt, exposing a naked arm with the muscles nearly
+gone, and the blue-white transparent skin stretched over sinews and
+the outlines of the bones. Pitiful beyond words was his effort to
+give a semblance of strength to the biceps which rose faintly to the
+upward movement of the forearm. But the boss sent him off with an
+oath and a contemptuous laugh; and I watched the fellow as he turned
+down the street, facing the fact of his starving family with a
+despair at his heart which only mortal man can feel and no mortal
+tongue can speak."
+
+Concerning habitat, Mr. Jacob Riis has stated that in New York City,
+in the block bounded by Stanton, Houston, Attorney, and Ridge
+streets, the size of which is 200 by 300, there is a warren of 2244
+human beings.
+
+In the block bounded by Sixty-first and Sixty-second streets, and
+Amsterdam and West End avenues, are over four thousand human
+creatures,--quite a comfortable New England village to crowd into
+one city block.
+
+The Rev. Dr. Behrends, speaking of the block bounded by Canal,
+Hester, Eldridge, and Forsyth streets, says: "In a room 12 by 8 and
+5.5 feet high, it was found that nine persons slept and prepared
+their food. . . . In another room, located in a dark cellar, without
+screens or partitions, were together two men with their wives and a
+girl of fourteen, two single men and a boy of seventeen, two women
+and four boys,--nine, ten, eleven, and fifteen years old,--fourteen
+persons in all."
+
+Here humanity rots. Its victims, with grim humor, call it "tenant-
+house rot." Or, as a legislative report puts it: "Here infantile
+life unfolds its bud, but perishes before its first anniversary.
+Here youth is ugly with loathsome disease, and the deformities which
+follow physical degeneration."
+
+These are the men and women who are what they are because they were
+not better born, or because they happened to be unluckily born in
+time and space. Gauged by the needs of the system, they are weak
+and worthless. The hospital and the pauper's grave await them, and
+they offer no encouragement to the mediocre worker who has failed
+higher up in the industrial structure. Such a worker, conscious
+that he has failed, conscious from the hard fact that he cannot
+obtain work in the higher employments, finds several courses open to
+him. He may come down and be a beast in the social pit, for
+instance; but if he be of a certain caliber, the effect of the
+social pit will be to discourage him from work. In his blood a
+rebellion will quicken, and he will elect to become either a felon
+or a tramp.
+
+If he have fought the hard fight he is not unacquainted with the
+lure of the "road." When out of work and still undiscouraged, he
+has been forced to "hit the road" between large cities in his quest
+for a job. He has loafed, seen the country and green things,
+laughed in joy, lain on his back and listened to the birds singing
+overhead, unannoyed by factory whistles and bosses' harsh commands;
+and, most significant of all, HE HAS LIVED! That is the point! He
+has not starved to death. Not only has he been care-free and happy,
+but he has lived! And from the knowledge that he has idled and is
+still alive, he achieves a new outlook on life; and the more he
+experiences the unenviable lot of the poor worker, the more the
+blandishments of the "road" take hold of him. And finally he flings
+his challenge in the face of society, imposes a valorous boycott on
+all work, and joins the far-wanderers of Hoboland, the gypsy folk of
+this latter day.
+
+But the tramp does not usually come from the slums. His place of
+birth is ordinarily a bit above, and sometimes a very great bit
+above. A confessed failure, he yet refuses to accept the
+punishment, and swerves aside from the slum to vagabondage. The
+average beast in the social pit is either too much of a beast, or
+too much of a slave to the bourgeois ethics and ideals of his
+masters, to manifest this flicker of rebellion. But the social pit,
+out of its discouragement and viciousness, breeds criminals, men who
+prefer being beasts of prey to being beasts of work. And the
+mediocre criminal, in turn, the unfit and inefficient criminal, is
+discouraged by the strong arm of the law and goes over to trampdom.
+
+These men, the discouraged worker and the discouraged criminal,
+voluntarily withdraw themselves from the struggle for work.
+Industry does not need them. There are no factories shut down
+through lack of labor, no projected railroads unbuilt for want of
+pick-and-shovel men. Women are still glad to toil for a dollar a
+week, and men and boys to clamor and fight for work at the factory
+gates. No one misses these discouraged men, and in going away they
+have made it somewhat easier for those that remain.
+
+
+So the case stands thus: There being more men than there is work
+for men to do, a surplus labor army inevitably results. The surplus
+labor army is an economic necessity; without it, present society
+would fall to pieces. Into the surplus labor army are herded the
+mediocre, the inefficient, the unfit, and those incapable of
+satisfying the industrial needs of the system. The struggle for
+work between the members of the surplus labor army is sordid and
+savage, and at the bottom of the social pit the struggle is vicious
+and beastly. This struggle tends to discouragement, and the victims
+of this discouragement are the criminal and the tramp. The tramp is
+not an economic necessity such as the surplus labor army, but he is
+the by-product of an economic necessity.
+
+The "road" is one of the safety-valves through which the waste of
+the social organism is given off. And BEING GIVEN OFF constitutes
+the negative function of the tramp. Society, as at present
+organized, makes much waste of human life. This waste must be
+eliminated. Chloroform or electrocution would be a simple, merciful
+solution of this problem of elimination; but the ruling ethics,
+while permitting the human waste, will not permit a humane
+elimination of that waste. This paradox demonstrates the
+irreconcilability of theoretical ethics and industrial need.
+
+And so the tramp becomes self-eliminating. And not only self!
+Since he is manifestly unfit for things as they are, and since kind
+is prone to beget kind, it is necessary that his kind cease with
+him, that his progeny shall not be, that he play the eunuch's part
+in this twentieth century after Christ. And he plays it. He does
+not breed. Sterility is his portion, as it is the portion of the
+woman on the street. They might have been mates, but society has
+decreed otherwise.
+
+And, while it is not nice that these men should die, it is ordained
+that they must die, and we should not quarrel with them if they
+cumber our highways and kitchen stoops with their perambulating
+carcasses. This is a form of elimination we not only countenance
+but compel. Therefore let us be cheerful and honest about it. Let
+us be as stringent as we please with our police regulations, but for
+goodness' sake let us refrain from telling the tramp to go to work.
+Not only is it unkind, but it is untrue and hypocritical. We know
+there is no work for him. As the scapegoat to our economic and
+industrial sinning, or to the plan of things, if you will, we should
+give him credit. Let us be just. He is so made. Society made him.
+He did not make himself.
+
+
+
+THE SCAB
+
+
+
+In a competitive society, where men struggle with one another for
+food and shelter, what is more natural than that generosity, when it
+diminishes the food and shelter of men other than he who is
+generous, should be held an accursed thing? Wise old saws to the
+contrary, he who takes from a man's purse takes from his existence.
+To strike at a man's food and shelter is to strike at his life; and
+in a society organized on a tooth-and-nail basis, such an act,
+performed though it may be under the guise of generosity, is none
+the less menacing and terrible.
+
+It is for this reason that a laborer is so fiercely hostile to
+another laborer who offers to work for less pay or longer hours. To
+hold his place, (which is to live), he must offset this offer by
+another equally liberal, which is equivalent to giving away somewhat
+from the food and shelter he enjoys. To sell his day's work for $2,
+instead of $2.50, means that he, his wife, and his children will not
+have so good a roof over their heads, so warm clothes on their
+backs, so substantial food in their stomachs. Meat will be bought
+less frequently and it will be tougher and less nutritious, stout
+new shoes will go less often on the children's feet, and disease and
+death will be more imminent in a cheaper house and neighborhood.
+
+Thus the generous laborer, giving more of a day's work for less
+return, (measured in terms of food and shelter), threatens the life
+of his less generous brother laborer, and at the best, if he does
+not destroy that life, he diminishes it. Whereupon the less
+generous laborer looks upon him as an enemy, and, as men are
+inclined to do in a tooth-and-nail society, he tries to kill the man
+who is trying to kill him.
+
+When a striker kills with a brick the man who has taken his place,
+he has no sense of wrong-doing. In the deepest holds of his being,
+though he does not reason the impulse, he has an ethical sanction.
+He feels dimly that he has justification, just as the home-defending
+Boer felt, though more sharply, with each bullet he fired at the
+invading English. Behind every brick thrown by a striker is the
+selfish will "to live" of himself, and the slightly altruistic will
+"to live" of his family. The family group came into the world
+before the State group, and society, being still on the primitive
+basis of tooth and nail, the will "to live" of the State is not so
+compelling to the striker as is the will "to live" of his family and
+himself.
+
+In addition to the use of bricks, clubs, and bullets, the selfish
+laborer finds it necessary to express his feelings in speech. Just
+as the peaceful country-dweller calls the sea-rover a "pirate," and
+the stout burgher calls the man who breaks into his strong-box a
+"robber," so the selfish laborer applies the opprobrious epithet a
+"scab" to the laborer who takes from him food and shelter by being
+more generous in the disposal of his labor power. The sentimental
+connotation of "scab" is as terrific as that of "traitor" or
+"Judas," and a sentimental definition would be as deep and varied as
+the human heart. It is far easier to arrive at what may be called a
+technical definition, worded in commercial terms, as, for instance,
+that A SCAB IS ONE WHO GIVES MORE VALUE FOR THE SAME PRICE THAN
+ANOTHER.
+
+The laborer who gives more time or strength or skill for the same
+wage than another, or equal time or strength or skill for a less
+wage, is a scab. This generousness on his part is hurtful to his
+fellow-laborers, for it compels them to an equal generousness which
+is not to their liking, and which gives them less of food and
+shelter. But a word may be said for the scab. Just as his act
+makes his rivals compulsorily generous, so do they, by fortune of
+birth and training, make compulsory his act of generousness. He
+does not scab because he wants to scab. No whim of the spirit, no
+burgeoning of the heart, leads him to give more of his labor power
+than they for a certain sum.
+
+It is because he cannot get work on the same terms as they that he
+is a scab. There is less work than there are men to do work. This
+is patent, else the scab would not loom so large on the labor-market
+horizon. Because they are stronger than he, or more skilled, or
+more energetic, it is impossible for him to take their places at the
+same wage. To take their places he must give more value, must work
+longer hours or receive a smaller wage. He does so, and he cannot
+help it, for his will "to live" is driving him on as well as they
+are being driven on by their will "to live"; and to live he must win
+food and shelter, which he can do only by receiving permission to
+work from some man who owns a bit of land or a piece of machinery.
+And to receive permission from this man, he must make the
+transaction profitable for him.
+
+Viewed in this light, the scab, who gives more labor power for a
+certain price than his fellows, is not so generous after all. He is
+no more generous with his energy than the chattel slave and the
+convict laborer, who, by the way, are the almost perfect scabs.
+They give their labor power for about the minimum possible price.
+But, within limits, they may loaf and malinger, and, as scabs, are
+exceeded by the machine, which never loafs and malingers and which
+is the ideally perfect scab.
+
+It is not nice to be a scab. Not only is it not in good social
+taste and comradeship, but, from the standpoint of food and shelter,
+it is bad business policy. Nobody desires to scab, to give most for
+least. The ambition of every individual is quite the opposite, to
+give least for most; and, as a result, living in a tooth-and-nail
+society, battle royal is waged by the ambitious individuals. But in
+its most salient aspect, that of the struggle over the division of
+the joint product, it is no longer a battle between individuals, but
+between groups of individuals. Capital and labor apply themselves
+to raw material, make something useful out of it, add to its value,
+and then proceed to quarrel over the division of the added value.
+Neither cares to give most for least. Each is intent on giving less
+than the other and on receiving more.
+
+Labor combines into its unions, capital into partnerships,
+associations, corporations, and trusts. A group-struggle is the
+result, in which the individuals, as individuals, play no part. The
+Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, for instance, serves notice
+on the Master Builders' Association that it demands an increase of
+the wage of its members from $3.50 a day to $4, and a Saturday half-
+holiday without pay. This means that the carpenters are trying to
+give less for more. Where they received $21 for six full days, they
+are endeavoring to get $22 for five days and a half,--that is, they
+will work half a day less each week and receive a dollar more.
+
+Also, they expect the Saturday half-holiday to give work to one
+additional man for each eleven previously employed. This last
+affords a splendid example of the development of the group idea. In
+this particular struggle the individual has no chance at all for
+life. The individual carpenter would be crushed like a mote by the
+Master Builders' Association, and like a mote the individual master
+builder would be crushed by the Brotherhood of Carpenters and
+Joiners.
+
+In the group-struggle over the division of the joint product, labor
+utilizes the union with its two great weapons, the strike and the
+boycott; while capital utilizes the trust and the association, the
+weapons of which are the black-list, the lockout, and the scab. The
+scab is by far the most formidable weapon of the three. He is the
+man who breaks strikes and causes all the trouble. Without him
+there would be no trouble, for the strikers are willing to remain
+out peacefully and indefinitely so long as other men are not in
+their places, and so long as the particular aggregation of capital
+with which they are fighting is eating its head off in enforced
+idleness.
+
+But both warring groups have reserve weapons. Were it not for the
+scab, these weapons would not be brought into play. But the scab
+takes the place of the striker, who begins at once to wield a most
+powerful weapon, terrorism. The will "to live" of the scab recoils
+from the menace of broken bones and violent death. With all due
+respect to the labor leaders, who are not to be blamed for volubly
+asseverating otherwise, terrorism is a well-defined and eminently
+successful policy of the labor unions. It has probably won them
+more strikes than all the rest of the weapons in their arsenal.
+This terrorism, however, must be clearly understood. It is directed
+solely against the scab, placing him in such fear for life and limb
+as to drive him out of the contest. But when terrorism gets out of
+hand and inoffensive non-combatants are injured, law and order
+threatened, and property destroyed, it becomes an edged tool that
+cuts both ways. This sort of terrorism is sincerely deplored by the
+labor leaders, for it has probably lost them as many strikes as have
+been lost by any other single cause.
