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Social Problems
by Henry George 1883
Chapter 17
The Functions of Government
[01] TO prevent government
from becoming corrupt and tyrannous, its organization and methods
should be as simple as possible, its functions be restricted to those
necessary to the common welfare, and in all its parts it should be
kept as close to the people and as directly within their control as
may be.
[02] We have ignored
these principles in many ways, and the result has been corruption
and demoralization, the loss of control by the people, and the wresting
of government to the advantage of the few and the spoliation of the
many. The line of reform, on one side at least, lies in simplification.
[03] The first and main
purpose of government is admirably stated in that grand document which
we Americans so honor and so ignore -- the Declaration of Independence.
It is to secure to men those equal and unalienable rights with which
the Creator has endowed them. I shall hereafter show how the adoption
of the only means by which, in civilized and progressive society,
the first of these unalienable rights -- the equal right to land --
can be secured, will at the same time greatly simplify government
and do away with corrupting influences. And beyond this, much simplification
is possible, and should be sought wherever it can be attained. As
political corruption makes it easier to resist the demand for reform,
whatever may be done to purify politics and bring government within
the intelligent supervision and control of the people is in itself
not merely an end to be sought, but a means to larger ends.
[04] The American Republic
has no more need for its burlesque of a navy than a peaceable giant
would have for a stuffed club or a tin sword. It is maintained only
for the sake of the officers and the naval rings. In peace it is a
source of expense and corruption; in war it would be useless. We are
too strong for any foreign power wantonly to attack, we ought to be
too great wantonly to attack others. If war should ever be forced
upon us, we could safely rely upon science and invention, which arc
already superseding navies faster than they can be built.
[05] So with our army.
All we need, if we even now need that, is a small force of frontier
police, such as is maintained in Australia and Canada. Standing navies
and standing armies are inimical to the genus of democracy, and it
ought to be our pride, as it is our duty, to show the world that a
great republic can dispense with both. And in organization, as in
principle, both our navy and our army are repugnant to the democratic
idea. In both we maintain that distinction between commissioned officers
and common soldiers and sailors which arose in Europe when the nobility
who furnished the one were considered a superior race to the serfs
and peasants who supplied the other. The whole system is an insult
to democracy, and ought to be swept away.
[06] Our diplomatic
system, too, is servilely copied from the usages of kings who plotted
with each other against the liberties of the people, before the ocean
steamship and the telegraph were invented. It serves no purpose save
to reward unscrupulous politicians and corruptionists, and occasionally
to demoralize a poet. To abolish it would save expense, corruption
and national dignity.
[07] In legal administration
there is a large field for radical reform. Here, too, we have servilely
copied English precedents, and have allowed lawyers to make law in
the interests of their class until justice is a costly gamble for
which a poor man cannot afford to sue. The best use that could be
made of our great law libraries, to which the reports of thirty-eight
States, of the Federal courts, and of the English, Scotch and Irish
courts are each year being added, would be to send them to the paper-mills,
and to adopt such principles and methods of procedure as would reduce
our great army of lawyers at least to the French standard. At the
same time our statute-books are full of enactments which could, with
advantage, be swept away. It is not the business of government to
make men virtuous or religious, or to preserve the fool from the consequences
of his own folly. Government should be repressive no further than
is necessary to secure liberty by protecting the equal rights of each
from aggression on the part of others, and the moment governmental
prohibitions extend beyond this line they are in danger of defeating
the very ends they are intended to serve. For while the tendency of
laws which prohibit or command what the moral sense does not, is to
bring law into contempt and produce hypocrisy and evasion, so the
attempt to bring law to the aid of morals as to those acts and relations
which do not plainly involve violation of the liberty of others, is
to weaken rather than to strengthen moral influences; to make the
standard of wrong and right a legal one, and to enable him who can
dexterously escape the punishment of the law to escape all punishment.
Thus, for instance, there can be no doubt that the standard of commercial
honesty would be much higher in the absence of laws for the collection
of debts. As to all such matters, the cunning rogue keeps within the
law or evades the law, while the existence of a legal standard lowers
the moral standard and weakens the sanction of public opinion.
