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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78171 ***
+
+
+
+
+ LIBERTY
+ IN THE
+ MODERN STATE
+
+ _By
+ HAROLD J. LASKI_
+
+ _Professor of Political Science
+ in the University of London_
+
+
+ 1930
+ PUBLISHERS
+ _HARPER & BROTHERS_
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+
+ LIBERTY
+ IN THE
+ MODERN
+ STATE
+
+ _Copyright, 1930,
+ by Harold J. Laski.
+ Printed in the
+ United States._
+
+ FIRST EDITION
+
+
+ TO
+ FRIDA
+ AND
+ DIANA
+
+
+
+
+ _CONTENTS_
+
+
+ I. THE NATURE OF LIBERTY 1
+
+ II. FREEDOM OF THE MIND 80
+
+ III. LIBERTY AND SOCIAL POWER 195
+
+ IV. THE OUTLOOK FOR LIBERTY 279
+
+
+
+
+LIBERTY IN THE MODERN STATE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE NATURE OF LIBERTY
+
+
+I
+
+I mean by liberty the absence of restraint upon the existence of those
+social conditions which, in modern civilization, are the necessary
+guarantees of individual happiness. I seek to inquire into the terms
+upon which it is attainable in the Western world, and, more especially,
+to find those rules of conduct to which political authority must
+conform if its subjects are, in a genuine sense, to be free.
+
+Already, therefore, I am maintaining a thesis. I am arguing, first,
+that liberty is essentially an absence of restraint. It implies power
+to expand, the choice by the individual of his own way of life without
+imposed prohibitions from without. Men cannot, as Rousseau claimed,
+be forced into freedom. They do not, as Hegel insisted, find their
+liberty in obedience to the law. They are free when the rules under
+which they live leave them without a sense of frustration in realms
+they deem significant. They are unfree whenever the rules to which they
+have to conform compel them to conduct which they dislike and resent. I
+do not deny that there are types of conduct against which prohibitions
+are desirable: I ought, for instance, to be compelled, even against
+my wish, to educate my children. But I am arguing that any rule which
+demands from me something I would not otherwise give is a diminution of
+my freedom.
+
+A second implication is important. My thesis involves the view that if
+in any state there is a body of men who possess unlimited political
+power, those over whom they rule can never be free. For the one assured
+result of historical investigation is the lesson that uncontrolled
+power is invariably poisonous to those who possess it. They are
+always tempted to impose their canon of good upon others, and, in the
+end, they assume that the good of the community depends upon the
+continuance of their power. Liberty always demands a limitation of
+political authority, and it is never attained unless the rulers of a
+state can, where necessary, be called to account. That is why Pericles
+insisted that the secret of liberty is courage.
+
+By making liberty the absence of restraint, I make it, of course, a
+purely negative condition. I do not thereby mean to assume that a man
+will be the happier the more completely restraints are absent from the
+society to which he belongs. In a community like our own, the pressure
+of numbers and the diversity of desires, make necessary both rules and
+compulsions. Each of these is a limitation upon freedom. Some of them
+are essential to happiness, but that does not make them for a moment
+less emphatically limitations. Our business is to secure such a balance
+between the liberty we need and the authority that is essential as to
+leave the average man with the clear sense that he has elbow-room for
+the continuous expression of his personality.
+
+Nor must we confound liberty with certain other goods without which
+it has no meaning. There may be absence of restraint in the economic
+sphere, for example, in the sense that a man may be free to enter any
+vocation he may choose. Yet if he is deprived of security in employment
+he becomes the prey of a mental and physical servitude incompatible
+with the very essence of liberty. Nevertheless, economic security is
+not liberty though it is a condition without which liberty is never
+effective. I do not mean that those who can take their ease in Zion are
+thereby free men. Once and for all, let us agree that property alone
+does not make a man free. But those who know the normal life of the
+poor, its perpetual fear of the morrow, its haunting sense of impending
+disaster, its fitful search for beauty which perpetually eludes, will
+realize well enough that, without economic security, liberty is not
+worth having. Men may well be free and yet remain unable to realize the
+purposes of freedom.
+
+Again, we live in a big world, about which, at our peril, we have
+to find our way. There can, under these conditions, be no freedom
+that is worth while unless the mind is trained to use its freedom. We
+cannot, otherwise, make explicit our experience of life, and so report
+the wants we build upon that experience to the centre of political
+decision. The right of the modern man to education became fundamental
+to his freedom once the mastery of Nature by science transformed the
+sources of power. Deprive a man of knowledge, and the road to ever
+greater knowledge, and you will make him, inevitably, the slave of
+those more fortunate than himself. But deprivation of knowledge is
+not a denial of liberty. It is a denial of the power to use liberty
+for great ends. An ignorant man may be free even in his ignorance. In
+our world he cannot employ his freedom so as to give him assurance of
+happiness. A compulsory training of the mind is still compulsion. It is
+a sacrifice of some liberty to a greater freedom when the compulsion
+ceases.
+
+Two other preliminary remarks are important to the thesis I am urging.
+Everyone knows the danger to freedom which exists in any community
+where there is either special privilege on the one hand or what is
+termed the tyranny of the majority on the other. John Stuart Mill
+long ago pointed out that in the early history of liberty it was
+normally and naturally conceived as protection against the tyranny
+of the political rulers. The latter disposed of a power to which its
+subjects were compelled to conform; and it became vital in the interest
+of freedom to limit that power either by the recognition of special
+immunities or by the creation of constitutional guarantees. But even
+in the modern state the underlying substance of the argument may not
+be neglected. Power as such, when uncontrolled, is always the natural
+enemy of freedom. It prevents the exercise of those capacities which
+are released for activity by the absence of restraint. Wherever it is
+possessed in excess, it tilts the balance of social action in favour
+of its possessors. A franchise limited to the owners of property means
+legislation in the interests of that class. The exclusion of a race
+or creed from a share in citizenship is, invariably, their exclusion
+also from the benefits of social action. In any state, therefore, where
+liberty is to move to its appointed end, it is important that there
+should be equality.
+
+Now equality is not the same thing as liberty. I do not, indeed,
+agree with Lord Acton’s famous dictum that the ‘passion for equality
+makes vain the hope of freedom’;[1] liberty and equality are not so
+much antithetic as complementary. Men might be broadly equal under
+a despotism, and yet unfree. But it is, I think, historically true
+that in the absence of certain equalities no freedom can ever hope
+for realization. The acute mind of Aristotle long ago saw that the
+craving for equality is one of the most profound roots of revolution.
+The reason is clear enough. The absence of equality means special
+privilege for some and not for others, a special privilege which is
+not, so to say, in nature but in a deliberate contrivance of the
+social environment. Men like Harrington and Madison and Marx all
+insisted, and with truth, that whatever the forms of state, political
+power will, in fact, belong to the owners of economic power. We need
+not argue that our happiness depends upon the possession of political
+power; we can argue that exclusion from it is likely to mean exclusion
+from that which largely determines the contours of happiness. And it
+follows that the more equal are the social rights of citizens, the more
+likely they are to be able to utilize their freedom in realms worthy
+of exploration. Certainly the history of the abolition of special
+privilege has been, also, the history of the expansion of what in our
+inheritance was open to the common man. The more equality there is in a
+State, the more use, in general, we can make of our freedom.
+
+Here, perhaps, it is worth while for a moment to dwell upon the meaning
+of equality. Nothing is easier than to make it a notion utterly devoid
+of all common sense.[2] It does not mean identity of treatment. The
+ultimate fact of the variety of human nature, our differences of both
+hereditary capacity and social nurture, these are inescapable. To
+treat men so different as Newton and Byron, Cromwell and Rousseau,
+in a precisely similar way is patently absurd. But equality does not
+mean identity of treatment. It is an insistence that there is no
+difference inherent in nature between the claims of men to happiness.
+It is therefore an argument that society shall not construct barriers
+against those claims which weigh more heavily upon some than upon
+others. It shall not exclude men from the legal profession because they
+are black or Wesleyans or freemasons. It shall not deny access to the
+Courts to men of whose opinions society in general disapproves. The
+idea of equality is obviously an idea of levelling. It is an attempt
+to give each man as similar a chance as possible to utilize what
+powers he may possess. It means that he is to count in the framing of
+decisions where these affect him, that whatever legal rights inhere
+in any other man as a citizen, shall inhere in him also; that where
+differences of treatment are meted out by society to different persons,
+those differences shall be capable of explanation in terms of the
+common good. It means the recognition of urgent need in all--food,
+for instance, and clothing, and shelter--before there is special
+recognition of non-urgent claims in any.
+
+Equality, so regarded, seems to me inescapably connected with freedom.
+For equality, so regarded, seems, in the first place, to mean the
+organization of opportunities; and, in the second place, it means
+that no man’s opportunities are sacrificed, except on terms of social
+principle, to the claims of another. In the view I am taking, no child
+could be deprived of education that another might receive it; but in a
+choice of men say for a post in the Treasury, one might be preferred to
+another on the ground of ability or character or training. The idea
+of equality, in a word, is such an organization of opportunity that no
+man’s personality suffers frustration to the private benefit of others.
+He is given his chance that he may use his freedom to experiment with
+his powers. He knows that in his effort to attain happiness no barriers
+impede him differently from their incidence upon others. He may not
+win his objective, but, at least, he cannot claim that society has so
+weighted the scale against him as to assure his defeat.
+
+It is often argued that a theory of liberty which starts from the
+effort of the individual to attain happiness must break down because
+it fails to remember that society also has rights, and that these are
+necessarily superior to those of its component parts. Any organization,
+it is said, is more than the units of which it is composed. A
+nation-state like America or England is not merely a body of Englishmen
+or Americans, but something beyond them. It has a life and a reality,
+needs and purposes, which are not exhausted by the sum of the needs
+and purposes of its individual members. The liberty of each citizen
+is born of, and must be subordinated to, the liberty of that greater
+whole from which his whole meaning is derived. For the rights of each
+of us depend upon the protective rampart of social organization. It is
+because the State enforces our rights as obligations upon others that
+we have the opportunity to enjoy them. We are free, it is said, not
+for ourselves but for the society which gives us meaning. Where our
+interests conflict with the obviously greater interest of the society,
+we ourselves must give way.
+
+It is, I think, true to say that an individual abstracted from society
+and regarded as entitled to freedom outside its environment is devoid
+of meaning. None of us is Crusoe or St. Simeon Stylites on his pillar.
+We are born to live our lives in London or New York, Paris or Berlin
+or Rome. Our liberty has to be realized in a welter of competing and
+co-operating interests which only achieve rational co-ordination by
+something not unlike a miracle. The need to give way to others, to
+accept, that is, restraint upon our right to unfettered activity
+is inherent in the nature of things. But the surrender we make is a
+surrender not for the sake of the society regarded as something other
+than its members, but exactly and precisely for men and women whose
+totality is conveniently summarized in a collective and abstract
+noun. I do not understand how England, for instance, can have an
+end or purpose different from, or opposed to, the end or purpose of
+its citizens. We strive to do our duty to England for the sake of
+Englishmen; a duty to England separate from them, and in which they did
+not share, is surely inconceivable.
+
+Or, at least, would be inconceivable, were it not that perhaps the most
+influential theory of the state in our own time has been built upon it.
+What is termed the idealist theory of the state is broadly the argument
+that individual freedom means obedience to the law of the society to
+which I belong. My personality, it is said, is simply an expression of
+the organized whole to which I belong. When I say that I am seeking
+to realize myself, I mean in fact that I am seeking to be one with
+the order of which I am a part. I am not independent of, or isolated
+in, that order, but one with it and of it. As it realizes itself, so
+am I also realized. The greater and more powerful it becomes, the
+greater and more powerful do I become as a consequence. The more
+fully, therefore, I serve it, the more fully do I express myself. True
+liberty is thus so far from being an absence of restraint that it
+is essentially subordination to a system of rational purposes which
+receive their highest expression in the activity of the state. To be
+one with that activity may well then be regarded as the highest freedom
+a citizen can know.
+
+In the whole history of political philosophy there is nothing more
+subtle than the skill with which the idealist school has turned the
+flank of the classic antithesis between liberty and authority. From
+the Greeks to Rousseau it was always conceived that a man’s freedom is
+born of a limitation upon what his rulers may exact from him; since
+Rousseau, and, more particularly, since Hegel, it has been urged that
+conformity to a code, and even compulsory obedience to it, is the
+very essence of freedom. So startling a paradox needs, at the least,
+explanation. Liberty, it argues, is not a mere negative thing like
+absence of restraint. It is rather a positive self-determination of the
+will which, in each of us, seeks the fulfilment of rational purpose
+as this lies behind, and gives unified meaning to, the diversified
+chaos of purposes in each of us. We desire freedom, that is to say,
+in order that we may be ourselves at our best. The right object of
+our wills, the thing which, did we know all the facts, we would truly
+desire, this is clearly that for which we would seek freedom. This is
+our real will, and the highest part of ourselves. This will, moreover,
+is the same in each member of society; for, at bottom, the real will
+is a common will which finds its highest embodiment in the state. In
+this view, therefore, the state is the highest part of ourselves. For
+it represents, in its will, what each of us would seek to be if the
+temporary, the immediate and the irrational, were stripped from the
+objects we desire. Its object is what alone we should aim at were we
+free to will only our permanent good. It is, so to say, the long and
+permanent end that, in the ultimate analysis, we come individually to
+will after private experience of wrong direction and erroneous desire.
+The more intimately, therefore, we make our will one with that of the
+state, the more completely are we free. The nature of the social bond
+makes service to its demands the very essence of freedom.
+
+Before I seek to analyse this view, I would point out how simply this
+argument enables us to resolve the very difficult problem of social
+obligation. When I obey the state, I obey the best part of myself.
+The more fully I discover its purposes the more fully, also, there is
+revealed to me their identity with that at which, in the long view, I
+aim. So that when I obey it, I am, in fact, obeying myself; in a real
+sense its commands are my own. Its view is built upon the innumerable
+intelligences from the interplay of which social organization derives
+its ultimate form; obviously such a view is superior in its wisdom
+to the result my own petty knowledge can attain. My true liberty is,
+therefore, a kind of permanent tutelage to the state, a sacrifice of my
+limited purpose to its larger end upon the ground that, as this larger
+end is realized, so I, too, am given realization. I may, in fact, be
+most fully free when I am most suffused with the sense of compulsion.
+
+To me, at least, this view contradicts all the major facts of
+experience. It seems to me to imply not only a paralysis of the will,
+but a denial of that uniqueness of individuality, that sense that each
+of us is ultimately different from our fellows, that is the ultimate
+fact of human experience. For as I encounter the state, it is for me a
+body of men issuing orders. Most of them I can obey either with active
+good will or, at least, with indifference. But I may encounter some one
+order, a demand, for instance, for military service, a compulsion to
+abandon my religious faith, which seems to me in direct contradiction
+to the whole scheme of values I have found in life. How I can be the
+more free by subordinating my judgment of right to one which directly
+changes that judgment to its opposite, I cannot understand. If the
+individual is not to find the source of his decisions in the contact
+between the outer world and himself, in the experience, that is, which
+is the one unique thing that separates him from the rest of society, he
+ceases to have meaning as an individual in any sense that is creative.
+For the individual is real to himself not by reason of the contacts
+he shares with others, but because he reaches those contacts through
+a channel which he alone can know. His true self is the self that
+is isolated from his fellows and contributes the fruit of isolated
+meditation to the common good, which, collectively, they seek to bring
+into being.
+
+A true theory of liberty, I urge, is built upon a denial of each of
+the assumptions of idealism. My true self is not a selected system
+of rational purposes identical with those sought by every member of
+society. We cannot split up the wholeness of personality in this way.
+My true self is all that I am and do. It is the total impression
+produced by the bewildering variety of my acts, good and bad and
+indifferent. All of them go to the formation of my view of the
+universe; all of them are my expression of my striving to fulfil my
+personality. Each, while it is, is real, and each, as real, must give
+way only in terms of a judgment I make, not of one made for me by some
+other will, if I am to remain a purposive human being serving myself as
+an end. This attempt, in a word, at the extraction of a partial self
+from the whole of my being as alone truly myself not only denies that
+my experience is real, but, also, makes me merely an instrument to the
+purpose of others. Whatever that condition is, surely it cannot be
+recognized as freedom.
+
+But we can go further than this. I see no reason to suppose that this
+assumed real will is identical in every member of society. The ultimate
+and inescapable fact in politics is the final variety of human wills.
+There is no continuum which makes all of them one. Experience suggests
+common objects of desire, but each will that wills these common
+objects is a different will in every sense not purely metaphorical. We
+all have a will to international peace. But the unity these make is not
+in the will but in the fusion of separate wills to the attainment of a
+common purpose. And we must remember that in every society the objects
+of wills cannot, in some mystic fashion, be fused into a higher unity
+somehow compounded of them all. I see no meaning, for instance, in the
+statement that the antithetic purposes of Jesuits and Freemasons are
+somehow transcended in a higher purpose which resumes them both; that
+is to say that a Jesuit or a Freemason is most truly himself when he
+ceases to be himself, which, frankly, seems to me nonsense. A member of
+the Praesidium of the Third International, whose will aims supremely
+at the overthrow of capitalism, is not somehow at one with the will
+of the President of the British Federation of Industries to whom all
+the purposes of the Third International are anathema. Both, doubtless,
+will the good; but the point is that each wills the good as he sees
+it, and each would regard the fulfilment of the other’s ideal of good
+as a definite destruction of his own. There is, therefore, no single
+and common will in society, unless we mean thereby the vague concept,
+entirely useless for political philosophy, that men desire the good.
+Each of us desires the good as he sees it; and each of us sees a good
+derived from an individual and separate experience into which no other
+person can fully enter. Our connection with others is, at the best,
+partial and interstitial. Our pooling of experiences to make a common
+purpose somewhere is in no case other than fragmentary. We remain
+ourselves even when we join with others to attain some common object
+of desire. The ultimate isolation of the individual personality is the
+basis from which any adequate theory of politics must start.
+
+I reject, therefore, the idea of a real will, and, still more, the
+idea that there is a common will in society. It is a logical inference
+therefrom that I should reject also the doctrine that all state-action
+is, at bottom, the exercise of the real will of society. For, first
+of all, I see no reason to suppose that social life is ultimately the
+product of a single and rational mind organizing its activities in
+terms of a logical process. To speak of the “mind of society”, seems to
+me merely a metaphorical way of describing a course of action which is
+made valid by translation into fact. There are no governing principles
+in social life deliberately emerging from the interplay of its myriad
+constituent parts. Governing principles emerge; but they emerge through
+the wills of individual minds. And the state is magnified to excess
+when it is regarded as embodying a unified will. The state is a complex
+of rulers and subjects territorially organized and seeking, by the
+conference of power upon those rulers, effective co-ordination of
+social activities. They exercise the right to use force, if necessary,
+to that end. But no one, I think, can examine the course of history and
+say that the experience of any state indicates a permanent embodiment
+of the highest good we know in the purpose of the state. Our rulers,
+doubtless, aim at the good as they see it. Yet what they see as good
+may not be so recognizable to us, and may well provoke in us the sense
+that life would not be worth living if their view was to prevail. The
+unity of the state, in a word, is not inherently there. It is made by
+civic acceptance of what its rulers propose. It is not necessarily
+good because it is accepted; it is not necessarily right because it
+is proposed. Obedience ought always to be a function of the substance
+contained in the rules made by government; it is a permanent essay in
+the conditional mood.[3]
+
+Here, of course, the idealist retorts that he is dealing not with the
+states of history, but with the state as such; he is concerned with
+the “pure” instance and not with deviations from the ideal.[4] But it
+is with actual states that we have to deal in everyday life as we know
+it, with states the policy of which is directed by men who are human
+like ourselves. The policy they announce must, obviously, be subject
+to our scrutiny; and the result of our judgment is necessarily made
+out of an experience not identical with, even though it be similar to,
+theirs. I cannot believe that a theory fits the facts of history which
+assumes that this policy is going to be right, whatever it is; and
+that freedom will be found only in acceptance of it. I do not believe
+that the Huguenot of 1685 was made the more free by accepting, against
+his conscience, the Revocation; nor do I believe that Luther would
+have been more free had he accepted the decrees of Rome and abandoned
+his protest. Man is a one among many obstinately refusing reduction
+to unity. His separateness, his isolation, are indefeasible; indeed,
+they are so ultimate that they are the basis out of which his civic
+obligations are builded. He cannot abandon the consequences of his
+isolation which are, broadly speaking, that his experience is private
+and the will built out of that experience personal to himself. If he
+surrenders it to others, he surrenders his personality. If his will is
+set by the will of others, he ceases to be master of himself. I cannot
+believe that a man no longer master of himself is in any meaning sense
+free.
+
+
+II
+
+If we reject a view which, like that just considered, seeks to dissolve
+the reality of the individual into the society of which he is a part,
+what are we left with as the pattern within which a man seeks freedom?
+Let us try to draw a picture of the place of man in a community like
+our own. He finds himself involved in a complex of relationships out
+of which he must form such a pattern of conduct as will give him
+happiness. There are his family, his friends, the church to which he
+may belong, his voluntary association, trade union, or employers’
+association or whatever it may be, and there is the state. All of
+these, save the state, he may in greater or less degree avoid. A man
+may cut himself off from family or friends; he may refuse membership of
+a church or vocational body; he cannot refuse membership of the state.
+Somewhere or other, he encounters it as a body of persons issuing
+orders, and he is involved in the problem of deciding whether or no he
+will obey those orders. Every order issued is, in a final analysis,
+issued by a person or persons to another person or persons. When we
+say that, in such a complex of relationships as this, that a man is
+free, what do we mean? We know that if his Church issues an order to
+him of which he disapproves, he can leave his church; so, too, with all
+other bodies save the state. The latter can, if he seeks evasion of its
+commands, use compulsion to secure obedience to its orders. It makes,
+we say, the law, and a member of the state is legally compelled to obey
+the law.
+
+But he is not free merely because he obeys the law. His freedom, in
+relation to the law, depends on the effect of any particular order
+upon his experience. He is seeking happiness; some order seems to him
+a wanton invasion of that happiness. He may be right or wrong in so
+thinking; the point of fact is that he has no alternative but to go by
+his own moral certainties. Now freedom exists in a state where a man
+knows that the decisions made by the ultimate authority do not invade
+his personality. The conditions of freedom are then those which assure
+the absence of such invasion. The citizen who asks for freedom is
+entitled to the conditions which, collectively, are the guarantees that
+he will be able to go on the road to his happiness, as he conceives it,
+unhindered. Neither conditions nor guarantees will ever be perfect; nor
+will they ever cover all upon which happiness depends. The state, for
+instance, may say that I may marry the woman I love; it cannot say that
+she will marry me if I so desire. The freedom it secures to me is the
+absence of a barrier in the way of marriage if I can win her consent.
+
+From this angle, liberty may appropriately be resolved into a system
+of liberties. There are realms of conduct within which, to be free,
+I must be permitted to act as I please; to be denied self-expression
+there, is to be denied freedom. What we need to know is, I suggest,
+first what those realms of conduct are, and, second, what my duty as a
+citizen is when I am, in any one of them, prohibited from acting as I
+please. The difficulty here, of course, it is impossible to exaggerate.
+It is the problem of knowing when a man ought deliberately to make up
+his mind to break the law or to refuse obedience to it. In the idealist
+theory, this problem does not arise; it is answered _a priori_ by the
+definition of freedom as obedience to the law. But because we have
+rejected this view, we have to admit that there will be occasional
+disobedience, at the least, and that this may be justified. We have to
+discover the principles of its justification.
+
+Liberty may be resolved into a system of liberties; and from this angle
+it may be said that it is the purpose of social organization to see to
+it that this system is adequately safeguarded. How can the state, which
+charges itself with the function of supreme co-ordination, properly
+fulfil this task? How can it guarantee to me such an environment to my
+activity that I do not suffer frustration in my search for happiness?
+
+There have been many answers to this question, some of them of the
+highest interest and importance. One or two I wish to consider partly
+because of their significance in themselves, and partly because,
+from that consideration, I wish to make the inference that no merely
+mechanical arrangements will ever secure freedom in permanence to the
+citizens of a state. While there are certain constitutional forms
+which are, as I think, essential to freedom, their mere presence as
+forms will not, of themselves, suffice to make men free. I shall seek,
+further, to draw the conclusion that, whatever the forms of social
+organization, liberty is essentially an expression of an impalpable
+atmosphere among men. It is a sense that in the things we deem
+significant there is the opportunity of continuous initiative, the
+knowledge that we can, so to speak, experiment with ourselves, think
+differently or act differently, from our neighbours without danger to
+our happiness being involved therein. We are not free, that is, unless
+we can form our plan of conduct to suit our own character without
+social penalties. Freedom is in an important degree a matter of law;
+but in a degree not less important it is a matter, also, of the _mores_
+of the society outside the sphere within which law can operate.
+
+You will observe that I am still, from the angle of political
+organization, thinking of liberty as a safeguard of the individual
+against those who rule him. I do so for the best of reasons. Whoever
+exerts power in a community is tempted to the abuse of power. Even in
+a democracy, we must have ways and means of protecting the minority
+against a majority which seeks to invade its freedom. Mankind has
+suffered much from the assumption that, once the people had become
+master in its own house, there was no limit to its power. You have
+only to remember the history of racial minorities like the negroes,
+of religious or national minorities like Jews and Czechs, to realize
+that democracy, of itself, is no guarantee of freedom. This raises
+the larger question of whether freedom in the modern state can ever
+be satisfactorily secured by internal sanctions, and whether, in
+fact, it is ever durably possible save in the terms of a strong and
+stable international organization. For, clearly, we must not think of
+freedom as involving only an individual set over against the community;
+it involves also the freedom of groups, racial, ecclesiastical,
+vocational, set over against the community and the state; it involves
+also the relation of states to one another, as, for instance, in the
+problem of annexation. No Englishman would think himself free if his
+domestic life were defined for him by another state; and no German but
+has had a bitter sense of unfreedom during the foreign occupation of
+the Rhineland. Our generation, at least, is unlikely to under-estimate
+the problem of what limits may be set to the demand for freedom by a
+national group.
+
+
+III
+
+Everyone who considers the relation of liberty to the institutions of
+a state will, I think, find it difficult to resist the conclusion that
+without democracy there cannot be liberty. That is not an over-popular
+thesis in our time. A reaction against democratic ideals is the
+fashion, and the dictatorships which proliferate over half Europe
+are earnest in maintaining their obsolescence. Yet consider, for a
+moment, what democracy implies. It involves a frame of government in
+which, first, men are given the chance of making the government under
+which they live, in which, also, the laws that government promulgates
+are binding equally upon all. I do not think the average man can be
+made happy merely by living in a democracy: I do not see how he can
+avoid a sense of continuous frustration unless he does. For if he does
+not share in making the government, if he cannot, where his fellows
+so choose, be himself made one of the rulers of the state, he is
+excluded from that which secures him the certainty that his experience
+counts. To read the history of England before the enfranchisement of
+the wage-earner is to realize that however small is the value of the
+franchise it still assures the attention of government to grievance.
+The right, therefore, to the franchise is essential to liberty; and
+a citizen excluded from it is unfree. Unfree for the simple reason
+that the rulers of the state will not regard his will as entitled to
+consideration in the making of policy. They will do things for him, but
+not those things he himself regards as urgent; as Parliament a hundred
+years ago met the grim problem of urban want by building more churches
+to the glory of the Lord. Whatever is to be said against the democratic
+form of state, it seems to me unquestionable that it has forced the
+needs of humble men on the attention of government in a way impossible
+under any other form.
+
+To be free a people must be able to choose its rulers at stated
+intervals simply because there is no other way in which their wants, as
+they experience those wants, will receive attention. It is fundamental
+to the conference of power that it should never be permanent. If it
+is so, it ceases to give attention to the purposes for which it is
+conferred and thinks only of the well-being of those who can exercise
+it. That has been, notably, the history of monarchy and aristocracy,
+and in general, of the practice of colonial dominion. Power that
+is unaccountable makes instruments of men who should be ends in
+themselves. Responsible government in a democracy lives always in the
+shadow of coming defeat; and this makes it eager to satisfy those with
+whose destinies it is charged.
+
+That is a general principle which, stated as baldly as this, does not
+adequately illustrate the substance it implies. The history of the
+struggle for popular freedom has given us knowledge of certain rules
+in the organization of a state the presence of which is fundamental
+to freedom. It can, I think, be shown that no citizen is secure in
+liberty unless certain rights are guaranteed to him, rights which the
+government of the state cannot hope to overthrow; and unless, to secure
+the maintenance of those rights, there is a separation of the judicial
+from the executive power.
+
+The citizens of a state choose men to make the laws under which they
+are to live. It is urgent that they should be binding upon all without
+fear or favour; that I, for instance, should be able to live secure
+in the knowledge that they will not apply to me differently from
+their incidence upon others. Clearly enough, in the modern state, the
+application of law to life demands a vast body of civil servants to
+administer it. Not the least important problem of our time is that
+which arises when the legality of their administration is in question.
+In Anglo-Saxon communities it has been regarded as elementary that
+the interpretation of law should be entrusted to an independent body
+of officials--the judges--who can arbitrate impartially between
+government and citizens. That view I take to be of the first importance
+to freedom; and its acceptance involves considerations which we must
+examine in some detail.
+
+The business of a judiciary, broadly speaking, is the impartial
+interpretation of the law as between government and citizen, or between
+classes of citizens who dispute with one another. The government, for
+instance, charges a man with treason; obviously he is deprived of
+something essential to his freedom if the law is strained so as to make
+of treason something it in fact is not in order to cover the acts which
+the government seeks to have accepted as treason. Here, obviously, the
+judge must be assured that his independence may be maintained with
+safety to himself. He must not suffer in his person or position because
+of the view he takes. It must not be within the power either of the
+government or other persons to deprive him of his authority because, as
+best he may, he applies the law. This, as I think, makes it essential
+that all judicial appointments should be held during good behaviour.
+There may be an age-limit of service, of course; but, this apart,
+nothing should permit the removal of a judge from the bench except
+corruption or physical unfitness. I do not, therefore, believe that a
+judicial system founded upon popular election is a satisfactory way of
+choosing judges, the more so if submission to re-election is involved;
+and the system, abandoned in England in 1701, of making judicial
+appointment dependent upon the pleasure of government is equally
+indefensible. Once a man has been appointed to judicial office nothing
+must stand in the way of his complete independence of mind. Election,
+re-election, a power in the government to dismiss, are all of them
+incompatible with the function the judge is to perform. They will not,
+as a general rule, either give us the men we want, or enable us to keep
+them when we have found them.
+
+But we must, I think, go further than this. Judicial independence is
+not merely a matter of mechanical technique; it is also psychological
+in character. The judge whose promotion is dependent upon the will of
+the executive, even more, the judge who may look to a political career
+as a source of future distinction, neither of these is adequately
+protected in that independence of mind which is the pivot of his
+function. No less a person than Mr Chief Justice Taft has told us
+that he appointed a predecessor to that eminent position at least
+partly because he approved of one of his decisions.[5] No one could,
+I think, have confidence in the Bench if it were known that decisions
+pleasing to a given political party might lead either to promotion or
+to choice as either a presidential candidate or as Lord Chancellor.
+It seems to me, therefore, that we must so organize the method of
+judicial promotion as to prevent the executive from choosing men of its
+own outlook, and, further, see to it that appointment to the Bench is
+definitely taken as the end of a political career. These are problems
+of detailed technique into which I cannot now enter;[6] here I am only
+concerned to point out that the problem of independence which they
+raise is one that it is necessary to meet with frankness.
+
+But the judge’s authority as a safeguard of our freedom is in the
+modern state threatened in another way. Modern legislation is so
+huge both in volume and extent that the average assembly has neither
+time nor energy to scrutinize its details. The modern habit is,
+therefore, to pass Acts which confer a general power, and to leave the
+filling in of details to the discretion of the department concerned.
+To this, I think, no one can really take exception. The state must
+do its work; and it must develop the agencies necessary to that end.
+But I think we have grave reason for fear when the growth of this
+delegated legislative authority is accompanied with, or followed by,
+the conference of powers upon government departments themselves to
+determine the question of whether the powers they take are legal or
+no. I regard the growth of delegated legislation as both necessary and
+desirable; but if it is not gravely to impair our freedom, it should, I
+think, be developed only under the amplest safeguards.
+
+Decisions, for instance, like that on the _Fu Toy_ case[7] in the
+United States, and in _Arlidge_ v. _Local Government Board_[8] in
+England, are clearly a real menace to the liberty of the subject. They
+suggest a type of executive justice for which the methods of the Star
+Chamber are the nearest analogy. No body of civil servants, however
+liberal-minded they may be, ought to be free both to make the law and
+to devise the procedure by which its legality may be tested; and that,
+be it remembered, without a power of appeal from their decision. It
+may be taken for granted that the modern state needs an administrative
+law; in matters, for instance, like rate-fixing in public utilities,
+in workmen’s compensation cases, in matters concerning public health,
+the views of a body of experts in a public department are generally
+at least as valid as that of the judicial body. But one wants to be
+certain that in arriving at his decision the expert has been compelled
+to take account of all the relevant evidence; that the parties to his
+decision have had their day in court. This seems to me to involve the
+organization of a procedure for all administrative tribunals which
+takes account of the lessons we have learned both from the procedure
+of ordinary courts and from the history of the law of evidence; and it
+involves an appeal from administrative tribunals to the ordinary courts
+on all questions where denial of proper procedure is held to involve a
+denial of proper consideration. Something of this, if I understand the
+matter aright, has been granted to the American citizen by the Supreme
+Court in _McCall_ &c. v. _New York_;[9] and I should feel happier about
+the future of administrative law if I were certain that the principles
+of that decision applied to all governmental activities of the kind.
+
+Another safeguard is not less essential. We agree, for the most part,
+in ordinary legal matters that the opinion of a single judge, even
+when reinforced by the verdict of a jury, ought not to be final in
+either criminal or civil cases. I should like to see that agreement
+extended to the sphere of administrative law. Where, that is to say,
+a departmental tribunal has rendered its decision I should like an
+appeal to lie to a higher administrative tribunal composed not only of
+officials, but, also, of laymen of experience in the matters involved
+who could be trusted to bring an independent mind to the settlement
+of the matter in dispute. English experience of tribunals like the
+civil service division of the Industrial Court, and the Commissioners
+of Income Tax, convinces me that the common sense of a good lay mind
+is, in this realm, an immense safeguard against departmental error. And
+we must remember that, however great be the good will of the public
+services, what, to them, may seem a simple matter of administrative
+routine, may be to the citizens involved a denial of the very substance
+of freedom. Certainly a case like _ex parte O’Brien_[10] makes one
+see how real would be the threat to public liberty if departmental
+legislation grew without proper judicial scrutiny at every stage of its
+development.
+
+The problem, however, does not merely end here. There are two other
+sides of administrative action in which the uncontrolled power of the
+state is an implicit threat to civic freedom. Of the first, I would
+say here only a word, since I have treated it fully elsewhere.[11] The
+modern state is a sovereign state and, as such, there are large realms
+of its conduct where wrong on its part cannot imply the invocation by
+the citizen of penalty. The right to sue the state in tort seems to me
+quite fundamental to freedom. The modern state is in essence a public
+service corporation. Like any other body, it acts through servants who
+take decisions in its name. I can see no reason in the world why, like
+any other body serving the public, it should not be responsible for
+the torts of its agents. If I am run over by the negligent driver of a
+railway truck, I can secure damages: I do not see why I am not equally
+entitled to damages if the truck is the property of, and is driven for,
+the Postmaster-General of His Majesty.[12]
+
+But, still in the context of administration, the needs of liberty
+go yet further. There has accreted today about the departments of
+state a type of discretionary power which seems to me full of danger
+unless it is exercised under proper safeguards. Examples of it
+are the power of the Postmaster-General in the United States over
+the mails and of the Home Secretary in England over requests from
+aliens for naturalization. An alien applies to the Home Secretary
+for naturalization. He answers innumerable questions, and presents
+certificates of good character from citizens who testify on oath to his
+standing. He has resided in the country for at least five years and he
+will not, of course, normally venture to apply unless his record is
+adequate. A request is published in the press for any information about
+him and, after a due interval, the Home Secretary makes a decision
+about his case. He has, of course, pursued his own inquiries, and he
+has, presumably, received information about the applicant upon which
+his action is based. Now the point that disturbs me is the fact that
+where a certificate of naturalization is refused, the grounds for
+rejection are never, even privately to the applicant, made known. He
+is refused privileges which may be vital to him and his family in
+the background of accusations which may, doubtless, be true, but may
+also be completely without foundation and capable, were opportunity
+afforded, of being immediately and decisively refuted. And so great is
+the discretionary power of the Minister that he may even substitute his
+own will for that of the legislature: the Act, for instance, demands a
+five-year period of residence. The late Home Secretary, Lord Brentford,
+announced that while he was in office he would grant no certificate
+unless the applicant had resided in England continuously for a period
+of thirteen years. It seems to me that this power to deny admission
+to citizenship, as it is exercised, is a complete denial of natural
+justice. No person ought to be condemned by accusations he is not given
+the opportunity to refute. Anyone who wishes to give testimony in a
+case of this kind ought surely to prove his _bona fides_ by submitting
+to cross-examination by the applicant or his representative. I should
+like, therefore, to see the possibility of an appeal from the decision
+of the Home Secretary to a judge in chambers where the latter would, on
+a case stated by the Department, hear such evidence as the applicant
+chose to bring for its refutation and then only make a final decision.
+Anything less than this seems to me a wanton abuse of freedom; and,
+_mutatis mutandis_, this type of safeguard seems to me urgent wherever
+a Minister is given a discretionary power which affects the liberty of
+the subject.
+
+I accept, therefore, the traditional notion that the separation of
+the judicial from the executive power, the right of the former to
+determine the legality of executive decision, is the basis of freedom.
+I do not, however, believe that the separation of the executive from
+the legislature is either necessary or desirable. The origin of
+the idea, as you know, is in the historic misinterpretation of the
+British Constitution by Montesquieu;[13] and this, in its turn, was
+due to his misapplication of certain classic dicta of Locke.[14] The
+fact is that a separation in this realm results in a complete and
+undesirable erosion of responsibility. The British system, in which the
+executive, as a committee of the legislative, formulates its plans for
+acceptance or rejection, has, I think, the clear advantage of showing
+the electorate exactly where responsibility for action must lie. Where
+mistakes are made, where there is corruption, or dishonesty, or abuse,
+it can be brought home forthwith to its authors. In the American
+system, that is not the case. The President is neither the master nor
+the servant of the legislature. The latter can make its own schemes;
+where its views, more, where its party complexion, are different from
+his, there is a constant tendency to paralysis of administration. Each
+can blame the other for failure. No clear policy emerges upon which
+the electorate can form a straightforward judgment. Independence makes
+for antagonism and antagonism, in its turn, makes for confusion. Such
+a separation means, almost invariably, the construction of a separate
+quasi-executive in the legislature, which has an interest of its own
+distinct from, and often hostile to, that of the President.[15] I can
+see no necessary safeguard of liberty in this. On the contrary, the
+British system, where the executive may be at any moment destroyed by
+the legislature as a penalty for error or wrong, where, also, there
+lies always the prospect of an immediate and direct appeal to the
+people as the ultimate and only arbiter of difference, seems to me far
+more satisfactory.
+
+
+IV
+
+Another institutional mechanism for the safeguarding of freedom is that
+of a Bill of Rights. Certain principles, freedom of speech, protection
+from arbitrary arrest, and the like, are regarded as especially sacred.
+They are enshrined in a document which cannot, constitutionally, be
+invaded either by the legislature or the executive, save by a special
+procedure to which access is difficult. The first Amendment to the
+American Constitution, for example, lays it down that Congress shall
+pass no law abridging freedom of speech; and any Act of Congress which
+touches upon the matter can be challenged for unconstitutionality
+before the Supreme Court. The Amendment, moreover, cannot be attacked
+save by the usual process of constitutional change in America; and
+that means that, except in the event of an American Revolution, it is
+unlikely ever to be directly attacked at all.
+
+My own years of residence in the United States have convinced me that
+there is a real value in Bills of Rights which it is both easy, and
+mistaken, to under-estimate. Granted that the people are educated to
+the appreciation of their purpose, they serve to draw attention, as
+attention needs to be drawn, to the fact that vigilance is essential in
+the realm of what Cromwell called fundamentals. Bills of Rights are,
+quite undoubtedly, a check upon possible excess in the government of
+the day. They warn us that certain popular powers have had to be fought
+for, and may have to be fought for again. The solemnity they embody
+serves to set the people on their guard. It acts as a rallying-point in
+the state for all who care deeply for the ideals of freedom. I believe,
+for instance, that the existence of the First Amendment has drawn
+innumerable American citizens to defend freedom of speech who have no
+atom of sympathy with the purposes for which it is used. A Bill of
+Rights, so to say, canonizes the safeguards of freedom; and, thereby,
+it persuades men to worship at the altar who might not otherwise note
+its existence.
+
+All this, I think, is true; but it does not for a moment imply that
+a Bill of Rights is an automatic guarantee of liberty. For the
+relationship of legislation to its substance has to be measured by the
+judiciary. Its members, after all, are human beings, likely, as the
+rest of us, to be swept off their feet by gusts of popular passion.
+The first Amendment to the American Constitution guarantees freedom of
+speech and peaceable assembly; the fourth Amendment legally secures to
+the citizen that his house shall not be searched except upon a warrant
+of probable cause; the eighth Amendment legally secures him against
+excessive bail. Yet you will remember how, in one hysterical week in
+1919, the action of the executive power rendered all these amendments
+worthless;[16] and you will not forget that the fifteenth Amendment,
+which sought political freedom for the coloured citizens of the South,
+has never been effectively applied either by the executive or by the
+Courts.
+
+The fact is that any Bill of Rights depends for its efficacy on the
+determination of the people that it shall be maintained. It is just
+as strong, and no more, than the popular will to freedom. No one now
+doubts that the Espionage Acts were strained so as to destroy almost
+all that the first Amendment was intended to cover; that most of the
+charges preferred under it were, on their face, ludicrous. Yet you
+will remember that, in _Abrams_ v. _United States_,[17] two judges
+stood alone in their insistence that the first Amendment really meant
+something; the judgment of the others was caught in the meshes of war
+hysteria. No principle is better established than the right of the
+citizen, under proper circumstances, to a writ of _habeas corpus_;
+that is, perhaps, the ark of the covenant in the Anglo-American
+conception of freedom. But who can ever forget the noble and pathetic
+words of Chief Justice Taney, in _ex parte Merryman_,[18] where he
+insists that the applicant is entitled to the writ and that, in view
+of President Lincoln’s suspension of it--a suspension entirely illegal
+in character--he could not secure to Mr Merryman his due rights? And
+let us remember, also, that even where the judge is prepared to do his
+duty, he cannot, in a period of excitement, count upon public opinion.
+Nothing is clearer than the fact that those who hanged Mr Gordon during
+the Jamaica riots were guilty of murder. The opinion of Chief Justice
+Cockburn could not have made the issue more clear; it is a landmark in
+the judicial history of freedom. Yet the jury at once, in its despite,
+acquitted the accused. There have been, further, many occasions when
+breaches of fundamental principles of freedom, breaches which, on
+any showing, have been quite indefensible, have been followed at
+once by Acts of Indemnity. I know only of one case in England in the
+last hundred years in which such an Act has been refused. Yet it
+is, I think, obvious that unless such breaches are definitely and
+deliberately punished, they will always occur on critical occasions.
+At such times, it is impossible to trust those who are charged with
+the exercise of power; and only the knowledge that swift and certain
+punishment will follow its abuse will make our rulers attentive to the
+needs of freedom.
+
+I speak the language of severity; and I am anxious that you should
+not think that the language of severity is that of the extremist.
+I invite you, as the proof of what I say, to read, in the light of
+cold reason a decade after the close of the war, the history of the
+tribunals in England which were charged with examining conscientious
+objectors to military service and on the military authorities to whom
+some of those objectors were handed over.[19] No one can go through
+the record without the sense that some of the tribunals deliberately
+evaded the purposes of the exemption clause; and it is clear that in
+the administration of punishment for refusal to obey orders, there was
+wanton cruelty, a deliberate pleasure in the infliction of pain, for
+which no words can be too strong. Nor is that all. The record shows
+occasions when Ministers of the Crown, when responding to questions in
+the House of Commons, used evasions of a kind which showed a complete
+contempt of truth;[20] and they were supported in their attitude by
+the majority of the members there. I note, also, at least one occasion
+when a number of conscientious objectors were taken from England to
+France for the purpose of execution by the military authorities; and it
+was only the accident that Professor Gilbert Murray was able to appeal
+on their behalf to the Prime Minister, which prevented the sentence
+from being carried out.[21] These are worse than the methods of the
+Inquisition; for, at least, the members of that tribunal believed that
+they were rescuing their victims from eternal damnation. Those of whom
+I speak had no excuse save ignorant prejudice and the blindness of
+passion.
+
+You will see, therefore, why I cannot believe that constitutional
+expedients alone, however substantial, will prevent the invasion of
+liberty. They will work just so long as people are determined they
+shall work, and no longer. They are valuable because, since they have
+been consecrated by tradition, their invasion tends to awaken, at
+least in some of us, a prejudice to which we have become habituated.
+But to keep them active and alive, requires a deliberate and purposive
+effort it is by no means easy to make when the result of doing so
+conflicts with some other object keenly desired. That is, I think,
+capable of a simple demonstration. No class of men is so carefully
+trained as the judiciary to the habit of a balanced mind. Yet if you
+examine the observations of judges in cases where their passions are
+deeply involved you will note how great is the effort they have to
+make to show tolerance to antagonistic views. Nor do they always
+succeed. In most of the classic English blasphemy cases, for example,
+the judge has too often been, either consciously or unconsciously, an
+additional counsel for the prosecution.[22] In many of the American
+Espionage Acts cases what chiefly emerges from the summing up of the
+judge is a desire, at all costs, to see that the prisoner does not
+secure an acquittal.[23] Recent injunction cases in America show a
+desire, no doubt unconscious, on the part of the Court, to lend aid and
+countenance to a social philosophy of which it happens to approve.
+
+I conclude, therefore, that in general we shall not allow, as a
+society, the mechanisms of the state to serve the cause of freedom
+unless we approve the objects at which freedom aims. In a time
+of crisis, particularly, when the things we hold most dear are
+threatened, we shall find the desire to throw overboard the habits of
+tolerance, almost irresistible. For those habits are not in Nature,
+which teaches us that opinions we deem evil are fraught with death.
+They come from our social heritage, and are part of a process the value
+of which we must relearn continuously if we are to preserve it. That is
+the meaning of the famous maxim that eternal vigilance is the price of
+liberty. It is why, also, it becomes necessary in each age to restate
+the case for freedom, if it is to be maintained.
+
+
+V
+
+There is one other general part of this political aspect of liberty
+that I wish to consider before I turn to a different portion of my
+theme. I have argued that resistance to the encroachments of power is
+essential to freedom because it is the habit of power continuously,
+if it can, to enlarge the boundaries of its authority. Is there any
+specific rule by which men can be trained to such resistance? Is there,
+that is, a way in which the average citizen of the modern state can be
+persuaded that it is in his interest to be vigilant against those who
+would invade his rights? Can it, further, be shown that such a temper
+in the citizen is likely, as it grows, to confer benefit upon the
+community as a whole?
+
+Broadly speaking, I think the answer to these questions is in the
+affirmative. I hazard the generalization that the more widespread
+the distribution of power in the state, the more decentralized its
+character, the more likely men are to be zealous for freedom. That is,
+of course, a large statement to make. It is the thesis that, in terms
+of historic experience, good government is always, in the end, both
+less valuable and less efficient than self-government. I mean that, in
+general, rules imposed upon a society from above for its benefit are
+less effective to the end that they seek than rules which have grown
+naturally from below. I believe that to be true both of the individual
+and the group in society. Its full realization is, of course, an
+impossibility since it would make the uniformities we need in social
+life unattainable. But the greater the degree in which we can realize
+it, the better for the community to which we belong.
+
+I do not mean to imply that there is any rigid principle which enables
+us to mark off the lines of demarcation between what is individual and
+what is social, between what belongs to the group and what belongs
+to the state, between the sphere of central, and the sphere of local
+government. The only possible approach to that problem is a pragmatic
+one, as anyone can see who tries to make common sense out of John
+Stuart Mill’s famous attempt, with its list of exceptions[24] by which
+he reduced it to something like absurdity. Most of us, I think, could
+draw up lists of governmental subjects in which central and local
+topics could be demarcated without undue disagreement. We should fairly
+universally say that foreign policy and defence, fiscal technique and
+commercial regulation were naturally within the sphere of the central,
+and playing fields, were within the sphere of the local, authority. We
+should agree that crime is a matter for the state, and sin a matter for
+the churches. We should admit that there must be uniform regulations
+for marriage and divorce, but that individuals only could make up their
+minds when, within the regulations, either to marry or divorce.
+
+This, I think, is pretty straightforward. The points I wish to
+emphasize are different. They are, first, that in the making of public
+decisions, it is desirable that as many persons as possible who are
+affected by the result should share in reaching it; and, secondly,
+that whenever the decision to make some rule of conduct a matter of
+governmental regulation arouses widespread and ardent dissent, the
+probability is that the case against the decision is stronger than the
+case in its favour.
+
+My first point I may perhaps best make by the statement that all
+creative authority is essentially federal in character. The purpose for
+which authority is exercised is the maximum satisfaction of desire. To
+achieve that end, it is in the long run vital to take account of the
+wills of those who will be affected by the decision. For, otherwise,
+their desires are unexplored, and there is substituted for the full
+experience that should be available, the partial experience, perhaps
+suffused with a sinister interest, which is able to influence the
+legal source of decision. Maximum satisfaction, in other words, is a
+function of maximum consultation; and the greater the degree in which
+the citizen shares in making the rules under which he lives, the more
+likely is his allegiance to those rules to be free and unfettered. Nor
+is this all. The process of being consulted gives him a sense of being
+significant in the state. It makes him feel that he is more than the
+mete recipient of orders. He realizes that the state exists for his
+ends and not for its own. He comes to see that his needs will be met
+only as he contributes his instructed judgment to the experience out
+of which decisions are compounded. He gains the expectation of being
+consulted, the sense that he must form an opinion on public affairs.
+He learns to dislike orders which are issued without regard being paid
+to his will. He comes to have a sense of frustration when decisions are
+made arbitrarily, and without an attempt to build them from the consent
+of those affected. He learns vigilance about the ways of power. Those
+who are trained to that vigilance become the conscious guardians of
+liberty.
+
+For they will protest against what they regard as the invasion of
+their rights, and tribute will have to be paid to their protest. In
+any community, fortunately for ourselves, power is always upon the
+defensive; and when men are vigilant to expose its encroachments it
+is urgent to seek their good opinion. Those active-minded enough to
+fight for their rights will, doubtless, be always in a minority; but
+they prick the indifferent multitude into thought and they thus act as
+the gadflies of liberty. The handful of American lawyers who protested
+against the methods of the Department of Justice in 1920 forced its
+officials to a change of their ways. The little group of men who, in
+season and out of season, have protested that the white man’s burden
+ought not, in justice, to be borne by the black, have the Mandates’
+system of the League of Nations to their credit: what E. D. Morel did
+for the Congo, what H. W. Nevinson did for Portuguese Angola, these
+are lessons in the service of citizenship to liberty. And it is the
+peculiar value of this habit of mind that it grows by what it feeds on.
+To accustom the average man to regard himself as a person who must be
+consulted is, in the long run, to assure him, through consultation, of
+satisfaction. For the holders of power are always desirous of finding
+the convenient routine; and if they are driven by pressure to give the
+people freedom, they will discover that this is the object they have
+set before themselves.
+
+Into the institutional pattern which such a federalization of
+authority requires I cannot here enter.[25] It must suffice to say
+that it makes totally inadequate the traditional forms even of the
+democratic state. For the notion that, when the citizen has chosen his
+representatives for Parliament or his local authority, he can sit back
+in the comfortable knowledge that his wants are known, his interests
+safeguarded, has not one jot of evidence to support it. We need, of a
+certainty, a much more complex scheme. We have not only to provide for
+more adequate relationships between Parliament and the administrative
+process; we have also to integrate the latter with the public it serves
+on a much ampler scale than any we have hitherto imagined. I have
+elsewhere tried to show how vital in this context is the device of the
+advisory committee. Its value both as a check upon bureaucracy, and
+as a means of making decision genuinely representative in character,
+becomes the more clear the wider our experience of its functioning.
+
+But even this is not enough. There will never be liberty in any state
+where there is an excessive concentration of power at the centre. The
+need for a wide conference of authority away from that centre becomes
+more obvious with the growth of our experience. If the decisions to
+be made are to embody the needs of those affected by them, the latter
+must have major responsibility for their making. All of our problems
+are not central problems; and to leave to the central government the
+decision of questions which affect only a portion of the community is
+to destroy in that portion the sense of responsibility and the habit of
+inventiveness. The inhabitants of any given area have a consciousness
+of common purposes, a sense of the needs of their neighbourhood,
+which only they can fully know. They find that the power to satisfy
+them of themselves gives to them a quality of vigour far greater in
+the happiness it produces than would be the case if satisfaction were
+always provided by, or controlled from, without. For administration
+from without always lacks the vitalizing ability to be responsive to
+local opinion; it misses shades and expressions of thought and want
+which are urgent to successful government. It lacks the genius of
+place. It does not elicit creative support from those over whom it
+rules. It makes for mechanical uniformity, an effort to apply similar
+rules to unsimilar things. It is too distant from the thing to be done
+to awaken interest from those concerned in the process of doing it.
+Centralized government in local matters may be more efficient than a
+decentralized system; but that superior efficiency will never, as Mill
+long ago pointed out, compensate for an inferior interest in the result.
+
+I believe, therefore, that, with all its difficulties and dangers, the
+area of local government should be as little circumscribed as possible.
+The German system, of laying down what a local authority may not do,
+and leaving it free to experiment outside that realm of prohibition,
+seems to me superior both in principle and result to its Anglo-American
+antithesis. Thereby we gain not only the knowledge which comes
+from varied social experiment, but the freedom born of citizenship
+trained in the widest degree to think for itself and to solve its own
+problems. Most imposed solutions of a uniform character only succeed
+where their material is genuinely uniform. That is rarely the case
+in these matters. And even the impatient reformer ought sometimes to
+think whether, say, forcing a child-labour law on Georgia by federal
+amendment will lead to a genuine and whole-hearted application of its
+terms; whether, in fact, it will not persuade to hatred of the law,
+even contempt for the law, by encouraging evasion of it. Successful
+legislation is almost always legislation for which the minds of men are
+anxious; the channels of assent to it can rarely be dug too deep.
+
+All, moreover, that I am saying of territorial locality, seems to me
+to apply, with no less emphasis, to what may be termed functional
+areas also. Everyone acquainted with the history of churches realizes
+the necessity of leaving them free to develop their own internal
+life. On matters like ecclesiastical government, dogma, ceremonial,
+interference by the state is almost invariably disastrous in its
+results. What is true of churches is true also, _mutatis mutandis_,
+of other associations. Bodies like the legal and medical professions
+are much better able to direct their own internal life than to have it
+directed for them by the state. It is necessary, of course, to prevent
+them from developing into monopolies; and to that end it is essential
+to devise a framework of principle within which they must work, to
+retain, also, the right to its revision from without from time to time.
+But that said, few would, I think, deny that what we call professional
+standards, the jealousy for the honour of the profession, the sense
+of _esprit de corps_, the realization that its members owe to the
+community something more than the qualities for which payment can be
+exacted, these things are born of the large degree of freedom to define
+their own life the professions enjoy.
+
+It is, I think, important to extend that notion of self-government
+beyond the professions. We ought to learn to think of industries like
+cotton and coal as entities not less real than Lancashire or New
+York, as capable, therefore, of being organized for the purpose of
+government. Most of the plans as current today for national economic
+councils are not, in my judgment, of great value; the satisfactory
+weighting of the different elements is really insoluble, and any
+problem that concerns industry as a whole seems to me at once civic
+in its nature and, therefore, the proper province of the legislative
+assembly of the state.[26] But these considerations do not apply to
+industries taken individually, or linked together at special points
+of intimate contact. It does not seem to me inconceivable that we
+should create a Parliament for the mining industry, in which capital,
+management, labour and the consumer, should each have their due
+representation, and to which should be confided the determination of
+industrial standards on the model of professional self-government.
+I should give to this Parliament a power of delegated legislation
+which would enable it to frame rules of conduct binding upon all the
+members of the industry. Thus, while Georgia might refuse to pass a
+child-labour law, a particular industry in Georgia might refuse to
+allow its members to engage child labour in field or factory. There
+might be developed in this way a body of industrial legislation and
+jurisprudence growing naturally out of the experience of those who
+participate in the operation of the industry, and imposed with a real
+sense of freedom because it has been developed from within and is not
+the outcome of an external control. The help this system would give
+to the creative-minded employer, on the one hand, and the adventurous
+trade-union, on the other, needs no emphasis from me. Something of what
+it might effect, if planned in a wholesale way, the experiments of the
+Amalgamated Clothing Workers and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad have
+amply demonstrated. They show clearly, I venture to suggest, that an
+authority born of consent is always definitely superior to an authority
+born of coercion. And the reason is the simple but vital one that
+creative energy is liberated only in the atmosphere of freedom.
+
+
+VI
+
+In all that I have so far said there is implied a theory of the nature
+of law upon which, perhaps, I ought to say a word. The view I am
+taking suggests that law is not simply a body of commands justifiable
+by virtue of their origin. Laws are rules seeking to satisfy human
+desires. They are the more certain of acceptance the more fully they
+seek to inquire what desires it is urgent to satisfy, and the best
+way of inquiry is to associate men with each stage of the process of
+law-making. For men, in fact, will not obey law which goes counter to
+what they regard as fundamental. Their notion of what is fundamental
+may be wrong, or unwise, or limited; but it is their notion, and they
+do not feel free unless they can act by their own moral certainties. It
+is useless to tell them that an assumption on their part that they are
+entitled to forgo obedience will result in anarchy. Every generation
+contains examples of men who, in the context of ultimate experience,
+deliberately decide that an anarchy in which they seek to maintain
+some principle is preferable to an order in which that principle must
+be surrendered. The South in 1861, Ulster in 1914, the Communist in the
+context of a capitalist society, these are but variations on the great
+theme of Luther’s classic _Ich Kann nicht anders_. They illustrate the
+inescapable truth that law must make its way to acceptance through the
+channel of consenting minds.
+
+Let me put this in a different way. Law is not merely a command; it
+is also an appeal. It is a search for the embodiment of my experience
+in the rule it imposes. The best way, therefore, to make that search
+creative is to consult me who can alone fully report what my experience
+is. There can be no guarantee that law will be accepted save in the
+degree that this is done. Legal right is so made as the individual
+recipient of a command invests it with right; he gives it his sanction
+by relating it successfully to his own experience. When that relation
+cannot be made, the authority of law is always in doubt. And it is in
+doubt because, by contradicting the experience of those whom it seeks
+to control, it seems to them a frustration of their personality. To
+accept the control would be to become unfree.
+
+An extreme way of putting this view would be to say that law is made by
+the individual’s acceptance of it, that the essence of the law-making
+process, is the consent of interested minds. At points of marginal
+significance, that is, I think, true; and the consequences of the
+truth are obviously important. Authority, if my view is right, is
+always acting at its peril. It lives not by its power to command but
+by its power to convince. And conviction is born of consent for the
+simple reason that the real field of social action is in the individual
+mind. Somewhere, inevitably, the power to coerce that mind to ways of
+thoughts of which it does not approve, breaks down; man, as Tyrrell
+said, is driven on “to follow the dominant influence of his life even
+if it should break the heart of all the world”. That is the stark fact
+which conditions the loyalty any authority seeks to secure. At some
+point, it cannot be imposed but must be won from us. And the greater
+the degree in which it springs from that persuasion, the greater, also,
+is the success of authority in imposing its solutions. No power can
+ever hope for successful permanence, no power, either, is entitled to
+it, which does not make its way, in vital matters, through the channels
+of consent.
+
+From this two conclusions seem to me to flow. Ours is not a universe
+in which the principles of a unified experience are unfolded. It is
+a multiverse embodying an ultimate variety of experiences, never
+identical, and always differently interpreted. There is enough
+similarity of view to enable us, if we have patience and goodwill, to
+make enough of unity to achieve order and peace. But that similarity
+is not identity. It does not entitle us to affirm that one man’s
+experience can be taken as the representation of another’s. It does not
+justify the inference that I shall find what I most truly desire in
+the desire of another. I am not a part of some great symphony in which
+I realize myself only as an incident in the _motif_ of the whole. I
+am unique, I am separate, I am myself; out of these qualities I must
+build my own principles of action. These are mine only, and cannot
+be made for me, at least creatively, by others. For their authority
+as principles comes from the fact that I recognize them as mine.
+Into them, as principles, I pour my personality, and life, for me,
+derives its meaning from their unique texture. To accept the forcible
+imposition of other principles upon me, which I do not recognize as
+the expression of my experience, is to make of me who might be free,
+a slave. I become an instrument of alien purposes, devoted to an end
+which denies my self-hood. Law, therefore, as coercion is always
+an invasion of personality, an abridgement of the moral stature of
+those whom it invades. To be true to its purpose, it must reduce the
+imperative element to a minimum if it is to release creativeness and
+not destroy it.
+
+The individual, therefore, is entitled to act upon the judgment of
+his conscience in public affairs. He is entitled to assume that he
+will not find the rules of the conduct he ought to pursue objectified
+in any institution or set of institutions. I agree that, for most of
+us, conscience is a poor guide. It is perverse, it is foolish, the
+little knowledge it has is small alongside the worth of the social
+tradition. But perverse, foolish, ignorant, it is the only guide we
+have. Perverse, foolish, ignorant, it is at least ours; and our freedom
+comes from acting upon its demands. We ought, doubtless, to convince
+ourselves that the path it indicates is one we have no alternative but
+to follow. We ought to seek the best possible means for its instruction
+and enlightenment. We should remember that civilization is, at best,
+a fragile thing, and that to embark upon a challenge to order is to
+threaten what little security it has. It may even be wise, as T. H.
+Greene once put it, to assume that we should approach the state in fear
+and trembling, remembering constantly the high mission with which it is
+charged.
+
+All this may be true, and yet it seems to me to leave the individual no
+option but to follow conscience as the guide to civic action. To do
+otherwise is to betray freedom. Those who accept commands they know to
+be wrong, make it easier for wrong commands to be accepted. Those who
+are silent in the presence of injustice are in fact part-authors of it.
+It is to be remembered that even a decision to acquiesce is a decision,
+that what shapes the substance of authority is what it encounters. If
+it meets always with obedience, sooner or later it will assume its own
+infallibility. When that moment comes, whatever its declared purpose,
+the good it will seek will be its own good and not that of those
+involved in its operations. Liberty means being faithful to oneself,
+and it is maintained by the courage to resist. This, and this only,
+gives life to the safeguards of liberty; and this only is the clue to
+the preservation of genuine integrity in the individual life.