+
+The scab is powerless under terrorism. As a rule, he is not so good
+nor gritty a man as the men he is displacing, and he lacks their
+fighting organization. He stands in dire need of stiffening and
+backing. His employers, the capitalists, draw their two remaining
+weapons, the ownership of which is debatable, but which they for the
+time being happen to control. These two weapons may be called the
+political and judicial machinery of society. When the scab crumples
+up and is ready to go down before the fists, bricks, and bullets of
+the labor group, the capitalist group puts the police and soldiers
+into the field, and begins a general bombardment of injunctions.
+Victory usually follows, for the labor group cannot withstand the
+combined assault of gatling guns and injunctions.
+
+But it has been noted that the ownership of the political and
+judicial machinery of society is debatable. In the Titanic struggle
+over the division of the joint product, each group reaches out for
+every available weapon. Nor are they blinded by the smoke of
+conflict. They fight their battles as coolly and collectedly as
+ever battles were fought on paper. The capitalist group has long
+since realized the immense importance of controlling the political
+and judicial machinery of society.
+
+Taught by gatlings and injunctions, which have smashed many an
+otherwise successful strike, the labor group is beginning to realize
+that it all depends upon who is behind and who is before the
+gatlings and the injunctions. And he who knows the labor movement
+knows that there is slowly growing up and being formulated a clear
+and definite policy for the capture of the political and judicial
+machinery.
+
+This is the terrible spectre which Mr. John Graham Brooks sees
+looming portentously over the twentieth century world. No man may
+boast a more intimate knowledge of the labor movement than he; and
+he reiterates again and again the dangerous likelihood of the whole
+labor group capturing the political machinery of society. As he
+says in his recent book: {6} "It is not probable that employers can
+destroy unionism in the United States. Adroit and desperate
+attempts will, however, be made, if we mean by unionism the
+undisciplined and aggressive fact of vigorous and determined
+organizations. If capital should prove too strong in this struggle,
+the result is easy to predict. The employers have only to convince
+organized labor that it cannot hold its own against the capitalist
+manager, and the whole energy that now goes to the union will turn
+to an aggressive political socialism. It will not be the harmless
+sympathy with increased city and state functions which trade unions
+already feel; it will become a turbulent political force bent upon
+using every weapon of taxation against the rich."
+
+This struggle not to be a scab, to avoid giving more for less and to
+succeed in giving less for more, is more vital than it would appear
+on the surface. The capitalist and labor groups are locked together
+in desperate battle, and neither side is swayed by moral
+considerations more than skin-deep. The labor group hires business
+agents, lawyers, and organizers, and is beginning to intimidate
+legislators by the strength of its solid vote; and more directly, in
+the near future, it will attempt to control legislation by capturing
+it bodily through the ballot-box. On the other hand, the capitalist
+group, numerically weaker, hires newspapers, universities, and
+legislatures, and strives to bend to its need all the forces which
+go to mould public opinion.
+
+The only honest morality displayed by either side is white-hot
+indignation at the iniquities of the other side. The striking
+teamster complacently takes a scab driver into an alley, and with an
+iron bar breaks his arms, so that he can drive no more, but cries
+out to high Heaven for justice when the capitalist breaks his skull
+by means of a club in the hands of a policeman. Nay, the members of
+a union will declaim in impassioned rhetoric for the God-given right
+of an eight-hour day, and at the time be working their own business
+agent seventeen hours out of the twenty-four.
+
+A capitalist such as Collis P. Huntington, and his name is Legion,
+after a long life spent in buying the aid of countless legislatures,
+will wax virtuously wrathful, and condemn in unmeasured terms "the
+dangerous tendency of crying out to the Government for aid" in the
+way of labor legislation. Without a quiver, a member of the
+capitalist group will run tens of thousands of pitiful child-
+laborers through his life-destroying cotton factories, and weep
+maudlin and constitutional tears over one scab hit in the back with
+a brick. He will drive a "compulsory" free contract with an
+unorganized laborer on the basis of a starvation wage, saying, "Take
+it or leave it," knowing that to leave it means to die of hunger,
+and in the next breath, when the organizer entices that laborer into
+a union, will storm patriotically about the inalienable right of all
+men to work. In short, the chief moral concern of either side is
+with the morals of the other side. They are not in the business for
+their moral welfare, but to achieve the enviable position of the
+non-scab who gets more than he gives.
+
+But there is more to the question than has yet been discussed. The
+labor scab is no more detestable to his brother laborers than is the
+capitalist scab to his brother capitalists. A capitalist may get
+most for least in dealing with his laborers, and in so far be a non-
+scab; but at the same time, in his dealings with his fellow-
+capitalists, he may give most for least and be the very worst kind
+of scab. The most heinous crime an employer of labor can commit is
+to scab on his fellow-employers of labor. Just as the individual
+laborers have organized into groups to protect themselves from the
+peril of the scab laborer, so have the employers organized into
+groups to protect themselves from the peril of the scab employer.
+The employers' federations, associations, and trusts are nothing
+more nor less than unions. They are organized to destroy scabbing
+amongst themselves and to encourage scabbing amongst others. For
+this reason they pool interests, determine prices, and present an
+unbroken and aggressive front to the labor group.
+
+As has been said before, nobody likes to play the compulsorily
+generous role of scab. It is a bad business proposition on the face
+of it. And it is patent that there would be no capitalist scabs if
+there were not more capital than there is work for capital to do.
+When there are enough factories in existence to supply, with
+occasional stoppages, a certain commodity, the building of new
+factories by a rival concern, for the production of that commodity,
+is plain advertisement that that capital is out of a job. The first
+act of this new aggregation of capital will be to cut prices, to
+give more for less,--in short to scab, to strike at the very
+existence of the less generous aggregation of capital the work of
+which it is trying to do.
+
+No scab capitalist strives to give more for less for any other
+reason than that he hopes, by undercutting a competitor and driving
+that competitor out of the market, to get that market and its
+profits for himself. His ambition is to achieve the day when he
+shall stand alone in the field both as buyer and seller,--when he
+will be the royal non-scab, buying most for least, selling least for
+most, and reducing all about him, the small buyers and sellers, (the
+consumers and the laborers), to a general condition of scabdom.
+This, for example, has been the history of Mr. Rockefeller and the
+Standard Oil Company. Through all the sordid villanies of scabdom
+he has passed, until today he is a most regal non-scab. However, to
+continue in this enviable position, he must be prepared at a
+moment's notice to go scabbing again. And he is prepared. Whenever
+a competitor arises, Mr. Rockefeller changes about from giving least
+for most and gives most for least with such a vengeance as to drive
+the competitor out of existence.
+
+The banded capitalists discriminate against a scab capitalist by
+refusing him trade advantages, and by combining against him in most
+relentless fashion. The banded laborers, discriminating against a
+scab laborer in more primitive fashion, with a club, are no more
+merciless than the banded capitalists.
+
+Mr. Casson tells of a New York capitalist who withdrew from the
+Sugar Union several years ago and became a scab. He was worth
+something like twenty millions of dollars. But the Sugar Union,
+standing shoulder to shoulder with the Railroad Union and several
+other unions, beat him to his knees till he cried, "Enough." So
+frightfully did they beat him that he was obliged to turn over to
+his creditors his home, his chickens, and his gold watch. In point
+of fact, he was as thoroughly bludgeoned by the Federation of
+Capitalist Unions as ever scab workman was bludgeoned by a labor
+union. The intent in either case is the same,--to destroy the
+scab's producing power. The labor scab with concussion of the brain
+is put out of business, and so is the capitalist scab who has lost
+all his dollars down to his chickens and his watch.
+
+But the role of scab passes beyond the individual. Just as
+individuals scab on other individuals, so do groups scab on other
+groups. And the principle involved is precisely the same as in the
+case of the simple labor scab. A group, in the nature of its
+organization, is often compelled to give most for least, and, so
+doing, to strike at the life of another group. At the present
+moment all Europe is appalled by that colossal scab, the United
+States. And Europe is clamorous with agitation for a Federation of
+National Unions to protect her from the United States. It may be
+remarked, in passing, that in its prime essentials this agitation in
+no wise differs from the trade-union agitation among workmen in any
+industry. The trouble is caused by the scab who is giving most for
+least. The result of the American scab's nefarious actions will be
+to strike at the food and shelter of Europe. The way for Europe to
+protect herself is to quit bickering among her parts and to form a
+union against the scab. And if the union is formed, armies and
+navies may be expected to be brought into play in fashion similar to
+the bricks and clubs in ordinary labor struggles.
+
+In this connection, and as one of many walking delegates for the
+nations, M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the noted French economist, may well be
+quoted. In a letter to the Vienna Tageblatt, he advocates an
+economic alliance among the Continental nations for the purpose of
+barring out American goods, an economic alliance, in his own
+language, "WHICH MAY POSSIBLY AND DESIRABLY DEVELOP INTO A POLITICAL
+ALLIANCE."
+
+It will be noted, in the utterances of the Continental walking
+delegates, that, one and all, they leave England out of the proposed
+union. And in England herself the feeling is growing that her days
+are numbered if she cannot unite for offence and defence with the
+great American scab. As Andrew Carnegie said some time ago, "The
+only course for Great Britain seems to be reunion with her
+grandchild or sure decline to a secondary place, and then to
+comparative insignificance in the future annals of the English-
+speaking race."
+
+Cecil Rhodes, speaking of what would have obtained but for the pig-
+headedness of George III, and of what will obtain when England and
+the United States are united, said, "NO CANNON WOULD. . . BE FIRED
+ON EITHER HEMISPHERE BUT BY PERMISSION OF THE ENGLISH RACE." It
+would seem that England, fronted by the hostile Continental Union
+and flanked by the great American scab, has nothing left but to join
+with the scab and play the historic labor role of armed Pinkerton.
+Granting the words of Cecil Rhodes, the United States would be
+enabled to scab without let or hindrance on Europe, while England,
+as professional strike-breaker and policeman, destroyed the unions
+and kept order.
+
+All this may appear fantastic and erroneous, but there is in it a
+soul of truth vastly more significant than it may seem.
+Civilization may be expressed today in terms of trade-unionism.
+Individual struggles have largely passed away, but group-struggles
+increase prodigiously. And the things for which the groups struggle
+are the same as of old. Shorn of all subtleties and complexities,
+the chief struggle of men, and of groups of men, is for food and
+shelter. And, as of old they struggled with tooth and nail, so
+today they struggle with teeth and nails elongated into armies and
+navies, machines, and economic advantages.
+
+Under the definition that a scab is ONE WHO GIVES MORE VALUE FOR THE
+SAME PRICE THAN ANOTHER, it would seem that society can be generally
+divided into the two classes of the scabs and the non-scabs. But on
+closer investigation, however, it will be seen that the non-scab is
+a vanishing quantity. In the social jungle, everybody is preying
+upon everybody else. As in the case of Mr. Rockefeller, he who was
+a scab yesterday is a non-scab today, and tomorrow may be a scab
+again.
+
+The woman stenographer or book-keeper who receives forty dollars per
+month where a man was receiving seventy-five is a scab. So is the
+woman who does a man's work at a weaving-machine, and the child who
+goes into the mill or factory. And the father, who is scabbed out
+of work by the wives and children of other men, sends his own wife
+and children to scab in order to save himself.
+
+When a publisher offers an author better royalties than other
+publishers have been paying him, he is scabbing on those other
+publishers. The reporter on a newspaper, who feels he should be
+receiving a larger salary for his work, says so, and is shown the
+door, is replaced by a reporter who is a scab; whereupon, when the
+belly-need presses, the displaced reporter goes to another paper and
+scabs himself. The minister who hardens his heart to a call, and
+waits for a certain congregation to offer him say $500 a year more,
+often finds himself scabbed upon by another and more impecunious
+minister; and the next time it is HIS turn to scab while a brother
+minister is hardening his heart to a call. The scab is everywhere.
+The professional strike-breakers, who as a class receive large
+wages, will scab on one another, while scab unions are even formed
+to prevent scabbing upon scabs.
+
+There are non-scabs, but they are usually born so, and are protected
+by the whole might of society in the possession of their food and
+shelter. King Edward is such a type, as are all individuals who
+receive hereditary food-and-shelter privileges,--such as the present
+Duke of Bedford, for instance, who yearly receives $75,000 from the
+good people of London because some former king gave some former
+ancestor of his the market privileges of Covent Garden. The
+irresponsible rich are likewise non-scabs,--and by them is meant
+that coupon-clipping class which hires its managers and brains to
+invest the money usually left it by its ancestors.
+
+Outside these lucky creatures, all the rest, at one time or another
+in their lives, are scabs, at one time or another are engaged in
+giving more for a certain price than any one else. The meek
+professor in some endowed institution, by his meek suppression of
+his convictions, is giving more for his salary than gave the other
+and more outspoken professor whose chair he occupies. And when a
+political party dangles a full dinner-pail in the eyes of the
+toiling masses, it is offering more for a vote than the dubious
+dollar of the opposing party. Even a money-lender is not above
+taking a slightly lower rate of interest and saying nothing about
+it.
+
+Such is the tangle of conflicting interests in a tooth-and-nail
+society that people cannot avoid being scabs, are often made so
+against their desires, and are often unconsciously made so. When
+several trades in a certain locality demand and receive an advance
+in wages, they are unwittingly making scabs of their fellow-laborers
+in that district who have received no advance in wages. In San
+Francisco the barbers, laundry-workers, and milk-wagon drivers
+received such an advance in wages. Their employers promptly added
+the amount of this advance to the selling price of their wares. The
+price of shaves, of washing, and of milk went up. This reduced the
+purchasing power of the unorganized laborers, and, in point of fact,
+reduced their wages and made them greater scabs.
+
+Because the British laborer is disinclined to scab,--that is,
+because he restricts his output in order to give less for the wage
+he receives,--it is to a certain extent made possible for the
+American capitalist, who receives a less restricted output from his
+laborers, to play the scab on the English capitalist. As a result
+of this, (of course combined with other causes), the American
+capitalist and the American laborer are striking at the food and
+shelter of the English capitalist and laborer.
