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| Chapter 13: "That
We All Might Be Rich" / 1883 |
THE terms rich and poor are of course frequently used in a relative
sense. Among Irish peasants, kept on the verge of starvation by the
tribute wrung from them to maintain the luxury of absentee landlords in
London or Paris, "the woman of three cows" will be looked on
as rich, while in the society of millionaires a man with only $500,000
will be regarded as poor. Now, we cannot, of course, all be rich in the
sense of having more than others; but when people say, as they so often
do, that we cannot all be rich, or when they say that we must always
have the poor with us, they do not use the words in this comparative
sense. They mean by the rich those who have enough, or more than enough,
wealth to gratify all reasonable wants, and by the poor those who have
not.
Now, using the words in this sense, I join issue with those who
say that we cannot all be rich; with those who declare that in human
society the poor must always exist. I do not, of course, mean that we
all might have an array of servants; that we all might outshine each
other in dress, in equipage, in the lavishness of our balls or dinners,
in the magnificence of our houses. That would be a contradiction in
terms. What I mean is, that we all might have leisure, comfort and
abundance, not merely of the necessaries, but even of what are now
esteemed the elegancies and luxuries of life. I do not mean to say that
absolute equality could be had, or would be desirable. I do not mean to
say that we could all have, or would want, the same quantity of all the
different forms of wealth. But I do mean to say that we might all have
enough wealth to satisfy reasonable desires; that we might all have so
much of the material things we now struggle for, that no one would want
to rob or swindle his neighbor; that no one would worry all day, or lie
awake at nights, fearing he might be brought to poverty, or thinking how
he might acquire wealth.
Does this seem an utopian dream? What would people of fifty
years ago have thought of one who would have told them that it was
possible to sew by steam-power; to cross the Atlantic in six days, or
the continent in three; to have a message sent from London at noon
delivered in Boston three hours before noon; to hear in New York the
voice of a man talking in Chicago?
Did you ever see a pail of swill given to a pen of hungry hogs?
That is human society as it is. Did you ever see a company of well-bred
men and women sitting down to a good dinner, without scrambling, or
jostling, or gluttony, each, knowing that his own appetite will be
satisfied, deferring to and helping the others? That is human society as
it might be.
"Devil catch the hindmost" is the motto of our
so-called civilized society to-day. We learn early to "take care of
No. 1," lest No. 1 should suffer; we learn early to grasp from
others that we may not want ourselves. The fear of poverty makes us
admire great wealth; and so habits of greed are formed, and we behold
the pitiable spectacle of men who have already more than they can by any
possibility use, toiling, striving, grasping to add to their store up to
the very verge of the grave --that grave which, whatever else it may
mean, does certainly mean the parting with all earthly possessions
however great they be.
In vain, in gorgeous churches, on the appointed Sunday, is the
parable of Dives and Lazarus read. What can it mean in churches where
Dives would be welcomed and Lazarus shown the door? In vain may the
preacher preach of the vanity of riches, while poverty engulfs the
hindmost. But the mad struggle would cease when the fear of poverty had
vanished. Then, and not till then, will a truly Christian civilization
become possible. And may not this be?
We are so accustomed to poverty that even in the most advanced
countries we regard it as the natural lot of the great masses of the
people; that we take it as a matter of course that even in our highest
civilization large classes should want the necessaries of healthful
life, and the vast majority should only get a poor and pinched living by
the hardest toil. There are professors of political economy who teach
that this condition of things is the result of social laws of which it
is idle to complain! There are ministers of religion who preach that
this is the condition which an all-wise, all-powerful Creator intended
for his children! If an architect were to build a theater so that not
more than one-tenth of the audience could see and hear, we would call
him a bungler and a botch. If a man were to give a feast and provide so
little food that nine-tenths of his guests must go away hungry, we
would call him a fool, or worse. Yet so accustomed are we to poverty,
that even the preachers of what passes for Christianity tell us that the
great Architect of the Universe, to whose infinite skill all nature
testifies, has made such a botch job of this world that the vast
majority of the human creatures whom he has called into it are condemned
by the conditions he has imposed to want, suffering, and brutalizing
toil that gives no opportunity for the development of mental powers --
must pass their lives in a hard struggle to merely live!
