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| [Reprinted from The
Commonwealth, 192-] |
Week by week, the numbers of the unemployed mount. The Lord Privy
Seal has failed to produce any method of putting willing men to work
sustaining their lives. He has not found a method which would prevent
men being thrown out of employment. This problem is really a simple one,
but the solution of the difficulty will never be found by any Minister
for Parliament believing that legislative action alone, Government
pressure in any direction, or compulsion in any shape, will solve it.
The plain and simple truth is that where men are denied the right of
access to Nature, a condition of economic slavery is set up, which, in
many respects, is actually worse than chattel slavery when it was
considered perfectly moral and legal for one human being to own another
human being, if the latter happened to be dark-skinned. The so-called
owner, in his own interest, took care of his property, fed, sheltered
and provided medical attendance in order to keep them in a condition to
produce wealth for his use and ownership.
The present owners of economic slaves are relieved from all these
responsibilities because they are able to buy the labour of the slaves
in the open market, and do buy at less cost than the owner of
dark-skinned slaves was put to in order to maintain his property in good
physical condition.
England, and every other country, where land is not accessible, has
become a large slave plantation. A certain freedom of movement is the
right of everybody, but this is strictly limited, and it may be said, in
a sentence, that men are not to-day free to do anything else but ask
someone else for a job of work; to such a pass have we come!
To-day, with the assistance of machines, sarcastically called "labour-saving
devices," the production of wealth of all kinds in great abundance
has been rendered possible.
We have large masses of unemployed everywhere hungry, while the wealth
which is needed for their sustenance and comfort is hoarded in granaries
and warehouses until there is a shortage of room to store the surplus
wealth. We are a hungry people because we have too much food; we are
badly clothed and housed because we have woven too much cloth and dug
too much clay and slate. Many go bare of foot in sight of warehouses
containing large quantities of boots. In a word, it is a made world we
live in, mad by reason of its denial of the main elementary rights of
man. Surely they who produce wealth must own it. In the modern complex
system of production, the share of the product which goes to labour is
represented by his wages, but as the wages passed over to labour cannot
purchase the things which labour has produced, it is obvious that wages
are too low; therefore, the wealth producers are not getting a fair
deal. This is a plain fact which anybody can see.
How can labour receive its just reward in the presence of so large a
number of unemployed? How can labour receive its just reward when it is
forced to take jobs from other people because the only opportunity to
employ itself is withheld from it? How labour is content to tolerate
such a state of affairs is a mystery.
It must be plain to everybody who works that those who do not work can
only live on the products of those who do labour. The result of the work
of the employed is taken from them by ingenious methods and divided with
those who are not allowed to work. Most people think this an inevitable
state of affairs, and never question its justice, but the system will be
challenged some day, probably when we have got a little further along
the road to Socialism, and the State pays those who do not work as much
as those who do work can earn. The question will become so acute that it
will be borne in upon men that the principle upon which the world has
been ordered is one contrary to Natural Law and good morals. There can
be no change so long as the earth is regarded as private property for
which rent can be charged by private individuals, and so long as the
right of men to keep what they produce is denied. When a Labour or
Socialist Government makes this denial complete and insists upon
collecting all the wealth produced into one common pool, to be divided
mechanically under the direction (say) of Mr. G. b. Shaw, then the end
will come. It may come long before that, as a matter of fact, because
already some workers are seeking discharge from their employment to go
on the dole. "Why should I work for so little a week?" said
one worker in a shipyard. "I can get enough of my weekly earnings
now if I go on the dole, and I am not obliged to prove that I am
genuinely seeking work, I would rather go on the dole than work for 3s a
week.
Can any change be brought about by the mere shifting of the burden from
one part of the anatomy to another? We think not. The Chancellor of the
Exchequer attempts to take more from the so-called rich by way of income
tax and inheritance tax, but there can be no solution found by such
practices. To attempt to bring about a condition of peace and
contentment in a community by denying the right of its members to own
anything at all, is merely insanity. To attempt to equalize the reward
of labour and make a mechanical division of the wealth produced is to
defy Nature, who, apparently decreed that progress is to be made towards
peace and contentment by individual effort. Taxation as at present
imposed nothing but legalized theft and just as reprehensible as any
other kind of theft; in fact, theft cannot be legalized; that is, it
cannot be made to accord with the moral law. That taxation should be
considered necessary in order to provide the wealth required to
establish and maintain necessary public institutions, displays ignorance
of the fact that there is in existence now, but going into private
pockets, a quite sufficient fund of communal wealth which, if collected
for the public benefit, would permit the abolition of all theft of
private earnings for public benefit.
What will induce those who have now the power to oppress the people by
an unjust system of taxation, to seek the truth of the matter? Nothing
but a popular outcry and an expression of the people's will, no longer
to be denied their rights on earth, to contribute to public expenses,
but to demand the collection of the only public wealth there is.
Unquestionably the time will come when the people generally will realize
that the land of England belongs to Englishmen, not a few of them but
all of them, and that this being so the rent of England must necessarily
belong to the owners, and they also insist upon its collection for the
benefit of the whole of the people, and will insist upon the
discontinuance of the theft of their private earnings, and then their
troubles will be over, but not until then.
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