+
+If it is objected that this is a doctrine of contingent anarchy,
+that it admits the right of men to rebellion, my answer is that the
+accusation is true. But is its truth important? Order, surely, is
+not the supreme wrong. Power is not conferred upon men for the sake
+of power, but to enable them to achieve ends which win happiness for
+each of us. If what they do is a denial of the purpose they serve;
+if, as we meet their acts, there appears in them an absence of
+goodwill, a blindness to experience alien from their own, an incapacity
+imaginatively to meet the wants of others, what alternatives have we
+save a challenge to power or a sacrifice of the end of our life? We
+do not condemn Washington because there came a moment in his career
+when he was compelled to recognize that the time for compromise with
+England had passed. We do not, even more notably, condemn those early
+Christians who refused to offer incense to the Gods. We have to act
+by the dictates of our conscience knowing, as Washington knew, as
+the early Christians recognized, that the penalties of failure are
+terrible. But we can so act, also, knowing that there is a sense in
+which no man who serves his conscience ever fails.
+
+For by that service he becomes a free man, and his freedom is a
+condition of other men’s freedom. There is immense significance in the
+fact that those who fought for religious liberty were the unconscious
+progenitors of civil liberty also. When they demanded the right to
+worship the God they knew, in their own mind they were insisting that
+in one sphere, at least, of human experience, their own perception must
+count as ultimate. They consecrated freedom to the service of God. But
+that, after all, is only one aspect of freedom. Its consecration to
+the service of man is, for some of us, not less vital and pervasive.
+To fight for the assurance that a man may do his duty as he conceives
+it is not only to fight for freedom, but for all the ends which the
+emancipation of mankind seeks to attain. I do not know whether liberty
+is the highest objective we can serve. I do assert that no other great
+purpose is possible of achievement save in the terms of fellowship with
+freedom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FREEDOM OF THE MIND
+
+
+I
+
+I have sought, so far, to show that, however important be the
+political mechanisms on which liberty depends, they will not work of
+themselves. They depend for their creativeness upon the presence in
+any given society of a determination to make them work. The knowledge
+that an invasion of liberty will always meet with resistance from men
+determined upon its repulsion, this, in the last analysis, is the only
+true safeguard that we have. It means, I have admitted, that a certain
+penumbra of contingent anarchy always confronts the state; but I have
+argued that this is entirely desirable since the secret of liberty is
+always, in the end, the courage to resist.
+
+The most important aspect of this atmosphere is undoubtedly freedom of
+the mind. The citizen seeks for happiness, and the state, for him, is
+an institution which exists to make his happiness possible. He judges
+it, I have urged, by its capacity to respond to the needs he infers
+from the experience he encounters. That experience, I have insisted, is
+private to himself. Its predominant quality is its uniqueness. Either
+it is his own, or it is nothing. The substitution for it of someone
+else’s experience, however much wider or wiser than his, is, where it
+is based upon constraint, a denial of freedom. What the citizen, quite
+rightly, expects from the state is to have his experience counted
+in the making of policy, and to have it counted as he, and he only,
+expresses its import.
+
+Obviously enough, if his experience is to count, a man must be able to
+state it freely. The right to speak it, to print it, to seek in concert
+with others its translation into the event, is fundamental to liberty.
+If he is driven, in this realm, to silence and inactivity, he becomes
+a dumb and inarticulate creature, whose personality is neglected in
+the making of policy. Without freedom of the mind and of association
+a man has no means of self-protection in our social order. He may
+speak wrongly or foolishly; he may associate with others for purposes
+that are abhorrent to the majority of men. Yet a denial of his right
+to do these things is a denial of his happiness. Thereby, he becomes
+an instrument of other peoples ends, not himself an end. That is the
+essential condition of the perversion of power. Once we inhibit freedom
+of speech, we inhibit criticism of social institutions. The only
+opinions of which account is then taken are the opinions which coincide
+with the will of those in authority. Silence is taken for consent;
+and the decisions that are registered as law reflect, not the total
+needs of the society, but the powerful needs which have been able to
+make themselves felt at the source of power. Historically, the road to
+tyranny has always lain through a denial of freedom in this realm.
+
+I desire here to maintain a twofold thesis. I shall seek to show,
+first, that liberty of thought and association--the two things are
+inextricably intertwined--is good in itself, and second, that
+its denial is always a means to the preservation of some special
+and, usually, sinister interest which cannot maintain itself in an
+atmosphere of freedom. I shall then discuss what restrictions, if any,
+must be placed upon this right, and the conditions it demands for
+its maximum realization. I shall, in particular, maintain that all
+restrictions upon freedom of expression upon the ground that they are
+seditious or blasphemous are contrary to the well-being of society.
+
+The case for the view that freedom of thought and speech is a good
+in itself is fairly easy to make. If it is the business of those who
+exercise authority in the state to satisfy the wants of those over whom
+they rule, it is plain that they should be informed of those wants;
+and, obviously, they cannot be truly informed about them unless the
+mass of men is free to report their experience. No state, for instance,
+could rightly legislate about the hours of labour if only business men
+were free to offer their opinion upon industrial conditions. We could
+not develop an adequate law of divorce if only those happily married
+were entitled to express an opinion upon its terms. Law must take
+account of the totality of experience and this can only be known to it
+as that experience is unfettered in its opportunity of expression.
+
+Most people are prepared to agree with this view when it is made
+as a general statement; most people, also, recoil from it when its
+implications are made fully known. For it implies not only the right
+to beatify the present social order, but the right, also, to condemn
+it with vigour and completeness. A man may say that England or America
+will never be genuinely democratic unless equality of income is
+established there; that equality of income may never be established
+except by force; that, accordingly, the way to a genuine democracy lies
+through a bloody revolution. Or he may argue that eternal truth is the
+sole possession of the Roman Catholic Church; that men can only be
+persuaded to understand this by the methods of the Inquisition; that,
+therefore, the re-establishment of the Inquisition is in the highest
+interest of society. To most of us, these views will seem utterly
+abhorrent. Yet they represent the generalizations of an experience that
+some one has felt. They point to needs which are seeking satisfaction,
+and the society gains nothing by prohibiting their expression.
+
+For no one really ceases to be a revolutionary Communist or a
+passionate Roman Catholic by being forbidden to be either of these. His
+conviction that society is rotten at its base is only the more ardently
+held, his search for alternative ways of expressing his conviction
+becomes only the more feverish as a result of suppression. Terror does
+not alter opinion. On the one hand it reinforces it, on the other
+it makes the substance of opinion a matter of interest to many who
+would, otherwise, have had no interest whatever in it. When the United
+States Customs Department suppressed _Candide_ on the ground that it
+was an obscene book, they merely stimulated the perverse curiosity
+of thousands to whom _Candide_ would have remained less than a name.
+When the British Government prosecuted the Communists for sedition
+in 1925 the daily reports of the trial, the editorial discussion of
+its result, made the principles of Communism known to innumerable
+readers who would never, under other circumstances, have troubled to
+acquaint themselves with its nature. No state can suppress the human
+impulse of curiosity, and there is always a special delight, a kind
+of psychological scarcity-value, in knowledge of the forbidden. No
+technique of suppression has so far been discovered which does not have
+the effect of giving wider currency to the thing suppressed than can be
+attained in any other fashion.
+
+But this is only the beginning of the case for freedom of speech.
+The heresies we may suppress today are the orthodoxies of tomorrow.
+New truth begins always in a minority of one; it must be someone’s
+perception before it becomes a general perception. The world gains
+nothing from a refusal to entertain the possibility that a new idea
+may be true. Nor can we pick and choose among our suppressions with
+any prospect of success. It would, indeed, be hardly beyond the mark
+to affirm that a list of the opinions condemned as wrong or dangerous
+would be a list of the commonplaces of our time. Most people can see
+that Nero and Diocletian accomplished nothing by their persecution of
+Christianity. But every argument against their attitude is an argument
+also against a similar attitude in other persons. Upon what grounds
+can we infer prospective gain from persecution of opinion? If the
+view held is untrue, experience shows that conviction of its untruth
+is invariably a matter of time; it does not come because authority
+announces that it is untrue. If the view is true in part only, the
+separation of truth and falsehood is accomplished most successfully in
+a free intellectual competition, a process of dissociation by rational
+criticism, in which those who hold the false opinion are driven to
+defend their position on rational grounds. If, again, the view held is
+wholly true, nothing whatever is gained by preventing its expression.
+Whether it relates to property, or marriage, to religion or the form
+of the state, by being true it demands a corresponding change in
+individual outlook and social organization. For untrue opinions do not
+permanently work. They impede discovery and they diminish happiness.
+They enable, of course, those to whom they are profitable, to benefit
+by their maintenance, but it is at the cost of society as a whole.
+
+There is the further question, moreover, of the persons to whom the
+task of selecting what should be suppressed to be confided. What
+qualifications are they to possess for their task? What tests are they
+to apply from which the desirability of suppression is to be inferred?
+A mere zeal for the well-being of society is an utterly inadequate
+qualification; for most persons who have played the part of censor have
+possessed this and have yet been utterly unfit for their task. The
+self-appointed person, Mr Comstock, for instance, merely identifies his
+private view of moral right with the ultimate principles of ethics;
+and only the intellectually blind would ask that the citizen be fitted
+to his vicious bed of Procrustes. The official censor, a man like the
+famous Pobedonostev, normally assumes that any thorough criticism of
+the existing social order is dangerous and destructive; and, thereby,
+he transforms what might be creative demand into secret attack which
+is ten times more dangerous in its attack. If you take almost any
+of those who are appointed to work of this kind, you discover that
+association with it seems necessarily to unfit them for their task. For
+it turns them into men who see undesirability in work which the average
+man reads without even a suspicion that it is not the embodiment of
+experience with which he ought to be acquainted. Anyone who looks
+through the list of prohibited publications enforced by the Dominion of
+Canada will, I think, get a sense that the office of censorship is the
+avenue to folly.[27] No one with whom I am acquainted seems wise enough
+or good enough to control the intellectual nutrition of the human mind.
+
+What tests, further, are they to apply? Broadly speaking, we suppress
+publications on the ground that they are obscene or dangerous. But no
+one has ever arrived at a working definition of obscenity, even for
+legal purposes. Take, for instance, two books suppressed by the English
+magistrates for obscenity in 1929. One, Miss Radclyffe Hall’s _Well of
+Loneliness_, seemed to men like Mr Arnold Bennett and Mr Bernard Shaw a
+work which treated of a theme of high importance to society in a sober
+and high-minded way. They saw no reason to suppose that the treatment
+of its difficult subject--sexual perversion--could be regarded by any
+normal person as offensive. The magistrate, Sir Chartres Biron, took a
+different view. I, certainly, am not prepared, on _a priori_ grounds,
+to say that a lawyer, however well-trained in the law, has a better
+sense of what is likely to produce moral depravity than Mr Bennett or
+Mr Shaw; and a reading of Miss Hall’s dull and sincere pamphlet only
+reinforces that impression. Another book was distributed privately and
+secretly--Mr D. H. Lawrence’s _Lady Chatterly’s Lover_--in a limited
+and expensive special edition. I gather that its public sale would
+have been definitely prohibited. Yet I observe that some of the most
+eminent American critics have praised it as the finest example of a
+novel seeking the truth about the sexual relations of men and women
+that an Englishman has published in the twentieth century. That may
+be--I am not competent to say--excessive praise. My point is that in a
+choice, say, between the average police magistrate and Mr Robert Morss
+Lovett, I am not prepared to accept the former’s opinion of what I may
+be safely left to read.
+
+Let me remind you, moreover, of what cannot too often be pointed out,
+that the rigorous application of the legal tests of obscenity would
+prohibit the circulation of a very considerable part of the great
+literature of the world. The Bible, Shakespeare, Rabelais, Plato,
+Horace, Catullus, to take names at random, would all come under the
+ban. It is worth while pointing out that those most concerned with the
+suppression of “obscene” books are religious people. On their tests
+of obscenity the Bible certainly could not hope to escape; yet they
+believe, in general, that the Bible is the inspired word of God, a
+position which, I venture to suggest, should at the least give them
+pause. I do not know, indeed, how we are to create a healthy social
+attitude to the problems of sex, if all that deals with it from a
+new point of view, and with a frankness that admits the experimental
+nature of our contemporary solutions, is to be dismissed as “obscene”.
+Questions like those of birth control, extra-marital love, companionate
+marriage, sexual perversion, cannot really be faced in a scientific
+fashion by applying to them the standards of a nomadic Eastern people
+which drew up its rules more than two thousand years ago. Virtuous
+people who shrink from frank discussion in this realm seem to me
+responsible for probably more gratuitous suffering than any other group
+of human beings. The thing they call “innocence” I believe to be quite
+wanton ignorance, and, by its abridgment of freedom, it imprisons human
+personality in a fashion that is quite unpardonable.
+
+The same seems to me to be the case in the realm that is called
+blasphemy. I have no sort of sympathy with that attitude of mind which
+finds satisfaction in wanton insult to the religious convictions of
+others. But I am not prepared for its suppression. For I note that,
+historically, there are no limits to the ideas which religious persons
+will denounce as blasphemous; and, especially, that in an age of
+comparative religious indifference, the hand of persecution almost
+invariably chooses to fall only on humble men.[28] It attacks Mr G.
+W. Foote, but it leaves Lord Morley free to do infinitely more damage
+than any for which Mr Foote can ever have been responsible. I cannot,
+moreover, forget that what is blasphemy in Tennessee is common sense
+in New York, that the works of Wollaston and Toland and Chubb, which
+seemed entirely blasphemous to their generation, seem commonplace
+to ourselves. Every religious body really means by blasphemy an
+attack upon its fundamental principles. Such attacks are, of course,
+necessarily circulated to bring them into contempt. We who read Paine’s
+_Age of Reason_ with admiration for its cogency of argument, its
+trenchant style, its fearless appetite for truth, can hardly avoid a
+sense of dismay when we remember the days when it was secretly passed
+from hand to hand as an outrageous production, the possession of which
+was itself an indication of social indecency.
+
+And here let me remind you of certain facts on the other side. We
+denominate as blasphemous works calculated to bring the principles of
+Christianity into hatred, ridicule, or contempt. As I have said, I
+entirely dislike the type of work which finds pleasure in offensiveness
+to Christians. But if we are to suppress works, and punish their
+authors, because they cause grief to certain of our fellow-citizens,
+exactly how far are we to carry the principle? A very large part of
+propagandist religious literature is highly offensive to sincere
+and serious-minded persons who are unable, in their conscience, to
+subscribe to any particular creed. When you remember the descriptions
+applied by Mr William Sunday to those who do not accept Christianity,
+you cannot, I think, avoid a sense that there is a religious blasphemy
+for which, at least from the angle of good manners, nothing whatever
+can be said. Mr Sunday is only one of the worse offenders in a whole
+tribe of preachers and writers to whom belief, however sincere, that
+is alien from their own, is normally and naturally described in the
+language it is a euphemism to call Billingsgate; and charges of
+immorality are brought against unbelievers by them for which not an
+atom of proof exists. Are we to suppress all such publications also?
+And if we are to continue this campaign of prohibition to its appointed
+and logical end, shall we have time for any other social adventure?
+
+Nor is this all. In the world of education we are continually
+presented with the problem of text-books which are offensive to a
+particular denomination. We are asked, for instance, to prohibit
+their use in schools. I sit as an appointed member of the Education
+Committee of the London County Council. I have been presented there
+with a requisitory, drawn up by a Catholic body, against the use of
+certain books on the ground that they contain untrue statements about
+questions like the Reformation, in which Catholics are particularly
+interested. But I have not observed in the same Catholic body a
+desire only to use those text-books in their own denominational
+schools which Protestants are prepared to accept as a true picture
+of the Reformation. Nor is this problem of school text-books merely
+religious in character. Americans of our own generation have seen
+passionate controversy over the view of the War of Independence, of the
+Constitution, of the motives and responsibility in the war of 1914,
+which are to be presented not merely to school children, but also to
+university students; there is a heresy-hunt in the fields of politics
+and economics, a desire to have only “true” opinions taught to the
+immature mind. But “true” opinions, on examination, usually turn out to
+be the opinions which suit the proponents of some particular cause.
+In London we think that a “true” theory of value is best obtained from
+the works of Professor Cannan; in Cambridge they pin their faith to
+Marshall and Pigou; in the Labour Colleges ultimate wisdom is embodied
+in the writings of Marx, and Cannan, Marshall and Pigou are all
+dismissed as the pathetic servants of bourgeois capitalism. Is anything
+gained for anyone by insisting that truth resides on one side only of
+a particular Pyrenees? Is it not wisdom to begin by an admission of
+its many-sidedness? And does not that admission involve an unlimited
+freedom of expression in the interpretation of facts? For facts, as
+William James said, are not born free and equal. They have to be
+interpreted in the light of our experience; and to suppress someone’s
+experience is to suppress someone’s personality, to impose upon him
+our view of what his life implies to the forcible exclusion of that in
+which alone he can find meaning. I see neither wisdom nor virtue in
+action of this kind.
+
+So far, I have restricted my discussion to the non-political field,
+and before I enter this area, I want, for a moment, both to summarize
+the position we have reached and to admit the one limitation on
+freedom of expression I am prepared to concede. I have denied that
+prohibitions arising from blasphemy or obscenity, or historical or
+social unfairness, have any justification. They seem to me unworkable.
+They are bad because they prevent necessary social ventilation. They
+are bad because they exclude the general public from access to facts
+and ideas which are often of vital importance. They are bad because
+no one is wise or virtuous enough to stand in judgment upon what
+another man is to think or say or write. They are bad because they are
+incapable of commonsense application; there is never any possibility
+of a wise discrimination in their application. They give excessive
+protection to old traditions; they make excessively difficult the
+entrance of new. They confer power in a realm where qualifications
+for the exercise of power, and tests for its application, are, almost
+necessarily, non-existent. For the decision of every question of this
+kind is a matter of opinion in which there is no prospect of certainty.
+Suppression here means not the prohibition of the untrue or the unjust
+or the immoral, but of opinions unpleasing to those who exercise the
+censorship. Historically, no evidence exists to suggest that it has
+ever been exercised for other ends.
+
+I do not see any rational alternative to this view. But here I should
+emphasize my own belief that, broadly speaking, such freedom of
+expression as I have discussed means freedom to express one’s ideas
+on general subjects, on themes of public importance, rather than on
+the character of particular persons. I have not, I think, a right to
+suggest that Jones beats his wife, or that Brown continually cheats his
+employer, unless I can prove, first that the suggestions are true, and,
+second, that they have a definite public import. I have not a right to
+create scandal because I find pleasure or profit in speaking ill of
+my neighbour. But if Brown, for instance, is a candidate for public
+office, my view that he cheats his employer is directly relevant to
+the question of his fitness to be elected; and if I can prove that my
+view is true, it is in the public interest that I should make it known.
+I cannot, that is to say, regard my freedom of expression as unlimited.
+I ought not to be permitted to inflict unnecessary pain on any person
+unless there is relevant social welfare in that infliction.
+
+On the other hand, I would make one remark here that seems to me of
+increasing importance in a society like our own. The public interest in
+the habits of individuals is real, and we must be careful to give it
+its proper protection. It is, I think, reasonable to doubt whether the
+Anglo-American law of libel, in its present state, does not push too
+far the right of the individual citizen to be protected from comment.
+Outrageous damages, which bear no measurable relation to anything, are
+often claimed and not seldom awarded. Where a political flavour enters
+into a case, it is difficult, and sometimes impossible, to persuade a
+jury to consider the issue on its merits. I have myself sat on a jury
+in a political libel case of which I can only say that I was almost
+persuaded to doubt the validity of the jury-system altogether by the
+habits there displayed. I am tempted to suggest that, criminal libel
+apart, it would be worth while considering the abolition of damages in
+all political or quasi-political cases, and the concentration, as an
+alternative, upon proper publicity for the form of apology where the
+libel is held to be proved. We have, for instance, got into the bad
+habit in England of thinking that the social position of the plaintiff
+is a measure of the damages he should receive; and it is well known
+that there are places where, for instance, a socialist could hardly
+hope even for a verdict from any average jury. The case for careful
+inquiry, at any rate, seems to me to be made out. As the law at present
+stands and works, I do not think I could even say of a candidate for
+the House of Commons that he was not likely to be more than a permanent
+back-bencher without having to pay heavily for my opinion.
+
+
+II
+
+But I turn from these relatively simple matters to the political aspect
+of freedom of expression which is, of course, the pith of the whole
+problem. How far is a man entitled to go in an attack upon the social
+order? What opinions, if any, are to be prohibited on the ground that
+they incite to subversive conduct? Is there a distinction between the
+printed word and the spoken word? Is there a distinction between speech
+in one place, and speech in another? Is there a difference between
+normal times and a time of crisis like, let us say, a war or a general
+strike? At what point, if any, do words become acts of which authority
+must take account to fulfil its primary duty of maintaining the peace?
+
+It will, I think, be universally agreed that all criticism of social
+institutions is a matter of degree. Let us take the problem first as
+we meet it in normal times and let us view it from the angle of the
+English law of sedition.[29] Here it may be said at once that were
+that law enforced in its literal terms, political controversy in
+England would be impossible. For the declared purpose of the law is to
+prevent the established institutions of the state from being brought
+into hatred or contempt, and every leader of the opposition is seeking
+to do precisely that thing when he makes a political speech. Anyone
+who reads, for instance, the utterances of Lord Carson at the time of
+the Home Rule fight in 1914, or of Mr Ramsay MacDonald in the General
+Election of 1929, cannot avoid the conclusion that, taken literally,
+they were seditious. Yet all of us agree that it is not the purpose of
+the law to prevent such speeches being made. When, therefore, if ever,
+is that law to be brought into operation?
+
+We must, I think, begin by a distinction between the written and the
+spoken word. If an English Communist leader writes a book or pamphlet,
+whatever its substance, and to whomever it is addressed, I do not think
+the law ought to be used against him. For it is the history of these
+matters that if governments once begin to prohibit men from seeking
+to prove in writing that violent revolution is desirable, they will,
+sooner or later, prohibit them from saying that the social order they
+represent is not divine. In Italy, at the moment, for example, papers
+are actually suppressed not for anything positive that they say, but
+because there is absent from their pages frequent and emphatic eulogy
+of the present régime; there have even been calls for suppression
+because particular papers, while saying no word against Mussolini,
+have been too insistently eulogistic of the Papacy. I yield to no one
+in my dissent from, say, Lenin’s analysis of the nature of the modern
+state. But I think it urgent that his criticism should be available
+to society. For it represents the impress made upon him by experience
+of political life, and a government which remains unaware of that
+criticism has lost its chance of seeking to satisfy the critic. If it
+begins by assuming that the exposition of Revolutionary Communism is
+undesirable, it will end, as the record shows, that language classes
+to teach English to Russians are a form of Communist propaganda.
+There is never any such certitude in matters of social constitution
+as to justify us in saying that any exposition of principles must be
+suppressed. No authority has ever a capacity for wise discrimination in
+these matters; and, even if it had, I do not see why it is justified in
+the exercise of discrimination.
+
+For suppression, in the first place, never convinces. What it does is
+to drive a small body of men to desperation and to reduce the masses to
+complete apathy in political matters. Most men who are prohibited from
+thinking as their experience teaches them soon cease to think at all.
+Men who cease to think cease also in any genuine sense to be citizens.
+They become the mere inert recipients of orders which they obey
+without scrutiny of any kind. And their inertia surrounds the acts of
+authority with that false glamour of confidence which mistakes silence
+for consent. The government which is not criticized at its base never
+truly knows the sentiments to which its activity gives rise among its
+subjects. It ultimately must fail to satisfy them because it does not
+know what desires it has to satisfy. Political thought, after all,
+however unwise or mistaken, is never born in a vacuum. Lenin’s view of
+capitalist society is just as relevant to its habits as the view of the
+Duke of Northumberland or of Judge Gary; each is born of contact with
+it, and each, as it is expressed, has lessons to teach from which, as
+these are scrutinized, a wise policy can be born.
+
+Here, I think, it is relevant to say a word upon one special aspect of
+freedom of expression for printed matter. I have argued that no limit
+of any kind is to be placed upon it, at any rate in normal times. The
+book, the pamphlet, the newspaper, ought to circulate with unimpeded
+freedom in whatever direction they can move. Many people who sympathize
+with this view will, however, except from this freedom printed
+material which is addressed to the armed forces of the state; and most
+governments, of course, have special legislation, with specially severe
+penalties, against any attempt at interference with their loyalty. I
+cannot myself see that this exception is justified. The armed forces
+of the state consist of citizens. The government has quite exceptional
+opportunities to retain their allegiance. If a printed document is able
+to sow disaffection amongst them, there must be something very wrong
+with the government. And, in fact, whenever agitation has produced
+military or naval disloyalty that has been the outcome not of affection
+for the principles upon which the agitators lay emphasis, but of
+grievances which have made either soldiers or sailors responsive to a
+plea for their disloyalty. That was the case with the Spithead mutinies
+of 1797; with the French troops in 1789; with the Russian troops in
+1917. If the army or the navy is prepared to turn upon the government,
+the likelihood is great that the government is unfit to retain power.
+For anyone who can disturb the allegiance of a mind as trained to
+obedience as that of the soldier or the sailor has, I believe, an _a
+priori_ case for insisting that his particular philosophy corresponds
+to an urgent human need.
+
+It is said that ideas are explosive and dangerous. To allow them
+unfettered freedom is, in fact, to invite disorder. But, to this
+position, there are at least two final answers. It is impossible to
+draw a line round dangerous ideas, and any attempt at their definition
+involves monstrous folly. If views, moreover, which imply disorder
+are able to disturb the foundations of the state, there is something
+supremely wrong with the governance of that state. For disorder is not
+a habit of mankind. We cling so eagerly to our accustomed ways that,
+as even Burke insisted, popular violence is always the outcome of a
+deep popular sense of wrong. The common man can only be persuaded to
+outbreak, granted his general habits, when the government of the taste
+has lost its hold upon his affections; and that loss is always the
+reflection of a profound moral cause. We may, indeed, go further and
+argue that the best index to the quality of a state is the degree in
+which it is able to permit free criticism of itself. For that implies
+an alertness to public opinion, a desire to remedy grievance, which
+enables the state to gain ground in the allegiance of its citizens.
+Almost always freedom of speech results in a mitigation which renders
+disorder unnecessary; almost always, also, prohibition of that freedom
+merely makes the agitation more dangerous because it drives it
+underground. Rousseau was infinitely more dangerous as a persecuted
+wanderer, because infinitely more interesting and, therefore,
+infinitely more persuasive, than he would have been when unfettered in
+Paris. Lenin did far more harm to Russia as an exile in Switzerland
+than he could ever have accomplished as an opposition leader in the
+Duma. The right freely to publish the written word is, in fact, the
+supreme Katharsis of discontent. Governments that are wise can always
+learn more from the criticism of their opponents than they can hope
+to discover in the eulogies of their friends. When they stifle that
+criticism, they prepare the way for their own destruction.
+
+There is, I think, an undeniable difference between freedom of written
+and freedom of spoken, expression. In the one case, a man attempts
+conviction by individual persuasion; he seeks, by argument which he
+believes to be rational, to move the mind of those who read what he
+has written. To speak at a meeting raises different problems. No one
+with experience of a great crowd under the sway of a skilled orator
+can doubt his power deliberately to create disorder if he so desires.
+A speaker at Trafalgar Square, for instance, who urged a vast meeting
+of angry unemployed to march on Downing Street, could do so with a fair
+assurance that they would obey his behest. I do not think a government
+can be left to the not always tender mercies of an orator with a
+grievance to exploit. The state, clearly, has the right to protection
+against the kind of public utterance which is bound to result in
+disorder.
+
+But no government is entitled itself to assume that disorder is
+imminent: the proof must be offered to an independent authority. And
+the proof so offered must be evidence that the utterance to which it
+takes exception was, at the time and in the circumstances in which it
+was made, definitely calculated to result in a breach of the peace. Its
+prohibitions must not be preventive prohibitions. It must not prohibit
+a meeting before it is held on the ground that the speaker is likely to
+preach sedition there. It must not seek conviction for sedition where
+the utterance might, under other circumstances, have had the tendency
+to result in a breach of the peace. To use my earlier illustration, I
+think a government would be justified in prosecution of the Trafalgar
+Square orator; but I do not think it would be entitled to prosecute the
+same speaker if he made the same speech on Calton Hill in Edinburgh.
+For we know that when men in Edinburgh are incited to march on London,
+they have a habit of turning back at Derby. I conclude, therefore, that
+the test adopted by Mr Justice Holmes, in his deservedly famous dissent
+in _Abrams_ v. U.S.,[30] is the maximum prohibition a government can
+be permitted. If it is in fact demonstrable that the speech made had
+a direct tendency to incite immediate disorder, the punishment of the
+accused is justified. I think such cases should always be tried before
+a jury. Experience suggests that a random sample of popular opinion
+is more likely to do justice in this type of case than is a judge. I
+have myself been present at such trials before a magistrate where the
+whole case for the prosecution quite obviously broke down and where,
+nevertheless, a conviction was secured. I do not for a moment suggest
+that we can be confident that a jury will act wisely; but my sense of
+our experience is that there is less chance of its acting unwisely than
+persons who occupy an official position of any kind. With the best will
+in the world, their tendency is to be unduly responsive to executive
+opinion.
+
+You will see that my anxiety is to maximize the difficulties of any
+government which desires to initiate prosecutions in this realm. My
+reason for this view is the quite simple one that I do not trust the
+executive power to act wisely in the presence of any threat, nor
+assumed threat, to public order. Anyone who studies the treason trials
+of 1794, or, even more striking, the cases under the Espionage Act in
+America during 1917-20, will be convinced of the unwisdom of allowing
+the executive an undue latitude. Every state contains innumerable and
+stupid men who see in unconventional thought the imminent destruction
+of social peace. They become Ministers; and they are quite capable of
+thinking that a society of Tolstoyan anarchists is about to attempt
+a new gunpowder plot. If you think of men like Lord Eldon, like Sir
+William Joynson-Hicks, like Attorney-General Palmer, you will realize
+how natural it is for them to believe that the proper place for Thoreau
+or Tolstoy, for William Morris or Mr Bernard Shaw, is a prison. I am
+unable to take that view; and I am therefore anxious that they should
+not be able to make it prevail without finding that there are barriers
+in their path.
+
+
+III
+
+Views such as I have put forward are often regarded with sympathy
+when their validity is limited to normal times. In a crisis, it is
+argued, different considerations prevail. When the safety of a state
+is threatened it is bound to take, and is justified in taking, all
+action to end the crisis. To suggest that it should be then bound by
+principles which weaken its effective striking power, is, it is said,
+to ask it to fight with one hand tied behind its back. The first
+objective of any society must be organized security; it is only when
+this has been obtained, that freedom of speech is within the pale of
+discussion.
+
+I am unable to share this view. We have really to examine two quite
+different positions. There is, first, the question of the principles
+to be applied in a period of internal violence; there is, next, the
+quite special question of limitation upon utterance in a period of
+war. I agree at once that it is entirely academic to demand freedom of
+speech in a time of civil war, for the simple reason that no one will
+pay the slightest attention to the demand; violence and freedom are,
+_a priori_, contradictory terms. But I would point out two things. In
+general, revolutions fail because those who make them deny freedom to
+their opponents. Losing criticism, they do not know the limits within
+which they can safely operate; they lose their power because they are
+not told when they are abusing it. I can think of no revolutionary
+period in history when a government has gained by stifling the opinion
+of men who did not see eye to eye with it; and I suggest that the
+revolutionary insistence that persuasion is futile finds little
+creative evidence in its support.
+
+But when once the question has been settled of who is to possess power
+other questions of urgent delicacy arise in which, as I think, the
+principles I have laid down possess an irresistible force. There is
+the problem of how the rebel and the disaffected are to be treated; of
+whether the resumption of order is to be followed by free discussion;
+of the power to be exercised by the military authority over ordinary
+citizens not engaged in armed hostility to the régime. Here I can
+only express the view that the resumption of order ought always to
+be followed forthwith by the normal principles of judicial control;
+and that the military authorities ought not, save where it is quite
+impossible for the civil courts to exercise their jurisdiction, to have
+any powers over ordinary citizens.
+
+These are rigorous views; and, perhaps, I may devote a little time
+to their exposition. I know of no case where the state has exercised
+extraordinary power outside the normal process of law, in which that
+authority has not been grossly abused. It was abused in the Civil
+War even under a mind so humane and generous as that of Lincoln; it
+was emphatically and dangerously abused in the Amritsar rebellion
+of 1919. Let me illustrate, from this latter example, some of the
+things that were done. Two men were arrested in Amritsar prior to the
+declaration of martial law and deported to an extreme and undisturbed
+part of the province; on the declaration of martial law, they were
+brought back to Lahore, which was in the martial law area, and tried
+and sentenced by a martial law tribunal. A number of pleaders were
+arrested in Gudaspur, where there was no disturbance, taken under
+revolting conditions to Lahore, and confined there in the common jail
+for a period lasting up to a month. They were then released, without
+any charges being preferred against them; on the evidence, indeed, it
+is difficult to know with what offence they could have been charged.
+In the trial, again, of one Harkishan Lal, and others, for treason
+and waging war against the King-Emperor, the accused were not allowed
+to have a lawyer of their own choosing; a full record of the case
+was not taken, and the private notes of counsel for the defence had
+to be surrendered by him to the Court at the end of each day. Under
+such conditions it is difficult to see how any adequate defence was
+possible. A punitive detachment, again, under a Colonel Jacob, tried by
+drumhead court-martial and flogged, a man who refused, it appears with
+some truculence, to say who had destroyed some telegraph wires; later
+it appeared that the man, as he had asserted, had in fact no knowledge
+of who had destroyed them. In Lahore--to take a final instance--the
+military officer in command prohibited more than a few persons to
+congregate in the streets; a few persons did so congregate and they
+were flogged. On investigation, after the flogging, it was found that
+the group was a wedding-party whose purpose was not more dangerous than
+that of any other persons engaged in a similar function.[31]
+
+I do not, of course, suggest that there is anything especially cruel
+or remarkable in these instances. Whether you study repression in
+Ireland or Russia, Bavaria or Hungary or India, its history is
+always the same. The fact always emerges that once the operation of
+justice is transferred from the ordinary courts to some branch of the
+executive, abuses always occur. The proper protection of the individual
+is deliberately neglected in the belief that a reign of terror will
+minimize disaffection. There is no evidence that it does. If it could,
+there would have been no Russian Revolution; and there would be no
+movement for Indian self-government today. The error inherent in any
+invasion of individuality, such as a system of special courts implies,
+is that it blinds the eyes of government to the facts not only by
+suppressing illegitimate expression of opinion, but by persuading it
+that most opinion which finds expression is illegitimate if it is
+not in the nature of eulogy. Even Lincoln supported his generals in
+completely indefensible attacks on civilian rights. Executive justice,
+in fact, is simply an euphemism for the denial of justice; and the
+restoration of order at this cost involves dangers of which the price
+is costly indeed.
+
+The problem of war is, in a sense, a special case of the problem of
+disorder; but, in fact, it raises quite different considerations.
+Let me first of all make the point that if you are a citizen in a
+besieged town, you cannot expect a normal freedom of speech; to be
+within the area of actual military operations means that you must not
+hope to be regarded as an individual. You become, from the nature of
+things, a unit of attack or defence whose personality is immaterial
+and insignificant. The position here is extraordinary; and principles
+have little or no relation to the problems that arise. The case,
+as elsewhere, merely affords proof that liberty and violence are
+antithetic terms.
+
+But let us rather take the position of a citizen whose country is
+involved in war as, say, England in 1914, or America in 1917. What are
+his rights and duties then? I would begin by making the point that the
+fact of belligerency does not suspend his citizenship; he owes as much,
+perhaps more than ever, the contribution his instructed judgment can
+make, to the public good. The scale of operations cannot, I think, make
+any difference to that duty. It is as real, and as compelling, when
+they are big, as in the war of 1914, as when, as in the Boer War, or
+the Spanish-American War, they are relatively small. If I think the war
+a just one, it is my duty to support it, and if I think it unjust there
+is no alternative open to me except opposition to it. I believe, for
+instance, that the opposition of Mr Ramsay MacDonald and Mr Snowden to
+the war of 1914 was a fulfilment, on their part, of the highest civil
+obligation. No citizen can assume that his duty in wartime is so to
+abdicate the exercise of his judgment that the executive has a blank
+cheque to act as it pleases. No government, therefore, is entitled to
+penalize opinion at a time when it is more than ever urgent to perform
+the task of citizenship. If a man sincerely thinks, like James Russell
+Lowell, that war is merely an alias for murder, it is his duty to say
+so even if his pronouncement is inconvenient to the government of the
+day.
+
+I cannot, indeed, believe that there is any case on the other side
+worthy of serious consideration. In the war of 1914, it was said that
+hostile opinion must be controlled because it hinders the successful
+prosecution of the war. But behind the facade of prejudice contained
+in the imputation of a term like hostility, there are several issues
+each one of which requires analysis. For what does “hostile opinion”
+mean? Does it imply hostility to the inception of a war, to the methods
+of its prosecution, to the end at which it aims, to the terms on which
+its conclusion is proposed? In the war of 1914, the critics were
+divided into camps on each of these views. There were men, like Mr
+MacDonald, who thought the war unjustified in its inception and bad
+in its conclusion. There were others who criticized the manner, both
+diplomatic and technical, of its prosecution. Was it, for instance,
+hostility to the prosecution of the late war to criticize Lord
+Jellicoe’s conduct at the Battle of Jutland, or Sir Ian Hamilton’s
+handling of the operations at the Dardanelles? Was it, again, hostility
+on the part of _The Times_ to attack the Asquith Government on the
+ground, rightly or wrongly, that it showed a lack of energy in building
+up a munitions supply? If a statesman not in office, Mr Roosevelt,
+for example, thinks the diplomatic policy of the executive likely
+to be attended by fatal results, must he confine himself to private
+representations, lest public utterance hinder the national unity? If an
+Englishman like Lord Lansdowne believed, as President Wilson believed
+in 1916, that peace by negotiation is preferable to peace by victory in
+the field, because of the human cost that victory entails, has he no
+obligation to his fellow-citizens who are paying that cost with their
+lives?
+
+It is evident from our experience that to limit the expression of
+opinion in wartime to opinion which does not hinder its prosecution
+is, in fact, to give the executive an entirely free hand, whatever
+its policy, and to assume that, while the armies are in the field,
+an absolute moral moratorium is imperative. That is, surely, a quite
+impossible position. No one who has watched at all carefully the
+process of governance in time of war can doubt that criticism was never
+more necessary. Its limitation is, in fact, an assurance that the unity
+of outlook is a guarantee that mistakes will be made and wrong done.
+For once the right to criticize is withdrawn, the executive commits
+all the natural follies of dictatorship. It assumes a semi-divine
+character for its acts. It deprives the people of information essential
+to a proper judgment of its policy. It misrepresents the situation it
+confronts by that art of propaganda which, as Mr Cornford has happily
+said, enables it to deceive its friends without deceiving its enemies.
+A people in wartime is always blind to the facts of its position and
+anxious to believe only agreeable news; the government takes care to
+provide it only with news that is pleasant. If no such news is at
+hand it will be manufactured. Petty successes will be magnified into
+resounding victories; defeats will be minimized, wherever possible. The
+agony of the troops will be obscured by the clouds of censorship. A
+wartime government is always obtuse to suggestion, angry when inquiry
+is suggested, careless of truth. It can, in fact, only be moralized
+to the degree to which it is subject to critical examination in every
+aspect of its policy. And to penalize, therefore, the critic is not
+only to poison the moral foundations of the state, but to make it
+extremely difficult, when peace comes, for both government and the mass
+of citizens to resume the habits of normal decency.
+
+Freedom of speech, therefore, in wartime seems to me broadly to involve
+the same rights as freedom of speech in peace. It involves them,
+indeed, more fully because a period of national trial is one when,
+above all, it is the duty of citizens to hear their witness. I do not,
+of course, mean that a citizen in wartime should be free to communicate
+secret military plans to the enemy; I do mean that if a man feels,
+like Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, that British policy in South Africa
+is “methods of barbarism,” it is his right, as well as his duty, to
+say so. Obviously critical activity of this kind will be unpopular,
+and a government which helps in the making of its unpopularity will
+find the task of suppression easy. But it will pay a heavy price for
+suppression. The winged words of criticism scatter, only too often,
+the seeds of peace. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman’s attack on the
+Balfour Government persuaded General Botha that trust in Great Britain
+might not be misplaced; President Wilson’s speeches, especially his
+Fourteen Points, were, impliedly, a criticism of Allied policy, and
+that which, also, awakened liberal opinion in Germany to a sense of
+its responsibilities. Wartime unity of outlook, in a word, is never
+worth the cost of prohibitions. If the policy of a state which decides
+upon war does not command the general assent of citizens, it has no
+right to make war. If the number of those hostile is considerable, the
+policy is, at the least, a dubious one. If the number is small, there
+is no need to attempt suppression in the interest of success. The only
+way, in fact, to attain the right is by free discussion; and a period
+of crisis, when the perception of right is difficult, only makes the
+emphasis upon freedom more fundamental.
+
+Let me illustrate my view with reference to one or two of the decisive
+factors in the Peace of Versailles. No one now believes the wartime lie
+that Germany was solely responsible for the war; her responsibility may
+be greater than that of some others, but it is agreed that the burden
+of Russia is at least as heavy and that war, in any case, was rooted
+in the nature of the European system. But, in the interest of national
+unity, it was regarded as essential to represent Germany as the sole
+conspirator against European peace. She was painted as a malefactor
+whose sins were incapable of exaggeration. Her virtues were denied, her
+achievements belittled, until what Mr Lippmann terms a “stereotype” of
+her was built up for public use which made her appear to the average
+man a criminal who could not be too severely punished. The statesmen
+who constructed this stereotype knew that it was untrue; but they
+hoped, doubtless, to escape its consequences, when the victory had been
+won. They found that they could not do so. They had so successfully
+repressed all effort at reasonable delineation, that the atmosphere
+of hate was unconquerable. They had no alternative to a Carthaginian
+peace because that seemed, to the masses they had deceived, the
+only possible course for justice to take. They knew, as the famous
+memorandum, for instance, of Mr. Lloyd George makes manifest,[32] that
+a Carthaginian peace was disastrous for Europe; but it was too late to
+destroy the legend they had created. Like those whom Dante describes in
+the Inferno, they were punished by the realization of their announced
+desires.
+
+The world, in this context, has paid the price for the suppression of
+truth; and another phase of the suppression should also be remembered.
+It is usually agreed that some of the worst elements in the Peace
+of Versailles were the result of the Secret Treaties by which the
+Allies, exclusive of America, bound themselves to each other before
+the entrance of America into the war. Nowhere among the associated
+powers was the desire for a just peace more widespread than in America;
+nowhere, also, was the discussion of war-aims more rigorously curtailed
+as a hindrance to the full prosecution of the war. Had discussion of
+the peace been full and effective in those critical years, the liberal
+instincts of President Wilson might, when reinforced by the weight of
+informed opinion, have compelled at least a considerable mitigation
+of the secret treaties. They had been published in the American Press
+after their issue by the Bolsheviks in 1917; full discussion would have
+revealed their inadequacies, and enabled the President to counteract
+what there was of evil in their substance. But the destruction of free
+opinion acted as a smoke-screen to conceal them, and Mr Wilson did
+not seriously give his mind to them until he reached Paris. It was
+then too late to undo their consequences. Here, in fact, as elsewhere,
+uncontrolled power acted like a miasma to blot out the only atmosphere
+in which truth could be made manifest. No government was compelled to
+do its duty, because the means were wanting to inform it of what its
+duty was. The powers had forgotten, or had chosen to forget, that they
+could not hope for a just peace save by freeing the minds of men and
+women who cared for justice.
+
+
+IV
+
+So far, I have considered freedom in the political sphere as though it
+concerned only a single individual placed over against society and the
+state. I have sought to discuss what his freedom means in the complex
+relationships in which he is involved. But, obviously, this is an undue
+simplification of the problem. The individual, in fact, does not stand
+alone; he joins hands with others of like mind to persuade, sometimes
+to compel, society to the adoption of the view they share. It is
+unnecessary for me to emphasize the vital part played by associations
+in the modern community.[33] Granted that they have their dangers, they
+are not only a vital expression of human personality, but an expression
+as natural as the state itself. That a man must be free to combine with
+his fellows for joint-action in some realm in which they have a kindred
+interest is, I take it, of the essence of liberty. The point it is
+important to examine is the degree of control, if any, that the state
+is entitled to exercise over voluntary associations.
+
+Let me say at once that I know no question more difficult in the whole
+range of political science. I am quite certain that, from the angle
+of individual freedom, the less interference the state attempts, the
+better for everyone concerned; but, equally, I am clear that to some
+interference the state is fully entitled. I should deny, for instance,
+the right of any voluntary association to inflict physical punishment
+or imprisonment upon its members; and I should argue that any state
+was justified in immediate and drastic interference to this end. But
+the real problems we encounter are not so simple as this. Joseph Smith
+announces his reception of a message from Heaven ordaining the duty of
+men to practise polygamy in a community where the law only recognizes
+monogamy; what rights of interference has the state when a body of men
+and women join him and begin to give effect to his teaching? What are
+the rights of the state when a congress of trade unionists declares
+a general strike? Are those rights different when the purpose of the
+strike is industrial from what they are if it is political? How are
+we to distinguish between the two? What are the rights of combination
+among men employed in industries the nature of which makes the service
+they perform fundamental to the community? What should be the attitude
+of the state to a society of men engaged in propaganda for a revolution
+by the use of physical force? Is there a difference between such a
+society when it merely preaches the desirability of such a revolution
+and when it acts to that end? Does action, in the latter case, mean
+embarkation upon rebellion, for example, the purchase of machine-guns,
+or does it extend, say, to the stirring-up of industrial strife in the
+hope that a resort to political rebellion may be its outcome?
+
+You will see that these are not merely academic questions; every one
+of them has been in the forefront of political discussion this last
+half-century, and all save the first have been vital themes of decision
+in the years since the war. Take first the case of an association
+which, like the Mormon Church, desires to practise modes of conduct
+different from those pursued by the society as a whole. We have to
+assume that the members of the association have joined it voluntarily,
+and continue voluntarily in its membership. We have to assume, further,
+that they do not desire to force their particular way of life upon
+others; for some single realm of conduct, like the realm of marriage,
+they desire that they shall be left free from interference by the
+organized power of society. I cannot see that we are entitled to
+interfere with them. We may think them unwise, foolish, muddle-headed,
+immoral. We know perfectly well that we cannot hope, by the external
+constraint of law, to abolish all conduct that comes within those
+terms. I happen to think that it is a gross superstition to leave
+money to the Roman Catholic Church that masses may be said for the
+testator’s soul; but I should think it an unwarrantable interference
+with the relations between that Church and its members if such bequests
+were forbidden. I see no evidence to suggest that the practice of
+polygamy is worse, in its nature, than a hundred other practices which
+organized society either directly permits, or wisely leaves alone,
+because it knows that rigorous control would be utterly futile. The
+only way to deal with the ideals of the Mormon Church is to prove
+their undesirability to their members. On the evidence of history,
+persecution will not be acceptable as proof; and it is not improbable
+that the only legal effect of prohibition has been to make furtive and
+dishonest what was, at first, open and avowed. _Mutatis mutandis_,
+this seems to me the case with all similar problems of association. If
+a society of women, enthusiastic for the independence of their sex,
+formed themselves into an association to propagate and practise the
+(to them) ideal of children outside the tie of marriage, I should not
+think the state entitled to interfere with its work. So, too, I should
+argue, with a principle like birth-control. The state is not entitled
+to prohibit diffusion of such knowledge, or the practice of it. When it
+does, it makes the family nothing more than an instrument of fecundity,
+and destroys the whole character of that right to privacy which is the
+foundation of harmonious sexual relationship.
+
+I argue, therefore, that voluntary bodies are entitled outside the
+realm where their ideas and conduct are intended directly to alter the
+law, or to arrest the continuity of general social habits, to believe
+what they please and to practise what they please. This would not
+permit a body of burglars to take over from Proudhon the principle that
+property is theft and assume their right to restore it to themselves;
+but it would justify, to take the case of principles I personally
+abhor, a society of Mormons practising polygamy in a society like that
+of the United States. Let me turn from this to the political field. I
+take first the question of the right of the state to control freedom
+of association in the industrial sphere. Practically speaking, the
+question reduces itself to one of whether the state is justified in
+limiting the power of a trade union, or of a combination of trade
+unions to call out its members on strike. I want to put on one side the
+technical juristic questions involved and to discover, if I can, the
+justice of the general principles which underlie the problem.
+
+These are, I think, broadly four in number. It is argued that the state
+has a right to prohibit a general strike on the ground that this is
+an attempt to coerce the government either directly, by making it
+introduce legislation which it would not otherwise do, or indirectly,
+by inflicting such hardship on the community that public opinion forces
+the government to act. It is said, secondly, that the state is entitled
+to prohibit those whom it directly employs, for example postmen, from
+either going on strike, or affiliating themselves with any organization
+the nature of which may compromise the neutrality of the government.
+It is said, thirdly, that certain industries, railways, for example,
+or electricity supply, are so vital to the community that continuity
+of service in them is the law of their being, and that, therefore,
+the right to strike can be legitimately denied to those engaged in
+them. It is argued, fourthly, that a limitation upon the purposes of
+trade unions, so that they are confined within their proper industrial
+sphere, is also justified.
+
+I want to analyse each of these principles separately, but certain
+preliminary observations are important. In any industrial society, as
+Mr Justice Holmes has insisted,[34] liberty of contract always begins
+where equality of bargaining power begins. Granted, therefore, the
+normal conditions of modern enterprise, only the existence of strong
+trade unions will ensure to the average worker just terms in his
+contract of service. If he stands alone, he has neither the knowledge
+nor the power to secure for himself proper protection. Nor is this
+all. Strong trade unionism always means that public opinion can be
+made effective in an industrial dispute. One has only to compare
+the situation in the British textile industries, where the power of
+the unions necessarily involves a search by the state, if there is
+a dispute, for the terms of a just settlement, with that in America
+where, from the weakness of the unions, the state seems hardly to
+know when a dispute has occurred, where, also, the police-power is
+almost invariably exerted on the side of the employer, to realize
+the meaning of strong trade unionism. It is, in fact, the condition
+of industrial justice. No limitation upon freedom to associate is,
+I urge, permissible unless it can be demonstrated that clear and
+decisive advantage to the community, including, be it remembered, trade
+unionists themselves, is likely to result.
+
+In this background, let us examine the first of the four principles I
+have enumerated. No coercion of the government, direct or indirect, is
+legitimate. If men want to obtain from government a solution other than
+government is willing to attempt, the way to that end is not by the use
+of industrial power, but through the ballot-box at a general election.
+Or, from the angle of indirect coercion, the first interest of the
+state is in the general well-being of the community; a general strike
+necessarily aims at that well-being and may therefore be prohibited.
+The general strike, even a large sympathetic strike, is in fact a
+revolutionary weapon. As such, it is a threat to the Constitution and
+illegal as well as unjustifiable.
+
+I do not think the problem is so straightforward as the delusive
+simplicity of this argument would seem to make it. If it is said that
+the Trades Union Congress of Great Britain would not be justified in
+calling a general strike to compel the government to make Great Britain
+a federation, I should agree at once. But I point out that no one
+supposes it would take such action and that therefore a prohibition
+of it is unnecessary. But I should not agree that a general strike is
+unjustified to secure the eight-hour day, or to protect the payment of
+unemployment relief, or to continue the Trade Board system in sweated
+industries. Whether a general strike for these, or similar ends, would
+be wise is another matter. That it cannot in any circumstances be
+justified I am not prepared to say until I know the circumstances of
+some given case. I am not willing, for instance, to condemn the General
+Strike of 1926; on a careful analysis of its history, I believe that
+the blame for its inception lies wholly at the door of the Baldwin
+Government. No one acquainted with the character of the trade union
+movement but knows that a weapon so tremendous as the general strike
+will only be called into play on the supreme occasion. To lay it down
+as law that, whatever the occasion, the weapon shall not be used, seems
+to me an unjustifiable interference with freedom.
+
+I am not greatly moved by the argument that it involves coercion of the
+government. There are occasions when that coercion is necessary, and
+even essential. I believe that was the case in Great Britain in 1926.
+The trade unions would never have called the strike had they seen in
+the policy of the government even the fragment of a genuine search for
+justice. But the fact was that Mr Baldwin and his colleagues simply
+acted as the mouthpiece of the coalowners. To illegalize a general
+strike in that background is to say that the trade unions should have
+acquiesced in the defeat of the miners without an attempt to prove
+their solidarity with them. It would be to announce to government that
+the ultimate weapon of Labour is one the use of which it need never
+fear. There is no danger that the general strike will ever be other
+than a weapon of last resort; the occasions when it can be successfully
+used will be of the utmost rarity. But they may occur. I cannot accept
+the position that government is always entitled to count on industrial
+peace, whatever its policy. Nor do I see why it is unconstitutional for
+Labour, as in 1926, to withdraw from work in an orderly and coherent
+way.
+
+I do not deny, of course, that both a general strike, and others of far
+less amplitude, inflict grave injury and hardship upon the community.
+But when trade unions seek for what they regard as justice, one of
+their most powerful sources of strength is the awakening of the slow
+and inert public to a sense of the position. Effectively to do this,
+in a real world, it must inconvenience the public; that awkward giant
+has no sense of its obligations until it is made uncomfortable. When it
+is aroused, if, for instance, trains do not run, or coal is not mined,
+the public begins to have interest in the position, to call for action.
+Without some alternative which attempts to secure attention for a just
+result--I know of no such alternative--the infliction of hardship on
+the community seems to me the sole way, even if an unfortunate way, to
+the end the trade unions have in view. To limit the right to strike is
+a form of industrial servitude. It means, ultimately, that the worker
+must labour on the employer’s terms lest the public be inconvenienced.
+I can see no justice in such a denial of freedom.
+
+Two further points it is worth while to make. It is sometimes agreed
+that while the state ought not to restrict freedom of association for
+industrial ends, it is justified in doing so when the strike-weapon is
+used for some political purpose. This, indeed, was one of the objects
+of the Baldwin Government in enacting the Trades Disputes Act of 1927.
+But I know of no formula whereby such a division of purposes can be
+successfully made. There is no hard and fast line between industrial
+action and political action. There is no hard and fast line which
+enables us to say, for instance, that pressure for a Factory Act is
+industrial action, but pressure for the ratification of the Washington
+Hours Convention political. Extreme cases are easy to define; but there
+is a vast middle ground with which the trade unions must concern
+themselves and this escapes definition of a kind that will not hamper
+the trade union in legitimate activity vital to its purpose. And there
+are certain types of political action by trade unions--a strike against
+war, for example--which I do not think they ought in the interest
+of the community itself, to abandon. Quite frankly, I should have
+liked to see a general strike proclaimed against the outbreak of war
+in 1914; and I conceive the power to act in that way as a necessary
+and wise protection of a people against a government which proposes
+such adventures. You cannot compartmentalize life; and where grave
+emergencies arise, the weapons to be utilized must be fitted to meet
+them. A government which knew that its declaration of war was, where it
+intended aggressive action, likely to involve a general strike, would
+be far less likely to think in belligerent terms. I do not see why such
+a weapon should be struck from the community’s hand. I do not forget
+that the German Republic was saved from the Kapp Putsch by a general
+strike.
+
+Nor must we forget the limits within which effective legal action is
+possible. _Jus est quod jussum est_ is a maxim the validity of which
+is singularly unimpressive. When the issue in dispute seems to the
+trade unions so vital that only by a general strike can they defend
+their position adequately, they will, in those circumstances, defend
+their position whatever the law may be. Legal prohibition will merely
+exacerbate the dispute. It will transfer the discussion of legality
+which serves merely to conceal it. A legal command is, after all,
+a mere static form of words; what gives it appropriateness is its
+relevance as just to the situation to which it is applied. And its
+relevance as just is made not by those who announce that it is to
+be applied, but by those who receive its application. The secret of
+avoiding general strikes does not lie in their prohibition but in the
+achievement of the conditions which render them unnecessary.
+
+Nor is the denial of the right to declare a general strike a necessary
+protection of the total interest of the community. Right and wrong
+in these matters are matters to be defined in each particular case.
+A government which meets the threat of a general strike is not
+entitled to public support merely because it meets the threat. It
+is no more possible to take that view than it is to say that all
+governments deserve support when they confront a rebellion of their
+subjects. Everything depends on what the general strike is for,
+just as everything depends on the purpose of the rebellion; and the
+individual trade unionist must make up his mind about the one, just as
+the individual citizen must make up his mind about the other. Law in
+this realm is, in fact, largely futile. It could not prevent a general
+strike by men who saw no alternative open to them; and, in that event,
+it would merely intensify its rigours when it came. The limitation
+of liberty in this realm seems to me, therefore, neither just in its
+purpose nor beneficent in its results.
+
+I do not, of course, deny that freedom of action in this field is
+capable of being abused. That is the nature of liberty. Any body of
+persons who exercise power may abuse it. It is an abuse of power
+when an employer dismisses his workmen because he does not like
+their political opinions. It is an abuse of power when the owners of
+halls in Boston refuse to hire them to the promoters of a meeting in
+memory of Sacco and Vanzetti. It was an abuse of power when British
+naval officers connived at the attempted internment of the Belgian
+socialist, M. Camille Huysmans, in England. It was, I think, an abuse
+of power when the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge refused to admit
+Nonconformists as students, or Parliament to seat Mr Bradlaugh because
+he was an infidel. But the trade unions are no more likely, on the
+historic record, to abuse their power than is Parliament itself. The
+latter, if it wished, has the legal competence to abolish the trade
+unions, to disenfranchise the working classes, to confine membership
+of the House of Commons to persons with an independent income. We
+know that Parliament is unlikely to do any of these things because
+omnicompetence, when gravely abused, ceases to be omnicompetent. And
+the same truth holds, as it seems to me, of the liberty to proclaim a
+general strike.
+
+A much more difficult problem arises where the second of my four
+principles is concerned. A government is, I think, entitled generally
+to the loyal and continuous service of its employees. It is therefore
+entitled to make regulations which restrain their liberty of action.
+The army and navy and the police, in particular, occupy a special
+position in the state; if they were free, like ordinary citizens, to
+withdraw their labour as they pleased, the executive power would be in
+an impossible position. The government, therefore, may make suitable
+regulations for their control. But it is important, in the framing of
+these regulations, that the conditions of service should be just. To be
+just, two principles are, I suggest, of primary importance. They should
+be made and administered in conjunction with those who are affected by
+them; and in their application or change executive action should not be
+the final court of appeal. The principles which, in England, we call
+Whitleyism are the _quid pro quo_ which government servants of this
+type are entitled to expect in return for the surrender of the right
+to strike; and Whitleyism must include the right of those servants to
+appeal from an executive decision to such a body as the Civil Service
+Division of the Industrial Court. To leave the executive sole master
+of the field is to invite the kind of purblind folly which resulted,
+in 1919, in the police strikes of Boston and London. Here, certainly,
+the fact that the governments concerned were the judges in their own
+cause made it impossible for the police to get either attention or
+justice without drastic action. And I draw your attention to the fact
+that although in each case the original strikers were defeated, their
+successors obtained the terms, and even more than the terms, for which
+they fought.
+
+The defence forces of the state constitute a special case. When we turn
+to the ordinary public services, central and local, quite different
+considerations emerge. If you analyse Whitehall, for instance, you
+will find a very small body of men and women who may be regarded as
+concerned with the making of policy; below them is another body,
+perhaps two or three times as large, engaged in assembling the material
+out of which policy is made, and applying it in minor cases; while
+below these once more is a vast army of clerks engaged in routine work
+of a more or less mechanical kind. To this last class, it cannot, I
+think, be said that government emerges as an employer different in
+kind from what they would encounter in the ordinary labour market.
+General economic conditions govern their pay; in France and America,
+indeed, it is below, rather than above, the level obtaining elsewhere
+for their kind of work. All their interests go along with those engaged
+in similar employment outside the sphere of government activity. Their
+union, therefore, with persons in private firms seems to me justified
+in order to raise their general economic level; and I do not see the
+justice of prohibiting it as was done by the Baldwin Government in the
+Trades Disputes Act of 1927. I think, further, that they are entitled
+to strike, if there is no other way in which they can, as they think,
+secure the enforcement of their demands; though I think, also, that
+the executive would be justified in compelling them to exhaust the
+resources of a comprehensive scheme of conciliation before they went
+so far. The history, indeed, of most modern civil services. France
+being a notable exception[35] shows clearly that there is no danger of
+officials abusing the right to strike. But it shows also the unwisdom
+of leaving the government free to determine the substance of the
+contract of service. It is just as likely as any private employer to
+extract the most it can get for the least it needs to give; and it is
+no more fit than any other employer to be left uncontrolled in this
+field. The more labour conditions in government service are determined
+finally by an independent authority, the more reasonable they are
+likely to be. We must not be led away by false claims to a special
+majesty born of its sovereign character to regard the state as entitled
+to a peculiar and uncontrolled power over its servants. History
+shows that it is just as likely as anyone else to abuse an unlimited
+authority.
+
+The civil servant is not merely an employee of government; he is also a
+citizen. In our own day, especially, delicate questions have arisen as
+to the right of the civil servant, or of a person engaged in the armed
+forces of the state, to enjoy all the normal political privileges of a
+person in private employ. Is a civil servant, for instance, entitled to
+enter on a political career with the chance, if it is interrupted, to
+return to his department? Most modern states, England, for instance,
+Canada, South Africa, regard political activities as beyond the area
+within which a civil servant may engage; France, on the other hand,
+hardly limits its officials in this way, while Germany expressly allows
+its officials to engage in politics, and some fifty civil servants are
+now in the Reichstag, with the power to return to their departments if
+they are defeated. Certainly there are few rights for which the rank
+and file of officials press so strongly as for this; and they regard
+the limitation of their political opportunities as an invasion of
+civic liberty at once unnecessary and unjustifiable.
+
+I do not think the problem is a simple one; and I think any solution
+of it must therefore be complex in character. If a high official of
+the Foreign Office in England could be elected to Parliament, spend
+a term there in bitter criticism of the Foreign Secretary and then,
+on defeat, return to work with the minister whom he had sought to
+destroy, the latter’s position would, I think, be intolerable. There
+is, that is to say, a class of civil service work the very nature and
+associations of which involves exclusion from political life; and if
+those engaged therein desire a political career, they must terminate
+their connexion with the civil service. We can, of course, draw a line.