+
+The English laborer is starving today because, among other things,
+he is not a scab. He practises the policy of "ca' canny," which may
+be defined as "go easy." In order to get most for least, in many
+trades he performs but from one-fourth to one-sixth of the labor he
+is well able to perform. An instance of this is found in the
+building of the Westinghouse Electric Works at Manchester. The
+British limit per man was 400 bricks per day. The Westinghouse
+Company imported a "driving" American contractor, aided by half a
+dozen "driving" American foremen, and the British bricklayer swiftly
+attained an average of 1800 bricks per day, with a maximum of 2500
+bricks for the plainest work.
+
+But, the British laborer's policy of "ca' canny," which is the very
+honorable one of giving least for most, and which is likewise the
+policy of the English capitalist, is nevertheless frowned upon by
+the English capitalist, whose business existence is threatened by
+the great American scab. From the rise of the factory system, the
+English capitalist gladly embraced the opportunity, wherever he
+found it, of giving least for most. He did it all over the world
+whenever he enjoyed a market monopoly, and he did it at home with
+the laborers employed in his mills, destroying them like flies till
+prevented, within limits, by the passage of the Factory Acts. Some
+of the proudest fortunes of England today may trace their origin to
+the giving of least for most to the miserable slaves of the factory
+towns. But at the present time the English capitalist is outraged
+because his laborers are employing against him precisely the same
+policy he employed against them, and which he would employ again did
+the chance present itself.
+
+Yet "ca' canny" is a disastrous thing to the British laborer. It
+has driven ship-building from England to Scotland, bottle-making
+from Scotland to Belgium, flint-glass-making from England to
+Germany, and today is steadily driving industry after industry to
+other countries. A correspondent from Northampton wrote not long
+ago: "Factories are working half and third time. . . . There is no
+strike, there is no real labor trouble, but the masters and men are
+alike suffering from sheer lack of employment. Markets which were
+once theirs are now American." It would seem that the unfortunate
+British laborer is 'twixt the devil and the deep sea. If he gives
+most for least, he faces a frightful slavery such as marked the
+beginning of the factory system. If he gives least for most, he
+drives industry away to other countries and has no work at all.
+
+But the union laborers of the United States have nothing of which to
+boast, while, according to their trade-union ethics, they have a
+great deal of which to be ashamed. They passionately preach short
+hours and big wages, the shorter the hours and the bigger the wages
+the better. Their hatred for a scab is as terrible as the hatred of
+a patriot for a traitor, of a Christian for a Judas. And in the
+face of all this, they are as colossal scabs as the United States is
+a colossal scab. For all of their boasted unions and high labor
+ideals, they are about the most thoroughgoing scabs on the planet.
+
+Receiving $4.50 per day, because of his proficiency and immense
+working power, the American laborer has been known to scab upon
+scabs (so called) who took his place and received only $0.90 per day
+for a longer day. In this particular instance, five Chinese
+coolies, working longer hours, gave less value for the price
+received from their employer than did one American laborer.
+
+It is upon his brother laborers overseas that the American laborer
+most outrageously scabs. As Mr. Casson has shown, an English nail-
+maker gets $3 per week, while an American nail-maker gets $30. But
+the English worker turns out 200 pounds of nails per week, while the
+American turns out 5500 pounds. If he were as "fair" as his English
+brother, other things being equal, he would be receiving, at the
+English worker's rate of pay, $82.50. As it is, he is scabbing upon
+his English brother to the tune of $79.50 per week. Dr. Schultze-
+Gaevernitz has shown that a German weaver produces 466 yards of
+cotton a week at a cost of .303 per yard, while an American weaver
+produces 1200 yards at a cost of .02 per yard.
+
+But, it may be objected, a great part of this is due to the more
+improved American machinery. Very true, but none the less a great
+part is still due to the superior energy, skill, and willingness of
+the American laborer. The English laborer is faithful to the policy
+of "ca' canny." He refuses point-blank to get the work out of a
+machine that the New World scab gets out of a machine. Mr. Maxim,
+observing a wasteful hand-labor process in his English factory,
+invented a machine which he proved capable of displacing several
+men. But workman after workman was put at the machine, and without
+exception they turned out neither more nor less than a workman
+turned out by hand. They obeyed the mandate of the union and went
+easy, while Mr. Maxim gave up in despair. Nor will the British
+workman run machines at as high speed as the American, nor will he
+run so many. An American workman will "give equal attention
+simultaneously to three, four, or six machines or tools, while the
+British workman is compelled by his trade union to limit his
+attention to one, so that employment may be given to half a dozen
+men."
+
+But for scabbing, no blame attaches itself anywhere. With rare
+exceptions, all the people in the world are scabs. The strong,
+capable workman gets a job and holds it because of his strength and
+capacity. And he holds it because out of his strength and capacity
+he gives a better value for his wage than does the weaker and less
+capable workman. Therefore he is scabbing upon his weaker and less
+capable brother workman. He is giving more value for the price paid
+by the employer.
+
+The superior workman scabs upon the inferior workman because he is
+so constituted and cannot help it. The one, by fortune of birth and
+upbringing, is strong and capable; the other, by fortune of birth
+and upbringing, is not so strong nor capable. It is for the same
+reason that one country scabs upon another. That country which has
+the good fortune to possess great natural resources, a finer sun and
+soil, unhampering institutions, and a deft and intelligent labor
+class and capitalist class is bound to scab upon a country less
+fortunately situated. It is the good fortune of the United States
+that is making her the colossal scab, just as it is the good fortune
+of one man to be born with a straight back while his brother is born
+with a hump.
+
+It is not good to give most for least, not good to be a scab. The
+word has gained universal opprobrium. On the other hand, to be a
+non-scab, to give least for most, is universally branded as stingy,
+selfish, and unchristian-like. So all the world, like the British
+workman, is 'twixt the devil and the deep sea. It is treason to
+one's fellows to scab, it is unchristian-like not to scab.
+
+Since to give least for most, and to give most for least, are
+universally bad, what remains? Equity remains, which is to give
+like for like, the same for the same, neither more nor less. But
+this equity, society, as at present constituted, cannot give. It is
+not in the nature of present-day society for men to give like for
+like, the same for the same. And so long as men continue to live in
+this competitive society, struggling tooth and nail with one another
+for food and shelter, (which is to struggle tooth and nail with one
+another for life), that long will the scab continue to exist. His
+will "to live" will force him to exist. He may be flouted and
+jeered by his brothers, he may be beaten with bricks and clubs by
+the men who by superior strength and capacity scab upon him as he
+scabs upon them by longer hours and smaller wages, but through it
+all he will persist, giving a bit more of most for least than they
+are giving.
+
+
+
+THE QUESTION OF THE MAXIMUM
+
+
+
+For any social movement or development there must be a maximum limit
+beyond which it cannot proceed. That civilization which does not
+advance must decline, and so, when the maximum of development has
+been reached in any given direction, society must either retrograde
+or change the direction of its advance. There are many families of
+men that have failed, in the critical period of their economic
+evolution, to effect a change in direction, and were forced to fall
+back. Vanquished at the moment of their maximum, they have dropped
+out of the whirl of the world. There was no room for them.
+Stronger competitors have taken their places, and they have either
+rotted into oblivion or remain to be crushed under the iron heel of
+the dominant races in as remorseless a struggle as the world has yet
+witnessed. But in this struggle fair women and chivalrous men will
+play no part. Types and ideals have changed. Helens and Launcelots
+are anachronisms. Blows will be given and taken, and men fight and
+die, but not for faiths and altars. Shrines will be desecrated, but
+they will be the shrines, not of temples, but market-places.
+Prophets will arise, but they will be the prophets of prices and
+products. Battles will be waged, not for honor and glory, nor for
+thrones and sceptres, but for dollars and cents and for marts and
+exchanges. Brain and not brawn will endure, and the captains of war
+will be commanded by the captains of industry. In short, it will be
+a contest for the mastery of the world's commerce and for industrial
+supremacy.
+
+It is more significant, this struggle into which we have plunged,
+for the fact that it is the first struggle to involve the globe. No
+general movement of man has been so wide-spreading, so far-reaching.
+Quite local was the supremacy of any ancient people; likewise the
+rise to empire of Macedonia and Rome, the waves of Arabian valor and
+fanaticism, and the mediaeval crusades to the Holy Sepulchre. But
+since those times the planet has undergone a unique shrinkage.
+
+The world of Homer, limited by the coast-lines of the Mediterranean
+and Black seas, was a far vaster world than ours of today, which we
+weigh, measure, and compute as accurately and as easily as if it
+were a child's play-ball. Steam has made its parts accessible and
+drawn them closer together. The telegraph annihilates space and
+time. Each morning, every part knows what every other part is
+thinking, contemplating, or doing. A discovery in a German
+laboratory is being demonstrated in San Francisco within twenty-four
+hours. A book written in South Africa is published by simultaneous
+copyright in every English-speaking country, and on the day
+following is in the hands of the translators. The death of an
+obscure missionary in China, or of a whiskey-smuggler in the South
+Seas, is served, the world over, with the morning toast. The wheat
+output of Argentine or the gold of Klondike are known wherever men
+meet and trade. Shrinkage, or centralization, has become such that
+the humblest clerk in any metropolis may place his hand on the pulse
+of the world. The planet has indeed grown very small; and because
+of this, no vital movement can remain in the clime or country where
+it takes its rise.
+
+And so today the economic and industrial impulse is world-wide. It
+is a matter of import to every people. None may be careless of it.
+To do so is to perish. It is become a battle, the fruits of which
+are to the strong, and to none but the strongest of the strong. As
+the movement approaches its maximum, centralization accelerates and
+competition grows keener and closer. The competitor nations cannot
+all succeed. So long as the movement continues its present
+direction, not only will there not be room for all, but the room
+that is will become less and less; and when the moment of the
+maximum is at hand, there will be no room at all. Capitalistic
+production will have overreached itself, and a change of direction
+will then be inevitable.
+
+Divers queries arise: What is the maximum of commercial development
+the world can sustain? How far can it be exploited? How much
+capital is necessary? Can sufficient capital be accumulated? A
+brief resume of the industrial history of the last one hundred years
+or so will be relevant at this stage of the discussion.
+Capitalistic production, in its modern significance, was born of the
+industrial revolution in England in the latter half of the
+eighteenth century. The great inventions of that period were both
+its father and its mother, while, as Mr. Brooks Adams has shown, the
+looted treasure of India was the potent midwife. Had there not been
+an unwonted increase of capital, the impetus would not have been
+given to invention, while even steam might have languished for
+generations instead of at once becoming, as it did, the most
+prominent factor in the new method of production. The improved
+application of these inventions in the first decades of the
+nineteenth century mark the transition from the domestic to the
+factory system of manufacture and inaugurated the era of capitalism.
+The magnitude of this revolution is manifested by the fact that
+England alone had invented the means and equipped herself with the
+machinery whereby she could overstock the world's markets. The home
+market could not consume a tithe of the home product. To
+manufacture this home product she had sacrificed her agriculture.
+She must buy her food from abroad, and to do so she must sell her
+goods abroad.
+
+But the struggle for commercial supremacy had not yet really begun.
+England was without a rival. Her navies controlled the sea. Her
+armies and her insular position gave her peace at home. The world
+was hers to exploit. For nearly fifty years she dominated the
+European, American, and Indian trade, while the great wars then
+convulsing society were destroying possible competitive capital and
+straining consumption to its utmost. The pioneer of the industrial
+nations, she thus received such a start in the new race for wealth
+that it is only today the other nations have succeeded in overtaking
+her. In 1820 the volume of her trade (imports and exports) was
+68,000,000 pounds. In 1899 it had increased to 815,000,000 pounds,-
+-an increase of 1200 per cent in the volume of trade.
+
+For nearly one hundred years England has been producing surplus
+value. She has been producing far more than she consumes, and this
+excess has swelled the volume of her capital. This capital has been
+invested in her enterprises at home and abroad, and in her shipping.
+In 1898 the Stock Exchange estimated British capital invested abroad
+at 1,900,000,000 pounds. But hand in hand with her foreign
+investments have grown her adverse balances of trade. For the ten
+years ending with 1868, her average yearly adverse balance was
+52,000,000 pounds; ending with 1878, 81,000,000 pounds; ending with
+1888, 101,000,000 pounds; and ending with 1898, 133,000,000 pounds.
+In the single year of 1897 it reached the portentous sum of
+157,000,000 pounds.
+
+But England's adverse balances of trade in themselves are nothing at
+which to be frightened. Hitherto they have been paid from out the
+earnings of her shipping and the interest on her foreign
+investments. But what does cause anxiety, however, is that,
+relative to the trade development of other countries, her export
+trade is falling off, without a corresponding diminution of her
+imports, and that her securities and foreign holdings do not seem
+able to stand the added strain. These she is being forced to sell
+in order to pull even. As the London Times gloomily remarks, "We
+are entering the twentieth century on the down grade, after a
+prolonged period of business activity, high wages, high profits, and
+overflowing revenue." In other words, the mighty grasp England held
+over the resources and capital of the world is being relaxed. The
+control of its commerce and banking is slipping through her fingers.
+The sale of her foreign holdings advertises the fact that other
+nations are capable of buying them, and, further, that these other
+nations are busily producing surplus value.
+
+The movement has become general. Today, passing from country to
+country, an ever-increasing tide of capital is welling up.
+Production is doubling and quadrupling upon itself. It used to be
+that the impoverished or undeveloped nations turned to England when
+it came to borrowing, but now Germany is competing keenly with her
+in this matter. France is not averse to lending great sums to
+Russia, and Austria-Hungary has capital and to spare for foreign
+holdings.
+
+Nor has the United States failed to pass from the side of the debtor
+to that of the creditor nations. She, too, has become wise in the
+way of producing surplus value. She has been successful in her
+efforts to secure economic emancipation. Possessing but 5 per cent
+of the world's population and producing 32 per cent of the world's
+food supply, she has been looked upon as the world's farmer; but
+now, amidst general consternation, she comes forward as the world's
+manufacturer. In 1888 her manufactured exports amounted to
+$130,300,087; in 1896, to $253,681,541; in 1897, to $279,652,721; in
+1898, to $307,924,994; in 1899, to $338,667,794; and in 1900, to
+$432,000,000. Regarding her growing favorable balances of trade, it
+may be noted that not only are her imports not increasing, but they
+are actually falling off, while her exports in the last decade have
+increased 72.4 per cent. In ten years her imports from Europe have
+been reduced from $474,000,000 to $439,000,000; while in the same
+time her exports have increased from $682,000,000 to $1,111,000,000.
