The Attraction of State-Socialism to the Downtrodden |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, May-June 1928]
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An American, a large part of whose life and thought
had been given to the study of American and
European governments, has recently returned from an extended
visit to Russia. Having justly earned a reputation as a
man of liberal views his path was made easy and he was
permitted to see what was going on with little interference.
His conclusions have therefore a special value. He
returns as one who having gazed upon a great experiment
in the working is chiefly concerned that the public at large
shall understand what is really happening.
From his report the following reflections are deduced.
As Max Hirsch pointed out long ago the initial steps for
the establishment of Communism involved the total
negation of Democracy. There is no more pretense of
Democracy in Russia today than there is in Italy under
Mussolini. About one million class-conscious Communists
control about nine million proletarians and, between them,
they dominate one hundred and fifty millions of peasants
of a mental development too primitive to be able to
comprehend their relation to so large an entity as Russia.
The million communists, who are the effective
government, are mostly honest fanatics. Even the highest
officials receive no more than one hundred and twenty dollars
a month, live in poor quarters and work long hours. Graft
and opposition to the government are the only capital
crimes. The utmost freedom of speech and action
prevails in regard to every subject except the policy of the
government. On this topic, if a man does not approve
he had better keep silence. Not even a trial may be given
in cases where persons are seriously suspected of
communications with the enemy.
The rumors of subsidies paid to carry on propaganda
abroad seem to have some substantiation in spite of the
difficulty of believing that so poor a country can spend
money for what looks like a pure abstraction, but we are
dealing with the motive power of a new idea, which in
its early stages at least partakes of the generative power
which carried Mohammedanism to such lengths of
conquest. The Soviets are working in India and China and
Japan, and as a result the "Yellow Peril" may come to
assume a totally new significance. The very crudeness
of the Communist idea makes it easy for primitive peoples
to grasp and wherever these are vast masses of
propertyless people there is inflammable material.
Then there is the rising generation of young Russia to
be counted with. Joseph Conrad foresaw that on account
of the lack of education in Russia the effect of a war
prolonged for any length of time and resulting in the
destruction of the upper grades of the army would result in
the practical deliquescence of the mass, because there were
no middle class educated people to take their places as
there were among all other civilized peoples. The Soviet
managers were of course aware of this and when they
came into power recognized the need for education if
anything was to prove permanent under the new regime. Of
course it had to be a slow, unperfect process. Czarists
could not be used and most of the educated class, while
they may have been disaffected to Imperialism, when
compelled to make a choice between that and Communism
showed themselves reactionary, so far as it was safe to
do so. Even if they kept their views to themselves, they
could hardly be trusted with the education of youth. And
not only had schools to be organized where there were
none before but a whole teaching staff had to be
developed.
By this time they have largely succeeded in evolving
it, though with much travail and many absurdities. In
these public schools the dominant subject taught is
Communism. Whatever intolerance our educational
institutions have shown toward economic reform seems like
enlightened liberality when compared with the rigid
drilling in Communist tenets which the Russian school child
receives.
What will the outcome be? Will the attempt to put
the human mind in a strait-jacket have the same result
there as elsewhere. Perhaps that out of it physical
conflict may arise seems only too likely. A Europe burdened
with crushing debts, broken up into small peoples divided
by customs barriers with the great mass of people living
lives of penury and hardship, will be an easy mark for
a powerful nation preaching solidarity of the workers
and a Communist basis.
Clearly the situation is such that it behooves the Nations
to consider whether they must not, if they want to see
Civilization survive, try the experiment of doing Justice
to their disinherited. The only answer to Communism
is Justice and Justice demands that the right of mankind
to the Earth be recognized.
The peasants do not like the Communists. If the
peasants did not fear that the Czarist restoration meant that
their lands would be confiscated and turned over to their
former masters the Communist rule would be unsafe today.
But they know that however fair may be the promises of
autocracy in distress, when once in the saddle its innate
instinct forces it into tyranny and economic absolutism.
And so Communism lowers over Europe because Europe
holds no minds among its statesmen capable of making clear
that free trade and free access to land can solve the
problem which the leaders of the world cannot understand.
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