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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65731 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65731)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of This Troubled World, by Eleanor
-Roosevelt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: This Troubled World
-
-Author: Eleanor Roosevelt
-
-Release Date: June 29, 2021 [eBook #65731]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
- Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THIS TROUBLED WORLD ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THIS
- TROUBLED
- WORLD
-
-
-
-
- THIS
- TROUBLED
- WORLD
-
-
- ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
-
- MCMXXXVIII
- H. C. KINSEY & COMPANY, INC.
- NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1938, BY ANNA ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
-
- PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. BY J. J. LITTLE & IVES, N.Y.
-
- FIRST EDITION
-
-
-
-
- To
- MRS. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT
- who has led so many of us
- in the struggle for peace
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- THE CASE AS IT STANDS 1
-
- ULTIMATE OBJECTIVES 14
-
- IMMEDIATE STEPS 27
-
- SUMMARY 44
-
-
-
-
-THIS TROUBLED WORLD
-
-
-
-
-
-THE CASE AS IT STANDS
-
-
-The newspapers these days are becoming more and more painful. I was
-reading my morning papers on the train not so long ago, and looked up
-with a feeling of desperation. Up and down the car people were reading,
-yet no one seemed excited.
-
-To me the whole situation seems intolerable. We face today a world
-filled with suspicion and hatred. We look at Europe and see a civil
-war going on, with other nations participating not only as individual
-volunteers, but obviously with the help and approval of their
-governments. We look at the Far East and see two nations, technically
-not at war, killing each other in great numbers.
-
-Every nation is watching the others on its borders, analyzing its own
-needs and striving to attain its ends with little consideration for the
-needs of its neighbors. Few people are sitting down dispassionately to
-go over the whole situation in an attempt to determine what present
-conditions are, or how they should be met.
-
-We know, for instance, that certain nations today need to expand
-because their populations have increased. Certain people will tell you
-that the solution of this whole question lies in the acceptance or
-rejection of birth control. That may be the solution for the future,
-but we can do nothing in that way about the populations that now exist.
-They are on this earth, and modern science has left us only a few
-places where famine or flood or disease can wipe out large numbers of
-superfluous people in one fell swoop. For this reason certain nations
-need additional territory to which part of their present populations
-may be moved; other nations need more land on which to grow necessary
-raw materials; or perhaps they may need mineral deposits which are not
-to be found in their own country. You will say that these can be had by
-trade. Yes, but the nations possessing them will frequently make the
-cost too high to the nations which need them.
-
-It is not a question today of the “free” interchange of goods. If
-standards of living were approximately the same, throughout the world,
-competition would be on an equal basis and then there might be no need
-for tariffs. However, standards of living vary. The nations with higher
-standards have set up protective barriers which served them well when
-they were self-contained, but not so well when they reached a point
-where they either wished to import or export.
-
-When you take all these things into consideration, the size of this
-problem is apt to make you feel that even an attempt to solve it in the
-future by education is futile. Faint heart, however, ne’er won fair
-lady, nor did it ever solve world problems!
-
-Peace plan after peace plan has been presented to me; most of them,
-I find, are impractical, or not very carefully thought out. In nearly
-all of them some one can find a flaw. I have come to look at them now
-without the slightest hope of finding one full-fledged plan, but I keep
-on looking in the hope of finding here and there some small suggestion
-that may be acceptable to enough people to insure an honest effort
-being made to study it and evaluate its possible benefits.
-
-For instance, one lady of my acquaintance brought me a plan this past
-spring which sounded extremely plausible. Her premises are: We never
-again wish to send our men overseas; we wish to have adequate defense;
-we do not need a navy if we do not intend to go beyond our own shores;
-submarines and airplanes can defend our shores, with guns along our
-coasts as an added protection. Therefore, we do not need an army, for
-our men are going to stay at home. With our coast defenses strong,
-nobody will land here, so why go to the expense of an army? We do not
-need battleships or, in fact, any navy beyond submarines because we do
-not intend to own any outlying possessions.
-
-In this way, said the lady, we will save vast sums of money which can
-be applied to all the social needs of the day--better housing, better
-schools, old age pensions, workmen’s compensation, care of the blind
-and crippled and other dependents. There is no limit to what we might
-do with this money which we now spend on preparation for destruction.
-
-It is a very attractive picture and I wish it were all as simple as
-that, but it seems to be fairly well proved that guns along our coasts
-are practically useless. No one, as far as I know, has ever devised an
-adequate defense by submarines and airplanes, or calculated whether the
-cost of the development of these two forces would really be any less
-than what we spend at present on our army and navy.
-
-The greatest defense value of the navy is that its cruising radius is
-great enough to allow it to contact an attacking force long before
-that force reaches our shores. If we trusted solely to submarines and
-airplanes we would have to have them in sufficient number really to
-cover all our borders, and this type of defense would seem to be almost
-prohibitive in cost for a nation with a great many miles of border to
-defend.
-
-Has any one sounded out the people of this country as to their
-willingness to wait until an attacking enemy comes within the cruising
-radius of our planes and submarines? Have we faced the fact that this
-would mean allowing an attacking enemy to come unmolested fairly near
-to our shores and would make it entirely possible for them to land
-in a nearby country which might be friendly to them, without any
-interference on our part? Have our citizens been asked if they are
-willing to take the risk of doing without trained men? We have always
-had a small trained army forming the first line of defense in case
-somebody does land on our borders, or attempts to approach us by land
-through a neighboring country. Our army has not been thought of as an
-attacking force; do we want to do away with it?
-
-Are all the people in this country willing also to give up the outlying
-islands which have come into our possession? Some of them cost us more
-than they bring in, but others bring certain of our citizens a fair
-revenue. Can we count on those citizens to accept the loss of these
-revenues in the interests of future peace?
-
-Perhaps this is part of what we will have to make up our minds to
-pay some day as the price of peace; but has any one as yet put it in
-concrete form to the American people and asked their opinion about it?
-
-One of the things that is most frequently harped upon is the vast sums
-of money spent for war preparation in this country. Very frequently the
-statements are somewhat misleading. It is true that in the past few
-years we have spent more than we have for a number of preceding years
-because we had fallen behind in our treaty strength but, in a world
-which is arming all around us, it is necessary to keep a certain parity
-and these expenditures should be analyzed with a little more care than
-is usual.
-
-For instance, few people realize that in the army appropriation is
-included all the work done under the army engineers on rivers and
-harbors, on flood control, etc. One other consideration which is
-frequently overlooked is that, because of the higher wages paid for
-labor in this country, whatever we build costs us more than it does
-in the other nations. One significant fact is that we only spend
-twelve percent of our national income on our army and navy, as against
-anywhere from thirty-five to fifty-five percent of the national income
-spent by nations in the rest of the world. It is well for us to realize
-these facts and not to feel that our government is doing something that
-will push us into a position which is incompatible with a desire for
-peace. We are the most peace loving nation in the world and we are not
-doing anything at present which would change that situation.
-
-One very intelligent friend of mine developed an idea the other day
-which seems to me common sense for the present time, at least. “Why
-do we talk,” she asked, “about peace? Why don’t we recognize the fact
-that it is normal and natural for differences to exist? Almost every
-family, no matter how close its members may be, is quarrelsome at
-times.” Quarrelsome may be too strong a word, so we might better say
-that differences of opinion arise in the family as to conduct or as to
-likes and dislikes. Why should we expect therefore, that nations will
-not have these same differences and quarrels? Why do we concentrate on
-urging them not to have any differences? Why don’t we simply accept
-the fact that differences always come up and concentrate on evolving
-some kind of machinery by which the differences may be recognized and
-some plan of compromise be worked out to satisfy, at least in part,
-all those concerned? Compromises, of course, have to be made; they are
-made in every family. There are usually some members of a family, who,
-by common consent, are the arbitrators of questions that arise, and
-who hold the family together, or bring them together if relationships
-become strained.
-
-The League of Nations was an effort to find for the nations of
-the world, a method by which differences between nations would
-automatically be brought before the court of public opinion. Some
-kind of compromise would be made and those involved would feel that
-substantial justice had been done, even though they might not at any
-one time achieve all of their desires.
-
-Many of us have become convinced that the League of Nations as it
-stands today cannot serve this purpose. The reason for this is
-unimportant. The important thing now is that we should concentrate on
-finding some new machinery or revamping what already exists so that
-every one will function within it and have confidence in its honesty.
-
-The people of the United States have congratulated themselves on the
-fact that they had made a beginning towards the development of this
-machinery in their conferences with the representatives of the other
-American governments.
-
-Perhaps we have a right to feel a sense of satisfaction for as a nation
-we have made a small beginning. We were cordially disliked throughout
-South America for years because we were the strongest nation on this
-continent. We took the attitude of the big brother for a long time and
-constituted ourselves the defender of all the other nations. We were
-not only the defender, however, we also considered it our duty to set
-ourselves up as the judge, and the only judge, of what should happen in
-the internal as well as the external affairs of our various neighbors.