+I see no reason why all the industrial employees of the government,
+postmen, for instance, or shipwrights in a national dockyard, should
+not enjoy all ordinary civil rights. I see no reason, either, to
+expect any deleterious consequence if civil servants below what we
+call in England the executive class are allowed ordinary political
+rights, so long as a decent discretion in their exercise is observed.
+Those engaged in the making of policy must, in my judgment, accept a
+self-denying ordinance in this regard. Unless government can be assured
+that its chief officials are aloof from political ties, it cannot trust
+them; and all the considerations which create a “spoils system” will
+then come into play. Since experience makes it evident that a spoils
+system is incompatible with either honest or efficient administration,
+a restriction upon the liberty of public officials is, I would argue,
+justified. It is an inevitable part of their contract of service from
+the point of view of the end that service is intended to secure.
+
+I believe, further, that this restriction applies with special force
+to the Army and Navy and to the police. The state is justified, in the
+interest of the community, in placing an absolute embargo upon the
+political activities of all their members. For unless this liberty is
+restrained, their allegiance becomes the possession of a party and
+they cannot give that neutral service which is the basic principle
+of their existence. Anyone who remembers the attempted use of the
+Army in 1913-14 for Ulster, the habits of the French Army during the
+Dreyfus period, the peculiar relations between the German Army and
+the Monarchy, will easily see how vital is this abstinence. There
+are American cities where the relations between big business and the
+police mean that the authority of the latter is certain to be abused in
+an industrial dispute. Nothing, perhaps, illustrates more nicely the
+delicacy of this problem than the activities of Sir Henry Wilson[36]
+during the years from 1912. He was, it appears, prepared to go from a
+meeting of the Committee of Imperial Defence to a discussion of its
+plans with the leaders of the Conservative opposition; and to advise
+with them upon the best way of rendering some of those plans nugatory.
+Even during the Great War he did not cease from the cultivation of
+political intimacies of this kind. Nor must we forget that Sir John
+French, at the time the Commander-in-Chief of the British Armies
+in France, was ready to go behind the back of the Government he
+served to offer secret information to the military correspondent of a
+Conservative newspaper; and the result of that betrayal of confidence
+was the breakdown of the first Asquith Government in 1915. The proper
+conduct of political life is clearly impossible, if the armed forces
+of the state are free to take a definite part in its formation. No
+one would endorse the Russian principle that a soldier’s quality is a
+function of his agreement with the political faith of the government;
+yet once relations are established between the politician and the Army
+a movement towards this principle is inevitable. Sooner or later, in
+this condition, the Army, like the Praetorian guard, determines the
+personality of the state. When that occurs, no one can hope for the
+enjoyment of political freedom.
+
+I turn, in the third place, to the view that industries which have a
+vital impact on social life can restrain the right to strike in those
+engaged in them. That is a peculiarly favoured doctrine at the present
+time; some writers even use the analogy of the Army and Navy, and argue
+that the principles applicable to these have a legitimate extension to
+this field. Others, the eminent French jurist M. Duguit, for example,
+take a similar view, but upon other grounds. They argue that vital
+public service, transport, for instance, or electricity supply, derive
+their whole meaning from continuity; to allow an interruption of them
+is, therefore, to destroy the whole law of their being.
+
+I am as willing, I hope, as anyone to agree that an interruption of a
+vital public service is undesirable, and that every possible step to
+minimize the possibility of its occurrence should be taken. But I do
+not think the denial of the right to strike obtains this end in any
+of them; and I do not believe that the same considerations apply to
+every sort of vital public service. It must, I think, make a difference
+whether the industry is primarily operated for private profit or no;
+for only in the latter case is its quality as both vital and public
+fully recognized. No one, surely, can examine the record of the coal
+industry either in England or in America and say that the motives
+which underlie its ownership by private interest are compatible with
+the view that an uninterrupted service to the community has been the
+first object of the owners. There are several reasons of primary
+importance for retaining the right to strike so long as private
+ownership continues in this sphere. If, for instance, a steamship
+company proposes to send out its ship under the conditions in which the
+_Vestris_ of ill-fated memory sailed in the spring of 1929, I think the
+crew would be justified in striking in the public interest. So, also, I
+should argue that the Seamen’s Union would be justified in striking, to
+see to it, if it could, that every vessel putting to sea carries with
+it wireless equipment. Again, a body of miners might, in my judgment,
+justifiably strike if they believed that some part of a pit to which
+they were to be sent was in fact too dangerous for coal to be hewed
+there without an alteration of the physical conditions of mining in
+that particular place. I should, further, urge that a strike to secure
+a national agreement for uniform conditions in a particular industry as
+against a variety of local agreements was a justifiable enterprise if
+that end could not be attained in any other way.
+
+My view, broadly, reduces itself to this. Where the vital industry is
+in public hands, the conditions which should operate are those which
+relate to government service in general where it is in private hands;
+the state is, I think, justified in seeing to it that the danger of
+dislocation is reduced to a minimum; but it is not justified in saying
+that, in the event of a disagreement, the men shall always abide by the
+results of compulsory arbitration. For, first of all, the men will not
+always do so; their refusal, doubtless, will be exceptional, but there
+will be instances in which it will occur. The famous munitions strikes
+on the Clyde, and the South Wales Miners’ strike, during the war show
+that this is the case. It is, I suggest, obvious folly to attempt
+legislation which cannot be enforced at the critical point of urgency.
+The business of the state, therefore, is not to prohibit, but to find
+how best to make the use of the strike the final and not the first
+instrument in conflict.
+
+This, I suggest, can be accomplished in two ways. It can be done,
+first, by limiting the profits private ownership can make in any
+industry of vital importance, either absolutely so that the owners
+are debenture-holders merely, and not the residuary legatees of any
+profit made, or relatively, as in a scheme like that laid down for the
+gas companies of London. The state is then, I suggest, legitimately
+entitled to argue that a curb on the liberty of the employer to
+make what profit he can justifies a curb on the right to strike by
+postulating the conditions under which alone it can become operative.
+Those conditions are, I think, met by some such instrument as the
+Canadian Industrial Disputes Investigation Act. Under its terms, we
+should then have, at least, enforced public inquiry into the dispute,
+and the consideration by both sides, as well as by the general
+opinion of the community, of a reasoned attempt at a solution of the
+difficulty. We respect freedom of association by leaving it at liberty
+to insist that the proposed solution is unjust, while we protect the
+public interest in continuity of service by insisting that the right to
+strike shall not operate until the resources of conciliation have been
+exhausted.
+
+I reject, therefore, M. Duguit’s notion that public interest in
+continuity of service is a paramount consideration which should
+overrule all others; and I see no reason to apply his vituperative
+adjectives[37] to those who take a different view. It seems to me quite
+definitely a denial of liberty for which no justification can be found
+to say that men shall work on terms they think utterly unjust; and the
+argument that, if they do not like those terms, they can find other
+work, is, increasingly, without force in a community like our own.
+The number of those in any society who have a genuine choice, at any
+given time, of alternative occupations is notably small. An electrician
+cannot suddenly become a barrister, as the latter can suddenly become
+a journalist; and if it is a matter of hundreds, or even thousands of
+men, the compulsion upon them to continue in the vocation for which
+they have been trained is obvious. The community never gains, in the
+long run, from work performed by men who labour under a sense of
+injustice. That psychological feeling of frustration is poisonous to a
+harmonious personality. As such, it is incompatible with that search
+for freedom which I have urged is a condition of happiness. I cannot,
+therefore, agree that the community is entitled, on any terms, to put
+its convenience first, and the workers’ freedom afterwards.
+
+A final problem in this same realm remains. The trade union, it
+is said, must obviously concern itself with all that touches the
+industrial conditions of its members. But it is not entitled to a
+general licence to roam all over the field of public activity. We
+should resent it if a football club passed resolutions upon the foreign
+policy of a government; and it is in the same way illegitimate for
+a trade union to deal with matters outside its sphere. The state,
+therefore, is entitled to define that sphere and to limit the
+activities of trade unions to matters that come within it.
+
+But I have already sought to show that such a definition of spheres is,
+in fact, impossible of achievement. Take, for instance, foreign policy.
+You cannot say that trade unions ought not to concern themselves
+with foreign policy since this is intimately bound up with economic
+policy which, in turn, is the chief factor in the determination of the
+conditions of employment. You cannot exclude any part of the economic
+realm from the trade union sphere. I should agree that a trade union
+ought not to concern itself, let us say, with the question of whether
+the Pope was justified in making the Immaculate Conception a dogma of
+the Roman Church; but the likelihood of a trade union acting in this
+way is as small as that of a football club concerning itself with
+foreign policy. We cannot legislate for the exceptional instance. Law
+can only deal with normal habits susceptible of logical reduction to
+well-established categories. When it goes further, it merely reveals
+its own impotence. A trade union, moreover, is a living body; and
+no law has ever been successful in coping with the growth of living
+things by legal promulgations upon the fact of growth. Many matters are
+regarded today as normally and naturally within the sphere of the trade
+unions which a generation ago, even a decade ago, most men would have
+insisted were in nowise their concern. In the American garment trade,
+the union concerns itself, as a vital part of its function, with the
+efficiency of the employers for whom its members work. A generation
+ago, this would have been dismissed as “an insolent interference with
+the rights of management”; today it is obvious that upon no other
+terms can the function of the trade union be fulfilled. In 1914 the
+unions would never have deemed it their business to concern themselves
+with the bank rate and credit policy; today they realize that these
+matters lie at the heart of their problems. Any such Procrustes’ bed of
+definition as this principle suggests seems to me, therefore, a quite
+wanton and foolish interference with freedom.
+
+
+V
+
+Such a discussion of the relation of trade unionism to the state,
+illustrates, I think, the general problem of the approach to freedom
+of association in the political sphere. I have denied the right of
+the state to control the internal life of such bodies; and I have
+sought to show the limits of liberty where that life has ramifications
+outside their membership. It is, I think, a good general rule that the
+state should not interfere in this realm unless it must. Whenever, for
+example, it has interfered with the claims of churches to lead their
+own life, conflict has been the inevitable outcome. For in any meeting
+of church and state, the latter will assert its paramountcy; and a
+church has no alternative but to deny that assertion. For this reason
+I believe that any attempt at partnership between them is bound to
+result in injury to freedom somewhere. If, as in England, the Church
+is formally established by the state, its dependency becomes obvious
+as soon as it develops ideas of which the state does not approve; in
+matters like marriage and divorce and education, the church has had
+to surrender positions held for centuries to preserve the privileges
+of establishment. It now appears that where there is disagreement in
+an established church, the minority, on defeat, will not hesitate to
+go beyond the organs which formally record the voice of the church,
+in order to maintain doctrine or ritual which the church itself seeks
+to change; and a legislative assembly most members of which are
+either alien from the church, or without competence in its technical
+problems, will find themselves defining its most sacred principles.
+Such a church, quite obviously, is the mere creature of the state; it
+sacrifices its spiritual birthright for a material mess of pottage.
+Or, as in the concordat between Italy and the Papacy, there may be a
+looser alliance of which the result is to deprive all non-Catholics of
+their right to a secular state treating all religions equally, in the
+realm of marriage and education. I cannot avoid the conclusion that in
+this historic realm only the American principle of complete separation
+and non-interference can produce freedom. Unless state and church
+pursue an independent path, liberty is sacrificed; for either fusion or
+partnership will, in fact, involve a conflict for supremacy.
+
+The remaining question I wish to discuss in this context is the right
+of the state over associations the purpose of which is the overthrow
+of the existing social order. What powers here ought the state to
+possess? At what point can it interfere? Has it what may be termed a
+preventive capacity, a right to prevent the development of associations
+the natural tendency of which will be an attempt at such overthrow?
+Or should its jurisdiction be limited to punishment for overt acts?
+Obviously the quality of liberty depends very largely upon the powers
+we give the state in this realm. I take it as elementary that the
+state has a right to protect itself from attack. It must, as a state,
+assume that its life is worth preserving. It must demand that changes
+in its organization be the outcome of peaceful persuasion and not the
+consequence of violent assault. A state must, therefore, assume that
+its duty to maintain peace and security lies at the very root of its
+existence. The liberty which associations enjoy must therefore be set
+in the context that they cannot have a liberty to overthrow the state.
+To that extent, any denial of freedom to them is justified.
+
+But what are the limits within which that denial must work. The world
+today is littered with organizations that are denied a legal existence
+and suppressed at any opportunity. The existence of a Communist party
+is denied by Lithuanian law; the Peasants’ Party in Jugoslavia was
+formally dissolved; Russian principle seems to be the imprisonment
+or exile of members of any organization which can be suspected of
+counter-revolutionary tendencies. We must, I think, begin with the
+principle that a government is not entitled to suppress associations
+the beliefs of which alone are subversive of the established order.
+For, otherwise, persecution will be built, not on fact, but on
+suspicion that facts may one day emerge, not on overt acts, but on
+principles of faith which are in truth only dangerous when they are
+expressed in practice. A society might be formed, for instance, to
+discuss and propagate the principles of Tolstoyan anarchy; I do not
+think any government has legitimate ground for interference with it.
+The time for that interference comes only when, outside the specific
+categories of peaceful persuasion, men have moved to action which
+cannot logically be interpreted as other than a determination to
+overthrow the social order.
+
+I agree, for instance, that a society of Communists which began to
+teach its members military drill could legitimately be regarded as a
+direct threat to peace. So, also, when a political party, the Ulster
+Volunteers, for instance, or their opponents, the Nationalists, begin
+to purchase munitions of war, interference by government is justified.
+But I cannot see that a government is entitled to prevent a society
+of Communists from preaching their doctrines either by speech or by
+publication of the printed word. It is, I think, essential that, as
+with the English law of treason, the government should be compelled
+to prove the commission of some overt act which directly tends to
+imminent rebellion in a court of law, and to bring two witnesses
+at least to bear testimony to its commission. It ought not to be
+sufficient for a government to say that since a particular party has
+beliefs which include the right to violence and has elsewhere practised
+violence, that its suppression is legitimate. Recently, again, Mr
+Ghandi announced that if the British Government did not grant Dominion
+Home Rule to India by the end of 1929, he and his followers would
+practise civil disobedience such as a refusal to pay taxes. We do not
+think that announcement would have justified the British Government in
+imprisoning Mr Ghandi before the end of 1929 in order that he might be
+prevented from accomplishing his threat at a later time. Or, once more,
+Mr Arthur Ponsonby’s organization of men pledged to refuse military
+service in the event of Great Britain going again to war ought not to
+be suppressed because, if Great Britain did go to war, some hundred
+thousand individuals would refuse to obey any military service Act
+that would then be enacted.
+
+I am anxious, as you will see, to make it difficult for the government
+of a state to attack an organization the views of which it happens
+to dislike. In the light of the evidence, we can rest assured that,
+unless we compel proof, in an ordinary court of law, that overt acts
+have been committed, such attacks will be made. One has only to
+remember the Treason Trials of 1794, where there was not a scintilla
+of evidence against any one of the accused, or the follies enacted by
+governments during the Great War, to see that this is the case. In
+August of 1929, an Italian official actually drew public attention to
+the undue circulation, as he deemed, of books by Chekov, Turgenev and
+Tolstoy;[38] we can be sure that if a Society for the study of Russian
+literature had then existed in Italy, the attention of the government
+to its suppression would have been called. In the opening stages of
+the Communist trial in Meerut, the counsel for the prosecution drew
+attention not merely to the alleged offences of the accused, but
+also to the actions of the Russian Communist leaders from 1917-20,
+though it is difficult to see how either Indian or English Communists
+could have been held responsible for them. The logic, indeed, of
+habitual government suppression seems to be that abnormal opinion
+is always dangerous because, if it is acted upon, the supremacy of
+the law will be endangered. That is, of course, perfectly true. If
+the Communist Party in England sought to initiate a rebellion, there
+would be a threat to the supremacy of the law. But no one of common
+sense believes today in a Communist menace in England, least of all,
+perhaps, the Communists themselves. What can possibly be gained by an
+attempt to suppress that philosophy by an imprisonment of its members
+is quite beyond my understanding. I see no evidence to suggest that the
+slightest good has been accomplished in America by all the legislation
+against criminal syndicalism. Nor can I see that anything would have
+been gained by the kind of prohibitions which the Lusk Committee, of
+dubious memory, sought to put upon the statute-book.
+
+My point is that men are always entitled to form voluntary associations
+for the expression of grievance, and for the propagation of ideas
+which, as they think, will remedy what they believe to be wrong. They
+are not entitled to move to the commission of acts which bring them
+into conflict with the state. By acts I mean things like the planning
+of Mussolini’s march on Rome, or the training of civilians as soldiers
+by the Ulster Defence Council. Things like these the government may
+legitimately attack because they have a clear and direct relation to
+immediate violence, actual or prospective. But governments would do
+well to remember, what they are too prone to forget, that they do not
+remove grievance, however ill-conceived, by suppressing it. And if they
+are allowed to associate violent opinion with actual violence, there
+are few follies upon which they cannot be persuaded to embark. The
+persecution of opinion grows by what it feeds on. Every social order
+is ardently upheld by fanatics who are eager to make dissent from
+their view a crime. The last thing that is desirable is to give them an
+opportunity for the exercise of their fanaticism.
+
+It is, further, of great importance that all trials relating to these
+offences should be held in the ordinary courts under the ordinary forms
+of law. Experience makes it painfully clear that special tribunals are
+simply special methods for securing a conviction. For the mere creation
+of a special tribunal persuades the ordinary man that there is an _a
+priori_ case against the accused, that the burden of proof lies upon
+him rather than upon the government. Whatever we can do to safeguard
+these trials from the introduction of passion is an obligation we owe
+to liberty. However wrong or unwise we may think the actions of men so
+accused, we have to remember that they represent, as a general rule,
+the expression of a deep-felt resentment against social injustice. We
+have to protect ourselves from protest which seeks deliberately to
+dissolve the bonds of order. But it is our duty, too, to respect that
+protest when it is sincerely made. And we cannot, therefore, permit
+attack upon it because it represents ideas or experience alien from our
+own. _De nobis fabula narretur_ is a maxim which every citizen should
+recognize as the real lesson of political punishment.
+
+Implied in all this is a view of the place of voluntary associations
+in the community the significance of which I do not wish to minimize.
+I am, in fact, denying that they owe their existence to the state, or
+that the latter is entitled, by means of its agents, to prescribe the
+terms upon which they can live. The special place of the state in the
+great society does not, in my judgment, give it an unlimited right
+to effect that co-ordination which is its function on any terms it
+pleases. The principles of a legitimate co-ordination bind the state
+as much as they bind any other body of men. Each of us finds himself
+part of a vast organization in the midst of which we must seek the
+realization of desire. We cannot attain it alone. We have to find
+others with kindred desires who will join hands with us to proclaim the
+urgency of their realization. There is no other way to the attainment
+of that end; and an attitude, therefore, like that of Rousseau, who
+denied the legitimacy of any voluntary associations, fails altogether
+to take account of the elementary facts of social life. Such bodies,
+indeed, must run in the leading-strings of principle, but the question
+of what that principle must be is not one the state alone is entitled
+to make. For the latter is not justified in preventing the expression
+of desire; it is justified only in preventing the realization of desire
+by violent means. It must tolerate the expression of experience it
+hates because it is there, as a state, to satisfy even the experience
+it cannot understand. We must not, in fact, allow ourselves to fall
+into the error of believing that opinion which is antagonistic to the
+state-purpose is unworthy to survive. The state-purpose, like any
+other, is expressed through the agency of men. They may misinterpret
+it; they may, consciously or unconsciously, pervert it to their own
+ends. To leave them free to settle the limits of free association would
+be to leave them free to settle what criticism of their work they were
+prepared to permit. That is a power which could not safely be entrusted
+to any body of men who have ever operated as a government.
+
+For consider, once more, the historic record. The Roman suppression of
+Christianity was built upon the belief that unity of religious belief
+is the necessary condition of citizenship; later experience shows that
+view to be without any substance. What in fact emerges from the history
+of religious persecution is the lesson that the unity made by the
+suppression of Nonconformity is the unity of stagnation. That was the
+history of France under the repeal of the Edict of Nantes; it has been
+the history of Spain ever since the sixteenth century; it is, indeed,
+the history of any community, however rich and powerful, the rulers
+of which assume that they know what constitute truth and right, what
+opinions, therefore, they are entitled to prescribe. Any government
+which attacks a body organized to promote some set of opinions which
+may become dangerous to its safety may fairly be presumed to have
+something to conceal. It is co-ordinating social life not to the end of
+its greater fullness, but simply for the sake of co-ordination.
+
+But law, as I have insisted earlier, does not exist for the sake of
+law. It is not entitled to obedience because it is legal, because,
+that is, it proceeds from a source of reference formally competent to
+enact it. Law exists for what it does; and its rightness is made by the
+attitude adopted to it by those whose lives it proposes to shape. Since
+bodies like the Communist Party are in fact an announcement that some
+lives at least are shaped inadequately by the laws of a régime like
+our own, suppression seems to me an indefensible way of meeting that
+announcement. Force is never a reply to argument; and until argument
+itself seeks force as the expression of its principle, it is only by
+argument that it can justifiably be countered.
+
+
+VI
+
+I turn to a very different phase of the subject. In every society
+there are modes of conduct which, though not in themselves harmful,
+offer an easy prospect of becoming so. It is therefore assumed by
+many that it is the business of the state actively to discourage
+such conduct, even to the point, if necessary, of making its most
+innocuous expression illegal. No one is harmed, for instance, by a
+moderate indulgence in alcoholic liquor; but since drunkenness is
+harmful both to the individual and society, the state, it is said, is
+justified in prohibiting the manufacture or sale of alcoholic liquor.
+The same principle is urged of noxious drugs, of the use of tobacco,
+of gambling. Sometimes, indeed, the principle is carried to an extreme
+point and it is said that the state may prohibit any form of conduct,
+Sunday games, for example, which a majority of the society finds
+obnoxious. The claim to freedom, it is urged, may be denied in the
+interest of a social view of good.
+
+I do not find it easy to accept any single principle that is obvious
+and straightforward as applicable to the very complex problems we
+encounter in this realm. Neither the fact that a mode of conduct may
+be harmful in excess, nor the fact that, whether harmful or no, society
+dislikes it, seems to me in itself a just ground for its suppression by
+the law. The first case seems to me one for safeguards against excess;
+care, for instance, may be taken to see to it that it is manufactured
+at a limited strength, is sold only under careful restrictions, and
+so on. The second case I find it impossible to decide as a general
+principle, and apart from particular cases each of which is judged upon
+its own merits. I am prepared, for example, to make it illegal to keep
+a gaming-house; but I am not prepared to legislate against a social
+game of bridge played for money in a private house. Conduct must be
+punished or prohibited when it is harmful in itself or in the excess in
+which it touches society before we ought to seek access to the clumsy
+machinery of the law.
+
+For we cannot suppress all modes of conduct in which excess does harm.
+In most cases, we have to leave the individual free to judge at what
+point excess is a fact. Over-eating does great harm, but no one would
+propose legislation against over-eating. Many motorists sacrifice their
+lives to their motor-car, especially in America; but no one would
+propose legislation against an undue indulgence in motoring. False
+social standards result from our excessive adulation of film-stars and
+athletes; but we should obviously be merely foolish if we legislated
+against the publicity which makes for that excessive adulation. We
+have always, I think, to study any proposed social prohibition in
+terms of the object to which it is applied. We have to remember that
+it always runs the risk of undermining character by a limitation
+of responsibility. Men are made not by being safeguarded against
+temptation but by being able to triumph over it. It would be impossible
+to forbid the use of cheques because some people succumb to the habit
+of embezzlement. There is a clear case for forbidding the sale of
+noxious drugs like heroin or cocaine except under severe restrictions,
+because it is clear that in themselves their consumption is bound to
+harm the recipient. There is a clear case for insisting that persons,
+even if they be passionate Christian Scientists, who are suffering from
+an infectious disease like small-pox, shall be isolated until they are
+cured; for anyone who goes about with small-pox inflicts direct and
+measurable injury on other persons. But unless we can show that the
+particular mode of conduct it is proposed to repress must necessarily
+destroy the will-power of those who practise it, as is true of noxious
+drugs, or directly and unquestionably injures the rest of society in
+a measurable way, I think the method of prohibition an unwarranted
+interference with freedom.
+
+I take this view on three grounds. I believe, first, that it is
+socially most important to leave the individual as uninhibited as
+possible in forming his own way of life, granted, of course, that he
+is adult and mature. To shelter him at every point from experience
+which, if carried to excess, may harm him is not only impossible,
+but also dangerous. It makes him pass his life under the aegis of a
+system of fear-sanctions which, for the most part, he will be quite
+unable to sublimate, and the result will be that sense of continuous
+frustration which is fatal to freedom. I must, in general, learn my
+own limitations by experimentation with myself. I cannot pass my life
+adjusting my conduct to standards and habits which represent the
+experiments of other people. For the reasons which make the results of
+particular experiments seem to them convincing, I may in my own case
+regard as completely unsuccessful. To insist that their rule of life
+is to be mine is, normally, to destroy my personality. It is to compel
+me to live at the behest of others even where I can discover no ground
+for the behest. Most people would agree that a statute compelling an
+atheist to go to church was utterly foolish. His absence does not
+affect the salvation of any other person. His presence there does him
+no good because his mood is inevitably one of gnawing indignation at
+being compelled to participate in ceremonies that have no meaning for
+him. Either he will invent excuses which enable him to stay away, or
+he will adopt an aggressive disbelief which makes him a source of
+offence to the faithful. He loses, that is, the habit of truth, on
+the one hand, or the capacity to give and take which makes for decent
+citizenship, on the other. Both forms of behaviour do real injury to
+him; neither produces an attitude of conviction. From the angle of
+character, the only rules of conduct in this realm that work, are those
+that are self-imposed. And these, so far as I know, are the invariable
+outcome of experiment made by oneself with one’s own personality.
+
+My second reason is not less important. The power of law to define
+modes of social conduct depends very largely upon its ability to
+command a sentiment of general approval. What it seeks to do must
+broadly commend itself, on rational grounds, to those over whose lives
+its principles are to preside. Legislation which does not fulfil
+this condition is always unsuccessful, and always has the result of
+bringing the idea of law itself into contempt. For where a particular
+statute is regarded as foolish or obnoxious by a considerable body of
+persons, they will rejoice in breaking it. Illegal conduct becomes a
+matter even of pride. It becomes a principle of conduct which gives
+rise to special pleasure and peculiarly satisfies human vanity. No
+one in London, so far as I know, regards the average policeman as an
+unwarrantable attack on liberty; but it seems to be the case that
+thousands of people in New York regard the prohibition agent in that
+way. They wear a breach of the law as a badge of courage, like the
+revolutionary in Czarist Russia or the suffragette in pre-war England;
+and the imposition of penalties upon them arouses in them and their
+friends a sense of angry injustice. Now I think it is an elementary
+principle of penal psychology that you cannot make a crime of conduct
+which people do not _a priori_ regard as criminal. Popular sentiment
+approves a law against murder, and you can enforce that law. But
+popular sentiment, in England at least, would not, in my judgment,
+approve a law forbidding the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquor;
+and its chief result would be to direct the minds of thousands to the
+problem of ways and means of evading the law. That is a habit which
+grows upon those who indulge in it. It loosens all the principles of
+conduct which make for social peace by making us think of the rules
+under which we live as unjustifiable and oppressive. It forces social
+effort quite unduly and unwisely in one direction. It persuades it to
+think out mean and petty expedients for the enforcement of the law
+in the same way as its subjects think out mean and petty expedients
+for its evasion. The spectacle, for instance, of the Supreme Court
+deciding that the American government is entitled to tap telephone
+wires in order to obtain evidence of infraction of the Volstead Act is
+not an encouraging one.[39] That way lies corruption and blackmail,
+the kind of habits which, in England, we associate with names like
+that of Oliver the spy,[40] in Russia with that of agents-provocateurs
+like Azeff. Few things are more detrimental than this to the moral
+equilibrium of a social order.
+
+Nor must we forget two other effects of attempted enforcement, both of
+which are, I think, entirely evil. A government which is continually
+flouted in its attempt at administration is bound to attempt even
+greater severity. There will be an extension not only of the area
+of offence, but also of the methods of coping with offence, and the
+punishment to be inflicted where it occurs. The classic instance of
+this result is the government of Geneva from the period of Calvin’s
+dispensation. It does not result in the satisfactory enforcement of
+the law, but in its wider evasion. Severity on one side is met by
+brutality upon another; one might as well be hung for a sheep as
+a lamb. And the disproportion between crime and punishment which
+emerges draws the sympathy of the general population away from the
+government to the offender. This is, I suggest, wholly bad for any
+society. It makes the habits of government generally suspect to the
+multitude. It creates martyrs unduly and unwisely. And this has,
+of course, the consequence that it becomes ever more impossible to
+enforce the law. Its irrationalism is advertised to the multitude.
+It becomes inacceptable to an ever-increasing circle who, while they
+may sympathize with its principle, are not prepared to acquiesce in
+the price that has to be paid for its application. Not only, sooner or
+later, does such legislation perish, but the habits to which it gives
+rise persist, and are frequently carried over into realms where they
+are still more undesirable. And the severity which a government is
+tempted to practise makes it blind to wrong through becoming inured to
+its consequences. When the British Government first met the weapon of
+the hunger-strike it was baffled; later, it turned that weapon against
+those who employed it by what was called the Cat and Mouse Act. Much of
+this proceeding, where the suffragettes were concerned, had a comic, as
+well as a tragic side. But the whole procedure had the serious result
+of making the public expect that any hunger-strike would be a dramatic
+battle between the government and its prisoner, in which the cause of
+the imprisonment was lost sight of in the gamble of the procedure.
+The public, accordingly, was not greatly moved by the hunger-striking
+which took place during the Irish Revolution; and when Mr Lloyd George
+left the Lord Mayor of Cork to die, people were more interested in
+the circumstance of his death than in the vital question of whether
+he should have been allowed to die. In all this realm, the denial of
+liberty seems to result in the slow maximization of unhappiness.
+
+The second effect is also wholly bad. Whenever government interferes
+to suppress some service which a considerable body of persons think
+they require, when, also, the suppression is disapproved by a large
+number of citizens, an industry to supply that service will come into
+existence. Its ways will be devious, its charges will be high. It will
+attract to its ranks many of the most undesirable elements in society.
+It will form an army of lawbreakers whose habits are only too often
+condoned by a large section of public opinion. That has been the case
+with bootleggers in America and with night-clubs in London. And the
+risks being great, the profits are high, the interests, consequently,
+to be protected are correspondingly great. The history of these
+adventures in England and America is one of organized immorality and
+corruption. Condemnation by the law seems to have little or no effect
+in dispelling its influence. Men and women attain power through its
+means who normally would be shunned by most decent-minded persons. The
+degree to which the police are corrupted by these influences is very
+difficult to exaggerate. There is hardly a bribe too high for them to
+pay. They are organizing, too, an adventure which stimulates every
+sort of dubious instinct in perfectly ordinary people. Mr Babbitt
+approaches his bootlegger, you will remember, in something like a
+religious frame of mind. The night-club _habitué_ finds nothing quite
+so exciting as the prospect of a raid; and he leaves his meretricious
+surroundings with the sense that he knows the glory of danger and has
+escaped the humdrum pettiness of suburbia. I think it bad for society
+to make illegal conduct heroic. I think it still worse to make the
+central figures in the drama of illegality powerful in the lives of
+those to whom they purvey their service; men and women whose methods
+of obtaining a living it does not occur to their clients to condemn.
+Nor is it an answer to say that when the law does act, those clients
+immediately desert the arrested offender which is proof that they
+really disapprove. An enforcement which induces cowardice at the
+critical moment in those who are _participes criminis_ does not seem to
+me anything of which to be proud.
+
+My third reason is rather different in character. Every state contains
+fussy and pedantic moralists who seek to use its machinery to insist
+that these habits shall become the official standard of conduct in
+the population. They are interested in prohibition and uniformity for
+their own sake, and every success that they win only spurs them to
+greater efforts. If they stop the sale of alcohol, they become ardent
+for the limitation of the right to tobacco. They are anxious to control
+the publication of books, the production of plays, women’s dress, the
+laws governing sexual life, the use of leisure. They are terrified by
+what they call immorality, by which they mean behaviour of which they
+do not happen to approve. They are scandalized by the unconventional.
+They luxuriate in its denunciation. They form committees and leagues
+to prove the degeneracy of our times. They rush to the legislature
+to compel action every time they discover some exceptional incident
+of dubious conduct. To themselves, of course, they appear as little
+Calvins saving the modern Geneva from the insidious invasion of
+the Devil. No one, I suppose, can seriously doubt that men like Mr
+Comstock regard themselves as the saviours of society. They have an
+unlimited sense of a divinely appointed mission, and the whole of
+their life is set in its perspective. They are the men who find in
+_Candide_ the means of corrupting the mind of the community. They are
+horrified by the nude in art. They think the performance of _Mrs.
+Warren’s Profession_ the public profanation of the ideal. They regard
+Darwin as an “infidel” whose works were an outrage upon God; and the
+circumstances of Maxim Gorky’s married life seem to them to demand his
+public excoriation.
+
+I know nothing more incompatible with the climate of mental freedom
+than the inference of such people. They lack altogether a respect for
+the dignity of human personality. They are utterly unable to see that
+people who live differently think differently and that in so various
+a civilization as ours absolute standards in these matters are out
+of place. It is difficult to overestimate the price we pay for their
+successes. Certainly no great art and no literature great in anything
+save indignation can be produced where they have sway. It is not for
+nothing that from the time of Calvin not a single work of ultimate
+literary significance was produced by a resident of Geneva. It is
+easy to understand why the grim excesses of Puritanism produced the
+luxuriant license of the Restoration. These would be, if they could,
+modern Inquisitors, without tolerance and without pity, thinking no
+means unjustified if only their end can be attained. They are the kind
+of people who drove Byron and Shelley into exile, and they remain
+unable to see upon whom that exile reflects. Their pride is inordinate;
+and human instincts are its chief victim. They are often ignorant,
+usually dangerous, and invariably active. Since the friends of liberty
+too often sleep, their unceasing vigilance not seldom meets with its
+reward. To me, at least, they commit the ultimate blasphemy since they
+seek to fashion man in their own image.
+
+I do sincerely plead that, especially in a democratic society, these
+are grave dangers to freedom, against which we cannot too stringently
+be upon our guard. Especially, I say, in a democratic society. For
+there, the proportion of men zealous in the service of freedom, is
+likely to be small unless great and dramatic issues are at stake.
+Tyranny flows easily from the accumulation of petty restrictions. It
+is important that each should have to prove its undeniable social
+necessity before it is admitted within the fabric of the law. No
+conduct should be inhibited unless it can be definitely shown that its
+practice in a reasonable way can have no other result than to stunt
+the development of personality. No opportunity should be offered for
+the exercise of power unless by its application men are released from
+trammels of which it is the necessary price of purchase. We ought
+not to accept the easy gospel that liberty must prove that it is not
+license. We ought rather to be critical of every proposal that asks
+for a surrender of liberty. Its enemies, we must remember, never admit
+that they are concerned to attack it; they always base their defence of
+their purpose upon other grounds. But I could not, for myself, serve
+principles which claimed to be just if their result was to make the
+temple of freedom a prison for the impulses of men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+LIBERTY AND SOCIAL POWER
+
+
+I
+
+In these pages, I have taken the view that liberty means that there is
+no restraint upon those conditions which, in modern civilization, are
+the necessary guarantees of individual happiness. There is no liberty
+without freedom of speech. There is no liberty if special privilege
+restricts the franchise to a portion of the community. There is no
+liberty if a dominant opinion can control the social habits of the
+rest without persuading the latter that there are reasonable grounds
+for the control. For, as I have argued, since each man’s experience
+is ultimately unique, he alone can fully appreciate its significance
+himself; he can never be free save as he is able to act upon his own
+private sense of that interpretation. Unfreedom means to him a denial
+of his experience, a refusal on the part of organized society to
+satisfy what he cannot help taking to be the lesson of his life.
+
+But no man, of course, stands alone. He lives with others and in
+others. His liberty, therefore, is never absolute, since the conflict
+of experience means the imposition of certain ways of behaviour upon
+all of us lest conflict destroy peace. That imposition, broadly
+speaking, is essential to liberty since it makes for peace; and peace
+is the condition of continuity of liberty. The prohibitions, therefore,
+that are imposed are an attempt to extract from the experience of
+society certain principles of action by which, in their own interest,
+men ought to be bound. We cannot, indeed, say that all the principles
+a given government imposes are those it ought to impose. We can only
+say that some principles, by being imposed, are bound up with the very
+heart of freedom.
+
+That is the paradox of self-government. Certain restraints upon freedom
+add to a man’s happiness. Partly, they save him from the difficulty of
+going back to first principles for every step he has to take; they
+summarize for him the past experience of the community. Partly, also,
+they prevent every opposition of desire from resulting in conflict;
+they thus assure him of security. In a sense, he is like a traveller
+who reaches a sign-post pointing in many directions. Law helps him
+by telling him where one, at least, will lead; and it invites him to
+assume that its direction is also, or should be, his destination.
+Clearly this will not always be the case. For it to be so, the end of
+the law must be his as well, its experience must not contradict his
+own. For that contradiction, as a rule, means punishment for him since,
+at the end of the road he takes, if it is not the path of the law, he
+will find a policeman waiting for him. We must, that is to say, find
+ways of maximizing our agreement with the law.
+
+I sought earlier to show that this maximization can only take place
+when the substance of law is continuously woven from the fabric of
+a wide consent. Here I propose to inquire into certain essential
+conditions which determine whether that consent can be obtained.
+I propose to inquire, in other words, into that weird complex of
+prejudice, judgment, interest, which we call public opinion and to seek
+the terms of its adequate relationship to liberty. For if my argument
+be valid that a man’s citizenship is the contribution of his instructed
+judgment to the public good, and that right action, for him, is action
+upon the basis of that judgment, clearly, the factor of instruction
+is of decisive importance. Instructed judgment is considered and not
+impulsive, ultimate and not immediate. It is a conclusion arrived at
+after an attempt to penetrate behind the superficial appearance to
+what is truth-seeming. It is a decision made after evidence has been
+collected and weighed, distortion allowed for, prejudice discounted.
+If, for instance, I am to oppose the State in a matter like military
+service, I ought not to do so until I have rigorously examined the
+facts upon which I build my principles. And, _mutatis mutandis_, that
+is true of every aspect of social activity. The first urgency is
+assurance that the facts upon which I base my action are valid.
+
+Now the world of facts which impinge upon each of us is difficult
+and complex and enormous. None of us can know all of that world. A
+large part of it, it may be in some context a fundamental part, we
+have to take on trust from other persons. Obviously, it is of primary
+importance that the things we take on trust should correspond with the
+reality on which alone a right judgment can be made. My view of the
+proper peace-terms that should be made with Germany will be one thing
+if I believe that Germans, when at leisure, crucify innocent Belgian
+citizens, rape their women, and cut off the breasts of their young
+girls; and quite another thing if I believe that the Germans are rather
+like other people, decent, kindly, respectable, wanting much the same
+things in life as I do myself. My attitude to the nationalization of
+the mines will obviously profoundly depend upon, first, the facts in
+the mining industry itself, and, second, the facts about the operation
+of nationalization in other fields. I cannot, in the vast majority of
+the problems I have to decide, make my own inquiries into the facts.
+Somewhere, sometime, I have to halt and say, “This man’s report, or
+this paper’s account, is a thing I can trust.”
+
+It is because opinion is so vitally dependent upon the truthfulness of
+facts that observers have come more and more to insist on the connexion
+between liberty and the news.[41] For a judging public is unfree if
+it has to judge not between competing theories of what an agreed set
+of facts mean, but between competing distortions of what is, at the
+outset, unedifying and invented mythology. Things like the incident
+of the _Maine_, the Pekin Massacre which never occurred, the Zenoviev
+letter, make an enormous difference to what Mr Lippmann has happily
+termed my “stereotype” of the environment about which I have to make up
+my mind. I bring already to its interpretation a mass of preconceptions
+which tend to distort it. If there is prepared for me “evidence”
+which has been distilled through the filter of a special interest
+the distortion may become so complete as to make a rational judgment
+impossible. The English journalist who invented the word “dole” has
+built into the minds of innumerable people of the comfortable classes
+a picture of the unemployed in England as a mass of work-shy persons,
+comfortably lazy and anxious at all costs to live parasitically upon
+the taxpayer; the proven fact that less than a fraction of one per cent
+really avoids the effort to work is unable to penetrate the miasma of
+that stereotype. The newspapers which belong to the Power Trust in
+America, the subsidized press in Paris, the journals which must satisfy
+Mussolini or suffer suppression, the government newspapers of Communist
+Russia, these are all efforts to dictate an environment to the citizen
+in order that the stereotype he forms may serve some interest their
+owners, or controllers, are anxious to promote. Men may actually go out
+to die for purposes in which they profoundly believe, though the cause
+which, as they judge, embodies those purposes has not, in fact, the
+remotest connexion with it.
+
+We have, in short, the difficulty that the control of news by special
+interests may make prisoners of men who believe themselves to be free.
+The Englishman who has to form an opinion about a miners’ strike is
+not likely to be “free” in any sense to which meaning can be attached
+if the facts which he encounters have been specially doctored in order
+to make it as certain as possible that he conclude in favour of the
+mine owners. A Chinaman who hears that the “Liberal” party in Rumania
+has won a victory at the polls, an American who is informed that
+London is governed by Municipal “Reformers”, approaches the discovery
+of the facts with a body of preconceptions, derived from quite alien
+experience, which will make a true judgment of those facts a very
+complex matter. In the Conference of The Hague upon reparations in
+August 1929, the Italian newspapers continued to paint Mr Snowden as
+the Shylock withholding from Italy its due share, while the English
+Press was equally unanimous in painting him as the protagonist against
+a continental effort to make Great Britain the milch-cow of Europe.
+The Italian, or the Englishman, who wished to obtain a just view of
+the issues really at stake there, would have had to engage in arduous
+researches into technical material about which he might lack competence
+and for which he would certainly not easily find leisure.
+
+Let us remember, too, that our stereotype of the contemporary
+environment is only the last phase, so to speak, of the problem. The
+psychologists are unanimous in telling us how important for our future
+are the impressions we gather in our early years. Clearly, from that
+angle, the things we are taught, the mental habits of those who teach
+us, are of quite primary urgency. It may make all the difference to the
+intellectual climate of a people whether, for instance, the history
+learned by children in schools is wide and generous, or parochial and
+narrow, whether its teachers cultivate the sceptical mind, or the
+positive mind. People who are imprisoned in dogmas in childhood will
+have an agonizing struggle to escape from its stereotypes, and they
+may well have been so taught that they either, after effort, succumb,
+or do not even know that it is necessary to struggle at all. I do not
+know how to emphasize sufficiently the quite inescapable importance to
+freedom of the content of the educational process.
+
+Teach a child year in and year out that the American Constitution is
+the ultimate embodiment of political wisdom and you increase tenfold
+the difficulty of rational and necessary amendment by the generation
+to which that child belongs. Set him under teachers like those of whom
+Professor Harper tells us that seventy-seven per cent “contended that
+one should never allow his own experience and reason to lead him in
+ways that he knows are contrary to the teaching of the Bible”, and
+fifty-one per cent that “our laws should forbid much of the radical
+criticism that we often hear and read concerning the injustice of our
+country and government”, and the openness of mind upon which reason
+depends for its victories will be well-nigh unattainable.[42] Those
+only who realize the importance of education will understand how a
+Southern audience could go wild with anger over an account, in large
+outline untrue, of German atrocities, and yet listen with indifference
+to the description of a lynching in their own community so revolting in
+its detail as to be unfit almost for transcription. And we must add to
+the school influence in childhood, that of the home, the church, the
+streets, in the terrible certainty that there are few impressions which
+do not leave their trace.
+
+It is necessary, if I may so phrase it, to urge men to live
+dangerously. To the degree that their happiness depends upon making
+their decisions conform to the facts, they cannot avoid danger. It is
+dangerous to leave a child in the hands of teachers who believe that
+all experience and reason must be abandoned which does not square with
+that recorded in the partly mythical annals of a primitive Semitic
+tribe several thousand years ago, or who equate patriotism with
+a fervid acceptance of the present political system. The adult is
+endangering his happiness if he believes that truth is what Karl Marx
+said, or Mussolini tells him, or the inferences of Mr Baldwin which the
+latter has in turn drawn from material prepared for him by the Research
+Department of the Conservative Central Office. Happiness depends upon
+being able to approach with an open mind facts which have been prepared
+by independent persons who have no interest in seeing that their
+incidence is bent in some particular way. Anything else imprisons the
+mind in dogmas which only work so long as that mind does not travel
+beyond the narrow confines within which the dogmas work. Once it goes
+beyond, unhappiness is the inevitable outcome.
+
+How are we to get independent fact-finding and the open mind? The
+answer, of course, is the tragic one that there is no high-road to it.
+Partly, it lies in the development of particular techniques, but, most
+largely, it lies in the kind of educational methods we use, and this,
+in its turn, in the purposes for which those methods are employed.
+I entirely agree that a multiplication of independent fact-finding
+agencies, as disinterested and impartial about wages and other social
+conditions as a medical man in the making of a diagnosis, will take
+us some distance.[43] Not, I think, very far; for between the finding
+of facts by independent agencies and the driving of them home to the
+public are interpolated just those factors of special interest which
+are the enemies we confront. I agree, too, that freedom is partly
+better served than when a great public organ falls into the hands of
+one who, like C. P. Scott with his _Manchester Guardian_, determines
+to make news and truth coincide. But men like Mr Scott are rare
+enough to make reliance upon their emergence a very dubious ground of
+hope. Nor need we deny that the growth of a professional spirit among
+journalists, their organization into a profession with standards of
+entrance and performance, will add greatly to the chances of solving
+the problem. So, also, will the development of specialized journals
+of opinion, and new inventions like the wireless. To some extent--not,
+I think, a great extent--competitive fact-finding makes for truth.
+Outrageous propaganda kills itself; men do not believe the “papers”
+because they have found them lying at some point where the facts forced
+themselves upon attention.
+
+And so, too, with a training for the open mind in schools. People may
+come to see that where the quality of intelligence is concerned, the
+second-rate, the dull, the incurious, the routineer, simply will not
+do. They may be prepared to make education a profession sufficiently
+well paid to attract the highest ability, and sufficiently honourable
+to satisfy the keenest ambition. Even now we cannot over estimate
+the influence exerted in his generation by a great teacher. Do what
+we will, let him teach what he please, the minds with which he is in
+contact will go along with his mind, they will learn his enthusiasms,
+share his zest in inquiry. It may be Huxley in London, William James
+in Harvard, Alain in Paris. Students who have lived with such men
+are their spiritual children not less than those who have learned the
+habits of a gentleman at Eton or a proper respect for the Emperor of
+Japan in Tokio. And, equally, we may learn that a narrow patriotism
+in history and politics has social results less admirable than a
+quick scepticism built from the sense that our country has not always
+been right, our institutional standards not invariably perfect. Our
+governors may be willing to admit that one inference from the rebellion
+of Washington is the possible legitimacy of rebellion, one inference
+even from the new theology of Jesus, that we are sometimes justified in
+the making of new theologies. It is even possible that the value of the
+power to think may become so much more widely recognized, that we shall
+not ask that those who are able creatively to teach this supreme art,
+be dismissed because we dislike either what they teach or the opinions
+they profess outside the practice of their profession. We may come to
+insist upon security of tenure for the teacher even when his principles
+of faith do not coincide with those for which we desire the triumph.
+
+Yet these possibilities do not, in themselves, seem to me to confer a
+right to optimism if they stand alone. If it pays to spread false news,
+let us be sure that false news will be spread. If some special interest
+gains by corrupting the facts, so far as it can, the facts will be
+corrupted. If a poor educational system strengthens the existing
+foundations of power, it will tend to remain poor; if its extension is
+costly, those who are to bear the cost will find good reason either not
+to extend it, or to proceed at such a snail’s pace that the new way
+has no chance of affecting mankind except in terms of geological time.
+Our difficulty is the twofold one that propaganda can produce immense
+results in a brief space of time and that creative educational change
+takes something like a generation before its results are manifest upon
+a wide scale. The forces at work to prevent the emergence of truth, the
+forces, also, which have every reason to dislike the development of the
+mind which seeks for truth, are many and concentrated and powerful.
+They do not want the general reporting of experience, but only of that
+experience which favours themselves. They do not want the general
+population so trained as to prize truth, but only so trained that they
+believe whatever they read. In our own day it would not be an unfair
+description of education to define it as the art which teaches men to
+be deceived by the printed word. Those who profit by that deception
+are, at the moment, the masters of society.
+
+For we must remember that in these matters we have to concern ourselves
+with short-term values and not long-term values. We do not legislate
+for some conceivable Utopia to be born in some unimaginable time, but
+for the kind of world we know ourselves, for lives like our own lives.
+The freedom we ask we have to make. Every postponement we accept, every
+failure before which we are dumb, only consolidates the forces that
+are hostile to freedom. They themselves realize this well enough. They
+have, in the past, fought every step on every road to freedom because
+they have seen that the accumulation of small concessions will, in
+the end, be their defeat. Everywhere they have been guilty of definite
+error, or wrong, they have denied the error or wrong, lest it upset
+faith in their own right to power. Not the least powerful to silence,
+you will recollect, which persuaded even those who thought Sacco and
+Vanzetti innocent was their fear that proof of that innocence might
+disturb popular faith in the Massachusetts Courts. The same was true
+in the Dreyfus case. The same, on a lesser plane, was true of Mr
+Winston Churchill when he sought to deceive the House of Commons over
+the treatment of Lady Constance Lytton in prison.[44] Those in power
+will always deny freedom if, thereby, they can conceal wrong. And any
+successful denial only makes its repetition easier. Had California
+released Mooney in 1916, when the world knew he was innocent, it would
+have been easier for Massachusetts to have acted justly ten years
+later. The will to freedom, like the will to power, is a habit, and it
+perishes of atrophy.
+
+The inference I would draw is the quite basic one that in any society
+men only have an equal interest in freedom when they have an equal
+interest in its results. Where those results are already possessed by
+some, they seldom have the imagination to see the consequence of their
+denial to others. They will persuade themselves that those others are
+contented with their lot, or made differently in nature, so that they
+are unfit to enjoy what others possess. There is no myth we are not
+capable of inventing to lull our conscience. We see the futility of
+action on our part, because we are so unimportant. We see that it would
+be dangerous in this particular case, because we have an influence
+that, in other cases, might be exerted to useful purpose. We do not
+think the time has come for action. We think that action here might
+lead to other and quite unjustifiable demands. We would have associated
+ourselves with the demand, but those who are making it, or the way in
+which it is being made, unfortunately renders this impossible. Life is
+so complex and tangled and full, that those who desire to abstain from
+the battle for freedom can always find ample excuse. The workman may be
+afraid for his job; Babbitt may shrink from being shunned by the group
+whose fellowship is his life; it may be the handful of silver, the
+riband for the coat, the love of power, the loathing of what freedom
+may bring. Whatever the motive of abstention, let us remember that men
+think differently who live differently, and that, as they think, so
+they build principles of action to remedy what, in their lives, they
+find bitter or unjust, to preserve what they find pleasant or right.
+
+We cannot, of course, remedy all experience which makes for a sense
+of bitterness or injustice. Things like the betrayal of friendship
+are, only too often, beyond the power of organization to affect. But
+the sense of bitterness or injustice that comes from bad housing, low
+wages, or the denial of an adequate political status, these we are able
+to remedy by social action. Or, rather, we are free to move to their
+remedy, if we have an equal interest in doing so. If our interest is
+unequal, our sense of a need to share with others in action will be
+small. Other things will seem more significant or more urgent; and
+the need itself will shrink as it obtrudes. The less we live in the
+experience of our neighbours, the less shall we feel wrong in the
+denial of their wants. Trade unionists appreciate a demand for higher
+wages more keenly than employers: the wealthy rentier reads of a strike
+in the cotton trade as a newspaper incident, of a railway dispute,
+whatever its grounds, as a threat to the community. The sense of
+solidarity comes only when the result of joint action impinges equally
+on the common life.
+
+We are in the difficulty that every step we take towards freedom is a
+step towards the equalization of privileges now held unequally. Those
+who hold them are not anxious to abandon what they entail; sometimes
+they can even persuade themselves that the well-being of society
+depends upon a refusal to surrender them. For them, therefore, the
+honest publication of facts, the making of free minds, are simply
+paths to disaster. Why should they surrender their weapons of defence?
+Why, the more, when many of them do not even suspect that they fight
+with poisoned weapons? To explain to a loyal Roman Catholic that he
+should tell his children that there is grave reason to deny the truth
+of all he believes is to invite him to shatter the foundation upon
+which he has built his life. To suggest to the average citizen who
+took part in the Great War that his school-books should abandon the
+legend that his particular state entered it with the whole-souled
+motive of serving justice would appear scandalous simply because he
+is honestly unconscious of any other motive. To urge even upon the
+public-spirited heir to a great estate the possible duty of acting upon
+the principle of Mill’s argument about the laws of inheritance is, at
+the best, an adventure in the lesser hope. There was good reason for
+the unpopularity of the Socratic temper in Athens.
+
+
+II
+
+I conclude, therefore, that whatever our mechanisms and institutions,
+liberty can hope to emerge and to be maintained in a society where
+men are, broadly speaking, equally interested in its emergency and
+its maintenance. I accept the insight Harrington had when he insisted
+that the distribution of economic power in a state will control the
+distribution of its political power. I think James Madison was right
+when he argued that property is the only durable source of faction. I
+think the perception of the early socialists entirely justified when
+they urged that a society divided into a small number of rich, and
+a large number of poor persons, will be a society of exploiters and
+exploited. I cannot believe that, in such an atmosphere, liberty will
+be a matter of serious concern to the possessors of power.
+
+What will concern them is how they can best maintain their power. They
+will permit anything save the laying of hands upon the ark of their
+covenant. They will allow freedom in inessentials; but when the pith of
+freedom is attack upon their monopoly they will define it as sedition
+or blasphemy. For if the form of social organization is a pyramid,
+men are bound to struggle towards its apex. In a society of economic
+unequals, gross unequalities make conflict inherent in its foundations.
+The possession of wealth means the possession of so much that makes for
+a happy life, beautiful physical surroundings, leisure to read and to
+think, safeguards against the insecurity of the morrow. It is, I think,
+inevitable that those to whom these things are denied should envy those
+who possess them. It is inevitable, also, that envy should be the nurse
+of hate and faction. Those who are so denied struggle to attain, those
+who possess struggle to preserve. Justice becomes the rule of the
+stronger, liberty the law which the stronger allow. The freedom that
+the poor desire in a society such as this is the freedom to enjoy the
+things their rulers enjoy. The penumbra of freedom, its purpose and
+its life, is the movement for equality.
+
+And it is equality that is decried by those who rule. It means
+parting with the exercise of power and all the pleasures that go with
+its exercise. It means that their wants do not define the ends of
+production, their standards do not set the objects of consideration,
+their right to determine the equilibrium of social forces is no longer
+recognized. Equality, in fact, is a denial of the philosophy of life
+which is bred into their bones by their way of living. It does not
+seem to me remarkable that they should fight against this denial.
+Who of us, on these terms, but would find it difficult to accept as
+valid experience which contradicts our experiences, a system of values
+which attempts the transvaluation of our own? Who of us but would not
+feel that a freedom which seeks radical alteration of the contours of
+existence is perverse and dangerous and worthy only to be suppressed?
+The Pagan felt that of the Christian, the Catholic of the Protestant,
+the landowner of the merchant. The new power which seeks its place in
+the sun is inevitably suspected by the old with whom it claims equal
+rights.
+
+The equality will be denied, and, with it, the freedom to claim
+equality. Inevitably, also, the right to freedom will be maintained,
+and the two powers will, sooner or later, mass their forces for battle.
+I know no instance in history in which men in possession of power
+have voluntarily abdicated its privileges. They say that reason and
+justice prevail; but they mean their reason and their justice. They are
+prepared to coerce in the hope of success, and they are prepared to die
+fighting rather than to surrender. It is the result of such a way of
+life that the ideal of freedom is inapplicable to matters upon which
+there is urgent difference of opinion between the rulers and their
+subjects. It is impossible for reason to prevail if men are prepared to
+fight about the consequences of its victory. And if they are prepared
+to fight there is no room in the society for freedom since this is
+incompatible with habits of violence.
+
+Any society, in fact, the fruits of whose economic operations are
+unequally distributed will be compelled to deny freedom as the law
+of its being; and the same will be true of any society in process
+of forcible transition from one way of life to another. Cromwellian
+England, Revolutionary France, Communist Russia, Fascist Italy, each
+of these, of set purpose, made an end of the pretence that freedom was
+a justifiable object of desire. In each, it was proposed to maintain
+some particular form of social organization at any cost; to inquire
+into the cost might result in doubt of the value of the effort; and
+the value of that freedom which releases reason was therefore denied.
+A revolutionary state, of course, makes the position peculiarly clear.
+But it is not merely true of the revolutionary state.
+
+In England, or France, or Germany, there is no freedom where the
+fundamentals of the society are called into question, if their rulers
+think that this may cause danger to those questions. The government
+may decide that William Godwin is innocuous; but it will not hesitate
+to convict Tom Paine--in truth far less drastic--of high treason. The
+cause of this attitude is, I think, beyond discussion. If freedom seeks
+to alter fundamentals, freedom must go; and freedom can hardly help
+but concentrate on fundamentals in a society distinguished by economic
+inequality. I do not need to point out to you the extraordinary
+timidity of society before subversive discussion of property-rights,
+nor to insist upon the complicated legal precautions that are taken
+for its defence. You have only to examine the attitude in which Labour
+combinations are approached by those who possess economic power, as
+instanced, for example, by the use of the injunction by American
+judges,[45] to realize that the main purpose of limitations on freedom
+is to prevent undue encroachments upon the existing inequalities.
+We announce that we are open to conviction in matters of social
+arrangement. But we take the most careful steps to see that our
+convictions are not likely to be overthrown.
+
+For the chance that reason will prevail in an unequal society is
+necessarily small. It is always at a disadvantage compared with
+interest, for, to the latter, especially in property matters, passion
+is harnessed, and in the presence of passion people become blind to
+truth. They see what they want to see, and they select as truth that
+which serves the purpose they desire to see prevail. The preparation
+of news for the making of opinion is, indeed, extraordinarily like the
+old religious controversy in which men hurled text and counter-text
+at one another. The real problem was one of proportions; but the
+protagonists altered the proportions that the material might the better
+serve their cause. Some years ago, a Labour Delegation returned from
+Russia with a statement about its character from Peter Kropotkin. A
+leading capitalist newspaper in London printed all those parts of it
+which attacked the Russian régime; and the leading Labour newspaper
+printed those parts of it favourable to the Bolshevik experiment. The
+readers of the first were, therefore, satisfied with the knowledge
+that an eminent anarchist heartily disliked Bolshevism; and the
+readers of the second were heartened by discovering that so eminent a
+friend of freedom was nevertheless prepared to support a Dictatorship
+as favourable to freedom. You will remember that Luther and Calvin were
+always prepared to abide by the plain words of Scripture; but each was
+careful, at critical points, to insist that his own interpretation
+alone possessed validity. In that atmosphere, a solution which strikes
+opposing controversialists as just is not, at least easily, to be found.
+
+This, I suggest, is the kind of environment any plea for freedom
+must meet in the modern state. Discussion of inessentials can be
+ample and luxurious; discussion of essentials will always, where it
+touches the heart of existing social arrangements, meet at least with
+difficulty and probably with attack. It will find it extraordinarily
+hard to organize supporters for its view, if this opposes the will of
+those in authority. In wartime, any plea for reasonableness is at a
+discount; and it was at a discount in England during the general
+strike when the government sought at once for the conditions of a
+belligerent atmosphere. Attack an interest, in a word, and you arouse
+passion; arouse passion, especially where property is concerned, and
+the technique of _raison d’état_ will sooner or later be invoked. But
+liberty and _raison d’état_ are mutually incompatible for the simple
+reason that _raison d’état_ is a principle which seeks, _a priori_, to
+exclude rational discussion from the field. It seeks neither truth nor
+justice, but surrender.
+
+It is a technique, I think, which almost always comes into play when
+dangerous opinion is challenged by the state. A good instance of this
+is afforded by the trial of the British Communists in 1925. No one
+could seriously claim that their effort constituted a serious menace
+to the state, for they were a handful among millions, and there was
+not even evidence that their propaganda met with any success. Yet
+their condemnation was a foregone conclusion, granted the terms of the
+indictment. And the habits of power were interestingly illustrated by
+the judge who presided over the trial. He had conducted the case with
+quite scrupulous fairness, and had shown no leaning to one side or the
+other until the jury had rendered its verdict. He then made an offer
+to the defendants that if they would abandon their belief in Communism
+he would adjust the sentence in the light of that abandonment. He made
+the offer, I do not doubt, in the utmost good faith and an entirely
+sincere conviction that Communist opinions are morally wicked. But
+that attitude was precisely similar to the Roman offer to the early
+Christians: they could avoid the arena if they would offer but a
+pinch of incense on the pagan altar. It was precisely similar to the
+willingness of the Inquisitor to mitigate his sentence where there
+is confession of heresy and repentance. Mr Justice Swift seemed to
+have no realization at all that the defendants were Communists in the
+light of an experience of social life which, for them, was as vivid
+and compelling as the Christian revelation to its early adherents;
+that the offer he made to them was mitigation of punishment in return
+for the sacrifice of their sincerity; that the state, for him, was
+Hobbes’ “moral God” at whose altar they must do reverence. His views,
+of course, were the natural expression of his own experience of life,
+and, without doubt, sincerely held; but they implied an inability
+imaginatively to understand alien experience which is pathetic in the
+limitation it involves. And perhaps the supreme irony in the situation
+was the fact that to be tried as Communists was, for the defendants,
+perhaps the supreme test of truth to which their faith could be
+submitted.
+
+When Plato, in the _Laws_, set out a revised version of his ideal
+policy for application to the real world about him, he surrendered his
+demand for the complete communism which had distinguished his Utopia.
+But he was still emphatic enough about the need for equality to lay
+it down that no member of his state should possess property more than
+four times in amount of that owned by the poorest citizens. The ground
+of that drastic conclusion was quite clear in his mind. Great economic
+inequalities are, as he saw, incompatible with a unity of interest in
+the community. There is no common basis upon which citizens can move to
+the attainment of kindred ideals. The lives of the few are too remote
+from the lives of the many for disagreement about social questions to
+be possible in terms of peace, if the ultimate organization of the
+society is not to be changed. The remoteness means that the few will
+always fear the invasion of their privilege, and the many will envy
+them its possession. It is not only, as I have said, that men think
+differently who live differently; it is, essentially, that men think
+antagonistically who live so differently. That antagonism is bound to
+result in violence unless the domination of the many by the few is
+almost complete, or is tempered by so continuous a flow of concession
+as results, in the end, in the effective mitigation of the inequality.
