Preface / Introduction
Chapter 1 - Goods
Porters Who Work 36 Hours
Chapter
2 - Society's Indifference While Men Perish
Chapter
3 - Justification of the Existing Position by Science
Chapter
4 - The Assertion of Economic Science that Rural Laborers Must Enter the Factory
System
Chapter
5 – Why Learned Economists Assert What is False
Chapter
6 – Bankruptcy of The Socialist Ideal
Chapter
7 – Culture of Freedom
Chapter
8 – Slavery Exists Among Us
Chapter
9 – What is Slavery?
Chapter
10 - Laws Concerning Taxes, Land and Property
Chapter
11 - Laws the Cause of Slavery
Chapter
12 - The Essence of Legislation is Organized Violence
Chapter
13 - What are Governments?"
Chapter
14 - How Can Governments be Abolished?"
Chapter
15 - What Should Each Man Do?"
An
Afterword
Preface
/ Introduction
"They
that take the sword shall perish by the sword."
NEARLY fifteen years ago the census in
Moscow
evoked in me a series of
thoughts and feelings which I expressed as best I could in a book called 'What
Must We Do Then.' Towards the end of last year (1899) I once more reconsidered
the same questions, and the conclusions to which I came were the same as in that
book. But as I think that during these ten years I have reflected on the
questions discussed in ‘What Must We Do Then’ more quietly and minutely in
relation to the teachings at present existing and diffused among us, I now offer
the reader new considerations, leading to the same replies as before. I think
these considerations may be of use to people who are honestly trying to
elucidate their position in society and clearly to define the moral obligations
flowing from that position. I, therefore, publish them.
The
fundamental thought both of that book and of this article is the repudiation of
violence. That repudiation I learnt and understood from the Gospels, where it is
most clearly expressed in the words: It was said to you, ‘An Eye for an
Eye,’ -that is, you have been
taught to oppose violence by violence, but I teach you: ‘turn the other cheek
when you are struck,’ - that is, suffer violence, but do not employ it. I know
that the use of those great words-in consequence of the unreflectingly perverted
interpretations alike of Liberals and of Churchmen, who on this matter
agree-will be a reason for most so-called cultured people not to read this
article, or to be biased against it; but, nevertheless, I place those words as
the epigraph of this work.
I cannot prevent people who consider themselves enlightened from
considering the Gospel teaching to be an obsolete guide to life-a guide long
outlived by humanity. But I can indicate the source from which I drew my
consciousness of a truth which people are as yet far from recognizing, and which
alone can save men from their sufferings.
And this I do.
11 July, 1900
.
THE SLAVERY OF OUR TIMES
"Ye have heard that
it was said, An Eye for an Eye, and a Tooth for a Tooth" (Matt. v.38; Ex.
xxi. 24). "But I say unto you, Resist not him that is evil; but whosoever
smiteth thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also" (Matt. v.39).
"And if any man would go to law with thee, and take away thy coat, let him
have thy cloak also" (Matt. v.40). "Give to every one that asketh
thee; and of him that taketh away thy goods ask them not again" (Luke vi.
30). "And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them
likewise" (Luke vi. 31).
"And
all that believed were together, and had all things common" (Acts ii.
44)." "And Jesus said, When it is evening, ye say, it will be fair
weather, for the heaven is red" (Matt. xvi. 2). "And in the morning,
It will be foul weather to-day: for the heaven is red and lowering. Ye
hypocrites, ye know how to discern the face of the heaven; but ye cannot discern
the signs of the times" (Matt. xvi. 3).
"The
system on which all the nations of the world are acting is founded in gross
deception, in the deepest ignorance, or a mixture of both; so that under no
possible modification of the principles on which it is based can it ever produce
good to man; on the contrary, its practical results must ever be to produce evil
continually." -Robert Owen.
"We have much studied and much perfected of late the great civilized
invention of the division of labor, only we give it a false name. It is not,
truly speaking, the labor that is divided, but the men-divided into mere
segments of men, broken into small fragments and crumbs of life; so that all the
little piece of intelligence that is left in a man is not enough to make a pin
or a nail, but exhausts itself in making the point of a pin or the head of a
nail. Now, it is a good and desirable thing, truly, to make many pins a day; but
if we could only see with what crystal sand their points were polished-sand of
human souls- we should think there might be some loss in it also.
"Men may be beaten, chained, tormented, yoked like cattle,
slaughtered like summer flies, and yet remain in one sense, and the best sense,
free. But to smother their souls within them, to blight and hew into rotting
pollards the suckling branches of their human intelligence, to make the flesh
and skin . . . into leathern thongs to yoke machinery with-this is to be
slave-masters indeed. . It is verily this degradation of the operative into a
machine which is leading the mass of the nations into vain, incoherent,
destructive struggling for a freedom of which they cannot explain the nature to
themselves. Their universal outcry against wealth and against nobility is not
forced from them either by the pressure of famine or the sting of mortified
pride. These do much and have done much in all ages; but the foundations of
society were never yet shaken as they are at this day.
"It is not that men are ill-fed, but that they have no pleasure in
the work by which they make their bread, and, therefore, look to wealth as the
only means of pleasure.
"It
is not that men are pained by the scorn of the upper classes, but they cannot
endure their own; for they feel that the kind of labor to which they are
condemned is verily a degrading one, and makes them less than men. Never had the
upper classes so much sympathy with the lower, or charity for them, as they have
at this day, and yet never were they so much hated by them."-From "The
Stones of Venice," by John Ruskin, Vol. II, Chap. VI., §§ 13-16.
CHAPTER
I.
GOODS-PORTERS WHO WORK THIRTY-SEVEN HOURS
CHAPTER I
AN acquaintance of mine who works on the Moscow-Kursk Railway as a weigher, in
the course of conversation mentioned to me that the men who load the goods on to
his scales work for thirty-seven hours on end.
Though I
had full confidence in the speaker's truthfulness I was unable to believe him. I
thought he was making a mistake, or exaggerating, or that I misunderstood
something.
But the weigher narrated the conditions under which this work is done so
exactly that there was no room left for doubt. He told me that there are two
hundred and fifty such goods-porters at the Kursk station in Moscow. They were
all divided into gangs of five men, and were on piece-work, receiving from one
rouble to iR. 15 (say two shillings to two and fourpence, or forty-eight cents
to fifty-six cents) for one thousand poods (over sixteen tons) of goods received
or dispatched.
They come
in the morning, work for a day and a night at unloading the trucks, and in the
morning, as soon as the night is ended, they begin to reload, and work on for
another day. So that in two days they get one night's sleep.
Their work
consists of unloading and moving bales of seven, eight, and up to ten poods (say
252, 280 and up to nearly 364 pounds). Two men place the bales on the backs of
the other three who carry them. By such work they earn less than a ruble (two
shillings, or forty-eight cents) a day. They work continually without holiday.
The account given by the weigher was so circumstantial that it was
impossible to doubt it, but, nevertheless, I decided to verify it with my own
eyes, and I went to the goods-station.
Finding my
acquaintance at the goods-station, I told him that I had come to see what he had
told me about. "No one I mention it to believes it," said I.
Without
replying to me, the weigher called to some one in a shed. "Nikita, come
here."
From the door appeared a tall, lean workman in a torn coat.
"When did you begin work?"
"When? Yesterday morning."
"And where were you last night?"
