.
CHAPTER 1
If we look beneath the surface of our public affairs, we can
discern one fundamental fact, namely: a great redistribution of power
between society and the State. This is the fact that interests the
student of civilization. He has only a secondary or derived interest in
matters like price-fixing, wage-fixing, inflation, political banking, "agricultural
adjustment," and similar items of State policy that fill the pages
of newspapers and the mouths of publicists and politicians. All these
can be run up under one head. They have an immediate and temporary
importance, and for this reason they monopolize public attention, but
they all come to the same thing; which is, an increase of State power
and a corresponding decrease of social power.
It is unfortunately none too well understood that, just as the State
has no money of its own, so it has no power of its own. All the power it
has is what society gives it, plus what it confiscates from time to time
on one pretext or another; there is no other source from which State
power can be drawn. Therefore every assumption of State power, whether
by gift or seizure, leaves society with so much less power; there is
never, nor can be, any strengthening of State power without a
corresponding and roughly equivalent depletion of social power.
Moreover, it follows that with any exercise of State power, not only
the exercise of social power in the same direction, but the disposition
to exercise it in that direction, tends to dwindle. Mayor Gaynor
astonished the whole of New York when he pointed out to a correspondent
who had been complaining about the inefficiency of the police, that any
citizen has the right to arrest a malefactor and bring him before a
magistrate. "The law of England and of this country," he
wrote, "has been very careful to confer no more right in that
respect upon policemen and constables than it confers on every citizen."
State exercise of that right through a police force had gone on so
steadily that not only were citizens indisposed to exercise it, but
probably not one in ten thousand knew he had it.
Heretofore in this country sudden crises of misfortune have been met by
a mobilization of social power. In fact (except for certain
institutional enterprises like the home for the aged, the
lunatic-asylum, city-hospital and county-poorhouse) destitution,
unemployment, "depression" and similar ills, have been no
concern of the State, but have been relieved by the application of
social power. Under Mr. Roosevelt, however, the State assumed this
function, publicly announcing the doctrine, brand-new in our history,
that the State owes its citizens a living. Students of politics, of
course, saw in this merely an astute proposal for a prodigious
enhancement of State power; merely what, as long ago as 1794, James
Madison called "the old trick of turning every contingency into a
resource for accumulating force in the government"; and the passage
of time has proved that they were right. The effect of this upon the
balance between State power and social power is clear, and also its
effect of a general indoctrination with the idea that an exercise of
social power upon such matters is no longer called for.
It is largely in this way that the progressive conversion of social
power into State power becomes acceptable and gets
itself accepted.[1] When the Johnstown flood
occurred, social power was immediately mobilized and applied with
intelligence and vigour. Its abundance, measured by money alone, was so
great that when everything was finally put in order, something like a
million dollars remained. If such a catastrophe happened now, not only
is social power perhaps too depleted for the like exercise, but the
general instinct would be to let the State see to it. Not only has
social power atrophied to that extent, but the disposition to exercise
it in that particular direction has atrophied with it. If the State has
made such matters its business, and has confiscated the social power
necessary to deal with them, why, let it deal with them. We can get some
kind of rough measure of this general atrophy by our own disposition
when approached by a beggar. Two years ago we might have been moved to
give him something; today we are moved to refer him to the State's
relief-agency. The State has said to society, You are either not
exercising enough power to meet the emergency, or are exercising it in
what I think is an incompetent way, so I shall confiscate your power,
and exercise it to suit myself. Hence when a beggar asks us for a
quarter, our instinct is to say that the State has already confiscated
our quarter for his benefit, and he should go to the State about it.
Every positive intervention that the State makes upon industry and
commerce has a similar effect. When the State intervenes to fix wages or
prices, or to prescribe the conditions of competition, it virtually
tells the enterpriser that he is not exercising social power in the
right way, and therefore it proposes to confiscate his power and
exercise it according to the State's own judgment of what is best. Hence
the enterpriser's instinct is to let the State look after the
consequences. As a simple illustration of this, a manufacturer of a
highly specialized type of textiles was saying to me the other day that
he had kept his mill going at a loss for five years because he did not
want to turn his workpeople on the street in such hard times, but now
that the State had stepped in to tell him how he must run his business,
the State might jolly well take the responsibility.