+There cannot, in a word, be democratic government without equality; and
+without democratic government there cannot be freedom.
+
+For the real meaning of democratic government is the equal weighing
+of individual claims to happiness by social institutions. A society
+built upon economic inequality cannot attempt that sort of measure.
+Consciously or unconsciously, it starts from the assumption that there
+is a greater right in some claims than in others. It cannot be said
+that response to claims is made in terms of justice. The nature of
+economic inequality is a compulsion to respond to effective demand,
+and this pays no regard to science on the one hand, or to need upon
+the other. It thinks only of the presence of purchasing power and not
+of its connotation in terms of social purpose. The whole productive
+scheme is thereby tilted to the favour of those who possess the power
+to make their wants effective. There is cake for some before there is
+bread for all. The palace neighbours the slum. And those who find that
+their wants do not secure attention are, inevitably, tempted to an
+examination of the moral foundations of such a society. Their interest
+drives them to demand its reconstruction in terms of those wants.
+Liberty means, in such a context, the power continuously to exercise
+initiative in social reconstruction. The whole ethos which surrounds
+their effort is that of equality. They search for freedom for no other
+end but this.
+
+I do not need to remind you that most observers who have sought
+to estimate the significance of the democratic movement have seen
+that equality is the key to its understanding. That was the case
+with Tocqueville; it was the case with John Stuart Mill; and, in a
+famous lecture which reads now as though it was the utterance of a
+prophet,[46] it was the case, also, with Matthew Arnold. Broadly, their
+insight converged towards a recognition of three important things. They
+realized, first, that in any society where power is gravely unequal,
+the character and intelligence of those at the base is unnaturally
+depressed. The community loses by this in two ways. The energy and
+capacity of which it might make use are not released for action; and
+the concentration of effective power in a few hands means that the
+wishes, opinions, needs, of the majority do not receive sufficient
+consideration. An aristocracy, whether of birth, or creed, or wealth,
+always suffers from self-sufficiency. It is inaccessible to ideals
+which originate from without itself. It tends to think them unimportant
+if they are urged tactfully, and dangerous if they are urged with
+vigour. It is so accustomed to the idea of its own superiority, that it
+is resentful of considerations which inquire into the validity of that
+assumption. It may be generous, charitable, kind; but the surrounding
+principle of those qualities is always their exercise as of grace and
+not in justice. An aristocracy, in a word, is the prisoner of its own
+power, and that the most completely when men begin to question its
+authority. It does not know how to act wisely at the very moment when
+it most requires wise action.
+
+It is not only that any aristocracy becomes unduly absorbed in the
+consideration of its own interests. Its depression of the people
+has the dangerous effect of persuading the latter of its necessary
+inferiority. It is unable to carry on its own affairs with order
+and intelligence. It does not know how to represent its wants with
+decision. It develops a sense of indignation because its interests
+are neglected; but it does not know how to attach its indignation to
+the right objects or, when so attached, how to remedy the ills from
+which it suffers. An aristocracy, in a word, deprives its subjects of
+character and responsibility; and as the revolutions of 1848 so clearly
+demonstrated, while they can destroy, they have never been taught
+how to create. The success of the Puritan Rebellion and the American
+Revolution was built upon the fact that, in each case, the exercise
+of power had been a habit of the general population; in the one case
+in the management of Nonconformist Churches, in the other in the
+governance of local legislatures and township meetings. In each case, a
+blind government confronted men who knew how to formulate their wants,
+and to organize their attainment. But, in general, aristocracies do
+not provide their subjects with this opportunity. Their own effort is
+substituted for popular effort, their own will for the popular will.
+The development of the total resources at their disposal is postponed
+to the preservation of their interest and convenience. They dwarf the
+masses that they may the better contemplate the stateliness of their
+own state. But that, in the end, always means that the vital power of
+the people is absent at the moment when it is most required.
+
+The third weakness of aristocracies is their inevitable impermanence.
+There is no method known of confining character and energy and ability
+to their own ranks. These, where they emerge in the people, will always
+seek the means of their satisfaction. From this angle, few things are
+so significant as the history of the British Labour Party. It rose
+to power largely because there was no room in the leadership of the
+historic parties for self-made men who had not sought success either as
+lawyers or as business men. The result was that the knowledge at the
+disposal of Liberals and Conservatives, the significant experience upon
+which they could draw for the making of their policy, was always more
+narrow than the area of the problems they had to meet. The lives of
+the typical Labour leaders of the second generation, Keir Hardie, Mr
+Ramsay MacDonald, Mr Arthur Henderson, invariably show a period where
+the regretful decision has to be taken against further co-operation
+with a party which cannot see the needs they see, which does not
+desire service to the ideals they seek to serve.[47] And men such as
+these make articulate in the minds of all who have a sense that their
+interests are neglected not only the fact of negligence, the demand,
+therefore, for satisfaction, but also the search for the principles
+whereby satisfaction can be attained. Their insight into an emphasis
+to which little attention has been paid grows by the volume of the
+experience they encounter into a movement; and those who have permitted
+the interest to be neglected find that the old battle-cries no longer
+attract its allegiance even when they are given new form.
+
+It is curious to note that not even the impact of defeat gives this
+lesson its proper perspective to the defeated. English Liberalism has
+suffered eclipse because, broadly speaking, it was unable to discover
+an industrial philosophy suitable to the wants of the new electorate.
+It served admirably the requirements of the manufacturer and the
+shopkeeper who were enfranchised in 1832. It gave them freedom of
+trade, liberty of contract and full religious toleration. But it never
+understood either the fact of trade unionism or the philosophy of
+trade unionism. Its attitude to citizenship was atomic in character.
+It saw the community as a government on the one side, and a mass of
+discrete individuals on the other. It assumed that each of these, given
+liberation from the special privilege of the _ancien régime_, had the
+full means of happiness at his disposal; it accepted, in a word, the
+principles of Benthamite radicalism as absolute. But its error was not
+to see that the community is not merely a mass of discrete individuals.
+Jones is not merely Jones, but also a miner, a railwayman, a cotton
+operative, an engineer. As one of these, he has interests to be jointly
+promoted and jointly realized. A philosophy of politics that is to
+work must find a full place in the state for organized workers to whom
+freedom in the industrial sphere is, in its fullest implications,
+as urgent and as imperative as freedom in the sphere of politics or
+religion.
+
+The Liberal Party did not see this until it was too late. Built largely
+on the support of the Nonconformist business man, the interests it
+understood were essentially his interests; and to recognize the
+implications of trade unionism, as Keir Hardie and his colleagues
+did, was to invade the interests upon which it was able to count for
+allegiance. It was forced, obviously unwillingly, into concessions
+like the Trades Disputes Act of 1906; but its policy, as the detailed
+history of the process of social legislation from 1906 to 1914
+makes clear was, so far as it could, to mitigate social inequality
+by recognition of individual claims, and to build machinery for
+their satisfaction which continued to neglect the fact of trade
+unionism. When, after the war, the remarkable growth of the Labour
+Party showed how vast was the decline of the Liberal hold upon the
+working-classes, the Liberal leaders were driven, by the need of
+self-preservation, to the invention of industrial principles likely to
+prove attractive to trade unionists. But these wore the air of being
+produced for the occasion; and they did not fit into the character
+of Liberal Leadership. For the latter was quite unable to attract to
+its ranks either working-men candidates or trade union support; and
+the emphatic declaration of a Liberal politician that his party could
+not join the ranks of Labour because the latter was built upon the
+trade unions showed how unreal was the body of industrial principles
+which Liberalism had developed.[48] It remained an atomic philosophy
+applicable to a world in which employer and worker confronted each
+other, as individuals, on equal terms. The assumption was unjustified;
+and the way lay open for the consolidation by Labour of its growing
+hold upon the workers. Liberalism remained a middle-class outlook,
+admirable in its exposition of basic principle, but incapable of
+adjusting principle to a medium with which its supporters were largely
+unacquainted.
+
+In an interesting passage[49] Lord Balfour has drawn attention to the
+fact that the success of the British Constitution in the nineteenth
+century--it is worth adding the general success of representative
+government--was built upon an agreement between parties in the state
+upon fundamental principles. There was, that is, a kindred outlook upon
+large issues; and since fighting was confined to matters of comparative
+detail, men were prepared to let reason have its sway in the realm of
+conflict. For it is significant that in the one realm where depth of
+feeling was passionate--Irish home rule--events moved rapidly to the
+test of the sword; and the settlement made was effected by violence and
+not by reason. That was the essence of the Russian problem. The effort
+to transform a dull and corrupt autocracy into a quasi-constitutional
+system came, like the efforts of Louis XVI at reform, too late to
+affect men who had already passed beyond any possibility of compromise
+with the idea of monarchical power. The concessions which the autocracy
+was prepared to offer did not touch the fringe of what the opposition
+regarded as nominal. Nor was that all. Post-war Russia illustrated
+admirably the truth of Mill’s insistence that “a state which dwarfs its
+men in order that they may be more docile instruments in its hands,
+even for beneficial purposes, will find that with small men no great
+thing can really be accomplished; and that the perfection of machinery
+to which it has sacrificed everything, will in the end avail it
+nothing, for want of the vital power which, in order that the machine
+might work more smoothly, it has preferred to banish.”[50]
+
+
+III
+
+I conclude, therefore, that the factor of consent is not likely
+effectively to operate in any society where there is a serious
+unequality of economic condition; and I assume, further, that the
+absence of such consent is, in the long run, fatal to social peace.
+I do not deny that men will long postpone their protest against that
+absence; there are few wrongs to which men do not become habituated
+by experience, few, therefore, which, after the long passage of time,
+they will not be persuaded are inherent in nature. But such habituation
+is never permanent; sooner or later someone arises, like the child in
+the fairy-story, to point out that in fact the emperor is naked. If
+attention is drawn to some need which is widely experienced, the denial
+that the need is real by those who have not experienced it, will not
+prove effective. Workingmen never found it easy to believe that long
+hours of work or low wages were the essential conditions of industrial
+leadership in the nineteenth century. Few Nonconformists sympathized
+with Burke’s attitude to parliamentary reform. Few American trade
+unionists see in the use of the injunction by the courts a method of
+preserving social peace in terms of a strict impartiality between
+capital and labour. Opponents of Mussolini are not moved by his plea
+that he thinks only of the well-being of Italy. Russian working-men
+have probably been often tempted to the view that their Bolshevik
+masters mistake Communist dogma for social truth.
+
+To satisfy experience, in short, we must weigh experience as we move
+to the making of decisions. We cannot rule it out because it is not
+ours; that is the error of autocracy which insists upon the _a priori_
+rightness of its own experience. We have to regard experience as
+significant in itself and seek to come to terms with it. If it is
+mistaken in the implications it assumes, we have to convince it of
+its error. Our business, hard as it is, is the discovery of that need
+in the experience which must be satisfied if successful government is
+to be possible. For successful government is simply government which
+satisfies the largest possible area of demand. It is not mysterious
+or divine. It is simply a body of men making decisions which, in the
+long run, live or die by what other men think of them. Their validity
+as decisions is in that thought if only because its content is born
+of what the decisions mean to ourselves. All of us are inescapably
+citizens, and, at some point, therefore, the privacy in which we seek
+escape from our obligation as citizens, will seem unsatisfying. A
+crisis comes which touches us; a decision is made which contradicts
+something we happen to have experienced as fundamental; we then judge
+our rulers by the fact of that denial, and act as we think its terms
+warrant.
+
+This, as I think, is the real pathway to an answer to the kind of
+problem which students of public opinion like Mr Lippmann have posed.
+They are right in their analysis of the constituent factors in its
+making, especially in their emphasis of the difficulties we confront
+in making that opinion correspond to the realities it must satisfy.
+They are right, further, I believe, in their emphasis upon the vital
+connexion between truthful news and liberty; nor do I doubt that
+some of the remedies they propose would have the valuable effect
+of increasing the degree of truth in the news. But all of them, I
+think, miss out the vital fact that truthful news is dangerous to a
+society the actual contours of which its presentation might seriously
+change. It would have been a different war in 1914 without propaganda;
+the history of political parties would have been different if the
+principles they announced were measured by their application to total
+and not to partial experience. It only pays to print the truth when
+the interest responsible for publication is not prejudiced thereby. My
+point has been that in an unequal society that prejudice is inevitable.
+
+And that prejudice, in its basic implications, is incompatible with
+liberty. For what it does is to emphasize some experience at the
+expense of other experience, to enable one need to make its way while
+another need remains unknown. The policy of censorship during the war
+meant that everyone anxious for its prosecution to the end had ample
+opportunity to express his view; the pacifist, the Christian, the
+believer in peace by negotiation, found it extraordinarily difficult
+to speak. Clamant opinion was, as always, taken for actual opinion;
+and policy, particularly in the making of peace, was built upon the
+assumption that no other opinion existed save that which made itself
+heard. To any observer with a grain of common sense, it was obvious
+that no treaty would be possible of application save as it impressed
+Germany as just, and that where, when the glow of war had gone, Germany
+resisted its application, a public opinion would not easily be found to
+demand the imposition of penalties. Nothing is more dangerous in the
+taking of decisions than to assume that because people are silent, they
+have nothing to say.
+
+Yet that is the underlying assumption of much of our social life. We
+emphasize opinion which satisfies those in power, we discount opinion
+which runs counter to it; above all we take it for granted that silence
+and consent are one and the same thing. Every one of these attitudes
+is a blunder; especially is it a blunder, for which we pay heavily,
+in matters of social importance. It is extraordinarily dangerous, for
+example, to assume that English public opinion disapproved the General
+Strike because Mayfair was indignant, the _Morning Post_ hysterical,
+and Sir John Simon coldly hostile; for Mayfair and the _Morning Post_,
+even with Sir John Simon, do not constitute English public opinion. Our
+difficulty is that they will be taken to constitute it when it is to
+the interest of government to do so. Such an equation is serious, and
+may well be fatal, to any who think of social peace as a thing really
+worth while to preserve.
+
+We must remember, too, what goes along with a process of this kind.
+Those who lament the ignorance of public opinion too often forget
+that in an unequal society it is necessary to repress the expression
+of individuality. Every attempt at such expression is an attempt
+at the equalization of social conditions; it is an attempt to make
+myself count, an insistence on my claim, an assertion of my right
+to be treated as equal in that claim with other persons. To admit
+that I ought to have that freedom is to deny that the inequality
+upon which society rests is valid. And, accordingly, every sort of
+devious method, conscious and unconscious, is adopted to prevent my
+assertiveness. The most subtle, perhaps, is the denial of adequate
+educational facilities; for what, in fact, that does is to prevent me
+from knowing how to formulate my claim effectively, and unattention
+is the price I have to pay for my ineffectiveness. My claim, then,
+however real or just, because it is clumsily presented fails to secure
+the consideration it deserves. Or, again, the view of a group may be
+simply discounted where it fails to please the holders of power. We
+are impressed, for instance, when we hear that a government, say that
+of Mr Lloyd George, is solid in its determination not to give way to
+the miners; we assume a careful weighing of the facts and a decision
+taken in the light of their total significance. But when we hear that
+the miners are solidly behind their leaders, we feel that this is a
+clear case of ignorant and misguided men being led to their destruction
+by agitators enjoying the exercise of power. The whole machinery of
+news-making is directed to the confirmation of that impression;
+and the chance that the miners’ claim will be considered equally is
+destroyed by the weight which unequal economic power attaches to the
+case against that claim. The opinion represented by the miners is not
+objectively valued. It is the victim of a process of valuation the
+purpose of which is to prevent, so far as possible, an alteration of
+the _status quo_; and, _mutatis mutandis_, this is true of all claims
+which seek alteration in a significant degree.
+
+Now it is, I think, unquestionable that in an unequal society, the
+effort of ordinary men to attain the condition we call happiness is
+hampered at every turn. The power of numbers is sacrificed to the
+interest of a few. The truth of the facts which might make a just
+solution is distorted for a similar end. Freedom, therefore, in an
+unequal society has no easy task as it seeks realization. For its
+search is not to realize itself for its own sake, but for what, as it
+is realized, it is able to bring. We seek religious freedom for the
+truth our religion embodies. We seek political freedom for the ends
+that, in the political world, we deem good. We seek economic freedom
+for the satisfaction brought by making an end of the frustration to our
+personality an irrational subordination implies. Men do not, I believe,
+resent an environment when they feel that they share adequately in its
+making and in the end for which it is made. But they are bound to be
+at least apathetic, and possibly hostile, when the sense is wide and
+deep that they are no more than its instruments. That is the secret of
+the profound allegiance trade unionism is able to create. Its members
+see in its activities the expression of the power for which they
+are individually searching. Few states--it is surely a significant
+thing--have ever won from their subjects a loyalty so profound as the
+Miners’ Federation of Great Britain, or the trade unions in the cotton
+trades. Even the blunders of their leaders meet with a pardon far more
+generous than would be extended to the political heads of the state.
+The reason lies in the degree to which the trade union expresses the
+intimate experience of its members. And until the policy of the state
+meets that experience with similar profundity conflict between the
+government and the trade union will rarely involve the desertion by
+the members of the association they have themselves made. What the
+government will represent as disloyalty to the state will seem to trade
+unionists a service which is freedom.
+
+The point I am seeking to make was summarized with the insight of
+genius by Disraeli when he spoke of the rich and poor as in fact two
+nations. For the poor, their voluntary organizations evoke the same
+kind of impassioned loyalty as a nation struggling to be free is able
+to win from its members. Anyone who reads, for example, the early
+history of bodies like the miners’ unions, and seeks to measure the
+meaning of the sacrifices men were willing to make on their behalf,
+will realize that he is meeting precisely the same kind of temper
+as he can parallel from the history of the Italian struggle against
+Austria or of the Balkan fight against Turkish domination. What Keir
+Hardie did for the miners of Ayrshire, what Sidney Hillman has done
+for the garment workers of America, are as epic and as creative, in
+their way, as the work of Garibaldi and Mazzini. The latter must have
+seemed at Vienna just as wrong and as unwise as Keir Hardie seemed to
+the mineowners fifty years ago, or Hillman to the garment manufacturer
+accustomed, in the classic phrase, to “conduct his own business in his
+own way.” The point in each case is the important one that power is
+challenged in the interest of self-government; that the focal point of
+conflict is an inability on the part of those who govern to interpret
+the experience of their subjects as these read its meaning; with the
+result, again in each case, that the imposition of an interpretation
+from without leaves those upon whom it is imposed with the sense that
+their lives and their happiness are instruments and not ends.
+
+What is the outcome of it all? For me, at least, essentially that a
+society pervaded by the fact of unequality is bound to deny freedom
+and, therefore, to provoke conflict. Its values will be so distorted,
+its apparatus for magnifying that distortion so complete, that it is
+blinded to the realities which confront it. We do not need to go far
+for proof. The daily newspaper, the novel, the poet, all confirm it.
+Compare Macaulay’s glorification of Victorian progress with the picture
+in Carlyle’s _Chartism_, or Dickens’ _Hard Times_. Set the resounding
+complacency of Mr. Gladstone’s perorations against the indignant
+insight of William Morris and Ruskin. Think of the America of President
+Coleridge’s speeches, and the America as bitterly described by Mr
+Sinclair Lewis. Remember that Treitzschke’s eulogy of blood and iron
+is a picture of the same Germany as that which Bebel and Liebkneckt
+sought to overthrow. Guizot’s era of the _juste milieu_ is the period
+of Proudhon and Leroux, of Considerant and Louis Blanc, all of them,
+however mistakenly, the protagonists of a just society. Men think
+differently who live differently. If we have a society of unequals,
+how can we agree either about means or ends? And if this agreement is
+absent how can we, at least over a considerable period, hope to move
+on our way in peace?
+
+An unequal society always lives in fear, and with a sense of impending
+disaster in its heart. The effect of this atmosphere is clear enough.
+We have only to examine the history of France after the death of Louis
+XIV to realize exactly what it implies. Everyone who seeks to penetrate
+below the surface sees some vast calamity ahead. It may be a visitor
+like Chesterfield, a timid lawyer like Barbier, an ex-minister like
+D’Argenson, a philosopher like Voltaire. The government itself, and
+those with whom it is allied, has a perception that something new is
+abroad. They fear the novelty and they seek to suppress it, in the
+belief that a bold front and an adequate severity will stem the tide of
+critical scepticism. But neither boldness nor severity can stem that
+tide. The government falters for a moment on the verge of concession:
+there is an hour when the ministry of Turgot seemed likely to
+inaugurate an era of conciliation. It is too late because the price of
+conciliation is the sacrifice of precisely the vested interests with
+which the government is in partnership. So the ancient régime moves
+relentlessly to its destruction. It is forced to consult those whose
+experience it had never taken into account in the hope of salvation;
+and they find that, if they are to fulfil, they must also destroy.
+
+That is, other things being equal, the inevitable history of such
+societies. Their mental habits resemble nothing so much as the
+horrified timidity which persuaded Hobbes to find in despotism the
+only cure for social disagreement. They are afraid of reason, for this
+involves an examination into their own prerogative and, as at least
+probable, a denunciation of the title by which it is preserved. They
+are afraid of concession, because they see in it an admission of the
+weakness of their case. They magnify scepticism into sedition and they
+accuse even their friends who doubt the virtue of severity of betraying
+the allegiance which is their due. They cannot see that men will not
+accept the state as the appointed conscience of the nation unless they
+conceive themselves to possess a full share of its benefits. They
+minimize the sufferings of others, because they do not have experience
+of them, and they magnify their own virtues that they may gain
+confidence in themselves. They distort history, and call it patriotism;
+they repress the expression of grievance and call it the maintenance
+of law and order. In such a society, the governors appear to their
+subjects as dwellers in another world; and communication between them
+lacks the vivifying quality of fellowship. For the truth of one party
+is never sufficiently the truth of another for the members to talk a
+common language. Every vehemence becomes a threat; and by a kind of
+mad logic every threat is taken as an act of treason. The society is
+unbalanced because justice is not its habitation. Even its generosity
+will be resented because it has not known how to be just.
+
+I do not want to be taken as implying that violence is the inevitable
+end. I only argue that the irrefutable and inherent logic of a
+society where the gain of living is not proportioned to its toil
+is one of which violence is the inevitable end. We have never any
+choice in history except to follow reason wholly or, ultimately, to
+expect disaster; and as we approach that ultimate, the temper of the
+society will be what I have described. For the rule of reason in a
+community means that a special interest must always give way before the
+principles it discovers. And the rule of reason is the only kind of
+rule which can afford the luxury of freedom. That is, I think, because
+an admission that the claims of reason are paramount makes possible the
+emergence of a spirit of compromise. The basis of the society being
+just, men are not prepared for conflict over detail; but when the basis
+itself is unacceptable, conflict over detail is magnified into a fight
+over principle. In such a temper, men are always discussing with their
+backs on the edge of a precipice. Social discussion becomes Carlyle’s
+ultimate question of “Can I kill thee or canst thou kill me?” Every
+utterance is necessarily a challenge; and suppressed because so taken;
+every association is a conspiracy and attacked because so imagined.
+The only way to avoid so poisonous an atmosphere is to be prepared to
+surrender what you cannot prove it is reasonable to hold. But, human
+nature being what it is, men do not easily surrender what they have the
+power to retain; and they will pay the price of conflict if they think
+they can win. They do not remember that the price of conflict is the
+destruction of freedom and that with its loss there go the qualities
+which make for the humanity of men.
+
+
+IV
+
+I spoke a little earlier of the sense of national freedom; and these
+lectures would be even more incomplete than they are unless I sought to
+dwell briefly on what such freedom means. Let me take here as my text
+a sentence from John Stuart Mill which might well stand as the classic
+embodiment of one of the outstanding ideals of the nineteenth century.
+“It is” he wrote “in general a necessary condition of free institutions
+that the boundaries of governments should coincide in the main with
+those of nationalities.” I do not need to remind you of the commentary
+history has written upon that text. In its name were accomplished the
+unity of Italy and Germany, the breakup of the Turkish and Russian
+empires, the separation of the Baltic peoples from the domination of
+Russia. The economic motive apart, no principle has been more fruitful
+of war than the demand for national freedom. Even yet, the day of its
+power is far from ended; for every misapplication of Mill’s principle
+in the peace treaties of 1919 has raised problems of government
+which the world will find it difficult to solve without the bloody
+arbitrament of the sword.
+
+Now nationality is a subjective conception that eludes definition in
+scientific terms. As an Englishman, I can feel in my bones the sense of
+what English nationality implies; I feel intimately, for instance, the
+things that enable me to claim Shakespeare or Jane Austen or Dickens
+as typically English, without being able to put into words the things
+that make them so. Every factor to which nationality has been traced,
+race, language, common political allegiance, is an excessive simplicity
+which betrays scientific exactitude. It is true that nationality is
+born of a common historic tradition, of achievement and suffering
+mutually shared; it is true, also, that language and race, and even a
+common political allegiance, have played their part in its formation.
+It is obvious that there is something exclusive about nationality,
+that the members of any given nation have a sense of separateness from
+other people which gives them a feeling of difference, of uniqueness,
+which makes domination by others so unpleasant as to involve profound
+discomfort to a point which may involve, even justly involve,
+resistance to that domination. But the fact remains that nationality is
+a psychological phenomenon rather than a juridical principle. It is in
+the former, not the latter, sphere that we must seek to meet its claims.
+
+Mill’s principle, if carried to its logical conclusion, would mean
+that every nation has a title to statehood. I want you to think what
+that implies. The modern state is a sovereign state, and in terms of
+that title no will can bind its purpose but its own. The legal meaning
+of sovereignty is omnicompetence. The state may, as it please, make
+peace or war. It can erect its own tariffs, restrict its immigration,
+decide upon the rights of aliens within its borders, without the duty
+of consulting its neighbours, or paying any attention to principles of
+justice. States have done all these things. There is no crime they have
+not been prepared to commit for the defence or the extension of their
+own power. A different moral code has been applied in history to their
+acts from what we insist upon applying to individual acts, and it is,
+quite definitely, a lower moral code. The history of the nation which
+becomes a state and insists upon the prerogatives of its statehood
+is a history incompatible with the terms upon which the maintenance
+of peace depends. That exclusive temper which, as I have argued, is
+the root of nationality means a measurable loss of ethical quality in
+those international relations which are concerned with questions of
+power. You have only to remember the acts which, during the war, states
+attempted against one another amid the applause of their subjects to
+realize that the recognition of national unity as a state means the
+destruction of private liberty and the violation of international
+justice, unless we can find means of setting some limit to the powers
+of which a nation-state can dispose.
+
+I am particularly concerned with the exercise of those powers on
+their economic side. The nation-state is expected to protect the
+activities of its citizens outside its own boundaries. Its prestige
+becomes associated with its power to act in this way. So Germany
+supports the Mannesman brothers in Morocco, England the Rothschilds in
+Egypt, America its citizens in half the territories of South America.
+Nationalism becomes imperialism and this means the enslavement of
+lesser nations to the imperialistic power. In its worst temper, its
+eternal character was described by Thucydides in that passage where he
+relates the tragic end of Melos, a passage it would be mere insolence
+either to summarize or to praise. Even where imperialism has resulted
+in measurable benefit to the subject people, as with Great Britain in
+India, or the United States in the Philippines, the resultant loss
+of responsibility and character, which an imposed rule implies, is a
+heavy price to pay for the efficiency of administration that has been
+conferred. The noble phrase of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman that good
+government is no substitute for self-government seems to me borne out
+by every phase of the history of imperialism. It is the imposition
+of a system of experience upon a people ignorant of the character
+of that experience for ends only partially its own, and by methods
+which neglect unduly the relation of consent to happiness in the
+process of government. The classic case in my own experience is that
+of Ireland. I cannot find ground upon which to defend the habits of
+Great Britain there. But those habits seem to me the inevitable outcome
+of an assumption that Great Britain was entitled to decide alone the
+character of her own destiny.
+
+Nationality, in a word, must, if it is to be consistent with the
+needs of civilization, be set in the context that matters of common
+interest to more than one nation-state cannot be decided by the fiat
+of one member of the international community. Modern science and
+modern economic organization has reduced this world to the unity of
+interdependence: the inference from this condition is, as I think, the
+supremacy of cosmopolitan need over the national claim. A nation, that
+is, is not entitled to be the sole judge of its conduct where that
+conduct, by its subject-matter, implicates others. It must consult with
+them, compromise with them, find the means of resolving the problem
+in terms of peace. Everyone of us can think of functions that, in the
+modern world, entail international consequences by their inherent
+character. We have passed the stage where we can allow a state to
+fix its own boundaries as it thinks best, without consultation with
+other states. The same is true of matters like the treatment of racial
+minorities, of the scale of armaments, of the making of war and peace.
+Everyone can see that matters like the control of the traffic in
+noxious drugs, or of women and children, of epidemics like cholera and
+typhus, cannot be settled save as states co-operate upon agreed methods
+of action. Most people can see, at least in principle, that the same
+thing applies to labour conditions, to legal questions like the law of
+bills and notes, or the rights of aliens before a municipal court, or
+the incorporation of public companies. An historian who surveyed the
+history of international investment would, I think, not illegitimately
+conclude that there are principles applicable to its control which can
+justly regard with indifference the question of the nationality of the
+investor or the state-power to which, save in cases of default, he
+is certain to appeal. The importance of the supply of raw materials
+to international economic life forces us to consider the deliberate
+rationing of that supply, and the maintenance of a stable world
+price level which thinks first of cosmopolitan need, and, only after
+a long interval, of national profit. A sane man would, I suggest,
+conclude that if bodies like the International Rail Syndicate, or the
+Continental Commercial Union in the glass industry, find it sensible to
+transcend national competition by international agreement, _a fortiori_
+the principle applies to matters of world-concern.
+
+I am, of course, only illustrating the problem.[51] The principle
+which seems to me to emerge is the necessity for world-control where
+the decision is of world-concern. The inference from that principle
+is that the rights of the state are always subject to, and limited
+by, the necessarily superior rights of the international community.
+State-sovereignty, that is, in the sense in which the nineteenth
+century used that term, is obsolete and dangerous in a world like our
+world. It gives an authority to the nation-state which, in the light
+of the facts, is incompatible with the well-being of the world. It
+invokes the factor of prestige in realms where it has no legitimate
+application. It means that problems of which a wise solution is
+possible only in terms of reason have to find a solution amid
+circumstances of passion and power which obviate any possibility of
+justice.
+
+For in the external, as in the internal, sphere of the state, the
+choice is between the use of reason and conflict. The use of reason is
+the law of liberty; conflict means the erosion of liberty. If states
+are to conduct their operations always with the knowledge in the
+background that the price of disagreement is war, the consequences are
+obvious. The atmosphere of international affairs will be poisoned by
+fear, and fear will bring with it the system of armaments and alliances
+which, in 1914, issued naturally and logically in the Great War. That
+was the price properly paid for a scheme of things which assumed that
+the legal right of the state was unlimited, and harnessed to the
+support of that legality every primitive and barbarous passion by which
+nationalism can degrade humanity. We need not be afraid to assert
+that, in the international sphere, the sovereignty of the state simply
+means the right of any powerful nation to make its own conception
+of self-interest applicable to its weaker opponents. It is the old
+doctrine of self-help clothed in legal form; the doctrine against which
+law itself came as a protest in the name of order and common sense.
+And exactly as we cannot admit the right of a man to make his own law
+in the internal life of the community, so we cannot allow the single
+nation-state to make its own law in the wider life of the international
+community. Because that is what the sovereignty of the state ultimately
+means, the sovereignty of the state is a conception which outrages the
+patent needs of international well-being.
+
+I conclude, therefore, that if the nation is entitled to
+self-government, it is to a self-government limited and defined by
+the demands of a wider interest. I conclude that its recognition as a
+state, if sovereignty be involved in that recognition, is incompatible
+with a just system of international relations. It is, further,
+incompatible with the notion of an international law regarded as
+binding upon the member-states of the international community. I need
+not dwell upon the impossible difficulties in which the defenders of
+this doctrine have found themselves.[52] In their extreme form they
+have even led a great jurist to write of war as the supreme expression
+of the national will.[53] I am unable to share such a view. Where war
+begins, freedom ends. Where war begins, the opportunity of making just
+solutions of any problem in dispute is indefinitely postponed. And I
+ask you to remember that, although, under modern conditions, a whole
+nation is implicated in war after its beginning, that is not the case
+either with its preparation or its declaration. That is an affair of
+the agents of the state whose interest in the action they take may be
+totally at variance with the interest of the people for whom they are
+taken as acting. They may be serving private ambition, a particular
+party; they may be acting on false information or wrong conceptions. My
+point is that they dispose of the whole power of the state, and that
+there is no means of checking their activity save the very unlikely
+means of revolution. The full implications of national sovereignty are
+a license to wreck civilization. I cannot recognize those implications
+as necessary to a proper view of national freedom.
+
+I deny, therefore, that there is any qualitative difference between
+the interests or the rights of states, and the interests or rights of
+other associations or individuals. Their purposes are ordinary, human
+purposes like any other: they are a means to the happiness of their
+members. They have, it seems to me, to be judged by exactly the same
+principles as those by which we judge the conduct of a trade union, or
+a church, or a scientific society. They do not constitute a corporate
+person living on a plane different from, and having standards other
+than, those of the individuals of whom they are composed. I fully agree
+that no decision ought to be taken about them, in the making of which
+they do not amply share. I fully agree, also, that limitations imposed
+upon their activities must pay scrupulous regard to the psychological
+facts out of which they are built. I do not, for instance, deny that
+the Partition of Poland was a crime against Poland, or that its
+inevitable result was to persuade millions of human beings that a war
+for their resuscitation was a morally justified adventure. But I see
+no difference between the Partition of Poland and, let us say, the
+suppression in the community of a Communist Party. Each seems to me an
+attack upon a corporate experience which is wrong because it does not
+persuade those who share that experience to abandon its implications.
+I do not advocate the supremacy of international authority over the
+national state in order to destroy the national state. I advocate that
+supremacy as the sole way with which I am acquainted to set the great
+fact of nationalism in its proper perspective.
+
+My point is, then, that the fact of a nation’s existence does not
+entitle it to the full panoply of a sovereign state. Scotland and Wales
+are both of them nations; neither possesses that panoply; neither, I
+think, suffers in moral or psychological stature by reason of its
+absence. Neither, let me add, do the Scandinavian peoples--perhaps the
+happiest of modern communities--who are only sovereign states upon the
+essential condition that they do not exercise their sovereignty. But
+there is no more humiliation in that position than in the position any
+government occupies in the context of its own subjects. Power is, by
+its very nature, an exercise in the conditional mood. Those who exert
+it can only have their way by making its objects commend themselves,
+as, also, its methods of pursuing those objects, to those over whom it
+is exerted. The sovereign king in Parliament could legally disfranchise
+the working-classes in England; practically we know that it dare not
+do so. Everyone in England is aware of the grim, practical limitations
+under which parliamentary sovereignty operates; no one, I believe,
+finds humiliation in limits such as we know.
+
+What is happening to the world is something of the same sort. The
+Covenant of the League of Nations is a method of limiting the
+unfettered exercise of national sovereign power. It is a painful and
+delicate operation; how painful and how delicate the timidity that has
+been characteristic of the League’s history makes hideously manifest.
+At any point in which the history of the League is examined, elections
+to the Council, operations of the Mandate system, application of a
+plebiscite, resolution of an international dispute, the statesmen of
+Geneva have hesitated to act upon the logic of the world’s facts. They
+have seen great nations confronting them, and they have feared that
+those nations might, if angered, flout the League and go their own
+way. So the League has fumbled and compromised and evaded. The big
+states have controlled it, and over almost all of its history there has
+fallen, darkening it, the shadow of the war.
+
+Yet experience of the League gives us hope rather than despair. It
+took three centuries to build up the sovereign national state to that
+amplitude which proclaimed its own disastrous character in 1914; it
+would be remarkable indeed if a decade full of memories and hates
+so passionate as those of the last ten years sufficed to overthrow
+its authority. We can at least say out of the experience of those ten
+years that remarkable incursions into that authority have occurred.
+We have discovered a great range of social questions the solution
+of which is not relevant to the national state or to the problems
+of power that state first of all considers. We have been able, that
+is, to devise subjects of government in which national control is
+not the obvious technique of operation. We have found, further, that
+a platform can be constructed at Geneva the nature of which throws
+any possible aggressor upon the defensive, and suggests the possible
+organization against it of the rest of the civilized world. We are
+finding ways of reaching the opinion of citizens in different states
+over the heads of their governments; of making those citizens demand
+attention to League recommendations in a way that a generation ago
+would have been unthinkable. We have shown, and this, in some ways, is
+the vital discovery of our time, that men of different nationalities
+can co-operate together in the task of international government in
+such a way as to sink the pettiness of a narrow outlook before the
+greatness of the common task. I know that Sir Arthur Salter is a great
+Englishman; but I believe his quality as an Englishman has been made
+complete because he is above all a great citizen of the world.
+
+I do not want to exaggerate the prospects of achievement that lie
+before us; one blunder in Moscow or Rome might easily destroy every
+hope we may tentatively cherish. I want merely to note that the idea of
+a world-state is slowly, painfully, hesitantly, taking shape before our
+eyes. I want to emphasize the logic of that state in an international
+community so inescapably interdependent as this. I want to draw
+therefrom the inference that national sovereignty and the international
+community confront one another as incompatibles. Even the states which
+have most carefully stood aloof from Geneva are in a degree to which
+they are themselves unconscious within the orbit of that influence
+which its idea makes so compelling. There is hardly one aspect of the
+League’s work in which American citizens have not borne their share;
+and I should hazard the suspicion that there have been occasions
+when “unofficial observers” have done considerably more than observe
+unofficially. I do not believe it is exaggeration to suggest that the
+underlying motive of the Kellogg Pact was compensation by America for
+her abstention from the Geneva Covenant. The Pact, by itself, is an
+empty declaration; but its logic, like that of the Covenant, is likely
+to take it much further in the direction of international government
+than its authors intended it should go. Even Russia, in some sort the
+antipodes of Geneva, has appeared there at Disarmament Conferences; and
+even granted the rigour of the premises upon which her life is built,
+she cannot remain unrelated to the structure of a world-order.
+
+I believe, accordingly, that we can retain all that is essential to the
+freedom of national life, and yet fully admit the implications of the
+international community. We can leave to England, for instance, her
+full cultural independence, her characteristic internal institutions,
+her special contacts with the Dominions she has begotten; to sacrifice
+the predominance of her navy, her right, by its means, to dictate the
+law of the sea, would still leave her England. She would still be
+England even if, to push speculation to the furthest point, the Suez
+Canal were internationalized and Gibraltar returned to Spain. France
+would be not the less France if the gold policy of her bank were set
+by an international authority, if she gave up her zeal for a conscript
+army, if she built her frontiers upon the impalpable solidity of
+friendship rather than the shifting waters of the Rhine. I can see
+nothing in the conceivable policy of a stronger League which would take
+from her the glory that has made her the Athens of the modern world.
+Changes in law policy, a different colonial outlook, a willingness to
+improve the physical standards of labour, an acceptance of novel and
+military forces determined upon the basis of world safety instead of
+national aggressiveness--it is difficult to see in any of these things
+such a blow at freedom as destroys the prospect of national happiness.
+I can see grounds for the view that an international authority which
+forbade the teaching of French in French schools; or altered the
+boundary of France so as to make Marseilles Italian; or sought the
+abrogation of the French civil code with its profound impact on the
+social customs of France; might reasonably be regarded as invading what
+in a nation’s life that nation only can claim to decide. I can see
+that a nation might feel an international authority to be oppressive
+if it sought, say, by an immigration policy seriously to alter the
+_mores_ of a national life; it should not impose Japanese immigration
+on California any more than Great Britain seeks to impose it upon
+Australia. I can even see that oppression might be felt where, in the
+building of an international civil service, there was a sense that
+there is discrimination against the members of any particular nation,
+or that in composing the committees of its government proper attention
+is not given to the claims of some particular power.
+
+The likelihood of any of these difficulties becoming real is, surely,
+exceedingly small. An international authority must presumably be
+endowed with an average volume of human common sense; and it is no
+more likely than any other authority to invite disaster. Indeed it is
+rather likely to fail to embark upon experiments and decisions it ought
+to make from an excessively delicate sense of what some particular
+nation may feel. International life in this realm is much more likely
+to be a régime of example and influence than one of legislative
+compulsion simply because the penalties of national dissent would
+strain too gravely the structure of the authority which sought an
+unwise imposition of its will. Here, once more, the situation is very
+like that of the internal life of a national state. There is hardly
+any association the state could not overthrow if it bent its energies
+to the task. But, also, most states are wise enough to realize that
+victories of this kind are empty victories, that solutions imposed by
+force have consequences invariably too grave to be satisfactory in
+their application. Consent has its full place in the international
+sphere; and it is a safeguard of national right as creative here,
+as elsewhere. Indeed it may reasonably be argued that with the
+disappearance of national sovereignty, the factor of consent is likely
+to be far more effective, far more genuinely related to the realities
+of the world; than it is at the present time. For consent between two
+powers like, say, America and Nicaragua, or Great Britain and Iraq has
+something in it which partakes of the ironical spirit. It is consent
+always in the knowledge that refusal to agree will make no serious
+difference to the result that occurs. But the surrender of national
+sovereignty is the surrender of aggressive power; and the nation can
+move on its way the more freely since it knows that it no longer lives
+in the shadow of international injustice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OUTLOOK FOR LIBERTY
+
+
+Every study of freedom is a plea for toleration; and every plea for
+toleration is a vindication of the rights of reason. The chief danger
+which always confronts a society is the desire of those who possess
+power to prohibit ideas and conduct which may disturb them in their
+possession. They are rarely concerned with the possible virtues of
+novelty and experiment. They are interested in the preservation of a
+static society because in such an order their desires are more likely
+to be fulfilled. Their ideas of right and wrong lie at the service of
+those desires. The standards they formulate are nothing so much as
+methods of maintaining an order with which they are satisfied; and
+those they repress or resent, are equally methods of establishing a new
+order in which different demands would secure fulfilment.
+
+But this is not a static world, and there is no means of making it
+so. Curiosity, discovery, invention, all of these jeopardize by their
+nature the foundations of any society to which their results are denied
+admission. Toleration is therefore not merely desirable in itself,
+but also politically wise, because no other atmosphere of activity
+offers the assurance of peaceful adjustment. If power is held by a few,
+happiness will be confined to a few also. Every novelty will seem a
+challenge to that confinement; and it will always accrete about itself
+the wills of those who are excluded from a share in its benefits.
+For this world is not only dynamic; it is also diverse. The path to
+happiness is not a single one. Men are not willing to yield the insight
+of their experience to other men’s insight merely because they are
+commanded to do so. They must be persuaded by reason that one vision of
+desire is better than another vision, the experience commended to them
+must persuade and not enforce, if they are to accept its implications
+with a sense of contentment.
+
+This is, of course, a counsel of perfection. Men enjoy the exercise of
+power; no passion has a deeper hold upon human impulse. The willingness
+to admit the prospect of difference, the courage to see that one’s
+private truth is never commensurate with the whole truth, these are
+the rarest of human qualities. That is why the friends of liberty are
+always a minority in every society. That is why, also, the maintenance
+of liberty is a thing that has to be fought for afresh every day, lest
+an inert acceptance of some particular imposition make the field of
+action accessible to a general tyranny. For it is impossible to confine
+the area in which freedom may be permitted to some special and defined
+part of conduct. Those who have fought for the right to think freely in
+theology or the natural sciences are not less certainly the ancestors
+of political freedom. Without Bruno and Galileo there would have been
+neither Rousseau nor Voltaire.
+
+Liberty, therefore, cannot help being a courage to resist the demands
+of power at some point that is deemed decisive; and, because of this,
+liberty, also, is an inescapable doctrine of contingent anarchy. It
+is always a threat to those who operate the engines of authority that
+prohibition of experience will be denied. It is always an assertion
+that he who has learned from life some lesson he takes to be truth will
+seek to live that lesson unless he can be persuaded of its falsehood.
+Punishment may persuade some to abandon the effort; and others may be
+driven by its imposition to conceal their impulse to act upon the view
+they take. But persecution, however thoroughgoing, will never, over any
+long period, be able to suppress significant truth. If the principles
+that are urged by a few correspond to some widespread experience those
+who recognize the expression of their experience will inevitably
+reaffirm it. It has been the historic character of persecution always
+to degrade the persecutor and to strengthen the persecuted by drawing
+attention to their claims. The only way to deal with novelty is to
+understand it, and the only way to deal with grievance is to seek a
+remedy for the complaint it embodies. To deny novelty or grievance a
+right of expression is a certain, if, indeed, an ultimate, validation
+of the truth they contain.
+
+We have, it appears, to learn this anew in each generation. We grant
+toleration in one part of the field only to deny it in another. We
+grant it in religion to deny it in politics; we grant it in politics,
+to deny it in economic matters. Each age finds that the incidence
+of freedom is significant at some special point, and there, once
+more, the lesson of freedom has to be learned. Each age makes some
+idol in its own image and sacrifices upon its altar the freedom of
+those who refuse it worship. Ultimately, that denial is always made
+upon the same ground: it is insisted that the doctrines or practices
+attacked are subversive of the civil order. The intolerance may be
+Catholic, when it insists that a unity of outlook is essential for the
+preservation of society; or it may be Protestant when, as with Calvin
+and the Socinians, it holds that the blasphemous nature of the belief
+anathematized destroys the reverence upon which society depends. The
+essence of the persecuting position is always that the persecutor has
+hold of truth and that he would betray its service by allowing it to be
+questioned. He is able, accordingly, to indulge in the twofold luxury
+not only of preserving his own authority, but also of assisting the
+persons attacked to enter, if they so choose, the way of truth.
+
+When attacks on liberty are political or economic, it is their motive
+rather than their nature that changes. A political pattern has the same
+hold upon its votaries as a religion; the enthusiasts of Moscow and of
+Rome differ only in the object of their worship. An economic system
+defends itself in just the same way: the devotees of Marxism in its
+extreme form have never doubted their right to impose their outlook
+upon the recalcitrant, even at the cost of blood. In a constitutional
+state like America the suppression of liberty is called the inhibition
+of license; in a dictatorship like Moscow it is termed resistance to
+the admission of incorrect “bourgeois” notions. Always the effort is to
+insist upon an artificial unity the maintenance of which is necessary
+to the desires of those who hold power. Suppression, doubtless, eases
+the way of authority, for scepticism is always painful, and to arrive
+at a conclusion after careful testing of evidence always involves the
+possibility that authority may have to admit that its conclusions are
+mistaken.
+
+Yet it may still be maintained with some confidence that the only
+adequate answer to a principle which claims social recognition is the
+rational proof that it is untrue. It may even be argued that the world
+would be a happier world if this were the general theory underlying
+the activities of society. Civilization is strewn with the wrecks of
+systems which men at one time held for true; systems, also, in the
+name of which liberty was denied and pain needlessly inflicted. A
+scrutiny of history, moreover, makes it plain that the right to liberty
+will always be challenged where its consequence is the equalization
+of some privilege which is not generally shared by men. The more
+consciously, therefore, we can seek that equalization as a desirable
+object of social effort, the more likely we are to make attacks upon
+liberty more rare, the evil results of such attack less frequent. No
+man’s love of justice is strong enough to survive the right to inflict
+punishment in the name of the creed he professes; and the simplest
+way to retain his sense of justice is to take away the interest which
+persuades him of the duty to punish. Scepticism, it may be, is a
+dissolvent of enthusiasm; but enthusiasm has always been the enemy
+of freedom. The atmosphere we require, if we are to attain happiness
+for the multitude, is one in which we have everything to gain by the
+statement of experience and nothing to lose by the investigation of
+its convictions. That atmosphere is the condition of liberty and its
+quality is light rather than heat. For light permits of argument, and
+we cannot argue with men who are in a passion. Nothing is so likely to
+engender passion as the perception that they are called to sacrifice a
+privilege. The way, therefore, of freedom is to arrange the pattern of
+social institutions so that there are no privileges to sacrifice.
+
+This kind of plea for liberty is built, after all, upon the simple
+consideration that the world is likely to be the more happy if it
+refuses to build its institutions upon injustice. And institutions are
+necessarily unjust if the impression they continually produce in the
+majority is a feeling of envy and hatred for the results they impose.
+There is something wrong in a system which, like ours, maintains itself
+not by the respect and affection it evokes, but by the sanctions to
+which it can appeal. What is wrong in them is their erection upon the
+basis of passion and their insistence that reason shall serve what that
+passion is seeking to protect. So long as that is true of our society,
+we shall continue to deny the validity of all principles which attack
+the existing disposition of social forces. Those principles may often
+be wrong; yet sometimes, at least, they represent the certainties of
+the future. It is always a hazardous enterprise to suppress belief
+which claims to be rooted in the experience of men.
+
+For no outlook which has behind it the support of considerable
+numbers will ever silently acquiesce in its reduction to impotence.
+It will fight for its right to be heard whatever the price of the
+conflict. Here it has been urged that conflict of this kind is usually
+unnecessary and frequently disastrous. It has been claimed that truth
+can be established by reason alone; that departure from the way of
+reason as a method of securing conviction is an indication always of a
+desire to protect injustice. Where there is respect for reason, there,
+also, is respect for freedom. And only respect for freedom can give
+final beauty to men’s lives.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+[1] Acton, _History of Freedom_, p. 57.
+
+[2] As Mr. Aldous Huxley, for instance, does with a quite unnecessary
+apparatus of scholarship in his _Proper Studies_, pp. 1-31.
+
+[3] All this has been put in classic form by the late Professor
+Hobhouse in his _Metaphysical Theory of the State_ (1918).
+
+[4] Cf. Barker, _Political Thought from Herbert Spencer to Today_
+(1915), p. 80.
+
+[5] W. H. Taft, _Our Supreme Magistrate and His Powers_ (1921), pp.
+102-3.
+
+[6] See my detailed discussion of the point in 34 Michigan Law Review,
+p. 529.
+
+[7] 189 U.S. 253.
+
+[8] (1915) A. C. 120.
+
+[9] 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 122.
+
+[10] (1923) 2 K. B. 61.
+
+[11] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, pp. 541 f.
+
+[12] _Ibid._
+
+[13] _Esprit des Lois_, Bk. XI, Chap. VI.
+
+[14] Second Treatise, Sec. 12.
+
+[15] Cf. my paper on American Federalism in the volume entitled _The
+Dangers of Obedience_ (1930).
+
+[16] Cf. Louis Post, _The Deportations Delirium_ (1921).
+
+[17] 250 U.S. 616.
+
+[18] See Taney’s _Report_.
+
+[19] I. W. Graham, _Conscription and Conscience_ (1922), Chap. III.
+
+[20] _Ibid._, p. 209.
+
+[21] _Ibid._
+
+[22] See, for example, Wickwar’s _Freedom of the Press_ for an account
+of judicial _mores_ in the early nineteenth century; and H. T. Buckle’s
+pamphlet on the Pooley case for similar conduct thirty years later.
+
+[23] Z. C. Chafee’s classic discussion in _Freedom of Speech_ is the
+best account of this unhappy period.
+
+[24] Thereby laying himself open to FitzJames Stephen’s crushing attack.
+
+[25] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, Chap. VII.
+
+[26] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, p. 82 f.
+
+[27] A list is printed in Ernst and Segal, _To the Pure_ (1929), pp.
+296-302.
+
+[28] This is brought out well in Mr Nokes’ excellent book on the
+blasphemy laws.
+
+[29] 53 G. III, C. 160.
+
+[30] _Ut supra._
+
+[31] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, p. 554.
+
+[32] Cd. 1614 (1922).
+
+[33] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, pp. 256 f.
+
+[34] _Coppage_ v. _Kansas_, 236 U.S. 1.
+
+[35] Cf. my _Authority in the Modern State_, Chap. V.
+
+[36] Calwell, _Life of Sir H. Wilson_, Vol. II, _passim_.
+
+[37] _Le Droit Social_, Lect. III.
+
+[38] _The Observer_, 18 August 1929.
+
+[39] 277 U.S. 438.
+
+[40] Hammond, _The Skilled Labourer_, Chap. XII.
+
+[41] Cf. Mr Lippmann’s excellent analysis in _Liberty and the News_.
+
+[42] I take my account from a summary in the _Lantern_ (Boston), July
+1929.
+
+[43] Lippmann, _Public Opinion_, pp. 379 f.
+
+[44] Cf. Lady Constance Lytton, _Prisons and Prisoners_.
+
+[45] Cf. Frankfurter and Green, _The Injunction in Labour Disputes_
+(1930).
+
+[46] See the lecture on Equality in _Mixed Essays_.
+
+[47] See for instance, the very interesting letter of Mr MacDonald to
+Keir Hardie in W. Stewart, _Life of Keir Hardie_ (1921), p. 92.
+
+[48] Mr Ramsay Muir in the _Nation_, 17 August 1929.
+
+[49] Preface to the World’s Classics edition of Bagshot’s _English
+Constitution_, p. xxiii.
+
+[50] _On Liberty_ (People’s edition), p. 68.
+
+[51] Cf. my _Grammar of Politics_, Chap. XI.
+
+[52] Cf. Lauterpacht, _Private Law Analogies in International Law_,
+for a brilliant discussion of this question; and my paper ‘Law and the
+State’ in _Economica_, No. 27, pp. 267 f.
+
+[53] Kaufman, _Das Wesen der Volkerrechts_.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78171 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78171 ***</div>
+
+
+<h1>
+LIBERTY<br>
+<span style="font-size:smaller">IN THE</span><br>
+MODERN STATE
+</h1>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>By</i><br>
+<i style="font-size:x-large">HAROLD J. LASKI</i><br>
+<br>
+<i>Professor of Political Science</i><br>
+<i>in the University of London</i><br>
+<br>
+<br>
+1930<br>
+PUBLISHERS<br>
+<i>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS</i><br>
+NEW YORK AND LONDON
+</p>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<p class="center">
+LIBERTY<br>
+IN THE<br>
+MODERN<br>
+STATE<br>
+<br>
+<i>Copyright, 1930,</i><br>
+<i>by Harold J. Laski.</i><br>
+<i>Printed in the</i><br>
+<i>United States.</i><br>
+<br>
+FIRST EDITION
+</p>
+
+<hr class="front">
+
+<p class="center">
+TO<br>
+FRIDA<br>
+AND<br>
+DIANA
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">
+ <i>CONTENTS</i>
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<table>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td class="tdl">THE NATURE OF LIBERTY</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td class="tdl">FREEDOM OF THE MIND</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td class="tdl">LIBERTY AND SOCIAL POWER</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td class="tdl">THE OUTLOOK FOR LIBERTY</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter nobreak center" style="font-size:xx-large">
+ LIBERTY IN THE MODERN STATE
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">
+ CHAPTER I
+ <br>
+ THE NATURE OF LIBERTY
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>I mean by liberty the absence of restraint
+upon the existence of those
+social conditions which, in modern civilization,
+are the necessary guarantees of individual
+happiness. I seek to inquire into
+the terms upon which it is attainable in
+the Western world, and, more especially,
+to find those rules of conduct to which political
+authority must conform if its subjects
+are, in a genuine sense, to be free.</p>
+
+<p>Already, therefore, I am maintaining a
+thesis. I am arguing, first, that liberty is
+essentially an absence of restraint. It implies
+power to expand, the choice by the
+individual of his own way of life without
+imposed prohibitions from without. Men
+cannot, as Rousseau claimed, be forced
+into freedom. They do not, as Hegel insisted,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>find their liberty in obedience to
+the law. They are free when the rules under
+which they live leave them without a
+sense of frustration in realms they deem
+significant. They are unfree whenever the
+rules to which they have to conform compel
+them to conduct which they dislike and
+resent. I do not deny that there are types
+of conduct against which prohibitions are
+desirable: I ought, for instance, to be compelled,
+even against my wish, to educate
+my children. But I am arguing that any
+rule which demands from me something I
+would not otherwise give is a diminution
+of my freedom.</p>
+
+<p>A second implication is important. My
+thesis involves the view that if in any state
+there is a body of men who possess unlimited
+political power, those over whom they
+rule can never be free. For the one assured
+result of historical investigation is the lesson
+that uncontrolled power is invariably
+poisonous to those who possess it. They
+are always tempted to impose their canon
+of good upon others, and, in the end, they
+assume that the good of the community depends
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>upon the continuance of their
+power. Liberty always demands a limitation
+of political authority, and it is never
+attained unless the rulers of a state can,
+where necessary, be called to account.
+That is why Pericles insisted that the secret
+of liberty is courage.</p>
+
+<p>By making liberty the absence of restraint,
+I make it, of course, a purely negative
+condition. I do not thereby mean to
+assume that a man will be the happier the
+more completely restraints are absent from
+the society to which he belongs. In a community
+like our own, the pressure of numbers
+and the diversity of desires, make
+necessary both rules and compulsions.
+Each of these is a limitation upon freedom.
+Some of them are essential to happiness,
+but that does not make them for a
+moment less emphatically limitations. Our
+business is to secure such a balance between
+the liberty we need and the authority
+that is essential as to leave the average
+man with the clear sense that he has
+elbow-room for the continuous expression
+of his personality.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nor must we confound liberty with certain
+other goods without which it has no
+meaning. There may be absence of restraint
+in the economic sphere, for example,
+in the sense that a man may be free
+to enter any vocation he may choose. Yet
+if he is deprived of security in employment
+he becomes the prey of a mental and physical
+servitude incompatible with the very
+essence of liberty. Nevertheless, economic
+security is not liberty though it is a condition
+without which liberty is never effective.
+I do not mean that those who can take
+their ease in Zion are thereby free men.
+Once and for all, let us agree that property
+alone does not make a man free. But those
+who know the normal life of the poor, its
+perpetual fear of the morrow, its haunting
+sense of impending disaster, its fitful
+search for beauty which perpetually eludes,
+will realize well enough that, without economic
+security, liberty is not worth having.
+Men may well be free and yet remain
+unable to realize the purposes of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Again, we live in a big world, about
+which, at our peril, we have to find our
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>way. There can, under these conditions, be
+no freedom that is worth while unless the
+mind is trained to use its freedom. We
+cannot, otherwise, make explicit our experience
+of life, and so report the wants we
+build upon that experience to the centre
+of political decision. The right of the modern
+man to education became fundamental
+to his freedom once the mastery of Nature
+by science transformed the sources of
+power. Deprive a man of knowledge, and
+the road to ever greater knowledge, and
+you will make him, inevitably, the slave of
+those more fortunate than himself. But
+deprivation of knowledge is not a denial
+of liberty. It is a denial of the power to
+use liberty for great ends. An ignorant
+man may be free even in his ignorance. In
+our world he cannot employ his freedom so
+as to give him assurance of happiness. A
+compulsory training of the mind is still
+compulsion. It is a sacrifice of some liberty
+to a greater freedom when the compulsion
+ceases.</p>
+
+<p>Two other preliminary remarks are important
+to the thesis I am urging. Everyone
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>knows the danger to freedom which
+exists in any community where there is
+either special privilege on the one hand or
+what is termed the tyranny of the majority
+on the other. John Stuart Mill long ago
+pointed out that in the early history of
+liberty it was normally and naturally conceived
+as protection against the tyranny of
+the political rulers. The latter disposed of
+a power to which its subjects were compelled
+to conform; and it became vital in
+the interest of freedom to limit that power
+either by the recognition of special immunities
+or by the creation of constitutional
+guarantees. But even in the modern
+state the underlying substance of the argument
+may not be neglected. Power as
+such, when uncontrolled, is always the
+natural enemy of freedom. It prevents the
+exercise of those capacities which are released
+for activity by the absence of restraint.
+Wherever it is possessed in excess,
+it tilts the balance of social action in favour
+of its possessors. A franchise limited
+to the owners of property means legislation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>in the interests of that class. The
+exclusion of a race or creed from a share in
+citizenship is, invariably, their exclusion
+also from the benefits of social action. In
+any state, therefore, where liberty is to
+move to its appointed end, it is important
+that there should be equality.</p>
+
+<p>Now equality is not the same thing as
+liberty. I do not, indeed, agree with Lord
+Acton’s famous dictum that the ‘passion for
+equality makes vain the hope of freedom’;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+liberty and equality are not so much
+antithetic as complementary. Men might
+be broadly equal under a despotism, and
+yet unfree. But it is, I think, historically
+true that in the absence of certain equalities
+no freedom can ever hope for realization.
+The acute mind of Aristotle long
+ago saw that the craving for equality is one
+of the most profound roots of revolution.
+The reason is clear enough. The absence
+of equality means special privilege for some
+and not for others, a special privilege
+which is not, so to say, in nature but in a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>deliberate contrivance of the social environment.
+Men like Harrington and Madison
+and Marx all insisted, and with truth, that
+whatever the forms of state, political power
+will, in fact, belong to the owners of economic
+power. We need not argue that our
+happiness depends upon the possession of
+political power; we can argue that exclusion
+from it is likely to mean exclusion
+from that which largely determines the
+contours of happiness. And it follows that
+the more equal are the social rights of citizens,
+the more likely they are to be able
+to utilize their freedom in realms worthy
+of exploration. Certainly the history of
+the abolition of special privilege has been,
+also, the history of the expansion of what
+in our inheritance was open to the common
+man. The more equality there is in
+a State, the more use, in general, we can
+make of our freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Here, perhaps, it is worth while for a
+moment to dwell upon the meaning of
+equality. Nothing is easier than to make
+it a notion utterly devoid of all common
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>sense.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> It does not mean identity of treatment.
+The ultimate fact of the variety of
+human nature, our differences of both
+hereditary capacity and social nurture,
+these are inescapable. To treat men so
+different as Newton and Byron, Cromwell
+and Rousseau, in a precisely similar way
+is patently absurd. But equality does not
+mean identity of treatment. It is an insistence
+that there is no difference inherent
+in nature between the claims of men to
+happiness. It is therefore an argument
+that society shall not construct barriers
+against those claims which weigh more
+heavily upon some than upon others. It
+shall not exclude men from the legal profession
+because they are black or Wesleyans
+or freemasons. It shall not deny
+access to the Courts to men of whose opinions
+society in general disapproves. The
+idea of equality is obviously an idea of levelling.