-
-To them it seemed a bullying, patronizing attitude. As they grew
-stronger, they resented it, but we went right on regardless of their
-feelings. During the past few years we have put ourselves imaginatively
-into their situation. The final result is that we have reached an
-amicable understanding and actually are in a fair way to get together
-and discuss subjects of mutual interest with little or no sense
-of suspicion and fear being involved in the discussion. This can,
-of course, be spoiled at any time by the selfishness of individual
-citizens who may decide that, as individuals, they can exploit some
-other nation on the North or South American continents. The restraint
-of these individuals will not be a question of government action,
-but of the force of public opinion which, it is to be hoped, will be
-able to control and exert a potent influence because of the sense of
-responsibility acquired by our citizens.
-
-This is satisfactory, but there is still much to be done before we
-can feel that even here in the Americas we have a thoroughly sound
-working basis for solving all misunderstandings. We cannot be entirely
-satisfied with anything, however, which does not include the world as a
-whole, for we are all so closely interdependent today that we can only
-operate successfully when we all cooperate.
-
-We have had the experience and can profit by the mistakes and the
-difficulties through which the League of Nations has passed. Every
-nation in the world still uses policemen to control its unruly element.
-It may be that any machinery set up today to deal with international
-difficulties may require policemen in order to function successfully,
-but even a police force should not be called upon until every other
-method of procedure has been tried and proved unsuccessful.
-
-We have some economic weapons which can be used first and which may
-prove themselves very efficient as the guardians of peace.
-
-
-
-
-ULTIMATE OBJECTIVES
-
-
-What are our ultimate objectives and how shall we achieve them? First,
-the most important thing is that any difficulties arising should
-automatically go before some body which will publish the facts to
-the world at large and give public opinion an opportunity to make a
-decision. Then, a group of world representatives will have to decide
-with whom the fault lies. If their decision is not accepted by the
-nations involved and either nation attempts to use force in coercing
-the other nation, or nations--in opposition to what is clearly the
-majority opinion of the world--then and then only, it seems to me, the
-decision will be made that the nation using force is an aggressor
-nation. Being an aggressor, the majority of nations in opposition
-would be obliged to resort to some method designed to make that nation
-realize that they could not with impunity flout the public opinion of
-the majority.
-
-We need to define what an aggressor nation is. We need to have a
-tribunal where the facts in any case may be discussed, and the decision
-made before the world, as to whether a nation is an aggressor or not.
-Then the steps decided upon could be taken in conjunction with other
-nations.
-
-First of all, trade should be withdrawn from that nation and they
-should be barred as traders in the countries disagreeing with them.
-It would not seem probable that more than this economic weapon would
-have to be used but, if necessary in the end, the police force could be
-called upon.
-
-In the case of a clearly defined issue where the majority of nations
-agreed, the police force would simply try to prevent bloodshed and
-aggression, and it would be in a very different position from an army
-which was attempting to attack a country and subjugate it. Even the use
-of a police force, which so many think of as tantamount to war, would
-really be very different and there would be no idea of marching into a
-country or making the people suffer or taking anything from them. It
-would simply be a group of armed men preventing either of the parties
-to a quarrel from entering into a real war.
-
-Of course, I can imagine cases in which the police force might find
-itself in an unenviable position, with two countries engaged in a
-heated quarrel trying to do away with the police so they could get at
-each other!
-
-All we can hope is that this situation will not arise and that the
-non-aggressor party to the quarrel, at least, may be willing to sit
-peacefully by and see the police force repulse the enemy without
-wishing to turn into aggressors themselves.
-
-With all our agitation about peace, we lose sight of the fact that with
-the proper machinery it is easier to keep out of situations which lead
-to war than it is to bring about peace once war is actually going on.
-
-I doubt very much whether peace is coming to us either through plans,
-even my own as I have outlined it, or through any of the theories or
-hopes we now hold. What I have outlined is not real peace, just a
-method of trying to deal with our difficulties a little better than
-we have in the past, in the world as it is today. We may, of course,
-be wiped off the face of the earth before we do even this. Our real
-ultimate objective must be a change in human nature for I have, as
-I said, yet to see a peace plan which is really practical and which
-has been thought through in every detail. Therefore, I am inclined to
-believe that there is no perfect and complete program for bringing
-about peace in the world at the present moment.
-
-I often wonder as I look around the world whether any of us, even
-we women, really want peace. Women should realize better than any
-one else, that the spirit of peace has to begin in the relationship
-between two individuals. They know that a child alone may be unhappy
-because he is alone, but there will be no quarreling until another
-child appears on the scene, and then the fur will fly, if each of them
-desires the same thing at the same time.
-
-Women have watched this for generations and must know, if peace is
-going to come about in the world, the way to start is by getting a
-better understanding between individuals. From this germ a better
-understanding between groups of people will grow.
-
-In spite of this knowledge, I am sure that women themselves are among
-the worst offenders when it comes to petty quarrels. Mrs. J---- will
-refuse to speak to Mrs. C---- because Mrs. C----’s dog came through
-the hedge and mussed up Mrs. J----’s flowerbed. No one will deny that
-occurrences of this kind are irritating in the extreme, but is it worth
-a feud between two neighbors, perhaps old friends or even acquaintances
-who must live next door to each other and see each other almost every
-day?
-
-At the moment we, as a nation, are looking across the Atlantic and the
-Pacific, patting ourselves on the back and saying how fortunate we are
-to be away from all their excitements. We feel a little self-righteous,
-and forget that we ourselves have been engaged in a war on the average
-of every forty years since our nation was founded. We even fought a
-civil war, complicated by the alignment of other nations with one side
-or the other, though no foreign soldiers actually came to fight on
-either side.
-
-The people who settled in New England came here for religious freedom,
-but religious freedom to them meant freedom only for their kind of
-religion. They were not going to be any more liberal to others who
-differed with them in this new country, than others had been with them
-in the countries from which they came. This attitude seems to be our
-attitude in many situations today.
-
-Very few people in any nation today are inclined to be really liberal
-in allowing real freedom to other individuals. Like our forebears we
-want freedom for ourselves, but not for those who differ from us.
-To think and act as we please within the limits, of course, caused
-by the necessity for respecting the equal rights which must belong
-to our neighbors, would seem to be almost a platitudinous doctrine,
-yet we would frequently like to overlook these limits and permit no
-freedom to our neighbors. If this is our personal attitude, it is not
-strange that our national attitude is similar. We are chiefly concerned
-with the rights and privileges of our own people and we show little
-consideration for the rights and privileges of others. In this we are
-not very different from other nations both in the past and in the
-present.
-
-I can almost count on the fingers of one hand the people whom I think
-are real pacifists. By that I mean, the people who are really making
-an effort in their personal lives to bring about an atmosphere which
-will be conducive to a solution of all our difficulties in a peaceful
-manner.
-
-The first step towards achieving this end is self-discipline and
-self-control. The second is a certain amount of imagination which
-will enable us to understand situations in which other people find
-themselves. We may learn to be less indignant at any slight or seeming
-slight, and we may try to find some way by which to remove the cause of
-the troubles which arise between individuals, if we become disciplined
-and cultivate our imaginative faculties. Once we achieve a technique
-by which we control our own emotions, we certainly will be better able
-to teach young people how to get on together. They may then find some
-saner way of settling questions under dispute than by merely punching
-each other’s noses!
-
-When we once control ourselves and submit personal differences to
-constituted authorities for settlement, we can say that we have a will
-to peace between individuals. Before we come to the question of what
-may be the technique between nations, however, we must go a step
-farther and set our national house in order. On every hand we see
-today miniature wars going on between conflicting interests. As the
-example most constantly before us, take capital and labor. If their
-difficulties are settled by arbitration and no blood is shed, we can
-feel we have made real strides towards approaching our international
-problems. We are not prepared to do this, however, when two factions
-in a group having the same basic interests cannot come to an agreement
-between themselves. Their ability to obtain what they desire is greatly
-weakened until they can reach an understanding and work as a unit.
-The basis of this understanding should not be hard to reach if the
-different personalities involved could forget themselves as individuals
-and think only of the objectives in view, and of the best way to obtain
-them.
-
-Granted that they are able to do this, then we can approach our second
-problem with the knowledge that more deeply conflicting interests are
-at stake but that those with common interests can state their case so
-the public may form their opinion. Here again, if you could take it
-for granted that on both sides a real desire existed amongst those
-representing divergent interests to consider unselfishly ultimate goals
-and benefits for the majority, rather than any individual gain or loss,
-it would undoubtedly be possible to reach a peaceful agreement.
-
-Human beings, however, do not stride from peak to peak, they climb
-laboriously up the side of the mountain. The public will have to
-understand each case as it comes up and force divergent interests to
-find a solution. The real mountain climber never gives up until he has
-reached the highest peak and the lure of the climb to this peak is
-always before him to draw him on.
-
-That should be the way in human progress--a peaceful, quiet progress.