"I was unloading, of course."
"Did you work during the night?" asked I.
"Of course we worked."
"And when did you begin work to-day?"
"We began in the morning-when else should we begin?"
"And when will you finish working?"
"When they let us go; then we shall finish!"
The four other Workmen of his gang came up to us. They all wore torn coats and
were without overcoats, though there were about -2O Reaumur of cold (13 below
zero, Fahrenheit).
I began to ask them about the conditions of their work, and evidently
surprised them by taking an interest in such a simple and natural thing (as it
seemed to them) as their thirty-six hour work.
They were
all villagers; for the most part fellow- countrymen of my own-from
Tula
; some, however, were from ArIa',
and some from Voro6nezh. They lived in
Moscow
in lodgings, some of them with
their families, but most of them without. Those who have come here alone send
their earnings home to the village.
They board
with contractors. Their food costs them ten rubles (say £1 Is., or five dollars
per month). They always eat meat, disregarding the fasts. Their work always
keeps them occupied more than hours running, because it takes more than half an
hour to get to their lodgings and from their lodgings, and, besides, they are
often kept at work beyond the time fixed.
Paying for their own food, they earn, by such thirty- seven-hour-on-end
work, about twenty-five rubles a month.
To my
question, why they did such convict work, they replied:
"Where is one to go to?"
"But why work thirty-six hours on end? Cannot the work be arranged in
shifts?"
"We do what we're told to."
"Yes; but why do you agree to it?"
"We agree because we have to feed ourselves. 'If you don't like it-be off!'
If one's even an hour late, one has one's ticket shied at one, and is told to
march; and there are ten men ready to take the place."
The men were all young, only one was somewhat older, perhaps about forty.
All their faces were lean, and had exhausted, weary eyes, as if the men were
drunk. The lean workman to whom I first spoke struck me especially by the
strange weariness of his look. I asked him whether he had not been drinking
to-day.
"I don't drink," answered he, in the decided way in which men
who really do not drink always reply to that question.
"And I do not smoke," added he.
"Do the others drink?" asked I.
"Yes; it is brought here."
"The work is not light, and a drink always adds to one's strength,"
said the older workman.
This workman had been drinking that day, but it was not in the least noticeable.
After some more talk with the workmen I went to watch the work.
Passing long rows of all sorts of goods, I came to some workmen slowly pushing a
loaded truck. I learned afterwards that the men have to shunt the trucks them-
selves and to keep the platform dear of snow, without being paid for the work.
It is so stated in the "Conditions of Pay." These workmen were just as
tattered and emaciated as those with whom I had been talking. When they had
moved the truck to its place I went up to them and asked when they had begun
work, and when they had dined.
I was told that they had started work at
seven o'clock
, and had only just dined. The
work had prevented their being let off sooner.
"And when do you get away?"
"As it happens; sometimes not till
ten o'clock
," replied the men, as if
boasting of their endurance. Seeing my interest in their position, they
surrounded me, and, probably taking me for an inspector, several of them
speaking at once, informed me of what was evidently their chief subject of
complaint-namely, that the apartment in which they could sometimes warm
themselves and snatch an hour's sleep between the day-work and the night-work
was crowded. All of them expressed great dissatisfaction at this crowding.
"There
may be one hundred men, and nowhere to lie down; even under the shelves it is
crowded," said dissatisfied voices. "Have a look at it yourself. It is
close here."
The room was certainly not large enough. In the thirty-six-foot room about
forty men might find place to lie down on the shelves.
Some of the men entered the room with me, and they vied with each other in
complaining of the scantiness of the accommodation.
"Even under the shelves there is nowhere to lie down," said
they.
These men, who in twenty degrees of frost, without overcoats, carry on their
backs 240 pound loads during thirty-six hours; who dine and sup not when they
need food, but when their overseer allows them to eat; living altogether in
conditions far worse than those of dray- horses, it seemed strange that these
people only complained of insufficient accommodation in the room where they warm
themselves. But though this seemed to me strange at first, yet, entering further
into their position, I understood what a feeling of torture these men, who never
get enough sleep, and who are half-frozen, must experience when, instead of
resting and being warmed, they have to creep on the dirty floor under the
shelves, and there, in the stuffy and vitiated air, become still weaker and more
broken down.
Only, perhaps, in that miserable hour of vain attempt to get rest and
sleep do they painfully realize all the horror of their life-destroying
thirty-seven-hour work, and that is why they are specially agitated by such an
apparently insignificant circumstance as the overcrowding of their room.
Having watched several gangs at work, and having talked with some more of
the men and heard the same story from them all, I drove home, having convinced
myself that what my acquaintance had told me was true.
It was true that for money, only enough to subsist on, people considering
themselves free men thought it necessary to give themselves up to work such as,
in the days of serfdom, not one slave-owner, however cruel, would have sent his
slaves to. Let alone slave-owners, not one cab- proprietor would send his horses
to such work, for horses cost money, and it would be wasteful, by excessive,
thirty-seven-hour work, to shorten the life of an animal of value.
CHAPTER II.
SOCIETY'S INDIFFERENCE WHILE MEN PERISH
To oblige men to work for
thirty-seven hours continuously without sleep, besides being cruel is also
uneconomical. And yet such uneconomical expenditure of human lives continually
goes on around us.
Opposite the house in which I live 1 is a factory of silk goods, built
with the latest technical improvements. About three thousand women and seven
hundred men work and live there. As I sit in my room now I hear the unceasing
din of the machinery, and know-for I have been there-what that din means. Three
thousand women stand, for twelve hours a day, at the looms amid a deafening
roar; winding, unwinding, arranging the silk threads to make silk stuffs. All
the women (except those who have just come from the villages) have an unhealthy
appearance. Most of them lead a most intemperate and immoral life. Almost all,
whether married or unmarried, as soon as a child is born to them send it off
either to the village or to the Foundlings' Hospital, where eighty per cent. of
these children perish. For fear of losing their places the mothers resume work
the next day, or on the third day after their confinement.
So that during twenty years, to my knowledge, tens of thousands of young,
healthy women-mothers-have ruined and are now ruining their lives and the lives
of their children in order to produce velvets and silk stuffs.
I met a beggar yesterday, a young man on crutches, sturdily built, but
crippled. He used to work as a navvy, with a wheelbarrow, but slipped and
injured himself internally. He spent all he had on peasant-women healers and on
doctors, and has now for eight years been home- less, begging his bread, and
complaining that God does not send him death.
How many such sacrifices of life there are that we either know nothing of,
or know of, but hardly notice, considering them inevitable!
I know men working at the blast-furnaces of the Tula Iron Foundry who, to
have one Sunday free each fort- night, will work for twenty-four hours-that is,
after working all day they will go on working all night. I have seen these men.
They all drink vodka to keep up their energy, and obviously, like those
goods-porters on the railway, they quickly expend not the interest, but the
capital of their lives.
And what
of the waste of lives among those who are employed on admittedly harmful work-in
looking-glass, cartridge, match, sugar, tobacco, and glass factories; in mines
or as gilders?
There are English statistics showing that the average length of life among
people of the upper classes is fifty- five years, and the average of life among
working people in unhealthy occupations is twenty-nine years.