+It is an attempt to give each man
+as similar a chance as possible to utilize
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>what powers he may possess. It means
+that he is to count in the framing of decisions
+where these affect him, that whatever
+legal rights inhere in any other man
+as a citizen, shall inhere in him also; that
+where differences of treatment are meted
+out by society to different persons, those
+differences shall be capable of explanation
+in terms of the common good. It means
+the recognition of urgent need in all—food,
+for instance, and clothing, and shelter—before
+there is special recognition of
+non-urgent claims in any.</p>
+
+<p>Equality, so regarded, seems to me inescapably
+connected with freedom. For
+equality, so regarded, seems, in the first
+place, to mean the organization of opportunities;
+and, in the second place, it means
+that no man’s opportunities are sacrificed,
+except on terms of social principle, to the
+claims of another. In the view I am taking,
+no child could be deprived of education
+that another might receive it; but in a
+choice of men say for a post in the Treasury,
+one might be preferred to another on
+the ground of ability or character or training.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>The idea of equality, in a word, is such
+an organization of opportunity that no
+man’s personality suffers frustration to the
+private benefit of others. He is given his
+chance that he may use his freedom to experiment
+with his powers. He knows that
+in his effort to attain happiness no barriers
+impede him differently from their incidence
+upon others. He may not win his
+objective, but, at least, he cannot claim
+that society has so weighted the scale
+against him as to assure his defeat.</p>
+
+<p>It is often argued that a theory of liberty
+which starts from the effort of the individual
+to attain happiness must break
+down because it fails to remember that society
+also has rights, and that these are
+necessarily superior to those of its component
+parts. Any organization, it is said,
+is more than the units of which it is composed.
+A nation-state like America or
+England is not merely a body of Englishmen
+or Americans, but something beyond
+them. It has a life and a reality, needs and
+purposes, which are not exhausted by the
+sum of the needs and purposes of its individual
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>members. The liberty of each citizen
+is born of, and must be subordinated
+to, the liberty of that greater whole from
+which his whole meaning is derived. For
+the rights of each of us depend upon the
+protective rampart of social organization.
+It is because the State enforces our rights
+as obligations upon others that we have
+the opportunity to enjoy them. We are
+free, it is said, not for ourselves but for
+the society which gives us meaning. Where
+our interests conflict with the obviously
+greater interest of the society, we ourselves
+must give way.</p>
+
+<p>It is, I think, true to say that an individual
+abstracted from society and regarded
+as entitled to freedom outside its environment
+is devoid of meaning. None of us is
+Crusoe or St. Simeon Stylites on his pillar.
+We are born to live our lives in London or
+New York, Paris or Berlin or Rome. Our
+liberty has to be realized in a welter of
+competing and co-operating interests which
+only achieve rational co-ordination by
+something not unlike a miracle. The need
+to give way to others, to accept, that is, restraint
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>upon our right to unfettered activity
+is inherent in the nature of things. But
+the surrender we make is a surrender not
+for the sake of the society regarded as
+something other than its members, but exactly
+and precisely for men and women
+whose totality is conveniently summarized
+in a collective and abstract noun. I do
+not understand how England, for instance,
+can have an end or purpose different from,
+or opposed to, the end or purpose of its
+citizens. We strive to do our duty to England
+for the sake of Englishmen; a duty
+to England separate from them, and in
+which they did not share, is surely inconceivable.</p>
+
+<p>Or, at least, would be inconceivable,
+were it not that perhaps the most influential
+theory of the state in our own time has
+been built upon it. What is termed the
+idealist theory of the state is broadly the
+argument that individual freedom means
+obedience to the law of the society to which
+I belong. My personality, it is said, is
+simply an expression of the organized
+whole to which I belong. When I say that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>I am seeking to realize myself, I mean in
+fact that I am seeking to be one with the
+order of which I am a part. I am not independent
+of, or isolated in, that order, but
+one with it and of it. As it realizes itself,
+so am I also realized. The greater and
+more powerful it becomes, the greater and
+more powerful do I become as a consequence.
+The more fully, therefore, I serve
+it, the more fully do I express myself. True
+liberty is thus so far from being an absence
+of restraint that it is essentially subordination
+to a system of rational purposes which
+receive their highest expression in the activity
+of the state. To be one with that activity
+may well then be regarded as the
+highest freedom a citizen can know.</p>
+
+<p>In the whole history of political philosophy
+there is nothing more subtle than the
+skill with which the idealist school has
+turned the flank of the classic antithesis
+between liberty and authority. From the
+Greeks to Rousseau it was always conceived
+that a man’s freedom is born of a limitation
+upon what his rulers may exact from
+him; since Rousseau, and, more particularly,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>since Hegel, it has been urged that
+conformity to a code, and even compulsory
+obedience to it, is the very essence of freedom.
+So startling a paradox needs, at the
+least, explanation. Liberty, it argues, is
+not a mere negative thing like absence of
+restraint. It is rather a positive self-determination
+of the will which, in each of
+us, seeks the fulfilment of rational purpose
+as this lies behind, and gives unified meaning
+to, the diversified chaos of purposes
+in each of us. We desire freedom, that is
+to say, in order that we may be ourselves
+at our best. The right object of our wills,
+the thing which, did we know all the facts,
+we would truly desire, this is clearly that
+for which we would seek freedom. This is
+our real will, and the highest part of ourselves.
+This will, moreover, is the same
+in each member of society; for, at bottom,
+the real will is a common will which finds
+its highest embodiment in the state. In
+this view, therefore, the state is the highest
+part of ourselves. For it represents, in its
+will, what each of us would seek to be if
+the temporary, the immediate and the irrational,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>were stripped from the objects we
+desire. Its object is what alone we should
+aim at were we free to will only our permanent
+good. It is, so to say, the long and
+permanent end that, in the ultimate analysis,
+we come individually to will after
+private experience of wrong direction and
+erroneous desire. The more intimately,
+therefore, we make our will one with that
+of the state, the more completely are we
+free. The nature of the social bond makes
+service to its demands the very essence of
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Before I seek to analyse this view, I
+would point out how simply this argument
+enables us to resolve the very difficult problem
+of social obligation. When I obey the
+state, I obey the best part of myself. The
+more fully I discover its purposes the more
+fully, also, there is revealed to me their
+identity with that at which, in the long
+view, I aim. So that when I obey it, I am,
+in fact, obeying myself; in a real sense its
+commands are my own. Its view is built
+upon the innumerable intelligences from
+the interplay of which social organization
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>derives its ultimate form; obviously such a
+view is superior in its wisdom to the result
+my own petty knowledge can attain. My
+true liberty is, therefore, a kind of permanent
+tutelage to the state, a sacrifice of my
+limited purpose to its larger end upon the
+ground that, as this larger end is realized,
+so I, too, am given realization. I may, in
+fact, be most fully free when I am most
+suffused with the sense of compulsion.</p>
+
+<p>To me, at least, this view contradicts all
+the major facts of experience. It seems to
+me to imply not only a paralysis of the
+will, but a denial of that uniqueness of individuality,
+that sense that each of us is
+ultimately different from our fellows, that
+is the ultimate fact of human experience.
+For as I encounter the state, it is for me a
+body of men issuing orders. Most of them
+I can obey either with active good will or,
+at least, with indifference. But I may encounter
+some one order, a demand, for instance,
+for military service, a compulsion
+to abandon my religious faith, which seems
+to me in direct contradiction to the whole
+scheme of values I have found in life. How
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>I can be the more free by subordinating
+my judgment of right to one which directly
+changes that judgment to its opposite, I
+cannot understand. If the individual is not
+to find the source of his decisions in the
+contact between the outer world and himself,
+in the experience, that is, which is the
+one unique thing that separates him from
+the rest of society, he ceases to have meaning
+as an individual in any sense that is
+creative. For the individual is real to himself
+not by reason of the contacts he shares
+with others, but because he reaches those
+contacts through a channel which he alone
+can know. His true self is the self that is
+isolated from his fellows and contributes
+the fruit of isolated meditation to the common
+good, which, collectively, they seek to
+bring into being.</p>
+
+<p>A true theory of liberty, I urge, is built
+upon a denial of each of the assumptions of
+idealism. My true self is not a selected system
+of rational purposes identical with
+those sought by every member of society.
+We cannot split up the wholeness of personality
+in this way. My true self is all that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>I am and do. It is the total impression produced
+by the bewildering variety of my
+acts, good and bad and indifferent. All of
+them go to the formation of my view of the
+universe; all of them are my expression of
+my striving to fulfil my personality. Each,
+while it is, is real, and each, as real, must
+give way only in terms of a judgment I
+make, not of one made for me by some
+other will, if I am to remain a purposive
+human being serving myself as an end.
+This attempt, in a word, at the extraction
+of a partial self from the whole of my being
+as alone truly myself not only denies that
+my experience is real, but, also, makes me
+merely an instrument to the purpose of
+others. Whatever that condition is, surely
+it cannot be recognized as freedom.</p>
+
+<p>But we can go further than this. I see
+no reason to suppose that this assumed real
+will is identical in every member of society.
+The ultimate and inescapable fact in politics
+is the final variety of human wills.
+There is no continuum which makes all of
+them one. Experience suggests common objects
+of desire, but each will that wills these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>common objects is a different will in every
+sense not purely metaphorical. We all have
+a will to international peace. But the unity
+these make is not in the will but in the
+fusion of separate wills to the attainment
+of a common purpose. And we must remember
+that in every society the objects
+of wills cannot, in some mystic fashion, be
+fused into a higher unity somehow compounded
+of them all. I see no meaning, for
+instance, in the statement that the antithetic
+purposes of Jesuits and Freemasons
+are somehow transcended in a higher purpose
+which resumes them both; that is to
+say that a Jesuit or a Freemason is most
+truly himself when he ceases to be himself,
+which, frankly, seems to me nonsense.
+A member of the Praesidium of the Third
+International, whose will aims supremely at
+the overthrow of capitalism, is not somehow
+at one with the will of the President of the
+British Federation of Industries to whom
+all the purposes of the Third International
+are anathema. Both, doubtless, will the
+good; but the point is that each wills the
+good as he sees it, and each would regard
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>the fulfilment of the other’s ideal of good
+as a definite destruction of his own. There
+is, therefore, no single and common will
+in society, unless we mean thereby the
+vague concept, entirely useless for political
+philosophy, that men desire the good. Each
+of us desires the good as he sees it; and
+each of us sees a good derived from an
+individual and separate experience into
+which no other person can fully enter. Our
+connection with others is, at the best, partial
+and interstitial. Our pooling of experiences
+to make a common purpose
+somewhere is in no case other than fragmentary.
+We remain ourselves even when
+we join with others to attain some common
+object of desire. The ultimate isolation of
+the individual personality is the basis from
+which any adequate theory of politics must
+start.</p>
+
+<p>I reject, therefore, the idea of a real will,
+and, still more, the idea that there is a common
+will in society. It is a logical inference
+therefrom that I should reject also the doctrine
+that all state-action is, at bottom, the
+exercise of the real will of society. For, first
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>of all, I see no reason to suppose that social
+life is ultimately the product of a single and
+rational mind organizing its activities in
+terms of a logical process. To speak of the
+“mind of society”, seems to me merely a
+metaphorical way of describing a course of
+action which is made valid by translation
+into fact. There are no governing principles
+in social life deliberately emerging from
+the interplay of its myriad constituent
+parts. Governing principles emerge; but
+they emerge through the wills of individual
+minds. And the state is magnified to excess
+when it is regarded as embodying a unified
+will. The state is a complex of rulers and
+subjects territorially organized and seeking,
+by the conference of power upon those
+rulers, effective co-ordination of social activities.
+They exercise the right to use force,
+if necessary, to that end. But no one, I
+think, can examine the course of history and
+say that the experience of any state indicates
+a permanent embodiment of the highest
+good we know in the purpose of the
+state. Our rulers, doubtless, aim at the good
+as they see it. Yet what they see as good
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>may not be so recognizable to us, and may
+well provoke in us the sense that life would
+not be worth living if their view was to prevail.
+The unity of the state, in a word, is
+not inherently there. It is made by civic
+acceptance of what its rulers propose. It is
+not necessarily good because it is accepted;
+it is not necessarily right because it is proposed.
+Obedience ought always to be a
+function of the substance contained in the
+rules made by government; it is a permanent
+essay in the conditional mood.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>Here, of course, the idealist retorts that
+he is dealing not with the states of history,
+but with the state as such; he is concerned
+with the “pure” instance and not with deviations
+from the ideal.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> But it is with actual
+states that we have to deal in everyday life
+as we know it, with states the policy of
+which is directed by men who are human
+like ourselves. The policy they announce
+must, obviously, be subject to our scrutiny;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>and the result of our judgment is necessarily
+made out of an experience not identical
+with, even though it be similar to,
+theirs. I cannot believe that a theory fits the
+facts of history which assumes that this
+policy is going to be right, whatever it is;
+and that freedom will be found only in acceptance
+of it. I do not believe that the
+Huguenot of 1685 was made the more free
+by accepting, against his conscience, the
+Revocation; nor do I believe that Luther
+would have been more free had he accepted
+the decrees of Rome and abandoned his
+protest. Man is a one among many obstinately
+refusing reduction to unity. His
+separateness, his isolation, are indefeasible;
+indeed, they are so ultimate that they
+are the basis out of which his civic obligations
+are builded. He cannot abandon the
+consequences of his isolation which are,
+broadly speaking, that his experience is
+private and the will built out of that experience
+personal to himself. If he surrenders
+it to others, he surrenders his personality.
+If his will is set by the will of others, he
+ceases to be master of himself. I cannot
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>believe that a man no longer master of
+himself is in any meaning sense free.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>If we reject a view which, like that just
+considered, seeks to dissolve the reality of
+the individual into the society of which he
+is a part, what are we left with as the
+pattern within which a man seeks freedom?
+Let us try to draw a picture of the place
+of man in a community like our own. He
+finds himself involved in a complex of relationships
+out of which he must form such
+a pattern of conduct as will give him happiness.
+There are his family, his friends,
+the church to which he may belong, his
+voluntary association, trade union, or employers’
+association or whatever it may be,
+and there is the state. All of these, save
+the state, he may in greater or less degree
+avoid. A man may cut himself off from
+family or friends; he may refuse membership
+of a church or vocational body; he
+cannot refuse membership of the state.
+Somewhere or other, he encounters it as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>a body of persons issuing orders, and he is
+involved in the problem of deciding
+whether or no he will obey those orders.
+Every order issued is, in a final analysis,
+issued by a person or persons to another
+person or persons. When we say that, in
+such a complex of relationships as this, that
+a man is free, what do we mean? We know
+that if his Church issues an order to him
+of which he disapproves, he can leave his
+church; so, too, with all other bodies save
+the state. The latter can, if he seeks evasion
+of its commands, use compulsion to secure
+obedience to its orders. It makes, we say,
+the law, and a member of the state is legally
+compelled to obey the law.</p>
+
+<p>But he is not free merely because he
+obeys the law. His freedom, in relation to
+the law, depends on the effect of any particular
+order upon his experience. He is
+seeking happiness; some order seems to
+him a wanton invasion of that happiness.
+He may be right or wrong in so thinking;
+the point of fact is that he has no alternative
+but to go by his own moral certainties.
+Now freedom exists in a state where a man
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>knows that the decisions made by the ultimate
+authority do not invade his personality.
+The conditions of freedom are then
+those which assure the absence of such invasion.
+The citizen who asks for freedom
+is entitled to the conditions which, collectively,
+are the guarantees that he will be
+able to go on the road to his happiness, as
+he conceives it, unhindered. Neither conditions
+nor guarantees will ever be perfect;
+nor will they ever cover all upon which
+happiness depends. The state, for instance,
+may say that I may marry the woman I
+love; it cannot say that she will marry me
+if I so desire. The freedom it secures to
+me is the absence of a barrier in the way
+of marriage if I can win her consent.</p>
+
+<p>From this angle, liberty may appropriately
+be resolved into a system of liberties.
+There are realms of conduct within
+which, to be free, I must be permitted to act
+as I please; to be denied self-expression
+there, is to be denied freedom. What we
+need to know is, I suggest, first what those
+realms of conduct are, and, second, what
+my duty as a citizen is when I am, in any
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>one of them, prohibited from acting as I
+please. The difficulty here, of course, it is
+impossible to exaggerate. It is the problem
+of knowing when a man ought deliberately
+to make up his mind to break the law or
+to refuse obedience to it. In the idealist
+theory, this problem does not arise; it is
+answered <i>a priori</i> by the definition of freedom
+as obedience to the law. But because
+we have rejected this view, we have to admit
+that there will be occasional disobedience,
+at the least, and that this may be
+justified. We have to discover the principles
+of its justification.</p>
+
+<p>Liberty may be resolved into a system
+of liberties; and from this angle it may be
+said that it is the purpose of social organization
+to see to it that this system is adequately
+safeguarded. How can the state,
+which charges itself with the function of
+supreme co-ordination, properly fulfil this
+task? How can it guarantee to me such an
+environment to my activity that I do not
+suffer frustration in my search for happiness?</p>
+
+<p>There have been many answers to this
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>question, some of them of the highest interest
+and importance. One or two I wish
+to consider partly because of their significance
+in themselves, and partly because,
+from that consideration, I wish to make the
+inference that no merely mechanical arrangements
+will ever secure freedom in
+permanence to the citizens of a state. While
+there are certain constitutional forms which
+are, as I think, essential to freedom, their
+mere presence as forms will not, of themselves,
+suffice to make men free. I shall
+seek, further, to draw the conclusion that,
+whatever the forms of social organization,
+liberty is essentially an expression of an
+impalpable atmosphere among men. It is a
+sense that in the things we deem significant
+there is the opportunity of continuous initiative,
+the knowledge that we can, so to
+speak, experiment with ourselves, think
+differently or act differently, from our
+neighbours without danger to our happiness
+being involved therein. We are not
+free, that is, unless we can form our plan
+of conduct to suit our own character without
+social penalties. Freedom is in an important
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>degree a matter of law; but in a
+degree not less important it is a matter,
+also, of the <i>mores</i> of the society outside the
+sphere within which law can operate.</p>
+
+<p>You will observe that I am still, from the
+angle of political organization, thinking of
+liberty as a safeguard of the individual
+against those who rule him. I do so for the
+best of reasons. Whoever exerts power in
+a community is tempted to the abuse of
+power. Even in a democracy, we must have
+ways and means of protecting the minority
+against a majority which seeks to invade
+its freedom. Mankind has suffered much
+from the assumption that, once the people
+had become master in its own house, there
+was no limit to its power. You have only
+to remember the history of racial minorities
+like the negroes, of religious or national
+minorities like Jews and Czechs, to
+realize that democracy, of itself, is no guarantee
+of freedom. This raises the larger
+question of whether freedom in the modern
+state can ever be satisfactorily secured by
+internal sanctions, and whether, in fact, it
+is ever durably possible save in the terms
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>of a strong and stable international organization.
+For, clearly, we must not think
+of freedom as involving only an individual
+set over against the community; it involves
+also the freedom of groups, racial, ecclesiastical,
+vocational, set over against the community
+and the state; it involves also the
+relation of states to one another, as, for instance,
+in the problem of annexation. No
+Englishman would think himself free if his
+domestic life were defined for him by another
+state; and no German but has had a
+bitter sense of unfreedom during the foreign
+occupation of the Rhineland. Our
+generation, at least, is unlikely to under-estimate
+the problem of what limits may be
+set to the demand for freedom by a national
+group.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>Everyone who considers the relation of
+liberty to the institutions of a state will, I
+think, find it difficult to resist the conclusion
+that without democracy there cannot
+be liberty. That is not an over-popular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>thesis in our time. A reaction against democratic
+ideals is the fashion, and the dictatorships
+which proliferate over half
+Europe are earnest in maintaining their
+obsolescence. Yet consider, for a moment,
+what democracy implies. It involves a
+frame of government in which, first, men
+are given the chance of making the government
+under which they live, in which,
+also, the laws that government promulgates
+are binding equally upon all. I do not think
+the average man can be made happy merely
+by living in a democracy: I do not see how
+he can avoid a sense of continuous frustration
+unless he does. For if he does not share
+in making the government, if he cannot,
+where his fellows so choose, be himself
+made one of the rulers of the state, he is
+excluded from that which secures him the
+certainty that his experience counts. To
+read the history of England before the enfranchisement
+of the wage-earner is to
+realize that however small is the value of
+the franchise it still assures the attention of
+government to grievance. The right, therefore,
+to the franchise is essential to liberty;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>and a citizen excluded from it is unfree.
+Unfree for the simple reason that the rulers
+of the state will not regard his will as entitled
+to consideration in the making of
+policy. They will do things for him, but
+not those things he himself regards as
+urgent; as Parliament a hundred years ago
+met the grim problem of urban want by
+building more churches to the glory of the
+Lord. Whatever is to be said against the
+democratic form of state, it seems to me unquestionable
+that it has forced the needs of
+humble men on the attention of government
+in a way impossible under any other
+form.</p>
+
+<p>To be free a people must be able to
+choose its rulers at stated intervals simply
+because there is no other way in which
+their wants, as they experience those wants,
+will receive attention. It is fundamental to
+the conference of power that it should
+never be permanent. If it is so, it ceases
+to give attention to the purposes for which
+it is conferred and thinks only of the well-being
+of those who can exercise it. That
+has been, notably, the history of monarchy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>and aristocracy, and in general, of the practice
+of colonial dominion. Power that is
+unaccountable makes instruments of men
+who should be ends in themselves. Responsible
+government in a democracy lives
+always in the shadow of coming defeat;
+and this makes it eager to satisfy those
+with whose destinies it is charged.</p>
+
+<p>That is a general principle which, stated
+as baldly as this, does not adequately illustrate
+the substance it implies. The history
+of the struggle for popular freedom has
+given us knowledge of certain rules in the
+organization of a state the presence of
+which is fundamental to freedom. It can,
+I think, be shown that no citizen is secure
+in liberty unless certain rights are guaranteed
+to him, rights which the government
+of the state cannot hope to overthrow; and
+unless, to secure the maintenance of those
+rights, there is a separation of the judicial
+from the executive power.</p>
+
+<p>The citizens of a state choose men to
+make the laws under which they are to live.
+It is urgent that they should be binding
+upon all without fear or favour; that I, for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>instance, should be able to live secure in
+the knowledge that they will not apply to
+me differently from their incidence upon
+others. Clearly enough, in the modern
+state, the application of law to life demands
+a vast body of civil servants to administer
+it. Not the least important
+problem of our time is that which arises
+when the legality of their administration is
+in question. In Anglo-Saxon communities
+it has been regarded as elementary that
+the interpretation of law should be entrusted
+to an independent body of officials—the
+judges—who can arbitrate impartially
+between government and citizens.
+That view I take to be of the first importance
+to freedom; and its acceptance involves
+considerations which we must
+examine in some detail.</p>
+
+<p>The business of a judiciary, broadly
+speaking, is the impartial interpretation of
+the law as between government and citizen,
+or between classes of citizens who dispute
+with one another. The government, for instance,
+charges a man with treason; obviously
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>he is deprived of something
+essential to his freedom if the law is
+strained so as to make of treason something
+it in fact is not in order to cover the
+acts which the government seeks to have
+accepted as treason. Here, obviously, the
+judge must be assured that his independence
+may be maintained with safety to
+himself. He must not suffer in his person
+or position because of the view he takes.
+It must not be within the power either of
+the government or other persons to deprive
+him of his authority because, as best he
+may, he applies the law. This, as I think,
+makes it essential that all judicial appointments
+should be held during good behaviour.
+There may be an age-limit of
+service, of course; but, this apart, nothing
+should permit the removal of a judge from
+the bench except corruption or physical
+unfitness. I do not, therefore, believe that
+a judicial system founded upon popular
+election is a satisfactory way of choosing
+judges, the more so if submission to re-election
+is involved; and the system, abandoned
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>in England in 1701, of making
+judicial appointment dependent upon the
+pleasure of government is equally indefensible.
+Once a man has been appointed
+to judicial office nothing must stand in the
+way of his complete independence of mind.
+Election, re-election, a power in the government
+to dismiss, are all of them incompatible
+with the function the judge is to
+perform. They will not, as a general rule,
+either give us the men we want, or enable
+us to keep them when we have found them.</p>
+
+<p>But we must, I think, go further than
+this. Judicial independence is not merely
+a matter of mechanical technique; it is also
+psychological in character. The judge
+whose promotion is dependent upon the
+will of the executive, even more, the judge
+who may look to a political career as a
+source of future distinction, neither of these
+is adequately protected in that independence
+of mind which is the pivot of his function.
+No less a person than Mr Chief
+Justice Taft has told us that he appointed
+a predecessor to that eminent position at
+least partly because he approved of one of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>his decisions.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> No one could, I think, have
+confidence in the Bench if it were known
+that decisions pleasing to a given political
+party might lead either to promotion or to
+choice as either a presidential candidate or
+as Lord Chancellor. It seems to me, therefore,
+that we must so organize the method
+of judicial promotion as to prevent the executive
+from choosing men of its own
+outlook, and, further, see to it that appointment
+to the Bench is definitely taken as the
+end of a political career. These are problems
+of detailed technique into which I
+cannot now enter;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> here I am only concerned
+to point out that the problem of independence
+which they raise is one that it
+is necessary to meet with frankness.</p>
+
+<p>But the judge’s authority as a safeguard
+of our freedom is in the modern state
+threatened in another way. Modern legislation
+is so huge both in volume and extent
+that the average assembly has neither time
+nor energy to scrutinize its details. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>modern habit is, therefore, to pass Acts
+which confer a general power, and to leave
+the filling in of details to the discretion of
+the department concerned. To this, I think,
+no one can really take exception. The state
+must do its work; and it must develop the
+agencies necessary to that end. But I think
+we have grave reason for fear when the
+growth of this delegated legislative authority
+is accompanied with, or followed by, the
+conference of powers upon government departments
+themselves to determine the
+question of whether the powers they take
+are legal or no. I regard the growth of delegated
+legislation as both necessary and desirable;
+but if it is not gravely to impair
+our freedom, it should, I think, be developed
+only under the amplest safeguards.</p>
+
+<p>Decisions, for instance, like that on the
+<i>Fu Toy</i> case&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> in the United States, and in
+<i>Arlidge</i> v. <i>Local Government Board</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> in
+England, are clearly a real menace to the
+liberty of the subject. They suggest a type
+of executive justice for which the methods
+of the Star Chamber are the nearest analogy.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>No body of civil servants, however
+liberal-minded they may be, ought to be
+free both to make the law and to devise the
+procedure by which its legality may be
+tested; and that, be it remembered, without
+a power of appeal from their decision.
+It may be taken for granted that the modern
+state needs an administrative law; in
+matters, for instance, like rate-fixing in
+public utilities, in workmen’s compensation
+cases, in matters concerning public health,
+the views of a body of experts in a public
+department are generally at least as valid
+as that of the judicial body. But one wants
+to be certain that in arriving at his decision
+the expert has been compelled to
+take account of all the relevant evidence;
+that the parties to his decision have had
+their day in court. This seems to me to
+involve the organization of a procedure for
+all administrative tribunals which takes account
+of the lessons we have learned both
+from the procedure of ordinary courts and
+from the history of the law of evidence;
+and it involves an appeal from administrative
+tribunals to the ordinary courts on all
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>questions where denial of proper procedure
+is held to involve a denial of proper consideration.
+Something of this, if I understand
+the matter aright, has been granted to the
+American citizen by the Supreme Court in
+<i>McCall</i> &amp;c. v. <i>New York</i>;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and I should
+feel happier about the future of administrative
+law if I were certain that the principles
+of that decision applied to all
+governmental activities of the kind.</p>
+
+<p>Another safeguard is not less essential.
+We agree, for the most part, in ordinary
+legal matters that the opinion of a single
+judge, even when reinforced by the verdict
+of a jury, ought not to be final in either
+criminal or civil cases. I should like to see
+that agreement extended to the sphere of
+administrative law. Where, that is to say, a
+departmental tribunal has rendered its decision
+I should like an appeal to lie to a
+higher administrative tribunal composed
+not only of officials, but, also, of laymen of
+experience in the matters involved who
+could be trusted to bring an independent
+mind to the settlement of the matter in dispute.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>English experience of tribunals like
+the civil service division of the Industrial
+Court, and the Commissioners of Income
+Tax, convinces me that the common sense
+of a good lay mind is, in this realm, an
+immense safeguard against departmental
+error. And we must remember that, however
+great be the good will of the public
+services, what, to them, may seem a simple
+matter of administrative routine, may be
+to the citizens involved a denial of the very
+substance of freedom. Certainly a case like
+<i>ex parte O’Brien</i>&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> makes one see how real
+would be the threat to public liberty if departmental
+legislation grew without proper
+judicial scrutiny at every stage of its development.</p>
+
+<p>The problem, however, does not merely
+end here. There are two other sides of administrative
+action in which the uncontrolled
+power of the state is an implicit
+threat to civic freedom. Of the first, I would
+say here only a word, since I have treated
+it fully elsewhere.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> The modern state is a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>sovereign state and, as such, there are
+large realms of its conduct where wrong
+on its part cannot imply the invocation by
+the citizen of penalty. The right to sue the
+state in tort seems to me quite fundamental
+to freedom. The modern state is in essence
+a public service corporation. Like any other
+body, it acts through servants who take decisions
+in its name. I can see no reason
+in the world why, like any other body serving
+the public, it should not be responsible
+for the torts of its agents. If I am run over
+by the negligent driver of a railway truck,
+I can secure damages: I do not see why I
+am not equally entitled to damages if the
+truck is the property of, and is driven for,
+the Postmaster-General of His Majesty.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>But, still in the context of administration,
+the needs of liberty go yet further.
+There has accreted today about the departments
+of state a type of discretionary power
+which seems to me full of danger unless it
+is exercised under proper safeguards. Examples
+of it are the power of the Postmaster-General
+in the United States over
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>the mails and of the Home Secretary in
+England over requests from aliens for naturalization.
+An alien applies to the Home
+Secretary for naturalization. He answers innumerable
+questions, and presents certificates
+of good character from citizens who
+testify on oath to his standing. He has resided
+in the country for at least five years
+and he will not, of course, normally venture
+to apply unless his record is adequate.
+A request is published in the press for any
+information about him and, after a due interval,
+the Home Secretary makes a decision
+about his case. He has, of course,
+pursued his own inquiries, and he has, presumably,
+received information about the
+applicant upon which his action is based.
+Now the point that disturbs me is the fact
+that where a certificate of naturalization is
+refused, the grounds for rejection are
+never, even privately to the applicant,
+made known. He is refused privileges
+which may be vital to him and his family
+in the background of accusations which
+may, doubtless, be true, but may also be
+completely without foundation and capable,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>were opportunity afforded, of being
+immediately and decisively refuted. And so
+great is the discretionary power of the
+Minister that he may even substitute his
+own will for that of the legislature: the
+Act, for instance, demands a five-year
+period of residence. The late Home Secretary,
+Lord Brentford, announced that while
+he was in office he would grant no certificate
+unless the applicant had resided in
+England continuously for a period of thirteen
+years. It seems to me that this power
+to deny admission to citizenship, as it is
+exercised, is a complete denial of natural
+justice. No person ought to be condemned
+by accusations he is not given the opportunity
+to refute. Anyone who wishes to give
+testimony in a case of this kind ought
+surely to prove his <i>bona fides</i> by submitting
+to cross-examination by the applicant or
+his representative. I should like, therefore,
+to see the possibility of an appeal from the
+decision of the Home Secretary to a judge
+in chambers where the latter would, on a
+case stated by the Department, hear such
+evidence as the applicant chose to bring
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>for its refutation and then only make a
+final decision. Anything less than this
+seems to me a wanton abuse of freedom;
+and, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>, this type of safeguard
+seems to me urgent wherever a Minister
+is given a discretionary power which
+affects the liberty of the subject.</p>
+
+<p>I accept, therefore, the traditional notion
+that the separation of the judicial from
+the executive power, the right of the former
+to determine the legality of executive
+decision, is the basis of freedom. I do not,
+however, believe that the separation of the
+executive from the legislature is either necessary
+or desirable. The origin of the idea,
+as you know, is in the historic misinterpretation
+of the British Constitution by Montesquieu;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+and this, in its turn, was due to
+his misapplication of certain classic dicta
+of Locke.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> The fact is that a separation in
+this realm results in a complete and undesirable
+erosion of responsibility. The
+British system, in which the executive, as
+a committee of the legislative, formulates
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>its plans for acceptance or rejection, has,
+I think, the clear advantage of showing the
+electorate exactly where responsibility for
+action must lie. Where mistakes are made,
+where there is corruption, or dishonesty, or
+abuse, it can be brought home forthwith
+to its authors. In the American system, that
+is not the case. The President is neither
+the master nor the servant of the legislature.
+The latter can make its own schemes;
+where its views, more, where its party complexion,
+are different from his, there is a
+constant tendency to paralysis of administration.
+Each can blame the other for failure.
+No clear policy emerges upon which
+the electorate can form a straightforward
+judgment. Independence makes for antagonism
+and antagonism, in its turn, makes
+for confusion. Such a separation means,
+almost invariably, the construction of a
+separate quasi-executive in the legislature,
+which has an interest of its own distinct
+from, and often hostile to, that of the President.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+I can see no necessary safeguard of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>liberty in this. On the contrary, the British
+system, where the executive may be at any
+moment destroyed by the legislature as a
+penalty for error or wrong, where, also,
+there lies always the prospect of an immediate
+and direct appeal to the people as
+the ultimate and only arbiter of difference,
+seems to me far more satisfactory.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>Another institutional mechanism for the
+safeguarding of freedom is that of a Bill
+of Rights. Certain principles, freedom of
+speech, protection from arbitrary arrest,
+and the like, are regarded as especially
+sacred. They are enshrined in a document
+which cannot, constitutionally, be invaded
+either by the legislature or the executive,
+save by a special procedure to which access
+is difficult. The first Amendment to the
+American Constitution, for example, lays it
+down that Congress shall pass no law
+abridging freedom of speech; and any Act
+of Congress which touches upon the matter
+can be challenged for unconstitutionality
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>before the Supreme Court. The Amendment,
+moreover, cannot be attacked save by
+the usual process of constitutional change
+in America; and that means that, except in
+the event of an American Revolution, it
+is unlikely ever to be directly attacked at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>My own years of residence in the United
+States have convinced me that there is a
+real value in Bills of Rights which it is
+both easy, and mistaken, to under-estimate.
+Granted that the people are educated to
+the appreciation of their purpose, they serve
+to draw attention, as attention needs to be
+drawn, to the fact that vigilance is essential
+in the realm of what Cromwell called fundamentals.
+Bills of Rights are, quite undoubtedly,
+a check upon possible excess in
+the government of the day. They warn us
+that certain popular powers have had to
+be fought for, and may have to be fought
+for again. The solemnity they embody
+serves to set the people on their guard. It
+acts as a rallying-point in the state for all
+who care deeply for the ideals of freedom.
+I believe, for instance, that the existence
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>of the First Amendment has drawn innumerable
+American citizens to defend
+freedom of speech who have no atom of
+sympathy with the purposes for which it is
+used. A Bill of Rights, so to say, canonizes
+the safeguards of freedom; and, thereby,
+it persuades men to worship at the altar
+who might not otherwise note its existence.</p>
+
+<p>All this, I think, is true; but it does not
+for a moment imply that a Bill of Rights
+is an automatic guarantee of liberty. For
+the relationship of legislation to its substance
+has to be measured by the judiciary.
+Its members, after all, are human beings,
+likely, as the rest of us, to be swept off
+their feet by gusts of popular passion. The
+first Amendment to the American Constitution
+guarantees freedom of speech and
+peaceable assembly; the fourth Amendment
+legally secures to the citizen that his house
+shall not be searched except upon a warrant
+of probable cause; the eighth Amendment
+legally secures him against excessive
+bail. Yet you will remember how, in one
+hysterical week in 1919, the action of the
+executive power rendered all these amendments
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>worthless;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> and you will not forget
+that the fifteenth Amendment, which
+sought political freedom for the coloured
+citizens of the South, has never been effectively
+applied either by the executive
+or by the Courts.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is that any Bill of Rights depends
+for its efficacy on the determination
+of the people that it shall be maintained.
+It is just as strong, and no more, than the
+popular will to freedom. No one now
+doubts that the Espionage Acts were
+strained so as to destroy almost all that the
+first Amendment was intended to cover;
+that most of the charges preferred under it
+were, on their face, ludicrous. Yet you will
+remember that, in <i>Abrams</i> v. <i>United
+States</i>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> two judges stood alone in their insistence
+that the first Amendment really
+meant something; the judgment of the
+others was caught in the meshes of war hysteria.
+No principle is better established
+than the right of the citizen, under proper
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>circumstances, to a writ of <i>habeas corpus</i>;
+that is, perhaps, the ark of the covenant in
+the Anglo-American conception of freedom.
+But who can ever forget the noble
+and pathetic words of Chief Justice Taney,
+in <i>ex parte Merryman</i>,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> where he insists
+that the applicant is entitled to the writ
+and that, in view of President Lincoln’s
+suspension of it—a suspension entirely illegal
+in character—he could not secure to
+Mr Merryman his due rights? And let us
+remember, also, that even where the judge
+is prepared to do his duty, he cannot, in a
+period of excitement, count upon public
+opinion. Nothing is clearer than the fact
+that those who hanged Mr Gordon during
+the Jamaica riots were guilty of murder.
+The opinion of Chief Justice Cockburn
+could not have made the issue more clear;
+it is a landmark in the judicial history of
+freedom. Yet the jury at once, in its despite,
+acquitted the accused. There have been,
+further, many occasions when breaches
+of fundamental principles of freedom,
+breaches which, on any showing, have been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>quite indefensible, have been followed at
+once by Acts of Indemnity. I know only of
+one case in England in the last hundred
+years in which such an Act has been refused.
+Yet it is, I think, obvious that
+unless such breaches are definitely and
+deliberately punished, they will always occur
+on critical occasions. At such times, it
+is impossible to trust those who are charged
+with the exercise of power; and only the
+knowledge that swift and certain punishment
+will follow its abuse will make our
+rulers attentive to the needs of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>I speak the language of severity; and I
+am anxious that you should not think that
+the language of severity is that of the extremist.
+I invite you, as the proof of what
+I say, to read, in the light of cold reason
+a decade after the close of the war, the
+history of the tribunals in England which
+were charged with examining conscientious
+objectors to military service and on the
+military authorities to whom some of those
+objectors were handed over.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> No one can go
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>through the record without the sense that
+some of the tribunals deliberately evaded
+the purposes of the exemption clause; and
+it is clear that in the administration of
+punishment for refusal to obey orders,
+there was wanton cruelty, a deliberate
+pleasure in the infliction of pain, for which
+no words can be too strong. Nor is that all.
+The record shows occasions when Ministers
+of the Crown, when responding to questions
+in the House of Commons, used evasions
+of a kind which showed a complete
+contempt of truth;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> and they were supported
+in their attitude by the majority of
+the members there. I note, also, at least
+one occasion when a number of conscientious
+objectors were taken from England
+to France for the purpose of execution by
+the military authorities; and it was only
+the accident that Professor Gilbert Murray
+was able to appeal on their behalf to the
+Prime Minister, which prevented the sentence
+from being carried out.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_21_21" href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> These are
+worse than the methods of the Inquisition;
+for, at least, the members of that tribunal
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>believed that they were rescuing their victims
+from eternal damnation. Those of
+whom I speak had no excuse save ignorant
+prejudice and the blindness of passion.</p>
+
+<p>You will see, therefore, why I cannot believe
+that constitutional expedients alone,
+however substantial, will prevent the invasion
+of liberty. They will work just so long
+as people are determined they shall work,
+and no longer. They are valuable because,
+since they have been consecrated by tradition,
+their invasion tends to awaken, at
+least in some of us, a prejudice to which
+we have become habituated. But to keep
+them active and alive, requires a deliberate
+and purposive effort it is by no means easy
+to make when the result of doing so conflicts
+with some other object keenly desired.
+That is, I think, capable of a simple demonstration.
+No class of men is so carefully
+trained as the judiciary to the habit of a
+balanced mind. Yet if you examine the observations
+of judges in cases where their
+passions are deeply involved you will note
+how great is the effort they have to make
+to show tolerance to antagonistic views.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>Nor do they always succeed. In most of the
+classic English blasphemy cases, for example,
+the judge has too often been, either
+consciously or unconsciously, an additional
+counsel for the prosecution.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_22_22" href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> In many of
+the American Espionage Acts cases what
+chiefly emerges from the summing up of
+the judge is a desire, at all costs, to see
+that the prisoner does not secure an acquittal.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_23_23" href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
+Recent injunction cases in America
+show a desire, no doubt unconscious,
+on the part of the Court, to lend aid and
+countenance to a social philosophy of
+which it happens to approve.</p>
+
+<p>I conclude, therefore, that in general
+we shall not allow, as a society, the mechanisms
+of the state to serve the cause of freedom
+unless we approve the objects at
+which freedom aims. In a time of crisis,
+particularly, when the things we hold most
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>dear are threatened, we shall find the desire
+to throw overboard the habits of tolerance,
+almost irresistible. For those habits
+are not in Nature, which teaches us that
+opinions we deem evil are fraught with
+death. They come from our social heritage,
+and are part of a process the value of which
+we must relearn continuously if we are to
+preserve it. That is the meaning of the
+famous maxim that eternal vigilance is the
+price of liberty. It is why, also, it becomes
+necessary in each age to restate the case for
+freedom, if it is to be maintained.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>There is one other general part of this
+political aspect of liberty that I wish to
+consider before I turn to a different portion
+of my theme. I have argued that resistance
+to the encroachments of power is
+essential to freedom because it is the habit
+of power continuously, if it can, to enlarge
+the boundaries of its authority. Is there any
+specific rule by which men can be trained
+to such resistance? Is there, that is, a way
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>in which the average citizen of the modern
+state can be persuaded that it is in his interest
+to be vigilant against those who
+would invade his rights? Can it, further,
+be shown that such a temper in the citizen
+is likely, as it grows, to confer benefit upon
+the community as a whole?</p>
+
+<p>Broadly speaking, I think the answer to
+these questions is in the affirmative. I hazard
+the generalization that the more widespread
+the distribution of power in the
+state, the more decentralized its character,
+the more likely men are to be zealous for
+freedom. That is, of course, a large statement
+to make. It is the thesis that, in terms
+of historic experience, good government is
+always, in the end, both less valuable and
+less efficient than self-government. I mean
+that, in general, rules imposed upon a society
+from above for its benefit are less effective
+to the end that they seek than rules
+which have grown naturally from below. I
+believe that to be true both of the individual
+and the group in society. Its full
+realization is, of course, an impossibility
+since it would make the uniformities we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>need in social life unattainable. But the
+greater the degree in which we can realize
+it, the better for the community to which
+we belong.</p>
+
+<p>I do not mean to imply that there is
+any rigid principle which enables us to
+mark off the lines of demarcation between
+what is individual and what is social, between
+what belongs to the group and what
+belongs to the state, between the sphere
+of central, and the sphere of local government.
+The only possible approach to that
+problem is a pragmatic one, as anyone can
+see who tries to make common sense out
+of John Stuart Mill’s famous attempt, with
+its list of exceptions&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_24_24" href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> by which he reduced
+it to something like absurdity. Most of us,
+I think, could draw up lists of governmental
+subjects in which central and local topics
+could be demarcated without undue
+disagreement. We should fairly universally
+say that foreign policy and defence, fiscal
+technique and commercial regulation were
+naturally within the sphere of the central,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>and playing fields, were within the sphere
+of the local, authority. We should agree
+that crime is a matter for the state, and sin
+a matter for the churches. We should admit
+that there must be uniform regulations
+for marriage and divorce, but that individuals
+only could make up their minds
+when, within the regulations, either to
+marry or divorce.</p>
+
+<p>This, I think, is pretty straightforward.
+The points I wish to emphasize are different.
+They are, first, that in the making of
+public decisions, it is desirable that as
+many persons as possible who are affected
+by the result should share in reaching it;
+and, secondly, that whenever the decision
+to make some rule of conduct a matter of
+governmental regulation arouses widespread
+and ardent dissent, the probability
+is that the case against the decision is
+stronger than the case in its favour.</p>
+
+<p>My first point I may perhaps best make
+by the statement that all creative authority
+is essentially federal in character. The purpose
+for which authority is exercised is the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>maximum satisfaction of desire. To achieve
+that end, it is in the long run vital to take
+account of the wills of those who will be
+affected by the decision. For, otherwise,
+their desires are unexplored, and there is
+substituted for the full experience that
+should be available, the partial experience,
+perhaps suffused with a sinister interest,
+which is able to influence the legal source
+of decision. Maximum satisfaction, in other
+words, is a function of maximum consultation;
+and the greater the degree in which
+the citizen shares in making the rules under
+which he lives, the more likely is his
+allegiance to those rules to be free and unfettered.
+Nor is this all. The process of
+being consulted gives him a sense of being
+significant in the state. It makes him feel
+that he is more than the mete recipient of
+orders. He realizes that the state exists for
+his ends and not for its own. He comes to
+see that his needs will be met only as he
+contributes his instructed judgment to the
+experience out of which decisions are compounded.
+He gains the expectation of being
+consulted, the sense that he must form an
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>opinion on public affairs. He learns to dislike
+orders which are issued without regard
+being paid to his will. He comes to have
+a sense of frustration when decisions are
+made arbitrarily, and without an attempt
+to build them from the consent of those
+affected. He learns vigilance about the ways
+of power. Those who are trained to that
+vigilance become the conscious guardians
+of liberty.</p>
+
+<p>For they will protest against what they
+regard as the invasion of their rights, and
+tribute will have to be paid to their protest.
+In any community, fortunately for
+ourselves, power is always upon the defensive;
+and when men are vigilant to expose
+its encroachments it is urgent to seek their
+good opinion. Those active-minded enough
+to fight for their rights will, doubtless, be
+always in a minority; but they prick the
+indifferent multitude into thought and they
+thus act as the gadflies of liberty. The handful
+of American lawyers who protested
+against the methods of the Department of
+Justice in 1920 forced its officials to a
+change of their ways. The little group of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>men who, in season and out of season, have
+protested that the white man’s burden
+ought not, in justice, to be borne by the
+black, have the Mandates’ system of the
+League of Nations to their credit: what E.
+D. Morel did for the Congo, what H. W.
+Nevinson did for Portuguese Angola, these
+are lessons in the service of citizenship to
+liberty. And it is the peculiar value of this
+habit of mind that it grows by what it feeds
+on. To accustom the average man to regard
+himself as a person who must be
+consulted is, in the long run, to assure him,
+through consultation, of satisfaction. For
+the holders of power are always desirous
+of finding the convenient routine; and if
+they are driven by pressure to give the people
+freedom, they will discover that this
+is the object they have set before themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Into the institutional pattern which such
+a federalization of authority requires I cannot
+here enter.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_25_25" href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> It must suffice to say that
+it makes totally inadequate the traditional
+forms even of the democratic state. For
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>the notion that, when the citizen has chosen
+his representatives for Parliament or his
+local authority, he can sit back in the comfortable
+knowledge that his wants are
+known, his interests safeguarded, has not
+one jot of evidence to support it. We need,
+of a certainty, a much more complex
+scheme. We have not only to provide for
+more adequate relationships between Parliament
+and the administrative process; we
+have also to integrate the latter with the
+public it serves on a much ampler scale
+than any we have hitherto imagined. I have
+elsewhere tried to show how vital in this
+context is the device of the advisory committee.
+Its value both as a check upon
+bureaucracy, and as a means of making
+decision genuinely representative in character,
+becomes the more clear the wider
+our experience of its functioning.</p>
+
+<p>But even this is not enough. There will
+never be liberty in any state where there
+is an excessive concentration of power at
+the centre. The need for a wide conference
+of authority away from that centre becomes
+more obvious with the growth of our experience.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>If the decisions to be made are to
+embody the needs of those affected by
+them, the latter must have major responsibility
+for their making. All of our problems
+are not central problems; and to leave
+to the central government the decision of
+questions which affect only a portion of the
+community is to destroy in that portion the
+sense of responsibility and the habit of inventiveness.
+The inhabitants of any given
+area have a consciousness of common purposes,
+a sense of the needs of their neighbourhood,
+which only they can fully know.
+They find that the power to satisfy them
+of themselves gives to them a quality of
+vigour far greater in the happiness it produces
+than would be the case if satisfaction
+were always provided by, or controlled
+from, without. For administration from
+without always lacks the vitalizing ability
+to be responsive to local opinion; it misses
+shades and expressions of thought and
+want which are urgent to successful government.
+It lacks the genius of place. It
+does not elicit creative support from those
+over whom it rules. It makes for mechanical
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>uniformity, an effort to apply similar
+rules to unsimilar things. It is too distant
+from the thing to be done to awaken interest
+from those concerned in the process of
+doing it. Centralized government in local
+matters may be more efficient than a decentralized
+system; but that superior efficiency
+will never, as Mill long ago pointed out,
+compensate for an inferior interest in the
+result.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, therefore, that, with all its difficulties
+and dangers, the area of local government
+should be as little circumscribed
+as possible. The German system, of laying
+down what a local authority may not do,
+and leaving it free to experiment outside
+that realm of prohibition, seems to me superior
+both in principle and result to its
+Anglo-American antithesis. Thereby we
+gain not only the knowledge which comes
+from varied social experiment, but the
+freedom born of citizenship trained in the
+widest degree to think for itself and to solve
+its own problems. Most imposed solutions
+of a uniform character only succeed where
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>their material is genuinely uniform. That
+is rarely the case in these matters. And
+even the impatient reformer ought sometimes
+to think whether, say, forcing a
+child-labour law on Georgia by federal
+amendment will lead to a genuine and
+whole-hearted application of its terms;
+whether, in fact, it will not persuade to hatred
+of the law, even contempt for the law,
+by encouraging evasion of it. Successful
+legislation is almost always legislation for
+which the minds of men are anxious; the
+channels of assent to it can rarely be dug
+too deep.</p>
+
+<p>All, moreover, that I am saying of territorial
+locality, seems to me to apply, with
+no less emphasis, to what may be termed
+functional areas also. Everyone acquainted
+with the history of churches realizes the
+necessity of leaving them free to develop
+their own internal life. On matters like
+ecclesiastical government, dogma, ceremonial,
+interference by the state is almost
+invariably disastrous in its results. What
+is true of churches is true also, <i>mutatis
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>mutandis</i>, of other associations. Bodies like
+the legal and medical professions are much
+better able to direct their own internal life
+than to have it directed for them by the
+state. It is necessary, of course, to prevent
+them from developing into monopolies;
+and to that end it is essential to devise a
+framework of principle within which they
+must work, to retain, also, the right to its
+revision from without from time to time.
+But that said, few would, I think, deny that
+what we call professional standards, the
+jealousy for the honour of the profession,
+the sense of <i>esprit de corps</i>, the realization
+that its members owe to the community
+something more than the qualities for
+which payment can be exacted, these things
+are born of the large degree of freedom to
+define their own life the professions enjoy.</p>
+
+<p>It is, I think, important to extend that
+notion of self-government beyond the professions.
+We ought to learn to think of industries
+like cotton and coal as entities not
+less real than Lancashire or New York, as
+capable, therefore, of being organized for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>the purpose of government. Most of the
+plans as current today for national economic
+councils are not, in my judgment,
+of great value; the satisfactory weighting
+of the different elements is really insoluble,
+and any problem that concerns industry
+as a whole seems to me at once civic in
+its nature and, therefore, the proper province
+of the legislative assembly of the state.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_26_26" href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+But these considerations do not apply to
+industries taken individually, or linked together
+at special points of intimate contact.
+It does not seem to me inconceivable that
+we should create a Parliament for the mining
+industry, in which capital, management,
+labour and the consumer, should
+each have their due representation, and
+to which should be confided the determination
+of industrial standards on the model
+of professional self-government. I should
+give to this Parliament a power of delegated
+legislation which would enable it to
+frame rules of conduct binding upon all
+the members of the industry. Thus, while
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>Georgia might refuse to pass a child-labour
+law, a particular industry in Georgia might
+refuse to allow its members to engage child
+labour in field or factory. There might be
+developed in this way a body of industrial
+legislation and jurisprudence growing naturally
+out of the experience of those who
+participate in the operation of the industry,
+and imposed with a real sense of freedom
+because it has been developed from within
+and is not the outcome of an external control.
+The help this system would give to
+the creative-minded employer, on the one
+hand, and the adventurous trade-union, on
+the other, needs no emphasis from me.
+Something of what it might effect, if
+planned in a wholesale way, the experiments
+of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers
+and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
+have amply demonstrated. They show
+clearly, I venture to suggest, that an authority
+born of consent is always definitely
+superior to an authority born of coercion.
+And the reason is the simple but vital one
+that creative energy is liberated only in the
+atmosphere of freedom.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>In all that I have so far said there is implied
+a theory of the nature of law upon
+which, perhaps, I ought to say a word. The
+view I am taking suggests that law is not
+simply a body of commands justifiable by
+virtue of their origin. Laws are rules seeking
+to satisfy human desires. They are
+the more certain of acceptance the more
+fully they seek to inquire what desires it is
+urgent to satisfy, and the best way of inquiry
+is to associate men with each stage
+of the process of law-making. For men, in
+fact, will not obey law which goes counter
+to what they regard as fundamental. Their
+notion of what is fundamental may be
+wrong, or unwise, or limited; but it is their
+notion, and they do not feel free unless
+they can act by their own moral certainties.
+It is useless to tell them that an assumption
+on their part that they are entitled
+to forgo obedience will result in anarchy.
+Every generation contains examples
+of men who, in the context of ultimate experience,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>deliberately decide that an anarchy
+in which they seek to maintain some
+principle is preferable to an order in which
+that principle must be surrendered. The
+South in 1861, Ulster in 1914, the Communist
+in the context of a capitalist society,
+these are but variations on the great theme
+of Luther’s classic <i>Ich Kann nicht anders</i>.
+They illustrate the inescapable truth that
+law must make its way to acceptance
+through the channel of consenting minds.</p>
+
+<p>Let me put this in a different way. Law
+is not merely a command; it is also an appeal.
+It is a search for the embodiment of
+my experience in the rule it imposes. The
+best way, therefore, to make that search
+creative is to consult me who can alone
+fully report what my experience is. There
+can be no guarantee that law will be accepted
+save in the degree that this is done.
+Legal right is so made as the individual
+recipient of a command invests it with
+right; he gives it his sanction by relating
+it successfully to his own experience. When
+that relation cannot be made, the authority
+of law is always in doubt. And it is in doubt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>because, by contradicting the experience of
+those whom it seeks to control, it seems to
+them a frustration of their personality. To
+accept the control would be to become
+unfree.</p>
+
+<p>An extreme way of putting this view
+would be to say that law is made by the individual’s
+acceptance of it, that the essence
+of the law-making process, is the consent
+of interested minds. At points of marginal
+significance, that is, I think, true; and the
+consequences of the truth are obviously important.
+Authority, if my view is right, is
+always acting at its peril. It lives not by its
+power to command but by its power to convince.
+And conviction is born of consent for
+the simple reason that the real field of social
+action is in the individual mind. Somewhere,
+inevitably, the power to coerce that
+mind to ways of thoughts of which it does
+not approve, breaks down; man, as Tyrrell
+said, is driven on “to follow the dominant
+influence of his life even if it should
+break the heart of all the world”. That is
+the stark fact which conditions the loyalty
+any authority seeks to secure. At some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>point, it cannot be imposed but must be
+won from us. And the greater the degree
+in which it springs from that persuasion,
+the greater, also, is the success of authority
+in imposing its solutions. No power can
+ever hope for successful permanence, no
+power, either, is entitled to it, which does
+not make its way, in vital matters, through
+the channels of consent.</p>
+
+<p>From this two conclusions seem to me
+to flow. Ours is not a universe in which the
+principles of a unified experience are unfolded.
+It is a multiverse embodying an
+ultimate variety of experiences, never identical,
+and always differently interpreted.
+There is enough similarity of view to enable
+us, if we have patience and goodwill,
+to make enough of unity to achieve order
+and peace. But that similarity is not identity.
+It does not entitle us to affirm that
+one man’s experience can be taken as the
+representation of another’s. It does not justify
+the inference that I shall find what I
+most truly desire in the desire of another.
+I am not a part of some great symphony in
+which I realize myself only as an incident
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>in the <i>motif</i> of the whole. I am unique,
+I am separate, I am myself; out of these
+qualities I must build my own principles
+of action. These are mine only, and cannot
+be made for me, at least creatively, by
+others. For their authority as principles
+comes from the fact that I recognize them
+as mine. Into them, as principles, I pour
+my personality, and life, for me, derives its
+meaning from their unique texture. To accept
+the forcible imposition of other principles
+upon me, which I do not recognize
+as the expression of my experience, is to
+make of me who might be free, a slave. I
+become an instrument of alien purposes,
+devoted to an end which denies my self-hood.
+Law, therefore, as coercion is always
+an invasion of personality, an abridgement
+of the moral stature of those whom it invades.
+To be true to its purpose, it must
+reduce the imperative element to a minimum
+if it is to release creativeness and not
+destroy it.</p>
+
+<p>The individual, therefore, is entitled to
+act upon the judgment of his conscience in
+public affairs. He is entitled to assume that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>he will not find the rules of the conduct he
+ought to pursue objectified in any institution
+or set of institutions. I agree that, for
+most of us, conscience is a poor guide. It
+is perverse, it is foolish, the little knowledge
+it has is small alongside the worth of
+the social tradition. But perverse, foolish,
+ignorant, it is the only guide we have. Perverse,
+foolish, ignorant, it is at least ours;
+and our freedom comes from acting upon
+its demands. We ought, doubtless, to convince
+ourselves that the path it indicates
+is one we have no alternative but to follow.
+We ought to seek the best possible
+means for its instruction and enlightenment.
+We should remember that civilization
+is, at best, a fragile thing, and that to
+embark upon a challenge to order is to
+threaten what little security it has. It may
+even be wise, as T. H. Greene once put it,
+to assume that we should approach the
+state in fear and trembling, remembering
+constantly the high mission with which it
+is charged.</p>
+
+<p>All this may be true, and yet it seems to
+me to leave the individual no option but to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>follow conscience as the guide to civic action.
+To do otherwise is to betray freedom.
+Those who accept commands they know to
+be wrong, make it easier for wrong commands
+to be accepted. Those who are silent
+in the presence of injustice are in fact
+part-authors of it. It is to be remembered
+that even a decision to acquiesce is a decision,
+that what shapes the substance of
+authority is what it encounters. If it meets
+always with obedience, sooner or later it
+will assume its own infallibility. When that
+moment comes, whatever its declared purpose,
+the good it will seek will be its own
+good and not that of those involved in its
+operations. Liberty means being faithful
+to oneself, and it is maintained by the courage
+to resist. This, and this only, gives life
+to the safeguards of liberty; and this only
+is the clue to the preservation of genuine
+integrity in the individual life.</p>
+
+<p>If it is objected that this is a doctrine
+of contingent anarchy, that it admits the
+right of men to rebellion, my answer is that
+the accusation is true. But is its truth important?
+Order, surely, is not the supreme
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>wrong. Power is not conferred upon men
+for the sake of power, but to enable them
+to achieve ends which win happiness for
+each of us. If what they do is a denial of
+the purpose they serve; if, as we meet their
+acts, there appears in them an absence of
+goodwill, a blindness to experience alien
+from their own, an incapacity imaginatively
+to meet the wants of others, what alternatives
+have we save a challenge to power or
+a sacrifice of the end of our life? We do
+not condemn Washington because there
+came a moment in his career when he was
+compelled to recognize that the time for
+compromise with England had passed. We
+do not, even more notably, condemn those
+early Christians who refused to offer incense
+to the Gods. We have to act by the
+dictates of our conscience knowing, as
+Washington knew, as the early Christians
+recognized, that the penalties of failure are
+terrible. But we can so act, also, knowing
+that there is a sense in which no man who
+serves his conscience ever fails.</p>
+
+<p>For by that service he becomes a free
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>man, and his freedom is a condition of
+other men’s freedom. There is immense
+significance in the fact that those who
+fought for religious liberty were the unconscious
+progenitors of civil liberty also.
+When they demanded the right to worship
+the God they knew, in their own mind they
+were insisting that in one sphere, at least,
+of human experience, their own perception
+must count as ultimate. They consecrated
+freedom to the service of God. But that,
+after all, is only one aspect of freedom. Its
+consecration to the service of man is, for
+some of us, not less vital and pervasive. To
+fight for the assurance that a man may do
+his duty as he conceives it is not only to
+fight for freedom, but for all the ends which
+the emancipation of mankind seeks to attain.
+I do not know whether liberty is the
+highest objective we can serve. I do assert
+that no other great purpose is possible of
+achievement save in the terms of fellowship
+with freedom.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">
+ CHAPTER II
+ <br>
+ FREEDOM OF THE MIND
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>I have sought, so far, to show that,
+however important be the political
+mechanisms on which liberty depends, they
+will not work of themselves. They depend
+for their creativeness upon the presence in
+any given society of a determination to
+make them work. The knowledge that an
+invasion of liberty will always meet with
+resistance from men determined upon its
+repulsion, this, in the last analysis, is the
+only true safeguard that we have. It means,
+I have admitted, that a certain penumbra
+of contingent anarchy always confronts the
+state; but I have argued that this is entirely
+desirable since the secret of liberty is always,
+in the end, the courage to resist.</p>
+
+<p>The most important aspect of this atmosphere
+is undoubtedly freedom of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>mind. The citizen seeks for happiness, and
+the state, for him, is an institution which
+exists to make his happiness possible. He
+judges it, I have urged, by its capacity to
+respond to the needs he infers from the
+experience he encounters. That experience,
+I have insisted, is private to himself. Its
+predominant quality is its uniqueness.
+Either it is his own, or it is nothing. The
+substitution for it of someone else’s experience,
+however much wider or wiser than
+his, is, where it is based upon constraint,
+a denial of freedom. What the citizen, quite
+rightly, expects from the state is to have
+his experience counted in the making of
+policy, and to have it counted as he, and
+he only, expresses its import.</p>
+
+<p>Obviously enough, if his experience is
+to count, a man must be able to state it
+freely. The right to speak it, to print it, to
+seek in concert with others its translation
+into the event, is fundamental to liberty.
+If he is driven, in this realm, to silence and
+inactivity, he becomes a dumb and inarticulate
+creature, whose personality is neglected
+in the making of policy. Without
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>freedom of the mind and of association a
+man has no means of self-protection in our
+social order. He may speak wrongly or
+foolishly; he may associate with others for
+purposes that are abhorrent to the majority
+of men. Yet a denial of his right to do these
+things is a denial of his happiness. Thereby,
+he becomes an instrument of other peoples
+ends, not himself an end. That is the
+essential condition of the perversion of
+power. Once we inhibit freedom of speech,
+we inhibit criticism of social institutions.
+The only opinions of which account is then
+taken are the opinions which coincide with
+the will of those in authority. Silence is
+taken for consent; and the decisions that
+are registered as law reflect, not the total
+needs of the society, but the powerful
+needs which have been able to make themselves
+felt at the source of power. Historically,
+the road to tyranny has always lain
+through a denial of freedom in this realm.</p>
+
+<p>I desire here to maintain a twofold thesis.
