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| [Reprinted from One
Is A Crowd, published by Devin-Adair Co., New York, 1952] |
WHEN YOU EXAMINE samples of the anti-socialistic literature
which is flooding the country, you realize why socialism, despite its
irrationality, is gaining common acceptance. If these booklets and "letters"
were designed to aid the collectivistic cause they could not do a better
job.
Taken as a whole, this literature can be catalogued as "Swell
Country; no change wanted." It is reminiscent of Harding's
normalcy, or of Hoover's chicken in every pot, to say nothing of two
cars in every garage. The "1ine" is to blow up economic
half-truths flattering to the status quo, with the hope that such
evidence will squelch the socialistic indictment of it. This literature
is more than futile. It must boomerang, simply because it dodges facts
that are as well-known as they are unsavory.
If the run-of-the-mill American is as gullible as this literature
assumes, and there is reason to believe that he is, there are
nevertheless the lessons of experience which even infantilism cannot
dull. Imagine feeding rags-to-riches syrup to the sharecropper who
remembers being dispossessed onto the highway, or to his children who
learned to hold out the hand of beggary. Then, there's the glorious tale
of the penniless immigrant who rose to affluence; what can be the effect
of this pap on the fellow who lived by the grace of the W. P. A. when
bank bankruptcy wiped out his lifetime savings? What goes on in the mind
0£ the mechanic who, on reading about the "overall picture"
of national prosperity, or the tables of comparative wages, recalls the
ten years of wage-less nightmare, until the war brought hypodermic
relief? Even now, dulling the enjoyment of his inflationary comfort is
the spectre of impending depression.
All this experience the anti-socialistic literature passes over lightly
with figures, carried out to three percentage points. The inference is
plain that the "poor ye have always" -- and nothing can be
done about it. It's fine solace to be labeled an "unemployable"
or to be put among the "surplus population."
But somehow the lowliest of the species resents being a statistic. He
flatters himself that he is a man. Whatever his intellectual
deficiencies, his sense perceptions are keen; recorded in the memory of
his belly is data the economists cannot get to. And that memory tells
him that there is a lie somewhere in the pollyannish picture of America
being presented to him.
The Unanswered Why
Sure, there are more opportunities for self-betterment in this country
than in other countries. Telling him about it is merely rubbing in the
fact that maybe he hasn't got what it takes, and that isn't soothing. He
knows there will always be a Babe Ruth, a champion. Well, all he asks of
life is a steady job as bat-boy in the bush leagues, and he hasn't found
even that modest ideal always attainable. Why? If this is such a great
country -- why? Observation tells him that many of those who rise above
the ruck do so by other means than industry and thrift. There's the
rag-picker made into a merchant by the black market; the town
ne'er-do-well who attached himself to a political mogul and became a
cigar-smoking contractor; the arrogant and opulent union leader who was
the most inefficient worker in the shop; the newsboy who somehow got
licenses for the best spots in town and now mingles with the "best
people." And how about the fellows who finance these "God
Bless America" pamphlets? What's their racket?
Sure, the "average" wage in this country is a princely income
compared to that of the Chinese coolie. What of it? The "average
American worker -- whatever that is -- produces more; well, if he
produces more he is entitled to more, and why give credit to a "system"
for the labor he puts out? According to the figures in this
anti-socialistic literature he absorbs in wages about all he produces,
and yet his eyes tell him that there are a lot of fellows who produce
nothing, or very little, and they seem to get along quite well. Who
produces what they have? He's envious, to be sure, but he's also
sensitive to a wrong he cannot locate.
The socialists locate it for him. He never will understand their
many-worded fable about surplus-value and the class-struggle and the
glories of controlled economy. No matter. These fellows at least come
clean; they admit the poverty-amidst-plenty incongruity, and in so doing
they gain the confidence of the mass-man. Having gained his confidence,
they find it easy to "teach" him the mysteries of their
solution. Their shibboleths are plausible; they "explain" and
they promise. He accepts their leadership.
The let-well-enough school, on the other hand, loses his confidence
right from the start by denying the obvious. Their encomiums of the
going order are suspect. Their arguments don't ring true, and their
figures add up to a sum that doesn't square with experience. Hence, the
lavishly sponsored literature of the anti-socialist camp, if it is read
at all, 'meets with a contemptuous "so what?"
Leaders Who Lead Nowhere
It is not, however, the inadequacy of the literature that spells the
doom of private property, but the inadequacy of the would-be
anti-socialistic leadership behind it. It is inane, stupid, ignorant
and, above all, lacking in integrity. With such leadership the case for
private property is lost.
Let us admit that in the shaping of social and political trends the
mass-man is a passive factor. He serves only as a battering ram in the
hands of the leaders he attaches himself to. Since that is the limit of
his capacity, his inclination is to stick to the job of keeping himself
and his race alive; if he ventures beyond that sphere, as in voting, it
is for the exhilaration his otherwise drab life demands. Such opinions
as he entertains, or can entertain, he acquires in pre-digested and
packaged form. He must have leaders to think for him. Yet, because of
the vanity which always accompanies mediocrity, the leadership he
accepts must flatter his importance, must cater to his ego. Nor can this
leadership be effective if it lies to him about what he knows, however
it may lie to him about what he does not know.