Knowing
this (and we cannot help knowing it), we who take advantage of labor that costs
human lives should, one would think (unless we are beasts), not be able to enjoy
a moment's peace. But the fact is that we well-to-do people, liberals and
humanitarians, very sensitive to the sufferings not of people only, but also of
animals, unceasingly make use of such labor, and try to become more and more
rich-that is, to take more and more advantage of such work. And we remain
perfectly tranquil.
For instance, having learned of the thirty-seven-hour labor of the
goods-porters, and of their bad room, we at once send there an inspector, who
receives a good salary, and we forbid people to work more than twelve hours,
leaving the workmen (who are thus deprived of one-third of their earnings) to
feed themselves as best they can; and we compel the railway company to erect a
large and convenient room for the workmen. Then with perfectly quiet consciences
we continue to receive and dispatch goods by that railway, and we ourselves
continue to receive salaries, dividends, rents from houses or from land, etc.
Having learned that the women and girls at the silk factory, living far from
their families, ruin their own lives and those of their children, and that a
large half of the washerwomen who iron our starched shirts, and of the
typesetters who print the books and papers that while away our time, get
consumption, we only shrug our shoulders and say that we are very sorry things
should be so, but that we can do nothing to alter it, and we continue with
tranquil consciences to buy silk stuffs, to wear starched shirts and to read our
morning paper. We are much concerned about the hours of the shop assistants, and
still more about the long hours of our own children at school; we strictly
forbid carters to make their horses drag heavy loads, and we even organize the
killing of cattle in slaughter-houses, so that the animals may feel it as little
as possible. But how wonderfully blind we become as soon as the question
concerns those millions of workers who perish slowly, and often painfully, all
around us, at labors the fruits of which we use for our convenience and
pleasure!
CHAPTER III.
JUSTIFICATION OF THE EXISTING POSITION BY SCIENCE
THIS wonderful blindness which
befalls people of our circle can only be explained by the fact that when people
behave badly they always invent a philosophy of life which represents their bad
actions to be not bad actions at all, but merely results of unalterable laws
beyond their control. In former times such a view of life was found in the
theory that an inscrutable and unalterable will of God existed which
foreordained to some men a humble position and hard work and to others an
exalted position and the enjoyment of the good things of life.
On this
theme an enormous quantity of books were written and an innumerable quantity of
sermons preached. The theme was worked up from every possible side. It was
demonstrated that God created different sorts of people-slaves and masters; and
that both should be satisfied with their position. It was further demonstrated
that it would be better for the slaves in the next world; and afterwards it was
shown that although the slaves were slaves and ought to remain such, yet their
condition would not be bad if the masters would be kind to them. Then the very
last explanation, after the emancipation of the slaves, was that wealth is
entrusted by God to some people in order that they may use part of it in good
works, and so there is no harm in some people's being rich and others poor.
These explanations satisfied the rich and the poor (especially the rich)
for a long time. But the day came when these explanations became unsatisfactory,
especially to the poor, who began to understand their position. Then fresh
explanations were needed. And just at the proper time they were produced. These
new explanations came in the form of science --political economy: which declared
that it had discovered the laws which regulate division of labor and of the
distribution of the products of labor among men. These laws, according to that
science, are that the division of labor and the enjoyment of its products depend
on supply and demand, and capital, rent, wages of labor, values, profits, etc.;
in general, on unalterable laws governing man's economic activities.
Soon, on
this theme as many books and pamphlets were written and lectures delivered as
there had been treatises written and religious sermons preached on the former
theme, and still unceasingly mountains of pamphlets and books are being written
and lectures are being delivered; and all these books and lectures are as cloudy
and unintelligible as the theological treatises and the sermons, and they, too,
like the theological treatises, fully achieve their appointed purpose-that is,
they give such an explanation of the existing order of things as justifies some
people in tranquilly refraining from labor and in utilizing the labor of others.
The fact
that, for the investigations of this pseudo- science, not the condition of the
people in the whole world through all historic time was taken to show the
general order of things, but only the condition of people in a small country, in
most exceptional circumstances- England at the end of the Eighteenth and the
beginning of the Nineteenth Centuries -this fact did not in the least hinder the
acceptance as valid of the result to which the investigators arrived; any more
than a similar acceptance is now hindered by the endless disputes and
disagreements among those who study that science and are quite unable to agree
as to the meaning of rent, surplus value, profits, etc. Only the one fundamental
position of that science is acknowledged by all-namely, that the relations among
men are conditioned, not by what people consider right or wrong, but by what is
advantageous for those who occupy an advantageous position.
It is admitted as an undoubted truth that if in society many thieves and
robbers have sprung up who take from the laborers the fruits of their labor,
this happens not because the thieves and robbers have acted badly, but because
such are the inevitable economic laws, which can only be altered slowly by an
evolutionary process indicated by science; and therefore, according to the
guidance of science, people belonging to the class of robbers, thieves or
receivers of stolen goods may quietly continue to utilize the things obtained by
thefts and robbery.
Though the
majority of people in our world do not know the details of these tranquilizing
scientific explanations any more than they formerly knew the details of the
theological explanations which justified their position, yet they all know that
an explanation exists; that scientific men, wise men, have proved convincingly,
and continue to prove, that the existing order of things is what it ought to be,
and that, therefore, we may live quietly in this order of things without
ourselves' trying to alter it.
Only in this way can I explain the amazing blindness of good people in our
society who sincerely desire the welfare of animals, but yet with quiet
consciences devour the lives of their brother men.
CHAPTER IV.
THE ASSERTION OF ECONOMIC SCIENCE THAT RURAL LABORERS MUST ENTER THE FACTORY
SYSTEM
THE theory
that it is God's will that some people should own others satisfied people for a
very long time. But that theory, by justifying cruelty, caused such cruelty as
evoked resistance, and produced doubts as to the truth of the theory.
So now
with the theory that an economic evolution is progressing, guided by inevitable
laws, in consequence of which some people must collect capital, and others must
labor all their lives to increase those capitals, preparing themselves meanwhile
for the promised communization of the means of production; this theory, causing
some people to be yet more cruel to others, also begins (especially among common
people not stupefied by science) to evoke certain doubts.
For instance, you see goods-porters destroying their lives by thirty-seven
hours' labor, or women in factories, or laundresses, or typesetters, or all
those millions of people who live in hard, unnatural conditions of monotonous,
stupefying, slavish toil, and you naturally ask, What has brought these people
to such a state? And how are they to be delivered from it? And science replies
that these people are in this condition because the railway belongs to this
company, the silk factory to that gentle- man, and all the foundries, factories,
typographies, and laundries to capitalists, and that this state of things will
come right by work-people forming unions, co-operative societies, strikes, and
taking part in government, and more and more swaying the masters and the
government till the workers first obtain shorter hours and increased wages, and
finally all the means of production will pass into their hands, and then all
will be well. Meanwhile, all is going on as it should go, and there is no need
to alter anything.
This
answer must seem to an unlearned man, and particularly to our Russian folk, very
surprising. In the first place, neither in relation to the goods-porters, nor
the factory women, nor all the millions of other laborers suffering from heavy,
unhealthy, stupefying labor does the possession of the means of production by
capitalists explain anything. The agricultural means of production of those men
who are now working at the railway have not been seized by capitalists: they
have land, and horses, and plows, and harrows, and all that is necessary to till
the ground; also these women working at the factory are not only not forced to
it by being deprived of their implements of production, but, on the contrary,
they have (for the most part against the wish of the elder members of their
families) left the homes where their work was much wanted, and where they had
implements of production.