The process of converting social power into State power may perhaps be
seen at its simplest in cases where the State's intervention is directly
competitive. The accumulation of State power in various countries has
been so accelerated and diversified within the last twenty years that we
now see the State functioning as telegraphist, telephonist,
match-pedlar, radio-operator, cannon-founder, railway-builder and owner,
railway-operator, wholesale and retail tobacconist, shipbuilder and
owner, chief chemist, harbour-maker and dockbuilder, housebuilder, chief
educator, newspaper-proprietor, food-purveyor, dealer in insurance, and
so on through a long list.[2]
It is obvious that private forms of these enterprises must tend to
dwindle in proportion as the energy of the State's encroachments on them
increases, for the competition of social power with State power is
always disadvantaged, since the State can arrange the terms of
competition to suit itself, even to the point of outlawing any exercise
of social power whatever in the premises; in other words, giving itself
a monopoly. Instances of this expedient are common; the one we are
probably best acquainted with is the State's monopoly of
letter-carrying. Social power is estopped by sheer fiat from application
to this form of enterprise, notwithstanding it could carry it on far
cheaper, and, in this country at least, far better. The advantages of
this monopoly in promoting the State's interests are peculiar. No other,
probably, could secure so large and well-distributed a volume of
patronage, under the guise of a public service in constant use by so
large a number of people; it plants a lieutenant of the State at every
country-crossroad. It is by no means a pure coincidence that an
administration's chief almoner and whip-at-large is so regularly
appointed Postmaster-general.
Thus the State "turns every contingency into a resource" for
accumulating power in itself, always at the expense of social power; and
with this it develops a habit of acquiescence in the people. New
generations appear, each temperamentally adjusted - or as I believe our
American glossary now has it, "conditioned" - to new
increments of State power, and they tend to take the process of
continuous accumulation as quite in order. All the State's institutional
voices unite in confirming this tendency; they unite in exhibiting the
progressive conversion of social power into State power as something not
only quite in order, but even as wholesome and necessary for the public
good.
II
In the United States at the present time, the principal indexes of the
increase of State power are three in number. First, the point to which
the centralization of State authority has been carried. Practically all
the sovereign rights and powers of the smaller political units - all of
them that are significant enough to be worth absorbing - have been
absorbed by the federal unit; nor is this all. State power has not only
been thus concentrated at Washington, but it has been so far
concentrated into the hands of the Executive that the existing régime
is a régime of personal government. It is nominally republican,
but actually monocratic; a curious anomaly, but highly characteristic of
a people little gifted with intellectual integrity. Personal government
is not exercised here in the same ways as in Italy, Russia or Germany,
for there is as yet no State interest to be served by so doing, but
rather the contrary; while in those countries there is. But personal
government is always personal government; the mode of its exercise is a
matter of immediate political expediency, and is determined entirely by
circumstances.
This regime was established by a
coup d'État of a new and unusual kind, practicable only
in a rich country. It was effected, not by violence, like Louis-Napoléon's,
or by terrorism, like Mussolini's, but by purchase. It therefore
presents what might be called an American variant of the coup
d'État.[3] Our
national legislature was not suppressed by force of arms, like the
French Assembly in 1851, but was bought out of its functions with public
money; and as appeared most conspicuously in the elections of November,
1934, the consolidation of the coup d'État was effected
by the same means; the corresponding functions in the smaller units were
reduced under the personal control of the
Executive.[4] This is a most remarkable
phenomenon; possibly nothing quite like it ever took place; and its
character and implications deserve the most careful attention.
A second index is supplied by the prodigious extension of the
bureaucratic principle that is now observable. This is attested prima
facie by the number of new boards, bureaux and commissions set up at
Washington in the last two years. They are reported as representing
something like 90,000 new employés appointed outside the civil
service, and the total of the federal pay-roll in Washington is reported
as something over three million dollars per
month.[5] This, however, is relatively a small
matter. The pressure of centralization has tended powerfully to convert
every official and every political aspirant in the smaller units into a
venal and complaisant agent of the federal bureaucracy. This presents an
interesting parallel with the state of things prevailing in the Roman
Empire in the last days of the Flavian dynasty, and afterwards. The
rights and practices of local self-government, which were formerly very
considerable in the provinces and much more so in the municipalities,
were lost by surrender rather than by suppression. The imperial
bureaucracy, which up to the second century was comparatively a modest
affair, grew rapidly to great size, and local politicians were quick to
see the advantage of being on terms with it. They came to Rome with
their hats in their hands, as governors, Congressional aspirants and
such-like now go to Washington. Their eyes and thoughts were constantly
fixed on Rome, because recognition and preferment lay that way; and in
their incorrigible sycophancy they became, as Plutarch says, like
hypochondriacs who dare not eat or take a bath without consulting their
physician.