+I shall seek to show, first, that liberty
+of thought and association—the two things
+are inextricably intertwined—is good in itself,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>and second, that its denial is always
+a means to the preservation of some special
+and, usually, sinister interest which cannot
+maintain itself in an atmosphere of
+freedom. I shall then discuss what restrictions,
+if any, must be placed upon this
+right, and the conditions it demands for
+its maximum realization. I shall, in particular,
+maintain that all restrictions upon
+freedom of expression upon the ground
+that they are seditious or blasphemous are
+contrary to the well-being of society.</p>
+
+<p>The case for the view that freedom of
+thought and speech is a good in itself is
+fairly easy to make. If it is the business of
+those who exercise authority in the state
+to satisfy the wants of those over whom
+they rule, it is plain that they should be
+informed of those wants; and, obviously,
+they cannot be truly informed about them
+unless the mass of men is free to report
+their experience. No state, for instance,
+could rightly legislate about the hours of
+labour if only business men were free to
+offer their opinion upon industrial conditions.
+We could not develop an adequate
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>law of divorce if only those happily married
+were entitled to express an opinion
+upon its terms. Law must take account of
+the totality of experience and this can only
+be known to it as that experience is unfettered
+in its opportunity of expression.</p>
+
+<p>Most people are prepared to agree with
+this view when it is made as a general statement;
+most people, also, recoil from it
+when its implications are made fully
+known. For it implies not only the right to
+beatify the present social order, but the
+right, also, to condemn it with vigour and
+completeness. A man may say that England
+or America will never be genuinely democratic
+unless equality of income is established
+there; that equality of income may
+never be established except by force; that,
+accordingly, the way to a genuine democracy
+lies through a bloody revolution. Or
+he may argue that eternal truth is the sole
+possession of the Roman Catholic Church;
+that men can only be persuaded to understand
+this by the methods of the Inquisition;
+that, therefore, the re-establishment
+of the Inquisition is in the highest interest
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>of society. To most of us, these views will
+seem utterly abhorrent. Yet they represent
+the generalizations of an experience that
+some one has felt. They point to needs
+which are seeking satisfaction, and the society
+gains nothing by prohibiting their
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>For no one really ceases to be a revolutionary
+Communist or a passionate Roman
+Catholic by being forbidden to be either of
+these. His conviction that society is rotten
+at its base is only the more ardently held,
+his search for alternative ways of expressing
+his conviction becomes only the more
+feverish as a result of suppression. Terror
+does not alter opinion. On the one hand it
+reinforces it, on the other it makes the substance
+of opinion a matter of interest to
+many who would, otherwise, have had no
+interest whatever in it. When the United
+States Customs Department suppressed
+<i>Candide</i> on the ground that it was an obscene
+book, they merely stimulated the perverse
+curiosity of thousands to whom
+<i>Candide</i> would have remained less than a
+name. When the British Government prosecuted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>the Communists for sedition in 1925
+the daily reports of the trial, the editorial
+discussion of its result, made the principles
+of Communism known to innumerable
+readers who would never, under other circumstances,
+have troubled to acquaint
+themselves with its nature. No state can
+suppress the human impulse of curiosity,
+and there is always a special delight, a kind
+of psychological scarcity-value, in knowledge
+of the forbidden. No technique of suppression
+has so far been discovered which
+does not have the effect of giving wider
+currency to the thing suppressed than can
+be attained in any other fashion.</p>
+
+<p>But this is only the beginning of the
+case for freedom of speech. The heresies
+we may suppress today are the orthodoxies
+of tomorrow. New truth begins always in a
+minority of one; it must be someone’s perception
+before it becomes a general perception.
+The world gains nothing from a
+refusal to entertain the possibility that a
+new idea may be true. Nor can we pick and
+choose among our suppressions with any
+prospect of success. It would, indeed, be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>hardly beyond the mark to affirm that a
+list of the opinions condemned as wrong
+or dangerous would be a list of the commonplaces
+of our time. Most people can
+see that Nero and Diocletian accomplished
+nothing by their persecution of Christianity.
+But every argument against their attitude
+is an argument also against a similar
+attitude in other persons. Upon what
+grounds can we infer prospective gain from
+persecution of opinion? If the view held
+is untrue, experience shows that conviction
+of its untruth is invariably a matter of
+time; it does not come because authority
+announces that it is untrue. If the view is
+true in part only, the separation of truth
+and falsehood is accomplished most successfully
+in a free intellectual competition,
+a process of dissociation by rational criticism,
+in which those who hold the false
+opinion are driven to defend their position
+on rational grounds. If, again, the view
+held is wholly true, nothing whatever is
+gained by preventing its expression.
+Whether it relates to property, or marriage,
+to religion or the form of the state, by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>being true it demands a corresponding
+change in individual outlook and social organization.
+For untrue opinions do not permanently
+work. They impede discovery and
+they diminish happiness. They enable, of
+course, those to whom they are profitable,
+to benefit by their maintenance, but it is at
+the cost of society as a whole.</p>
+
+<p>There is the further question, moreover,
+of the persons to whom the task of selecting
+what should be suppressed to be confided.
+What qualifications are they to possess for
+their task? What tests are they to apply
+from which the desirability of suppression
+is to be inferred? A mere zeal for the well-being
+of society is an utterly inadequate
+qualification; for most persons who have
+played the part of censor have possessed
+this and have yet been utterly unfit for their
+task. The self-appointed person, Mr Comstock,
+for instance, merely identifies his
+private view of moral right with the ultimate
+principles of ethics; and only the
+intellectually blind would ask that the citizen
+be fitted to his vicious bed of Procrustes.
+The official censor, a man like the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>famous Pobedonostev, normally assumes
+that any thorough criticism of the existing
+social order is dangerous and destructive;
+and, thereby, he transforms what might
+be creative demand into secret attack which
+is ten times more dangerous in its attack.
+If you take almost any of those who are
+appointed to work of this kind, you discover
+that association with it seems necessarily
+to unfit them for their task. For
+it turns them into men who see undesirability
+in work which the average man
+reads without even a suspicion that it is not
+the embodiment of experience with which
+he ought to be acquainted. Anyone who
+looks through the list of prohibited publications
+enforced by the Dominion of Canada
+will, I think, get a sense that the office
+of censorship is the avenue to folly.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_27_27" href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> No
+one with whom I am acquainted seems wise
+enough or good enough to control the intellectual
+nutrition of the human mind.</p>
+
+<p>What tests, further, are they to apply?
+Broadly speaking, we suppress publications
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>on the ground that they are obscene
+or dangerous. But no one has ever arrived
+at a working definition of obscenity, even
+for legal purposes. Take, for instance, two
+books suppressed by the English magistrates
+for obscenity in 1929. One, Miss
+Radclyffe Hall’s <i>Well of Loneliness</i>,
+seemed to men like Mr Arnold Bennett and
+Mr Bernard Shaw a work which treated of
+a theme of high importance to society in a
+sober and high-minded way. They saw no
+reason to suppose that the treatment of its
+difficult subject—sexual perversion—could
+be regarded by any normal person as
+offensive. The magistrate, Sir Chartres Biron,
+took a different view. I, certainly, am
+not prepared, on <i>a priori</i> grounds, to say
+that a lawyer, however well-trained in the
+law, has a better sense of what is likely to
+produce moral depravity than Mr Bennett
+or Mr Shaw; and a reading of Miss Hall’s
+dull and sincere pamphlet only reinforces
+that impression. Another book was distributed
+privately and secretly—Mr D. H.
+Lawrence’s <i>Lady Chatterly’s Lover</i>—in a
+limited and expensive special edition. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>gather that its public sale would have been
+definitely prohibited. Yet I observe that
+some of the most eminent American critics
+have praised it as the finest example of a
+novel seeking the truth about the sexual
+relations of men and women that an Englishman
+has published in the twentieth
+century. That may be—I am not competent
+to say—excessive praise. My point is
+that in a choice, say, between the average
+police magistrate and Mr Robert Morss
+Lovett, I am not prepared to accept the
+former’s opinion of what I may be safely
+left to read.</p>
+
+<p>Let me remind you, moreover, of what
+cannot too often be pointed out, that the
+rigorous application of the legal tests of
+obscenity would prohibit the circulation of
+a very considerable part of the great literature
+of the world. The Bible, Shakespeare,
+Rabelais, Plato, Horace, Catullus,
+to take names at random, would all come
+under the ban. It is worth while pointing
+out that those most concerned with the suppression
+of “obscene” books are religious
+people. On their tests of obscenity the Bible
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>certainly could not hope to escape; yet
+they believe, in general, that the Bible is
+the inspired word of God, a position which,
+I venture to suggest, should at the least
+give them pause. I do not know, indeed,
+how we are to create a healthy social attitude
+to the problems of sex, if all that deals
+with it from a new point of view, and with
+a frankness that admits the experimental
+nature of our contemporary solutions, is to
+be dismissed as “obscene”. Questions like
+those of birth control, extra-marital love,
+companionate marriage, sexual perversion,
+cannot really be faced in a scientific fashion
+by applying to them the standards of
+a nomadic Eastern people which drew up
+its rules more than two thousand years
+ago. Virtuous people who shrink from
+frank discussion in this realm seem to me
+responsible for probably more gratuitous
+suffering than any other group of human
+beings. The thing they call “innocence” I
+believe to be quite wanton ignorance, and,
+by its abridgment of freedom, it imprisons
+human personality in a fashion that is quite
+unpardonable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span></p>
+
+<p>The same seems to me to be the case in
+the realm that is called blasphemy. I have
+no sort of sympathy with that attitude of
+mind which finds satisfaction in wanton insult
+to the religious convictions of others.
+But I am not prepared for its suppression.
+For I note that, historically, there are no
+limits to the ideas which religious persons
+will denounce as blasphemous; and, especially,
+that in an age of comparative
+religious indifference, the hand of persecution
+almost invariably chooses to fall only
+on humble men.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_28_28" href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> It attacks Mr G. W.
+Foote, but it leaves Lord Morley free to do
+infinitely more damage than any for which
+Mr Foote can ever have been responsible.
+I cannot, moreover, forget that what is
+blasphemy in Tennessee is common sense
+in New York, that the works of Wollaston
+and Toland and Chubb, which seemed entirely
+blasphemous to their generation,
+seem commonplace to ourselves. Every religious
+body really means by blasphemy an
+attack upon its fundamental principles.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>Such attacks are, of course, necessarily circulated
+to bring them into contempt. We
+who read Paine’s <i>Age of Reason</i> with admiration
+for its cogency of argument, its
+trenchant style, its fearless appetite for
+truth, can hardly avoid a sense of dismay
+when we remember the days when it was
+secretly passed from hand to hand as an
+outrageous production, the possession of
+which was itself an indication of social indecency.</p>
+
+<p>And here let me remind you of certain
+facts on the other side. We denominate as
+blasphemous works calculated to bring the
+principles of Christianity into hatred, ridicule,
+or contempt. As I have said, I entirely
+dislike the type of work which finds pleasure
+in offensiveness to Christians. But if
+we are to suppress works, and punish their
+authors, because they cause grief to certain
+of our fellow-citizens, exactly how far are
+we to carry the principle? A very large part
+of propagandist religious literature is
+highly offensive to sincere and serious-minded
+persons who are unable, in their
+conscience, to subscribe to any particular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>creed. When you remember the descriptions
+applied by Mr William Sunday to
+those who do not accept Christianity, you
+cannot, I think, avoid a sense that there is
+a religious blasphemy for which, at least
+from the angle of good manners, nothing
+whatever can be said. Mr Sunday is only
+one of the worse offenders in a whole tribe
+of preachers and writers to whom belief,
+however sincere, that is alien from their
+own, is normally and naturally described
+in the language it is a euphemism to call
+Billingsgate; and charges of immorality
+are brought against unbelievers by them
+for which not an atom of proof exists. Are
+we to suppress all such publications also?
+And if we are to continue this campaign of
+prohibition to its appointed and logical
+end, shall we have time for any other social
+adventure?</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all. In the world of education
+we are continually presented with the problem
+of text-books which are offensive to
+a particular denomination. We are asked,
+for instance, to prohibit their use in
+schools. I sit as an appointed member of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>the Education Committee of the London
+County Council. I have been presented
+there with a requisitory, drawn up by a
+Catholic body, against the use of certain
+books on the ground that they contain untrue
+statements about questions like the
+Reformation, in which Catholics are particularly
+interested. But I have not observed
+in the same Catholic body a desire only to
+use those text-books in their own denominational
+schools which Protestants are prepared
+to accept as a true picture of the
+Reformation. Nor is this problem of school
+text-books merely religious in character.
+Americans of our own generation have seen
+passionate controversy over the view of the
+War of Independence, of the Constitution,
+of the motives and responsibility in the war
+of 1914, which are to be presented not
+merely to school children, but also to university
+students; there is a heresy-hunt in
+the fields of politics and economics, a desire
+to have only “true” opinions taught
+to the immature mind. But “true” opinions,
+on examination, usually turn out to
+be the opinions which suit the proponents
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>of some particular cause. In London we
+think that a “true” theory of value is best
+obtained from the works of Professor Cannan;
+in Cambridge they pin their faith to
+Marshall and Pigou; in the Labour Colleges
+ultimate wisdom is embodied in the
+writings of Marx, and Cannan, Marshall
+and Pigou are all dismissed as the pathetic
+servants of bourgeois capitalism. Is anything
+gained for anyone by insisting that
+truth resides on one side only of a particular
+Pyrenees? Is it not wisdom to begin
+by an admission of its many-sidedness?
+And does not that admission involve an
+unlimited freedom of expression in the interpretation
+of facts? For facts, as William
+James said, are not born free and equal.
+They have to be interpreted in the light of
+our experience; and to suppress someone’s
+experience is to suppress someone’s personality,
+to impose upon him our view of
+what his life implies to the forcible exclusion
+of that in which alone he can find
+meaning. I see neither wisdom nor virtue
+in action of this kind.</p>
+
+<p>So far, I have restricted my discussion
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>to the non-political field, and before I enter
+this area, I want, for a moment, both to
+summarize the position we have reached
+and to admit the one limitation on freedom
+of expression I am prepared to concede.
+I have denied that prohibitions
+arising from blasphemy or obscenity, or
+historical or social unfairness, have any
+justification. They seem to me unworkable.
+They are bad because they prevent
+necessary social ventilation. They are bad
+because they exclude the general public
+from access to facts and ideas which are
+often of vital importance. They are bad
+because no one is wise or virtuous enough
+to stand in judgment upon what another
+man is to think or say or write. They are
+bad because they are incapable of commonsense
+application; there is never any possibility
+of a wise discrimination in their
+application. They give excessive protection
+to old traditions; they make excessively difficult
+the entrance of new. They confer
+power in a realm where qualifications for
+the exercise of power, and tests for its application,
+are, almost necessarily, non-existent.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>For the decision of every question
+of this kind is a matter of opinion in which
+there is no prospect of certainty. Suppression
+here means not the prohibition of
+the untrue or the unjust or the immoral,
+but of opinions unpleasing to those who
+exercise the censorship. Historically, no
+evidence exists to suggest that it has ever
+been exercised for other ends.</p>
+
+<p>I do not see any rational alternative to
+this view. But here I should emphasize my
+own belief that, broadly speaking, such
+freedom of expression as I have discussed
+means freedom to express one’s ideas on
+general subjects, on themes of public importance,
+rather than on the character of
+particular persons. I have not, I think, a
+right to suggest that Jones beats his wife,
+or that Brown continually cheats his employer,
+unless I can prove, first that the
+suggestions are true, and, second, that they
+have a definite public import. I have not
+a right to create scandal because I find
+pleasure or profit in speaking ill of my
+neighbour. But if Brown, for instance, is a
+candidate for public office, my view that he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>cheats his employer is directly relevant to
+the question of his fitness to be elected;
+and if I can prove that my view is true,
+it is in the public interest that I should
+make it known. I cannot, that is to say, regard
+my freedom of expression as unlimited.
+I ought not to be permitted to inflict
+unnecessary pain on any person unless
+there is relevant social welfare in that infliction.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, I would make one
+remark here that seems to me of increasing
+importance in a society like our own.
+The public interest in the habits of individuals
+is real, and we must be careful to
+give it its proper protection. It is, I think,
+reasonable to doubt whether the Anglo-American
+law of libel, in its present state,
+does not push too far the right of the individual
+citizen to be protected from comment.
+Outrageous damages, which bear no
+measurable relation to anything, are often
+claimed and not seldom awarded. Where
+a political flavour enters into a case, it is
+difficult, and sometimes impossible, to persuade
+a jury to consider the issue on its
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>merits. I have myself sat on a jury in a
+political libel case of which I can only say
+that I was almost persuaded to doubt the
+validity of the jury-system altogether by
+the habits there displayed. I am tempted
+to suggest that, criminal libel apart, it
+would be worth while considering the abolition
+of damages in all political or quasi-political
+cases, and the concentration, as an
+alternative, upon proper publicity for the
+form of apology where the libel is held to
+be proved. We have, for instance, got into
+the bad habit in England of thinking that
+the social position of the plaintiff is a measure
+of the damages he should receive; and
+it is well known that there are places where,
+for instance, a socialist could hardly hope
+even for a verdict from any average jury.
+The case for careful inquiry, at any rate,
+seems to me to be made out. As the law at
+present stands and works, I do not think
+I could even say of a candidate for the
+House of Commons that he was not likely
+to be more than a permanent back-bencher
+without having to pay heavily for my
+opinion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_1">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>But I turn from these relatively simple
+matters to the political aspect of freedom
+of expression which is, of course, the pith
+of the whole problem. How far is a man
+entitled to go in an attack upon the social
+order? What opinions, if any, are to be
+prohibited on the ground that they incite
+to subversive conduct? Is there a distinction
+between the printed word and the
+spoken word? Is there a distinction between
+speech in one place, and speech in
+another? Is there a difference between normal
+times and a time of crisis like, let us
+say, a war or a general strike? At what
+point, if any, do words become acts of
+which authority must take account to fulfil
+its primary duty of maintaining the peace?</p>
+
+<p>It will, I think, be universally agreed
+that all criticism of social institutions is a
+matter of degree. Let us take the problem
+first as we meet it in normal times and let
+us view it from the angle of the English
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>law of sedition.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_29_29" href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Here it may be said at once
+that were that law enforced in its literal
+terms, political controversy in England
+would be impossible. For the declared purpose
+of the law is to prevent the established
+institutions of the state from being brought
+into hatred or contempt, and every leader
+of the opposition is seeking to do precisely
+that thing when he makes a political
+speech. Anyone who reads, for instance, the
+utterances of Lord Carson at the time of
+the Home Rule fight in 1914, or of Mr
+Ramsay MacDonald in the General Election
+of 1929, cannot avoid the conclusion
+that, taken literally, they were seditious.
+Yet all of us agree that it is not the purpose
+of the law to prevent such speeches being
+made. When, therefore, if ever, is that law
+to be brought into operation?</p>
+
+<p>We must, I think, begin by a distinction
+between the written and the spoken word.
+If an English Communist leader writes a
+book or pamphlet, whatever its substance,
+and to whomever it is addressed, I do not
+think the law ought to be used against him.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>For it is the history of these matters that
+if governments once begin to prohibit men
+from seeking to prove in writing that violent
+revolution is desirable, they will,
+sooner or later, prohibit them from saying
+that the social order they represent is not
+divine. In Italy, at the moment, for example,
+papers are actually suppressed not for
+anything positive that they say, but because
+there is absent from their pages frequent
+and emphatic eulogy of the present
+régime; there have even been calls for suppression
+because particular papers, while
+saying no word against Mussolini, have
+been too insistently eulogistic of the
+Papacy. I yield to no one in my dissent
+from, say, Lenin’s analysis of the nature
+of the modern state. But I think it urgent
+that his criticism should be available to
+society. For it represents the impress made
+upon him by experience of political life,
+and a government which remains unaware
+of that criticism has lost its chance of seeking
+to satisfy the critic. If it begins by
+assuming that the exposition of Revolutionary
+Communism is undesirable, it will
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>end, as the record shows, that language
+classes to teach English to Russians are a
+form of Communist propaganda. There is
+never any such certitude in matters of social
+constitution as to justify us in saying that
+any exposition of principles must be suppressed.
+No authority has ever a capacity
+for wise discrimination in these matters;
+and, even if it had, I do not see why it is
+justified in the exercise of discrimination.</p>
+
+<p>For suppression, in the first place, never
+convinces. What it does is to drive a small
+body of men to desperation and to reduce
+the masses to complete apathy in political
+matters. Most men who are prohibited from
+thinking as their experience teaches them
+soon cease to think at all. Men who cease
+to think cease also in any genuine sense to
+be citizens. They become the mere inert recipients
+of orders which they obey without
+scrutiny of any kind. And their inertia surrounds
+the acts of authority with that false
+glamour of confidence which mistakes silence
+for consent. The government which is
+not criticized at its base never truly knows
+the sentiments to which its activity gives
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>rise among its subjects. It ultimately must
+fail to satisfy them because it does not know
+what desires it has to satisfy. Political
+thought, after all, however unwise or mistaken,
+is never born in a vacuum. Lenin’s
+view of capitalist society is just as relevant
+to its habits as the view of the Duke of
+Northumberland or of Judge Gary; each
+is born of contact with it, and each, as it is
+expressed, has lessons to teach from which,
+as these are scrutinized, a wise policy can
+be born.</p>
+
+<p>Here, I think, it is relevant to say a word
+upon one special aspect of freedom of expression
+for printed matter. I have argued
+that no limit of any kind is to be placed
+upon it, at any rate in normal times. The
+book, the pamphlet, the newspaper, ought
+to circulate with unimpeded freedom in
+whatever direction they can move. Many
+people who sympathize with this view will,
+however, except from this freedom printed
+material which is addressed to the armed
+forces of the state; and most governments,
+of course, have special legislation, with
+specially severe penalties, against any attempt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>at interference with their loyalty. I
+cannot myself see that this exception is
+justified. The armed forces of the state consist
+of citizens. The government has quite
+exceptional opportunities to retain their allegiance.
+If a printed document is able to
+sow disaffection amongst them, there must
+be something very wrong with the government.
+And, in fact, whenever agitation has
+produced military or naval disloyalty that
+has been the outcome not of affection for
+the principles upon which the agitators lay
+emphasis, but of grievances which have
+made either soldiers or sailors responsive
+to a plea for their disloyalty. That was the
+case with the Spithead mutinies of 1797;
+with the French troops in 1789; with the
+Russian troops in 1917. If the army or
+the navy is prepared to turn upon the government,
+the likelihood is great that the
+government is unfit to retain power. For
+anyone who can disturb the allegiance of
+a mind as trained to obedience as that of
+the soldier or the sailor has, I believe, an
+<i>a priori</i> case for insisting that his particular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>philosophy corresponds to an urgent
+human need.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that ideas are explosive and
+dangerous. To allow them unfettered freedom
+is, in fact, to invite disorder. But, to
+this position, there are at least two final
+answers. It is impossible to draw a line
+round dangerous ideas, and any attempt at
+their definition involves monstrous folly.
+If views, moreover, which imply disorder
+are able to disturb the foundations of the
+state, there is something supremely wrong
+with the governance of that state. For disorder
+is not a habit of mankind. We cling
+so eagerly to our accustomed ways that, as
+even Burke insisted, popular violence is
+always the outcome of a deep popular sense
+of wrong. The common man can only be
+persuaded to outbreak, granted his general
+habits, when the government of the taste
+has lost its hold upon his affections; and
+that loss is always the reflection of a profound
+moral cause. We may, indeed, go
+further and argue that the best index to the
+quality of a state is the degree in which it
+is able to permit free criticism of itself.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>For that implies an alertness to public opinion,
+a desire to remedy grievance, which
+enables the state to gain ground in the
+allegiance of its citizens. Almost always
+freedom of speech results in a mitigation
+which renders disorder unnecessary; almost
+always, also, prohibition of that freedom
+merely makes the agitation more
+dangerous because it drives it underground.
+Rousseau was infinitely more dangerous as
+a persecuted wanderer, because infinitely
+more interesting and, therefore, infinitely
+more persuasive, than he would have been
+when unfettered in Paris. Lenin did far
+more harm to Russia as an exile in Switzerland
+than he could ever have accomplished
+as an opposition leader in the Duma. The
+right freely to publish the written word is,
+in fact, the supreme Katharsis of discontent.
+Governments that are wise can always
+learn more from the criticism of their
+opponents than they can hope to discover
+in the eulogies of their friends. When they
+stifle that criticism, they prepare the way
+for their own destruction.</p>
+
+<p>There is, I think, an undeniable difference
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>between freedom of written and freedom
+of spoken, expression. In the one case,
+a man attempts conviction by individual
+persuasion; he seeks, by argument which
+he believes to be rational, to move the mind
+of those who read what he has written. To
+speak at a meeting raises different problems.
+No one with experience of a great
+crowd under the sway of a skilled orator
+can doubt his power deliberately to create
+disorder if he so desires. A speaker at Trafalgar
+Square, for instance, who urged a
+vast meeting of angry unemployed to march
+on Downing Street, could do so with a fair
+assurance that they would obey his behest.
+I do not think a government can be left
+to the not always tender mercies of an orator
+with a grievance to exploit. The state,
+clearly, has the right to protection against
+the kind of public utterance which is bound
+to result in disorder.</p>
+
+<p>But no government is entitled itself to
+assume that disorder is imminent: the
+proof must be offered to an independent
+authority. And the proof so offered must
+be evidence that the utterance to which it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>takes exception was, at the time and in the
+circumstances in which it was made, definitely
+calculated to result in a breach of
+the peace. Its prohibitions must not be
+preventive prohibitions. It must not prohibit
+a meeting before it is held on the
+ground that the speaker is likely to preach
+sedition there. It must not seek conviction
+for sedition where the utterance might,
+under other circumstances, have had the
+tendency to result in a breach of the peace.
+To use my earlier illustration, I think a
+government would be justified in prosecution
+of the Trafalgar Square orator; but
+I do not think it would be entitled to prosecute
+the same speaker if he made the same
+speech on Calton Hill in Edinburgh. For
+we know that when men in Edinburgh are
+incited to march on London, they have a
+habit of turning back at Derby. I conclude,
+therefore, that the test adopted by Mr Justice
+Holmes, in his deservedly famous dissent
+in <i>Abrams</i> v. U.S.,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_30_30" href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> is the maximum
+prohibition a government can be permitted.
+If it is in fact demonstrable that the speech
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>made had a direct tendency to incite immediate
+disorder, the punishment of the
+accused is justified. I think such cases
+should always be tried before a jury. Experience
+suggests that a random sample of
+popular opinion is more likely to do justice
+in this type of case than is a judge. I have
+myself been present at such trials before
+a magistrate where the whole case for the
+prosecution quite obviously broke down
+and where, nevertheless, a conviction was
+secured. I do not for a moment suggest
+that we can be confident that a jury will
+act wisely; but my sense of our experience
+is that there is less chance of its acting
+unwisely than persons who occupy an official
+position of any kind. With the best
+will in the world, their tendency is to be
+unduly responsive to executive opinion.</p>
+
+<p>You will see that my anxiety is to maximize
+the difficulties of any government
+which desires to initiate prosecutions in this
+realm. My reason for this view is the quite
+simple one that I do not trust the executive
+power to act wisely in the presence of any
+threat, nor assumed threat, to public order.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>Anyone who studies the treason trials of
+1794, or, even more striking, the cases under
+the Espionage Act in America during
+1917–20, will be convinced of the unwisdom
+of allowing the executive an undue
+latitude. Every state contains innumerable
+and stupid men who see in unconventional
+thought the imminent destruction of social
+peace. They become Ministers; and they
+are quite capable of thinking that a society
+of Tolstoyan anarchists is about to attempt
+a new gunpowder plot. If you think of men
+like Lord Eldon, like Sir William Joynson-Hicks,
+like Attorney-General Palmer, you
+will realize how natural it is for them to
+believe that the proper place for Thoreau
+or Tolstoy, for William Morris or Mr Bernard
+Shaw, is a prison. I am unable to take
+that view; and I am therefore anxious that
+they should not be able to make it prevail
+without finding that there are barriers in
+their path.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_1">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>Views such as I have put forward are
+often regarded with sympathy when their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>validity is limited to normal times. In a
+crisis, it is argued, different considerations
+prevail. When the safety of a state is
+threatened it is bound to take, and is justified
+in taking, all action to end the crisis.
+To suggest that it should be then bound
+by principles which weaken its effective
+striking power, is, it is said, to ask it to
+fight with one hand tied behind its back.
+The first objective of any society must be
+organized security; it is only when this has
+been obtained, that freedom of speech is
+within the pale of discussion.</p>
+
+<p>I am unable to share this view. We have
+really to examine two quite different positions.
+There is, first, the question of the
+principles to be applied in a period of internal
+violence; there is, next, the quite
+special question of limitation upon utterance
+in a period of war. I agree at once that
+it is entirely academic to demand freedom
+of speech in a time of civil war, for the
+simple reason that no one will pay the
+slightest attention to the demand; violence
+and freedom are, <i>a priori</i>, contradictory
+terms. But I would point out two things.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>In general, revolutions fail because those
+who make them deny freedom to their opponents.
+Losing criticism, they do not know
+the limits within which they can safely
+operate; they lose their power because they
+are not told when they are abusing it. I can
+think of no revolutionary period in history
+when a government has gained by stifling
+the opinion of men who did not see eye to
+eye with it; and I suggest that the revolutionary
+insistence that persuasion is futile
+finds little creative evidence in its support.</p>
+
+<p>But when once the question has been
+settled of who is to possess power other
+questions of urgent delicacy arise in which,
+as I think, the principles I have laid down
+possess an irresistible force. There is the
+problem of how the rebel and the disaffected
+are to be treated; of whether the
+resumption of order is to be followed by
+free discussion; of the power to be exercised
+by the military authority over ordinary
+citizens not engaged in armed hostility
+to the régime. Here I can only express the
+view that the resumption of order ought
+always to be followed forthwith by the normal
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>principles of judicial control; and that
+the military authorities ought not, save
+where it is quite impossible for the civil
+courts to exercise their jurisdiction, to have
+any powers over ordinary citizens.</p>
+
+<p>These are rigorous views; and, perhaps,
+I may devote a little time to their exposition.
+I know of no case where the state has
+exercised extraordinary power outside the
+normal process of law, in which that authority
+has not been grossly abused. It was
+abused in the Civil War even under a mind
+so humane and generous as that of Lincoln;
+it was emphatically and dangerously
+abused in the Amritsar rebellion of 1919.
+Let me illustrate, from this latter example,
+some of the things that were done. Two
+men were arrested in Amritsar prior to the
+declaration of martial law and deported to an
+extreme and undisturbed part of the province;
+on the declaration of martial law,
+they were brought back to Lahore, which
+was in the martial law area, and tried and
+sentenced by a martial law tribunal. A
+number of pleaders were arrested in Gudaspur,
+where there was no disturbance, taken
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>under revolting conditions to Lahore, and
+confined there in the common jail for a
+period lasting up to a month. They were
+then released, without any charges being
+preferred against them; on the evidence,
+indeed, it is difficult to know with what
+offence they could have been charged. In
+the trial, again, of one Harkishan Lal, and
+others, for treason and waging war against
+the King-Emperor, the accused were not
+allowed to have a lawyer of their own choosing;
+a full record of the case was not taken,
+and the private notes of counsel for the
+defence had to be surrendered by him to
+the Court at the end of each day. Under
+such conditions it is difficult to see how
+any adequate defence was possible. A punitive
+detachment, again, under a Colonel
+Jacob, tried by drumhead court-martial and
+flogged, a man who refused, it appears with
+some truculence, to say who had destroyed
+some telegraph wires; later it appeared
+that the man, as he had asserted, had in
+fact no knowledge of who had destroyed
+them. In Lahore—to take a final instance—the
+military officer in command prohibited
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>more than a few persons to congregate
+in the streets; a few persons did so
+congregate and they were flogged. On investigation,
+after the flogging, it was found
+that the group was a wedding-party whose
+purpose was not more dangerous than that
+of any other persons engaged in a similar
+function.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_31_31" href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>I do not, of course, suggest that there is
+anything especially cruel or remarkable in
+these instances. Whether you study repression
+in Ireland or Russia, Bavaria or Hungary
+or India, its history is always the same.
+The fact always emerges that once the
+operation of justice is transferred from the
+ordinary courts to some branch of the executive,
+abuses always occur. The proper
+protection of the individual is deliberately
+neglected in the belief that a reign of terror
+will minimize disaffection. There is no
+evidence that it does. If it could, there
+would have been no Russian Revolution;
+and there would be no movement for Indian
+self-government today. The error inherent
+in any invasion of individuality,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>such as a system of special courts implies,
+is that it blinds the eyes of government to
+the facts not only by suppressing illegitimate
+expression of opinion, but by persuading
+it that most opinion which finds
+expression is illegitimate if it is not in the
+nature of eulogy. Even Lincoln supported
+his generals in completely indefensible attacks
+on civilian rights. Executive justice,
+in fact, is simply an euphemism for the
+denial of justice; and the restoration of
+order at this cost involves dangers of which
+the price is costly indeed.</p>
+
+<p>The problem of war is, in a sense, a special
+case of the problem of disorder; but,
+in fact, it raises quite different considerations.
+Let me first of all make the point that
+if you are a citizen in a besieged town, you
+cannot expect a normal freedom of speech;
+to be within the area of actual military
+operations means that you must not hope
+to be regarded as an individual. You become,
+from the nature of things, a unit of
+attack or defence whose personality is immaterial
+and insignificant. The position
+here is extraordinary; and principles have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>little or no relation to the problems that
+arise. The case, as elsewhere, merely affords
+proof that liberty and violence are
+antithetic terms.</p>
+
+<p>But let us rather take the position of a
+citizen whose country is involved in war
+as, say, England in 1914, or America in
+1917. What are his rights and duties then?
+I would begin by making the point that
+the fact of belligerency does not suspend
+his citizenship; he owes as much, perhaps
+more than ever, the contribution his instructed
+judgment can make, to the public
+good. The scale of operations cannot, I
+think, make any difference to that duty.
+It is as real, and as compelling, when they
+are big, as in the war of 1914, as when,
+as in the Boer War, or the Spanish-American
+War, they are relatively small. If I
+think the war a just one, it is my duty to
+support it, and if I think it unjust there is
+no alternative open to me except opposition
+to it. I believe, for instance, that the
+opposition of Mr Ramsay MacDonald and
+Mr Snowden to the war of 1914 was a fulfilment,
+on their part, of the highest civil
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>obligation. No citizen can assume that his
+duty in wartime is so to abdicate the exercise
+of his judgment that the executive
+has a blank cheque to act as it pleases. No
+government, therefore, is entitled to penalize
+opinion at a time when it is more than
+ever urgent to perform the task of citizenship.
+If a man sincerely thinks, like James
+Russell Lowell, that war is merely an alias
+for murder, it is his duty to say so even
+if his pronouncement is inconvenient to
+the government of the day.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot, indeed, believe that there is
+any case on the other side worthy of serious
+consideration. In the war of 1914, it was
+said that hostile opinion must be controlled
+because it hinders the successful prosecution
+of the war. But behind the facade of
+prejudice contained in the imputation of a
+term like hostility, there are several issues
+each one of which requires analysis. For
+what does “hostile opinion” mean? Does
+it imply hostility to the inception of a war,
+to the methods of its prosecution, to the end
+at which it aims, to the terms on which
+its conclusion is proposed? In the war of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>1914, the critics were divided into camps
+on each of these views. There were men,
+like Mr MacDonald, who thought the war
+unjustified in its inception and bad in its
+conclusion. There were others who criticized
+the manner, both diplomatic and technical,
+of its prosecution. Was it, for
+instance, hostility to the prosecution of the
+late war to criticize Lord Jellicoe’s conduct
+at the Battle of Jutland, or Sir Ian Hamilton’s
+handling of the operations at the Dardanelles?
+Was it, again, hostility on the
+part of <i>The Times</i> to attack the Asquith
+Government on the ground, rightly or
+wrongly, that it showed a lack of energy
+in building up a munitions supply? If a
+statesman not in office, Mr Roosevelt, for
+example, thinks the diplomatic policy of
+the executive likely to be attended by fatal
+results, must he confine himself to private
+representations, lest public utterance
+hinder the national unity? If an Englishman
+like Lord Lansdowne believed, as
+President Wilson believed in 1916, that
+peace by negotiation is preferable to peace
+by victory in the field, because of the human
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>cost that victory entails, has he no
+obligation to his fellow-citizens who are
+paying that cost with their lives?</p>
+
+<p>It is evident from our experience that
+to limit the expression of opinion in wartime
+to opinion which does not hinder its
+prosecution is, in fact, to give the executive
+an entirely free hand, whatever its policy,
+and to assume that, while the armies are
+in the field, an absolute moral moratorium
+is imperative. That is, surely, a quite impossible
+position. No one who has watched
+at all carefully the process of governance
+in time of war can doubt that criticism was
+never more necessary. Its limitation is, in
+fact, an assurance that the unity of outlook
+is a guarantee that mistakes will be
+made and wrong done. For once the right
+to criticize is withdrawn, the executive commits
+all the natural follies of dictatorship.
+It assumes a semi-divine character for its
+acts. It deprives the people of information
+essential to a proper judgment of its policy.
+It misrepresents the situation it confronts
+by that art of propaganda which, as Mr
+Cornford has happily said, enables it to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>deceive its friends without deceiving its
+enemies. A people in wartime is always
+blind to the facts of its position and anxious
+to believe only agreeable news; the government
+takes care to provide it only with
+news that is pleasant. If no such news is at
+hand it will be manufactured. Petty successes
+will be magnified into resounding
+victories; defeats will be minimized,
+wherever possible. The agony of the troops
+will be obscured by the clouds of censorship.
+A wartime government is always obtuse
+to suggestion, angry when inquiry is
+suggested, careless of truth. It can, in fact,
+only be moralized to the degree to which
+it is subject to critical examination in every
+aspect of its policy. And to penalize, therefore,
+the critic is not only to poison the
+moral foundations of the state, but to make
+it extremely difficult, when peace comes,
+for both government and the mass of citizens
+to resume the habits of normal
+decency.</p>
+
+<p>Freedom of speech, therefore, in wartime
+seems to me broadly to involve the
+same rights as freedom of speech in peace.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>It involves them, indeed, more fully because
+a period of national trial is one when,
+above all, it is the duty of citizens to hear
+their witness. I do not, of course, mean that
+a citizen in wartime should be free to communicate
+secret military plans to the enemy;
+I do mean that if a man feels, like
+Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, that British
+policy in South Africa is “methods of
+barbarism,” it is his right, as well as his
+duty, to say so. Obviously critical activity
+of this kind will be unpopular, and a government
+which helps in the making of its
+unpopularity will find the task of suppression
+easy. But it will pay a heavy price for
+suppression. The winged words of criticism
+scatter, only too often, the seeds of peace.
+Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman’s attack
+on the Balfour Government persuaded
+General Botha that trust in Great Britain
+might not be misplaced; President Wilson’s
+speeches, especially his Fourteen Points,
+were, impliedly, a criticism of Allied policy,
+and that which, also, awakened liberal
+opinion in Germany to a sense of its responsibilities.
+Wartime unity of outlook,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>in a word, is never worth the cost of prohibitions.
+If the policy of a state which decides
+upon war does not command the general
+assent of citizens, it has no right to
+make war. If the number of those hostile
+is considerable, the policy is, at the least,
+a dubious one. If the number is small, there
+is no need to attempt suppression in the
+interest of success. The only way, in fact,
+to attain the right is by free discussion;
+and a period of crisis, when the perception
+of right is difficult, only makes the emphasis
+upon freedom more fundamental.</p>
+
+<p>Let me illustrate my view with reference
+to one or two of the decisive factors in the
+Peace of Versailles. No one now believes
+the wartime lie that Germany was solely
+responsible for the war; her responsibility
+may be greater than that of some others,
+but it is agreed that the burden of Russia
+is at least as heavy and that war, in any
+case, was rooted in the nature of the European
+system. But, in the interest of national
+unity, it was regarded as essential to
+represent Germany as the sole conspirator
+against European peace. She was painted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>as a malefactor whose sins were incapable
+of exaggeration. Her virtues were denied,
+her achievements belittled, until what Mr
+Lippmann terms a “stereotype” of her was
+built up for public use which made her
+appear to the average man a criminal who
+could not be too severely punished. The
+statesmen who constructed this stereotype
+knew that it was untrue; but they hoped,
+doubtless, to escape its consequences,
+when the victory had been won. They
+found that they could not do so. They had
+so successfully repressed all effort at reasonable
+delineation, that the atmosphere
+of hate was unconquerable. They had no
+alternative to a Carthaginian peace because
+that seemed, to the masses they had deceived,
+the only possible course for justice
+to take. They knew, as the famous memorandum,
+for instance, of Mr. Lloyd George
+makes manifest,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_32_32" href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> that a Carthaginian peace
+was disastrous for Europe; but it was too
+late to destroy the legend they had created.
+Like those whom Dante describes in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>Inferno, they were punished by the realization
+of their announced desires.</p>
+
+<p>The world, in this context, has paid the
+price for the suppression of truth; and another
+phase of the suppression should also
+be remembered. It is usually agreed that
+some of the worst elements in the Peace of
+Versailles were the result of the Secret
+Treaties by which the Allies, exclusive of
+America, bound themselves to each other
+before the entrance of America into the
+war. Nowhere among the associated powers
+was the desire for a just peace more
+widespread than in America; nowhere,
+also, was the discussion of war-aims more
+rigorously curtailed as a hindrance to the
+full prosecution of the war. Had discussion
+of the peace been full and effective
+in those critical years, the liberal instincts
+of President Wilson might, when reinforced
+by the weight of informed opinion,
+have compelled at least a considerable
+mitigation of the secret treaties. They had
+been published in the American Press after
+their issue by the Bolsheviks in 1917; full
+discussion would have revealed their inadequacies,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>and enabled the President to
+counteract what there was of evil in their
+substance. But the destruction of free opinion
+acted as a smoke-screen to conceal
+them, and Mr Wilson did not seriously give
+his mind to them until he reached Paris.
+It was then too late to undo their consequences.
+Here, in fact, as elsewhere, uncontrolled
+power acted like a miasma to
+blot out the only atmosphere in which
+truth could be made manifest. No government
+was compelled to do its duty, because
+the means were wanting to inform it of
+what its duty was. The powers had forgotten,
+or had chosen to forget, that they could
+not hope for a just peace save by freeing
+the minds of men and women who cared
+for justice.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_1">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>So far, I have considered freedom in the
+political sphere as though it concerned only
+a single individual placed over against society
+and the state. I have sought to discuss
+what his freedom means in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>complex relationships in which he is involved.
+But, obviously, this is an undue
+simplification of the problem. The individual,
+in fact, does not stand alone; he
+joins hands with others of like mind to
+persuade, sometimes to compel, society to
+the adoption of the view they share. It is
+unnecessary for me to emphasize the vital
+part played by associations in the modern
+community.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_33_33" href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> Granted that they have their
+dangers, they are not only a vital expression
+of human personality, but an expression
+as natural as the state itself. That a
+man must be free to combine with his fellows
+for joint-action in some realm in
+which they have a kindred interest is, I
+take it, of the essence of liberty. The point
+it is important to examine is the degree of
+control, if any, that the state is entitled
+to exercise over voluntary associations.</p>
+
+<p>Let me say at once that I know no question
+more difficult in the whole range of
+political science. I am quite certain that,
+from the angle of individual freedom, the
+less interference the state attempts, the better
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>for everyone concerned; but, equally, I
+am clear that to some interference the state
+is fully entitled. I should deny, for instance,
+the right of any voluntary association to
+inflict physical punishment or imprisonment
+upon its members; and I should argue
+that any state was justified in immediate
+and drastic interference to this end. But
+the real problems we encounter are not so
+simple as this. Joseph Smith announces his
+reception of a message from Heaven ordaining
+the duty of men to practise polygamy
+in a community where the law only
+recognizes monogamy; what rights of interference
+has the state when a body of
+men and women join him and begin to give
+effect to his teaching? What are the rights
+of the state when a congress of trade unionists
+declares a general strike? Are those
+rights different when the purpose of the
+strike is industrial from what they are if
+it is political? How are we to distinguish
+between the two? What are the rights of
+combination among men employed in industries
+the nature of which makes the
+service they perform fundamental to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>community? What should be the attitude
+of the state to a society of men engaged
+in propaganda for a revolution by the use
+of physical force? Is there a difference between
+such a society when it merely
+preaches the desirability of such a revolution
+and when it acts to that end? Does
+action, in the latter case, mean embarkation
+upon rebellion, for example, the purchase
+of machine-guns, or does it extend,
+say, to the stirring-up of industrial strife in
+the hope that a resort to political rebellion
+may be its outcome?</p>
+
+<p>You will see that these are not merely
+academic questions; every one of them has
+been in the forefront of political discussion
+this last half-century, and all save the
+first have been vital themes of decision in
+the years since the war. Take first the case
+of an association which, like the Mormon
+Church, desires to practise modes of conduct
+different from those pursued by the
+society as a whole. We have to assume that
+the members of the association have joined
+it voluntarily, and continue voluntarily in
+its membership. We have to assume, further,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>that they do not desire to force their
+particular way of life upon others; for
+some single realm of conduct, like the
+realm of marriage, they desire that they
+shall be left free from interference by the
+organized power of society. I cannot see
+that we are entitled to interfere with them.
+We may think them unwise, foolish, muddle-headed,
+immoral. We know perfectly
+well that we cannot hope, by the external
+constraint of law, to abolish all conduct
+that comes within those terms. I happen
+to think that it is a gross superstition to
+leave money to the Roman Catholic Church
+that masses may be said for the testator’s
+soul; but I should think it an unwarrantable
+interference with the relations between
+that Church and its members if such bequests
+were forbidden. I see no evidence
+to suggest that the practice of polygamy is
+worse, in its nature, than a hundred other
+practices which organized society either directly
+permits, or wisely leaves alone, because
+it knows that rigorous control would
+be utterly futile. The only way to deal with
+the ideals of the Mormon Church is to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>prove their undesirability to their members.
+On the evidence of history, persecution will
+not be acceptable as proof; and it is not
+improbable that the only legal effect of
+prohibition has been to make furtive and
+dishonest what was, at first, open and
+avowed. <i>Mutatis mutandis</i>, this seems to
+me the case with all similar problems of
+association. If a society of women, enthusiastic
+for the independence of their sex,
+formed themselves into an association to
+propagate and practise the (to them) ideal
+of children outside the tie of marriage, I
+should not think the state entitled to interfere
+with its work. So, too, I should argue,
+with a principle like birth-control.
+The state is not entitled to prohibit diffusion
+of such knowledge, or the practice
+of it. When it does, it makes the family
+nothing more than an instrument of fecundity,
+and destroys the whole character of
+that right to privacy which is the foundation
+of harmonious sexual relationship.</p>
+
+<p>I argue, therefore, that voluntary bodies
+are entitled outside the realm where their
+ideas and conduct are intended directly to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>alter the law, or to arrest the continuity of
+general social habits, to believe what they
+please and to practise what they please.
+This would not permit a body of burglars
+to take over from Proudhon the principle
+that property is theft and assume their
+right to restore it to themselves; but it
+would justify, to take the case of principles
+I personally abhor, a society of Mormons
+practising polygamy in a society like that
+of the United States. Let me turn from this
+to the political field. I take first the question
+of the right of the state to control freedom
+of association in the industrial sphere.
+Practically speaking, the question reduces
+itself to one of whether the state is justified
+in limiting the power of a trade union, or
+of a combination of trade unions to call out
+its members on strike. I want to put on one
+side the technical juristic questions involved
+and to discover, if I can, the justice
+of the general principles which underlie
+the problem.</p>
+
+<p>These are, I think, broadly four in number.
+It is argued that the state has a right
+to prohibit a general strike on the ground
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>that this is an attempt to coerce the government
+either directly, by making it introduce
+legislation which it would not
+otherwise do, or indirectly, by inflicting
+such hardship on the community that public
+opinion forces the government to act.
+It is said, secondly, that the state is entitled
+to prohibit those whom it directly employs,
+for example postmen, from either going on
+strike, or affiliating themselves with any
+organization the nature of which may compromise
+the neutrality of the government.
+It is said, thirdly, that certain industries,
+railways, for example, or electricity supply,
+are so vital to the community that
+continuity of service in them is the law of
+their being, and that, therefore, the right to
+strike can be legitimately denied to those
+engaged in them. It is argued, fourthly,
+that a limitation upon the purposes of trade
+unions, so that they are confined within
+their proper industrial sphere, is also justified.</p>
+
+<p>I want to analyse each of these principles
+separately, but certain preliminary observations
+are important. In any industrial
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>society, as Mr Justice Holmes has insisted,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_34_34" href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
+liberty of contract always begins where
+equality of bargaining power begins.
+Granted, therefore, the normal conditions
+of modern enterprise, only the existence of
+strong trade unions will ensure to the
+average worker just terms in his contract of
+service. If he stands alone, he has neither
+the knowledge nor the power to secure for
+himself proper protection. Nor is this all.
+Strong trade unionism always means that
+public opinion can be made effective in an
+industrial dispute. One has only to compare
+the situation in the British textile industries,
+where the power of the unions
+necessarily involves a search by the state,
+if there is a dispute, for the terms of a just
+settlement, with that in America where,
+from the weakness of the unions, the state
+seems hardly to know when a dispute has
+occurred, where, also, the police-power is
+almost invariably exerted on the side of the
+employer, to realize the meaning of strong
+trade unionism. It is, in fact, the condition
+of industrial justice. No limitation upon
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>freedom to associate is, I urge, permissible
+unless it can be demonstrated that clear
+and decisive advantage to the community,
+including, be it remembered, trade unionists
+themselves, is likely to result.</p>
+
+<p>In this background, let us examine the
+first of the four principles I have enumerated.
+No coercion of the government, direct
+or indirect, is legitimate. If men want to
+obtain from government a solution other
+than government is willing to attempt, the
+way to that end is not by the use of industrial
+power, but through the ballot-box at
+a general election. Or, from the angle of indirect
+coercion, the first interest of the state
+is in the general well-being of the community;
+a general strike necessarily aims
+at that well-being and may therefore be
+prohibited. The general strike, even a large
+sympathetic strike, is in fact a revolutionary
+weapon. As such, it is a threat to the
+Constitution and illegal as well as unjustifiable.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think the problem is so straightforward
+as the delusive simplicity of this
+argument would seem to make it. If it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>said that the Trades Union Congress of
+Great Britain would not be justified in calling
+a general strike to compel the government
+to make Great Britain a federation, I
+should agree at once. But I point out that
+no one supposes it would take such action
+and that therefore a prohibition of it is unnecessary.
+But I should not agree that a
+general strike is unjustified to secure the
+eight-hour day, or to protect the payment
+of unemployment relief, or to continue the
+Trade Board system in sweated industries.
+Whether a general strike for these, or
+similar ends, would be wise is another
+matter. That it cannot in any circumstances
+be justified I am not prepared to
+say until I know the circumstances of
+some given case. I am not willing, for instance,
+to condemn the General Strike of
+1926; on a careful analysis of its history,
+I believe that the blame for its inception
+lies wholly at the door of the Baldwin
+Government. No one acquainted with the
+character of the trade union movement but
+knows that a weapon so tremendous as
+the general strike will only be called into
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>play on the supreme occasion. To lay it
+down as law that, whatever the occasion,
+the weapon shall not be used, seems to me
+an unjustifiable interference with freedom.</p>
+
+<p>I am not greatly moved by the argument
+that it involves coercion of the government.
+There are occasions when that coercion is
+necessary, and even essential. I believe that
+was the case in Great Britain in 1926. The
+trade unions would never have called the
+strike had they seen in the policy of the
+government even the fragment of a genuine
+search for justice. But the fact was that Mr
+Baldwin and his colleagues simply acted as
+the mouthpiece of the coalowners. To illegalize
+a general strike in that background
+is to say that the trade unions should have
+acquiesced in the defeat of the miners without
+an attempt to prove their solidarity with
+them. It would be to announce to government
+that the ultimate weapon of Labour is
+one the use of which it need never fear.
+There is no danger that the general strike
+will ever be other than a weapon of last
+resort; the occasions when it can be successfully
+used will be of the utmost rarity.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>But they may occur. I cannot accept the
+position that government is always entitled
+to count on industrial peace, whatever its
+policy. Nor do I see why it is unconstitutional
+for Labour, as in 1926, to withdraw
+from work in an orderly and coherent way.</p>
+
+<p>I do not deny, of course, that both a
+general strike, and others of far less amplitude,
+inflict grave injury and hardship upon
+the community. But when trade unions seek
+for what they regard as justice, one of their
+most powerful sources of strength is the
+awakening of the slow and inert public to
+a sense of the position. Effectively to do
+this, in a real world, it must inconvenience
+the public; that awkward giant has no
+sense of its obligations until it is made uncomfortable.
+When it is aroused, if, for instance,
+trains do not run, or coal is not
+mined, the public begins to have interest
+in the position, to call for action. Without
+some alternative which attempts to secure
+attention for a just result—I know of no
+such alternative—the infliction of hardship
+on the community seems to me the sole
+way, even if an unfortunate way, to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>end the trade unions have in view. To limit
+the right to strike is a form of industrial
+servitude. It means, ultimately, that the
+worker must labour on the employer’s
+terms lest the public be inconvenienced. I
+can see no justice in such a denial of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Two further points it is worth while to
+make. It is sometimes agreed that while the
+state ought not to restrict freedom of association
+for industrial ends, it is justified
+in doing so when the strike-weapon is used
+for some political purpose. This, indeed,
+was one of the objects of the Baldwin Government
+in enacting the Trades Disputes
+Act of 1927. But I know of no formula
+whereby such a division of purposes can
+be successfully made. There is no hard and
+fast line between industrial action and political
+action. There is no hard and fast
+line which enables us to say, for instance,
+that pressure for a Factory Act is industrial
+action, but pressure for the ratification of
+the Washington Hours Convention political.
+Extreme cases are easy to define; but
+there is a vast middle ground with which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>the trade unions must concern themselves
+and this escapes definition of a kind that will
+not hamper the trade union in legitimate
+activity vital to its purpose. And there are
+certain types of political action by trade
+unions—a strike against war, for example—which
+I do not think they ought in the
+interest of the community itself, to abandon.
+Quite frankly, I should have liked to
+see a general strike proclaimed against the
+outbreak of war in 1914; and I conceive
+the power to act in that way as a necessary
+and wise protection of a people against a
+government which proposes such adventures.
+You cannot compartmentalize life;
+and where grave emergencies arise, the
+weapons to be utilized must be fitted to
+meet them. A government which knew that
+its declaration of war was, where it intended
+aggressive action, likely to involve a general
+strike, would be far less likely to think
+in belligerent terms. I do not see why such
+a weapon should be struck from the community’s
+hand. I do not forget that the
+German Republic was saved from the Kapp
+Putsch by a general strike.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nor must we forget the limits within
+which effective legal action is possible. <i>Jus
+est quod jussum est</i> is a maxim the validity
+of which is singularly unimpressive. When
+the issue in dispute seems to the trade
+unions so vital that only by a general strike
+can they defend their position adequately,
+they will, in those circumstances, defend
+their position whatever the law may be.
+Legal prohibition will merely exacerbate
+the dispute. It will transfer the discussion
+of legality which serves merely to conceal
+it. A legal command is, after all, a mere
+static form of words; what gives it appropriateness
+is its relevance as just to the situation
+to which it is applied. And its
+relevance as just is made not by those who
+announce that it is to be applied, but by
+those who receive its application. The secret
+of avoiding general strikes does not lie
+in their prohibition but in the achievement
+of the conditions which render them unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is the denial of the right to declare a
+general strike a necessary protection of the
+total interest of the community. Right and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>wrong in these matters are matters to be
+defined in each particular case. A government
+which meets the threat of a general
+strike is not entitled to public support
+merely because it meets the threat. It is no
+more possible to take that view than it is
+to say that all governments deserve support
+when they confront a rebellion of their subjects.
+Everything depends on what the general
+strike is for, just as everything depends
+on the purpose of the rebellion; and the individual
+trade unionist must make up his
+mind about the one, just as the individual
+citizen must make up his mind about the
+other. Law in this realm is, in fact, largely
+futile. It could not prevent a general strike
+by men who saw no alternative open to
+them; and, in that event, it would merely
+intensify its rigours when it came. The limitation
+of liberty in this realm seems to me,
+therefore, neither just in its purpose nor
+beneficent in its results.</p>
+
+<p>I do not, of course, deny that freedom of
+action in this field is capable of being
+abused. That is the nature of liberty. Any
+body of persons who exercise power may
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>abuse it. It is an abuse of power when an
+employer dismisses his workmen because
+he does not like their political opinions. It
+is an abuse of power when the owners of
+halls in Boston refuse to hire them to the
+promoters of a meeting in memory of Sacco
+and Vanzetti. It was an abuse of power
+when British naval officers connived at the
+attempted internment of the Belgian socialist,
+M. Camille Huysmans, in England. It
+was, I think, an abuse of power when the
+Universities of Oxford and Cambridge refused
+to admit Nonconformists as students,
+or Parliament to seat Mr Bradlaugh because
+he was an infidel. But the trade
+unions are no more likely, on the historic
+record, to abuse their power than is Parliament
+itself. The latter, if it wished, has
+the legal competence to abolish the trade
+unions, to disenfranchise the working
+classes, to confine membership of the
+House of Commons to persons with an independent
+income. We know that Parliament
+is unlikely to do any of these things
+because omnicompetence, when gravely
+abused, ceases to be omnicompetent. And
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>the same truth holds, as it seems to me, of
+the liberty to proclaim a general strike.</p>
+
+<p>A much more difficult problem arises
+where the second of my four principles is
+concerned. A government is, I think, entitled
+generally to the loyal and continuous
+service of its employees. It is therefore entitled
+to make regulations which restrain
+their liberty of action. The army and navy
+and the police, in particular, occupy a special
+position in the state; if they were free,
+like ordinary citizens, to withdraw their labour
+as they pleased, the executive power
+would be in an impossible position. The
+government, therefore, may make suitable
+regulations for their control. But it is important,
+in the framing of these regulations,
+that the conditions of service should
+be just. To be just, two principles are, I
+suggest, of primary importance. They
+should be made and administered in conjunction
+with those who are affected by
+them; and in their application or change
+executive action should not be the final
+court of appeal. The principles which, in
+England, we call Whitleyism are the <i>quid
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>pro quo</i> which government servants of this
+type are entitled to expect in return for the
+surrender of the right to strike; and Whitleyism
+must include the right of those servants
+to appeal from an executive decision
+to such a body as the Civil Service Division
+of the Industrial Court. To leave the executive
+sole master of the field is to invite
+the kind of purblind folly which resulted,
+in 1919, in the police strikes of Boston and
+London. Here, certainly, the fact that the
+governments concerned were the judges in
+their own cause made it impossible for the
+police to get either attention or justice without
+drastic action. And I draw your attention
+to the fact that although in each case
+the original strikers were defeated, their
+successors obtained the terms, and even
+more than the terms, for which they fought.</p>
+
+<p>The defence forces of the state constitute
+a special case. When we turn to the ordinary
+public services, central and local,
+quite different considerations emerge. If
+you analyse Whitehall, for instance, you
+will find a very small body of men and
+women who may be regarded as concerned
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>with the making of policy; below them is
+another body, perhaps two or three times
+as large, engaged in assembling the material
+out of which policy is made, and applying
+it in minor cases; while below these
+once more is a vast army of clerks engaged
+in routine work of a more or less mechanical
+kind. To this last class, it cannot, I
+think, be said that government emerges as
+an employer different in kind from what
+they would encounter in the ordinary labour
+market. General economic conditions
+govern their pay; in France and America,
+indeed, it is below, rather than above, the
+level obtaining elsewhere for their kind of
+work. All their interests go along with those
+engaged in similar employment outside the
+sphere of government activity. Their union,
+therefore, with persons in private firms
+seems to me justified in order to raise their
+general economic level; and I do not see
+the justice of prohibiting it as was done by
+the Baldwin Government in the Trades Disputes
+Act of 1927. I think, further, that
+they are entitled to strike, if there is no
+other way in which they can, as they think,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>secure the enforcement of their demands;
+though I think, also, that the executive
+would be justified in compelling them to
+exhaust the resources of a comprehensive
+scheme of conciliation before they went so
+far. The history, indeed, of most modern
+civil services. France being a notable exception&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_35_35" href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+shows clearly that there is no danger
+of officials abusing the right to strike.
+But it shows also the unwisdom of leaving
+the government free to determine the substance
+of the contract of service. It is just
+as likely as any private employer to extract
+the most it can get for the least it needs to
+give; and it is no more fit than any other
+employer to be left uncontrolled in this
+field. The more labour conditions in government
+service are determined finally by
+an independent authority, the more reasonable
+they are likely to be. We must not
+be led away by false claims to a special
+majesty born of its sovereign character to
+regard the state as entitled to a peculiar and
+uncontrolled power over its servants. History
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>shows that it is just as likely as anyone
+else to abuse an unlimited authority.</p>
+
+<p>The civil servant is not merely an employee
+of government; he is also a citizen.
+In our own day, especially, delicate questions
+have arisen as to the right of the civil
+servant, or of a person engaged in the
+armed forces of the state, to enjoy all the
+normal political privileges of a person in
+private employ. Is a civil servant, for instance,
+entitled to enter on a political career
+with the chance, if it is interrupted, to return
+to his department? Most modern
+states, England, for instance, Canada,
+South Africa, regard political activities as
+beyond the area within which a civil servant
+may engage; France, on the other hand,
+hardly limits its officials in this way, while
+Germany expressly allows its officials to
+engage in politics, and some fifty civil
+servants are now in the Reichstag, with
+the power to return to their departments if
+they are defeated. Certainly there are few
+rights for which the rank and file of officials
+press so strongly as for this; and they regard
+the limitation of their political opportunities
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>as an invasion of civic liberty at
+once unnecessary and unjustifiable.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think the problem is a simple
+one; and I think any solution of it must
+therefore be complex in character. If a high
+official of the Foreign Office in England
+could be elected to Parliament, spend a
+term there in bitter criticism of the Foreign
+Secretary and then, on defeat, return to
+work with the minister whom he had sought
+to destroy, the latter’s position would, I
+think, be intolerable. There is, that is to
+say, a class of civil service work the very nature
+and associations of which involves exclusion
+from political life; and if those engaged
+therein desire a political career, they
+must terminate their connexion with the
+civil service. We can, of course, draw a
+line. I see no reason why all the industrial
+employees of the government, postmen, for
+instance, or shipwrights in a national dockyard,
+should not enjoy all ordinary civil
+rights. I see no reason, either, to expect
+any deleterious consequence if civil servants
+below what we call in England the
+executive class are allowed ordinary political
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>rights, so long as a decent discretion
+in their exercise is observed. Those engaged
+in the making of policy must, in my judgment,
+accept a self-denying ordinance in
+this regard. Unless government can be assured
+that its chief officials are aloof from
+political ties, it cannot trust them; and all
+the considerations which create a “spoils
+system” will then come into play. Since
+experience makes it evident that a spoils
+system is incompatible with either honest
+or efficient administration, a restriction
+upon the liberty of public officials is, I
+would argue, justified. It is an inevitable
+part of their contract of service from the
+point of view of the end that service is intended
+to secure.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, further, that this restriction
+applies with special force to the Army and
+Navy and to the police. The state is justified,
+in the interest of the community, in
+placing an absolute embargo upon the political
+activities of all their members. For
+unless this liberty is restrained, their allegiance
+becomes the possession of a party
+and they cannot give that neutral service
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>which is the basic principle of their existence.