+Her balance of trade in her favor in 1895 was $75,000,000; in 1896,
+over $100,000,000; in 1897, nearly $300,000,000; in 1898,
+$615,000,000; in 1899, $530,000,000; and in 1900, $648,000,000.
+
+In the matter of iron, the United States, which in 1840 had not
+dreamed of entering the field of international competition, in 1897,
+as much to her own surprise as any one else's, undersold the English
+in their own London market. In 1899 there was but one American
+locomotive in Great Britain; but, of the five hundred locomotives
+sold abroad by the United States in 1902, England bought more than
+any other country. Russia is operating a thousand of them on her
+own roads today. In one instance the American manufacturers
+contracted to deliver a locomotive in four and one-half months for
+$9250, the English manufacturers requiring twenty-four months for
+delivery at $14,000. The Clyde shipbuilders recently placed orders
+for 150,000 tons of plates at a saving of $250,000, and the American
+steel going into the making of the new London subway is taken as a
+matter of course. American tools stand above competition the world
+over. Ready-made boots and shoes are beginning to flood Europe,--
+the same with machinery, bicycles, agricultural implements, and all
+kinds of manufactured goods. A correspondent from Hamburg, speaking
+of the invasion of American trade, says: "Incidentally, it may be
+remarked that the typewriting machine with which this article is
+written, as well as the thousands--nay, hundreds of thousands--of
+others that are in use throughout the world, were made in America;
+that it stands on an American table, in an office furnished with
+American desks, bookcases, and chairs, which cannot be made in
+Europe of equal quality, so practical and convenient, for a similar
+price."
+
+In 1893 and 1894, because of the distrust of foreign capital, the
+United States was forced to buy back American securities held
+abroad; but in 1897 and 1898 she bought back American securities
+held abroad, not because she had to, but because she chose to. And
+not only has she bought back her own securities, but in the last
+eight years she has become a buyer of the securities of other
+countries. In the money markets of London, Paris, and Berlin she is
+a lender of money. Carrying the largest stock of gold in the world,
+the world, in moments of danger, when crises of international
+finance loom large, looks to her vast lending ability for safety.
+
+Thus, in a few swift years, has the United States drawn up to the
+van where the great industrial nations are fighting for commercial
+and financial empire. The figures of the race, in which she passed
+England, are interesting:
+
+Year United States Exports United Kingdom Exports
+1875 $497,263,737 $1,087,497,000
+1885 673,593,506 1,037,124,000
+1895 807,742,415 1,100,452,000
+1896 986,830,080 1,168,671,000
+1897 1,079,834,296 1,139,882,000
+1898 1,233,564,828 1,135,642,000
+1899 1,253,466,000 1,287,971,000
+1900 1,453,013,659 1,418,348,000
+
+As Mr. Henry Demarest Lloyd has noted, "When the news reached
+Germany of the new steel trust in America, the stocks of the iron
+and steel mills listed on the Berlin Bourse fell." While Europe has
+been talking and dreaming of the greatness which was, the United
+States has been thinking and planning and doing for the greatness to
+be. Her captains of industry and kings of finance have toiled and
+sweated at organizing and consolidating production and
+transportation. But this has been merely the developmental stage,
+the tuning-up of the orchestra. With the twentieth century rises
+the curtain on the play,--a play which shall have much in it of
+comedy and a vast deal of tragedy, and which has been well named The
+Capitalistic Conquest of Europe by America. Nations do not die
+easily, and one of the first moves of Europe will be the erection of
+tariff walls. America, however, will fittingly reply, for already
+her manufacturers are establishing works in France and Germany. And
+when the German trade journals refused to accept American
+advertisements, they found their country flamingly bill-boarded in
+buccaneer American fashion.
+
+M. Leroy-Beaulieu, the French economist, is passionately preaching a
+commercial combination of the whole Continent against the United
+States,--a commercial alliance which, he boldly declares, should
+become a political alliance. And in this he is not alone, finding
+ready sympathy and ardent support in Austria, Italy, and Germany.
+Lord Rosebery said, in a recent speech before the Wolverhampton
+Chamber of Commerce: "The Americans, with their vast and almost
+incalculable resources, their acuteness and enterprise, and their
+huge population, which will probably be 100,000,000 in twenty years,
+together with the plan they have adopted for putting accumulated
+wealth into great cooperative syndicates or trusts for the purpose
+of carrying on this great commercial warfare, are the most
+formidable . . . rivals to be feared."
+
+The London Times says: "It is useless to disguise the fact that
+Great Britain is being outdistanced. The competition does not come
+from the glut caused by miscalculation as to the home demand. Our
+own steel-makers know better and are alarmed. The threatened
+competition in markets hitherto our own comes from efficiency in
+production such as never before has been seen." Even the British
+naval supremacy is in danger, continues the same paper, "for, if we
+lose our engineering supremacy, our naval supremacy will follow,
+unless held on sufferance by our successful rivals."
+
+And the Edinburgh Evening News says, with editorial gloom: "The
+iron and steel trades have gone from us. When the fictitious
+prosperity caused by the expenditure of our own Government and that
+of European nations on armaments ceases, half of the men employed in
+these industries will be turned into the streets. The outlook is
+appalling. What suffering will have to be endured before the
+workers realize that there is nothing left for them but emigration!"
+
+
+That there must be a limit to the accumulation of capital is
+obvious. The downward course of the rate of interest,
+notwithstanding that many new employments have been made possible
+for capital, indicates how large is the increase of surplus value.
+This decline of the interest rate is in accord with Bohm-Bawerk's
+law of "diminishing returns." That is, when capital, like anything
+else, has become over-plentiful, less lucrative use can only be
+found for the excess. This excess, not being able to earn so much
+as when capital was less plentiful, competes for safe investments
+and forces down the interest rate on all capital. Mr. Charles A.
+Conant has well described the keenness of the scramble for safe
+investments, even at the prevailing low rates of interest. At the
+close of the war with Turkey, the Greek loan, guaranteed by Great
+Britain, France, and Russia, was floated with striking ease.
+Regardless of the small return, the amount offered at Paris,
+(41,000,000 francs), was subscribed for twenty-three times over.
+Great Britain, France, Germany, Holland, and the Scandinavian
+States, of recent years, have all engaged in converting their
+securities from 5 per cents to 4 per cents, from 4.5 per cents to
+3.5 per cents, and the 3.5 per cents into 3 per cents.
+
+Great Britain, France, Germany, and Austria-Hungary, according to
+the calculation taken in 1895 by the International Statistical
+Institute, hold forty-six billions of capital invested in negotiable
+securities alone. Yet Paris subscribed for her portion of the Greek
+loan twenty-three times over! In short, money is cheap. Andrew
+Carnegie and his brother bourgeois kings give away millions
+annually, but still the tide wells up. These vast accumulations
+have made possible "wild-catting," fraudulent combinations, fake
+enterprises, Hooleyism; but such stealings, great though they be,
+have little or no effect in reducing the volume. The time is past
+when startling inventions, or revolutions in the method of
+production, can break up the growing congestion; yet this saved
+capital demands an outlet, somewhere, somehow.
+
+When a great nation has equipped itself to produce far more than it
+can, under the present division of the product, consume, it seeks
+other markets for its surplus products. When a second nation finds
+itself similarly circumstanced, competition for these other markets
+naturally follows. With the advent of a third, a fourth, a fifth,
+and of divers other nations, the question of the disposal of surplus
+products grows serious. And with each of these nations possessing,
+over and beyond its active capital, great and growing masses of idle
+capital, and when the very foreign markets for which they are
+competing are beginning to produce similar wares for themselves, the
+question passes the serious stage and becomes critical.
+
+Never has the struggle for foreign markets been sharper than at the
+present. They are the one great outlet for congested accumulations.
+Predatory capital wanders the world over, seeking where it may
+establish itself. This urgent need for foreign markets is forcing
+upon the world-stage an era of great colonial empire. But this does
+not stand, as in the past, for the subjugation of peoples and
+countries for the sake of gaining their products, but for the
+privilege of selling them products. The theory once was, that the
+colony owed its existence and prosperity to the mother country; but
+today it is the mother country that owes its existence and
+prosperity to the colony. And in the future, when that supporting
+colony becomes wise in the way of producing surplus value and sends
+its goods back to sell to the mother country, what then? Then the
+world will have been exploited, and capitalistic production will
+have attained its maximum development.
+
+Foreign markets and undeveloped countries largely retard that
+moment. The favored portions of the earth's surface are already
+occupied, though the resources of many are yet virgin. That they
+have not long since been wrested from the hands of the barbarous and
+decadent peoples who possess them is due, not to the military
+prowess of such peoples, but to the jealous vigilance of the
+industrial nations. The powers hold one another back. The Turk
+lives because the way is not yet clear to an amicable division of
+him among the powers. And the United States, supreme though she is,
+opposes the partition of China, and intervenes her huge bulk between
+the hungry nations and the mongrel Spanish republics. Capital
+stands in its own way, welling up and welling up against the
+inevitable moment when it shall burst all bonds and sweep
+resistlessly across such vast stretches as China and South America.
+And then there will be no more worlds to exploit, and capitalism
+will either fall back, crushed under its own weight, or a change of
+direction will take place which will mark a new era in history.
+
+The Far East affords an illuminating spectacle. While the Western
+nations are crowding hungrily in, while the Partition of China is
+commingled with the clamor for the Spheres of Influence and the Open
+Door, other forces are none the less potently at work. Not only are
+the young Western peoples pressing the older ones to the wall, but
+the East itself is beginning to awake. American trade is advancing,
+and British trade is losing ground, while Japan, China, and India
+are taking a hand in the game themselves.
+
+In 1893, 100,000 pieces of American drills were imported into China;
+in 1897, 349,000. In 1893, 252,000 pieces of American sheetings
+were imported against 71,000 British; but in 1897, 566,000 pieces of
+American sheetings were imported against only 10,000 British. The
+cotton goods and yarn trade (which forms 40 per cent of the whole
+trade with China) shows a remarkable advance on the part of the
+United States. During the last ten years America has increased her
+importation of plain goods by 121 per cent in quantity and 59.5 per
+cent in value, while that of England and India combined has
+decreased 13.75 per cent in quantity and 8 per cent in value. Lord
+Charles Beresford, from whose "Break-up of China" these figures are
+taken, states that English yarn has receded and Indian yarn advanced
+to the front. In 1897, 140,000 piculs of Indian yarn were imported,
+18,000 of Japanese, 4500 of Shanghai-manufactured, and 700 of
+English.
+
+Japan, who but yesterday emerged from the mediaeval rule of the
+Shogunate and seized in one fell swoop the scientific knowledge and
+culture of the Occident, is already today showing what wisdom she
+has acquired in the production of surplus value, and is preparing
+herself that she may tomorrow play the part to Asia that England did
+to Europe one hundred years ago. That the difference in the world's
+affairs wrought by those one hundred years will prevent her
+succeeding is manifest; but it is equally manifest that they cannot
+prevent her playing a leading part in the industrial drama which has
+commenced on the Eastern stage. Her imports into the port of
+Newchang in 1891 amounted to but 22,000 taels; but in 1897 they had
+increased to 280,000 taels. In manufactured goods, from matches,
+watches, and clocks to the rolling stock of railways, she has
+already given stiff shocks to her competitors in the Asiatic
+markets; and this while she is virtually yet in the equipment stage
+of production. Erelong she, too, will be furnishing her share to
+the growing mass of the world's capital.
+
+As regards Great Britain, the giant trader who has so long
+overshadowed Asiatic commerce, Lord Charles Beresford says: "But
+competition is telling adversely; the energy of the British merchant
+is being equalled by other nationals. . . The competition of the
+Chinese and the introduction of steam into the country are also
+combining to produce changed conditions in China." But far more
+ominous is the plaintive note he sounds when he says: "New
+industries must be opened up, and I would especially direct the
+attention of the Chambers of Commerce (British) to . . . the fact
+that the more the native competes with the British manufacturer in
+certain classes of trade, the more machinery he will need, and the
+orders for such machinery will come to this country if our machinery
+manufacturers are enterprising enough."
+
+The Orient is beginning to show what an important factor it will
+become, under Western supervision, in the creation of surplus value.
+Even before the barriers which restrain Western capital are removed,
+the East will be in a fair way toward being exploited. An analysis
+of Lord Beresford's message to the Chambers of Commerce discloses,
+first, that the East is beginning to manufacture for itself; and,
+second, that there is a promise of keen competition in the West for
+the privilege of selling the required machinery. The inexorable
+query arises: WHAT IS THE WEST TO DO WHEN IT HAS FURNISHED THIS
+MACHINERY? And when not only the East, but all the now undeveloped
+countries, confront, with surplus products in their hands, the old
+industrial nations, capitalistic production will have attained its
+maximum development.
+
+But before that time must intervene a period which bids one pause
+for breath. A new romance, like unto none in all the past, the
+economic romance, will be born. For the dazzling prize of world-
+empire will the nations of the earth go up in harness. Powers will
+rise and fall, and mighty coalitions shape and dissolve in the swift
+whirl of events. Vassal nations and subject territories will be
+bandied back and forth like so many articles of trade. And with the
+inevitable displacement of economic centres, it is fair to presume
+that populations will shift to and fro, as they once did from the
+South to the North of England on the rise of the factory towns, or
+from the Old World to the New. Colossal enterprises will be
+projected and carried through, and combinations of capital and
+federations of labor be effected on a cyclopean scale.