Yet who can look about him without seeing that to whatever
cause poverty may be due, it is not due to the niggardliness of nature;
without seeing that it is blindness or blasphemy to assume that the
Creator has condemned the masses of men to hard toil for a bare living?
If some men have not enough to live decently, do not others
have far more than they really need? If there is not wealth sufficient
to go around, giving every one abundance, is it because we have reached
the limit of the production of wealth? Is our land all in use ? is our
labor all employed? is our capital all utilized? On the contrary, in
whatever direction we look we see the most stupendous waste of
productive forces -- of productive forces so potent that were they
permitted to play freely the production of wealth would be so enormous
that there would be more than a sufficiency for all. What branch of
production is there in which the limit of production has been reached?
What single article of wealth is there of which we might not produce
enormously more?
If the mass of the population of New York are jammed into the
fever-breeding rooms of tenement-houses, it is not because there are not
vacant lots enough in and around New York to give each family space for
a separate home. If settlers are going into Montana and Dakota and
Manitoba, it is not because there are not vast areas of untilled land
much nearer the centers of population. If farmers are paying one-fourth,
one-third, or even one-half their crops for the privilege of getting
land to cultivate, it is not because there are not, even in our oldest
States, great quantities of land which no one is cultivating.
So true is it that poverty does not come from the inability to
produce more wealth that from every side we hear that the power to
produce is in excess of the ability to find a market; that the constant
fear seems to be not that too little, but that too much, will be
produced! Do we not maintain a high tariff, and keep at every port a
horde of Custom-House officers, for fear the people of other countries
will overwhelm us with their goods? Is not a great part of our machinery
constantly idle? Are there not, even in what we call good times, an
immense number of unemployed men who would gladly be at work producing
wealth if they could only get the opportunity? Do we not, even now,
hear, from every side, of embarrassment from the very excess of
productive power, and of combinations to reduce production? Coal
operators band together to limit their output; iron-works have shut
down, or are running on half-time; distillers have agreed to limit their
production to one-half their capacity, and sugar refiners to sixty per
cent; paper-mills are suspending for one, two or three days a week; the
gunny-cloth manufacturers, at a recent meeting, agreed to close their
mills until the present overstock on the market is greatly reduced; many
other manufacturers have done the same thing. The shoemaking machinery
of New England can, in six months' full running, it is said, supply the
whole demand of the United States for twelve months; the machinery for
making rubber goods can turn out twice as much as the market will take.
This seeming glut of production, this seeming excess of
productive power, runs through all branches of industry, and is evident
all over the civilized world. From black-berries, bananas or apples, to
ocean steamships or plateglass mirrors, there is scarcely an article of
human comfort or convenience that could not be produced in very much
greater quantities than now without lessening the production of anything
else.
So evident is this that many people think and talk and write as
though the trouble is that there is not work enough to go around. We are
in constant fear that other nations may do for us some of the work we
might do for ourselves, and, to prevent them, guard ourselves with a
tariff. We laud as public benefactors those who, as we say, "furnish
employment." We are constantly talking as though this "furnishing
of employment," this "giving of work," were the greatest
boon that could be conferred upon society. To listen to much that is
talked and much that is written, one would think that the cause of
poverty is that there is not work enough for so many people, and that if
the Creator had made the rock harder, the soil less fertile, iron as
scarce as gold, and gold as diamonds; or if ships would sink and cities
burn down oftener, there would be less poverty, because there would be
more work to do. The Lord Mayor of London tells a deputation of
unemployed working-men that there is no demand for their labor, and that
the only resource for them is to go to the poorhouse or emigrate. The
English government is shipping from Ireland able-bodied men and women to
avoid maintaining them as paupers. Even in our own land there are at all
times large numbers, and in hard times vast numbers, earnestly seeking
work-the opportunity to give labor for the things produced by labor.