+Anyone who remembers the attempted
+use of the Army in 1913–14 for
+Ulster, the habits of the French Army during
+the Dreyfus period, the peculiar relations
+between the German Army and the
+Monarchy, will easily see how vital is this
+abstinence. There are American cities
+where the relations between big business
+and the police mean that the authority of
+the latter is certain to be abused in an industrial
+dispute. Nothing, perhaps, illustrates
+more nicely the delicacy of this
+problem than the activities of Sir Henry
+Wilson&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_36_36" href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> during the years from 1912. He
+was, it appears, prepared to go from a meeting
+of the Committee of Imperial Defence
+to a discussion of its plans with the leaders
+of the Conservative opposition; and to advise
+with them upon the best way of rendering
+some of those plans nugatory. Even
+during the Great War he did not cease from
+the cultivation of political intimacies of
+this kind. Nor must we forget that Sir John
+French, at the time the Commander-in-Chief
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>of the British Armies in France, was
+ready to go behind the back of the Government
+he served to offer secret information
+to the military correspondent of a Conservative
+newspaper; and the result of that
+betrayal of confidence was the breakdown
+of the first Asquith Government in 1915.
+The proper conduct of political life is
+clearly impossible, if the armed forces of
+the state are free to take a definite part in
+its formation. No one would endorse the
+Russian principle that a soldier’s quality
+is a function of his agreement with the political
+faith of the government; yet once
+relations are established between the politician
+and the Army a movement towards
+this principle is inevitable. Sooner or later,
+in this condition, the Army, like the Praetorian
+guard, determines the personality of
+the state. When that occurs, no one can
+hope for the enjoyment of political freedom.</p>
+
+<p>I turn, in the third place, to the view
+that industries which have a vital impact
+on social life can restrain the right to strike
+in those engaged in them. That is a peculiarly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>favoured doctrine at the present
+time; some writers even use the analogy of
+the Army and Navy, and argue that the
+principles applicable to these have a legitimate
+extension to this field. Others, the
+eminent French jurist M. Duguit, for example,
+take a similar view, but upon other
+grounds. They argue that vital public service,
+transport, for instance, or electricity
+supply, derive their whole meaning from
+continuity; to allow an interruption of them
+is, therefore, to destroy the whole law of
+their being.</p>
+
+<p>I am as willing, I hope, as anyone to
+agree that an interruption of a vital public
+service is undesirable, and that every possible
+step to minimize the possibility of its
+occurrence should be taken. But I do not
+think the denial of the right to strike obtains
+this end in any of them; and I do not
+believe that the same considerations apply
+to every sort of vital public service. It must,
+I think, make a difference whether the industry
+is primarily operated for private
+profit or no; for only in the latter case is
+its quality as both vital and public fully
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>recognized. No one, surely, can examine
+the record of the coal industry either in
+England or in America and say that the
+motives which underlie its ownership by
+private interest are compatible with the
+view that an uninterrupted service to the
+community has been the first object of
+the owners. There are several reasons of
+primary importance for retaining the right
+to strike so long as private ownership continues
+in this sphere. If, for instance, a
+steamship company proposes to send out its
+ship under the conditions in which the <i>Vestris</i>
+of ill-fated memory sailed in the spring
+of 1929, I think the crew would be justified
+in striking in the public interest. So, also,
+I should argue that the Seamen’s Union
+would be justified in striking, to see to it,
+if it could, that every vessel putting to sea
+carries with it wireless equipment. Again, a
+body of miners might, in my judgment, justifiably
+strike if they believed that some
+part of a pit to which they were to be sent
+was in fact too dangerous for coal to be
+hewed there without an alteration of the
+physical conditions of mining in that particular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>place. I should, further, urge that
+a strike to secure a national agreement for
+uniform conditions in a particular industry
+as against a variety of local agreements was
+a justifiable enterprise if that end could not
+be attained in any other way.</p>
+
+<p>My view, broadly, reduces itself to this.
+Where the vital industry is in public hands,
+the conditions which should operate are
+those which relate to government service
+in general where it is in private hands; the
+state is, I think, justified in seeing to it that
+the danger of dislocation is reduced to a
+minimum; but it is not justified in saying
+that, in the event of a disagreement, the
+men shall always abide by the results of
+compulsory arbitration. For, first of all, the
+men will not always do so; their refusal,
+doubtless, will be exceptional, but there
+will be instances in which it will occur. The
+famous munitions strikes on the Clyde, and
+the South Wales Miners’ strike, during the
+war show that this is the case. It is, I suggest,
+obvious folly to attempt legislation
+which cannot be enforced at the critical
+point of urgency. The business of the state,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>therefore, is not to prohibit, but to find
+how best to make the use of the strike the
+final and not the first instrument in conflict.</p>
+
+<p>This, I suggest, can be accomplished in
+two ways. It can be done, first, by limiting
+the profits private ownership can make in
+any industry of vital importance, either absolutely
+so that the owners are debenture-holders
+merely, and not the residuary
+legatees of any profit made, or relatively,
+as in a scheme like that laid down for the
+gas companies of London. The state is then,
+I suggest, legitimately entitled to argue that
+a curb on the liberty of the employer to
+make what profit he can justifies a curb on
+the right to strike by postulating the conditions
+under which alone it can become operative.
+Those conditions are, I think, met
+by some such instrument as the Canadian
+Industrial Disputes Investigation Act. Under
+its terms, we should then have, at least,
+enforced public inquiry into the dispute,
+and the consideration by both sides, as well
+as by the general opinion of the community,
+of a reasoned attempt at a solution of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>the difficulty. We respect freedom of association
+by leaving it at liberty to insist that
+the proposed solution is unjust, while we
+protect the public interest in continuity of
+service by insisting that the right to strike
+shall not operate until the resources of conciliation
+have been exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>I reject, therefore, M. Duguit’s notion
+that public interest in continuity of service
+is a paramount consideration which should
+overrule all others; and I see no reason to
+apply his vituperative adjectives&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_37_37" href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> to those
+who take a different view. It seems to me
+quite definitely a denial of liberty for which
+no justification can be found to say that
+men shall work on terms they think utterly
+unjust; and the argument that, if they do
+not like those terms, they can find other
+work, is, increasingly, without force in a
+community like our own. The number of
+those in any society who have a genuine
+choice, at any given time, of alternative occupations
+is notably small. An electrician
+cannot suddenly become a barrister, as the
+latter can suddenly become a journalist;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>and if it is a matter of hundreds, or even
+thousands of men, the compulsion upon
+them to continue in the vocation for which
+they have been trained is obvious. The community
+never gains, in the long run, from
+work performed by men who labour under
+a sense of injustice. That psychological
+feeling of frustration is poisonous to a harmonious
+personality. As such, it is incompatible
+with that search for freedom which
+I have urged is a condition of happiness. I
+cannot, therefore, agree that the community
+is entitled, on any terms, to put its convenience
+first, and the workers’ freedom
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>A final problem in this same realm remains.
+The trade union, it is said, must
+obviously concern itself with all that
+touches the industrial conditions of its
+members. But it is not entitled to a general
+licence to roam all over the field of public
+activity. We should resent it if a football
+club passed resolutions upon the foreign
+policy of a government; and it is in the
+same way illegitimate for a trade union to
+deal with matters outside its sphere. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>state, therefore, is entitled to define that
+sphere and to limit the activities of trade
+unions to matters that come within it.</p>
+
+<p>But I have already sought to show that
+such a definition of spheres is, in fact, impossible
+of achievement. Take, for instance,
+foreign policy. You cannot say that trade
+unions ought not to concern themselves
+with foreign policy since this is intimately
+bound up with economic policy which, in
+turn, is the chief factor in the determination
+of the conditions of employment. You
+cannot exclude any part of the economic
+realm from the trade union sphere. I should
+agree that a trade union ought not to concern
+itself, let us say, with the question of
+whether the Pope was justified in making
+the Immaculate Conception a dogma of the
+Roman Church; but the likelihood of a
+trade union acting in this way is as small
+as that of a football club concerning itself
+with foreign policy. We cannot legislate
+for the exceptional instance. Law can only
+deal with normal habits susceptible of logical
+reduction to well-established categories.
+When it goes further, it merely reveals
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>its own impotence. A trade union, moreover,
+is a living body; and no law has ever
+been successful in coping with the growth
+of living things by legal promulgations
+upon the fact of growth. Many matters are
+regarded today as normally and naturally
+within the sphere of the trade unions which
+a generation ago, even a decade ago, most
+men would have insisted were in nowise
+their concern. In the American garment
+trade, the union concerns itself, as a vital
+part of its function, with the efficiency of
+the employers for whom its members work.
+A generation ago, this would have been dismissed
+as “an insolent interference with the
+rights of management”; today it is obvious
+that upon no other terms can the function
+of the trade union be fulfilled. In 1914 the
+unions would never have deemed it their
+business to concern themselves with the
+bank rate and credit policy; today they
+realize that these matters lie at the heart of
+their problems. Any such Procrustes’ bed
+of definition as this principle suggests
+seems to me, therefore, a quite wanton and
+foolish interference with freedom.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="V_1">
+ V
+</h3>
+
+<p>Such a discussion of the relation of trade
+unionism to the state, illustrates, I think,
+the general problem of the approach to freedom
+of association in the political sphere. I
+have denied the right of the state to control
+the internal life of such bodies; and I have
+sought to show the limits of liberty where
+that life has ramifications outside their
+membership. It is, I think, a good general
+rule that the state should not interfere in
+this realm unless it must. Whenever, for
+example, it has interfered with the claims
+of churches to lead their own life, conflict
+has been the inevitable outcome. For in
+any meeting of church and state, the latter
+will assert its paramountcy; and a church
+has no alternative but to deny that assertion.
+For this reason I believe that any attempt
+at partnership between them is
+bound to result in injury to freedom somewhere.
+If, as in England, the Church is formally
+established by the state, its dependency
+becomes obvious as soon as it develops
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>ideas of which the state does not approve;
+in matters like marriage and divorce
+and education, the church has had to surrender
+positions held for centuries to preserve
+the privileges of establishment. It
+now appears that where there is disagreement
+in an established church, the minority,
+on defeat, will not hesitate to go beyond
+the organs which formally record the voice
+of the church, in order to maintain doctrine
+or ritual which the church itself seeks to
+change; and a legislative assembly most
+members of which are either alien from
+the church, or without competence in its
+technical problems, will find themselves
+defining its most sacred principles. Such a
+church, quite obviously, is the mere creature
+of the state; it sacrifices its spiritual
+birthright for a material mess of pottage.
+Or, as in the concordat between Italy and
+the Papacy, there may be a looser alliance
+of which the result is to deprive all non-Catholics
+of their right to a secular state
+treating all religions equally, in the realm
+of marriage and education. I cannot avoid
+the conclusion that in this historic realm
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>only the American principle of complete
+separation and non-interference can produce
+freedom. Unless state and church
+pursue an independent path, liberty is sacrificed;
+for either fusion or partnership will,
+in fact, involve a conflict for supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining question I wish to discuss
+in this context is the right of the state over
+associations the purpose of which is the
+overthrow of the existing social order.
+What powers here ought the state to possess?
+At what point can it interfere? Has
+it what may be termed a preventive capacity,
+a right to prevent the development
+of associations the natural tendency of
+which will be an attempt at such overthrow?
+Or should its jurisdiction be limited
+to punishment for overt acts?
+Obviously the quality of liberty depends
+very largely upon the powers we give the
+state in this realm. I take it as elementary
+that the state has a right to protect itself
+from attack. It must, as a state, assume
+that its life is worth preserving. It must demand
+that changes in its organization be
+the outcome of peaceful persuasion and not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>the consequence of violent assault. A state
+must, therefore, assume that its duty to
+maintain peace and security lies at the very
+root of its existence. The liberty which associations
+enjoy must therefore be set in
+the context that they cannot have a liberty
+to overthrow the state. To that extent, any
+denial of freedom to them is justified.</p>
+
+<p>But what are the limits within which that
+denial must work. The world today is littered
+with organizations that are denied a
+legal existence and suppressed at any opportunity.
+The existence of a Communist
+party is denied by Lithuanian law; the
+Peasants’ Party in Jugoslavia was formally
+dissolved; Russian principle seems to be
+the imprisonment or exile of members of
+any organization which can be suspected
+of counter-revolutionary tendencies. We
+must, I think, begin with the principle that
+a government is not entitled to suppress associations
+the beliefs of which alone are
+subversive of the established order. For,
+otherwise, persecution will be built, not on
+fact, but on suspicion that facts may one
+day emerge, not on overt acts, but on principles
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>of faith which are in truth only dangerous
+when they are expressed in practice.
+A society might be formed, for instance, to
+discuss and propagate the principles of
+Tolstoyan anarchy; I do not think any government
+has legitimate ground for interference
+with it. The time for that interference
+comes only when, outside the specific
+categories of peaceful persuasion, men
+have moved to action which cannot logically
+be interpreted as other than a determination
+to overthrow the social order.</p>
+
+<p>I agree, for instance, that a society of
+Communists which began to teach its members
+military drill could legitimately be regarded
+as a direct threat to peace. So, also,
+when a political party, the Ulster Volunteers,
+for instance, or their opponents, the
+Nationalists, begin to purchase munitions
+of war, interference by government is justified.
+But I cannot see that a government is
+entitled to prevent a society of Communists
+from preaching their doctrines either by
+speech or by publication of the printed
+word. It is, I think, essential that, as with
+the English law of treason, the government
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>should be compelled to prove the commission
+of some overt act which directly tends
+to imminent rebellion in a court of law,
+and to bring two witnesses at least to bear
+testimony to its commission. It ought not
+to be sufficient for a government to say that
+since a particular party has beliefs which
+include the right to violence and has elsewhere
+practised violence, that its suppression
+is legitimate. Recently, again, Mr
+Ghandi announced that if the British Government
+did not grant Dominion Home
+Rule to India by the end of 1929, he and
+his followers would practise civil disobedience
+such as a refusal to pay taxes. We
+do not think that announcement would
+have justified the British Government in
+imprisoning Mr Ghandi before the end of
+1929 in order that he might be prevented
+from accomplishing his threat at a later
+time. Or, once more, Mr Arthur Ponsonby’s
+organization of men pledged to refuse military
+service in the event of Great Britain
+going again to war ought not to be suppressed
+because, if Great Britain did go
+to war, some hundred thousand individuals
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>would refuse to obey any military
+service Act that would then be enacted.</p>
+
+<p>I am anxious, as you will see, to make
+it difficult for the government of a state to
+attack an organization the views of which
+it happens to dislike. In the light of the evidence,
+we can rest assured that, unless we
+compel proof, in an ordinary court of law,
+that overt acts have been committed, such
+attacks will be made. One has only to remember
+the Treason Trials of 1794, where
+there was not a scintilla of evidence against
+any one of the accused, or the follies enacted
+by governments during the Great
+War, to see that this is the case. In August
+of 1929, an Italian official actually drew
+public attention to the undue circulation,
+as he deemed, of books by Chekov, Turgenev
+and Tolstoy;&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_38_38" href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> we can be sure that if a
+Society for the study of Russian literature
+had then existed in Italy, the attention of
+the government to its suppression would
+have been called. In the opening stages of
+the Communist trial in Meerut, the counsel
+for the prosecution drew attention not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>merely to the alleged offences of the accused,
+but also to the actions of the Russian
+Communist leaders from 1917–20,
+though it is difficult to see how either Indian
+or English Communists could have
+been held responsible for them. The logic,
+indeed, of habitual government suppression
+seems to be that abnormal opinion is
+always dangerous because, if it is acted
+upon, the supremacy of the law will be
+endangered. That is, of course, perfectly
+true. If the Communist Party in England
+sought to initiate a rebellion, there would
+be a threat to the supremacy of the law. But
+no one of common sense believes today in
+a Communist menace in England, least of
+all, perhaps, the Communists themselves.
+What can possibly be gained by an attempt
+to suppress that philosophy by an imprisonment
+of its members is quite beyond my
+understanding. I see no evidence to suggest
+that the slightest good has been
+accomplished in America by all the legislation
+against criminal syndicalism. Nor can
+I see that anything would have been gained
+by the kind of prohibitions which the Lusk
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>Committee, of dubious memory, sought to
+put upon the statute-book.</p>
+
+<p>My point is that men are always entitled
+to form voluntary associations for the expression
+of grievance, and for the propagation
+of ideas which, as they think, will
+remedy what they believe to be wrong.
+They are not entitled to move to the commission
+of acts which bring them into conflict
+with the state. By acts I mean things
+like the planning of Mussolini’s march on
+Rome, or the training of civilians as soldiers
+by the Ulster Defence Council. Things
+like these the government may legitimately
+attack because they have a clear and direct
+relation to immediate violence, actual
+or prospective. But governments would do
+well to remember, what they are too prone
+to forget, that they do not remove grievance,
+however ill-conceived, by suppressing
+it. And if they are allowed to associate violent
+opinion with actual violence, there are
+few follies upon which they cannot be persuaded
+to embark. The persecution of opinion
+grows by what it feeds on. Every social
+order is ardently upheld by fanatics who
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>are eager to make dissent from their view
+a crime. The last thing that is desirable is
+to give them an opportunity for the exercise
+of their fanaticism.</p>
+
+<p>It is, further, of great importance that
+all trials relating to these offences should
+be held in the ordinary courts under the
+ordinary forms of law. Experience makes
+it painfully clear that special tribunals are
+simply special methods for securing a conviction.
+For the mere creation of a special
+tribunal persuades the ordinary man that
+there is an <i>a priori</i> case against the accused,
+that the burden of proof lies upon him
+rather than upon the government. Whatever
+we can do to safeguard these trials
+from the introduction of passion is an obligation
+we owe to liberty. However wrong or
+unwise we may think the actions of men so
+accused, we have to remember that they
+represent, as a general rule, the expression
+of a deep-felt resentment against social injustice.
+We have to protect ourselves from
+protest which seeks deliberately to dissolve
+the bonds of order. But it is our duty, too,
+to respect that protest when it is sincerely
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>made. And we cannot, therefore, permit attack
+upon it because it represents ideas or
+experience alien from our own. <i>De nobis
+fabula narretur</i> is a maxim which every
+citizen should recognize as the real lesson
+of political punishment.</p>
+
+<p>Implied in all this is a view of the place
+of voluntary associations in the community
+the significance of which I do not wish to
+minimize. I am, in fact, denying that they
+owe their existence to the state, or that the
+latter is entitled, by means of its agents, to
+prescribe the terms upon which they can
+live. The special place of the state in the
+great society does not, in my judgment, give
+it an unlimited right to effect that co-ordination
+which is its function on any terms
+it pleases. The principles of a legitimate
+co-ordination bind the state as much as they
+bind any other body of men. Each of us
+finds himself part of a vast organization
+in the midst of which we must seek the
+realization of desire. We cannot attain it
+alone. We have to find others with kindred
+desires who will join hands with us to
+proclaim the urgency of their realization.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>There is no other way to the attainment of
+that end; and an attitude, therefore, like
+that of Rousseau, who denied the legitimacy
+of any voluntary associations, fails
+altogether to take account of the elementary
+facts of social life. Such bodies, indeed,
+must run in the leading-strings of
+principle, but the question of what that
+principle must be is not one the state alone
+is entitled to make. For the latter is not
+justified in preventing the expression of desire;
+it is justified only in preventing the
+realization of desire by violent means. It
+must tolerate the expression of experience
+it hates because it is there, as a state, to
+satisfy even the experience it cannot understand.
+We must not, in fact, allow ourselves
+to fall into the error of believing that
+opinion which is antagonistic to the state-purpose
+is unworthy to survive. The state-purpose,
+like any other, is expressed
+through the agency of men. They may misinterpret
+it; they may, consciously or unconsciously,
+pervert it to their own ends.
+To leave them free to settle the limits of
+free association would be to leave them
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>free to settle what criticism of their work
+they were prepared to permit. That is a
+power which could not safely be entrusted
+to any body of men who have ever operated
+as a government.</p>
+
+<p>For consider, once more, the historic record.
+The Roman suppression of Christianity
+was built upon the belief that unity of
+religious belief is the necessary condition
+of citizenship; later experience shows that
+view to be without any substance. What
+in fact emerges from the history of religious
+persecution is the lesson that the unity
+made by the suppression of Nonconformity
+is the unity of stagnation. That was the
+history of France under the repeal of the
+Edict of Nantes; it has been the history of
+Spain ever since the sixteenth century; it
+is, indeed, the history of any community,
+however rich and powerful, the rulers of
+which assume that they know what constitute
+truth and right, what opinions, therefore,
+they are entitled to prescribe. Any
+government which attacks a body organized
+to promote some set of opinions which
+may become dangerous to its safety may
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>fairly be presumed to have something to
+conceal. It is co-ordinating social life not
+to the end of its greater fullness, but simply
+for the sake of co-ordination.</p>
+
+<p>But law, as I have insisted earlier, does
+not exist for the sake of law. It is not entitled
+to obedience because it is legal, because,
+that is, it proceeds from a source of
+reference formally competent to enact it.
+Law exists for what it does; and its rightness
+is made by the attitude adopted to it
+by those whose lives it proposes to shape.
+Since bodies like the Communist Party are
+in fact an announcement that some lives at
+least are shaped inadequately by the laws
+of a régime like our own, suppression seems
+to me an indefensible way of meeting that
+announcement. Force is never a reply to
+argument; and until argument itself seeks
+force as the expression of its principle, it
+is only by argument that it can justifiably
+be countered.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="VI_1">
+ VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>I turn to a very different phase of the
+subject. In every society there are modes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>of conduct which, though not in themselves
+harmful, offer an easy prospect of becoming
+so. It is therefore assumed by many that
+it is the business of the state actively to discourage
+such conduct, even to the point, if
+necessary, of making its most innocuous
+expression illegal. No one is harmed, for
+instance, by a moderate indulgence in alcoholic
+liquor; but since drunkenness is
+harmful both to the individual and society,
+the state, it is said, is justified in prohibiting
+the manufacture or sale of alcoholic
+liquor. The same principle is urged of noxious
+drugs, of the use of tobacco, of gambling.
+Sometimes, indeed, the principle is
+carried to an extreme point and it is said
+that the state may prohibit any form of
+conduct, Sunday games, for example,
+which a majority of the society finds obnoxious.
+The claim to freedom, it is urged,
+may be denied in the interest of a social
+view of good.</p>
+
+<p>I do not find it easy to accept any single
+principle that is obvious and straightforward
+as applicable to the very complex
+problems we encounter in this realm.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>Neither the fact that a mode of conduct may
+be harmful in excess, nor the fact that,
+whether harmful or no, society dislikes it,
+seems to me in itself a just ground for its
+suppression by the law. The first case seems
+to me one for safeguards against excess;
+care, for instance, may be taken to see to
+it that it is manufactured at a limited
+strength, is sold only under careful restrictions,
+and so on. The second case I find it
+impossible to decide as a general principle,
+and apart from particular cases each of
+which is judged upon its own merits. I am
+prepared, for example, to make it illegal to
+keep a gaming-house; but I am not prepared
+to legislate against a social game of
+bridge played for money in a private house.
+Conduct must be punished or prohibited
+when it is harmful in itself or in the excess
+in which it touches society before we ought
+to seek access to the clumsy machinery of
+the law.</p>
+
+<p>For we cannot suppress all modes of conduct
+in which excess does harm. In most
+cases, we have to leave the individual free
+to judge at what point excess is a fact. Over-eating
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>does great harm, but no one would
+propose legislation against over-eating.
+Many motorists sacrifice their lives to their
+motor-car, especially in America; but no
+one would propose legislation against an
+undue indulgence in motoring. False social
+standards result from our excessive adulation
+of film-stars and athletes; but we
+should obviously be merely foolish if we
+legislated against the publicity which
+makes for that excessive adulation. We
+have always, I think, to study any proposed
+social prohibition in terms of the object to
+which it is applied. We have to remember
+that it always runs the risk of undermining
+character by a limitation of responsibility.
+Men are made not by being safeguarded
+against temptation but by being
+able to triumph over it. It would be impossible
+to forbid the use of cheques because
+some people succumb to the habit of
+embezzlement. There is a clear case for
+forbidding the sale of noxious drugs like
+heroin or cocaine except under severe restrictions,
+because it is clear that in themselves
+their consumption is bound to harm
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>the recipient. There is a clear case for insisting
+that persons, even if they be passionate
+Christian Scientists, who are suffering
+from an infectious disease like small-pox,
+shall be isolated until they are cured;
+for anyone who goes about with small-pox
+inflicts direct and measurable injury on
+other persons. But unless we can show that
+the particular mode of conduct it is proposed
+to repress must necessarily destroy
+the will-power of those who practise it, as
+is true of noxious drugs, or directly and unquestionably
+injures the rest of society in
+a measurable way, I think the method of
+prohibition an unwarranted interference
+with freedom.</p>
+
+<p>I take this view on three grounds. I believe,
+first, that it is socially most important
+to leave the individual as uninhibited
+as possible in forming his own way of life,
+granted, of course, that he is adult and
+mature. To shelter him at every point from
+experience which, if carried to excess, may
+harm him is not only impossible, but also
+dangerous. It makes him pass his life under
+the aegis of a system of fear-sanctions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>which, for the most part, he will be quite
+unable to sublimate, and the result will
+be that sense of continuous frustration
+which is fatal to freedom. I must, in general,
+learn my own limitations by experimentation
+with myself. I cannot pass my
+life adjusting my conduct to standards and
+habits which represent the experiments of
+other people. For the reasons which make
+the results of particular experiments seem
+to them convincing, I may in my own case
+regard as completely unsuccessful. To insist
+that their rule of life is to be mine is,
+normally, to destroy my personality. It is to
+compel me to live at the behest of others
+even where I can discover no ground for
+the behest. Most people would agree that a
+statute compelling an atheist to go to
+church was utterly foolish. His absence
+does not affect the salvation of any other
+person. His presence there does him no
+good because his mood is inevitably one of
+gnawing indignation at being compelled to
+participate in ceremonies that have no
+meaning for him. Either he will invent excuses
+which enable him to stay away, or he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>will adopt an aggressive disbelief which
+makes him a source of offence to the faithful.
+He loses, that is, the habit of truth, on
+the one hand, or the capacity to give and
+take which makes for decent citizenship,
+on the other. Both forms of behaviour do
+real injury to him; neither produces an attitude
+of conviction. From the angle of
+character, the only rules of conduct in this
+realm that work, are those that are self-imposed.
+And these, so far as I know, are
+the invariable outcome of experiment made
+by oneself with one’s own personality.</p>
+
+<p>My second reason is not less important.
+The power of law to define modes of social
+conduct depends very largely upon its ability
+to command a sentiment of general approval.
+What it seeks to do must broadly
+commend itself, on rational grounds, to
+those over whose lives its principles are to
+preside. Legislation which does not fulfil
+this condition is always unsuccessful, and
+always has the result of bringing the idea
+of law itself into contempt. For where a
+particular statute is regarded as foolish or
+obnoxious by a considerable body of persons,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>they will rejoice in breaking it. Illegal
+conduct becomes a matter even of
+pride. It becomes a principle of conduct
+which gives rise to special pleasure and
+peculiarly satisfies human vanity. No one
+in London, so far as I know, regards the
+average policeman as an unwarrantable attack
+on liberty; but it seems to be the case
+that thousands of people in New York regard
+the prohibition agent in that way.
+They wear a breach of the law as a badge
+of courage, like the revolutionary in Czarist
+Russia or the suffragette in pre-war England;
+and the imposition of penalties upon
+them arouses in them and their friends a
+sense of angry injustice. Now I think it is
+an elementary principle of penal psychology
+that you cannot make a crime of conduct
+which people do not <i>a priori</i> regard as
+criminal. Popular sentiment approves a
+law against murder, and you can enforce
+that law. But popular sentiment, in England
+at least, would not, in my judgment,
+approve a law forbidding the manufacture
+and sale of alcoholic liquor; and its chief
+result would be to direct the minds of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>thousands to the problem of ways and
+means of evading the law. That is a habit
+which grows upon those who indulge in
+it. It loosens all the principles of conduct
+which make for social peace by making us
+think of the rules under which we live as
+unjustifiable and oppressive. It forces social
+effort quite unduly and unwisely in one
+direction. It persuades it to think out mean
+and petty expedients for the enforcement
+of the law in the same way as its subjects
+think out mean and petty expedients for
+its evasion. The spectacle, for instance, of
+the Supreme Court deciding that the American
+government is entitled to tap telephone
+wires in order to obtain evidence of
+infraction of the Volstead Act is not an
+encouraging one.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_39_39" href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> That way lies corruption
+and blackmail, the kind of habits which,
+in England, we associate with names like
+that of Oliver the spy,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_40_40" href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> in Russia with that
+of agents-provocateurs like Azeff. Few
+things are more detrimental than this to
+the moral equilibrium of a social order.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nor must we forget two other effects of
+attempted enforcement, both of which are,
+I think, entirely evil. A government which
+is continually flouted in its attempt at administration
+is bound to attempt even
+greater severity. There will be an extension
+not only of the area of offence, but also of
+the methods of coping with offence, and
+the punishment to be inflicted where it occurs.
+The classic instance of this result is
+the government of Geneva from the period
+of Calvin’s dispensation. It does not result
+in the satisfactory enforcement of the law,
+but in its wider evasion. Severity on one
+side is met by brutality upon another; one
+might as well be hung for a sheep as a
+lamb. And the disproportion between crime
+and punishment which emerges draws the
+sympathy of the general population away
+from the government to the offender. This
+is, I suggest, wholly bad for any society.
+It makes the habits of government generally
+suspect to the multitude. It creates
+martyrs unduly and unwisely. And this has,
+of course, the consequence that it becomes
+ever more impossible to enforce the law.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>Its irrationalism is advertised to the multitude.
+It becomes inacceptable to an ever-increasing
+circle who, while they may
+sympathize with its principle, are not prepared
+to acquiesce in the price that has to
+be paid for its application. Not only, sooner
+or later, does such legislation perish, but
+the habits to which it gives rise persist, and
+are frequently carried over into realms
+where they are still more undesirable. And
+the severity which a government is tempted
+to practise makes it blind to wrong through
+becoming inured to its consequences. When
+the British Government first met the
+weapon of the hunger-strike it was baffled;
+later, it turned that weapon against those
+who employed it by what was called the
+Cat and Mouse Act. Much of this proceeding,
+where the suffragettes were concerned,
+had a comic, as well as a tragic side. But
+the whole procedure had the serious result
+of making the public expect that any hunger-strike
+would be a dramatic battle between
+the government and its prisoner, in
+which the cause of the imprisonment was
+lost sight of in the gamble of the procedure.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>The public, accordingly, was not greatly
+moved by the hunger-striking which took
+place during the Irish Revolution; and
+when Mr Lloyd George left the Lord Mayor
+of Cork to die, people were more interested
+in the circumstance of his death than
+in the vital question of whether he should
+have been allowed to die. In all this realm,
+the denial of liberty seems to result in the
+slow maximization of unhappiness.</p>
+
+<p>The second effect is also wholly bad.
+Whenever government interferes to suppress
+some service which a considerable
+body of persons think they require, when,
+also, the suppression is disapproved by a
+large number of citizens, an industry to
+supply that service will come into existence.
+Its ways will be devious, its charges
+will be high. It will attract to its ranks
+many of the most undesirable elements in
+society. It will form an army of lawbreakers
+whose habits are only too often condoned
+by a large section of public opinion. That
+has been the case with bootleggers in America
+and with night-clubs in London. And
+the risks being great, the profits are high,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>the interests, consequently, to be protected
+are correspondingly great. The history of
+these adventures in England and America
+is one of organized immorality and corruption.
+Condemnation by the law seems to
+have little or no effect in dispelling its influence.
+Men and women attain power
+through its means who normally would be
+shunned by most decent-minded persons.
+The degree to which the police are corrupted
+by these influences is very difficult
+to exaggerate. There is hardly a bribe too
+high for them to pay. They are organizing,
+too, an adventure which stimulates every
+sort of dubious instinct in perfectly ordinary
+people. Mr Babbitt approaches his
+bootlegger, you will remember, in something
+like a religious frame of mind. The
+night-club <i>habitué</i> finds nothing quite so
+exciting as the prospect of a raid; and he
+leaves his meretricious surroundings with
+the sense that he knows the glory of danger
+and has escaped the humdrum pettiness of
+suburbia. I think it bad for society to make
+illegal conduct heroic. I think it still worse
+to make the central figures in the drama of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>illegality powerful in the lives of those to
+whom they purvey their service; men and
+women whose methods of obtaining a living
+it does not occur to their clients to condemn.
+Nor is it an answer to say that when
+the law does act, those clients immediately
+desert the arrested offender which is proof
+that they really disapprove. An enforcement
+which induces cowardice at the critical
+moment in those who are <i>participes
+criminis</i> does not seem to me anything of
+which to be proud.</p>
+
+<p>My third reason is rather different in
+character. Every state contains fussy and
+pedantic moralists who seek to use its machinery
+to insist that these habits shall
+become the official standard of conduct in
+the population. They are interested in prohibition
+and uniformity for their own sake,
+and every success that they win only spurs
+them to greater efforts. If they stop the sale
+of alcohol, they become ardent for the limitation
+of the right to tobacco. They are
+anxious to control the publication of books,
+the production of plays, women’s dress, the
+laws governing sexual life, the use of leisure.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>They are terrified by what they call
+immorality, by which they mean behaviour
+of which they do not happen to approve.
+They are scandalized by the unconventional.
+They luxuriate in its denunciation.
+They form committees and leagues to prove
+the degeneracy of our times. They rush to
+the legislature to compel action every time
+they discover some exceptional incident of
+dubious conduct. To themselves, of course,
+they appear as little Calvins saving the
+modern Geneva from the insidious invasion
+of the Devil. No one, I suppose, can seriously
+doubt that men like Mr Comstock regard
+themselves as the saviours of society.
+They have an unlimited sense of a divinely
+appointed mission, and the whole of their
+life is set in its perspective. They are the
+men who find in <i>Candide</i> the means of corrupting
+the mind of the community. They
+are horrified by the nude in art. They think
+the performance of <i>Mrs. Warren’s Profession</i>
+the public profanation of the ideal.
+They regard Darwin as an “infidel” whose
+works were an outrage upon God; and the
+circumstances of Maxim Gorky’s married
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>life seem to them to demand his public excoriation.</p>
+
+<p>I know nothing more incompatible with
+the climate of mental freedom than the inference
+of such people. They lack altogether
+a respect for the dignity of human
+personality. They are utterly unable to see
+that people who live differently think differently
+and that in so various a civilization
+as ours absolute standards in these matters
+are out of place. It is difficult to overestimate
+the price we pay for their successes.
+Certainly no great art and no literature
+great in anything save indignation can be
+produced where they have sway. It is not
+for nothing that from the time of Calvin
+not a single work of ultimate literary significance
+was produced by a resident of
+Geneva. It is easy to understand why the
+grim excesses of Puritanism produced the
+luxuriant license of the Restoration. These
+would be, if they could, modern Inquisitors,
+without tolerance and without pity,
+thinking no means unjustified if only their
+end can be attained. They are the kind of
+people who drove Byron and Shelley into
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>exile, and they remain unable to see upon
+whom that exile reflects. Their pride is inordinate;
+and human instincts are its chief
+victim. They are often ignorant, usually
+dangerous, and invariably active. Since the
+friends of liberty too often sleep, their unceasing
+vigilance not seldom meets with
+its reward. To me, at least, they commit
+the ultimate blasphemy since they seek to
+fashion man in their own image.</p>
+
+<p>I do sincerely plead that, especially in a
+democratic society, these are grave dangers
+to freedom, against which we cannot
+too stringently be upon our guard. Especially,
+I say, in a democratic society. For
+there, the proportion of men zealous in the
+service of freedom, is likely to be small unless
+great and dramatic issues are at stake.
+Tyranny flows easily from the accumulation
+of petty restrictions. It is important that
+each should have to prove its undeniable
+social necessity before it is admitted within
+the fabric of the law. No conduct should
+be inhibited unless it can be definitely
+shown that its practice in a reasonable
+way can have no other result than to stunt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>the development of personality. No opportunity
+should be offered for the exercise
+of power unless by its application men are
+released from trammels of which it is the
+necessary price of purchase. We ought not
+to accept the easy gospel that liberty must
+prove that it is not license. We ought rather
+to be critical of every proposal that asks
+for a surrender of liberty. Its enemies, we
+must remember, never admit that they are
+concerned to attack it; they always base
+their defence of their purpose upon other
+grounds. But I could not, for myself, serve
+principles which claimed to be just if their
+result was to make the temple of freedom
+a prison for the impulses of men.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">
+ CHAPTER III
+ <br>
+ LIBERTY AND SOCIAL POWER
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>In these pages, I have taken the view
+that liberty means that there is no restraint
+upon those conditions which, in
+modern civilization, are the necessary guarantees
+of individual happiness. There is no
+liberty without freedom of speech. There is
+no liberty if special privilege restricts the
+franchise to a portion of the community.
+There is no liberty if a dominant opinion
+can control the social habits of the rest
+without persuading the latter that there are
+reasonable grounds for the control. For, as
+I have argued, since each man’s experience
+is ultimately unique, he alone can fully
+appreciate its significance himself; he can
+never be free save as he is able to act upon
+his own private sense of that interpretation.
+Unfreedom means to him a denial of his experience,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>a refusal on the part of organized
+society to satisfy what he cannot help taking
+to be the lesson of his life.</p>
+
+<p>But no man, of course, stands alone. He
+lives with others and in others. His liberty,
+therefore, is never absolute, since the conflict
+of experience means the imposition
+of certain ways of behaviour upon all of
+us lest conflict destroy peace. That imposition,
+broadly speaking, is essential to liberty
+since it makes for peace; and peace is
+the condition of continuity of liberty. The
+prohibitions, therefore, that are imposed
+are an attempt to extract from the experience
+of society certain principles of action
+by which, in their own interest, men ought
+to be bound. We cannot, indeed, say that
+all the principles a given government imposes
+are those it ought to impose. We can
+only say that some principles, by being imposed,
+are bound up with the very heart of
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>That is the paradox of self-government.
+Certain restraints upon freedom add to a
+man’s happiness. Partly, they save him
+from the difficulty of going back to first
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>principles for every step he has to take;
+they summarize for him the past experience
+of the community. Partly, also, they prevent
+every opposition of desire from resulting
+in conflict; they thus assure him of
+security. In a sense, he is like a traveller
+who reaches a sign-post pointing in many
+directions. Law helps him by telling him
+where one, at least, will lead; and it invites
+him to assume that its direction is also, or
+should be, his destination. Clearly this will
+not always be the case. For it to be so, the
+end of the law must be his as well, its
+experience must not contradict his own.
+For that contradiction, as a rule, means
+punishment for him since, at the end of the
+road he takes, if it is not the path of the
+law, he will find a policeman waiting for
+him. We must, that is to say, find ways
+of maximizing our agreement with the law.</p>
+
+<p>I sought earlier to show that this maximization
+can only take place when the substance
+of law is continuously woven from
+the fabric of a wide consent. Here I propose
+to inquire into certain essential conditions
+which determine whether that consent can
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>be obtained. I propose to inquire, in other
+words, into that weird complex of prejudice,
+judgment, interest, which we call public
+opinion and to seek the terms of its
+adequate relationship to liberty. For if my
+argument be valid that a man’s citizenship
+is the contribution of his instructed judgment
+to the public good, and that right action,
+for him, is action upon the basis of
+that judgment, clearly, the factor of instruction
+is of decisive importance. Instructed
+judgment is considered and not
+impulsive, ultimate and not immediate. It
+is a conclusion arrived at after an attempt
+to penetrate behind the superficial appearance
+to what is truth-seeming. It is a
+decision made after evidence has been collected
+and weighed, distortion allowed for,
+prejudice discounted. If, for instance, I am
+to oppose the State in a matter like military
+service, I ought not to do so until I have
+rigorously examined the facts upon which
+I build my principles. And, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>,
+that is true of every aspect of social
+activity. The first urgency is assurance that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>the facts upon which I base my action are
+valid.</p>
+
+<p>Now the world of facts which impinge
+upon each of us is difficult and complex and
+enormous. None of us can know all of that
+world. A large part of it, it may be in some
+context a fundamental part, we have to take
+on trust from other persons. Obviously, it is
+of primary importance that the things we
+take on trust should correspond with the
+reality on which alone a right judgment
+can be made. My view of the proper peace-terms
+that should be made with Germany
+will be one thing if I believe that Germans,
+when at leisure, crucify innocent Belgian
+citizens, rape their women, and cut off the
+breasts of their young girls; and quite another
+thing if I believe that the Germans
+are rather like other people, decent, kindly,
+respectable, wanting much the same things
+in life as I do myself. My attitude to the
+nationalization of the mines will obviously
+profoundly depend upon, first, the facts in
+the mining industry itself, and, second, the
+facts about the operation of nationalization
+in other fields. I cannot, in the vast majority
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>of the problems I have to decide,
+make my own inquiries into the facts.
+Somewhere, sometime, I have to halt and
+say, “This man’s report, or this paper’s account,
+is a thing I can trust.”</p>
+
+<p>It is because opinion is so vitally dependent
+upon the truthfulness of facts that observers
+have come more and more to insist
+on the connexion between liberty and the
+news.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_41_41" href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> For a judging public is unfree if
+it has to judge not between competing
+theories of what an agreed set of facts
+mean, but between competing distortions
+of what is, at the outset, unedifying and invented
+mythology. Things like the incident
+of the <i>Maine</i>, the Pekin Massacre which
+never occurred, the Zenoviev letter, make
+an enormous difference to what Mr Lippmann
+has happily termed my “stereotype”
+of the environment about which I have to
+make up my mind. I bring already to its
+interpretation a mass of preconceptions
+which tend to distort it. If there is prepared
+for me “evidence” which has been distilled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>through the filter of a special interest the
+distortion may become so complete as to
+make a rational judgment impossible. The
+English journalist who invented the word
+“dole” has built into the minds of innumerable
+people of the comfortable classes
+a picture of the unemployed in England as
+a mass of work-shy persons, comfortably
+lazy and anxious at all costs to live parasitically
+upon the taxpayer; the proven
+fact that less than a fraction of one per cent
+really avoids the effort to work is unable
+to penetrate the miasma of that stereotype.
+The newspapers which belong to the Power
+Trust in America, the subsidized press in
+Paris, the journals which must satisfy Mussolini
+or suffer suppression, the government
+newspapers of Communist Russia,
+these are all efforts to dictate an environment
+to the citizen in order that the stereotype
+he forms may serve some interest their
+owners, or controllers, are anxious to promote.
+Men may actually go out to die for
+purposes in which they profoundly believe,
+though the cause which, as they judge,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>embodies those purposes has not, in fact,
+the remotest connexion with it.</p>
+
+<p>We have, in short, the difficulty that the
+control of news by special interests may
+make prisoners of men who believe themselves
+to be free. The Englishman who
+has to form an opinion about a miners’
+strike is not likely to be “free” in any sense
+to which meaning can be attached if the
+facts which he encounters have been specially
+doctored in order to make it as certain
+as possible that he conclude in favour
+of the mine owners. A Chinaman who hears
+that the “Liberal” party in Rumania has
+won a victory at the polls, an American
+who is informed that London is governed
+by Municipal “Reformers”, approaches the
+discovery of the facts with a body of preconceptions,
+derived from quite alien experience,
+which will make a true judgment
+of those facts a very complex matter. In
+the Conference of The Hague upon reparations
+in August 1929, the Italian newspapers
+continued to paint Mr Snowden as
+the Shylock withholding from Italy its due
+share, while the English Press was equally
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>unanimous in painting him as the protagonist
+against a continental effort to make
+Great Britain the milch-cow of Europe. The
+Italian, or the Englishman, who wished to
+obtain a just view of the issues really at
+stake there, would have had to engage in
+arduous researches into technical material
+about which he might lack competence and
+for which he would certainly not easily find
+leisure.</p>
+
+<p>Let us remember, too, that our stereotype
+of the contemporary environment is
+only the last phase, so to speak, of the
+problem. The psychologists are unanimous
+in telling us how important for our future
+are the impressions we gather in our early
+years. Clearly, from that angle, the things
+we are taught, the mental habits of those
+who teach us, are of quite primary urgency.
+It may make all the difference
+to the intellectual climate of a people
+whether, for instance, the history learned
+by children in schools is wide and generous,
+or parochial and narrow, whether its teachers
+cultivate the sceptical mind, or the positive
+mind. People who are imprisoned in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>dogmas in childhood will have an agonizing
+struggle to escape from its stereotypes, and
+they may well have been so taught that
+they either, after effort, succumb, or do not
+even know that it is necessary to struggle
+at all. I do not know how to emphasize sufficiently
+the quite inescapable importance
+to freedom of the content of the educational
+process.</p>
+
+<p>Teach a child year in and year out that
+the American Constitution is the ultimate
+embodiment of political wisdom and you
+increase tenfold the difficulty of rational
+and necessary amendment by the generation
+to which that child belongs. Set him
+under teachers like those of whom Professor
+Harper tells us that seventy-seven
+per cent “contended that one should never
+allow his own experience and reason to lead
+him in ways that he knows are contrary to
+the teaching of the Bible”, and fifty-one
+per cent that “our laws should forbid much
+of the radical criticism that we often hear
+and read concerning the injustice of our
+country and government”, and the openness
+of mind upon which reason depends
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>for its victories will be well-nigh unattainable.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_42_42" href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
+Those only who realize the importance
+of education will understand how a
+Southern audience could go wild with anger
+over an account, in large outline untrue,
+of German atrocities, and yet listen
+with indifference to the description of a
+lynching in their own community so revolting
+in its detail as to be unfit almost for
+transcription. And we must add to the
+school influence in childhood, that of the
+home, the church, the streets, in the terrible
+certainty that there are few impressions
+which do not leave their trace.</p>
+
+<p>It is necessary, if I may so phrase it, to
+urge men to live dangerously. To the degree
+that their happiness depends upon
+making their decisions conform to the facts,
+they cannot avoid danger. It is dangerous
+to leave a child in the hands of teachers
+who believe that all experience and reason
+must be abandoned which does not square
+with that recorded in the partly mythical
+annals of a primitive Semitic tribe several
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>thousand years ago, or who equate patriotism
+with a fervid acceptance of the
+present political system. The adult is endangering
+his happiness if he believes that
+truth is what Karl Marx said, or Mussolini
+tells him, or the inferences of Mr Baldwin
+which the latter has in turn drawn from
+material prepared for him by the Research
+Department of the Conservative Central
+Office. Happiness depends upon being able
+to approach with an open mind facts which
+have been prepared by independent persons
+who have no interest in seeing that
+their incidence is bent in some particular
+way. Anything else imprisons the mind in
+dogmas which only work so long as that
+mind does not travel beyond the narrow
+confines within which the dogmas work.
+Once it goes beyond, unhappiness is the
+inevitable outcome.</p>
+
+<p>How are we to get independent fact-finding
+and the open mind? The answer, of
+course, is the tragic one that there is no
+high-road to it. Partly, it lies in the development
+of particular techniques, but, most
+largely, it lies in the kind of educational
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>methods we use, and this, in its turn, in the
+purposes for which those methods are employed.
+I entirely agree that a multiplication
+of independent fact-finding agencies,
+as disinterested and impartial about wages
+and other social conditions as a medical
+man in the making of a diagnosis, will take
+us some distance.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_43_43" href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> Not, I think, very far;
+for between the finding of facts by independent
+agencies and the driving of them
+home to the public are interpolated just
+those factors of special interest which are
+the enemies we confront. I agree, too, that
+freedom is partly better served than when
+a great public organ falls into the hands of
+one who, like C. P. Scott with his <i>Manchester
+Guardian</i>, determines to make news and
+truth coincide. But men like Mr Scott are
+rare enough to make reliance upon their
+emergence a very dubious ground of hope.
+Nor need we deny that the growth of a professional
+spirit among journalists, their organization
+into a profession with standards
+of entrance and performance, will add
+greatly to the chances of solving the problem.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>So, also, will the development of specialized
+journals of opinion, and new inventions
+like the wireless. To some extent—not,
+I think, a great extent—competitive
+fact-finding makes for truth. Outrageous
+propaganda kills itself; men do not believe
+the “papers” because they have found them
+lying at some point where the facts forced
+themselves upon attention.</p>
+
+<p>And so, too, with a training for the open
+mind in schools. People may come to see
+that where the quality of intelligence is concerned,
+the second-rate, the dull, the incurious,
+the routineer, simply will not do.
+They may be prepared to make education a
+profession sufficiently well paid to attract
+the highest ability, and sufficiently honourable
+to satisfy the keenest ambition. Even
+now we cannot over estimate the influence
+exerted in his generation by a great teacher.
+Do what we will, let him teach what he
+please, the minds with which he is in contact
+will go along with his mind, they will
+learn his enthusiasms, share his zest in
+inquiry. It may be Huxley in London, William
+James in Harvard, Alain in Paris.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>Students who have lived with such men
+are their spiritual children not less than
+those who have learned the habits of a gentleman
+at Eton or a proper respect for the
+Emperor of Japan in Tokio. And, equally,
+we may learn that a narrow patriotism in
+history and politics has social results less
+admirable than a quick scepticism built
+from the sense that our country has not
+always been right, our institutional standards
+not invariably perfect. Our governors
+may be willing to admit that one inference
+from the rebellion of Washington is the
+possible legitimacy of rebellion, one inference
+even from the new theology of Jesus,
+that we are sometimes justified in the making
+of new theologies. It is even possible
+that the value of the power to think may
+become so much more widely recognized,
+that we shall not ask that those who are
+able creatively to teach this supreme art,
+be dismissed because we dislike either what
+they teach or the opinions they profess outside
+the practice of their profession. We
+may come to insist upon security of tenure
+for the teacher even when his principles of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>faith do not coincide with those for which
+we desire the triumph.</p>
+
+<p>Yet these possibilities do not, in themselves,
+seem to me to confer a right to optimism
+if they stand alone. If it pays to
+spread false news, let us be sure that false
+news will be spread. If some special interest
+gains by corrupting the facts, so far as
+it can, the facts will be corrupted. If a poor
+educational system strengthens the existing
+foundations of power, it will tend to remain
+poor; if its extension is costly, those who
+are to bear the cost will find good reason
+either not to extend it, or to proceed at such
+a snail’s pace that the new way has no
+chance of affecting mankind except in
+terms of geological time. Our difficulty is
+the twofold one that propaganda can produce
+immense results in a brief space of
+time and that creative educational change
+takes something like a generation before its
+results are manifest upon a wide scale. The
+forces at work to prevent the emergence
+of truth, the forces, also, which have every
+reason to dislike the development of the
+mind which seeks for truth, are many and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>concentrated and powerful. They do not
+want the general reporting of experience,
+but only of that experience which favours
+themselves. They do not want the general
+population so trained as to prize truth, but
+only so trained that they believe whatever
+they read. In our own day it would not be
+an unfair description of education to define
+it as the art which teaches men to be deceived
+by the printed word. Those who
+profit by that deception are, at the moment,
+the masters of society.</p>
+
+<p>For we must remember that in these
+matters we have to concern ourselves with
+short-term values and not long-term values.
+We do not legislate for some conceivable
+Utopia to be born in some unimaginable
+time, but for the kind of world we know
+ourselves, for lives like our own lives. The
+freedom we ask we have to make. Every
+postponement we accept, every failure before
+which we are dumb, only consolidates
+the forces that are hostile to freedom. They
+themselves realize this well enough. They
+have, in the past, fought every step on
+every road to freedom because they have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>seen that the accumulation of small concessions
+will, in the end, be their defeat.
+Everywhere they have been guilty of
+definite error, or wrong, they have denied
+the error or wrong, lest it upset faith in
+their own right to power. Not the least powerful
+to silence, you will recollect, which
+persuaded even those who thought Sacco
+and Vanzetti innocent was their fear that
+proof of that innocence might disturb popular
+faith in the Massachusetts Courts. The
+same was true in the Dreyfus case. The
+same, on a lesser plane, was true of Mr
+Winston Churchill when he sought to deceive
+the House of Commons over the treatment
+of Lady Constance Lytton in prison.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_44_44" href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>
+Those in power will always deny freedom
+if, thereby, they can conceal wrong. And
+any successful denial only makes its repetition
+easier. Had California released
+Mooney in 1916, when the world knew he
+was innocent, it would have been easier for
+Massachusetts to have acted justly ten years
+later. The will to freedom, like the will to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>power, is a habit, and it perishes of
+atrophy.</p>
+
+<p>The inference I would draw is the quite
+basic one that in any society men only have
+an equal interest in freedom when they
+have an equal interest in its results. Where
+those results are already possessed by some,
+they seldom have the imagination to see the
+consequence of their denial to others. They
+will persuade themselves that those others
+are contented with their lot, or made differently
+in nature, so that they are unfit to
+enjoy what others possess. There is no myth
+we are not capable of inventing to lull our
+conscience. We see the futility of action on
+our part, because we are so unimportant.
+We see that it would be dangerous in this
+particular case, because we have an influence
+that, in other cases, might be exerted
+to useful purpose. We do not think the time
+has come for action. We think that action
+here might lead to other and quite unjustifiable
+demands. We would have associated
+ourselves with the demand, but those who
+are making it, or the way in which it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>being made, unfortunately renders this impossible.
+Life is so complex and tangled
+and full, that those who desire to abstain
+from the battle for freedom can always find
+ample excuse. The workman may be afraid
+for his job; Babbitt may shrink from being
+shunned by the group whose fellowship is
+his life; it may be the handful of silver, the
+riband for the coat, the love of power, the
+loathing of what freedom may bring. Whatever
+the motive of abstention, let us remember
+that men think differently who live
+differently, and that, as they think, so they
+build principles of action to remedy what,
+in their lives, they find bitter or unjust, to
+preserve what they find pleasant or right.</p>
+
+<p>We cannot, of course, remedy all experience
+which makes for a sense of bitterness
+or injustice. Things like the betrayal of
+friendship are, only too often, beyond the
+power of organization to affect. But the
+sense of bitterness or injustice that comes
+from bad housing, low wages, or the denial
+of an adequate political status, these
+we are able to remedy by social action. Or,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>rather, we are free to move to their remedy,
+if we have an equal interest in doing so.
+If our interest is unequal, our sense of a
+need to share with others in action will be
+small. Other things will seem more significant
+or more urgent; and the need itself
+will shrink as it obtrudes. The less we live
+in the experience of our neighbours, the
+less shall we feel wrong in the denial of
+their wants. Trade unionists appreciate a
+demand for higher wages more keenly than
+employers: the wealthy rentier reads of a
+strike in the cotton trade as a newspaper
+incident, of a railway dispute, whatever its
+grounds, as a threat to the community. The
+sense of solidarity comes only when the
+result of joint action impinges equally on
+the common life.</p>
+
+<p>We are in the difficulty that every step
+we take towards freedom is a step towards
+the equalization of privileges now held unequally.
+Those who hold them are not anxious
+to abandon what they entail; sometimes
+they can even persuade themselves
+that the well-being of society depends upon
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>a refusal to surrender them. For them,
+therefore, the honest publication of facts,
+the making of free minds, are simply paths
+to disaster. Why should they surrender
+their weapons of defence? Why, the more,
+when many of them do not even suspect
+that they fight with poisoned weapons? To
+explain to a loyal Roman Catholic that he
+should tell his children that there is grave
+reason to deny the truth of all he believes
+is to invite him to shatter the foundation
+upon which he has built his life. To suggest
+to the average citizen who took part
+in the Great War that his school-books
+should abandon the legend that his particular
+state entered it with the whole-souled
+motive of serving justice would appear
+scandalous simply because he is honestly
+unconscious of any other motive. To
+urge even upon the public-spirited heir to
+a great estate the possible duty of acting
+upon the principle of Mill’s argument
+about the laws of inheritance is, at the best,
+an adventure in the lesser hope. There was
+good reason for the unpopularity of the
+Socratic temper in Athens.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="II_2">
+ II
+</h3>
+
+<p>I conclude, therefore, that whatever our
+mechanisms and institutions, liberty can
+hope to emerge and to be maintained in a
+society where men are, broadly speaking,
+equally interested in its emergency and its
+maintenance. I accept the insight Harrington
+had when he insisted that the distribution
+of economic power in a state will
+control the distribution of its political
+power. I think James Madison was right
+when he argued that property is the only
+durable source of faction. I think the perception
+of the early socialists entirely justified
+when they urged that a society divided
+into a small number of rich, and a
+large number of poor persons, will be a
+society of exploiters and exploited. I cannot
+believe that, in such an atmosphere,
+liberty will be a matter of serious concern
+to the possessors of power.</p>
+
+<p>What will concern them is how they can
+best maintain their power. They will permit
+anything save the laying of hands upon
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>the ark of their covenant. They will allow
+freedom in inessentials; but when the pith
+of freedom is attack upon their monopoly
+they will define it as sedition or blasphemy.
+For if the form of social organization is a
+pyramid, men are bound to struggle towards
+its apex. In a society of economic unequals,
+gross unequalities make conflict
+inherent in its foundations. The possession
+of wealth means the possession of so much
+that makes for a happy life, beautiful physical
+surroundings, leisure to read and to
+think, safeguards against the insecurity of
+the morrow. It is, I think, inevitable that
+those to whom these things are denied
+should envy those who possess them. It is
+inevitable, also, that envy should be the
+nurse of hate and faction. Those who are
+so denied struggle to attain, those who possess
+struggle to preserve. Justice becomes
+the rule of the stronger, liberty the law
+which the stronger allow. The freedom that
+the poor desire in a society such as this is
+the freedom to enjoy the things their rulers
+enjoy. The penumbra of freedom, its purpose
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>and its life, is the movement for
+equality.</p>
+
+<p>And it is equality that is decried by those
+who rule. It means parting with the exercise
+of power and all the pleasures that go
+with its exercise. It means that their wants
+do not define the ends of production, their
+standards do not set the objects of consideration,
+their right to determine the
+equilibrium of social forces is no longer
+recognized. Equality, in fact, is a denial of
+the philosophy of life which is bred into
+their bones by their way of living. It does
+not seem to me remarkable that they should
+fight against this denial. Who of us, on
+these terms, but would find it difficult to
+accept as valid experience which contradicts
+our experiences, a system of values
+which attempts the transvaluation of our
+own? Who of us but would not feel that a
+freedom which seeks radical alteration of
+the contours of existence is perverse and
+dangerous and worthy only to be suppressed?
+The Pagan felt that of the Christian,
+the Catholic of the Protestant, the
+landowner of the merchant. The new power
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>which seeks its place in the sun is inevitably
+suspected by the old with whom it
+claims equal rights.</p>
+
+<p>The equality will be denied, and, with
+it, the freedom to claim equality. Inevitably,
+also, the right to freedom will be maintained,
+and the two powers will, sooner or
+later, mass their forces for battle. I know
+no instance in history in which men in possession
+of power have voluntarily abdicated
+its privileges. They say that reason and
+justice prevail; but they mean their reason
+and their justice. They are prepared to
+coerce in the hope of success, and they are
+prepared to die fighting rather than to surrender.
+It is the result of such a way of life
+that the ideal of freedom is inapplicable to
+matters upon which there is urgent difference
+of opinion between the rulers and
+their subjects. It is impossible for reason
+to prevail if men are prepared to fight about
+the consequences of its victory. And if they
+are prepared to fight there is no room in
+the society for freedom since this is incompatible
+with habits of violence.</p>
+
+<p>Any society, in fact, the fruits of whose
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>economic operations are unequally distributed
+will be compelled to deny freedom
+as the law of its being; and the same will
+be true of any society in process of forcible
+transition from one way of life to another.
+Cromwellian England, Revolutionary
+France, Communist Russia, Fascist Italy,
+each of these, of set purpose, made an end
+of the pretence that freedom was a justifiable
+object of desire. In each, it was proposed
+to maintain some particular form of
+social organization at any cost; to inquire
+into the cost might result in doubt of the
+value of the effort; and the value of that
+freedom which releases reason was therefore
+denied. A revolutionary state, of
+course, makes the position peculiarly clear.
+But it is not merely true of the revolutionary
+state.</p>
+
+<p>In England, or France, or Germany,
+there is no freedom where the fundamentals
+of the society are called into question,
+if their rulers think that this may cause
+danger to those questions. The government
+may decide that William Godwin is innocuous;
+but it will not hesitate to convict
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>Tom Paine—in truth far less drastic—of
+high treason. The cause of this attitude is,
+I think, beyond discussion. If freedom
+seeks to alter fundamentals, freedom must
+go; and freedom can hardly help but concentrate
+on fundamentals in a society distinguished
+by economic inequality. I do
+not need to point out to you the extraordinary
+timidity of society before subversive
+discussion of property-rights, nor to insist
+upon the complicated legal precautions that
+are taken for its defence. You have only to
+examine the attitude in which Labour combinations
+are approached by those who possess
+economic power, as instanced, for
+example, by the use of the injunction by
+American judges,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_45_45" href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> to realize that the main
+purpose of limitations on freedom is to prevent
+undue encroachments upon the existing
+inequalities. We announce that we are
+open to conviction in matters of social arrangement.
+But we take the most careful
+steps to see that our convictions are not
+likely to be overthrown.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span></p>
+
+<p>For the chance that reason will prevail
+in an unequal society is necessarily small.
+It is always at a disadvantage compared
+with interest, for, to the latter, especially
+in property matters, passion is harnessed,
+and in the presence of passion people become
+blind to truth. They see what they
+want to see, and they select as truth that
+which serves the purpose they desire to see
+prevail. The preparation of news for the
+making of opinion is, indeed, extraordinarily
+like the old religious controversy in
+which men hurled text and counter-text at
+one another. The real problem was one of
+proportions; but the protagonists altered
+the proportions that the material might the
+better serve their cause. Some years ago, a
+Labour Delegation returned from Russia
+with a statement about its character from
+Peter Kropotkin. A leading capitalist newspaper
+in London printed all those parts of
+it which attacked the Russian régime; and
+the leading Labour newspaper printed
+those parts of it favourable to the Bolshevik
+experiment. The readers of the first
+were, therefore, satisfied with the knowledge
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>that an eminent anarchist heartily
+disliked Bolshevism; and the readers of
+the second were heartened by discovering
+that so eminent a friend of freedom was
+nevertheless prepared to support a Dictatorship
+as favourable to freedom. You will
+remember that Luther and Calvin were always
+prepared to abide by the plain words
+of Scripture; but each was careful, at critical
+points, to insist that his own interpretation
+alone possessed validity. In that
+atmosphere, a solution which strikes opposing
+controversialists as just is not, at least
+easily, to be found.</p>
+
+<p>This, I suggest, is the kind of environment
+any plea for freedom must meet in
+the modern state. Discussion of inessentials
+can be ample and luxurious; discussion of
+essentials will always, where it touches the
+heart of existing social arrangements, meet
+at least with difficulty and probably with
+attack. It will find it extraordinarily hard
+to organize supporters for its view, if this
+opposes the will of those in authority. In
+wartime, any plea for reasonableness is at
+a discount; and it was at a discount in England
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>during the general strike when the
+government sought at once for the conditions
+of a belligerent atmosphere. Attack
+an interest, in a word, and you arouse passion;
+arouse passion, especially where
+property is concerned, and the technique of
+<i>raison d’état</i> will sooner or later be invoked.