[08] Restrictions, prohibitions,
interferences with the liberty of action in itself harmless, are evil
in their nature, and, though they may sometimes be necessary, may
for the most part be likened to medicines which suppress or modify
some symptom without lessening the disease and, generally, where restrictive
or prohibitive laws are called for, the evils they are designed to
meet may be traced to previous restriction -- to some curtailment
of natural rights.
[09] I can but briefly
allude to these matters, though in themselves they deserve much attention.
It is the more necessary to simplify government as much as possible
and to improve, as much as may be, what may be called the mechanics
of government, because, with the progress of society, the functions
which government must assume steadily increase. It is only in the
infancy of society that the functions of government can be properly
confined to providing for the common defense and protecting the weak
against the physical power of the strong. As society develops in obedience
to that law of integration and increasing complexity of which I spoke
in the first of these chapters, it becomes necessary in order to secure
equality that other regulations should be made and enforced; and upon
the primary and restrictive functions of government are superimposed
what may be called co如erative functions, the refusal to assume which
lead, in many cases, to the disregard of individual rights as surely
as does the assumption of directive and restrictive functions not
properly belonging to government.
[10] All the tendencies
of the time are to the absorption of smaller communities, to the enlargement
of the area within which uniformity of law and administration is necessary
or desirable. But for this very reason we ought with the more tenacity
to hold, wherever possible, to the principle of local self-government
-- the principle that, in things which concern only themselves, the
people of each political sub-division -- township, ward, city or State,
as may be -- shall act for themselves. We have neglected this principle
within our States even more than in the relations between the State
and National Governments, and in attempting to govern great cities
by State commissions, and in making what properly belongs to County
Supervisors and Township Trustees the business of legislatures, we
have divided responsibility and promoted corruption.
[11] Much, too, may
be done to restrict the abuse of party machinery, and make the ballot
the true expression of the will of the voter, by simplifying our elective
methods. And a principle should always be kept in mind which we have
largely ignored, that the people cannot manage details, nor intelligently
choose more than a few officials. To call upon the average citizen
to vote at each election for a long string of candidates, as to the
majority of whom he can know nothing unless he makes a business of
politics, is to relegate choice to nominating conventions and political
rings. And to divide power is often to destroy responsibility, and
to provoke, not to prevent, usurpation.
[12] In the division
of labor and the specialization of vocation that begin in an early
stage of social development, and increase with it, the assumption
by individuals of certain parts in the business of society necessarily
operates to the exclusion of other individuals. Thus when one opens
a store or an inn, or establishes a regular carriage of passengers
or goods, or devotes himself to a special trade or profession of which
all may have need, his doing of these things operates to prevent others
from doing them, and leads to the establishment of habits and customs
which make resort to him a necessity to others, and which would put
those who were denied this resort at a great disadvantage as compared
with other individuals. Thus to secure quality it becomes necessary
so to limit liberty of action as to oblige those who thus take upon
themselves quasi-public functions to serve without discrimination
those who may apply to them upon customary conditions. This principle
is recognized by all nations that have made any progress in civilization,
in their laws relating to common carriers, innkeepers, etc.
[13] As civilization
progresses and industrial development goes on, the concentration which
results from the utilization of larger powers and improved processes
operates more and more to the restriction and exclusion of competition,
and to the establishment of complete monopolies. This we may see very
clearly in the railroad. It is but a sheer waste of capital and labor
to build one railroad alongside of another; and even where this is
done, an irresistible tendency leads either to consolidation or to
combination; and even at what are called competing points, competition
is only transitional. The consolidation of companies, which in a few
years bids fair to concentrate the whole railway business of the United
States in the hands of half a dozen managements, the pooling of receipts,
and agreements as to business and charges, which even at competing
points prevent competition, are due to a tendency inherent in the
development of the railroad system, and of which it is idle to complain.