-We cannot follow this way, however, until human nature becomes less
-interested in self, acquires some of the vision and persistence of the
-mountain climber, and realizes that physical forces must be harnessed
-and controlled by disciplined mental and spiritual forces.
-
-When we have achieved a nation where the majority of the people is of
-this type, then we can hope for some measure of success in changing our
-procedure when international difficulties arise.
-
-What we have said really means that we believe in one actual way to
-peace--making a fundamental change in human nature. Over and over again
-people will tell you that that is impossible. I cannot see why it
-should be impossible when the record of history shows so many changes
-already gone through.
-
-Only the other day I heard it stated that there are only two real
-divisions which can be made between people--the people who have good
-intentions, and the people who have evil intentions. The same man
-who made this distinction between people, made the suggestion that
-eventually there should be in the government, a department where
-business--the business that wishes to be fair and square--could lay
-its plans before a chosen group of men representing business, the
-public and the government. They could ask for advice as to whether
-the plans proposed were according to the best business interests of
-the country and the majority of the people and receive in return a
-disinterested, honest opinion. Immediately the remonstrance was made
-that this would be impossible because it would be difficult for an
-advisory group to know if the plans laid before them were honestly
-stated, and people of evil intentions could use such a group to promote
-plans for selfish interests rather than for the general welfare. This
-is undoubtedly true, and we are up against exactly the same situation
-in trying to obtain peace between groups within nations as we are on
-the international fronts.
-
-Human beings either must recognize the fact that what serves the
-people as a whole serves them best as individuals and, through selfish
-or unselfish interests, they become people of good intentions and
-honesty. If not we will be unable to move forward except as we have
-moved in the past with recourse to force, and constant, suspicious
-watchfulness on the part of individuals and groups towards each other.
-The preservation of our civilization seems to demand a permanent change
-of attitude and therefore every effort should be bent towards bringing
-about this change in human nature through education. This is a slow way
-and, in the meantime, we need not sit with folded hands and feel that
-no steps can be taken to ward off the dangers which constantly beset
-us.
-
-
-
-
-IMMEDIATE STEPS
-
-
-We can begin, and begin at once, to set up some machinery. Our
-international difficulties will then automatically be taken up before
-they reach the danger point. One of our great troubles is that it is
-nobody’s business to try to straighten out difficulties between nations
-in the early stages. If they are allowed to continue too long, they
-grow more and more bitter and little things, which might at first have
-been easily explained or settled, take on the proportions of a bitter
-and important quarrel.
-
-We do not scrap our whole judicial machinery just because we are not
-sure that the people who appear before the bar are telling the truth.
-We go ahead and do our best to ascertain the truth in any given case,
-and substantial justice seems to be done in a majority of situations.
-This same thing would have to satisfy us for a time at least in
-the results achieved by whatever machinery we set up to solve our
-international difficulties.
-
-I am not advocating any particular machinery. The need seems
-fairly obvious. To say that we cannot find a way is tantamount to
-acknowledging that we are going to watch our civilization wipe itself
-off the face of the earth.
-
-For those of us who remember the World War, there is little need to
-paint a picture of war conditions, but the generation that participated
-in that war is growing older. To the younger group what they have not
-seen and experienced themselves actually means little.
-
-I heard a gentleman who loves adventure say the other day that he could
-recruit an army of young people at any time to go to war in any part
-of the world. They would believe that the danger was slight, and the
-fun and comradeship and adventure would be attractive. I protested
-violently that youth today was not so gullible, but down in the bottom
-of my heart I am a little apprehensive. Therefore, it seems to me
-that one of our first duties is constantly to paint for young people
-a realistic picture of war. You cannot gainsay the assertion that
-war brings out certain fine qualities in human nature. People will
-make sacrifices which they would not make in the ordinary course of
-existence. War will give opportunities for heroism which do not arise
-in every-day living, but this is not all that war will do.
-
-It will place men for weeks under conditions which are physically so
-bad that years later they may still be suffering from the effects of
-this “period of adventure” even though they may not have been injured
-by shot or shell during this time of service. Upon many people it will
-have mental or psychological effects which will take them years to
-overcome. In many countries of the world there are people to attest to
-the changed human beings who have returned to them after the World
-War. Men who could no longer settle down to their old work, men who had
-seen such horrors that they could no longer sleep quietly at night,
-men who do not wish to speak of their experiences. It is a rather
-exceptional person who goes through a war and comes out unscathed
-physically, mentally or morally.
-
-Secondly, it is one’s duty to youth to point out that there are ways of
-living heroically during peace times. I do not imagine that Monsieur
-and Madame Curie ever felt the lack of adventure in their lives, for
-there is nothing more adventurous than experimentation with an unknown
-element. Their purpose was to find something of benefit to the human
-race. They jeopardized no lives but their own.
-
-I doubt if Father Damien ever felt that his life lacked adventure; and
-I can think of a hundred places in our own country today where men or
-women might lead their lives unknown or unsung beyond the borders of
-their own communities and yet never lack for adventure and interest.
-Those who set themselves the task of making their communities into
-places in which the average human being may obtain a share, not only
-of greater physical well-being, but of wider mental and spiritual
-existence, will lead an active and adventurous life to reach their goal.
-
-This will need energy, patience and understanding beyond the average,
-qualities of leadership to win other men to their point of view,
-unselfishness and heroism, for they may be asked to make great
-sacrifices. To reach their objectives they may have to hand over their
-leadership to other men, their characters may be maligned, their
-motives impugned, but they must remain completely indifferent if only
-in the end they achieve their objectives. Moral courage of a rare kind
-will be required of them.
-
-In the wars of the past, deeds of valor and heroism have won
-decorations from governments and the applause of comrades in arms,
-but the men who lead in civic campaigns may hope for none of these
-recognitions. The best that can happen to them is that they may live
-to see a part of their dreams come true, they may keep a few friends
-who believe in them and their own consciences may bring them inner
-satisfactions.
-
-Making our every-day living an adventure is probably our best safeguard
-against war. But there are other steps which we might well take.
-
-Let us examine again, for example, the ever-recurring question of the
-need for armaments as a means of defense and protection and see if
-something cannot be done immediately. Many people feel the building of
-great military machines lead us directly into war for when you acquire
-something it is always a temptation to use it.
-
-It is perfectly obvious, however, that no nation can cut down its army
-and navy and armaments in general when the rest of the world is not
-doing the same thing.
-
-We ourselves have a long unfortified border on the north which has
-remained undefended for more than a hundred years, a shining example
-of what peace and understanding between two nations can accomplish.
-But we also have two long coast lines to defend and the Panama Canal,
-which in case of war must be kept open, therefore it behooves us to
-have adequate naval defense. Just what we mean by adequate defense is a
-point on which a great many people differ.
-
-Innumerable civilians have ideas as to what constitutes adequate
-military preparedness and the people most concerned, our military
-forces, have even more definite ideas. Many people in the United
-States feel that we are still rendered practically safe by the expanse
-of water on our east and west coasts. Some people even feel, like
-Mr. William Jennings Bryan, that if our nation needed to be defended
-a million men would spring to arms over night. They forget that a
-million untrained, unarmed men would be a poor defense. We must concede
-that our military establishments have probably made a more careful,
-practical study of the situation than any one else, for they know they
-would have to be ready for action at once.
-
-Whether we accept the civil or the military point of view on
-preparedness, we can still move forward. We can continue to try to come
-to an understanding with other nations on some of the points which lead
-to bad feeling. We can begin first, perhaps, with the Central and South
-American nations and continue later with other nations, to enter into
-agreements which may lead to the gradual reduction of armaments. If we
-only agree on one thing at a time, every little step is something to
-the good. Simply because we have so far not been able to arrive at any
-agreement is no reason for giving up the attempt to agree. No one has
-as yet discovered a way to make any of the methods of transportation
-by which we all travel around the world, absolutely safe, but nobody
-suggests that we should do away with ships and railroads and airplanes.
-I feel that the people of various nations can greatly influence their
-governments and representatives and encourage action along the lines of
-reduction in arms and munitions.
-
-Every international group that meets must bear in mind that they have
-an opportunity to create better feeling, but to move forward along this
-particular front also requires the backing of public opinion at home.
-This opinion may be formed in many little groups all over the world and
-may be felt in an ever widening circle of nations until it becomes a
-formidable force in the world as a whole.
-
-Then there is the matter of private interests involved in the
-manufacture of arms and munitions. I know there are many arguments
-advanced against government ownership of the factories making arms
-and munitions. When you know the story of the part played by certain
-families in Europe whose business it has been to manufacture arms and
-munitions, however, you wonder if the arguments advanced against this
-step are not inspired in large part by those whose interests lie in
-this particular business?
-
-It is true that a government can lose its perspective for a number of
-reasons. The need for employment may push them to over-production,
-as well as fear of their neighbors, and they may manufacture so much
-that the temptation to use it may be great. Some governments today
-manufacture practically all they need for peace-time purposes and
-this is a safeguard, but for war-time use, all governments would have
-to fall back on private manufacturers who could convert their plants
-easily for the manufacturing of war materials. Some governments today
-encourage private manufacturers to produce arms and munitions needed
-in peace time by buying from them, but the great danger lies in the
-uncontrolled private production which is used for export. The element
-of private profit is a great incentive towards the increase of this
-business just as it is in any other business. Governments are not
-tempted in the same way, for they do not manufacture for export or for
-profit.