A third index is seen in the erection of poverty and mendicancy into a
permanent political asset. Two years ago, many of our people were in
hard straits; to some extent, no doubt, through no fault of their own,
though it is now clear that in the popular view of their case, as well
as in the political view, the line between the deserving poor and the
undeserving poor was not distinctly drawn. Popular feeling ran high at
the time, and the prevailing wretchedness was regarded with
undiscriminating emotion, as evidence of some general wrong done upon
its victims by society at large, rather than as the natural penalty of
greed, folly or actual misdoings; which in large part it was. The State,
always instinctively "turning every contingency into a resource"
for accelerating the conversion of social power into State power, was
quick to take advantage of this state of mind. All that was needed to
organize these unfortunates into an invaluable political property was to
declare the doctrine that the State owes all its citizens a living; and
this was accordingly done. It immediately precipitated an enormous mass
of subsidized voting-power, an enormous resource for strengthening the
State at the expense of society.[6]
III
There is an impression that the enhancement of State power which has
taken place since 1932 is provisional and temporary, that the
corresponding depletion of social power is by way of a kind of
emergency-loan, and therefore is not to be scrutinized too closely.
There is every probability that this belief is devoid of foundation. No
doubt our present régime will be modified in one way and another;
indeed, it must be, for the process of consolidation itself requires it.
But any essential change would be quite unhistorical, quite without
precedent, and is therefore most unlikely; and by an essential change, I
mean one that will tend to
redistribute actual power between the State and
society.[7] In the nature of things, there is no
reason why such a change should take place, and every reason why it
should not. We shall see various apparent recessions, apparent
compromises, but the one thing we may be quite sure of is that none of
these will tend to diminish actual State power.
For example, we shall no doubt shortly see the great pressure-group of
politically-organized poverty and mendicancy subsidized indirectly
instead of directly, because State interest can not long keep pace with
the hand-over-head disposition of the masses to loot their own Treasury.
The method of direct subsidy, or sheer cash-purchase, will therefore in
all probability soon give way to the indirect method of what is called "social
legislation"; that is, a multiplex system of State-managed
pensions, insurances and indemnities of various kinds. This is an
apparent recession, and when it occurs it will no doubt be proclaimed as
an actual recession, no doubt accepted as such; but is it? Does it
actually tend to diminish State power and increase social power?
Obviously not, but quite the opposite. It tends to consolidate firmly
this particular fraction of State power, and opens the way to getting an
indefinite increment upon it by the mere continuous invention of new
courses and developments of State-administered social legislation, which
is an extremely simple business. One may add the observation for
whatever its evidential value may be worth, that if the effect of
progressive social legislation upon the sum-total of State power were
unfavourable or even nil, we should hardly have found Prince de Bismarck
and the British Liberal politicians of forty years ago going in for
anything remotely resembling it.
When, therefore, the inquiring student of civilization has occasion to
observe this or any other apparent recession upon
any point of our present régime,[8] he
may content himself with asking the one question, What effect has
this upon the sum-total of State power? The answer he gives himself
will show conclusively whether the recession is actual or apparent, and
this is all he is concerned to know.