Perhaps nothing shows more clearly the enormous forces of
production constantly going to waste than the fact that the most
prosperous time in all branches of business that this country has known
was during the civil war, when we were maintaining great fleets and
armies, and millions of our industrial population were engaged in
supplying them with wealth for unproductive consumption or for reckless
destruction. It is idle to talk about the fictitious prosperity of those
"flush" times. The masses of the people lived better, dressed
better, found it easier to get a living, and had more luxuries and
amusements than in normal times. There was more real, tangible wealth in
the North at the close than at the beginning of the war. Nor was it the
great issue of paper money, nor the creation of the debt, which caused
this posterity. The government presses struck off promises to pay; they
could not print ships, cannon, arms, tools, food and clothing. Nor did
we borrow these things from other countries or "from posterity."
Our bonds did not begin to go to Europe until the close of the war, and
the people of one generation can no more borrow from the people of a
subsequent generation than we who live on this planet can borrow from
the inhabitants of another planet or another solar system. The wealth
consumed and destroyed by our fleets and armies came from the then
existing stock of wealth. We could have carried on the war without the
issue of a single bond, if, when we did not shrink from taking from wife
and children their only bread-winner, we had not shrunk from taking the
wealth of the rich.
Our armies and fleets were maintained, the enormous
unproductive and destructive use of wealth was kept up, by the labor and
capital then and there engaged in production. And it was that the demand
caused by the war stimulated productive forces into activity that the
enormous drain of the war was not only supplied, but that the North grew
richer. The waste of labor in marching and countermarching, in digging
trenches, throwing up earthworks, and fighting battles, the waste of
wealth consumed or destroyed by our armies and fleets, did not amount to
as much as the waste constantly going on from unemployed labor and idle
or partially used machinery.
It is evident that this enormous waste of productive power is
due, not to defects in the laws of nature, but to social maladjustments
which deny to labor access to the natural opportunities of labor and rob
the laborer of his just reward. Evidently the glut of markets does not
really come from over-production when there are so many who want the
things which are said to be over-produced, and would gladly exchange
their labor for them did they have opportunity. Every day passed in
enforced idleness by a laborer who would gladly be at work could he find
opportunity, means so much less in the fund which creates the effective
demand for other labor; every time wages are screwed down means so much
reduction in the purchasing power of the workmen whose incomes are thus
reduced. The paralysis which at all times wastes productive power, and
which in times of industrial depression causes more loss than a great
war, springs from the difficulty which those who would gladly satisfy
their wants by their labor find in doing so. It cannot come from any
natural limitation, so long as human desires remain unsatisfied, and
nature yet offers to man the raw material of wealth. It must come from
social maladjustments which permit the monopolization of these natural
opportunities, and which rob labor of its fair reward.
What these maladjustments are I shall in subsequent chapters
endeavor to show. In this I wish simply to call attention to the fact
that productive power in such a state of civilization as ours is
sufficient, did we give it play, to so enormously increase the
production of wealth as to give abundance to all -- to point out that
the cause of poverty is not in natural limitations, which we cannot
alter, but in inequalities and injustices of distribution entirely
within our control.
The passenger who leaves New York on a trans-Atlantic steamer
does not fear that the provisions will give out. The men who run these
steamers do not send them to sea without provisions enough for all they
carry. Did He who made this whirling planet for our sojourn lack the
forethought of man? Not so. In soil and sunshine, in vegetable and
animal life, in veins of minerals, and in pulsing forces which we are
only beginning to use, are capabilities which we cannot exhaust --
materials and powers from which human effort, guided by intelligence,
may gratify every material want of every human creature. There is in
nature no reason for poverty -- not even for the poverty of the crippled
or the decrepit. For man is by nature a social animal, and the family
affections and the social sympathies would, where chronic poverty did
not distort and embrute, amply provide for those who could not provide
for themselves.