+Concentration and organization will be perfected in ways hitherto
+undreamed. The nation which would keep its head above the tide must
+accurately adjust supply to demand, and eliminate waste to the last
+least particle. Standards of living will most likely descend for
+millions of people. With the increase of capital, the competition
+for safe investments, and the consequent fall of the interest rate,
+the principal which today earns a comfortable income would not then
+support a bare existence. Saving toward old age would cease among
+the working classes. And as the merchant cities of Italy crashed
+when trade slipped from their hands on the discovery of the new
+route to the Indies by way of the Cape of Good Hope, so will there
+come times of trembling for such nations as have failed to grasp the
+prize of world-empire. In that given direction they will have
+attained their maximum development, before the whole world, in the
+same direction, has attained its. There will no longer be room for
+them. But if they can survive the shock of being flung out of the
+world's industrial orbit, a change in direction may then be easily
+effected. That the decadent and barbarous peoples will be crushed
+is a fair presumption; likewise that the stronger breeds will
+survive, entering upon the transition stage to which all the world
+must ultimately come.
+
+This change of direction must be either toward industrial
+oligarchies or socialism. Either the functions of private
+corporations will increase till they absorb the central government,
+or the functions of government will increase till it absorbs the
+corporations. Much may be said on the chance of the oligarchy.
+Should an old manufacturing nation lose its foreign trade, it is
+safe to predict that a strong effort would be made to build a
+socialistic government, but it does not follow that this effort
+would be successful. With the moneyed class controlling the State
+and its revenues and all the means of subsistence, and guarding its
+own interests with jealous care, it is not at all impossible that a
+strong curb could be put upon the masses till the crisis were past.
+It has been done before. There is no reason why it should not be
+done again. At the close of the last century, such a movement was
+crushed by its own folly and immaturity. In 1871 the soldiers of
+the economic rulers stamped out, root and branch, a whole generation
+of militant socialists.
+
+Once the crisis were past, the ruling class, still holding the curb
+in order to make itself more secure, would proceed to readjust
+things and to balance consumption with production. Having a
+monopoly of the safe investments, the great masses of unremunerative
+capital would be directed, not to the production of more surplus
+value, but to the making of permanent improvements, which would give
+employment to the people, and make them content with the new order
+of things. Highways, parks, public buildings, monuments, could be
+builded; nor would it be out of place to give better factories and
+homes to the workers. Such in itself would be socialistic, save
+that it would be done by the oligarchs, a class apart. With the
+interest rate down to zero, and no field for the investment of
+sporadic capital, savings among the people would utterly cease, and
+old-age pensions be granted as a matter of course. It is also a
+logical necessity of such a system that, when the population began
+to press against the means of subsistence, (expansion being
+impossible), the birth rate of the lower classes would be lessened.
+Whether by their own initiative, or by the interference of the
+rulers, it would have to be done, and it would be done. In other
+words, the oligarchy would mean the capitalization of labor and the
+enslavement of the whole population. But it would be a fairer,
+juster form of slavery than any the world has yet seen. The per
+capita wage and consumption would be increased, and, with a
+stringent control of the birth rate, there is no reason why such a
+country should not be so ruled through many generations.
+
+On the other hand, as the capitalistic exploitation of the planet
+approaches its maximum, and countries are crowded out of the field
+of foreign exchanges, there is a large likelihood that their change
+in direction will be toward socialism. Were the theory of
+collective ownership and operation then to arise for the first time,
+such a movement would stand small chance of success. But such is
+not the case. The doctrine of socialism has flourished and grown
+throughout the nineteenth century; its tenets have been preached
+wherever the interests of labor and capital have clashed; and it has
+received exemplification time and again by the State's assumption of
+functions which had always belonged solely to the individual.
+
+When capitalistic production has attained its maximum development,
+it must confront a dividing of the ways; and the strength of capital
+on the one hand, and the education and wisdom of the workers on the
+other, will determine which path society is to travel. It is
+possible, considering the inertia of the masses, that the whole
+world might in time come to be dominated by a group of industrial
+oligarchies, or by one great oligarchy, but it is not probable.
+That sporadic oligarchies may flourish for definite periods of time
+is highly possible; that they may continue to do so is as highly
+improbable. The procession of the ages has marked not only the rise
+of man, but the rise of the common man. From the chattel slave, or
+the serf chained to the soil, to the highest seats in modern
+society, he has risen, rung by rung, amid the crumbling of the
+divine right of kings and the crash of falling sceptres. That he
+has done this, only in the end to pass into the perpetual slavery of
+the industrial oligarch, is something at which his whole past cries
+in protest. The common man is worthy of a better future, or else he
+is not worthy of his past.
+
+
+NOTE.--The above article was written as long ago as 1898. The only
+alteration has been the bringing up to 1900 of a few of its
+statistics. As a commercial venture of an author, it has an
+interesting history. It was promptly accepted by one of the leading
+magazines and paid for. The editor confessed that it was "one of
+those articles one could not possibly let go of after it was once in
+his possession." Publication was voluntarily promised to be
+immediate. Then the editor became afraid of its too radical nature,
+forfeited the sum paid for it, and did not publish it. Nor, offered
+far and wide, could any other editor of bourgeois periodicals be
+found who was rash enough to publish it. Thus, for the first time,
+after seven years, it appears in print.
+
+
+
+A REVIEW
+
+
+
+Two remarkable books are Ghent's "Our Benevolent Feudalism" {7} and
+Brooks's "The Social Unrest." {8} In these two books the opposite
+sides of the labor problem are expounded, each writer devoting
+himself with apprehension to the side he fears and views with
+disfavor. It would appear that they have set themselves the task of
+collating, as a warning, the phenomena of two counter social forces.
+Mr. Ghent, who is sympathetic with the socialist movement, follows
+with cynic fear every aggressive act of the capitalist class. Mr.
+Brooks, who yearns for the perpetuation of the capitalist system as
+long as possible, follows with grave dismay each aggressive act of
+the labor and socialist organizations. Mr. Ghent traces the
+emasculation of labor by capital, and Mr. Brooks traces the
+emasculation of independent competing capital by labor. In short,
+each marshals the facts of a side in the two sides which go to make
+a struggle so great that even the French Revolution is insignificant
+beside it; for this later struggle, for the first time in the
+history of struggles, is not confined to any particular portion of
+the globe, but involves the whole of it.
+
+Starting on the assumption that society is at present in a state of
+flux, Mr. Ghent sees it rapidly crystallizing into a status which
+can best be described as something in the nature of a benevolent
+feudalism. He laughs to scorn any immediate realization of the
+Marxian dream, while Tolstoyan utopias and Kropotkinian communistic
+unions of shop and farm are too wild to merit consideration. The
+coming status which Mr. Ghent depicts is a class domination by the
+capitalists. Labor will take its definite place as a dependent
+class, living in a condition of machine servitude fairly analogous
+to the land servitude of the Middle Ages. That is to say, labor
+will be bound to the machine, though less harshly, in fashion
+somewhat similar to that in which the earlier serf was bound to the
+soil. As he says, "Bondage to the land was the basis of villeinage
+in the old regime; bondage to the job will be the basis of
+villeinage in the new."
+
+At the top of the new society will tower the magnate, the new feudal
+baron; at the bottom will be found the wastrels and the
+inefficients. The new society he grades as follows:
+
+
+"I. The barons, graded on the basis of possessions.
+
+"II. The court agents and retainers. (This class will include the
+editors of 'respectable' and 'safe' newspapers, the pastors of
+'conservative' and 'wealthy' churches, the professors and teachers
+in endowed colleges and schools, lawyers generally, and most judges
+and politicians).
+
+"III. The workers in pure and applied science, artists, and
+physicians.
+
+"IV. The entrepreneurs, the managers of the great industries,
+transformed into a salaried class.
+
+"V. The foremen and superintendents. This class has heretofore
+been recruited largely from the skilled workers, but with the growth
+of technical education in schools and colleges, and the development
+of fixed caste, it is likely to become entirely differentiated.
+
+"VI. The villeins of the cities and towns, more or less regularly
+employed, who do skilled work and are partially protected by
+organization.
+
+"VII. The villeins of the cities and towns who do unskilled work
+and are unprotected by organization. They will comprise the
+laborers, domestics, and clerks.
+
+"VIII. The villeins of the manorial estates, of the great farms,
+the mines, and the forests.
+
+"IX. The small-unit farmers (land-owning), the petty tradesmen, and
+manufacturers.
+
+"X. The subtenants of the manorial estates and great farms
+(corresponding to the class of 'free tenants' in the old Feudalism).
+
+"XI. The cotters.
+
+"XII. The tramps, the occasionally employed, the unemployed--the
+wastrels of the city and country."
+
+"The new Feudalism, like most autocracies, will foster not only the
+arts, but also certain kinds of learning--particularly the kinds
+which are unlikely to disturb the minds of the multitude. A future
+Marsh, or Cope, or Le Comte will be liberally patronized and left
+free to discover what he will; and so, too, an Edison or a Marconi.
+Only they must not meddle with anything relating to social science."
+
+It must be confessed that Mr. Ghent's arguments are cunningly
+contrived and arrayed. They must be read to be appreciated. As an
+example of his style, which at the same time generalizes a portion
+of his argument, the following may well be given:
+
+"The new Feudalism will be but an orderly outgrowth of present
+tendencies and conditions. All societies evolve naturally out of
+their predecessors. In sociology, as in biology, there is no cell
+without a parent cell. The society of each generation develops a
+multitude of spontaneous and acquired variations, and out of these,
+by a blending process of natural and conscious selection, the
+succeeding society is evolved. The new order will differ in no
+important respects from the present, except in the completer
+development of its more salient features. The visitor from another
+planet who had known the old and should see the new would note but
+few changes. Alter et Idem--another yet the same--he would say.
+From magnate to baron, from workman to villein, from publicist to
+court agent and retainer, will be changes of state and function so
+slight as to elude all but the keenest eyes."
+
+And in conclusion, to show how benevolent and beautiful this new
+feudalism of ours will be, Mr. Ghent says: "Peace and stability it
+will maintain at all hazards; and the mass, remembering the chaos,
+the turmoil, the insecurity of the past, will bless its reign. . . .
+Efficiency--the faculty of getting things--is at last rewarded as it
+should be, for the efficient have inherited the earth and its
+fulness. The lowly, whose happiness is greater and whose welfare is
+more thoroughly conserved when governed than when governing, as a
+twentieth-century philosopher said of them, are settled and happy in
+the state which reason and experience teach is their God-appointed
+lot. They are comfortable too; and if the patriarchal ideal of a
+vine and fig tree for each is not yet attained, at least each has
+his rented patch in the country or his rented cell in a city
+building. Bread and the circus are freely given to the deserving,
+and as for the undeserving, they are merely reaping the rewards of
+their contumacy and pride. Order reigns, each has his justly
+appointed share, and the state rests, in security, 'lapt in
+universal law.'"
+
+Mr. Brooks, on the other hand, sees rising and dissolving and rising
+again in the social flux the ominous forms of a new society which is
+the direct antithesis of a benevolent feudalism. He trembles at the
+rash intrepidity of the capitalists who fight the labor unions, for
+by such rashness he greatly fears that labor will be driven to
+express its aims and strength in political terms, which terms will
+inevitably be socialistic terms.
+
+To keep down the rising tide of socialism, he preaches greater
+meekness and benevolence to the capitalists. No longer may they
+claim the right to run their own business, to beat down the
+laborer's standard of living for the sake of increased profits, to
+dictate terms of employment to individual workers, to wax
+righteously indignant when organized labor takes a hand in their
+business. No longer may the capitalist say "my" business, or even
+think "my" business; he must say "our" business, and think "our"
+business as well, accepting labor as a partner whose voice must be
+heard. And if the capitalists do not become more meek and
+benevolent in their dealings with labor, labor will be antagonized
+and will proceed to wreak terrible political vengeance, and the
+present social flux will harden into a status of socialism.
+
+Mr. Brooks dreams of a society at which Mr. Ghent sneers as "a
+slightly modified individualism, wherein each unit secures the just
+reward of his capacity and service." To attain this happy state,
+Mr. Brooks imposes circumspection upon the capitalists in their
+relations with labor. "If the socialistic spirit is to be held in
+abeyance in this country, businesses of this character (anthracite
+coal mining) must be handled with extraordinary caution." Which is
+to say, that to withstand the advance of socialism, a great and
+greater measure of Mr. Ghent's BENEVOLENCE will be required.
+
+Again and again, Mr. Brooks reiterates the danger he sees in harshly
+treating labor. "It is not probable that employers can destroy
+unionism in the United States. Adroit and desperate attempts will,
+however, be made, if we mean by unionism the undisciplined and
+aggressive fact of vigorous and determined organizations. If
+capital should prove too strong in this struggle, the result is easy
+to predict. The employers have only to convince organized labor
+that it cannot hold its own against the capitalist manager, and the
+whole energy that now goes to the union will turn to an aggressive
+political socialism. It will not be the harmless sympathy with
+increased city and state functions which trade unions already feel;
+it will become a turbulent political force bent upon using every
+weapon of taxation against the rich."
+
+"The most concrete impulse that now favors socialism in this country
+is the insane purpose to deprive labor organizations of the full and
+complete rights that go with federated unionism."
+
+"That which teaches a union that it cannot succeed as a union turns
+it toward socialism. In long strikes in towns like Marlboro and
+Brookfield strong unions are defeated. Hundreds of men leave these
+towns for shoe-centres like Brockton, where they are now voting the
+socialist ticket. The socialist mayor of this city tells me, 'The
+men who come to us now from towns where they have been thoroughly
+whipped in a strike are among our most active working socialists.'
+The bitterness engendered by this sense of defeat is turned to
+politics, as it will throughout the whole country, if organization
+of labor is deprived of its rights."
+
+"This enmity of capital to the trade union is watched with glee by
+every intelligent socialist in our midst. Every union that is
+beaten or discouraged in its struggle is ripening fruit for
+socialism."
+
+"The real peril which we now face is the threat of a class conflict.
+If capitalism insists upon the policy of outraging the saving
+aspiration of the American workman to raise his standard of comfort
+and leisure, every element of class conflict will strengthen among
+us."