-
-It seems to me that we must trust some one and I think perhaps it
-is wiser to trust a government than the more vulnerable and easily
-tempted individual. Besides which, a democracy has it within its power
-to control any government business and, therefore, the idea that our
-government should control the manufacture of arms and munitions fills
-me with no great trepidation.
-
-This control of the manufacture of arms and munitions is a measure
-which could be undertaken by one government alone. It does not have to
-wait for all the other governments to concur, and so I believe either
-in complete government ownership or in the strictest kind of government
-supervision, allowing such manufacture as will supply our own country
-but which will not create a surplus for exportation, thus removing the
-incentive for constantly seeking and creating new markets.
-
-The next step will be the mutual curtailment, very gradually I am
-sure, of the amount of armaments the world over. This is a difficult
-step, because it requires not only an agreement on the part of all
-the nations, but sufficient confidence in each other to believe that,
-having given their word, they will live up to the spirit of the
-agreement as well as to the letter of it, and not try cleverly to hide
-whatever they have done from possible inspectors.
-
-They will not, for instance, destroy a battleship and add a half dozen
-airplanes, telling the other members to the agreement that they have
-carried out the promised reduction, but forgetting to mention the
-additions to some other arm of their military service.
-
-This lack of integrity, or perhaps we should call it more politely the
-desire to be a little more clever than one’s neighbor, is what promotes
-a constant attitude of suspicion amongst nations. This will exist until
-we have accomplished a change in human nature and that is why for the
-present it seems to me necessary to have inspection and policing as
-well as an agreement.
-
-The objection will be made that in the nations which are not
-democracies a government might build up a great secret arsenal; but in
-those countries this could be done today for most of them control the
-press and all out-going information with an iron hand.
-
-Outside of the democracies, government ownership is a much more serious
-danger on this account. If all nations were obliged to report their
-military strength to some central body, and this body was allowed
-to inspect and vouch for the truth of their statements, then all
-governments could feel secure against that hidden danger which is now
-part of the incentive for a constant increase in the defense machinery
-of every nation.
-
-Here again we are confronted with the need of some machinery to work
-for peace. I have already stated that I doubt if the present League
-of Nations could ever be made to serve the purpose for which it was
-originally intended. This does not mean that I do not believe that we
-could get together. We might even begin by setting up regional groups
-in different parts of the world which might eventually amalgamate
-into a central body. It seems to me almost a necessity that we have
-some central body as a means of settling our difficulties, with an
-international police force to enforce its decisions, as long as we have
-not yet reached the point everywhere of setting force aside.
-
-Joint economic action on the part of a group of nations will
-undoubtedly be very effective, but it will take time to educate people
-to a point where they are willing to sacrifice, even temporarily,
-material gains in the interests of peace, so I doubt whether we can
-count at once on complete cooperation in the use of an economic
-boycott. To be a real weapon against any nation wishing to carry on
-war, it must be well carried out by a great number of nations.
-
-Another small and perhaps seemingly unimportant thing might be done
-immediately. It might be understood that in war time every one should
-become a part of the military service and no one should be allowed to
-make any profit either in increased wages or in increased interest
-on their capital investment. This might bring about a little more
-universal interest in peace, and more active interest in the efforts to
-prevent war whether a man were going to the front or staying at home.
-
-Of course, when we talk of “the front” in connection with future wars,
-we are taking it for granted that future wars will be much like those
-of the past, whereas most people believe that future wars will have no
-fronts. What we hear of Spain and China makes this seem very probable.
-Gases and airplanes will not be directed only against armed forces, or
-military centers, they may be used for the breaking of morale in the
-opposing nation. That will mean shelling of unfortified cities, towns
-and villages, and the killing of women and children. In fact this means
-the participation in war of entire populations.
-
-One other element must be considered, namely, the creating of public
-opinion today. Wars have frequently been declared in the past with
-the backing of the nations involved because public opinion had been
-influenced through the press and through other mediums, either by the
-governments themselves or by certain powerful interests which desired
-war. Could that be done again today in our own country or have we
-become suspicious of the written word and the inspired message? I think
-that as a people we look for motives more carefully than we did in the
-past but whether issues could be clouded for us is one of the questions
-that no one can answer until the test comes.
-
-I am inclined to think that if a question as serious as going to war
-were presented to our nation we would demand facts unvarnished by
-interpretation. Whether we even in our free democracy could obtain them
-is another question. Who controls the dissemination of news? Is the
-press totally, uncompromisingly devoted to the unbiased presentation of
-all news insofar as possible? Is it possible for groups with special
-interests to put pressure on the press and on our other means of
-disseminating information, such as the radio and the screen, and to
-what extent?
-
-This is an interesting study in every country where people are really
-interested in good will and peace. If these sources of information are
-not really free should not the people insist that this be one of our
-first reforms? Without it we can have no sound basis on which to form
-our opinions.
-
-These are things we can work for immediately, but some of my friends
-consider that one point transcends all others and epitomizes the way to
-“peace.”
-
-
-
-
-SUMMARY
-
-
-We can establish no real trust between nations until we acknowledge
-the power of love above all other power. We cannot cast out fear and
-therefore we cannot build up trust. Perfectly obvious and perfectly
-true, but we are back again to our fundamental difficulty--the
-education of the individual human being, and that takes time. We cannot
-sit around a table and discuss our difficulties until we are able to
-state them frankly. We must feel that those who listen wish to get at
-the truth and desire to do what is best for all. We must reach a point
-where we can recognize the rights and needs of others, as well as our
-own rights and needs.
-
-I have a group of religious friends who claim that the answer to all
-these difficulties is a great religious revival. They may be right, but
-great religious revivals which are not simply short emotional upheavals
-lifting people to the heights and dropping them down again below the
-place from which they rose, mean a fundamental change in human nature.
-That change will come to some people through religion, but it will not
-come to all that way, for I have known many people, very fine people,
-who had no formal religion. So the change must come to some, perhaps,
-through a new code of ethics, or an awakening sense of responsibility
-for their brothers, or a discovery that whether they believe in a
-future life or not, there are now greater enjoyments and rewards in
-this world than those which they have envisioned in the past.
-
-I would have people begin at home to discover for themselves the
-meaning of brotherly love. A friend of mine wrote me the other day that
-she wondered what would happen if occasionally a member of Congress
-got up and mentioned in the House the existence of brotherly love. You
-laugh, it seems fantastic, but this subject will, I am sure, have to
-be discussed throughout the world for many years before it becomes an
-accepted rule. We will have to want peace, want it enough to pay for
-it, pay for it in our own behavior and in material ways. We will have
-to want it enough to overcome our lethargy and go out and find all
-those in other countries who want it as much as we do.
-
-Some time we must begin, for where there is no beginning there is no
-end, and if we hope to see the preservation of our civilization, if we
-believe that there is anything worthy of perpetuation in what we have
-built thus far, then our people must turn to brotherly love, not as a
-doctrine but as a way of living. If this becomes our accepted way of
-life, this life may be so well worth living that we will look into the
-future with a desire to perpetuate a peaceful world for our children.
-With this desire will come a realization that only if others feel as we
-do, can we obtain the objectives of peace on earth, good will to men.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of This Troubled World, by Eleanor Roosevelt</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: This Troubled World</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Eleanor Roosevelt</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 29, 2021 [eBook #65731]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THIS TROUBLED WORLD ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" /></div>
-
-<h1>THIS<br />
-TROUBLED<br />
-WORLD</h1>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="newpage p4 center vspace wspace">
-<p class="xxlarge gesperrt">
-THIS<br />
-TROUBLED<br />
-WORLD</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 10em;">
- <img src="images/i_001.png" width="600" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="larger">ELEANOR ROOSEVELT</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 10em;">
- <img src="images/i_002.png" width="599" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2">MCMXXXVIII<br />
-H. C. KINSEY &amp; COMPANY, INC.<br />
-NEW YORK
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 smaller">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1938, by Anna Eleanor Roosevelt</span><br />
-
-<span class="smcap">Printed in the U.S.A. by J. J. Little &amp; Ives, N.Y.</span></p>
-
-<p class="smaller gesperrt">FIRST EDITION</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4">
-To<br />
-MRS. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT<br />
-who has led so many of us<br />
-in the struggle for peace
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.png" width="301" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE CASE AS IT STANDS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">ULTIMATE OBJECTIVES</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_14">14</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">IMMEDIATE STEPS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SUMMARY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_44">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="larger gesperrt">THIS TROUBLED WORLD</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 10em;">
- <img src="images/i_004.png" width="601" height="106" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_1" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_CASE_AS_IT_STANDS">THE CASE AS IT STANDS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.png" width="301" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> newspapers these days are becoming
-more and more painful. I was reading
-my morning papers on the train not so long
-ago, and looked up with a feeling of desperation.