[14] The primary purpose
and end of government being to secure the natural rights and equal
liberty of each, all businesses that involve monopoly are within the
necessary province of governmental regulation, and businesses that
are in their nature complete monopolies become properly functions
of the state. As society develops, the state must assume these functions,
in their nature co如erative, in order to secure the equal rights and
liberty of all. That is to say, as, in the process of integration,
the individual becomes more and more dependent upon and subordinate
to the all, it becomes necessary for government, which is properly
that social organ by which alone the whole body of individuals can
act, to take upon itself, in the interest of all, certain functions
which cannot safely be left to individuals. Thus out of the principle
that it is the proper end and purpose of government to secure the
natural rights and equal liberty of the individual, grows the principle
that it is the business of government to do for the mass of individuals
those things which cannot be done, or cannot be so well done, by individual
action. As in the development of species, the power of conscious,
co字dinated action of the whole being must assume greater and greater
relative importance to the automatic action of parts, so is it in
the development of society. This is the truth in socialism, which,
although it is being forced upon us by industrial progress and social
development, we are so slow to recognize.
[15] In the physical
organism, weakness and disease result alike from the overstraining
of functions and from the non-use of functions. In like manner governments
may be corrupted and public misfortunes induced by the failure to
assume, as governmental, functions that properly belong to government
as the controlling organ in the management of common interests, as
well as from interferences by government in the proper sphere of individual
action. This we may see in our own case. In what we attempt to do
by government and what we leave undone we are like a man who should
leave the provision of his dinner to the promptings of his stomach
while attempting to govern his digestion by the action of his will;
or like one who, in walking through a crowded street or over a bad
road, should concentrate all his conscious faculties upon the movement
of his legs without paying any attention to where he was going.
[16] To illustrate:
It is not the business of government to interfere with the views which
any one may hold of the Creator or with the worship he may choose
to pay him, so long as the exercise of these individual rights does
not conflict with the equal liberty of others; and the result of governmental
interference in this domain has been hypocrisy, corruption, persecution
and religious war. It is not the business of government to direct
the employment of labor and capital, and to foster certain industries
at the expense of other industries; and the attempt to do so leads
to all the waste, loss and corruption due to protective tariffs.
[17] On the other hand,
it is the business of government to issue money. This is perceived
as soon as the great laborsaving invention of money supplants barter.
To leave it to every one who chose to do so to issue money would be
to entail general inconvenience and loss, to offer many temptations
to roguery, and to put the poorer classes of society at a great disadvantage.
These obvious considerations have everywhere, as society became well
organized, led to the recognition of the coinage of money as an exclusive
function of government. When, in the progress of society, a further
labor-saving improvement becomes possible by the substitution of paper
for the precious metals as the material for money, the reasons why
the issuance of this money should be made a government function become
still stronger. The evils entailed by wildcat banking in the United
States are too well remembered to need reference. The loss and inconvenience,
the swindling and corruption that flowed from the assumption by each
State of the Union of the power to license banks of issue ended with
the war, and no one would now go back to them. Yet instead of doing
what every public consideration impels us to, and assuming wholly
and fully as the exclusive function of the General Government the
power to issue paper money, the private interests of bankers have,
up to this, compelled us to the use of a hybrid currency, of which
a large part, though guaranteed by the General Government, is issued
and made profitable to corporations. The legitimate business of banking
-- the safekeeping and loaning of money, and the making and exchange
of credits, is properly left to individuals and associations; but
by leaving to them, even in part and under restrictions and guaranties,
the issuance of money, the people of the United States suffer an annual
loss of millions of dollars, and sensibly increase the influences
which exert a corrupting effect upon their government.
[18] The principle evident
here may be seen in even stronger light in another department of social
life.
[19] The great "railroad
question," with its dangers and perplexities, is a most striking instance
of the evil consequences which result from the failure of the state
to assume functions that properly belong to it.