There is also an impression that if actual recessions do not come about
of themselves, they may be brought about by the expedient of voting one
political party out and another one in. This idea rests upon certain
assumptions that experience has shown to be unsound; the first one being
that the power of the ballot is what republican political theory makes
it out to be, and that therefore the electorate has an effective choice
in the matter. It is a matter of open and notorious fact that nothing
like this is true. Our nominally republican system is actually built on
an imperial model, with our professional politicians standing in the
place of the prætorian guards; they meet from time to time, decide
what can be "got away with," and how, and who is to do it; and
the electorate votes according to their prescriptions. Under these
conditions it is easy to provide the appearance of any desired
concession of State power, without the reality; our history shows
innumerable instances of very easy dealing with problems in practical
politics much more difficult than that. One may remark in this connexion
also the notoriously baseless assumption that party-designations connote
principles, and that party-pledges imply performance. Moreover,
underlying these assumptions and all others that faith in "political
action" contemplates, is the assumption that the interests of the
State and the interests of society are, at least theoretically,
identical; whereas in theory they are directly opposed, and this
opposition invariably declares itself in practice to the precise extent
that circumstances permit.
However, without pursuing these matters further at the moment, it is
probably enough to observe here that in the nature of things the
exercise of personal government, the control of a huge and growing
bureaucracy, and the management of an enormous mass of subsidized
voting-power, are as agreeable to one stripe of politician as they are
to another. Presumably they interest a Republican or a Progressive as
much as they do a Democrat, Communist, Farmer-Labourite, Socialist, or
whatever a politician may, for electioneering purposes, see fit to call
himself. This was demonstrated in the local campaigns of 1934 by the
practical attitude of politicians who represented nominal opposition
parties. It is now being further demonstrated by the derisible haste
that the leaders of the official opposition are making towards what they
call "reorganization" of their party. One may well be
inattentive to their words; their actions, however, mean simply that the
recent accretions of State power are here to stay, and that they are
aware of it; and that, such being the case, they are preparing to
dispose themselves most advantageously in a contest for their control
and management. This is all that "reorganization" of the
Republican party means, and all it is meant to mean; and this is in
itself quite enough to show that any expectation of an essential change
of regime through a change of party-administration is illusory. On the
contrary, it is clear that whatever party-competition we shall see
hereafter will be on the same terms as heretofore. It will be a
competition for control and management, and it would naturally issue in
still closer centralization, still further extension of the bureaucratic
principle, and still larger concessions to subsidized voting-power. This
course would be strictly historical, and is furthermore to be expected
as lying in the nature of things, as it so obviously does.
Indeed, it is by this means that the aim of the collectivists seems
likeliest to be attained in this country; this aim being the complete
extinction of social power through absorption by the State. Their
fundamental doctrine was formulated and invested with a quasi-religious
sanction by the idealist philosophers of the last century; and among
peoples who have accepted it in terms as well as in fact, it is
expressed in formulas almost identical with theirs. Thus, for example,
when Hitler says that "the State dominates the nation because it
alone represents it," he is only putting into loose popular
language the formula of Hegel, that "the State is the general
substance, whereof individuals are but accidents." Or, again, when
Mussolini says, "Everything for the State; nothing outside the
State; nothing against the State," he is merely vulgarizing the
doctrine of Fichte, that "the State is the superior power, ultimate
and beyond appeal, absolutely independent."
It may be in place to remark here the essential identity of the various
extant forms of collectivism. The superficial distinctions of Fascism,
Bolshevism, Hitlerism, are the concern of journalists and publicists;
the serious student[9]
sees in them only the one root-idea of a complete conversion of social
power into State power. When Hitler and Mussolini invoke a kind of
debased and hoodwinking mysticism to aid their acceleration of this
process, the student at once recognizes his old friend, the formula of
Hegel, that "the State incarnates the Divine Idea upon earth,"
and he is not hoodwinked. The journalist and the impressionable
traveller may make what they will of "the new religion of
Bolshevism"; the student contents himself with remarking clearly
the exact nature of the process which this inculcation is designed to
sanction.
IV
This process - the conversion of social power into State power - has
not been carried as far here as it has elsewhere; as it has in Russia,
Italy or Germany, for example. Two things, however, are to be observed.