-Up and down the car people were reading,
-yet no one seemed excited.</p>
-
-<p>To me the whole situation seems intolerable.
-We face today a world filled with suspicion
-and hatred. We look at Europe and
-see a civil war going on, with other nations
-participating not only as individual volunteers,
-but obviously with the help and approval
-of their governments. We look at the
-Far East and see two nations, technically not
-at war, killing each other in great numbers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span></p>
-
-<p>Every nation is watching the others on its
-borders, analyzing its own needs and striving
-to attain its ends with little consideration for
-the needs of its neighbors. Few people are
-sitting down dispassionately to go over the
-whole situation in an attempt to determine
-what present conditions are, or how they
-should be met.</p>
-
-<p>We know, for instance, that certain nations
-today need to expand because their populations
-have increased. Certain people will tell
-you that the solution of this whole question
-lies in the acceptance or rejection of birth
-control. That may be the solution for the
-future, but we can do nothing in that way
-about the populations that now exist. They
-are on this earth, and modern science has left
-us only a few places where famine or flood or
-disease can wipe out large numbers of superfluous
-people in one fell swoop. For this reason
-certain nations need additional territory
-to which part of their present populations
-may be moved; other nations need more land
-on which to grow necessary raw materials; or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-perhaps they may need mineral deposits
-which are not to be found in their own country.
-You will say that these can be had by
-trade. Yes, but the nations possessing them
-will frequently make the cost too high to the
-nations which need them.</p>
-
-<p>It is not a question today of the “free”
-interchange of goods. If standards of living
-were approximately the same, throughout
-the world, competition would be on an equal
-basis and then there might be no need for
-tariffs. However, standards of living vary.
-The nations with higher standards have set
-up protective barriers which served them
-well when they were self-contained, but not
-so well when they reached a point where they
-either wished to import or export.</p>
-
-<p>When you take all these things into consideration,
-the size of this problem is apt to
-make you feel that even an attempt to solve
-it in the future by education is futile. Faint
-heart, however, ne’er won fair lady, nor did
-it ever solve world problems!</p>
-
-<p>Peace plan after peace plan has been presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-to me; most of them, I find, are impractical,
-or not very carefully thought out.
-In nearly all of them some one can find a
-flaw. I have come to look at them now without
-the slightest hope of finding one full-fledged
-plan, but I keep on looking in the
-hope of finding here and there some small
-suggestion that may be acceptable to enough
-people to insure an honest effort being made
-to study it and evaluate its possible benefits.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, one lady of my acquaintance
-brought me a plan this past spring
-which sounded extremely plausible. Her
-premises are: We never again wish to send
-our men overseas; we wish to have adequate
-defense; we do not need a navy if we do not
-intend to go beyond our own shores; submarines
-and airplanes can defend our shores,
-with guns along our coasts as an added protection.
-Therefore, we do not need an army,
-for our men are going to stay at home. With
-our coast defenses strong, nobody will land
-here, so why go to the expense of an army?
-We do not need battleships or, in fact, any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-navy beyond submarines because we do not
-intend to own any outlying possessions.</p>
-
-<p>In this way, said the lady, we will save vast
-sums of money which can be applied to all
-the social needs of the day—better housing,
-better schools, old age pensions, workmen’s
-compensation, care of the blind and crippled
-and other dependents. There is no limit to
-what we might do with this money which we
-now spend on preparation for destruction.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very attractive picture and I wish it
-were all as simple as that, but it seems to be
-fairly well proved that guns along our coasts
-are practically useless. No one, as far as I
-know, has ever devised an adequate defense
-by submarines and airplanes, or calculated
-whether the cost of the development of these
-two forces would really be any less than what
-we spend at present on our army and navy.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest defense value of the navy is
-that its cruising radius is great enough to
-allow it to contact an attacking force long
-before that force reaches our shores. If we
-trusted solely to submarines and airplanes we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-would have to have them in sufficient number
-really to cover all our borders, and this
-type of defense would seem to be almost prohibitive
-in cost for a nation with a great
-many miles of border to defend.</p>
-
-<p>Has any one sounded out the people of
-this country as to their willingness to wait
-until an attacking enemy comes within the
-cruising radius of our planes and submarines?
-Have we faced the fact that this would
-mean allowing an attacking enemy to come
-unmolested fairly near to our shores and
-would make it entirely possible for them to
-land in a nearby country which might be
-friendly to them, without any interference
-on our part? Have our citizens been asked if
-they are willing to take the risk of doing
-without trained men? We have always had a
-small trained army forming the first line of
-defense in case somebody does land on our
-borders, or attempts to approach us by land
-through a neighboring country. Our army
-has not been thought of as an attacking
-force; do we want to do away with it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<p>Are all the people in this country willing
-also to give up the outlying islands which
-have come into our possession? Some of them
-cost us more than they bring in, but others
-bring certain of our citizens a fair revenue.
-Can we count on those citizens to accept the
-loss of these revenues in the interests of
-future peace?</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this is part of what we will have
-to make up our minds to pay some day as
-the price of peace; but has any one as yet put
-it in concrete form to the American people
-and asked their opinion about it?</p>
-
-<p>One of the things that is most frequently
-harped upon is the vast sums of money spent
-for war preparation in this country. Very frequently
-the statements are somewhat misleading.
-It is true that in the past few years
-we have spent more than we have for a number
-of preceding years because we had fallen
-behind in our treaty strength but, in a world
-which is arming all around us, it is necessary
-to keep a certain parity and these expenditures<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-should be analyzed with a little more
-care than is usual.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, few people realize that in
-the army appropriation is included all the
-work done under the army engineers on
-rivers and harbors, on flood control, etc. One
-other consideration which is frequently overlooked
-is that, because of the higher wages
-paid for labor in this country, whatever we
-build costs us more than it does in the other
-nations. One significant fact is that we only
-spend twelve percent of our national income
-on our army and navy, as against anywhere
-from thirty-five to fifty-five percent of the national
-income spent by nations in the rest of
-the world. It is well for us to realize these
-facts and not to feel that our government is
-doing something that will push us into a
-position which is incompatible with a desire
-for peace. We are the most peace loving nation
-in the world and we are not doing anything
-at present which would change that
-situation.</p>
-
-<p>One very intelligent friend of mine developed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-an idea the other day which seems
-to me common sense for the present time, at
-least. “Why do we talk,” she asked, “about
-peace? Why don’t we recognize the fact
-that it is normal and natural for differences
-to exist? Almost every family, no matter how
-close its members may be, is quarrelsome at
-times.” Quarrelsome may be too strong a
-word, so we might better say that differences
-of opinion arise in the family as to conduct
-or as to likes and dislikes. Why should we
-expect therefore, that nations will not have
-these same differences and quarrels? Why do
-we concentrate on urging them not to have
-any differences? Why don’t we simply accept
-the fact that differences always come up and
-concentrate on evolving some kind of machinery
-by which the differences may be recognized
-and some plan of compromise be
-worked out to satisfy, at least in part, all
-those concerned? Compromises, of course,
-have to be made; they are made in every family.
-There are usually some members of a
-family, who, by common consent, are the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-arbitrators of questions that arise, and who
-hold the family together, or bring them together
-if relationships become strained.</p>
-
-<p>The League of Nations was an effort to
-find for the nations of the world, a method
-by which differences between nations would
-automatically be brought before the court of
-public opinion. Some kind of compromise
-would be made and those involved would
-feel that substantial justice had been done,
-even though they might not at any one time
-achieve all of their desires.</p>
-
-<p>Many of us have become convinced that
-the League of Nations as it stands today cannot
-serve this purpose. The reason for this is
-unimportant. The important thing now is
-that we should concentrate on finding some
-new machinery or revamping what already
-exists so that every one will function within
-it and have confidence in its honesty.</p>
-
-<p>The people of the United States have
-congratulated themselves on the fact that
-they had made a beginning towards the development
-of this machinery in their conferences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-with the representatives of the other
-American governments.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps we have a right to feel a sense of
-satisfaction for as a nation we have made a
-small beginning. We were cordially disliked
-throughout South America for years because
-we were the strongest nation on this continent.
-We took the attitude of the big brother
-for a long time and constituted ourselves the
-defender of all the other nations. We were
-not only the defender, however, we also considered
-it our duty to set ourselves up as the
-judge, and the only judge, of what should
-happen in the internal as well as the external
-affairs of our various neighbors.</p>
-
-<p>To them it seemed a bullying, patronizing
-attitude. As they grew stronger, they resented
-it, but we went right on regardless of their
-feelings. During the past few years we have
-put ourselves imaginatively into their situation.