Millions of work-people in
Russia
and in other countries are in
like case. So that the cause of the miserable position of the workers cannot be
found in the seizure of the means of production by capitalists. The cause must
lie in that which drives them from the villages. That, in the first place.
Secondly, the emancipation of the workers from this state of things (even in
that distant future in which science promises them liberty) can be accomplished
neither by shortening the hours of labor, nor by increasing wages, nor by the
promised communization of the means of production.
All that cannot improve their position, for the misery of the laborer's
position-alike on the railway, in the silk factory and in every other factory or
workshop consists not in the longer or shorter hours of work (agriculturists
sometimes work eighteen hours a day, and as much as thirty-six hours on end, and
consider their lives happy ones), nor does it consist in the low rate of wages,
nor in the fact that the railway or the factory is not theirs, but it consists
in the fact that they are obliged to work in harmful, unnatural conditions often
dangerous and destructive to life, and to live a barrack4ife in towns -a life
full of temptations and immorality-and to do compulsory labor at another's
bidding.
Latterly the hours of labor have diminished and the rate of wages has
increased; but this diminution of the hours of labor and this increase in wages
have not improved the position of the worker, if one takes into account not
their more luxurious habits-watches with chains, silk kerchiefs, tobacco, vodka,
beef, beer, etc.- but their true welfare-that is, their health and morality, and
chiefly their freedom.
At the silk factory with which I am acquainted, twenty years ago the work
was chiefly done by men, who worked fourteen hours a day, earned on an average
fifteen rubles a month, and sent the money for the most part to their families
in the villages. Now nearly all the work is done by women working eleven hours,
some of whom earn as much as twenty-five rubles a month (over fifteen rubles on
the average), and for the most part not sending it home, but spend all they earn
here chiefly on dress, drunkenness and vice. The diminution of the hours of work
merely increases the time they spend in the taverns.
The same thing is happening, to a greater or lesser extent, at all the
factories and works. Everywhere, notwithstanding the diminution of the hours of
labor and the increase of wages, the health of the operatives is worse than that
of country workers, the average duration of life is shorter, and morality is
sacrificed, as cannot but occur when people are torn from those conditions which
most conduce to morality-family life, and free, healthy, varied and intelligible
agricultural work.
It is very possibly true that, as some economists assert, with shorter
hours of labor, more pay, and improved sanitary conditions in mills and
factories, the health of the workers and their morality improve in comparison
with the former condition of factory workers. It is possible also that latterly,
and in some places, the position of the factory hands is better in external
conditions than the position of the country population. But this is so (and only
in some places) because the government and society, influenced by the
affirmation of science, do all that is possible to improve the position of the
factory population at the expense of the country population.
If the condition of the factory-workers in some places is (though only in
externals) better than that of country people, it only shows that one can, by
all kinds of restrictions, render life miserable in what should be the best
external conditions, and that there is no position so unnatural and bad that men
may not adapt themselves to it if they remain in it for some generations.
The misery of the position of a factory hand, and in general of a
town-worker, does not consist in his long hours and small pay, but in the fact
that he is deprived of the natural conditions of life in touch with nature, is
deprived of freedom, is compelled to compulsory and monotonous toil at another
man's will.
And,
therefore, the reply to the questions, why factory and town workers are in a
miserable condition, and how to improve their condition, cannot be that this
arises because capitalists have possessed themselves of the means of production,
and that the workers' condition will be improved by diminishing their hours of
work, increasing their wages, and communalizing the means of production.
The reply to these questions must consist in indicating the causes which
have deprived the workers of the natural conditions of life in touch with
nature, and have driven them into factory bondage, and in indicating means to
free the workers from the necessity of foregoing a free, country life, and going
into slavery at the factories.
And, therefore, the question why town-workers are in a miserable condition
includes, first of all, the question, What reasons have driven them from the
villages, where they and their ancestors have lived and might live, where, in
Russia, people such as they do now live? and, What it is that drove and
continues to drive them against their will to the factories and works?
If there
are workmen, as in England, Belgium, or Germany, who for some generations have
lived by factory work, even they live so not at their own free will, but because
their fathers, grandfathers, and great-grandfathers were, in some way, compelled
to exchange the agricultural life which they loved for life which seemed to them
hard, in towns and in factories. First, the country people were deprived of
their land by violence, says Karl Marx, were evicted and brought to vagabondage,
and then, by cruel laws, they were tortured with pincers, with red-hot irons,
and were whipped, to make them submit to the condition of being hired laborers.
Therefore, the question how to free the workers from their miserable position
should, one would think, naturally lead to the question how to remove those
causes which have already driven some, and are now driving or threatening to
drive, the rest of the peasants from the position which they considered and
consider good, and have driven and are driving them to a position which they
consider bad.
Economic science, although it indicates in passing the causes that drove
the peasants from the villages, does not concern itself with the question how to
remove these causes, but directs all its attention to the improvement of the
worker's position in the existing factories and works, assuming, as it were,
that the worker's position at these factories and workshops is something
unalterable, some- thing which must at all costs be maintained for those who are
already in the factories, and must absorb those who have not yet left the
villages or abandoned agricultural work.
Moreover, economic science is so sure that all the peasants have
inevitably to become factory operatives in towns, that though all the sages and
all the poets of the world have always placed the ideal of human happiness in
the conditions of agricultural work; though all the workers whose habits are
unperverted have always preferred, and still prefer, agricultural labor to any
other; though factory work is always unhealthy and monotonous, while agriculture
is the most healthy and varied; though agricultural work is free - that is, the
peasant alternates toil and rest at his own will-while factory work, even if the
factory belongs to the workmen, is always enforced, in dependence on the
machines; though factory work is derivative, while agricultural work is
fundamental, and without it no factory could exist-yet economic science affirms
that all the country people not only are not injured by the transition from the
country to the town, but themselves desire it and strive towards it.
CHAPTER V.
WHY LEARNED ECONOMISTS ASSERT WHAT IS FALSE
HOWEVER
obviously unjust may he the assertion of the men of science that the welfare of
humanity must consist in the very thing that is profoundly repulsive to human
feelings-in monotonous, enforced factory labor-the men of science were
inevitably led to the necessity of making this obviously unjust assertion, just
as the theologians of old were inevitably led to make the equally evident unjust
assertion that slaves and their masters were creatures differing in kind, and
that the inequality of their position in this world would be compensated in the
next.
The cause
of this evidently unjust assertion is that those who have formulated, and who
are formulating, the laws of science belong to the well-to-do classes, and are
so accustomed to the conditions, advantageous for themselves, among which they
live, that they do not admit the thought that society could exist under other
conditions.
The condition of life to which people of the well-to-do classes are
accustomed is that of an abundant production of various articles necessary for
their comfort and pleasure, and these things are obtained only thanks to the
existence of factories and works organized
as at present. And, therefore, discussing the improvement of the workers'
position, the men of science belonging to the well- to-do classes always have in
view only such improvements as will not do away with the system of
factory-production and those conveniences of which they avail themselves.
Even the
most advanced economists-the Socialists, who demand the complete control of the
means of production for the workers-expect production of the same or almost of
the same articles as are produced now to continue in the present or in similar
factories with the present division of labor.