This fact the socialistic tacticians have been wise enough to
recognize. From Marx and Engels to Attlee and Wallace, due homage was
always given to the "will of' the people," although the
shaping and direction of that will has ever been the private prerogative
of the intelligentsia, the leadership. They won the mass-man by
appealing to the intelligence they knew he did not have; in the name of
education they filled him with phrases which served him well enough for
understanding. But -- and this is of utmost importance -- he became a
willing "student" because they told him what he knew only too
well: that the world as is is NOT the best of all possible worlds.
Socialism has come a long way, then, because of competent leadership.
The proponents of private property, on the other hand, have fought a'
losing game simply because of their ineptitude. The logic of economics
is entirely on their side: it is only through private property that
society can achieve abundance. Morality is also on their side: if a man
is denied exclusive possession and enjoyment of that which he produces
he is denied the right to life, and is in effect reduced to something
less than a man. With these two arguments in its arsenal, private
property should never have been put on the defensive. The collectivistic
psychopaths should never have gained ascendancy with the mass-man.
But, the cause of private property has been championed by men who had
no interest in it; their main concern has always been with the
institution of privilege which has grown up alongside private property.
They start by defining private property as anything that can be got by
law; hence, they put their cunning to the control of the law-making
machinery, so that the emerging laws enable them to profit at the
expense of producers. They talk about the benefits of competition and
work toward monopolistic practices. They extol individual initiative and
support legal limitations on individuals who might challenge their
ascendancy. In short, they are for the State, the enemy of private
property, because they profit by its schemes. Their Only objection to
the State is its inclination to invade their privileged position or to
extend privileges to other groups.
The Unassailed Citadels
It is what this literature does not advocate that stamps it for what it
is. A few examples will suffice.
The current slogan of this effort to forestall Socialism is "free
enterprise." Now, enterprise consists of nothing else, in the
economic field, than the production and exchange of goods and services,
by individuals acting in their own interests, and it is free only when
the process is rid of legal interventions. The ultimate object is to
provide an abundance of the things men want; to flood the marketplace.
That means low prices, or prices determined by the equation of supply
and demand without restrictions on supply. If that is what the "free
enterprisers were really for, they would concentrate on the rescinding
of laws making for scarcities -- and they would inform the mass-man that
the cause for his lack (admitting first that there is an unwarranted
lack) are these laws and the practices that have grown up under them.
First of all, they would direct attention to the scarcities resulting
from tariffs, quotas, the manipulation of money, fictitious quarantine
laws and other devices for preventing foreign goods from reaching our
market. You see nothing about that in their literature. The inference is
that free trade is not included in their concept of free enterprise.
Why? Is it because of a concern for the higher prices which this
limitation on competition affords them?
Taxation is a major interference with enterprise, simply because what
is taken by the State is production which was intended for the market.
Taxes on commodities are added to price and therefore decrease the
purchasing power of wages; taxes on incomes and inheritances discourage
production. These facts are rarely mentioned in any of the "free
enterprise" literature; when it does touch on taxation the comment
is limited to "equitable" distribution, which, on examination,
simmers down to the shifting of the burden from one class of citizens to
another. The reason is clear. You cannot expect the holders of
government bonds to attack the income tax (which is the necessary
precursor of State capitalism), because the prime security behind these
bonds is the power of the State to levy on incomes. Nor can you expect
liquor interests to oppose liquor taxes because if these were abolished
every farmer could open a distillery.
You read in this "free enterprise" literature about
government extravagances. But, what about particulars? Subsidies to
railroads, airplane and shipping companies (via the post office) are
clearly extravagances, supporting and encouraging inefficiency; but, the
values of the stocks and bonds issued by these companies are enhanced
thereby and hence the subject is taboo; subsidies which cannot be
capitalized, like handouts to veterans and unemployed, can be attacked.
Parity prices provide a cushion for the commodity market, and also hold
up the value of agricultural land; the "free enterprisers"
avoid the subject. Militarism is undoubtedly the greatest waste of all,
besides being the greatest threat to freedom of the individual, and yet
it is rather condoned than opposed by those whose hearts bleed for
freedom, according to their literature.
One could go on paragraph after paragraph with instances of State
interferences with enterprise which the "free enterprise"
bilge skirts around or ignores. One is driven to the conclusion that the
sponsors are not at all in favor of what they preach. They are rather
for the status quo, for the legal setup by which they can continue to
''enterprise" themselves into favored position. They are for
privilege, as is, and not for the sanctity of private property.
Is it any wonder that the only following this kind of leadership can
muster is what it can buy? Is it any wonder that the socialists have the
mass-field to themselves?
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