[20] In rude stages
of social development, and where government, neglectful of its proper
functions, has been occupied in making needless wars and imposing
harmful restrictions, the making and improvement of highways have
been left to individuals, who, to recompense themselves, have been
permitted to exact tolls. It has, however, from the first, been recognized
that these tolls are properly subject to governmental control and
regulation. But the great inconveniences of this system, and the heavy
taxes which, in spite of attempted regulation, are under it levied
upon production, have led, as social advance went on, to the assumption
of the making and maintenance of highroads as a governmental duty.
In the course of social development came the invention of the railroad,
which merged the business of making and maintaining roads with the
business of carrying freight and passengers upon them. It is probably
due to this that it was not at first recognized that the same reasons
which render it necessary for the state to make and maintain common
roads apply with even greater force to the building and operating
of railroads. In Great Britain and the United States, and, with partial
exceptions, in other countries, railroads have been left to private
enterprise to build and private greed to manage. In the United States,
where railroads are of more importance than in any other country in
the world, our only recognition of their public character has been
in the donation of lands and the granting of subsidies, which have
been the cause of much corruption, and in some feeble attempts to
regulate fares and freights.
[21] But the fact that
the railroad system as far as yet developed (and perhaps necessarily)
combines transportation with the maintenance of roadways, renders
competition all the more impossible, and brings it still more clearly
within the province of the state. That it makes the assumption of
the railroad business by the state a most serious matter is not to
be denied. Even if it were possible, which may well be doubted, as
has been sometimes proposed, to have the roadway maintained by the
state, leaving the furnishing of trains to private enterprise, it
would be still a most serious matter. But look at it which way we
may, it is so serious a matter that it must be faced. As the individual
grows from childhood to maturity, he must meet difficulties and accept
responsibilities from which he well might shrink. So is it with society.
New powers bring new duties and new responsibilities. Imprudence in
going forward involves danger, but it is fatal to stand still. And
however great be the difficulties involved in the assumption of the
railroad business by the state, much greater difficulties are involved
in the refusal to assume it.
[22] It is not necessary
to go into any elaborate argument to show that the ownership and management
of railroads are functions of the state. That is proved beyond dispute
by the logic of events and of existing facts. Nothing is more obvious
-- at least in the United States, where the tendencies of modern development
may be seen much more clearly than in Europe -- than that a union
of railroading with the other functions of government is inevitable.
We may not like it, but we cannot avoid it. Either government must
manage the railroads, or the railroads must manage the government.
There is no escape. To refuse one horn of the dilemma is to be impaled
on the other.
[23] As for any satisfactory
state regulation of railroads, the experience of our States shows
it to be impossible. A strong-willed despot, clothed with arbitrary
power, might curb such leviathans; but popular governments cannot.
The power of the whole people is, of course, greater than the power
of the railroads, but it cannot be exerted steadily and in details.
Even a small special interest is, by reason of its intelligence, compactness
and flexibility, more than a match for large and vague general interests;
it has the advantage which belongs to a well-armed and disciplined
force in dealing with a mob. But in the number of its employees, the
amount of its revenues, and the extent of the interests which it controls,
the railroad power is gigantic. And, growing faster than the growth
of the country, it is tending still faster to concentration. It may
be that the man is already born who will control the whole railroad
system of the United States, as Vanderbilt, Gould and Huntington now
control great sections of it.
[24] Practical politicians
all over the United States recognize the utter hopelessness of contending
with the railroad power. In many if not in most of the States, no
prudent man will run for office if he believes the railroad power
is against him. Yet in the direct appeal to the people a power of
this kind is weakest, and railroad kings rule States where, on any
issues that came fairly before the people, they would be voted down.
It is by throwing their weight into primaries, and managing conventions,
by controlling the press, manipulating legislatures, and filling the
bench with their creatures, that the railroads best exert political
power. The people of California, for instance, have voted against
the railroad time and again, or rather imagined they did, and even
adopted a very bad new constitution because they supposed the railroad
was against it. The result is, that the great railroad company, of
whose domain California, with an area greater than twice that of Great
Britain, is but one of the provinces, absolutely dominates the State.