The difference, as they imagine it, will only be that in the future not
they alone, but all men, will make use of such conveniences as they alone now
enjoy. They dimly picture to themselves that, with the communization of the
means of production, they, too-men of science, and in general the ruling
classes-will do some work, but chiefly as managers, designers, scientists or
artists. To the questions, Who will have to wear a muzzle and make white lead?
Who will be stokers, miners, and cesspool- cleaners? they are either silent, or
foretell that all these things will be so improved that even work at cesspools
and underground will afford pleasant occupation. That is bow they represent to
themselves future economic conditions, both in Utopias such as that of Bellamy
and in scientific works.
According to their theories, the workers will all join unions and
associations, and cultivate solidarity among themselves by unions, strikes, and
participation in Parliament till they obtain possession of all the means of
production, as well as the land, and then they will be so well fed, so well
dressed, and enjoy such amusements on holidays that they will prefer life in
town, amid brick buildings and smoking chimneys, to free village life amid
plants and domestic animals; and monotonous, bell-regulated machine work to the
varied, healthy, and free agricultural labor.
Though this anticipation is as improbable as the anticipation of the
theologians about a heaven to be enjoyed hereafter by workmen in compensation
for their hard labor here, yet learned and educated people of our society
believe this strange teaching, just as formerly wise and learned people believed
in a heaven for workmen in the next world.
And learned men and their disciples, people of the well-to-do classes,
believe this because they must believe it. This dilemma stands before them:
either they must see that all that they make use of in their lives, from
railways to lucifer matches and cigarettes, represents labor which costs the
lives of their brother men, and that they, not sharing in that toil, but making
use of it, are very dishonorable men; or they must believe that all that takes
place takes place for the general advantage in accord with unalterable laws of
economic science. Therein lies the inner psychological cause, compelling men of
science, men wise and educated, but not enlightened, to affirm positively and
tenaciously such an obvious untruth as that the laborers, for their own
well-being, should leave their happy and healthy life in touch with nature, and
go to ruin their bodies and souls in factories and workshops.
CHAPTER VI.
BANKRUPTCY OF THE SOCIALIST IDEAL
BUT even
allowing the assertion (evidently unfounded as it is, and contrary to the facts
of human nature) that it is better for people to live in towns and to do
compulsory machine work in factories rather than to live in villages and work
freely at handicrafts, there remains, in the very ideal itself, to which the men
of science tell us the economic revolution is leading, an insoluble
contradiction. The ideal is that the workers, having become the masters of all
the means of production, are to obtain all the comforts and pleasures now
possessed by well-to-do people. They will all be well clothed, and housed, and
well nourished, and will all walk on electrically lighted, asphalt streets, and
frequent concerts and theaters, and read papers and books, and ride on motor
cars, etc. But that everybody may have certain things, the production of those
things must be apportioned, and consequently it must be decided how long each
workman is to work.
How is that to be decided?
Statistics may show (though very imperfectly) what people require in a
society fettered by capital, by competition, and by want. But no statistics can
show how much is wanted and what articles are needed to satisfy the demand in a
society where the means of production will belong to the society itself-that is,
where the people will be free.
The demands in such a society cannot be defined, and they will always
infinitely exceed the possibility of satisfying them. Everybody will wish to
have all that the richest now possesses, and, therefore, it is quite impossible
to define the quantity of goods that such a society will require.
Furthermore, how are people to be induced to work at articles which some
consider necessary and others consider unnecessary or even harmful?
If it be
found necessary for everybody to work, say six hours a day, in order to satisfy
the requirements of the society, who in a free society can compel a man work
those six hours, if he knows that part of the time is spent in producing things
he considers unnecessary or even harmful?
It is undeniable that under the present state of things most varied
articles are produced with great economy of exertion, thanks to machinery, and
thanks especially to the division of labor which has been brought to an extreme
nicety and carried to the highest perfection, and that those articles are
profitable to the manufacturers, and that we find them convenient and pleasant
to use. But the fact that these articles are well made and are produced with
little expenditure of strength, that they are profitable to the capitalists and
convenient for us, does not prove that free men would, without compulsion,
continue to produce them. There is no doubt that Krupp, with the present
division of labor, makes admirable cannons very quickly and artfully; N. M. very
quickly and artfully produces silk materials; X, Y. and Z. produce
toilet-scents, powder to preserve the complexion, or glazed packs of cards, and
K. produces whiskey of choice flavor, etc.; and, no doubt, both for those who
want these articles and for the owners of the factories in which they are made
it is very advantageous. But cannons and scents and whiskey are wanted by those
who wish to obtain control of the Chinese market, or who like to get drunk, or
are concerned about their complexions; but there will be some who consider the
production of these articles harmful. And there will always be people who
consider that besides these articles, exhibitions, academies, beer and beef are
unnecessary and even harmful. How are these people to be made to participate in
the production of such articles?
But even
if a means could be found to get all to agree to produce certain articles
(though there is no such means, and can be none, except coercion), who, in a
free society, without capitalistic production, competition, and its law of
supply and demand, will decide which articles are to have the preference? Which
are to be made first, and which after? Are we first to build the Siberian
Railway and fortify
Port Arthur
, and then macadamize the roads in our country districts, or
vice-versa? Which is to come first, electric lighting or irrigation of the
fields? And then comes another question, insoluble with free workmen, -- Which
men are to do which work? Evidently all will prefer hay-making or drawing to
stoking or cesspool-cleaning. How, in apportioning the work, are people to be
induced to agree?
No statistics can answer these questions. The solution can be only
theoretical; it may be said that there will be people to whom power will be
given to regulate all these matters. Some people will decide these questions and
others will obey them.
But besides the questions of apportioning and directing production and of
selecting work, when the means of production are communalized, there will be
another and most important question, as to the degree of division of labor that
can be established in a socialistically organized
society. The now existing division of labor is conditioned by the necessities of
the workers. A worker only agrees to live all his life underground, or to make
the one-hundredth part of one article all his life, or to move his hands up and
down amid the roar of machinery all his life, because he will otherwise not have
means to live. But it will only be by compulsion that a workman, owning the
means of production and not suffering want, can be induced to accept such
stupefying and soul-destroying conditions of labor as those in which people now
work. Division of labor is undoubtedly very profitable and natural to people;
but if people are free, division of labor is only possible up to a certain very
limited extent, which has been far overstepped in our society.
If one peasant occupies himself chiefly with bootmaking, and his wife
weaves, and another peasant plows, and a third is a blacksmith, and they all,
having acquired special dexterity in their own work, afterwards exchange what
they have produced, such division of labor is advantageous to all, and free
people will naturally divide their work in this way. But a division of labor by
which a man makes one one-hundredth of an article, or a stoker works in 1500 of
heat, or is choked with harmful gases, such divisions of labor is
disadvantageous, because though it furthers the production of insignificant
articles, it destroys that which is most precious-the life of man. And,
therefore, such division of labor as now exists can only exist where there is
compulsion. Rodbertus says that communal division of labor unites mankind. That
is true, but it is only free division, such as people voluntarily adopt, that
unites.
If people decide to make a road, and one digs, another brings stones, a
third breaks them, etc., that sort of division of work unites people. But if,
independently of the wishes, and sometimes against the wishes, of the workers, a
strategical railway is built, or an Eiffel tower, or stupidities such as fill
the Paris Exhibition, and one workman is compelled to obtain iron, another to
dig coal, a third to make castings, a fourth to cut down trees, and a fifth to
saw them up, without even having the least idea what the things they are making
are wanted for, then such division of labor not only does not unite men, but, on
the contrary, it divides them.