-The final result is that we have reached
-an amicable understanding and actually are
-in a fair way to get together and discuss subjects
-of mutual interest with little or no sense<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-of suspicion and fear being involved in the
-discussion. This can, of course, be spoiled at
-any time by the selfishness of individual citizens
-who may decide that, as individuals,
-they can exploit some other nation on the
-North or South American continents. The
-restraint of these individuals will not be a
-question of government action, but of the
-force of public opinion which, it is to be
-hoped, will be able to control and exert a
-potent influence because of the sense of responsibility
-acquired by our citizens.</p>
-
-<p>This is satisfactory, but there is still much
-to be done before we can feel that even here
-in the Americas we have a thoroughly sound
-working basis for solving all misunderstandings.
-We cannot be entirely satisfied with
-anything, however, which does not include
-the world as a whole, for we are all so closely
-interdependent today that we can only operate
-successfully when we all cooperate.</p>
-
-<p>We have had the experience and can profit
-by the mistakes and the difficulties through
-which the League of Nations has passed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-Every nation in the world still uses policemen
-to control its unruly element. It may
-be that any machinery set up today to deal
-with international difficulties may require
-policemen in order to function successfully,
-but even a police force should not be called
-upon until every other method of procedure
-has been tried and proved unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p>We have some economic weapons which
-can be used first and which may prove themselves
-very efficient as the guardians of peace.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_14" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ULTIMATE_OBJECTIVES">ULTIMATE OBJECTIVES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.png" width="301" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">What</span> are our ultimate objectives and
-how shall we achieve them? First,
-the most important thing is that any difficulties
-arising should automatically go before
-some body which will publish the facts to the
-world at large and give public opinion an
-opportunity to make a decision. Then, a
-group of world representatives will have to
-decide with whom the fault lies. If their decision
-is not accepted by the nations involved
-and either nation attempts to use force in
-coercing the other nation, or nations—in opposition
-to what is clearly the majority opinion
-of the world—then and then only, it
-seems to me, the decision will be made that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-the nation using force is an aggressor nation.
-Being an aggressor, the majority of nations
-in opposition would be obliged to resort to
-some method designed to make that nation
-realize that they could not with impunity
-flout the public opinion of the majority.</p>
-
-<p>We need to define what an aggressor nation
-is. We need to have a tribunal where the
-facts in any case may be discussed, and the
-decision made before the world, as to
-whether a nation is an aggressor or not. Then
-the steps decided upon could be taken in
-conjunction with other nations.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, trade should be withdrawn
-from that nation and they should be barred
-as traders in the countries disagreeing with
-them. It would not seem probable that more
-than this economic weapon would have to be
-used but, if necessary in the end, the police
-force could be called upon.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of a clearly defined issue where
-the majority of nations agreed, the police
-force would simply try to prevent bloodshed
-and aggression, and it would be in a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-different position from an army which was
-attempting to attack a country and subjugate
-it. Even the use of a police force, which so
-many think of as tantamount to war, would
-really be very different and there would be
-no idea of marching into a country or making
-the people suffer or taking anything from
-them. It would simply be a group of armed
-men preventing either of the parties to a
-quarrel from entering into a real war.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, I can imagine cases in which
-the police force might find itself in an unenviable
-position, with two countries engaged
-in a heated quarrel trying to do away
-with the police so they could get at each
-other!</p>
-
-<p>All we can hope is that this situation will
-not arise and that the non-aggressor party to
-the quarrel, at least, may be willing to sit
-peacefully by and see the police force repulse
-the enemy without wishing to turn into aggressors
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>With all our agitation about peace, we lose
-sight of the fact that with the proper machinery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-it is easier to keep out of situations
-which lead to war than it is to bring about
-peace once war is actually going on.</p>
-
-<p>I doubt very much whether peace is coming
-to us either through plans, even my own
-as I have outlined it, or through any of the
-theories or hopes we now hold. What I have
-outlined is not real peace, just a method of
-trying to deal with our difficulties a little
-better than we have in the past, in the world
-as it is today. We may, of course, be wiped off
-the face of the earth before we do even this.
-Our real ultimate objective must be a change
-in human nature for I have, as I said, yet to
-see a peace plan which is really practical and
-which has been thought through in every detail.
-Therefore, I am inclined to believe that
-there is no perfect and complete program for
-bringing about peace in the world at the
-present moment.</p>
-
-<p>I often wonder as I look around the world
-whether any of us, even we women, really
-want peace. Women should realize better
-than any one else, that the spirit of peace has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-to begin in the relationship between two individuals.
-They know that a child alone may
-be unhappy because he is alone, but there
-will be no quarreling until another child appears
-on the scene, and then the fur will fly,
-if each of them desires the same thing at the
-same time.</p>
-
-<p>Women have watched this for generations
-and must know, if peace is going to come
-about in the world, the way to start is by getting
-a better understanding between individuals.
-From this germ a better understanding
-between groups of people will grow.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of this knowledge, I am sure that
-women themselves are among the worst offenders
-when it comes to petty quarrels. Mrs.
-J—— will refuse to speak to Mrs. C——
-because Mrs. C——’s dog came through the
-hedge and mussed up Mrs. J——’s flowerbed.
-No one will deny that occurrences of
-this kind are irritating in the extreme, but is
-it worth a feud between two neighbors, perhaps
-old friends or even acquaintances who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-must live next door to each other and see
-each other almost every day?</p>
-
-<p>At the moment we, as a nation, are looking
-across the Atlantic and the Pacific, patting
-ourselves on the back and saying how fortunate
-we are to be away from all their excitements.
-We feel a little self-righteous, and forget
-that we ourselves have been engaged in a
-war on the average of every forty years since
-our nation was founded. We even fought a
-civil war, complicated by the alignment of
-other nations with one side or the other,
-though no foreign soldiers actually came to
-fight on either side.</p>
-
-<p>The people who settled in New England
-came here for religious freedom, but religious
-freedom to them meant freedom only
-for their kind of religion. They were not going
-to be any more liberal to others who differed
-with them in this new country, than
-others had been with them in the countries
-from which they came. This attitude seems
-to be our attitude in many situations today.</p>
-
-<p>Very few people in any nation today are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-inclined to be really liberal in allowing real
-freedom to other individuals. Like our forebears
-we want freedom for ourselves, but not
-for those who differ from us. To think and
-act as we please within the limits, of course,
-caused by the necessity for respecting the
-equal rights which must belong to our neighbors,
-would seem to be almost a platitudinous
-doctrine, yet we would frequently like
-to overlook these limits and permit no freedom
-to our neighbors. If this is our personal
-attitude, it is not strange that our national
-attitude is similar. We are chiefly concerned
-with the rights and privileges of our own
-people and we show little consideration for
-the rights and privileges of others. In this we
-are not very different from other nations
-both in the past and in the present.</p>
-
-<p>I can almost count on the fingers of one
-hand the people whom I think are real pacifists.
-By that I mean, the people who are
-really making an effort in their personal lives
-to bring about an atmosphere which will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-conducive to a solution of all our difficulties
-in a peaceful manner.</p>
-
-<p>The first step towards achieving this end is
-self-discipline and self-control. The second is
-a certain amount of imagination which will
-enable us to understand situations in which
-other people find themselves. We may learn
-to be less indignant at any slight or seeming
-slight, and we may try to find some way by
-which to remove the cause of the troubles
-which arise between individuals, if we become
-disciplined and cultivate our imaginative
-faculties. Once we achieve a technique
-by which we control our own emotions, we
-certainly will be better able to teach young
-people how to get on together. They may
-then find some saner way of settling questions
-under dispute than by merely punching
-each other’s noses!</p>
-
-<p>When we once control ourselves and submit
-personal differences to constituted authorities
-for settlement, we can say that we
-have a will to peace between individuals.
-Before we come to the question of what may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-be the technique between nations, however,
-we must go a step farther and set our national
-house in order. On every hand we see
-today miniature wars going on between conflicting
-interests. As the example most constantly
-before us, take capital and labor. If
-their difficulties are settled by arbitration
-and no blood is shed, we can feel we have
-made real strides towards approaching our
-international problems. We are not prepared
-to do this, however, when two factions in a
-group having the same basic interests cannot
-come to an agreement between themselves.
-Their ability to obtain what they desire is
-greatly weakened until they can reach an
-understanding and work as a unit. The basis
-of this understanding should not be hard to
-reach if the different personalities involved
-could forget themselves as individuals and
-think only of the objectives in view, and of
-the best way to obtain them.</p>
-
-<p>Granted that they are able to do this, then
-we can approach our second problem with
-the knowledge that more deeply conflicting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-interests are at stake but that those with common
-interests can state their case so the public
-may form their opinion. Here again, if
-you could take it for granted that on both
-sides a real desire existed amongst those representing
-divergent interests to consider unselfishly
-ultimate goals and benefits for the
-majority, rather than any individual gain or
-loss, it would undoubtedly be possible to
-reach a peaceful agreement.</p>
-
-<p>Human beings, however, do not stride
-from peak to peak, they climb laboriously up
-the side of the mountain. The public will
-have to understand each case as it comes up
-and force divergent interests to find a solution.