+
+"We have only to humiliate what is best in the trade union, and then
+every worst feature of socialism is fastened upon us."
+
+This strong tendency in the ranks of the workers toward socialism is
+what Mr. Brooks characterizes the "social unrest"; and he hopes to
+see the Republican, the Cleveland Democrat, and the conservative and
+large property interests "band together against this common foe,"
+which is socialism. And he is not above feeling grave and well-
+contained satisfaction wherever the socialist doctrinaire has been
+contradicted by men attempting to practise cooperation in the midst
+of the competitive system, as in Belgium.
+
+Nevertheless, he catches fleeting glimpses of an extreme and
+tyrannically benevolent feudalism very like to Mr. Ghent's, as
+witness the following:
+
+"I asked one of the largest employers of labor in the South if he
+feared the coming of the trade union. 'No,' he said, 'it is one
+good result of race prejudice, that the negro will enable us in the
+long run to weaken the trade union so that it cannot harm us. We
+can keep wages down with the negro and we can prevent too much
+organization.'
+
+"It is in this spirit that the lower standards are to be used. If
+this purpose should succeed, it has but one issue,--the immense
+strengthening of a plutocratic administration at the top, served by
+an army of high-salaried helpers, with an elite of skilled and well-
+paid workmen, but all resting on what would essentially be a serf
+class of low-paid labor and this mass kept in order by an increased
+use of military force."
+
+In brief summary of these two notable books, it may be said that Mr.
+Ghent is alarmed, (though he does not flatly say so), at the too
+great social restfulness in the community, which is permitting the
+capitalists to form the new society to their liking; and that Mr.
+Brooks is alarmed, (and he flatly says so), at the social unrest
+which threatens the modified individualism into which he would like
+to see society evolve. Mr. Ghent beholds the capitalist class
+rising to dominate the state and the working class; Mr. Brooks
+beholds the working class rising to dominate the state and the
+capitalist class. One fears the paternalism of a class; the other,
+the tyranny of the mass.
+
+
+
+WANTED: A NEW LAW OF DEVELOPMENT
+
+
+
+Evolution is no longer a mere tentative hypothesis. One by one,
+step by step, each division and subdivision of science has
+contributed its evidence, until now the case is complete and the
+verdict rendered. While there is still discussion as to the method
+of evolution, none the less, as a process sufficient to explain all
+biological phenomena, all differentiations of life into widely
+diverse species, families, and even kingdoms, evolution is flatly
+accepted. Likewise has been accepted its law of development: THAT,
+IN THE STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE, THE STRONG AND FIT AND THE PROGENY OF
+THE STRONG AND FIT HAVE A BETTER OPPORTUNITY FOR SURVIVAL THAN THE
+WEAK AND LESS FIT AND THE PROGENY OF THE WEAK AND LESS FIT.
+
+It is in the struggle of the species with other species and against
+all other hostile forces in the environment, that this law operates;
+also in the struggle between the individuals of the same species.
+In this struggle, which is for food and shelter, the weak
+individuals must obviously win less food and shelter than the
+strong. Because of this, their hold on life relaxes and they are
+eliminated. And for the same reason that they may not win for
+themselves adequate food and shelter, the weak cannot give to their
+progeny the chance for survival that the strong give. And thus,
+since the weak are prone to beget weakness, the species is
+constantly purged of its inefficient members.
+
+Because of this, a premium is placed upon strength, and so long as
+the struggle for food and shelter obtains, just so long will the
+average strength of each generation increase. On the other hand,
+should conditions so change that all, and the progeny of all, the
+weak as well as the strong, have an equal chance for survival, then,
+at once, the average strength of each generation will begin to
+diminish. Never yet, however, in animal life, has there been such a
+state of affairs. Natural selection has always obtained. The
+strong and their progeny, at the expense of the weak, have always
+survived. This law of development has operated down all the past
+upon all life; it so operates today, and it is not rash to say that
+it will continue to operate in the future--at least upon all life
+existing in a state of nature.
+
+Man, preeminent though he is in the animal kingdom, capable of
+reacting upon and making suitable an unsuitable environment,
+nevertheless remains the creature of this same law of development.
+The social selection to which he is subject is merely another form
+of natural selection. True, within certain narrow limits he
+modifies the struggle for existence and renders less precarious the
+tenure of life for the weak. The extremely weak, diseased, and
+inefficient are housed in hospitals and asylums. The strength of
+the viciously strong, when inimical to society, is tempered by penal
+institutions and by the gallows. The short-sighted are provided
+with spectacles, and the sickly (when they can pay for it) with
+sanitariums. Pestilential marshes are drained, plagues are checked,
+and disasters averted. Yet, for all that, the strong and the
+progeny of the strong survive, and the weak are crushed out. The
+men strong of brain are masters as of yore. They dominate society
+and gather to themselves the wealth of society. With this wealth
+they maintain themselves and equip their progeny for the struggle.
+They build their homes in healthful places, purchase the best
+fruits, meats, and vegetables the market affords, and buy themselves
+the ministrations of the most brilliant and learned of the
+professional classes. The weak man, as of yore, is the servant, the
+doer of things at the master's call. The weaker and less efficient
+he is, the poorer is his reward. The weakest work for a living
+wage, (when they can get work), live in unsanitary slums, on vile
+and insufficient food, at the lowest depths of human degradation.
+Their grasp on life is indeed precarious, their mortality excessive,
+their infant death-rate appalling.
+
+That some should be born to preferment and others to ignominy in
+order that the race may progress, is cruel and sad; but none the
+less they are so born. The weeding out of human souls, some for
+fatness and smiles, some for leanness and tears, is surely a
+heartless selective process--as heartless as it is natural. And the
+human family, for all its wonderful record of adventure and
+achievement, has not yet succeeded in avoiding this process. That
+it is incapable of doing this is not to be hazarded. Not only is it
+capable, but the whole trend of society is in that direction. All
+the social forces are driving man on to a time when the old
+selective law will be annulled. There is no escaping it, save by
+the intervention of catastrophes and cataclysms quite unthinkable.
+It is inexorable. It is inexorable because the common man demands
+it. The twentieth century, the common man says, is his day; the
+common man's day, or, rather, the dawning of the common man's day.
+
+Nor can it be denied. The evidence is with him. The previous
+centuries, and more notably the nineteenth, have marked the rise of
+the common man. From chattel slavery to serfdom, and from serfdom
+to what he bitterly terms "wage slavery," he has risen. Never was
+he so strong as he is today, and never so menacing. He does the
+work of the world, and he is beginning to know it. The world cannot
+get along without him, and this also he is beginning to know. All
+the human knowledge of the past, all the scientific discovery,
+governmental experiment, and invention of machinery, have tended to
+his advancement. His standard of living is higher. His common
+school education would shame princes ten centuries past. His civil
+and religious liberty makes him a free man, and his ballot the peer
+of his betters. And all this has tended to make him conscious,
+conscious of himself, conscious of his class. He looks about him
+and questions that ancient law of development. It is cruel and
+wrong, he is beginning to declare. It is an anachronism. Let it be
+abolished. Why should there be one empty belly in all the world,
+when the work of ten men can feed a hundred? What if my brother be
+not so strong as I? He has not sinned. Wherefore should he hunger-
+-he and his sinless little ones? Away with the old law. There is
+food and shelter for all, therefore let all receive food and
+shelter.
+
+As fast as labor has become conscious it has organized. The
+ambition of these class-conscious men is that the movement shall
+become general, that all labor shall become conscious of itself and
+its class interests. And the day that witnesses the solidarity of
+labor, they triumphantly affirm, will be a day when labor dominates
+the world. This growing consciousness has led to the organization
+of two movements, both separate and distinct, but both converging
+toward a common goal--one, the labor movement, known as Trade
+Unionism; the other, the political movement, known as Socialism.
+Both are grim and silent forces, unheralded and virtually unknown to
+the general public save in moments of stress. The sleeping labor
+giant receives little notice from the capitalistic press, and when
+he stirs uneasily, a column of surprise, indignation, and horror
+suffices.
+
+It is only now and then, after long periods of silence, that the
+labor movement puts in its claim for notice. All is quiet. The
+kind old world spins on, and the bourgeois masters clip their
+coupons in smug complacency. But the grim and silent forces are at
+work.
+
+Suddenly, like a clap of thunder from a clear sky, comes a
+disruption of industry. From ocean to ocean the wheels of a great
+chain of railroads cease to run. A quarter of a million miners
+throw down pick and shovel and outrage the sun with their pale,
+bleached faces. The street railways of a swarming metropolis stand
+idle, or the rumble of machinery in vast manufactories dies away to
+silence. There is alarm and panic. Arson and homicide stalk forth.
+There is a cry in the night, and quick anger and sudden death.
+Peaceful cities are affrighted by the crack of rifles and the snarl
+of machine-guns, and the hearts of the shuddering are shaken by the
+roar of dynamite. There is hurrying and skurrying. The wires are
+kept hot between the centre of government and the seat of trouble.
+The chiefs of state ponder gravely and advise, and governors of
+states implore. There is assembling of militia and massing of
+troops, and the streets resound to the tramp of armed men. There
+are separate and joint conferences between the captains of industry
+and the captains of labor. And then, finally, all is quiet again,
+and the memory of it is like the memory of a bad dream.
+
+But these strikes become olympiads, things to date from; and common
+on the lips of men become such phrases as "The Great Dock Strike,"
+"The Great Coal Strike," "The Great Railroad Strike." Never before
+did labor do these things. After the Great Plague in England,
+labor, finding itself in demand and innocently obeying the economic
+law, asked higher wages. But the masters set a maximum wage,
+restrained workingmen from moving about from place to place, refused
+to tolerate idlers, and by most barbarous legal methods punished
+those who disobeyed. But labor is accorded greater respect today.
+Such a policy, put into effect in this the first decade of the
+twentieth century, would sweep the masters from their seats in one
+mighty crash. And the masters know it and are respectful.
+
+A fair instance of the growing solidarity of labor is afforded by an
+unimportant recent strike in San Francisco. The restaurant cooks
+and waiters were completely unorganized, working at any and all
+hours for whatever wages they could get. A representative of the
+American Federation of Labor went among them and organized them.
+Within a few weeks nearly two thousand men were enrolled, and they
+had five thousand dollars on deposit. Then they put in their demand
+for increased wages and shorter hours. Forthwith their employers
+organized. The demand was denied, and the Cooks' and Waiters' Union
+walked out.
+
+All organized employers stood back of the restaurant owners, in
+sympathy with them and willing to aid them if they dared. And at
+the back of the Cooks' and Waiters' Union stood the organized labor
+of the city, 40,000 strong. If a business man was caught
+patronizing an "unfair" restaurant, he was boycotted; if a union man
+was caught, he was fined heavily by his union or expelled. The
+oyster companies and the slaughter houses made an attempt to refuse
+to sell oysters and meat to union restaurants. The Butchers and
+Meat Cutters, and the Teamsters, in retaliation, refused to work for
+or to deliver to non-union restaurants. Upon this the oyster
+companies and slaughter houses acknowledged themselves beaten and
+peace reigned. But the Restaurant Bakers in non-union places were
+ordered out, and the Bakery Wagon Drivers declined to deliver to
+unfair houses.
+
+Every American Federation of Labor union in the city was prepared to
+strike, and waited only the word. And behind all, a handful of men,
+known as the Labor Council, directed the fight. One by one, blow
+upon blow, they were able if they deemed it necessary to call out
+the unions--the Laundry Workers, who do the washing; the Hackmen,
+who haul men to and from restaurants; the Butchers, Meat Cutters,
+and Teamsters; and the Milkers, Milk Drivers, and Chicken Pickers;
+and after that, in pure sympathy, the Retail Clerks, the Horse
+Shoers, the Gas and Electrical Fixture Hangers, the Metal Roofers,
+the Blacksmiths, the Blacksmiths' Helpers, the Stablemen, the
+Machinists, the Brewers, the Coast Seamen, the Varnishers and
+Polishers, the Confectioners, the Upholsterers, the Paper Hangers
+and Fresco Painters, the Drug Clerks, the Fitters and Helpers, the
+Metal Workers, the Boiler Makers and Iron Ship Builders, the
+Assistant Undertakers, the Carriage and Wagon Workers, and so on
+down the lengthy list of organizations.
+
+For, over all these trades, over all these thousands of men, is the
+Labor Council. When it speaks its voice is heard, and when it
+orders it is obeyed. But it, in turn, is dominated by the National
+Labor Council, with which it is constantly in touch. In this wholly
+unimportant little local strike it is of interest to note the stands
+taken by the different sides. The legal representative and official
+mouthpiece of the Employers' Association said: "This organization
+is formed for defensive purposes, and it may be driven to take
+offensive steps, and if so, will be strong enough to follow them up.
+Labor cannot be allowed to dictate to capital and say how business
+shall be conducted. There is no objection to the formation of
+unions and trades councils, but membership must not be compulsory.
+It is repugnant to the American idea of liberty and cannot be
+tolerated."
+
+On the other hand, the president of the Team Drivers' Union said:
+"The employers of labor in this city are generally against the
+trade-union movement and there seems to be a concerted effort on
+their part to check the progress of organized labor. Such action as
+has been taken by them in sympathy with the present labor troubles
+may, if continued, lead to a serious conflict, the outcome of which
+might be most calamitous for the business and industrial interests
+of San Francisco."
+
+And the secretary of the United Brewery Workmen: "I regard a
+sympathetic strike as the last weapon which organized labor should
+use in its defence. When, however, associations of employers band
+together to defeat organized labor, or one of its branches, then we
+should not and will not hesitate ourselves to employ the same
+instrument in retaliation."
+
+Thus, in a little corner of the world, is exemplified the growing
+solidarity of labor. The organization of labor has not only kept
+pace with the organization of industry, but it has gained upon it.