The men who really fought it are taken into its service or crushed,
and powers are exerted in the interests of the corporation managers
which no government would dare attempt. This company, heavily subsidized,
in the first place, as a great public convenience, levies on commerce,
not tolls, but tariffs. If a man goes into business requiring transportation
he must exhibit his profits and take it into partnership for the lion's
share. Importers are bound by an "iron-clad agreement" to give its
agents access to their books, and if they do anything the company
deems against its interests they are fined or ruined by being placed
at a disadvantage to their rivals in business. Three continental railroads
heavily subsidized by the nation under the impression that the competition
would keep down rates, have now reached the Pacific. Instead of competing
they have pooled their receipts. The line of steamers from San Francisco
to New York via the Isthmus receives $100,000 a month to keep up fares
and freights to a level with those exacted by the railroad, and if
you would send goods from New York to San Francisco by way of the
Isthmus, the cheapest way is first to ship them to England. Shippers
to interior points are charged as much as though their goods were
carried to the end of the road and then shipped back again; and even,
by means of the agreements mentioned, an embargo is laid upon ocean
commerce by sailing-vessels, wherever it might interfere with the
monopoly.
[25] I speak of California
only as an instance. The power of the railroads is apparent in State
after State, as it is in the National Government. Nothing can be clearer
than that, if present conditions must continue, the American people
might as well content themselves to surrender political power to these
great corporations and their affiliated interests. There is no escape
from this. The railroad managers cannot keep out of politics, even
if they wished to. The difficulties of the railroad question do not
arise from the fact that peculiarly bad men have got control of the
railroads; they arise from the nature of the railroad business and
its intimate relations to other interests and industries.
[26] But it will be
said: "If the railroads are even now a corrupting element in our politics,
what would they be if the government were to own and to attempt to
run them? Is not governmental management notoriously corrupt and inefficient?
Would not the effect of adding such a vast army to the already great
number of government employees, of increasing so enormously the revenues
and expenditures of government, be to enable those who got control
of government to defy opposition and perpetuate their power indefinitely;
and would it not be, finally, to sink the whole political organization
in a hopeless slough of corruption?"
[27] My reply is, that
great as these dangers may be, they must be faced, lest worse befall
us. When a gale sets him on a lee shore, the seaman must make sail,
even at the risk of having his canvas fly from the bolt-ropes and
his masts go by the board. The dangers of wind and sea urge him to
make everything snug as may be, alow and aloft; to get rid of anything
that might diminish the weatherly qualities of his ship, and to send
his best helmsman to the wheel, -- not supinely to accept the certain
destruction of the rocks.
[28] Instead of belittling
the dangers of adding to the functions of government as it is at present,
what I am endeavoring to point out is the urgent necessity of simplifying
and improving government, that it may safely assume the additional
functions that social development forces upon it. It is not merely
necessary to prevent government from getting more corrupt and more
inefficient, though we can no more do that by a negative policy than
the seaman can lay to in a gale without drifting; it is necessary
to make government much more efficient and much less corrupt. The
dangers that menace us are not accidental. They spring from a universal
law which we cannot escape. That law is the one I pointed out in the
first chapter of this book -- that every advance brings new dangers
and requires higher and more alert intelligence. As the more highly
organized animal cannot live unless it have a more fully developed
brain than those of lower animal organizations, so the more highly
organized society must perish unless it bring to the management of
social affairs greater intelligence and higher moral sense. The great
material advances which modern invention has enabled us to make, necessitate
corresponding social and political advances. Nature knows no "Baby
Act." We must live up to her conditions or not live at all.
[29] My purpose here
is to show how important it is that we simplify government, purify
politics and improve social conditions, as a preliminary to showing
how much in all these directions may be accomplished by one single
great reform. But although I shall be obliged to do so briefly, it
may be worth while, even if briefly, to call attention to some principles
that should not be forgotten in thinking of the assumption by the
state of such functions as the running of railroads.
