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Lay the Axe at the Root of War |
Charles Erskine Scott Wood |
[Extracts from a
pamphlet, "Ave! Caesar. Imperator. Morituri te Salutant."
Reprinted from Everyman, November 1917]
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EVERYONE knows that England is a country of aristocracy and ancient
feudal titles. But because we have no titles or books of peerage, and
because the public schools and the Fourth of July have kept us in a
Fool's Paradise we really believe we are different. We talk so much of
our "Democracy" and "Liberty" we believe we have
them. The truth is the United States is a Democracy only in theory (in
so far as it is a democracy at all). It is in fact a Plutocracy and the
worst exploited country on earth. The stupidist of us see in a dim way
that the early liberty and equality of the forefathers has disappeared
and that there has grown up a plutocratic class and proletariat shading
off into slums. But the stupid do not see that the loss of liberty to
the common man and the loss of a certain economic equality and the rise
of plutocracy have one and the same cause - and that cause is this
English and American Industrial Feudalism we are calling "Democracy."
This itself rests on these root feudal evils : First, Land the mother of
all wealth, held in both countries in absolute unconditioned private
ownership, and regardless of any monopolistic advantage inherent in the
land which makes its possession by an individual dangerous to the people
as a whole. In short, the mother earth in both countries is absolutely
and unconditionally owned by private individuals by the old feudal paper
title of fee simple, which title is conveyable from one person to
another. It is inevitable that in course of time by economic gravity all
the monopolistically valuable areas, growths and deposits will gravitate
into the possession of a shrewd acquisitive few (not at all the "Best"
or "Fittest" or "Most Far Sighted," unless to
acquire be the highest aim of man and to be born first be far sighted).
In a new country like the United States, the whole country has gradually
become the prize of those exploiting and speculating men first on the
ground - and the enormous wealth of a virgin continent has become
theirs. The others remaining in effect feudal tenants, wage earners, job
hunters. Second : To this feudalism must be added its child, viz. : the
private ownership of the economic machinery for the service of Society -
Railroads, Banks, the Circulating Medium (money), Water, Light and Mills
so powerful in capitalization, army of employees and output as to be a
menace to the freedom of the individual.
Are we really to achieve in this world-purging a true Democracy, a
death of feudalism? If we are to do this then we need reforms at home as
well as in Germany. This survival of the principal feudal title to land
has produced a result patent to all. In England and America there now
exists a shocking disparity in wealth - not accounted for by the
superior brains or morals of the industrial barons or the inferior
brains or morals of the industrial serfs. There must be some inequality
of opportunity, some institution at work; not just the natural
difference in human ability operating in a free economic environment.
When society is divided into a few having a dangerous control of
opportunity and jobs and the many dependent on these few for actual
existence, either by charity or chance to work, the dependents or serfs
cannot be free. There can be no Democracy.
The slums of London, Manchester, Birmingham, New York, Chicago and
other cities, in-dictate something rotten somewhere. It is a diseased
social system which not only remains consenting to, but which
automatically produces and insists on a concentration of wealth at one
end, and a rising tide of poverty, crime and degeneracy at the other.
All the political democracy in the world would not compensate for actual
industrial serfdom and would become useless to the serfs. "He owns
my life who owns the means whereby I live." But with Industrial
Democracy, freedom of the individual is inevitable. A man uncontrolled
as to his means of existence is a free man.
Where such discrepancies in the distribution of wealth exist the
indigent workman is as much a serf as under the earlier feudal system.
Out of either and both of these feudal systems, German or English, come
wars, and if we are to cause wars to cease we must cause these systems
to cease. There is no difference in social and political effect between
an hereditary aristocracy and a self-made plutocracy. The hereditary is
older, that is all, but both begin the same way - getting control of the
land and making the people tenants. Titles are nothing, robes and
childish gegaws are nothing. The control of the means of subsistence is
the real power.
The English system, the United States system, automatically produces
kings, lords and barons at one end and. dependents at the other. The
older feudal lords fought each other for large dominions - more subjects
and greater power in exploitation. So do our barons. The system in the
great basic principle is unchanged and inevitably the result is
unchanged. Wars are only the symptom of a disease. The disease is
industrial feudalism, and the progress of the disease is steady. When
the monopolizing few, or privileged few, have fully exploited their own
country and people, they are driven to the world at large for further
fields of exploitations. They seek the weaker peoples as their natural
feeding ground, competitions and conflicts arise between the ruling
classes of the strong predatory countries, and hence wars. It is as
simple as two dogs and a bone. Until you can abolish the force of
gravity and deny that like causes produce like effects all conferences
and discussions are of little value which do not seek to abolish
Industrial Feudalism as the cause of wars.
Instead of looking to Germany and England for economic and truly
democratic revolution we must take the beam out of our own eye; our
efforts for peace must be efforts to change our plutocratic system here
and now. If our Industrial Feudalism continues the United States will be
the promoter of the next great war. People have talked of war in horror
since Christ, yet wars have been bred and bred again like thunderstorms,
but the people have never laid the axe - no, not so much as a penknife
to the root of the disease. To do so should now be the effort of every
true patriot - one whose country is the world - all mankind his
countrymen; of every true pacifist - one who cares not to make a peace
for peace's sake, beneath which new wars will breed, but earnestly hopes
for an enduring peace of the world and brotherhood of man.
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