The Winds of War 1935, Land Wars That Is |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, May-June, 1935]
|
Japan wants more room, which means more land.
Hence the danger of war. We are told by Prof. Jesse
Holmes of Swarthmore College that Japan is "terribly
overcrowded, terribly poor." But who is crowding her?
There is no question that any country, Japan included,
with equality of land distribution, is able to support its
existing population. Japan is in the position of being
out-distanced in the business of land gambling "a belated bandit," Prof.
Holmes calls her. But if nobody
were crowding her she would not be giving the impression
of being overcrowded, and that is true of every country.
Landowners are doing the crowding. Prof. Holmes calls
all nations "bandits," which is a pretty accurate description,
though he does not quite sense the reason for it all.
The curious misunderstanding about "overcrowded"
nations is very persistent, despite the fact that it
has no basis in fact or arithmetic. Even Frank H.
Simonds, who has done some clear thinking on international
questions, says that the way to avoid war would
be for the nations rich in natural resources to divide up
in order to live in peace in a normal world. He sees that
it is hunger for land that causes war. He is not very
clear about it. He does not see that what is the matter
with "overcrowded nations" is that land owners are
doing the crowding. If a nation has not enough of the
things it needs it can share in the natural resources of
the world by letting down the barriers to freedom of exchange.
INTERNATIONAL wars and civil wars alike most
of them have their basis in land or tariffs. They
are shooting down peasants in Spain, of whom there are
some three million, because the promise of agrarian reforms
were not kept. The peasants who were shot down
were called "anarchists" a convenient term. Men who
protest against conditions will always be called anarchists
or communists. What do their crazy theories matter?
The only dreadful fact that is obvious enough is that
men are hungry and that they will revolt and fight to
satisfy their hunger. They are divorced from the land
and that is the sole reason they are hungry. They have
no place to work and land is a place to work.
Look where we will the conflict is the same. Paraguay
is fighting to secure the petroleum fields of Bolivia.
The Chaco war is a fight for land oil fields are land.
Not that it really matters to the native Paraguayan
worker who owns the petroleum fields; he never will. And
that is one of the mysteries of the matter explainable only
by the unfathomable ignorance of man. Paraguayans and
Bolivians hate each other, kill each other, over land they
will never have any right to own. If they were going to
get the land for themselves there would be some sense
in it. But whoever owns the oil-fields, Paraguayans and
Bolivians will work for the owners as miserable slaves,
as they always did.
The Ukraine is a great wheat country and produces
more iron and coal than all of France. Germany
has long cast envious eyes upon it. Hitler's book, Mein
Kampf, hints at the seizure of the Ukraine. Germany
would gladly go to war to secure it. Land again as the
urge to war. Italian imperalism rushes more and definitely
into Ethiopia where there are vast natural resources.
IT is always land or tariffs that are the cause of war.
It is news that has not yet got into the news that
West Australia is anxious to secede from the Australian
Commonwealth because of the high tariff taxation of the
Canberra Government. It is even hinted that West Australia
with half a million people is willing to take up arms
to enforce its demand if it should be refused. King
George and the British Parliament have been petitioned
for permission to secede. If the petition is not granted
a peaceful withdrawal is to be put to a referendum of the
people of West Australia. Either the tariff must be
abolished or greatly lowered. In the San Francisco News
its correspondent Sam Ewing has interviewed one of the
leading business men of Perth, West Australia, who said:
"I do not mean to predict in advance what the vote will
be. But it is a matter of life and death with us. My
state is agricultural. It sells products in the world
market. The eastern Australian states have the power
to enforce a high protective tariff for the protection of
their infant industries. The tax is too much of a burden
on our farming community."
This presents a very interesting situation. And it can easily lead to civil war.
Again let it be said, and it cannot be said too often, that
the two causes of war -- one a primary and the other a
secondary cause -- are the private ownership of natural
resources and hostile tariffs.
|