First, that it has gone a long way, at a rate of progress which has of
late been greatly accelerated. What has chiefly differentiated its
progress here from its progress in other countries is its unspectacular
character. Mr. Jefferson wrote in 1823 that there was no danger he
dreaded so much as "the consolidation [i.e., centralization] of our
government by the noiseless and therefore unalarming instrumentality of
the Supreme Court." These words characterize every advance that we
have made in State aggrandizement. Each one has been noiseless and
therefore unalarming, especially to a people notoriously preoccupied,
inattentive and incurious. Even the
coup d'État of 1932 was noiseless and unalarming. In
Russia, Italy, Germany, the coup d'État was violent and
spectacular; it had to be; but here it was neither. Under cover of a
nationwide, State-managed mobilization of inane buffoonery and aimless
commotion, it took place in so unspectacular a way that its true nature
escaped notice, and even now is not generally understood. The method of
consolidating the ensuing regime, moreover, was also noiseless and
unalarming; it was merely the prosaic and unspectacular "higgling
of the market," to which a long and uniform political experience
had accustomed us. A visitor from a poorer and thriftier country might
have regarded Mr. Farley's activities in the local campaigns of 1934 as
striking or even spectacular, but they made no such impression on us.
They seemed so familiar, so much the regular thing, that one heard
little comment on them. Moreover, political habit led us to attribute
whatever unfavourable comment we did hear, to interest; either partisan
or monetary interest, or both. We put it down as the jaundiced judgment
of persons with axes to grind; and naturally the regime did all it could
to encourage this view.
The second thing to be observed is that certain formulas, certain
arrangements of words, stand as an obstacle in the way of our perceiving
how far the conversion of social power into State power has actually
gone. The force of phrase and name distorts the identification of our
own actual acceptances and acquiescences. We are accustomed to the
rehearsal of certain poetic litanies, and provided their cadence be kept
entire, we are indifferent to their correspondence with truth and fact.
When Hegel's doctrine of the State, for example, is restated in terms by
Hitler and Mussolini, it is distinctly offensive to us, and we
congratulate ourselves on our freedom from the "yoke of a
dictator's tyranny." No American politician would dream of breaking
in on our routine of litanies with anything of the kind. We may imagine,
for example, the shock to popular sentiment that would ensue upon Mr.
Roosevelt's declaring publicly that "the State embraces everything,
and nothing has value outside the State. The State creates right."
Yet an American politician, as long as he does not formulate that
doctrine in set terms, may go further with it in a practical way than
Mussolini has gone, and without trouble or question. Suppose Mr.
Roosevelt should defend his regime by publicly reasserting Hegel's
dictum that "the State alone possesses rights, because it is the
strongest." One can hardly imagine that our public would get that
down without a great deal of retching. Yet how far, really, is that
doctrine alien to our public's actual acquiescences? Surely not far.
The point is that in respect of the relation between the theory and the
actual practice of public affairs, the American is the most
un-philosophical of beings. The rationalization of conduct in general is
most repugnant to him; he prefers to emotionalize it. He is indifferent
to the theory of things, so long as he may rehearse his formulas; and so
long as he can listen to the patter of his litanies, no practical
inconsistency disturbs him - indeed, he gives no evidence of even
recognizing it as an inconsistency.
The ablest and most acute observer among the many who came from Europe
to look us over in the early part of the last century was the one who is
for some reason the most neglected, notwithstanding that in our present
circumstances, especially, he is worth more to us than all the de
Tocquevilles, Bryces, Trollopes and Chateaubriands put together. This
was the noted St.-Simonien and political economist, Michel Chevalier.
Professor Chinard, in his admirable biographical study of John Adams,
has called attention to Chevalier's observation that the American people
have "the morale of an army on the march." The more one thinks
of this, the more clearly one sees how little there is in what our
publicists are fond of calling "the American psychology" that
it does not exactly account for; and it exactly accounts for the trait
that we are considering.
An army on the march has no philosophy; it views itself as a creature
of the moment. It does not rationalize conduct except in terms of an
immediate end. As Tennyson observed, there is a pretty strict official
understanding against its doing so; "theirs not to reason why."
Emotionalizing conduct is another matter, and the more of it the better;
it is encouraged by a whole elaborate paraphernalia of showy etiquette,
flags, music, uniforms, decorations, and the careful cultivation of a
very special sort of comradery. In every relation to "the reason of
the thing," however - in the ability and eagerness, as Plato puts
it, "to see things as they are" - the mentality of an army on
the march is merely so much delayed adolescence; it remains
persistently, incorrigibly and notoriously infantile.