[30] In the first place,
I think it may be accepted as a principle proved by experience, that
any considerable interest having necessary relations with government
is more corruptive of government when acting upon government from
without than when assumed by government. Let a ship in mid-ocean drop
her anchor and pay out her cable, and though she would be relieved
of some weight, since part of the weight of anchor and cable would
be supported by the water, not only would her progress be retarded,
but she would refuse to answer her helm, and become utterly unmanageable.
Yet, assumed as part of the ship, and properly stowed on board, anchor
and cable no longer perceptibly interfere with her movements.
[31] A standing army
is a corrupting influence, and a danger to popular liberties; but
who would maintain that on this ground it were wiser, if a standing
army must be kept, that it should be enlisted and paid by private
parties, and hired of them by the state? Such an army would be far
more corrupting and far more dangerous than one maintained directly
by the state, and would soon make its leaders masters of the state.
[32] I do not think
the postal department of the government, with its extensive ramifications
and its numerous employees, begins to be as important a factor in
our politics, or exerts so corrupting an influence, as would a private
corporation carrying on this business, and which would be constantly
tempted or forced into politics to procure favorable or prevent unfavorable
legislation. Where individual States and the General Government have
substituted public printing-offices for Public Printers, who themselves
furnished material and hired labor, I think the result has been to
lessen, not to increase, corruptive influences; and speaking generally,
I think experience shows that in all departments of government the
system of contracting for work and supplies has, on the whole, led
to more corruption than the system of direct employment. The reason
I take to be, that there is in one case a much greater concentration
of corruptive interests and power than in the other.
[33] The inefficiency,
extravagance and corruption which we commonly attribute to governmental
management are mostly in those departments which do not come under
the public eye, and little concern, if they concern at all, public
convenience. Whether the six new steel cruisers which the persistent
lobbying of contractors has induced Congress to order, are well or
ill built the American people will never know, except as they learn
through the newspapers, and the fact will no more affect their comfort
and convenience than does the fitting of the Sultan's new breeches,
or the latest changes in officers' uniforms which it has pleased the
Secretary of the Navy to order. But let the mails go astray or the
postman fail in his rounds, and there is at once an outcry. The post-office
department is managed with greater efficiency than any other department
of the National Government, because it comes close to the people.
To say the very least, it is managed as efficiently as any private
company could manage such a vast business, and I think, on the whole,
as economically. And the scandals and abuses that have arisen in it
have been, for the most part, as to out-of-the-way places, and things
of which there was little or no public consciousness. So in England,
the telegraph and parcel-carrying and savings-bank businesses are
managed by government more efficiently and economically than before
by private corporations.
[34] Like these businesses
-- perhaps even more so -- the railroad business comes directly under
the notice of the people. It so immediately concerns the interests,
the convenience and the safety of the great body, that under public
management it would compel that close and quick attention that secures
efficiency.
[35] It seems to me
that in regard to public affairs we too easily accept the dictum that
faithful and efficient work can be secured only by the hopes of pecuniary
profit, or the fear of pecuniary loss. We get faithful and efficient
work in our colleges and similar institutions without this not to
speak of the army and navy, or of the postal and educational departments
of government; and be this as it may, our railroads are really run
by men who, from switch-tender to general superintendent, have no
pecuniary interest in the business other than to get their pay --
in most cases paltry and insufficient -- and hold their positions.
Under governmental ownership they would have, at the very least, all
the incentives to faithfulness and efficiency that they have now,
for that governmental management of railroads must involve the principles
of civil service reform goes without the saying. The most determined
supporter of the spoils system would not care to resign the safety
of limb and life to engineers and brakemen appointed for political
services.
[36] Look, moreover,
at the railroad system as it exists now. That it is not managed in
the interests of the public is clear; but is it managed in the interests
of its owners? Is it managed with that economy, efficiency and intelligence
that are presumed to be the results of private ownership and control?