And,
therefore, with communalized implements of production, if people are free, they
will only adopt division of labour in so far as the good resulting will outweigh
the evils it occasions to the workers. And as each man naturally sees good in
extending and diversifying his activities, such division of labor as now exists
will evidently be impossible in a free society.
To suppose that with communalized means of production there will be such
an abundance of things as is now produced by compulsory division of labor is
like supposing that after the emancipation of the serfs the domestic orchestras2
and theaters, the home-made carpets and laces and the elaborate gardens which
depended on serf-labor would continue to exist as before. So that the
supposition that when the Socialist ideal is realized every one will be free,
and will at the same time have at his disposal everything, or almost everything,
that is now made use of by the well-to-do classes, involves an obvious self-
contradiction.
CHAPTER VII.
CULTURE OR FREEDOM
JUST what
happened when serfdom existed is now being repeated. Then the majority of the
serf-owners and of people of the well-to-do classes, if they acknowledged the
serf's position to be not quite satisfactory, yet recommended only such
alterations as would not deprive the owners of what was essential to their
profit; now, people of the well-to-do classes, admitting that the position of
the workers is not altogether satisfactory, propose for its amendment only such
measures as will not deprive the well-to-do classes of their advantages. As
well-disposed owners then spoke of "paternal authority," and, like
Go'g~,1 advised owners to be kind to their serfs, and to take care of them, but
would not tolerate the idea of emancipation,2 considering it harmful and
dangerous, just so the majority of well-to-do people to-day advise employers to
look after the well-being of their work- people, but do not admit the thought of
any such alteration of the economic structure of life as would set the laborers
quite free.
And just as advanced Liberals then, while considering serfdom to be an
immutable arrangement, demanded that the government should limit the power of
the owners, and sympathized with the serfs' agitation, so the Liberals of
to-day, while considering the existing order immutable demand that government
should limit the powers of capitalists and manufacturers, and they sympathize
with unions, and strikes, and, in general, with the workers' agitation. And just
as the most advanced men then demanded the emancipation of the serfs, but drew
up a project which left the serfs dependent on private land- owners, or fettered
them with tributes and land-taxes, so now the most advanced people demand the
emancipation of the workmen from the power of the capitalists, the
communalisation of the means of production, but yet would leave the workers
dependent on the present apportionment and division of labor, which, in their
opinion, must remain unaltered.
The teachings of economic science which are adopted, though without
closely examining their details by all those of the well-to-do classes who
consider themselves enlightened and advanced, seem
on a superficial examination to be liberal and even radical, containing as they
do attacks on the wealthy classes of society; but essentially that teaching is
in the highest degree conservative, gross and cruel. One way or another the men
of science, and in their train all the well-to-do classes, wish at all cost to
maintain the present system of distribution and division of labor, which makes
possible the production of that great quantity of goods which they make use of.
The existing economic order is, by the men of science and, following them, by
all the well-to-do classes, called culture; and in this culture-railways,
telegraphs, telephones, photographs, Roentgen rays, clinical hospitals,
exhibitions, and, chiefly, all the appliances of comfort- they see something so
sacrosanct that they will not allow even a thought of alterations which might
destroy it all, or but endanger a small part of these acquisitions. Everything
may, according to the teachings of that science, be changed except what it calls
culture. But it becomes more and more evident that this culture can exist only
while the workers are compelled to work. Yet men of science are so sure that
this culture is the greatest of blessings that they boldly proclaim the contrary
of what the lawyers once said, Fiat justitla, pereat mundus! They now say, Fiat
cultura, pereat justitia
And they not only say it, but act accordingly. Everything may be changed
in practice and in theory, but not culture; not all that is going on in
workshops and factories, and certainly not what is being sold in the shops.
But I think that enlightened people, professing the Christian law of
brotherhood and love to one's neighbor, should say just the contrary.
Electric lights and telephones and exhibitions are excellent, and so are
all the pleasure-gardens, with concerts and performances, and all the cigars,
and match-boxes, and braces, and motor cars, but they may all go to perdition,
and not they alone, but the railways, and all the factory-made chintz stuffs and
cloths in the world, if to produce them it is necessary that ninety-nine per
cent. of the people should remain in slavery and perish by thousands in
factories needed for the production of these articles. If, in order that London
or Petersburg may be lighted by electricity, or in order to construct
exhibition- buildings, or in order that there may be beautiful paints, or in
order to weave beautiful stuffs quickly and abundantly, it is necessary that
even a very few lives should be destroyed, or ruined, or shortened-and
statistics show us how many are destroyed-let London or Petersburg rather be lit
by gas or oil; let there rather be no exhibition, no paints, or materials, only
let there be no slavery, and no destruction of human lives resulting from it.
Truly enlightened people will always agree rather to go back to riding on horses
and using pack-horses, or even to tilling the earth with sticks or with one's
hands, than to travel on railways which regularly every year crush so many
people as is done in Chicago-merely because the proprietors of the railway find
it more profitable to compensate the families of those killed than to build the
line so that it should not kill people. The motto for truly enlightened people
is not, Fiat cultura, pereat justitia, but Fiat justitia, pereat cultura. But
culture, useful culture, will not be destroyed. Let justice be done, though the
world perish. It will certainly not be necessary for people to revert to tillage
of the land with sticks or to lighting up with torches. It is not for nothing
that mankind, in their slavery, have achieved such great progress in technical
matters. If only it is understood that we must not sacrifice the lives of our
fellow-men for our pleasure, it will be possible to apply technical improvements
without destroying men's lives, and to arrange life so as to profit by all such
methods giving us control of nature as have been devised and can be applied
without keeping our brother men in slavery.
CHAPTER VIII.
SLAVERY EXISTS AMONG US
IMAGINE a
man from the country quite different from our own, with no idea of our history
or of our laws, and suppose that, after showing him the various aspects of our
life, we were to ask him what was the chief difference he noticed in the lives
of people of our world? The chief difference which such a man would notice in
the way people live is that some people-a small number- who have clean, white
hands, and are well nourished and clothed and lodged, do very little and very
light work, or even do not work at all, but only amuse themselves, spending on
these amusements the results of millions of days devoted by other people to
severe labor; but other people, always dirty, poorly clothed and lodged and fed,
with dirty, horny hands, toil unceasingly from morning to night, and sometimes
all night long, working for those who do not work, but who continually amuse
themselves.
If between the slaves and slave-owners of to-day it is difficult to draw
as sharp a dividing line as that which separated the former slaves from their
masters, and if among the slaves of to-day there are some who are only
temporarily slaves and then become slave-owners, or some who, at one and the
same time, are slaves and slave- owners, this blending of the two classes at
their points of contact does not upset the fact that the people of our time are
divided into slaves and slave-owners as definitely as, in spite of the twilight,
each twenty-four hours is divided into day and night.
If the slave-owner of our times has no slave, John, whom he can send to
the cesspool, he has five shillings, of which hundreds of such Johns are in such
need that the slave-owner of our times may choose any one out of hundreds of
Johns and be a benefactor to him by giving him the preference, and allowing him,
rather than another, to climb down into the cesspool.