Past generations of Americans, as Martin Chuzzlewit left record,
erected this infantilism into a distinguishing virtue, and they took
great pride in it as the mark of a chosen people, destined to live
forever amidst the glory of their own unparalleled achievements wie
Gott in Frankreich. Mr. Jefferson Brick, General Choke and the
Honourable Elijah Pogram made a first-class job of indoctrinating their
countrymen with the idea that a philosophy is wholly unnecessary, and
that a concern with the theory of things is effeminate and unbecoming.
An envious and presumably dissolute Frenchman may say what he likes
about the morale of an army on the march, but the fact remains that it
has brought us where we are, and has got us what we have. Look at a
continent subdued, see the spread of our industry and commerce, our
railways, newspapers, finance-companies, schools, colleges, what you
will! Well, if all this has been done without a philosophy, if we have
grown to this unrivalled greatness without any attention to the theory
of things, does it not show that philosophy and the theory of things are
all moonshine, and not worth a practical people's consideration? The
morale of an army on the march is good enough for us, and we are proud
of it.
The present generation does not speak in quite this tone of robust
certitude. It seems, if anything, rather less openly contemptuous of
philosophy; one even sees some signs of a suspicion that in our present
circumstances the theory of things might be worth looking into, and it
is especially towards the theory of sovereignty and rulership that this
new attitude of hospitality appears to be developing. The condition of
public affairs in all countries, notably in our own, has done more than
bring under review the mere current practice of politics, the character
and quality of representative politicians, and the relative merits of
this-or-that form or mode of government. It has served to suggest
attention to the one institution whereof all these forms or modes are
but the several, and, from the theoretical point of view, indifferent,
manifestations. It suggests that finality does not lie with
consideration of species, but of genus; it does not lie with
consideration of the characteristic marks that differentiate the
republican State, monocratic State, constitutional, collectivist,
totalitarian, Hitlerian, Bolshevist, what you will. It lies with
consideration of the State itself.
V
There appears to be a curious difficulty about exercising reflective
thought upon the actual nature of an institution into which one was born
and one's ancestors were born. One accepts it as one does the
atmosphere; one's practical adjustments to it are made by a kind of
reflex. One seldom thinks about the air until one notices some change,
favourable or unfavourable, and then one's thought about it is special;
one thinks about purer air, lighter air, heavier air, not about air. So
it is with certain human institutions. We know that they exist, that
they affect us in various ways, but we do not ask how they came to
exist, or what their original intention was, or what primary function it
is that they are actually fulfilling; and when they affect us so
unfavourably that we rebel against them, we contemplate substituting
nothing beyond some modification or variant of the same institution.
Thus colonial America, oppressed by the monarchical State, brings in the
republican State; Germany gives up the republican State for the
Hitlerian State; Russia exchanges the monocratic State for the
collectivist State; Italy exchanges the constitutionalist State for the
"totalitarian" State.
It is interesting to observe that in the year 1935 the average
individual's incurious attitude towards the phenomenon of the State is
precisely what his attitude was towards the phenomenon of the Church in
the year, say, 1500. The State was then a very weak institution; the
Church was very strong. The individual was born into the Church, as his
ancestors had been for generations, in precisely the formal, documented
fashion in which he is now born into the State. He was taxed for the
Church's support, as he now is for the State's support. He was supposed
to accept the official theory and doctrine of the Church, to conform to
its discipline, and in a general way to do as it told him; again,
precisely the sanctions that the State now lays upon him. If he were
reluctant or recalcitrant, the Church made a satisfactory amount of
trouble for him, as the State now does. Notwithstanding all this, it
does not appear to have occurred to the Church-citizen of that day, any
more than it occurs to the State-citizen of the present, to ask what
sort of institution it was that claimed his allegiance. There it was; he
accepted its own account of itself, took it as it stood, and at its own
valuation. Even when he revolted, fifty years later, he merely exchanged
one form or mode of the Church for another, the Roman for the Calvinist,
Lutheran, Zuinglian, or what not; again, quite as the modern
State-citizen exchanges one mode of the State for another. He did not
examine the institution itself, nor does the State-citizen today.