-The real mountain climber never gives
-up until he has reached the highest peak and
-the lure of the climb to this peak is always
-before him to draw him on.</p>
-
-<p>That should be the way in human progress—a
-peaceful, quiet progress. We cannot follow
-this way, however, until human nature
-becomes less interested in self, acquires some
-of the vision and persistence of the mountain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-climber, and realizes that physical forces
-must be harnessed and controlled by disciplined
-mental and spiritual forces.</p>
-
-<p>When we have achieved a nation where
-the majority of the people is of this type,
-then we can hope for some measure of success
-in changing our procedure when international
-difficulties arise.</p>
-
-<p>What we have said really means that we
-believe in one actual way to peace—making
-a fundamental change in human nature.
-Over and over again people will tell you that
-that is impossible. I cannot see why it should
-be impossible when the record of history
-shows so many changes already gone through.</p>
-
-<p>Only the other day I heard it stated that
-there are only two real divisions which can
-be made between people—the people who
-have good intentions, and the people who
-have evil intentions. The same man who
-made this distinction between people, made
-the suggestion that eventually there should
-be in the government, a department where
-business—the business that wishes to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-fair and square—could lay its plans before
-a chosen group of men representing business,
-the public and the government. They could
-ask for advice as to whether the plans proposed
-were according to the best business interests
-of the country and the majority of the
-people and receive in return a disinterested,
-honest opinion. Immediately the remonstrance
-was made that this would be impossible
-because it would be difficult for an
-advisory group to know if the plans laid
-before them were honestly stated, and people
-of evil intentions could use such a group to
-promote plans for selfish interests rather than
-for the general welfare. This is undoubtedly
-true, and we are up against exactly the same
-situation in trying to obtain peace between
-groups within nations as we are on the international
-fronts.</p>
-
-<p>Human beings either must recognize the
-fact that what serves the people as a whole
-serves them best as individuals and, through
-selfish or unselfish interests, they become people
-of good intentions and honesty. If not we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-will be unable to move forward except as
-we have moved in the past with recourse to
-force, and constant, suspicious watchfulness
-on the part of individuals and groups towards
-each other. The preservation of our
-civilization seems to demand a permanent
-change of attitude and therefore every effort
-should be bent towards bringing about this
-change in human nature through education.
-This is a slow way and, in the meantime, we
-need not sit with folded hands and feel that
-no steps can be taken to ward off the dangers
-which constantly beset us.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_27" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IMMEDIATE_STEPS">IMMEDIATE STEPS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.png" width="301" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> can begin, and begin at once, to set
-up some machinery. Our international
-difficulties will then automatically be
-taken up before they reach the danger point.
-One of our great troubles is that it is nobody’s
-business to try to straighten out difficulties
-between nations in the early stages. If
-they are allowed to continue too long, they
-grow more and more bitter and little things,
-which might at first have been easily explained
-or settled, take on the proportions of
-a bitter and important quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>We do not scrap our whole judicial machinery
-just because we are not sure that the
-people who appear before the bar are telling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-the truth. We go ahead and do our best to
-ascertain the truth in any given case, and
-substantial justice seems to be done in a majority
-of situations. This same thing would
-have to satisfy us for a time at least in the
-results achieved by whatever machinery we
-set up to solve our international difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>I am not advocating any particular machinery.
-The need seems fairly obvious. To
-say that we cannot find a way is tantamount
-to acknowledging that we are going to watch
-our civilization wipe itself off the face of the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>For those of us who remember the World
-War, there is little need to paint a picture of
-war conditions, but the generation that participated
-in that war is growing older. To the
-younger group what they have not seen and
-experienced themselves actually means little.</p>
-
-<p>I heard a gentleman who loves adventure
-say the other day that he could recruit an
-army of young people at any time to go to
-war in any part of the world. They would
-believe that the danger was slight, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-fun and comradeship and adventure would
-be attractive. I protested violently that youth
-today was not so gullible, but down in the
-bottom of my heart I am a little apprehensive.
-Therefore, it seems to me that one of
-our first duties is constantly to paint for
-young people a realistic picture of war. You
-cannot gainsay the assertion that war brings
-out certain fine qualities in human nature.
-People will make sacrifices which they would
-not make in the ordinary course of existence.
-War will give opportunities for heroism
-which do not arise in every-day living, but
-this is not all that war will do.</p>
-
-<p>It will place men for weeks under conditions
-which are physically so bad that years
-later they may still be suffering from the
-effects of this “period of adventure” even
-though they may not have been injured by
-shot or shell during this time of service.
-Upon many people it will have mental or
-psychological effects which will take them
-years to overcome. In many countries of the
-world there are people to attest to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-changed human beings who have returned
-to them after the World War. Men who
-could no longer settle down to their old
-work, men who had seen such horrors that
-they could no longer sleep quietly at night,
-men who do not wish to speak of their experiences.
-It is a rather exceptional person
-who goes through a war and comes out unscathed
-physically, mentally or morally.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, it is one’s duty to youth to point
-out that there are ways of living heroically
-during peace times. I do not imagine that
-Monsieur and Madame Curie ever felt the
-lack of adventure in their lives, for there is
-nothing more adventurous than experimentation
-with an unknown element. Their purpose
-was to find something of benefit to the
-human race. They jeopardized no lives but
-their own.</p>
-
-<p>I doubt if Father Damien ever felt that his
-life lacked adventure; and I can think of a
-hundred places in our own country today
-where men or women might lead their lives
-unknown or unsung beyond the borders of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-their own communities and yet never lack
-for adventure and interest. Those who set
-themselves the task of making their communities
-into places in which the average
-human being may obtain a share, not only
-of greater physical well-being, but of wider
-mental and spiritual existence, will lead an
-active and adventurous life to reach their
-goal.</p>
-
-<p>This will need energy, patience and understanding
-beyond the average, qualities of
-leadership to win other men to their point of
-view, unselfishness and heroism, for they may
-be asked to make great sacrifices. To reach
-their objectives they may have to hand over
-their leadership to other men, their characters
-may be maligned, their motives impugned,
-but they must remain completely
-indifferent if only in the end they achieve
-their objectives. Moral courage of a rare kind
-will be required of them.</p>
-
-<p>In the wars of the past, deeds of valor and
-heroism have won decorations from governments
-and the applause of comrades in arms,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-but the men who lead in civic campaigns
-may hope for none of these recognitions. The
-best that can happen to them is that they may
-live to see a part of their dreams come true,
-they may keep a few friends who believe in
-them and their own consciences may bring
-them inner satisfactions.</p>
-
-<p>Making our every-day living an adventure
-is probably our best safeguard against war.
-But there are other steps which we might
-well take.</p>
-
-<p>Let us examine again, for example, the
-ever-recurring question of the need for armaments
-as a means of defense and protection
-and see if something cannot be done immediately.
-Many people feel the building of
-great military machines lead us directly into
-war for when you acquire something it is
-always a temptation to use it.</p>
-
-<p>It is perfectly obvious, however, that no
-nation can cut down its army and navy and
-armaments in general when the rest of the
-world is not doing the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>We ourselves have a long unfortified border<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-on the north which has remained undefended
-for more than a hundred years, a
-shining example of what peace and understanding
-between two nations can accomplish.
-But we also have two long coast lines
-to defend and the Panama Canal, which in
-case of war must be kept open, therefore it
-behooves us to have adequate naval defense.
-Just what we mean by adequate defense is a
-point on which a great many people differ.</p>
-
-<p>Innumerable civilians have ideas as to
-what constitutes adequate military preparedness
-and the people most concerned, our
-military forces, have even more definite
-ideas. Many people in the United States feel
-that we are still rendered practically safe by
-the expanse of water on our east and west
-coasts. Some people even feel, like Mr. William
-Jennings Bryan, that if our nation
-needed to be defended a million men would
-spring to arms over night. They forget that
-a million untrained, unarmed men would be
-a poor defense. We must concede that our
-military establishments have probably made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-a more careful, practical study of the situation
-than any one else, for they know they
-would have to be ready for action at once.</p>
-
-<p>Whether we accept the civil or the military
-point of view on preparedness, we can
-still move forward. We can continue to try
-to come to an understanding with other nations
-on some of the points which lead to bad
-feeling. We can begin first, perhaps, with the
-Central and South American nations and
-continue later with other nations, to enter
-into agreements which may lead to the
-gradual reduction of armaments. If we only
-agree on one thing at a time, every little step
-is something to the good. Simply because we
-have so far not been able to arrive at any
-agreement is no reason for giving up the
-attempt to agree. No one has as yet discovered
-a way to make any of the methods of
-transportation by which we all travel around
-the world, absolutely safe, but nobody suggests
-that we should do away with ships and
-railroads and airplanes. I feel that the people
-of various nations can greatly influence their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-governments and representatives and encourage
-action along the lines of reduction
-in arms and munitions.</p>
-
-<p>Every international group that meets must
-bear in mind that they have an opportunity
-to create better feeling, but to move forward
-along this particular front also requires the
-backing of public opinion at home. This
-opinion may be formed in many little groups
-all over the world and may be felt in an ever
-widening circle of nations until it becomes a
-formidable force in the world as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>Then there is the matter of private interests
-involved in the manufacture of arms and
-munitions. I know there are many arguments
-advanced against government ownership of
-the factories making arms and munitions.