+In one winter, in the anthracite coal region, $160,000,000 in mines
+and $600,000,000 in transportation and distribution consolidated its
+ownership and control. And at once, arrayed as solidly on the other
+side, were the 150,000 anthracite miners. The bituminous mines,
+however, were not consolidated; yet the 250,000 men employed therein
+were already combined. And not only that, but they were also
+combined with the anthracite miners, these 400,000 men being under
+the control and direction of one supreme labor council. And in this
+and the other great councils are to be found captains of labor of
+splendid abilities, who, in understanding of economic and industrial
+conditions, are undeniably the equals of their opponents, the
+captains of industry.
+
+The United States is honeycombed with labor organizations. And the
+big federations which these go to compose aggregate millions of
+members, and in their various branches handle millions of dollars
+yearly. And not only this; for the international brotherhoods and
+unions are forming, and moneys for the aid of strikers pass back and
+forth across the seas. The Machinists, in their demand for a nine-
+hour day, affected 500,000 men in the United States, Mexico, and
+Canada. In England the membership of working-class organizations is
+approximated by Keir Hardie at 2,500,000, with reserve funds of
+$18,000,000. There the cooperative movement has a membership of
+1,500,000, and every year turns over in distribution more than
+$100,000,000. In France, one-eighth of the whole working class is
+unionized. In Belgium the unions are very rich and powerful, and so
+able to defy the masters that many of the smaller manufacturers,
+unable to resist, "are removing their works to other countries where
+the workmen's organizations are not so potential." And in all other
+countries, according to the stage of their economic and political
+development, like figures obtain. And Europe, today, confesses that
+her greatest social problem is the labor problem, and that it is the
+one most closely engrossing the attention of her statesmen.
+
+The organization of labor is one of the chief acknowledged factors
+in the retrogression of British trade. The workers have become
+class conscious as never before. The wrong of one is the wrong of
+all. They have come to realize, in a short-sighted way, that their
+masters' interests are not their interests. The harder they work,
+they believe, the more wealth they create for their masters.
+Further, the more work they do in one day, the fewer men will be
+needed to do the work. So the unions place a day's stint upon their
+members, beyond which they are not permitted to go. In "A Study of
+Trade Unionism," by Benjamin Taylor in the "Nineteenth Century" of
+April, 1898, are furnished some interesting corroborations. The
+facts here set forth were collected by the Executive Board of the
+Employers' Federation, the documentary proofs of which are in the
+hands of the secretaries. In a certain firm the union workmen made
+eight ammunition boxes a day. Nor could they be persuaded into
+making more. A young Swiss, who could not speak English, was set to
+work, and in the first day he made fifty boxes. In the same firm
+the skilled union hands filed up the outside handles of one machine-
+gun a day. That was their stint. No one was known ever to do more.
+A non-union filer came into the shop and did twelve a day. A
+Manchester firm found that to plane a large bed-casting took union
+workmen one hundred and ninety hours, and non-union workmen one
+hundred and thirty-five hours. In another instance a man, resigning
+from his union, day by day did double the amount of work he had done
+formerly. And to cap it all, an English gentleman, going out to
+look at a wall being put up for him by union bricklayers, found one
+of their number with his right arm strapped to his body, doing all
+the work with his left arm -forsooth, because he was such an
+energetic fellow that otherwise he would involuntarily lay more
+bricks than his union permitted.
+
+All England resounds to the cry, "Wake up, England!" But the sulky
+giant is not stirred. "Let England's trade go to pot," he says;
+"what have I to lose?" And England is powerless. The capacity of
+her workmen is represented by 1, in comparison with the 2.25
+capacity of the American workman. And because of the solidarity of
+labor and the destructiveness of strikes, British capitalists dare
+not even strive to emulate the enterprise of American capitalists.
+So England watches trade slipping through her fingers and wails
+unavailingly. As a correspondent writes: "The enormous power of
+the trade unions hangs, a sullen cloud, over the whole industrial
+world here, affecting men and masters alike."
+
+The political movement known as Socialism is, perhaps, even less
+realized by the general public. The great strides it has taken and
+the portentous front it today exhibits are not comprehended; and,
+fastened though it is in every land, it is given little space by the
+capitalistic press. For all its plea and passion and warmth, it
+wells upward like a great, cold tidal wave, irresistible,
+inexorable, ingulfing present-day society level by level. By its
+own preachment it is inexorable. Just as societies have sprung into
+existence, fulfilled their function, and passed away, it claims,
+just as surely is present society hastening on to its dissolution.
+This is a transition period--and destined to be a very short one.
+Barely a century old, capitalism is ripening so rapidly that it can
+never live to see a second birthday. There is no hope for it, the
+Socialists say. It is doomed.
+
+The cardinal tenet of Socialism is that forbidding doctrine, the
+materialistic conception of history. Men are not the masters of
+their souls. They are the puppets of great, blind forces. The
+lives they live and the deaths they die are compulsory. All social
+codes are but the reflexes of existing economic conditions, plus
+certain survivals of past economic conditions. The institutions men
+build they are compelled to build. Economic laws determine at any
+given time what these institutions shall be, how long they shall
+operate, and by what they shall be replaced. And so, through the
+economic process, the Socialist preaches the ripening of the
+capitalistic society and the coming of the new cooperative society.
+
+The second great tenet of Socialism, itself a phase of the
+materialistic conception of history, is the class struggle. In the
+social struggle for existence, men are forced into classes. "The
+history of all society thus far is the history of class strife." In
+existing society the capitalist class exploits the working class,
+the proletariat. The interests of the exploiter are not the
+interests of the exploited. "Profits are legitimate," says the one.
+"Profits are unpaid wages," replies the other, when he has become
+conscious of his class, "therefore profits are robbery." The
+capitalist enforces his profits because he is the legal owner of all
+the means of production. He is the legal owner because he controls
+the political machinery of society. The Socialist sets to work to
+capture the political machinery, so that he may make illegal the
+capitalist's ownership of the means of production, and make legal
+his own ownership of the means of production. And it is this
+struggle, between these two classes, upon which the world has at
+last entered.
+
+Scientific Socialism is very young. Only yesterday it was in
+swaddling clothes. But today it is a vigorous young giant, well
+braced to battle for what it wants, and knowing precisely what it
+wants. It holds its international conventions, where world-policies
+are formulated by the representatives of millions of Socialists. In
+little Belgium there are three-quarters of a million of men who work
+for the cause; in Germany, 3,000,000; Austria, between 1895 and
+1897, raised her socialist vote from 90,000 to 750,000. France in
+1871 had a whole generation of Socialists wiped out; yet in 1885
+there were 30,000, and in 1898, 1,000,000.
+
+Ere the last Spaniard had evacuated Cuba, Socialist groups were
+forming. And from far Japan, in these first days of the twentieth
+century, writes one Tomoyoshi Murai: "The interest of our people on
+Socialism has been greatly awakened these days, especially among our
+laboring people on one hand and young students' circle on the other,
+as much as we can draw an earnest and enthusiastic audience and fill
+our hall, which holds two thousand. . . . It is gratifying to say
+that we have a number of fine and well-trained public orators among
+our leaders of Socialism in Japan. The first speaker tonight is Mr.
+Kiyoshi Kawakami, editor of one of our city (Tokyo) dailies, a
+strong, independent, and decidedly socialistic paper, circulated far
+and wide. Mr. Kawakami is a scholar as well as a popular writer.
+He is going to speak tonight on the subject, 'The Essence of
+Socialism--the Fundamental Principles.' The next speaker is
+Professor Iso Abe, president of our association, whose subject of
+address is, 'Socialism and the Existing Social System.' The third
+speaker is Mr. Naoe Kinosita, the editor of another strong journal
+of the city. He speaks on the subject, 'How to Realize the
+Socialist Ideals and Plans.' Next is Mr. Shigeyoshi Sugiyama, a
+graduate of Hartford Theological Seminary and an advocate of Social
+Christianity, who is to speak on 'Socialism and Municipal Problems.'
+And the last speaker is the editor of the 'Labor World,' the
+foremost leader of the labor-union movement in our country, Mr. Sen
+Katayama, who speaks on the subject, 'The Outlook of Socialism in
+Europe and America.' These addresses are going to be published in
+book form and to be distributed among our people to enlighten their
+minds on the subject."
+
+And in the struggle for the political machinery of society,
+Socialism is no longer confined to mere propaganda. Italy, Austria,
+Belgium, England, have Socialist members in their national bodies.
+Out of the one hundred and thirty-two members of the London County
+Council, ninety-one are denounced by the conservative element as
+Socialists. The Emperor of Germany grows anxious and angry at the
+increasing numbers which are returned to the Reichstag. In France,
+many of the large cities, such as Marseilles, are in the hands of
+the Socialists. A large body of them is in the Chamber of Deputies,
+and Millerand, Socialist, sits in the cabinet. Of him M. Leroy-
+Beaulieu says with horror: "M. Millerand is the open enemy of
+private property, private capital, the resolute advocate of the
+socialization of production . . . a constant incitement to violence
+. . . a collectivist, avowed and militant, taking part in the
+government, dominating the departments of commerce and industry,
+preparing all the laws and presiding at the passage of all measures
+which should be submitted to merchants and tradesmen."
+
+In the United States there are already Socialist mayors of towns and
+members of State legislatures, a vast literature, and single
+Socialist papers with subscription lists running up into the
+hundreds of thousands. In 1896, 36,000 votes were cast for the
+Socialist candidate for President; in 1900, nearly 200,000; in 1904,
+450,000. And the United States, young as it is, is ripening
+rapidly, and the Socialists claim, according to the materialistic
+conception of history, that the United States will be the first
+country in the world wherein the toilers will capture the political
+machinery and expropriate the bourgeoisie.
+
+
+But the Socialist and labor movements have recently entered upon a
+new phase. There has been a remarkable change in attitude on both
+sides. For a long time the labor unions refrained from going in for
+political action. On the other hand, the Socialists claimed that
+without political action labor was powerless. And because of this
+there was much ill feeling between them, even open hostilities, and
+no concerted action. But now the Socialists grant that the labor
+movement has held up wages and decreased the hours of labor, and the
+labor unions find that political action is necessary. Today both
+parties have drawn closely together in the common fight. In the
+United States this friendly feeling grows. The Socialist papers
+espouse the cause of labor, and the unions have opened their ears
+once more to the wiles of the Socialists. They are all leavened
+with Socialist workmen, "boring from within," and many of their
+leaders have already succumbed. In England, where class
+consciousness is more developed, the name "Unionism" has been
+replaced by "The New Unionism," the main object of which is "to
+capture existing social structures in the interests of the wage-
+earners." There the Socialist, the trade-union, and other working-
+class organizations are beginning to cooperate in securing the
+return of representatives to the House of Commons. And in France,
+where the city councils and mayors of Marseilles and Monteaules-
+Mines are Socialistic, thousands of francs of municipal money were
+voted for the aid of the unions in the recent great strikes.
+
+For centuries the world has been preparing for the coming of the
+common man. And the period of preparation virtually past, labor,
+conscious of itself and its desires, has begun a definite movement
+toward solidarity. It believes the time is not far distant when the
+historian will speak not only of the dark ages of feudalism, but of
+the dark ages of capitalism. And labor sincerely believes itself
+justified in this by the terrible indictment it brings against
+capitalistic society. In the face of its enormous wealth,
+capitalistic society forfeits its right to existence when it permits
+widespread, bestial poverty. The philosophy of the survival of the
+fittest does not soothe the class-conscious worker when he learns
+through his class literature that among the Italian pants-finishers
+of Chicago {9} the average weekly wage is $1.31, and the average
+number of weeks employed in the year is 27.85. Likewise when he
+reads:{10} "Every room in these reeking tenements houses a family or
+two. In one room a missionary found a man ill with small-pox, his
+wife just recovering from her confinement, and the children running
+about half naked and covered with dirt. Here are seven people
+living in one underground kitchen, and a little dead child lying in
+the same room. Here live a widow and her six children, two of whom
+are ill with scarlet fever. In another, nine brothers and sisters,
+from twenty-nine years of age downward, live, eat, and sleep
+together." And likewise, when he reads:{11} "When one man, fifty
+years old, who has worked all his life, is compelled to beg a little
+money to bury his dead baby, and another man, fifty years old, can
+give ten million dollars to enable his daughter to live in luxury
+and bolster up a decaying foreign aristocracy, do you see nothing
+amiss?"
+
+And on the other hand, the class-conscious worker reads the
+statistics of the wealthy classes, knows what their incomes are, and
+how they get them. True, down all the past he has known his own
+material misery and the material comfort of the dominant classes,
+and often has this knowledge led him to intemperate acts and unwise
+rebellion. But today, and for the first time, because both society
+and he have evolved, he is beginning to see a possible way out. His
+ears are opening to the propaganda of Socialism, the passionate
+gospel of the dispossessed. But it does not inculcate a turning
+back. The way through is the way out, he understands, and with this
+in mind he draws up the programme.
+
+It is quite simple, this programme. Everything is moving in his
+direction, toward the day when he will take charge. The trust? Ah,
+no. Unlike the trembling middle-class man and the small capitalist,
+he sees nothing at which to be frightened. He likes the trust. He
+exults in the trust, for it is largely doing the task for him. It
+socializes production; this done, there remains nothing for him to
+do but socialize distribution, and all is accomplished. The trust?
+"It organizes industry on an enormous, labor-saving scale, and
+abolishes childish, wasteful competition." It is a gigantic object
+lesson, and it preaches his political economy far more potently than
+he can preach it. He points to the trust, laughing scornfully in
+the face of the orthodox economists. "You told me this thing could
+not be," {12} he thunders. "Behold, the thing is!"
+
+He sees competition in the realm of production passing away. When
+the captains of industry have thoroughly organized production, and
+got everything running smoothly, it will be very easy for him to
+eliminate the profits by stepping in and having the thing run for
+himself. And the captain of industry, if he be good, may be given
+the privilege of continuing the management on a fair salary. The
+sixty millions of dividends which the Standard Oil Company annually
+declares will be distributed among the workers. The same with the
+great United States Steel Corporation. The president of that
+corporation knows his business. Very good. Let him become
+Secretary of the Department of Iron and Steel of the United States.