On the contrary, while the public interests are utterly disregarded,
the interests of the stockholders are in most cases little better
considered. Our railroads are really managed in the interests of unscrupulous
adventurers, whose purpose is to bull and bear the stock-market; by
men who make the interests of the property they manage subservient
to their personal interests in other railroads or in other businesses;
who speculate in lands and town sites, who give themselves or their
friends contracts for supplies and special rates for transportation,
and who often deliberately wreck the corporation they control and
rob stockholders to the last cent. From one end to the other, the
management of our railroad system, as it now exists, reeks with jobbery
and fraud.
[37] That ordinary roads,
bridges, etc., should not be maintained for profit, either public
or private, is an accepted principle, and the State of New York has
recently gone so far as to abolish all tolls on the Erie Canal. Our
postal service we merely aim to make self-sustaining, and no one would
now think of proposing that the rates of postage should be increased
in order to furnish public revenues; still less would any one think
of proposing to abandon the government postal service, and turn the
business over to individuals or corporations. In the beginning the
postal service was carried on by individuals with a view to profits.
Had that system been continued to the present day, it is certain that
we should not begin to have such extensive and regular postal facilities
as we have now, nor such cheap rates; and all the objections that
are now urged against the government assumption of the railroad business
would be urged against government carriage of letters. We never can
enjoy the full benefits of the invention of the railroad until we
make the railroads public property, managed by public servants in
the public interests. And thus will a great cause of the corruption
of government, and a great cause of monstrous fortunes, be destroyed.
[38] All I have said
of the railroad applies, of course, to the telegraph, the telephone,
the supplying of cities with gas, water, heat and electricity, --
in short to all businesses which are in their nature monopolies. I
speak of the railroad only because the magnitude of the business makes
its assumption by the state the most formidable of such undertakings.
[39] Businesses that
are in their nature monopolies are properly functions of the state.
The state must control or assume them, in self-defense, and for the
protection of the equal rights of citizens. But beyond this, the field
in which the state may operate beneficially as the executive of the
great co如erative association, into which it is the tendency of true
civilization to blend society, will widen with the improvement of
government and the growth of public spirit.
[40] We have already
made an important step in this direction in our public-school system.
Our public schools are not maintained for the poor, as are the English
board schools -- where, moreover, payment is required from all who
can pay nor yet is their main motive the protection of the state against
ignorance. These are subsidiary motives. But the main motive for the
maintenance of our public schools is, that by far the greater part
of our people find them the best and most economical means of educating
their children. American society is, in fact, organized by the operation
of government into co如erative educational associations, and with
such happy results that in no State where the public-school system
has obtained would any proposition to abolish it get respectful consideration.
In spite of the corruption of our politics, our public schools are,
on the whole, much better than private schools; while by their association
of the children of rich and poor, of Jew and Gentile, of Protestant
and Catholic, of Republican and Democrat, they are of inestimable
value in breaking down prejudice and checking the growth of class
feeling. It is likewise to be remarked as to our public-school system,
that corruptive influences seem to spring rather from our not having
gone far enough than from our having gone too far in the direction
of state action. In some of our States the books used by the children
are supplied at public expense, being considered school property,
which the pupil receives on entering the school or class, and returns
when leaving. In most of them, however, the pupils, unless their parents
cannot afford the outlay, are required to furnish their own books.
Experience has shown the former system to be much the better, not
only because, when books are furnished to all, there is no temptation
of those who can afford to purchase books falsely to plead indigence,
and no humiliation on the part of those who cannot; but because the
number of books required is much less, and they can be purchased at
cheaper rates. This not only effects a large economy in the aggregate
expenditure, but lessens an important corruptive influence. For the
strife of the great school-book publishers to get their books adopted
in the public schools, in which most of them make no scruple of resorting
to bribery wherever they can, has done much to degrade the character
of school boards. This corruptive influence can only be fully done
away with by manufacturing school-books at public expense, as has
been in a number of the States proposed.
[41] The public-library
system, which, beginning in the public-spirited city of Boston, is
steadily making its way over the country, and under which both reading
and lending libraries are maintained at public expense for the free
use of the public, is another instance of the successful extension
of the co如erative functions of government. So are the public parks
and recreation grounds which we are beginning to establish.