The slaves of our times are not all those factory and workshop hands only
who must sell themselves completely into the power of the factory and
foundry-owners in order to exist, but nearly all the agricultural laborers are
slaves, working, as they do, unceasingly to grow another's corn on another's
field, and gathering it into another's barn; or tilling their own fields only in
order to pay to bankers the interest on debts they cannot get rid of. And slaves
also are all the innumerable footmen, cooks, porters, housemaids, coachmen,
bathmen, waiters, etc., who all their life long perform duties most unnatural to
a human being, and which they themselves dislike.
Slavery exists in full vigor, but we do not perceive it, just as in
Europe
at the end of the Eighteenth
Century the slavery of serfdom was not perceived.
People of
that day thought that the position of men obliged to till the land for their
lords, and to obey them, was a natural, inevitable, economic condition of life,
and they did not call it slavery.
It is the
same among us: people of our day consider the position of the laborer to be a
natural, inevitable economic condition, and they do not call it slavery. And as,
at the end of the Eighteenth Century, the people of Europe began little by
little to understand that what formerly seemed a natural and inevitable form of
economic life-namely, the position of peasants who were completely in the power
of their lords-was wrong, unjust and immoral, and demanded alteration, so now
people today are beginning to understand that the position of hired workmen, and
of the working classes in general, which formerly seemed quite right and quite
normal, is not what it should be, and demands alteration.
The question of the slavery of our times is just in the same phase now in
which the question of serfdom stood in
Europe
towards the end of the Eighteenth Century, and in which the
questions of serfdom among us and of slavery in
America
stood in the second quarter of
the Nineteenth Century.
The slavery of the workers in our time is only beginning to be admitted by
advanced people in our society; the majority as yet are convinced that among us
no slavery exists.
A thing that helps people to day to misunderstand their position in this
matter is the fact that we have, in
Russia
and in
America
, only recently abolished
slavery. But in reality the abolition of serfdom and of slavery was only the
abolition of an obsolete form of slavery that had become unnecessary, and the
substitution for it of a firmer form of slavery and one that holds a greater
number of people in bondage. The abolition of serfdom and of slavery was like
what the 'Tartars of the
Crimea
did with their prisoners. They invented the plan of slitting
the soles of the slaves' feet and sprinkling chopped-up bristles into the
wounds. Having performed that operation, they released them from their weights
and chains. The abolition of serfdom in Russia and of slavery in America, though
it abolished the former method of slavery, not only did not abolish what was
essential in it, but was only accomplished when the bristles had formed sores in
the soles, and one could be quite sure that without chains or weights the
prisoners would not run away, but would have to work. (The Northerners in
America
boldly demanded the abolition
of the former slavery because among them the new, monetary slavery had already
shown its power to shackle the people. The Southerners did not perceive the
plain signs of the new slavery, and, therefore, did not consent to abolish the
old form.)
Among us in
Russia
serfdom was abolished only when all the land had been
appropriated. When land was granted to the peasants it was burdened with
payments, which took the place of the land-slavery. In
Europe
taxes that kept the people in
bondage began to be abolished only when the people had lost their land, were
unaccustomed to agricultural work and, having acquired town tastes, were quite
dependent on the capitalists.
Only then were the taxes on corn abolished in
England
. And they are now beginning,
in
Germany
and in other countries, to
abolish the taxes that fall on the workers and to shift them on to the rich,
only because the majority of the people are already in the hands of the
capitalists. One form of slavery is not abolished until another has already
replaced it. There are several such forms. And if not one, then another (and
sometimes several of these means together) keeps a people in slavery-that is,
places it in such a position that one small part of the people has full power
over the labor and the life of a larger number. In this enslavement of the
larger part of the people by a smaller part lies the chief cause of the
miserable condition of the people. And, therefore, the means of improving the
position of the workers must consist in this: First, in admitting that among us
slavery exists not in some figurative, metaphorical sense, but in the simplest
and plainest sense; slavery which keeps some people - the majority-in the power
of others-the minority; secondly, having admitted this, in finding the causes of
the enslavement of some people by others; and thirdly, having found these
causes, to destroy them.
CHAPTER IX.
WHAT IS SLAVERY?
IN what
does the slavery of our time consist? What are the forces that make some people
the slaves of others? If we ask all the workers in Russia and in Europe and in
America alike in the factories and in various situations in which they work for
hire, in towns and villages, what has made them choose the position in which
they are living, they will all reply that they have been brought to it either
because they bad no land on which they could and wished to live and work (that
will be the reply of all the Russian workmen and of very many of the Europeans),
or that taxes, direct and indirect, were demanded of them, which they could only
pay by selling their labor, or that they remain at factory work ensnared by the
more luxurious habits they have adopted, and which they can gratify only by
selling their labor and their liberty.
The first two conditions, the lack of land and the taxes, drive men to
compulsory labor; while the third, his increased and unsatisfied needs, decoy
him to it and keep him at it.
We can imagine that the land may be freed from the claims of private
proprietors by Henry George's plan, and that, therefore, the first cause driving
people into slavery-the lack of land-may be done away with. With reference to
taxes (besides the single-tax plan) we may imagine the abolition of taxes, or
that they should be transferred from the poor to the rich, as is being done now
in some countries; but under the present economic organization one cannot even
imagine a position of things under which more and more luxurious, and often
harmful, habits of life should not, little by little, pass to those of the lower
classes who are in contact with the rich as inevitably as water sinks into dry
ground, and that those habits should not become so necessary to the workers that
in order to be able to satisfy them they will be ready to sell their freedom.
So that this third condition, though it is a voluntary one-that is, it
would seem that a man might resist the temptation-and though science does not
acknowledge it to be a cause of the miserable condition of the workers, is the
firmest and most irremovable cause of slavery.
Workmen living near rich people always are infected with new requirements,
and obtain means to satisfy these requirements only to the extent to which they
devote their most intense labor to this satisfaction. So that workmen in
England
and
America
, receiving sometimes ten times
as much as is necessary for subsistence, continue to be just such slaves as they
were before.
Three causes, as the workmen themselves explain, produce the slavery in
which they live; and the history of their enslavement and the facts of their
position confirm the correctness of this explanation.
All the
workers are brought to their present state and are kept in it by these three
causes. These causes, acting on people from different sides, are such that none
can escape from their enslavement. The agriculturalist who has no land, or who
has not enough, will always be obliged to go into perpetual or temporary slavery
to the landowner, in order to have the possibility of feeding himself from the
land. Should he in one way or other obtain land enough to be able to feed
himself from it by his own labor, such taxes, direct and indirect, are demanded
from him that in order to pay them he has again to go into slavery.
If to escape from slavery on the land he ceases to cultivate land, and,
living on some one else's land, begins to occupy himself with a handicraft, or
to exchange his produce for the things he needs, then, on the one hand, taxes,
and on the other hand, the competition of capitalists producing similar articles
to those he makes, but with better implements of production, compel him to go
into temporary or perpetual slavery to a capitalist. If working for a capitalist
he might set up free relations with him, and not be obliged to sell his liberty,
yet the new requirements which he assimilates deprive him of any such
possibility. So that one way or another the laborer is always in slavery to
those who control the taxes, the land, and the articles necessary to satisfy his
requirements.
CHAPTER X.