+But, since the chief executive of a nation of seventy-odd millions
+works for $50,000 a year, the Secretary of the Department of Iron
+and Steel must expect to have his salary cut accordingly. And not
+only will the workers take to themselves the profits of national and
+municipal monopolies, but also the immense revenues which the
+dominant classes today draw from rents, and mines, and factories,
+and all manner of enterprises.
+
+
+All this would seem very like a dream, even to the worker, if it
+were not for the fact that like things have been done before. He
+points triumphantly to the aristocrat of the eighteenth century, who
+fought, legislated, governed, and dominated society, but who was
+shorn of power and displaced by the rising bourgeoisie. Ay, the
+thing was done, he holds. And it shall be done again, but this time
+it is the proletariat who does the shearing. Sociology has taught
+him that m-i-g-h-t spells "right." Every society has been ruled by
+classes, and the classes have ruled by sheer strength, and have been
+overthrown by sheer strength. The bourgeoisie, because it was the
+stronger, dragged down the nobility of the sword; and the
+proletariat, because it is the strongest of all, can and will drag
+down the bourgeoisie.
+
+And in that day, for better or worse, the common man becomes the
+master--for better, he believes. It is his intention to make the
+sum of human happiness far greater. No man shall work for a bare
+living wage, which is degradation. Every man shall have work to do,
+and shall be paid exceedingly well for doing it. There shall be no
+slum classes, no beggars. Nor shall there be hundreds of thousands
+of men and women condemned, for economic reasons, to lives of
+celibacy or sexual infertility. Every man shall be able to marry,
+to live in healthy, comfortable quarters, and to have all he wants
+to eat as many times a day as he wishes. There shall no longer be a
+life-and-death struggle for food and shelter. The old heartless law
+of development shall be annulled.
+
+All of which is very good and very fine. And when these things have
+come to pass, what then? Of old, by virtue of their weakness and
+inefficiency in the struggle for food and shelter, the race was
+purged of its weak and inefficient members. But this will no longer
+obtain. Under the new order the weak and the progeny of the weak
+will have a chance for survival equal to that of the strong and the
+progeny of the strong. This being so, the premium upon strength
+will have been withdrawn, and on the face of it the average strength
+of each generation, instead of continuing to rise, will begin to
+decline.
+
+When the common man's day shall have arrived, the new social
+institutions of that day will prevent the weeding out of weakness
+and inefficiency. All, the weak and the strong, will have an equal
+chance for procreation. And the progeny of all, of the weak as well
+as the strong, will have an equal chance for survival. This being
+so, and if no new effective law of development be put into
+operation, then progress must cease. And not only progress, for
+deterioration would at once set in. It is a pregnant problem. What
+will be the nature of this new and most necessary law of
+development? Can the common man pause long enough from his
+undermining labors to answer? Since he is bent upon dragging down
+the bourgeoisie and reconstructing society, can he so reconstruct
+that a premium, in some unguessed way or other, will still be laid
+upon the strong and efficient so that the human type will continue
+to develop? Can the common man, or the uncommon men who are allied
+with him, devise such a law? Or have they already devised one? And
+if so, what is it?
+
+
+
+HOW I BECAME A SOCIALIST
+
+
+
+It is quite fair to say that I became a Socialist in a fashion
+somewhat similar to the way in which the Teutonic pagans became
+Christians--it was hammered into me. Not only was I not looking for
+Socialism at the time of my conversion, but I was fighting it. I
+was very young and callow, did not know much of anything, and though
+I had never even heard of a school called "Individualism," I sang
+the paean of the strong with all my heart.
+
+This was because I was strong myself. By strong I mean that I had
+good health and hard muscles, both of which possessions are easily
+accounted for. I had lived my childhood on California ranches, my
+boyhood hustling newspapers on the streets of a healthy Western
+city, and my youth on the ozone-laden waters of San Francisco Bay
+and the Pacific Ocean. I loved life in the open, and I toiled in
+the open, at the hardest kinds of work. Learning no trade, but
+drifting along from job to job, I looked on the world and called it
+good, every bit of it. Let me repeat, this optimism was because I
+was healthy and strong, bothered with neither aches nor weaknesses,
+never turned down by the boss because I did not look fit, able
+always to get a job at shovelling coal, sailorizing, or manual labor
+of some sort.
+
+And because of all this, exulting in my young life, able to hold my
+own at work or fight, I was a rampant individualist. It was very
+natural. I was a winner. Wherefore I called the game, as I saw it
+played, or thought I saw it played, a very proper game for MEN. To
+be a MAN was to write man in large capitals on my heart. To
+adventure like a man, and fight like a man, and do a man's work
+(even for a boy's pay)--these were things that reached right in and
+gripped hold of me as no other thing could. And I looked ahead into
+long vistas of a hazy and interminable future, into which, playing
+what I conceived to be MAN'S game, I should continue to travel with
+unfailing health, without accidents, and with muscles ever vigorous.
+As I say, this future was interminable. I could see myself only
+raging through life without end like one of Nietzsche's BLOND-
+BEASTS, lustfully roving and conquering by sheer superiority and
+strength.
+
+As for the unfortunates, the sick, and ailing, and old, and maimed,
+I must confess I hardly thought of them at all, save that I vaguely
+felt that they, barring accidents, could be as good as I if they
+wanted to real hard, and could work just as well. Accidents? Well,
+they represented FATE, also spelled out in capitals, and there was
+no getting around FATE. Napoleon had had an accident at Waterloo,
+but that did not dampen my desire to be another and later Napoleon.
+Further, the optimism bred of a stomach which could digest scrap
+iron and a body which flourished on hardships did not permit me to
+consider accidents as even remotely related to my glorious
+personality.
+
+I hope I have made it clear that I was proud to be one of Nature's
+strong-armed noblemen. The dignity of labor was to me the most
+impressive thing in the world. Without having read Carlyle, or
+Kipling, I formulated a gospel of work which put theirs in the
+shade. Work was everything. It was sanctification and salvation.
+The pride I took in a hard day's work well done would be
+inconceivable to you. It is almost inconceivable to me as I look
+back upon it. I was as faithful a wage slave as ever capitalist
+exploited. To shirk or malinger on the man who paid me my wages was
+a sin, first, against myself, and second, against him. I considered
+it a crime second only to treason and just about as bad.
+
+In short, my joyous individualism was dominated by the orthodox
+bourgeois ethics. I read the bourgeois papers, listened to the
+bourgeois preachers, and shouted at the sonorous platitudes of the
+bourgeois politicians. And I doubt not, if other events had not
+changed my career, that I should have evolved into a professional
+strike-breaker, (one of President Eliot's American heroes), and had
+my head and my earning power irrevocably smashed by a club in the
+hands of some militant trades-unionist.
+
+Just about this time, returning from a seven months' voyage before
+the mast, and just turned eighteen, I took it into my head to go
+tramping. On rods and blind baggages I fought my way from the open
+West where men bucked big and the job hunted the man, to the
+congested labor centres of the East, where men were small potatoes
+and hunted the job for all they were worth. And on this new BLOND-
+BEAST adventure I found myself looking upon life from a new and
+totally different angle. I had dropped down from the proletariat
+into what sociologists love to call the "submerged tenth," and I was
+startled to discover the way in which that submerged tenth was
+recruited.
+
+I found there all sorts of men, many of whom had once been as good
+as myself and just as BLOND-BEAST; sailor-men, soldier-men, labor-
+men, all wrenched and distorted and twisted out of shape by toil and
+hardship and accident, and cast adrift by their masters like so many
+old horses. I battered on the drag and slammed back gates with
+them, or shivered with them in box cars and city parks, listening
+the while to life-histories which began under auspices as fair as
+mine, with digestions and bodies equal to and better than mine, and
+which ended there before my eyes in the shambles at the bottom of
+the Social Pit.
+
+And as I listened my brain began to work. The woman of the streets
+and the man of the gutter drew very close to me. I saw the picture
+of the Social Pit as vividly as though it were a concrete thing, and
+at the bottom of the Pit I saw them, myself above them, not far, and
+hanging on to the slippery wall by main strength and sweat. And I
+confess a terror seized me. What when my strength failed? when I
+should be unable to work shoulder to shoulder with the strong men
+who were as yet babes unborn? And there and then I swore a great
+oath. It ran something like this: ALL MY DAYS I HAVE WORKED HARD
+WITH MY BODY, AND ACCORDING TO THE NUMBER OF DAYS I HAVE WORKED, BY
+JUST THAT MUCH AM I NEARER THE BOTTOM OF THE PIT. I SHALL CLIMB OUT
+OF THE PIT, BUT NOT BY THE MUSCLES OF MY BODY SHALL I CLIMB OUT. I
+SHALL DO NO MORE HARD WORK, AND MAY GOD STRIKE ME DEAD IF I DO
+ANOTHER DAY'S HARD WORK WITH MY BODY MORE THAN I ABSOLUTELY HAVE TO
+DO. And I have been busy ever since running away from hard work.
+
+Incidentally, while tramping some ten thousand miles through the
+United States and Canada, I strayed into Niagara Falls, was nabbed
+by a fee-hunting constable, denied the right to plead guilty or not
+guilty, sentenced out of hand to thirty days' imprisonment for
+having no fixed abode and no visible means of support, handcuffed
+and chained to a bunch of men similarly circumstanced, carted down
+country to Buffalo, registered at the Erie County Penitentiary, had
+my head clipped and my budding mustache shaved, was dressed in
+convict stripes, compulsorily vaccinated by a medical student who
+practised on such as we, made to march the lock-step, and put to
+work under the eyes of guards armed with Winchester rifles--all for
+adventuring in BLOND-BEASTLY fashion. Concerning further details
+deponent sayeth not, though he may hint that some of his plethoric
+national patriotism simmered down and leaked out of the bottom of
+his soul somewhere--at least, since that experience he finds that he
+cares more for men and women and little children than for imaginary
+geographical lines.
+
+
+To return to my conversion. I think it is apparent that my rampant
+individualism was pretty effectively hammered out of me, and
+something else as effectively hammered in. But, just as I had been
+an individualist without knowing it, I was now a Socialist without
+knowing it, withal, an unscientific one. I had been reborn, but not
+renamed, and I was running around to find out what manner of thing I
+was. I ran back to California and opened the books. I do not
+remember which ones I opened first. It is an unimportant detail
+anyway. I was already It, whatever It was, and by aid of the books
+I discovered that It was a Socialist. Since that day I have opened
+many books, but no economic argument, no lucid demonstration of the
+logic and inevitableness of Socialism affects me as profoundly and
+convincingly as I was affected on the day when I first saw the walls
+of the Social Pit rise around me and felt myself slipping down,
+down, into the shambles at the bottom.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} "From 43 to 52 per cent of all applicants need work rather than
+relief."--Report of the Charity Organization Society of New York
+City.
+
+{2} Mr. Leiter, who owns a coal mine at the town of Zeigler,
+Illinois, in an interview printed in the Chicago Record-Herald of
+December 6, 1904, said: "When I go into the market to purchase
+labor, I propose to retain just as much freedom as does a purchaser
+in any other kind of a market. . . . There is no difficulty whatever
+in obtaining labor, FOR THE COUNTRY IS FULL OF UNEMPLOYED MEN."
+
+{3} "Despondent and weary with vain attempts to struggle against an
+unsympathetic world, two old men were brought before Police Judge
+McHugh this afternoon to see whether some means could not be
+provided for their support, at least until springtime.
+
+"George Westlake was the first one to receive the consideration of
+the court. Westlake is seventy-two years old. A charge of habitual
+drunkenness was placed against him, and he was sentenced to a term
+in the county jail, though it is more than probable that he was
+never under the influence of intoxicating liquor in his life. The
+act on the part of the authorities was one of kindness for him, as
+in the county jail he will be provided with a good place to sleep
+and plenty to eat.
+
+"Joe Coat, aged sixty-nine years, will serve ninety days in the
+county jail for much the same reason as Westlake. He states that,
+if given a chance to do so, he will go out to a wood-camp and cut
+timber during the winter, but the police authorities realize that he
+could not long survive such a task."--From the Butte (Montana)
+Miner, December 7th, 1904.
+
+"'I end my life because I have reached the age limit, and there is
+no place for me in this world. Please notify my wife, No. 222 West
+129th Street, New York.' Having summed up the cause of his
+despondency in this final message, James Hollander, fifty-six years
+old, shot himself through the left temple, in his room at the
+Stafford Hotel today."--New York Herald.
+
+{4} In the San Francisco Examiner of November 16, 1904, there is an
+account of the use of fire-hose to drive away three hundred men who
+wanted work at unloading a vessel in the harbor. So anxious were
+the men to get the two or three hours' job that they made a
+veritable mob and had to be driven off.
+
+{5} "It was no uncommon thing in these sweatshops for men to sit
+bent over a sewing-machine continuously from eleven to fifteen hours
+a day in July weather, operating a sewing-machine by foot-power, and
+often so driven that they could not stop for lunch. The seasonal
+character of the work meant demoralizing toil for a few months in
+the year, and a not less demoralizing idleness for the remainder of
+the time. Consumption, the plague of the tenements and the especial
+plague of the garment industry, carried off many of these workers;
+poor nutrition and exhaustion, many more."--From McClure's Magazine.
+
+{6} The Social Unrest. Macmillan Company.
+
+{7} "Our Benevolent Feudalism." By W. J. Ghent. The Macmillan
+Company.
+
+{8} "The Social Unrest." By John Graham Brooks. The Macmillan
+Company.
+
+{9} From figures presented by Miss Nellie Mason Auten in the
+American Journal of Sociology, and copied extensively by the trade-
+union and Socialist press.
+
+{10} "The Bitter Cry of Outcast London."
+
+{11} An item from the Social Democratic Herald. Hundreds of these
+items, culled from current happenings, are published weekly in the
+papers of the workers.
+
+{12} Karl Marx, the great Socialist, worked out the trust
+development forty years ago, for which he was laughed at by the
+orthodox economists.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of War of the Classes by Jack London
+
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