+But liberty and <i>raison d’état</i> are
+mutually incompatible for the simple reason
+that <i>raison d’état</i> is a principle which
+seeks, <i>a priori</i>, to exclude rational discussion
+from the field. It seeks neither truth
+nor justice, but surrender.</p>
+
+<p>It is a technique, I think, which almost
+always comes into play when dangerous
+opinion is challenged by the state. A good
+instance of this is afforded by the trial of
+the British Communists in 1925. No one
+could seriously claim that their effort constituted
+a serious menace to the state, for
+they were a handful among millions, and
+there was not even evidence that their
+propaganda met with any success. Yet their
+condemnation was a foregone conclusion,
+granted the terms of the indictment. And
+the habits of power were interestingly illustrated
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>by the judge who presided over
+the trial. He had conducted the case with
+quite scrupulous fairness, and had shown
+no leaning to one side or the other until the
+jury had rendered its verdict. He then made
+an offer to the defendants that if they would
+abandon their belief in Communism he
+would adjust the sentence in the light of
+that abandonment. He made the offer, I do
+not doubt, in the utmost good faith and an
+entirely sincere conviction that Communist
+opinions are morally wicked. But that attitude
+was precisely similar to the Roman
+offer to the early Christians: they could
+avoid the arena if they would offer but a
+pinch of incense on the pagan altar. It was
+precisely similar to the willingness of the
+Inquisitor to mitigate his sentence where
+there is confession of heresy and repentance.
+Mr Justice Swift seemed to have no
+realization at all that the defendants were
+Communists in the light of an experience
+of social life which, for them, was as vivid
+and compelling as the Christian revelation
+to its early adherents; that the offer he
+made to them was mitigation of punishment
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>in return for the sacrifice of their sincerity;
+that the state, for him, was Hobbes’ “moral
+God” at whose altar they must do reverence.
+His views, of course, were the natural
+expression of his own experience of life,
+and, without doubt, sincerely held; but
+they implied an inability imaginatively to
+understand alien experience which is pathetic
+in the limitation it involves. And
+perhaps the supreme irony in the situation
+was the fact that to be tried as Communists
+was, for the defendants, perhaps the supreme
+test of truth to which their faith
+could be submitted.</p>
+
+<p>When Plato, in the <i>Laws</i>, set out a revised
+version of his ideal policy for application
+to the real world about him, he
+surrendered his demand for the complete
+communism which had distinguished his
+Utopia. But he was still emphatic enough
+about the need for equality to lay it down
+that no member of his state should possess
+property more than four times in amount of
+that owned by the poorest citizens. The
+ground of that drastic conclusion was quite
+clear in his mind. Great economic inequalities
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>are, as he saw, incompatible with a
+unity of interest in the community. There is
+no common basis upon which citizens can
+move to the attainment of kindred ideals.
+The lives of the few are too remote from
+the lives of the many for disagreement
+about social questions to be possible in
+terms of peace, if the ultimate organization
+of the society is not to be changed. The remoteness
+means that the few will always
+fear the invasion of their privilege, and
+the many will envy them its possession. It
+is not only, as I have said, that men think
+differently who live differently; it is, essentially,
+that men think antagonistically
+who live so differently. That antagonism
+is bound to result in violence unless the
+domination of the many by the few is almost
+complete, or is tempered by so continuous
+a flow of concession as results, in
+the end, in the effective mitigation of the inequality.
+There cannot, in a word, be democratic
+government without equality; and
+without democratic government there cannot
+be freedom.</p>
+
+<p>For the real meaning of democratic government
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>is the equal weighing of individual
+claims to happiness by social institutions.
+A society built upon economic inequality
+cannot attempt that sort of measure. Consciously
+or unconsciously, it starts from
+the assumption that there is a greater right
+in some claims than in others. It cannot be
+said that response to claims is made in
+terms of justice. The nature of economic
+inequality is a compulsion to respond to
+effective demand, and this pays no regard
+to science on the one hand, or to need upon
+the other. It thinks only of the presence of
+purchasing power and not of its connotation
+in terms of social purpose. The whole
+productive scheme is thereby tilted to the
+favour of those who possess the power to
+make their wants effective. There is cake
+for some before there is bread for all. The
+palace neighbours the slum. And those who
+find that their wants do not secure attention
+are, inevitably, tempted to an examination
+of the moral foundations of such a
+society. Their interest drives them to demand
+its reconstruction in terms of those
+wants. Liberty means, in such a context,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>the power continuously to exercise initiative
+in social reconstruction. The whole
+ethos which surrounds their effort is that
+of equality. They search for freedom for
+no other end but this.</p>
+
+<p>I do not need to remind you that most
+observers who have sought to estimate the
+significance of the democratic movement
+have seen that equality is the key to its
+understanding. That was the case with
+Tocqueville; it was the case with John
+Stuart Mill; and, in a famous lecture which
+reads now as though it was the utterance of
+a prophet,&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_46_46" href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> it was the case, also, with Matthew
+Arnold. Broadly, their insight converged
+towards a recognition of three
+important things. They realized, first, that
+in any society where power is gravely unequal,
+the character and intelligence of
+those at the base is unnaturally depressed.
+The community loses by this in two ways.
+The energy and capacity of which it might
+make use are not released for action; and
+the concentration of effective power in a
+few hands means that the wishes, opinions,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>needs, of the majority do not receive sufficient
+consideration. An aristocracy,
+whether of birth, or creed, or wealth, always
+suffers from self-sufficiency. It is inaccessible
+to ideals which originate from
+without itself. It tends to think them unimportant
+if they are urged tactfully, and
+dangerous if they are urged with vigour. It
+is so accustomed to the idea of its own superiority,
+that it is resentful of considerations
+which inquire into the validity of that
+assumption. It may be generous, charitable,
+kind; but the surrounding principle of
+those qualities is always their exercise as of
+grace and not in justice. An aristocracy, in
+a word, is the prisoner of its own power,
+and that the most completely when men
+begin to question its authority. It does not
+know how to act wisely at the very moment
+when it most requires wise action.</p>
+
+<p>It is not only that any aristocracy becomes
+unduly absorbed in the consideration
+of its own interests. Its depression of the
+people has the dangerous effect of persuading
+the latter of its necessary inferiority. It
+is unable to carry on its own affairs with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>order and intelligence. It does not know
+how to represent its wants with decision.
+It develops a sense of indignation because
+its interests are neglected; but it does not
+know how to attach its indignation to the
+right objects or, when so attached, how to
+remedy the ills from which it suffers. An
+aristocracy, in a word, deprives its subjects
+of character and responsibility; and as the
+revolutions of 1848 so clearly demonstrated,
+while they can destroy, they have
+never been taught how to create. The success
+of the Puritan Rebellion and the American
+Revolution was built upon the fact
+that, in each case, the exercise of power
+had been a habit of the general population;
+in the one case in the management of Nonconformist
+Churches, in the other in the
+governance of local legislatures and township
+meetings. In each case, a blind government
+confronted men who knew how to
+formulate their wants, and to organize their
+attainment. But, in general, aristocracies do
+not provide their subjects with this opportunity.
+Their own effort is substituted for
+popular effort, their own will for the popular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>will. The development of the total resources
+at their disposal is postponed to the
+preservation of their interest and convenience.
+They dwarf the masses that they may
+the better contemplate the stateliness of
+their own state. But that, in the end, always
+means that the vital power of the people is
+absent at the moment when it is most required.</p>
+
+<p>The third weakness of aristocracies is
+their inevitable impermanence. There is no
+method known of confining character and
+energy and ability to their own ranks.
+These, where they emerge in the people,
+will always seek the means of their satisfaction.
+From this angle, few things are so
+significant as the history of the British Labour
+Party. It rose to power largely because
+there was no room in the leadership of the
+historic parties for self-made men who had
+not sought success either as lawyers or as
+business men. The result was that the
+knowledge at the disposal of Liberals and
+Conservatives, the significant experience
+upon which they could draw for the making
+of their policy, was always more narrow
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>than the area of the problems they had to
+meet. The lives of the typical Labour leaders
+of the second generation, Keir Hardie,
+Mr Ramsay MacDonald, Mr Arthur Henderson,
+invariably show a period where the
+regretful decision has to be taken against
+further co-operation with a party which
+cannot see the needs they see, which does
+not desire service to the ideals they seek
+to serve.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_47_47" href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> And men such as these make articulate
+in the minds of all who have a sense
+that their interests are neglected not only
+the fact of negligence, the demand, therefore,
+for satisfaction, but also the search
+for the principles whereby satisfaction can
+be attained. Their insight into an emphasis
+to which little attention has been paid
+grows by the volume of the experience they
+encounter into a movement; and those who
+have permitted the interest to be neglected
+find that the old battle-cries no longer attract
+its allegiance even when they are given
+new form.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span></p>
+
+<p>It is curious to note that not even the impact
+of defeat gives this lesson its proper
+perspective to the defeated. English Liberalism
+has suffered eclipse because,
+broadly speaking, it was unable to discover
+an industrial philosophy suitable to the
+wants of the new electorate. It served admirably
+the requirements of the manufacturer
+and the shopkeeper who were
+enfranchised in 1832. It gave them freedom
+of trade, liberty of contract and full
+religious toleration. But it never understood
+either the fact of trade unionism or
+the philosophy of trade unionism. Its attitude
+to citizenship was atomic in character.
+It saw the community as a government
+on the one side, and a mass of discrete individuals
+on the other. It assumed that each
+of these, given liberation from the special
+privilege of the <i>ancien régime</i>, had the full
+means of happiness at his disposal; it accepted,
+in a word, the principles of Benthamite
+radicalism as absolute. But its error
+was not to see that the community is not
+merely a mass of discrete individuals. Jones
+is not merely Jones, but also a miner, a railwayman,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>a cotton operative, an engineer.
+As one of these, he has interests to be
+jointly promoted and jointly realized. A
+philosophy of politics that is to work must
+find a full place in the state for organized
+workers to whom freedom in the industrial
+sphere is, in its fullest implications, as urgent
+and as imperative as freedom in the
+sphere of politics or religion.</p>
+
+<p>The Liberal Party did not see this until
+it was too late. Built largely on the support
+of the Nonconformist business man, the interests
+it understood were essentially his
+interests; and to recognize the implications
+of trade unionism, as Keir Hardie and his
+colleagues did, was to invade the interests
+upon which it was able to count for allegiance.
+It was forced, obviously unwillingly,
+into concessions like the Trades
+Disputes Act of 1906; but its policy, as the
+detailed history of the process of social legislation
+from 1906 to 1914 makes clear
+was, so far as it could, to mitigate social
+inequality by recognition of individual
+claims, and to build machinery for their
+satisfaction which continued to neglect the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>fact of trade unionism. When, after the
+war, the remarkable growth of the Labour
+Party showed how vast was the decline of
+the Liberal hold upon the working-classes,
+the Liberal leaders were driven, by the need
+of self-preservation, to the invention of industrial
+principles likely to prove attractive
+to trade unionists. But these wore the air
+of being produced for the occasion; and
+they did not fit into the character of Liberal
+Leadership. For the latter was quite unable
+to attract to its ranks either working-men
+candidates or trade union support; and the
+emphatic declaration of a Liberal politician
+that his party could not join the ranks of
+Labour because the latter was built upon
+the trade unions showed how unreal was
+the body of industrial principles which Liberalism
+had developed.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_48_48" href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> It remained an
+atomic philosophy applicable to a world in
+which employer and worker confronted
+each other, as individuals, on equal terms.
+The assumption was unjustified; and the
+way lay open for the consolidation by Labour
+of its growing hold upon the workers.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>Liberalism remained a middle-class outlook,
+admirable in its exposition of basic
+principle, but incapable of adjusting principle
+to a medium with which its supporters
+were largely unacquainted.</p>
+
+<p>In an interesting passage&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_49_49" href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> Lord Balfour
+has drawn attention to the fact that the success
+of the British Constitution in the nineteenth
+century—it is worth adding the
+general success of representative government—was
+built upon an agreement between
+parties in the state upon fundamental
+principles. There was, that is, a kindred
+outlook upon large issues; and since fighting
+was confined to matters of comparative
+detail, men were prepared to let reason
+have its sway in the realm of conflict. For
+it is significant that in the one realm where
+depth of feeling was passionate—Irish
+home rule—events moved rapidly to the
+test of the sword; and the settlement made
+was effected by violence and not by reason.
+That was the essence of the Russian problem.
+The effort to transform a dull and corrupt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>autocracy into a quasi-constitutional
+system came, like the efforts of Louis XVI
+at reform, too late to affect men who had
+already passed beyond any possibility of
+compromise with the idea of monarchical
+power. The concessions which the autocracy
+was prepared to offer did not touch
+the fringe of what the opposition regarded
+as nominal. Nor was that all. Post-war Russia
+illustrated admirably the truth of Mill’s
+insistence that “a state which dwarfs its
+men in order that they may be more docile
+instruments in its hands, even for beneficial
+purposes, will find that with small men no
+great thing can really be accomplished; and
+that the perfection of machinery to which it
+has sacrificed everything, will in the end
+avail it nothing, for want of the vital power
+which, in order that the machine might
+work more smoothly, it has preferred to
+banish.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_50_50" href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+
+<h3 id="III_2">
+ III
+</h3>
+
+<p>I conclude, therefore, that the factor of
+consent is not likely effectively to operate
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>in any society where there is a serious unequality
+of economic condition; and I assume,
+further, that the absence of such
+consent is, in the long run, fatal to social
+peace. I do not deny that men will long
+postpone their protest against that absence;
+there are few wrongs to which men do not
+become habituated by experience, few,
+therefore, which, after the long passage of
+time, they will not be persuaded are inherent
+in nature. But such habituation is
+never permanent; sooner or later someone
+arises, like the child in the fairy-story, to
+point out that in fact the emperor is naked.
+If attention is drawn to some need which
+is widely experienced, the denial that the
+need is real by those who have not experienced
+it, will not prove effective. Workingmen
+never found it easy to believe that long
+hours of work or low wages were the essential
+conditions of industrial leadership
+in the nineteenth century. Few Nonconformists
+sympathized with Burke’s attitude
+to parliamentary reform. Few American
+trade unionists see in the use of the injunction
+by the courts a method of preserving
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>social peace in terms of a strict impartiality
+between capital and labour. Opponents of
+Mussolini are not moved by his plea that
+he thinks only of the well-being of Italy.
+Russian working-men have probably been
+often tempted to the view that their Bolshevik
+masters mistake Communist dogma for
+social truth.</p>
+
+<p>To satisfy experience, in short, we must
+weigh experience as we move to the making
+of decisions. We cannot rule it out because
+it is not ours; that is the error of autocracy
+which insists upon the <i>a priori</i> rightness of
+its own experience. We have to regard experience
+as significant in itself and seek to
+come to terms with it. If it is mistaken in
+the implications it assumes, we have to convince
+it of its error. Our business, hard as
+it is, is the discovery of that need in the experience
+which must be satisfied if successful
+government is to be possible. For
+successful government is simply government
+which satisfies the largest possible
+area of demand. It is not mysterious or divine.
+It is simply a body of men making
+decisions which, in the long run, live or die
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>by what other men think of them. Their
+validity as decisions is in that thought if
+only because its content is born of what
+the decisions mean to ourselves. All of us
+are inescapably citizens, and, at some point,
+therefore, the privacy in which we seek escape
+from our obligation as citizens, will
+seem unsatisfying. A crisis comes which
+touches us; a decision is made which contradicts
+something we happen to have experienced
+as fundamental; we then judge
+our rulers by the fact of that denial, and
+act as we think its terms warrant.</p>
+
+<p>This, as I think, is the real pathway to an
+answer to the kind of problem which students
+of public opinion like Mr Lippmann
+have posed. They are right in their analysis
+of the constituent factors in its making, especially
+in their emphasis of the difficulties
+we confront in making that opinion correspond
+to the realities it must satisfy. They
+are right, further, I believe, in their emphasis
+upon the vital connexion between
+truthful news and liberty; nor do I doubt
+that some of the remedies they propose
+would have the valuable effect of increasing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>the degree of truth in the news. But all of
+them, I think, miss out the vital fact that
+truthful news is dangerous to a society the
+actual contours of which its presentation
+might seriously change. It would have been
+a different war in 1914 without propaganda;
+the history of political parties
+would have been different if the principles
+they announced were measured by their application
+to total and not to partial experience.
+It only pays to print the truth when
+the interest responsible for publication is
+not prejudiced thereby. My point has been
+that in an unequal society that prejudice is
+inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>And that prejudice, in its basic implications,
+is incompatible with liberty. For what
+it does is to emphasize some experience at
+the expense of other experience, to enable
+one need to make its way while another
+need remains unknown. The policy of censorship
+during the war meant that everyone
+anxious for its prosecution to the end had
+ample opportunity to express his view; the
+pacifist, the Christian, the believer in peace
+by negotiation, found it extraordinarily difficult
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>to speak. Clamant opinion was, as always,
+taken for actual opinion; and policy,
+particularly in the making of peace, was
+built upon the assumption that no other
+opinion existed save that which made itself
+heard. To any observer with a grain of common
+sense, it was obvious that no treaty
+would be possible of application save as it
+impressed Germany as just, and that where,
+when the glow of war had gone, Germany
+resisted its application, a public opinion
+would not easily be found to demand the
+imposition of penalties. Nothing is more
+dangerous in the taking of decisions than to
+assume that because people are silent, they
+have nothing to say.</p>
+
+<p>Yet that is the underlying assumption of
+much of our social life. We emphasize opinion
+which satisfies those in power, we discount
+opinion which runs counter to it;
+above all we take it for granted that silence
+and consent are one and the same thing.
+Every one of these attitudes is a blunder;
+especially is it a blunder, for which we pay
+heavily, in matters of social importance. It
+is extraordinarily dangerous, for example,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>to assume that English public opinion disapproved
+the General Strike because Mayfair
+was indignant, the <i>Morning Post</i> hysterical,
+and Sir John Simon coldly hostile;
+for Mayfair and the <i>Morning Post</i>, even
+with Sir John Simon, do not constitute
+English public opinion. Our difficulty is
+that they will be taken to constitute it when
+it is to the interest of government to do so.
+Such an equation is serious, and may well
+be fatal, to any who think of social peace as
+a thing really worth while to preserve.</p>
+
+<p>We must remember, too, what goes along
+with a process of this kind. Those who
+lament the ignorance of public opinion too
+often forget that in an unequal society it is
+necessary to repress the expression of individuality.
+Every attempt at such expression
+is an attempt at the equalization of social
+conditions; it is an attempt to make myself
+count, an insistence on my claim, an assertion
+of my right to be treated as equal in
+that claim with other persons. To admit
+that I ought to have that freedom is to
+deny that the inequality upon which society
+rests is valid. And, accordingly, every sort
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>of devious method, conscious and unconscious,
+is adopted to prevent my assertiveness.
+The most subtle, perhaps, is the
+denial of adequate educational facilities;
+for what, in fact, that does is to prevent me
+from knowing how to formulate my claim
+effectively, and unattention is the price I
+have to pay for my ineffectiveness. My
+claim, then, however real or just, because
+it is clumsily presented fails to secure the
+consideration it deserves. Or, again, the
+view of a group may be simply discounted
+where it fails to please the holders of
+power. We are impressed, for instance,
+when we hear that a government, say that
+of Mr Lloyd George, is solid in its determination
+not to give way to the miners; we
+assume a careful weighing of the facts and
+a decision taken in the light of their total
+significance. But when we hear that the
+miners are solidly behind their leaders, we
+feel that this is a clear case of ignorant
+and misguided men being led to their destruction
+by agitators enjoying the exercise
+of power. The whole machinery of news-making
+is directed to the confirmation of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>that impression; and the chance that the
+miners’ claim will be considered equally
+is destroyed by the weight which unequal
+economic power attaches to the case against
+that claim. The opinion represented by the
+miners is not objectively valued. It is the
+victim of a process of valuation the purpose
+of which is to prevent, so far as possible,
+an alteration of the <i>status quo</i>; and,
+<i>mutatis mutandis</i>, this is true of all claims
+which seek alteration in a significant degree.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is, I think, unquestionable that
+in an unequal society, the effort of ordinary
+men to attain the condition we call
+happiness is hampered at every turn. The
+power of numbers is sacrificed to the interest
+of a few. The truth of the facts which
+might make a just solution is distorted for
+a similar end. Freedom, therefore, in an
+unequal society has no easy task as it seeks
+realization. For its search is not to realize
+itself for its own sake, but for what, as it
+is realized, it is able to bring. We seek
+religious freedom for the truth our religion
+embodies. We seek political freedom for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>the ends that, in the political world, we
+deem good. We seek economic freedom for
+the satisfaction brought by making an end
+of the frustration to our personality an irrational
+subordination implies. Men do not,
+I believe, resent an environment when they
+feel that they share adequately in its making
+and in the end for which it is made.
+But they are bound to be at least apathetic,
+and possibly hostile, when the sense is wide
+and deep that they are no more than its
+instruments. That is the secret of the profound
+allegiance trade unionism is able to
+create. Its members see in its activities the
+expression of the power for which they are
+individually searching. Few states—it is
+surely a significant thing—have ever won
+from their subjects a loyalty so profound
+as the Miners’ Federation of Great Britain,
+or the trade unions in the cotton trades.
+Even the blunders of their leaders meet
+with a pardon far more generous than
+would be extended to the political heads of
+the state. The reason lies in the degree to
+which the trade union expresses the intimate
+experience of its members. And until
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>the policy of the state meets that experience
+with similar profundity conflict between
+the government and the trade union
+will rarely involve the desertion by the
+members of the association they have
+themselves made. What the government
+will represent as disloyalty to the state will
+seem to trade unionists a service which is
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>The point I am seeking to make was
+summarized with the insight of genius by
+Disraeli when he spoke of the rich and
+poor as in fact two nations. For the poor,
+their voluntary organizations evoke the
+same kind of impassioned loyalty as a nation
+struggling to be free is able to win
+from its members. Anyone who reads, for
+example, the early history of bodies like
+the miners’ unions, and seeks to measure
+the meaning of the sacrifices men were willing
+to make on their behalf, will realize that
+he is meeting precisely the same kind of
+temper as he can parallel from the history
+of the Italian struggle against Austria or
+of the Balkan fight against Turkish domination.
+What Keir Hardie did for the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>miners of Ayrshire, what Sidney Hillman
+has done for the garment workers of America,
+are as epic and as creative, in their way,
+as the work of Garibaldi and Mazzini. The
+latter must have seemed at Vienna just as
+wrong and as unwise as Keir Hardie seemed
+to the mineowners fifty years ago, or Hillman
+to the garment manufacturer accustomed,
+in the classic phrase, to “conduct
+his own business in his own way.” The
+point in each case is the important one that
+power is challenged in the interest of self-government;
+that the focal point of conflict
+is an inability on the part of those who
+govern to interpret the experience of their
+subjects as these read its meaning; with
+the result, again in each case, that the imposition
+of an interpretation from without
+leaves those upon whom it is imposed with
+the sense that their lives and their happiness
+are instruments and not ends.</p>
+
+<p>What is the outcome of it all? For me,
+at least, essentially that a society pervaded
+by the fact of unequality is bound to deny
+freedom and, therefore, to provoke conflict.
+Its values will be so distorted, its apparatus
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>for magnifying that distortion so complete,
+that it is blinded to the realities which confront
+it. We do not need to go far for proof.
+The daily newspaper, the novel, the poet,
+all confirm it. Compare Macaulay’s glorification
+of Victorian progress with the picture
+in Carlyle’s <i>Chartism</i>, or Dickens’
+<i>Hard Times</i>. Set the resounding complacency
+of Mr. Gladstone’s perorations against
+the indignant insight of William Morris
+and Ruskin. Think of the America of President
+Coleridge’s speeches, and the America
+as bitterly described by Mr Sinclair Lewis.
+Remember that Treitzschke’s eulogy of
+blood and iron is a picture of the same Germany
+as that which Bebel and Liebkneckt
+sought to overthrow. Guizot’s era of the
+<i>juste milieu</i> is the period of Proudhon and
+Leroux, of Considerant and Louis Blanc,
+all of them, however mistakenly, the protagonists
+of a just society. Men think differently
+who live differently. If we have
+a society of unequals, how can we agree
+either about means or ends? And if this
+agreement is absent how can we, at least
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>over a considerable period, hope to move
+on our way in peace?</p>
+
+<p>An unequal society always lives in fear,
+and with a sense of impending disaster in
+its heart. The effect of this atmosphere is
+clear enough. We have only to examine the
+history of France after the death of Louis
+XIV to realize exactly what it implies.
+Everyone who seeks to penetrate below the
+surface sees some vast calamity ahead. It
+may be a visitor like Chesterfield, a timid
+lawyer like Barbier, an ex-minister like
+D’Argenson, a philosopher like Voltaire.
+The government itself, and those with
+whom it is allied, has a perception that
+something new is abroad. They fear the
+novelty and they seek to suppress it, in the
+belief that a bold front and an adequate
+severity will stem the tide of critical scepticism.
+But neither boldness nor severity
+can stem that tide. The government falters
+for a moment on the verge of concession:
+there is an hour when the ministry of Turgot
+seemed likely to inaugurate an era of
+conciliation. It is too late because the price
+of conciliation is the sacrifice of precisely
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>the vested interests with which the government
+is in partnership. So the ancient
+régime moves relentlessly to its destruction.
+It is forced to consult those whose experience
+it had never taken into account in the
+hope of salvation; and they find that, if
+they are to fulfil, they must also destroy.</p>
+
+<p>That is, other things being equal, the
+inevitable history of such societies. Their
+mental habits resemble nothing so much as
+the horrified timidity which persuaded
+Hobbes to find in despotism the only cure
+for social disagreement. They are afraid of
+reason, for this involves an examination
+into their own prerogative and, as at least
+probable, a denunciation of the title by
+which it is preserved. They are afraid of
+concession, because they see in it an admission
+of the weakness of their case. They
+magnify scepticism into sedition and they
+accuse even their friends who doubt the
+virtue of severity of betraying the allegiance
+which is their due. They cannot see
+that men will not accept the state as the
+appointed conscience of the nation unless
+they conceive themselves to possess a full
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>share of its benefits. They minimize the
+sufferings of others, because they do not
+have experience of them, and they magnify
+their own virtues that they may gain
+confidence in themselves. They distort history,
+and call it patriotism; they repress
+the expression of grievance and call it the
+maintenance of law and order. In such a
+society, the governors appear to their subjects
+as dwellers in another world; and
+communication between them lacks the
+vivifying quality of fellowship. For the
+truth of one party is never sufficiently the
+truth of another for the members to talk a
+common language. Every vehemence becomes
+a threat; and by a kind of mad logic
+every threat is taken as an act of treason.
+The society is unbalanced because justice
+is not its habitation. Even its generosity
+will be resented because it has not known
+how to be just.</p>
+
+<p>I do not want to be taken as implying
+that violence is the inevitable end. I only
+argue that the irrefutable and inherent
+logic of a society where the gain of living
+is not proportioned to its toil is one of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>which violence is the inevitable end. We
+have never any choice in history except
+to follow reason wholly or, ultimately, to
+expect disaster; and as we approach that
+ultimate, the temper of the society will be
+what I have described. For the rule of
+reason in a community means that a special
+interest must always give way before the
+principles it discovers. And the rule of reason
+is the only kind of rule which can afford
+the luxury of freedom. That is, I think, because
+an admission that the claims of reason
+are paramount makes possible the
+emergence of a spirit of compromise. The
+basis of the society being just, men are not
+prepared for conflict over detail; but when
+the basis itself is unacceptable, conflict over
+detail is magnified into a fight over principle.
+In such a temper, men are always discussing
+with their backs on the edge of a
+precipice. Social discussion becomes Carlyle’s
+ultimate question of “Can I kill thee
+or canst thou kill me?” Every utterance
+is necessarily a challenge; and suppressed
+because so taken; every association is a
+conspiracy and attacked because so imagined.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>The only way to avoid so poisonous
+an atmosphere is to be prepared to surrender
+what you cannot prove it is reasonable
+to hold. But, human nature being
+what it is, men do not easily surrender what
+they have the power to retain; and they
+will pay the price of conflict if they think
+they can win. They do not remember that
+the price of conflict is the destruction of
+freedom and that with its loss there go the
+qualities which make for the humanity of
+men.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="IV_2">
+ IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>I spoke a little earlier of the sense of
+national freedom; and these lectures would
+be even more incomplete than they are unless
+I sought to dwell briefly on what such
+freedom means. Let me take here as my
+text a sentence from John Stuart Mill which
+might well stand as the classic embodiment
+of one of the outstanding ideals of the
+nineteenth century. “It is” he wrote “in
+general a necessary condition of free institutions
+that the boundaries of governments
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>should coincide in the main with those of
+nationalities.” I do not need to remind you
+of the commentary history has written upon
+that text. In its name were accomplished
+the unity of Italy and Germany, the breakup
+of the Turkish and Russian empires, the
+separation of the Baltic peoples from the
+domination of Russia. The economic motive
+apart, no principle has been more fruitful
+of war than the demand for national freedom.
+Even yet, the day of its power is far
+from ended; for every misapplication of
+Mill’s principle in the peace treaties of
+1919 has raised problems of government
+which the world will find it difficult to solve
+without the bloody arbitrament of the
+sword.</p>
+
+<p>Now nationality is a subjective conception
+that eludes definition in scientific
+terms. As an Englishman, I can feel in my
+bones the sense of what English nationality
+implies; I feel intimately, for instance, the
+things that enable me to claim Shakespeare
+or Jane Austen or Dickens as typically
+English, without being able to put into
+words the things that make them so. Every
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>factor to which nationality has been traced,
+race, language, common political allegiance,
+is an excessive simplicity which betrays
+scientific exactitude. It is true that
+nationality is born of a common historic
+tradition, of achievement and suffering mutually
+shared; it is true, also, that language
+and race, and even a common political allegiance,
+have played their part in its formation.
+It is obvious that there is something
+exclusive about nationality, that the members
+of any given nation have a sense of
+separateness from other people which gives
+them a feeling of difference, of uniqueness,
+which makes domination by others so unpleasant
+as to involve profound discomfort
+to a point which may involve, even justly
+involve, resistance to that domination. But
+the fact remains that nationality is a psychological
+phenomenon rather than a
+juridical principle. It is in the former, not
+the latter, sphere that we must seek to meet
+its claims.</p>
+
+<p>Mill’s principle, if carried to its logical
+conclusion, would mean that every nation
+has a title to statehood. I want you to think
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>what that implies. The modern state is a
+sovereign state, and in terms of that title
+no will can bind its purpose but its own.
+The legal meaning of sovereignty is omnicompetence.
+The state may, as it please,
+make peace or war. It can erect its own
+tariffs, restrict its immigration, decide upon
+the rights of aliens within its borders, without
+the duty of consulting its neighbours,
+or paying any attention to principles of justice.
+States have done all these things.
+There is no crime they have not been prepared
+to commit for the defence or the extension
+of their own power. A different
+moral code has been applied in history to
+their acts from what we insist upon applying
+to individual acts, and it is, quite definitely,
+a lower moral code. The history
+of the nation which becomes a state and
+insists upon the prerogatives of its statehood
+is a history incompatible with the
+terms upon which the maintenance of peace
+depends. That exclusive temper which, as
+I have argued, is the root of nationality
+means a measurable loss of ethical quality
+in those international relations which are
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>concerned with questions of power. You
+have only to remember the acts which, during
+the war, states attempted against one
+another amid the applause of their subjects
+to realize that the recognition of national
+unity as a state means the destruction of
+private liberty and the violation of international
+justice, unless we can find means
+of setting some limit to the powers of which
+a nation-state can dispose.</p>
+
+<p>I am particularly concerned with the exercise
+of those powers on their economic
+side. The nation-state is expected to protect
+the activities of its citizens outside its
+own boundaries. Its prestige becomes associated
+with its power to act in this way. So
+Germany supports the Mannesman brothers
+in Morocco, England the Rothschilds in
+Egypt, America its citizens in half the territories
+of South America. Nationalism becomes
+imperialism and this means the
+enslavement of lesser nations to the imperialistic
+power. In its worst temper, its
+eternal character was described by Thucydides
+in that passage where he relates the
+tragic end of Melos, a passage it would be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>mere insolence either to summarize or to
+praise. Even where imperialism has resulted
+in measurable benefit to the subject
+people, as with Great Britain in India, or
+the United States in the Philippines, the
+resultant loss of responsibility and character,
+which an imposed rule implies, is
+a heavy price to pay for the efficiency of
+administration that has been conferred.
+The noble phrase of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
+that good government is no
+substitute for self-government seems to me
+borne out by every phase of the history of
+imperialism. It is the imposition of a system
+of experience upon a people ignorant
+of the character of that experience for ends
+only partially its own, and by methods
+which neglect unduly the relation of consent
+to happiness in the process of
+government. The classic case in my own
+experience is that of Ireland. I cannot find
+ground upon which to defend the habits of
+Great Britain there. But those habits seem
+to me the inevitable outcome of an assumption
+that Great Britain was entitled to decide
+alone the character of her own destiny.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nationality, in a word, must, if it is to
+be consistent with the needs of civilization,
+be set in the context that matters of
+common interest to more than one nation-state
+cannot be decided by the fiat of one
+member of the international community.
+Modern science and modern economic organization
+has reduced this world to the
+unity of interdependence: the inference
+from this condition is, as I think, the supremacy
+of cosmopolitan need over the national
+claim. A nation, that is, is not
+entitled to be the sole judge of its conduct
+where that conduct, by its subject-matter,
+implicates others. It must consult with
+them, compromise with them, find the
+means of resolving the problem in terms of
+peace. Everyone of us can think of functions
+that, in the modern world, entail international
+consequences by their inherent
+character. We have passed the stage where
+we can allow a state to fix its own boundaries
+as it thinks best, without consultation
+with other states. The same is true of
+matters like the treatment of racial minorities,
+of the scale of armaments, of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>making of war and peace. Everyone can
+see that matters like the control of the traffic
+in noxious drugs, or of women and children,
+of epidemics like cholera and typhus,
+cannot be settled save as states co-operate
+upon agreed methods of action. Most people
+can see, at least in principle, that the
+same thing applies to labour conditions,
+to legal questions like the law of bills and
+notes, or the rights of aliens before a municipal
+court, or the incorporation of public
+companies. An historian who surveyed the
+history of international investment would,
+I think, not illegitimately conclude that
+there are principles applicable to its control
+which can justly regard with indifference
+the question of the nationality of the
+investor or the state-power to which, save
+in cases of default, he is certain to appeal.
+The importance of the supply of raw materials
+to international economic life forces
+us to consider the deliberate rationing of
+that supply, and the maintenance of a
+stable world price level which thinks first
+of cosmopolitan need, and, only after a
+long interval, of national profit. A sane
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>man would, I suggest, conclude that if
+bodies like the International Rail Syndicate,
+or the Continental Commercial Union
+in the glass industry, find it sensible to
+transcend national competition by international
+agreement, <i>a fortiori</i> the principle
+applies to matters of world-concern.</p>
+
+<p>I am, of course, only illustrating the
+problem.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_51_51" href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> The principle which seems to me
+to emerge is the necessity for world-control
+where the decision is of world-concern. The
+inference from that principle is that the
+rights of the state are always subject to, and
+limited by, the necessarily superior rights
+of the international community. State-sovereignty,
+that is, in the sense in which the
+nineteenth century used that term, is obsolete
+and dangerous in a world like our
+world. It gives an authority to the nation-state
+which, in the light of the facts, is
+incompatible with the well-being of the
+world. It invokes the factor of prestige in
+realms where it has no legitimate application.
+It means that problems of which a
+wise solution is possible only in terms of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>reason have to find a solution amid circumstances
+of passion and power which obviate
+any possibility of justice.</p>
+
+<p>For in the external, as in the internal,
+sphere of the state, the choice is between
+the use of reason and conflict. The use of
+reason is the law of liberty; conflict means
+the erosion of liberty. If states are to conduct
+their operations always with the
+knowledge in the background that the price
+of disagreement is war, the consequences
+are obvious. The atmosphere of international
+affairs will be poisoned by fear, and
+fear will bring with it the system of armaments
+and alliances which, in 1914, issued
+naturally and logically in the Great War.
+That was the price properly paid for a
+scheme of things which assumed that the
+legal right of the state was unlimited, and
+harnessed to the support of that legality
+every primitive and barbarous passion by
+which nationalism can degrade humanity.
+We need not be afraid to assert that, in the
+international sphere, the sovereignty of the
+state simply means the right of any powerful
+nation to make its own conception of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>self-interest applicable to its weaker opponents.
+It is the old doctrine of self-help
+clothed in legal form; the doctrine against
+which law itself came as a protest in the
+name of order and common sense. And
+exactly as we cannot admit the right of a
+man to make his own law in the internal
+life of the community, so we cannot allow
+the single nation-state to make its own law
+in the wider life of the international community.
+Because that is what the sovereignty
+of the state ultimately means, the
+sovereignty of the state is a conception
+which outrages the patent needs of international
+well-being.</p>
+
+<p>I conclude, therefore, that if the nation
+is entitled to self-government, it is to a self-government
+limited and defined by the demands
+of a wider interest. I conclude that
+its recognition as a state, if sovereignty be
+involved in that recognition, is incompatible
+with a just system of international relations.
+It is, further, incompatible with the
+notion of an international law regarded as
+binding upon the member-states of the international
+community. I need not dwell
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>upon the impossible difficulties in which
+the defenders of this doctrine have found
+themselves.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_52_52" href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> In their extreme form they
+have even led a great jurist to write of war
+as the supreme expression of the national
+will.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_53_53" href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> I am unable to share such a view.
+Where war begins, freedom ends. Where
+war begins, the opportunity of making just
+solutions of any problem in dispute is indefinitely
+postponed. And I ask you to remember
+that, although, under modern
+conditions, a whole nation is implicated in
+war after its beginning, that is not the case
+either with its preparation or its declaration.
+That is an affair of the agents of the
+state whose interest in the action they take
+may be totally at variance with the interest
+of the people for whom they are taken as
+acting. They may be serving private ambition,
+a particular party; they may be acting
+on false information or wrong conceptions.
+My point is that they dispose of the whole
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>power of the state, and that there is no
+means of checking their activity save the
+very unlikely means of revolution. The full
+implications of national sovereignty are a
+license to wreck civilization. I cannot recognize
+those implications as necessary to a
+proper view of national freedom.</p>
+
+<p>I deny, therefore, that there is any qualitative
+difference between the interests or
+the rights of states, and the interests or
+rights of other associations or individuals.
+Their purposes are ordinary, human purposes
+like any other: they are a means to
+the happiness of their members. They
+have, it seems to me, to be judged by exactly
+the same principles as those by which
+we judge the conduct of a trade union, or
+a church, or a scientific society. They do
+not constitute a corporate person living on
+a plane different from, and having standards
+other than, those of the individuals
+of whom they are composed. I fully agree
+that no decision ought to be taken about
+them, in the making of which they do not
+amply share. I fully agree, also, that limitations
+imposed upon their activities must
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>pay scrupulous regard to the psychological
+facts out of which they are built. I do not,
+for instance, deny that the Partition of Poland
+was a crime against Poland, or that
+its inevitable result was to persuade millions
+of human beings that a war for their
+resuscitation was a morally justified adventure.
+But I see no difference between the
+Partition of Poland and, let us say, the
+suppression in the community of a Communist
+Party. Each seems to me an attack
+upon a corporate experience which is wrong
+because it does not persuade those who
+share that experience to abandon its implications.
+I do not advocate the supremacy
+of international authority over the national
+state in order to destroy the national state.
+I advocate that supremacy as the sole way
+with which I am acquainted to set the great
+fact of nationalism in its proper perspective.</p>
+
+<p>My point is, then, that the fact of a nation’s
+existence does not entitle it to the
+full panoply of a sovereign state. Scotland
+and Wales are both of them nations;
+neither possesses that panoply; neither, I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>think, suffers in moral or psychological
+stature by reason of its absence. Neither,
+let me add, do the Scandinavian peoples—perhaps
+the happiest of modern communities—who
+are only sovereign states
+upon the essential condition that they do
+not exercise their sovereignty. But there is
+no more humiliation in that position than
+in the position any government occupies
+in the context of its own subjects. Power
+is, by its very nature, an exercise in the
+conditional mood. Those who exert it can
+only have their way by making its objects
+commend themselves, as, also, its methods
+of pursuing those objects, to those over
+whom it is exerted. The sovereign king in
+Parliament could legally disfranchise the
+working-classes in England; practically we
+know that it dare not do so. Everyone in
+England is aware of the grim, practical
+limitations under which parliamentary
+sovereignty operates; no one, I believe,
+finds humiliation in limits such as we know.</p>
+
+<p>What is happening to the world is something
+of the same sort. The Covenant of
+the League of Nations is a method of limiting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>the unfettered exercise of national sovereign
+power. It is a painful and delicate
+operation; how painful and how delicate
+the timidity that has been characteristic of
+the League’s history makes hideously manifest.
+At any point in which the history of
+the League is examined, elections to the
+Council, operations of the Mandate system,
+application of a plebiscite, resolution of an
+international dispute, the statesmen of
+Geneva have hesitated to act upon the logic
+of the world’s facts. They have seen great
+nations confronting them, and they have
+feared that those nations might, if angered,
+flout the League and go their own way. So
+the League has fumbled and compromised
+and evaded. The big states have controlled
+it, and over almost all of its history there
+has fallen, darkening it, the shadow of the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>Yet experience of the League gives us
+hope rather than despair. It took three centuries
+to build up the sovereign national
+state to that amplitude which proclaimed
+its own disastrous character in 1914; it
+would be remarkable indeed if a decade
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>full of memories and hates so passionate
+as those of the last ten years sufficed to
+overthrow its authority. We can at least
+say out of the experience of those ten years
+that remarkable incursions into that authority
+have occurred. We have discovered a
+great range of social questions the solution
+of which is not relevant to the national
+state or to the problems of power that state
+first of all considers. We have been able,
+that is, to devise subjects of government
+in which national control is not the obvious
+technique of operation. We have found,
+further, that a platform can be constructed
+at Geneva the nature of which throws any
+possible aggressor upon the defensive, and
+suggests the possible organization against
+it of the rest of the civilized world. We are
+finding ways of reaching the opinion of
+citizens in different states over the heads
+of their governments; of making those citizens
+demand attention to League recommendations
+in a way that a generation ago
+would have been unthinkable. We have
+shown, and this, in some ways, is the vital
+discovery of our time, that men of different
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>nationalities can co-operate together in the
+task of international government in such a
+way as to sink the pettiness of a narrow
+outlook before the greatness of the common
+task. I know that Sir Arthur Salter
+is a great Englishman; but I believe his
+quality as an Englishman has been made
+complete because he is above all a great
+citizen of the world.</p>
+
+<p>I do not want to exaggerate the prospects
+of achievement that lie before us;
+one blunder in Moscow or Rome might
+easily destroy every hope we may tentatively
+cherish. I want merely to note that
+the idea of a world-state is slowly, painfully,
+hesitantly, taking shape before our
+eyes. I want to emphasize the logic of that
+state in an international community so inescapably
+interdependent as this. I want
+to draw therefrom the inference that national
+sovereignty and the international
+community confront one another as incompatibles.
+Even the states which have most
+carefully stood aloof from Geneva are in
+a degree to which they are themselves unconscious
+within the orbit of that influence
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>which its idea makes so compelling. There
+is hardly one aspect of the League’s work
+in which American citizens have not borne
+their share; and I should hazard the suspicion
+that there have been occasions when
+“unofficial observers” have done considerably
+more than observe unofficially. I do
+not believe it is exaggeration to suggest
+that the underlying motive of the Kellogg
+Pact was compensation by America for her
+abstention from the Geneva Covenant. The
+Pact, by itself, is an empty declaration;
+but its logic, like that of the Covenant, is
+likely to take it much further in the direction
+of international government than
+its authors intended it should go. Even
+Russia, in some sort the antipodes of Geneva,
+has appeared there at Disarmament
+Conferences; and even granted the rigour
+of the premises upon which her life is
+built, she cannot remain unrelated to the
+structure of a world-order.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, accordingly, that we can retain
+all that is essential to the freedom of
+national life, and yet fully admit the implications
+of the international community.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>We can leave to England, for instance, her
+full cultural independence, her characteristic
+internal institutions, her special contacts
+with the Dominions she has begotten;
+to sacrifice the predominance of her navy,
+her right, by its means, to dictate the law
+of the sea, would still leave her England.
+She would still be England even if, to push
+speculation to the furthest point, the Suez
+Canal were internationalized and Gibraltar
+returned to Spain. France would be not the
+less France if the gold policy of her bank
+were set by an international authority, if
+she gave up her zeal for a conscript army,
+if she built her frontiers upon the impalpable
+solidity of friendship rather than the
+shifting waters of the Rhine. I can see nothing
+in the conceivable policy of a stronger
+League which would take from her the
+glory that has made her the Athens of the
+modern world. Changes in law policy, a
+different colonial outlook, a willingness to
+improve the physical standards of labour,
+an acceptance of novel and military forces
+determined upon the basis of world safety
+instead of national aggressiveness—it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>difficult to see in any of these things such
+a blow at freedom as destroys the prospect
+of national happiness. I can see grounds
+for the view that an international authority
+which forbade the teaching of French
+in French schools; or altered the boundary
+of France so as to make Marseilles Italian;
+or sought the abrogation of the French
+civil code with its profound impact on the
+social customs of France; might reasonably
+be regarded as invading what in a nation’s
+life that nation only can claim to decide. I
+can see that a nation might feel an international
+authority to be oppressive if it
+sought, say, by an immigration policy seriously
+to alter the <i>mores</i> of a national life;
+it should not impose Japanese immigration
+on California any more than Great Britain
+seeks to impose it upon Australia. I can
+even see that oppression might be felt
+where, in the building of an international
+civil service, there was a sense that there
+is discrimination against the members of
+any particular nation, or that in composing
+the committees of its government proper
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>attention is not given to the claims of some
+particular power.</p>
+
+<p>The likelihood of any of these difficulties
+becoming real is, surely, exceedingly small.
+An international authority must presumably
+be endowed with an average volume of
+human common sense; and it is no more
+likely than any other authority to invite
+disaster. Indeed it is rather likely to fail to
+embark upon experiments and decisions it
+ought to make from an excessively delicate
+sense of what some particular nation may
+feel. International life in this realm is much
+more likely to be a régime of example and
+influence than one of legislative compulsion
+simply because the penalties of national
+dissent would strain too gravely the structure
+of the authority which sought an unwise
+imposition of its will. Here, once
+more, the situation is very like that of the
+internal life of a national state. There is
+hardly any association the state could not
+overthrow if it bent its energies to the task.
+But, also, most states are wise enough to
+realize that victories of this kind are empty
+victories, that solutions imposed by force
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>have consequences invariably too grave to
+be satisfactory in their application. Consent
+has its full place in the international
+sphere; and it is a safeguard of national
+right as creative here, as elsewhere. Indeed
+it may reasonably be argued that with
+the disappearance of national sovereignty,
+the factor of consent is likely to be far more
+effective, far more genuinely related to the
+realities of the world; than it is at the present
+time. For consent between two powers
+like, say, America and Nicaragua, or Great
+Britain and Iraq has something in it which
+partakes of the ironical spirit. It is consent
+always in the knowledge that refusal to
+agree will make no serious difference to
+the result that occurs. But the surrender of
+national sovereignty is the surrender of aggressive
+power; and the nation can move
+on its way the more freely since it knows
+that it no longer lives in the shadow of
+international injustice.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">
+ CHAPTER IV
+ <br>
+ THE OUTLOOK FOR LIBERTY
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Every study of freedom is a plea for
+toleration; and every plea for toleration
+is a vindication of the rights of reason.
+The chief danger which always confronts
+a society is the desire of those who possess
+power to prohibit ideas and conduct which
+may disturb them in their possession. They
+are rarely concerned with the possible virtues
+of novelty and experiment. They are
+interested in the preservation of a static
+society because in such an order their desires
+are more likely to be fulfilled. Their
+ideas of right and wrong lie at the service
+of those desires. The standards they formulate
+are nothing so much as methods of
+maintaining an order with which they are
+satisfied; and those they repress or resent,
+are equally methods of establishing a new
+order in which different demands would
+secure fulfilment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span></p>
+
+<p>But this is not a static world, and there
+is no means of making it so. Curiosity, discovery,
+invention, all of these jeopardize
+by their nature the foundations of any society
+to which their results are denied admission.
+Toleration is therefore not merely
+desirable in itself, but also politically wise,
+because no other atmosphere of activity
+offers the assurance of peaceful adjustment.
+If power is held by a few, happiness will
+be confined to a few also. Every novelty
+will seem a challenge to that confinement;
+and it will always accrete about itself the
+wills of those who are excluded from a
+share in its benefits. For this world is not
+only dynamic; it is also diverse. The path
+to happiness is not a single one. Men are
+not willing to yield the insight of their experience
+to other men’s insight merely because
+they are commanded to do so. They
+must be persuaded by reason that one vision
+of desire is better than another vision,
+the experience commended to them must
+persuade and not enforce, if they are to
+accept its implications with a sense of contentment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span></p>
+
+<p>This is, of course, a counsel of perfection.
+Men enjoy the exercise of power; no
+passion has a deeper hold upon human
+impulse. The willingness to admit the prospect
+of difference, the courage to see that
+one’s private truth is never commensurate
+with the whole truth, these are the rarest
+of human qualities. That is why the friends
+of liberty are always a minority in every
+society. That is why, also, the maintenance
+of liberty is a thing that has to be fought
+for afresh every day, lest an inert acceptance
+of some particular imposition make
+the field of action accessible to a general
+tyranny. For it is impossible to confine the
+area in which freedom may be permitted
+to some special and defined part of conduct.
+Those who have fought for the right
+to think freely in theology or the natural
+sciences are not less certainly the ancestors
+of political freedom. Without Bruno and
+Galileo there would have been neither
+Rousseau nor Voltaire.</p>
+
+<p>Liberty, therefore, cannot help being a
+courage to resist the demands of power at
+some point that is deemed decisive; and,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>because of this, liberty, also, is an inescapable
+doctrine of contingent anarchy. It is always
+a threat to those who operate the
+engines of authority that prohibition of experience
+will be denied. It is always an
+assertion that he who has learned from life
+some lesson he takes to be truth will seek
+to live that lesson unless he can be persuaded
+of its falsehood. Punishment may
+persuade some to abandon the effort; and
+others may be driven by its imposition to
+conceal their impulse to act upon the view
+they take. But persecution, however thoroughgoing,
+will never, over any long period,
+be able to suppress significant truth.
+If the principles that are urged by a few
+correspond to some widespread experience
+those who recognize the expression of their
+experience will inevitably reaffirm it. It has
+been the historic character of persecution
+always to degrade the persecutor and to
+strengthen the persecuted by drawing attention
+to their claims. The only way to
+deal with novelty is to understand it, and
+the only way to deal with grievance is to
+seek a remedy for the complaint it embodies.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>To deny novelty or grievance a
+right of expression is a certain, if, indeed,
+an ultimate, validation of the truth they
+contain.</p>
+
+<p>We have, it appears, to learn this anew
+in each generation. We grant toleration in
+one part of the field only to deny it in
+another. We grant it in religion to deny it
+in politics; we grant it in politics, to deny
+it in economic matters. Each age finds that
+the incidence of freedom is significant at
+some special point, and there, once more,
+the lesson of freedom has to be learned.
+Each age makes some idol in its own image
+and sacrifices upon its altar the freedom of
+those who refuse it worship. Ultimately,
+that denial is always made upon the same
+ground: it is insisted that the doctrines or
+practices attacked are subversive of the
+civil order. The intolerance may be Catholic,
+when it insists that a unity of outlook
+is essential for the preservation of society;
+or it may be Protestant when, as with Calvin
+and the Socinians, it holds that the
+blasphemous nature of the belief anathematized
+destroys the reverence upon which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>society depends. The essence of the persecuting
+position is always that the persecutor
+has hold of truth and that he would
+betray its service by allowing it to be questioned.
+He is able, accordingly, to indulge
+in the twofold luxury not only of preserving
+his own authority, but also of assisting the
+persons attacked to enter, if they so choose,
+the way of truth.</p>
+
+<p>When attacks on liberty are political or
+economic, it is their motive rather than
+their nature that changes. A political pattern
+has the same hold upon its votaries
+as a religion; the enthusiasts of Moscow
+and of Rome differ only in the object of
+their worship. An economic system defends
+itself in just the same way: the devotees of
+Marxism in its extreme form have never
+doubted their right to impose their outlook
+upon the recalcitrant, even at the cost of
+blood. In a constitutional state like America
+the suppression of liberty is called the
+inhibition of license; in a dictatorship like
+Moscow it is termed resistance to the admission
+of incorrect “bourgeois” notions.
+Always the effort is to insist upon an artificial
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>unity the maintenance of which is
+necessary to the desires of those who hold
+power. Suppression, doubtless, eases the
+way of authority, for scepticism is always
+painful, and to arrive at a conclusion after
+careful testing of evidence always involves
+the possibility that authority may have to
+admit that its conclusions are mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it may still be maintained with some
+confidence that the only adequate answer
+to a principle which claims social recognition
+is the rational proof that it is untrue.
+It may even be argued that the world
+would be a happier world if this were the
+general theory underlying the activities of
+society. Civilization is strewn with the
+wrecks of systems which men at one time
+held for true; systems, also, in the name
+of which liberty was denied and pain needlessly
+inflicted. A scrutiny of history, moreover,
+makes it plain that the right to liberty
+will always be challenged where its consequence
+is the equalization of some privilege
+which is not generally shared by men. The
+more consciously, therefore, we can seek
+that equalization as a desirable object of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>social effort, the more likely we are to make
+attacks upon liberty more rare, the evil results
+of such attack less frequent. No man’s
+love of justice is strong enough to survive
+the right to inflict punishment in the name
+of the creed he professes; and the simplest
+way to retain his sense of justice is to take
+away the interest which persuades him of
+the duty to punish. Scepticism, it may be,
+is a dissolvent of enthusiasm; but enthusiasm
+has always been the enemy of freedom.
+The atmosphere we require, if we are
+to attain happiness for the multitude, is
+one in which we have everything to gain by
+the statement of experience and nothing to
+lose by the investigation of its convictions.
+That atmosphere is the condition of liberty
+and its quality is light rather than heat.
+For light permits of argument, and we cannot
+argue with men who are in a passion.
+Nothing is so likely to engender passion as
+the perception that they are called to sacrifice
+a privilege. The way, therefore, of freedom
+is to arrange the pattern of social
+institutions so that there are no privileges
+to sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span></p>
+
+<p>This kind of plea for liberty is built,
+after all, upon the simple consideration
+that the world is likely to be the more
+happy if it refuses to build its institutions
+upon injustice. And institutions are necessarily
+unjust if the impression they continually
+produce in the majority is a feeling
+of envy and hatred for the results they impose.
+There is something wrong in a system
+which, like ours, maintains itself not
+by the respect and affection it evokes, but
+by the sanctions to which it can appeal.
+What is wrong in them is their erection
+upon the basis of passion and their insistence
+that reason shall serve what that passion
+is seeking to protect. So long as that
+is true of our society, we shall continue to
+deny the validity of all principles which
+attack the existing disposition of social
+forces. Those principles may often be
+wrong; yet sometimes, at least, they represent
+the certainties of the future. It is always
+a hazardous enterprise to suppress
+belief which claims to be rooted in the experience
+of men.</p>
+
+<p>For no outlook which has behind it the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>support of considerable numbers will ever
+silently acquiesce in its reduction to impotence.
+It will fight for its right to be heard
+whatever the price of the conflict. Here it
+has been urged that conflict of this kind is
+usually unnecessary and frequently disastrous.
+It has been claimed that truth can be
+established by reason alone; that departure
+from the way of reason as a method of securing
+conviction is an indication always of
+a desire to protect injustice. Where there
+is respect for reason, there, also, is respect
+for freedom. And only respect for freedom
+can give final beauty to men’s lives.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">
+ FOOTNOTES
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> Acton, <i>History of Freedom</i>, p. 57.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">[2]</a> As Mr. Aldous Huxley, for instance, does with a
+quite unnecessary apparatus of scholarship in his
+<i>Proper Studies</i>, pp. 1–31.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">[3]</a> All this has been put in classic form by the late
+Professor Hobhouse in his <i>Metaphysical Theory of
+the State</i> (1918).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">[4]</a> Cf. Barker, <i>Political Thought from Herbert
+Spencer to Today</i> (1915), p. 80.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">[5]</a> W. H. Taft, <i>Our Supreme Magistrate and His
+Powers</i> (1921), pp. 102–3.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">[6]</a> See my detailed discussion of the point in 34
+Michigan Law Review, p. 529.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">[7]</a> 189 U.S. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">[8]</a> (1915) A. C. 120.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">[9]</a> 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 122.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">[10]</a> (1923) 2 K. B. 61.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">[11]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, pp. 541 f.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">[12]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">[13]</a> <i>Esprit des Lois</i>, Bk. XI, Chap. VI.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">[14]</a> Second Treatise, Sec. 12.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">[15]</a> Cf. my paper on American Federalism in the
+volume entitled <i>The Dangers of Obedience</i> (1930).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">[16]</a> Cf. Louis Post, <i>The Deportations Delirium</i>
+(1921).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">[17]</a> 250 U.S. 616.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">[18]</a> See Taney’s <i>Report</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">[19]</a> I. W. Graham, <i>Conscription and Conscience</i>
+(1922), Chap. III.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">[20]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 209.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_21_21" href="#FNanchor_21_21" class="label">[21]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_22_22" href="#FNanchor_22_22" class="label">[22]</a> See, for example, Wickwar’s <i>Freedom of the
+Press</i> for an account of judicial <i>mores</i> in the early
+nineteenth century; and H. T. Buckle’s pamphlet on
+the Pooley case for similar conduct thirty years
+later.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_23_23" href="#FNanchor_23_23" class="label">[23]</a> Z. C. Chafee’s classic discussion in <i>Freedom of
+Speech</i> is the best account of this unhappy period.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_24_24" href="#FNanchor_24_24" class="label">[24]</a> Thereby laying himself open to FitzJames
+Stephen’s crushing attack.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_25_25" href="#FNanchor_25_25" class="label">[25]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, Chap. VII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_26_26" href="#FNanchor_26_26" class="label">[26]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, p. 82 f.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_27_27" href="#FNanchor_27_27" class="label">[27]</a> A list is printed in Ernst and Segal, <i>To the Pure</i>
+(1929), pp. 296–302.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_28_28" href="#FNanchor_28_28" class="label">[28]</a> This is brought out well in Mr Nokes’ excellent
+book on the blasphemy laws.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_29_29" href="#FNanchor_29_29" class="label">[29]</a> 53 G. III, C. 160.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_30_30" href="#FNanchor_30_30" class="label">[30]</a> <i>Ut supra.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_31_31" href="#FNanchor_31_31" class="label">[31]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, p. 554.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_32_32" href="#FNanchor_32_32" class="label">[32]</a> Cd. 1614 (1922).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_33_33" href="#FNanchor_33_33" class="label">[33]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, pp. 256 f.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_34_34" href="#FNanchor_34_34" class="label">[34]</a> <i>Coppage</i> v. <i>Kansas</i>, 236 U.S. 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_35_35" href="#FNanchor_35_35" class="label">[35]</a> Cf. my <i>Authority in the Modern State</i>, Chap. V.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_36_36" href="#FNanchor_36_36" class="label">[36]</a> Calwell, <i>Life of Sir H. Wilson</i>, Vol. II, <i>passim</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_37_37" href="#FNanchor_37_37" class="label">[37]</a> <i>Le Droit Social</i>, Lect. III.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_38_38" href="#FNanchor_38_38" class="label">[38]</a> <i>The Observer</i>, 18 August 1929.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_39_39" href="#FNanchor_39_39" class="label">[39]</a> 277 U.S. 438.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_40_40" href="#FNanchor_40_40" class="label">[40]</a> Hammond, <i>The Skilled Labourer</i>, Chap. XII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_41_41" href="#FNanchor_41_41" class="label">[41]</a> Cf. Mr Lippmann’s excellent analysis in <i>Liberty
+and the News</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_42_42" href="#FNanchor_42_42" class="label">[42]</a> I take my account from a summary in the <i>Lantern</i>
+(Boston), July 1929.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_43_43" href="#FNanchor_43_43" class="label">[43]</a> Lippmann, <i>Public Opinion</i>, pp. 379 f.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_44_44" href="#FNanchor_44_44" class="label">[44]</a> Cf. Lady Constance Lytton, <i>Prisons and Prisoners</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_45_45" href="#FNanchor_45_45" class="label">[45]</a> Cf. Frankfurter and Green, <i>The Injunction in
+Labour Disputes</i> (1930).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_46_46" href="#FNanchor_46_46" class="label">[46]</a> See the lecture on Equality in <i>Mixed Essays</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_47_47" href="#FNanchor_47_47" class="label">[47]</a> See for instance, the very interesting letter of
+Mr MacDonald to Keir Hardie in W. Stewart, <i>Life
+of Keir Hardie</i> (1921), p. 92.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_48_48" href="#FNanchor_48_48" class="label">[48]</a> Mr Ramsay Muir in the <i>Nation</i>, 17 August 1929.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_49_49" href="#FNanchor_49_49" class="label">[49]</a> Preface to the World’s Classics edition of Bagshot’s
+<i>English Constitution</i>, p. xxiii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_50_50" href="#FNanchor_50_50" class="label">[50]</a> <i>On Liberty</i> (People’s edition), p. 68.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_51_51" href="#FNanchor_51_51" class="label">[51]</a> Cf. my <i>Grammar of Politics</i>, Chap. XI.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_52_52" href="#FNanchor_52_52" class="label">[52]</a> Cf. Lauterpacht, <i>Private Law Analogies in International
+Law</i>, for a brilliant discussion of this
+question; and my paper ‘Law and the State’ in
+<i>Economica</i>, No. 27, pp. 267 f.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_53_53" href="#FNanchor_53_53" class="label">[53]</a> Kaufman, <i>Das Wesen der Volkerrechts</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78171 ***</div>
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