My purpose in writing is to raise the question whether the enormous
depletion of social power which we are witnessing everywhere does not
suggest the importance of knowing more than we do about the essential
nature of the institution that is so rapidly absorbing this volume
of power.[10] One of my
friends said to me lately that if the public-utility corporations did
not mend their ways, the State would take over their business and
operate it. He spoke with a curiously reverent air of finality. Just so,
I thought, might a Church-citizen, at the end of the fifteenth century,
have spoken of some impending intervention of the Church; and I wondered
then whether he had any better-informed and closer-reasoned theory of
the State than his prototype had of the Church. Frankly, I am sure he
had not. His pseudo-conception was merely an unreasoned acceptance of
the State on its own terms and at its own valuation; and in this
acceptance he showed himself no more intelligent, and no less, than the
whole mass of State-citizenry at large.
It appears to me that with the depletion of social power going on at
the rate it is, the State-citizen should look very closely into the
essential nature of the institution that is bringing it about. He should
ask himself whether he has a theory of the State, and if so, whether he
can assure himself that history supports it. He will not find this a
matter that can be settled offhand; it needs a good deal of
investigation, and a stiff exercise of reflective thought. He should
ask, in the first place, how the State originated, and why; it must have
come about somehow, and for some purpose. This seems an extremely easy
question to answer, but he will not find it so. Then he should ask what
it is that history exhibits continuously as the State's primary
function. Then, whether he finds that " the State" and "government"
are strictly synonymous terms; he uses them as such, but are they? Are
there any invariable characteristic marks that differentiate the
institution of government from the institution of the State? Then
finally he should decide whether, by the testimony of history, the State
is to be regarded as, in essence, a social or an anti-social
institution?
It is pretty clear now that if the Church-citizen of 1500 had put his
mind on questions as fundamental as these, his civilization might have
had a much easier and pleasanter course to run; and the State-citizen of
today may profit by his experience.
Footnotes to Chapter 1
- The result of a
questionnaire published in July, 1935, showed 76.8 per cent of the
replies favourable to the idea that it is the State's duty to see that
every person who wants a job shall have one; 20.1 per cent were
against it, and 3.1 per cent were undecided.
- In this country, the State is at present
manufacturing furniture, grinding flour, producing fertilizer,
building houses; selling farm-products, dairy-products, textiles,
canned goods, and electrical apparatus; operating
employment-agencies and home-loan offices; financing exports and
imports; financing agriculture. It also controls the issuance of
securities, communications by wire and radio, discount rates,
oil-production, power-production, commercial competition, the
production and sale of alcohol, and the use of inland waterways and
railways.
- There is a sort of precedent for it in
Roman history, if the story be true in all its details that the army
sold the emperorship to Didius Julianus for something like five
million dollars. Money has often been used to grease the wheels of a
coup d'État, but straight over-the-counter
purchase is unknown, I think, except in these two instances.
- On the day I write this, the newspapers
say that the President is about to order a stoppage on the flow of
federal relief-funds into Louisiana, for the purpose of bringing
Senator Long to terms. I have seen no comment, however, on the
propriety of this kind of procedure.
- A friend in the theatrical business tells
me that from the box-office point of view, Washington is now the
best theatre-town, concert-town and general-amusement town in the
United States, far better than New York.
- The feature of the approaching campaign of
1936 which will most interest the student of civilization will be
the use of the four-billion-dollar relief-fund that has been placed
at the President's disposal - the extent, that is, to which it will
be distributed on a patronage-basis.
- It must always be kept in mind that there
is a tidal-motion as well as a wave-motion in these matters, and
that the wave-motion is of little importance, relatively. For
instance, the Supreme Court's invalidation of the National Recovery
Act counts for nothing in determining the actual status of personal
government. The real question is not how much less the sum of
personal government is now than it was before that decision, but how
much greater it is normally now than it was in 1932, and in years
preceding.
- As, for example, the spectacular voiding
of the National Recovery Act.
- This book is a sort of syllabus or précis
of some lectures to students of American history and politics -
mostly graduate students - and it therefore presupposes some little
acquaintance with those subjects. The few references I have given,
however, will put any reader in the way of documenting and
amplifying it satisfactorily.
- An inadequate and partial idea of what
this volume amounts to, may be got from the fact that the American
State's income from taxation is now about one third of the nation's
total income! This takes into account all forms of taxation, direct
and indirect, local and federal.
NEXT []
BACK
|