The Workman Still is Greater Than His Work |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, January-February 1939]
|
There must be some reason why, of all the works
of God and man, human society is the only one
which is apparently incomprehensible, unworkable and
unsolvable. The planets have moved in their orbits for
millions of years with perfect regularity, plants and animals
develop into symmetry and beauty, and individual man
stands at the summit of creation, "the beauty of the
world, the paragon of animals." But the greatest work
of man, society, is another name for chaos.
These lords of creation, on an earth which is a storehouse of riches, and equipped with all strength and
wisdom to turn these natural riches to the satisfaction
of every desire, stand more helpless than a tethered
animal, more helpless than the trees of the forest, and die
of hunger or live in wretchedness on "charity" and doles.
But this helplessness comes only with the development
of society. Perhaps the reason for this chaos in society
is that society has been organized upon a principle which
is absurd, and therefore incomprehensible and unworkable.
As the Declaration of Independence recites, and as
common sense perceives, "governments were instituted
among men," that is, instituted by men. Governments
are the work of men, men are the workmen, the makers
of governments, and "The Workman Still is Greater than
His Work."
By what distortion of human intelligence can we now
build a society on the principle that government is the
master, that the province of government is to direct
human activity, and that human activities may be carried
on only subject to the approval of government? When
men create governments and then endow them with power
to direct the activities of men, they have created a Frankenstein monster which can only drive men to destruction.
The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.
Governments were made by men, for the uses of men.
Men were not created for governments, to be the puppets
of government.
The doctrine that the work is greater than the work-
man, that governments were instituted to control the
lives of men, is as ancient, as honorable, and as absurd,
as the doctrines that the earth is flat. No man can serve
two masters, and one must be supreme. Either man is
the lord of creation and government is his work and his
servant, or government is supreme and men's province
is only to be ruled.
Men who have turned over to government the direction of their lives can have no reasonable grounds to object
to any form which that direction may take. They must
willingly accept the mode of life laid down by their government, whether it be fascist, communistic, or nazi. If
government wisdom must direct the economic lives of
men, how much more important that government direct
men rightly in the matter of religion and in the realm of
thought.
A government which has been given power to bar its
citizens from the natural resources of the earth and from
a place to work, a government which, in consequence,
must either watch its citizens starve, or institute a system
which directs every act of employer and employee, must
end in a totalitarian state which controls the thought
and the religion of its "subjects."
The justification for government interference with
personal freedom is the helplessness of the poor, and the
poor are helpless because government has sanctioned the
appropriation and the control of the earth's resources
by individuals. Populations are barred from any chance
to employ their labor, their labor is "dumped," and
government can save them only by interfering with employers. This is a vicious circle which will never be
broken except by throwing open the natural resources
of the earth on equal terms to all. A government which
would rent the lands, the patrimony of all the citizens,
on equal terms to all, would collect such ample rents
that it would have no occasion for taxes, and every man's
earnings would be left to him in their entirety.
In a society where all men were free on equal terms
to the earth's resources, and where government was barred
from interference with any man's work, and above all,
barred from piecing out the earth to the more successful, every man would be employed, he would employ
himself or take employment where his work would produce the maximum in wealth or services, and he would
exchange this maximum of wealth for the forms of wealth
he desired. There is no imaginable interference of government which could increase this man's comfort and happiness; but it could put an end to his work and conduct
him to the bread line.
The root of all evil in the society of men is that men,
the lords of creation, have abdicated their lordship, and
of government, the work of their hands, they have made
a golden calf before which they fall down and worship,
a Frankenstein monster which will grind them to powder.
Government is absolutely necessary for the protection
of human rights against the assaults of the criminal.
When government goes beyond this duty and assumes
control of human life, and interferes with the natural
rights of men, it can produce nothing but the infinity of
mischiefs we see around us.
No laws which legislators may enact will ever make
human society workable; nothing but a fundamental
change in the constitution of a state, restricting the duties
of government to guaranteeing the complete and equal
freedom of all men, and prohibiting interference by government with the natural rights of any man. This sounds
radical, and it is. When a pyramid is standing on its
point, when a tree is planted with its roots upward,
nothing less radical than a complete reversal will restore
them to their normal functions. When men have been
reduced to the status of cogwheels in a tractor, when
intelligent human beings have placed the direction of
their lives in the care of a bodiless, soulless, mindless
abstraction, the work of their hands, the inevitable chaos
can never be restored to order except by a complete
reversal, with every man as the sole arbiter of his destinies,
and government protecting him against any interference
with his freedom.
I appeal to:
Americans who see communist, nazi, fascist, and twelve
other varieties of terrorism, tearing apart the Americanism
we used to know.
Victims of religious, race, and class persecution.
The man out of work.
The man whose income is too low to provide decently
for his family.
The high school and college graduate for whom the
world has nothing to offer but the park bench.
The employer who is burdened with income taxes,
capital gains taxes, and a hundred other taxes, with sitdown strikers, and with 15,000 government "regulations,"
until he does not know how a business can be run.
Those who would like to keep the money they make,
instead of being the target for the next tax raid.
Those who believe that government could be run on
business principles, paying for what it gets, and getting
what it pays for.
The man who is willing to work for what he wants,
rather than to live on the labor of others.
The man with a sense of fair play, willing to take his
chances with a fair field and no favor.
I appeal to every man except the men who have monopolized the earth and its resources, and who make a living
by keeping the world out of work.
WE CAN HAVE PROSPERITY AND PEACE WHEN
WE WANT THEM
There is no reform which can correct the evils of society
so long as government stands upon the necks of men;
no "back to the land," no old-age pensions, no wage and
hour laws, no New Deal can correct the evils which will
pour in an endless stream from the mindless, soulless
abstraction, government, so long as government is given
the power of direction. A government authorized to
direct will direct, it will set its own bounds to the limits
of its direction, and the sky will be the limit.
Every evil from which any of the above-mentioned
[unreadable] is suffering is one form of perversion of government
functions, and there is not one of the evils which
would not be cured automatically by the restriction of
government to its function of protection, and the restoring
to men of their natural rights. In the limits of this article
it would be impossible to go into these manifold evils,
but the writer would be glad to correspond with any one
who should feel that the above claim is in error. Liberty
would cure every evil of society as surely as the sun lights
every nook and cranny of the earth.
The day on which these classes decide to forget their
classes, and join in one universal demand for the restoration of men's natural rights and the restriction of government to its proper function, will see the end of all persecution, religious, race, and class, the end of unemployment and exploitation. It will also sound the death
knell of wars, because there would be nothing for which
nations could go to war. And nothing else will ever end
these abominations, because an absurd system can produce nothing but abominations.
Perhaps, among the classes I have mentioned, may be
found a new Moses who will lead us out of the wilderness
and into the daylight of human freedom, where man will
be once more the lord of creation, and government his
able assistant, helping him to heights beyond "the glory
that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome."
|