-When you know the story of the part played
-by certain families in Europe whose business
-it has been to manufacture arms and munitions,
-however, you wonder if the arguments
-advanced against this step are not inspired in
-large part by those whose interests lie in this
-particular business?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span></p>
-
-<p>It is true that a government can lose its
-perspective for a number of reasons. The
-need for employment may push them to over-production,
-as well as fear of their neighbors,
-and they may manufacture so much that the
-temptation to use it may be great. Some governments
-today manufacture practically all
-they need for peace-time purposes and this is
-a safeguard, but for war-time use, all governments
-would have to fall back on private
-manufacturers who could convert their
-plants easily for the manufacturing of war
-materials. Some governments today encourage
-private manufacturers to produce arms
-and munitions needed in peace time by buying
-from them, but the great danger lies in
-the uncontrolled private production which
-is used for export. The element of private
-profit is a great incentive towards the increase
-of this business just as it is in any other
-business. Governments are not tempted in
-the same way, for they do not manufacture
-for export or for profit.</p>
-
-<p>It seems to me that we must trust some one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-and I think perhaps it is wiser to trust a
-government than the more vulnerable and
-easily tempted individual. Besides which, a
-democracy has it within its power to control
-any government business and, therefore, the
-idea that our government should control the
-manufacture of arms and munitions fills me
-with no great trepidation.</p>
-
-<p>This control of the manufacture of arms
-and munitions is a measure which could be
-undertaken by one government alone. It does
-not have to wait for all the other governments
-to concur, and so I believe either in
-complete government ownership or in the
-strictest kind of government supervision,
-allowing such manufacture as will supply our
-own country but which will not create a surplus
-for exportation, thus removing the incentive
-for constantly seeking and creating
-new markets.</p>
-
-<p>The next step will be the mutual curtailment,
-very gradually I am sure, of the
-amount of armaments the world over. This
-is a difficult step, because it requires not only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-an agreement on the part of all the nations,
-but sufficient confidence in each other to believe
-that, having given their word, they will
-live up to the spirit of the agreement as well
-as to the letter of it, and not try cleverly to
-hide whatever they have done from possible
-inspectors.</p>
-
-<p>They will not, for instance, destroy a battleship
-and add a half dozen airplanes, telling
-the other members to the agreement that
-they have carried out the promised reduction,
-but forgetting to mention the additions
-to some other arm of their military service.</p>
-
-<p>This lack of integrity, or perhaps we
-should call it more politely the desire to be
-a little more clever than one’s neighbor, is
-what promotes a constant attitude of suspicion
-amongst nations. This will exist until
-we have accomplished a change in human
-nature and that is why for the present it
-seems to me necessary to have inspection and
-policing as well as an agreement.</p>
-
-<p>The objection will be made that in the nations
-which are not democracies a government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-might build up a great secret arsenal;
-but in those countries this could be done today
-for most of them control the press and all
-out-going information with an iron hand.</p>
-
-<p>Outside of the democracies, government
-ownership is a much more serious danger on
-this account. If all nations were obliged to
-report their military strength to some central
-body, and this body was allowed to inspect
-and vouch for the truth of their statements,
-then all governments could feel secure
-against that hidden danger which is now part
-of the incentive for a constant increase in the
-defense machinery of every nation.</p>
-
-<p>Here again we are confronted with the
-need of some machinery to work for peace.
-I have already stated that I doubt if the present
-League of Nations could ever be made to
-serve the purpose for which it was originally
-intended. This does not mean that I do not
-believe that we could get together. We might
-even begin by setting up regional groups in
-different parts of the world which might
-eventually amalgamate into a central body.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-It seems to me almost a necessity that we
-have some central body as a means of settling
-our difficulties, with an international police
-force to enforce its decisions, as long as we
-have not yet reached the point everywhere
-of setting force aside.</p>
-
-<p>Joint economic action on the part of a
-group of nations will undoubtedly be very
-effective, but it will take time to educate
-people to a point where they are willing to
-sacrifice, even temporarily, material gains in
-the interests of peace, so I doubt whether we
-can count at once on complete cooperation
-in the use of an economic boycott. To be a
-real weapon against any nation wishing to
-carry on war, it must be well carried out by
-a great number of nations.</p>
-
-<p>Another small and perhaps seemingly unimportant
-thing might be done immediately.
-It might be understood that in war time
-every one should become a part of the military
-service and no one should be allowed to
-make any profit either in increased wages or
-in increased interest on their capital investment.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-This might bring about a little more
-universal interest in peace, and more active
-interest in the efforts to prevent war whether
-a man were going to the front or staying at
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, when we talk of “the front” in
-connection with future wars, we are taking
-it for granted that future wars will be much
-like those of the past, whereas most people
-believe that future wars will have no fronts.
-What we hear of Spain and China makes this
-seem very probable. Gases and airplanes will
-not be directed only against armed forces, or
-military centers, they may be used for the
-breaking of morale in the opposing nation.
-That will mean shelling of unfortified cities,
-towns and villages, and the killing of women
-and children. In fact this means the participation
-in war of entire populations.</p>
-
-<p>One other element must be considered,
-namely, the creating of public opinion today.
-Wars have frequently been declared in the
-past with the backing of the nations involved
-because public opinion had been influenced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-through the press and through other mediums,
-either by the governments themselves
-or by certain powerful interests which desired
-war. Could that be done again today in
-our own country or have we become suspicious
-of the written word and the inspired
-message? I think that as a people we look for
-motives more carefully than we did in the
-past but whether issues could be clouded for
-us is one of the questions that no one can
-answer until the test comes.</p>
-
-<p>I am inclined to think that if a question as
-serious as going to war were presented to our
-nation we would demand facts unvarnished
-by interpretation. Whether we even in our
-free democracy could obtain them is another
-question. Who controls the dissemination of
-news? Is the press totally, uncompromisingly
-devoted to the unbiased presentation of all
-news insofar as possible? Is it possible for
-groups with special interests to put pressure
-on the press and on our other means of disseminating
-information, such as the radio
-and the screen, and to what extent?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
-<p>This is an interesting study in every country
-where people are really interested in good
-will and peace. If these sources of information
-are not really free should not the people
-insist that this be one of our first reforms?
-Without it we can have no sound basis on
-which to form our opinions.</p>
-
-<p>These are things we can work for immediately,
-but some of my friends consider
-that one point transcends all others and epitomizes
-the way to “peace.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_44" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SUMMARY">SUMMARY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.png" width="301" height="105" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> can establish no real trust between
-nations until we acknowledge the
-power of love above all other power. We cannot
-cast out fear and therefore we cannot
-build up trust. Perfectly obvious and perfectly
-true, but we are back again to our
-fundamental difficulty—the education of the
-individual human being, and that takes time.
-We cannot sit around a table and discuss
-our difficulties until we are able to state them
-frankly. We must feel that those who listen
-wish to get at the truth and desire to do what
-is best for all. We must reach a point where
-we can recognize the rights and needs of
-others, as well as our own rights and needs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span></p>
-
-<p>I have a group of religious friends who
-claim that the answer to all these difficulties
-is a great religious revival. They may be
-right, but great religious revivals which are
-not simply short emotional upheavals lifting
-people to the heights and dropping them
-down again below the place from which they
-rose, mean a fundamental change in human
-nature. That change will come to some people
-through religion, but it will not come to
-all that way, for I have known many people,
-very fine people, who had no formal religion.
-So the change must come to some, perhaps,
-through a new code of ethics, or an awakening
-sense of responsibility for their brothers,
-or a discovery that whether they believe in a
-future life or not, there are now greater enjoyments
-and rewards in this world than
-those which they have envisioned in the past.</p>
-
-<p>I would have people begin at home to discover
-for themselves the meaning of brotherly
-love. A friend of mine wrote me the
-other day that she wondered what would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-happen if occasionally a member of Congress
-got up and mentioned in the House the
-existence of brotherly love. You laugh, it
-seems fantastic, but this subject will, I am
-sure, have to be discussed throughout the
-world for many years before it becomes an
-accepted rule. We will have to want peace,
-want it enough to pay for it, pay for it in our
-own behavior and in material ways. We will
-have to want it enough to overcome our lethargy
-and go out and find all those in other
-countries who want it as much as we do.</p>
-
-<p>Some time we must begin, for where there
-is no beginning there is no end, and if we
-hope to see the preservation of our civilization,
-if we believe that there is anything
-worthy of perpetuation in what we have
-built thus far, then our people must turn to
-brotherly love, not as a doctrine but as a way
-of living. If this becomes our accepted way
-of life, this life may be so well worth living
-that we will look into the future with a desire
-to perpetuate a peaceful world for our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-children. With this desire will come a realization
-that only if others feel as we do, can we
-obtain the objectives of peace on earth, good
-will to men.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">THE END</p>
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