But if we will not use the intelligence with which we have been
gifted to adapt social organization to natural laws -- if we allow dogs
in the manger to monopolize what they cannot use; if we allow strength
and cunning to rob honest labor, we must have chronic poverty, and all
the social evils it inevitably brings. Under such conditions there would
be poverty in paradise.
"The poor ye have always with you." If ever a
scripture has been wrested to the devils service, this is that
scripture. How often have these words been distorted from their obvious
meaning to soothe conscience into acquiescence in human misery and
degradation -- to bolster that blasphemy, the very negation and denial
of Christ's teachings, that the All-Wise and Most Merciful, the Infinite
Father, has decreed that so many of his creatures must be poor in order
that others of his creatures to whom he wills the good things of life
should enjoy the pleasure and virtue of doling out alms! "The poor
ye have always with you," said Christ; but all his teachings supply
the limitation, "until the coming of the Kingdom." In that
kingdom of God on earth, that kingdom of justice and love for
which he taught his followers to strive and pray, there will be no poor.
But though the faith and the hope and the striving for this kingdom are
of the very essence of Christ's teaching, the stanchest disbelievers and
revilers of its possibility are found among those who call themselves
Christians. Queer ideas of the Divinity have some of these Christians
who hold themselves orthodox and contribute to the conversion of the
heathen. A very rich orthodox Christian said to a newspaper reporter,
awhile ago, on the completion of a large work out of which he is said to
have made millions: "We have been peculiarly favored by Divine
Providence; iron never was so cheap before, and labor has been a drug in
the market."
That in spite of all our great advances we have yet with us the
poor, those who, without fault of their own, cannot get healthful and
wholesome conditions of life, is our fault and our
shame. Who that looks about him can fail to see that it is only the
injustice that denies natural opportunities to labor, and robs the
producer of the fruits of his toil, that prevents us all from being
rich? Consider the enormous powers of production now going to waste;
consider the great number of unproductive consumers maintained at the
expense of producers -- the rich men and dudes, the worse than useless
government officials, the pickpockets, burglars and confidence men; the
highly respectable thieves who carry on their operations inside the law;
the great army of lawyers; the beggars and paupers, and inmates of
prisons; the monopolists and cornerers and gamblers of every kind and
grade. Consider how much brains and energy and capital are devoted, not
to the production of wealth, but to the grabbing of wealth. Consider the
waste caused by competition which does not increase wealth; by laws
which restrict production and exchange. Consider how human power is
lessened by insufficient food, by unwholesome lodgings, by work done
under conditions that produce disease and shorten life. Consider how
intemperance and unthrift follow poverty. Consider how the ignorance
bred of poverty lessens production, and how the vice bred of poverty
causes destruction, and who can doubt that under conditions of social
justice all might be rich?
The wealth-producing powers that would be evoked in a social
state based on justice, where wealth went to the producers of wealth,
and the banishment of poverty had banished the fear and greed and lusts
that spring from it, we now can only faintly imagine. Wonderful as have
been the discoveries and inventions of this century, it is evident that
we have only begun to grasp that dominion which it is given to mind to
obtain over matter. Discovery and invention are born of leisure, of
material comfort, of freedom. These secured to all, and who shall say to
what command over nature man may not attain?
It is not necessary that any one should be condemned to
monotonous toil; it is not necessary that any one should lack the wealth
and the leisure which permit the development of the faculties that raise
man above the animal. Mind, not muscle, is the motor of progress, the
force which compels nature and produces wealth. In turning men into
machines we are wasting the highest powers. Already in our society there
is a favored class who need take no thought for the morrow -- what they
shall eat, or what they shall drink, or wherewithal they shall be
clothed. And may it not be that Christ was more than a dreamer when he
told his disciples that in that kingdom of justice for which he taught
them to work and pray this might be the condition of all?
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