[42] Not only is it
possible to go much further in the direction of thus providing, at
public expense, for the public health, education and recreation, and
for public encouragement of science and invention, but if we can simplify
and purify government it will become possible for society in its various
sub-divisions to obtain in many other ways, but in much larger degree,
those advantages for its members that voluntary co如erative societies
seek to obtain. Not only could the most enormous economies thus be
obtained, but the growing tendency to adulteration and dishonesty,
as fatal to morals as to health, would be checked,*
and at least such an organization of industry be reached as would
very greatly reduce the appropriative power of aggregated capital,
and prevent those strifes that may be likened to wars. The natural
progress of social development is unmistakably toward co如eration,
or, if the word be preferred, toward socialism, though 1 dislike to
use a word to which such various and vague meanings are attached.
Civilization is the art of living together in closer relations. That
mankind should dwell together in unity is the evident intent of the
Divine mind, -- of that Will expressed in the immutable laws of the
physical and moral universe which reward obedience and punish disobedience.
The dangers which menace modern society are but the reverse of blessings
which modern society may grasp. The concentration that is going on
in all branches of industry is a necessary tendency of our advance
in the material arts. It is not in itself an evil. If in anything
its results are evil, it is simply because of our bad social adjustments.
The construction of this world in which we find ourselves is such
that a thousand men working together can produce many times more than
the same thousand men working singly. But this does not make it necessary
that the nine hundred and ninety-nine must be the virtual slaves of
the one.
[43] Let me repeat it,
though again and again, for it is, it seems to me, the great lesson
which existing social facts impress upon him who studies them, and
that it is all important that we should heed: The natural laws which
permit of social advance, require that advance to be intellectual
and moral as well as material. The natural laws which give us the
steamship, the locomotive, the telegraph, the printing-press, and
all the thousand inventions by which our mastery over matter and material
conditions is increased, require greater social intelligence and a
higher standard of social morals. Especially do they make more and
more imperative that justice between man and man which demands the
recognition of the equality of natural rights.
[44] "Seek first the
kingdom of God and his righteousness [right or just doing] and all
these things shall be added unto you." The first step toward a natural
and healthy organization of society is to secure to all men their
natural, equal and unalienable rights in the material universe. To
do this is not to do everything that may be necessary but it is to
make all else easier. And unless we do this nothing else will avail.
[45] I have in this
chapter touched briefly upon subjects that for thorough treatment
would require much more space. My purpose has been to show that the
simplification and purification of government are rendered the more
necessary, on account of functions which industrial development is
forcing upon government, and the further functions which it is becoming
more and more evident that it would be advantageous for government
to assume. In succeeding chapters 1 propose to show how, by recognizing
in practicable method the equal and unalienable rights of men to the
soil of their country, government may be greatly simplified, and corrupting
influences destroyed. For it is indeed true, as the French Assembly
declared, that public misfortunes and corruptions of government spring
from ignorance, neglect or contempt of human rights.
[46] Of course in this
chapter and elsewhere in speaking of government, the state, the community,
etc., I use these terms in a general sense, without reference to existing
political divisions. What should properly belong to the township or
ward, what to the county or State, what to the nation, and what to
such federations of nations as it is in the manifest line of civilization
to evolve, is a matter into which I have not entered. As to the proper
organization of government, and the distribution of powers, there
is much need for thought.
footnote
*There
are many manufactured articles for which the producer now receives
only a third of the price paid by the consumer, while adulteration
has gone far beyond detection by the individual purchaser. Not to
speak of the compounding of liquors, of oleomargarine and glucose,
a single instance will show how far adulteration is carried. The adulterations
in ground coffee have driven many people to purchase their coffee
in the bean and grind it themselves. To meet this, at least one firm
of large coffee-roasters, and I presume most of them, have adopted
an invention by means of which imitation coffee-beans, exactly resembling
in appearance the genuine article, are stamped out of a paste. These
they mix in large quantities with real coffee.
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