LAWS CONCERNING TAXES, LAND AND PROPERTY
THE German
Socialists have termed the combination of conditions which put the worker in
subjection to the capitalists the iron law of wages, implying by the word
"iron'' that this law is immutable. But in these conditions there is
nothing immutable. These conditions merely result from human laws concerning
taxes, land, and, above all, concerning things which satisfy our
requirements-that is, concerning property. Laws are framed and repealed by human
beings. So that it is not some sociological "iron law," but ordinary,
man-made law that produces slavery. In the case in hand the slavery of our times
is very clearly and definitely produced not by some "iron" elemental
law, but by human enactments about land, about taxes, and about property. There
is one set of laws by which any quantity of land may belong to private people,
and may pass from one to another by inheritance, or by will, or may be sold;
there is another set of laws by which every one must pay the taxes demanded of
him unquestioningly; and there is a third set of laws to the effect that any
quantity of articles, by whatever means acquired, may become the absolute
property of the people who hold them. And in consequence of these laws slavery
exists.
We are so accustomed to all these laws that they seem to us just as
necessary and natural to human life as the laws maintaining serfdom and slavery
seemed in former times; no doubt about their necessity and justice seems
possible, and no one notices anything wrong in them. But Just as a time came
when people, having seen the ruinous consequences of serfdom, questioned the
justice and necessity of the laws which maintained it, so now, when the
pernicious consequences of the present economic order have become evident, one
involuntarily questions the justice and inevitability of the legislation about
land, taxes and property which produces these results.
As people formerly asked, Is it right that some people should belong to
others, and that the former should have nothing of their own, but should give
all the produce of their labor to their owners? so now we must ask ourselves, Is
it right that people must not use land accounted the property of other people;
is it right that people should hand over to others, in the form of taxes,
whatever part of their labor is demanded of them? Is it right that people may
not make use of articles considered to be the property of other people?
Is it right that people should not have the use of land when it is
considered to belong to others who are not cultivating it?
It is said that this legislation is instituted because landed property is
an essential condition if agriculture is to flourish, and if there were no
private property passing by inheritance people would drive one another from the
land they occupy, and no one would work or improve the land on which he is
settled. Is this true? The answer is to be found in history and in the facts of
to day. History shows that property in land did not arise from any wish to make
the cultivator's tenure more secure, but resulted from the seizure of communal
lands by conquerors and its distribution to those who served the conqueror. So
that property in land was not established with the object of stimulating the
agriculturalists. Present-day facts show the fallacy of the assertion that
landed property enables those who work the land to be sure that they will not be
deprived of the land they cultivate. In reality, just the contrary has
everywhere happened and is happening. The right of landed property, by which the
great proprietors have profited and are profiting most, has produced the result
that all, or most-that is, the immense majority of the agriculturalists-are now
in the position of people who cultivate other people's land, from which they may
be driven at the whim of men who do not cultivate it. So that the existing right
of landed property certainly does not defend the rights of the agriculturalists
to enjoy the fruits of the labor he puts into the land, but, on the contrary, it
is a way of depriving the agriculturalists of the land on which they work and
handing it over to those who have not worked it; and, therefore, it is certainly
not a means for the improvement of agriculture, but, on the contrary, a means of
deteriorating it.
About taxes it is said that people ought to pay them because they are
instituted with the general, even though silent, consent of all, and are used
for public needs to the advantage of all. Is this true?
The answer to this question is given in history and in present-day facts.
History shows that taxes never were instituted by common consent, but, on the
contrary always only in consequence of the fact that some people having obtained
power by conquest, or by other means over other people, imposed tribute not for
public needs, but for themselves. And the same thing is still going on. Taxes
are taken by those who have the power of taking them. If nowadays some portion
of these tributes, called taxes and duties, are used for public purposes, for
the most part it is for public purposes that are harmful rather than useful to
most people.
For instance, in
Russia
one-third of the revenue is
drawn from the peasants, but only One-Fiftieth of the revenue is spent on their
greatest need, the education of the people; and even that amount is spent on a
kind of education which, by stupefying the people, harms them more than it
benefits them. The other Forty-nine Fiftieths are spent on unnecessary things
harmful for the people, such as equipping the army, building strategical
railways, forts and prisons, or supporting the priesthood and the Court, and on
salaries for military and civil officials-that is, on salaries for those people
who make it possible to take this money from the people. The same thing goes on
not only in Persia, Turkey and India, but also in all the Christian and
constitutional states and democratic republics; money is taken from the majority
of the people quite independently of the consent or non-consent of the payers,
and the amount collected is not what is really needful, but as much as can be
got (it is known how Parliaments are made up, and how little they represent the
will of the people), and it is used not for the common advantage, but for what
the governing classes consider necessary for themselves-on wars in Cuba or the
Philippines, on taking and keeping the riches of the Transvaal, and so forth. So
that the explanation that people must pay taxes because they are instituted with
general consent, and are used for the common good, is as unjust as the other
explanation that private property in land is established to encourage
agriculture.
Is it true that people should not use articles needful to satisfy their
requirements if these articles are the property of other people?
It is asserted that the rights of property in acquired articles is
established in order to make the worker sure that no one will take from him the
produce of his labor. Is this true?
It is only necessary to glance at what is done in our world, where
property rights are defended with especial strictness, in order to be convinced
how completely the facts of life run counter to this explanation.
In our society, in consequence of property rights in acquired articles,
the very thing happens which that right is intended to prevent-namely, all
articles which have been, and continually are being, produced by working people
are possessed by, and as they are produced are continually taken by, those who
have not produced them.
So that the assertion that the right of property secures to the workers
the possibility of enjoying the products of their labor is evidently still more
unjust than the assertion concerning property in land, and it is based on the
same sophistry; first, the fruit of their toil is unjustly and violently taken
from the workers, and then the law steps in, and these very articles which have
been taken from the workmen unjustly and by violence are declared to be the
absolute property of those who have taken them.
Property, for instance, a factory acquired by a series of frauds and by
taking advantage of the workmen, is considered a result of labor and is held
sacred; but the lives of those workmen who perish at work in that factory and
their labor are not considered their property, but are rather considered to be
the property of the factory- owner, if he, taking advantage of the necessities
of the workers, has bound them down in a manner considered legal. Hundreds of
thousands of bushels of corn, collected from the peasants by usury and by a
series of extortions, are considered to be the property of the merchant, while
the growing corn raised by the peasants is considered to be the property of some
one else if he has inherited the land from a grandfather or great-grandfather
who took it from the people. It is said that the law defends equally the
property of the mill-owner, of the capitalist, of the landowner, and of the
factory or country laborer. The equality of the capitalist and of the worker is
like the equality of two fighters when one has his arms tied and the other has
weapons, but during the fight certain rules are applied to both with strict
impartiality. So that all the explanations of the justice and necessity of the
three sets of laws which produce slavery are as untrue as were the explanations
formerly given of the justice and necessity of serfdom. All those three sets of
laws are nothing but the establishment of that new form of slavery which has
replaced the old form. As people formerly established laws enabling some people
to buy and sell other people, and to own them, and to make them work, and
slavery existed, so now people have established laws that men may not use land
that is considered to belong to some one else, must pay the taxes demanded of
them, and must not use articles considered to be the property of others-and we
have the slavery of our times.
CHAPTER XI.
LAWS THE CAUSE OF SLAVERY
THE
slavery of our times results from three sets of laws-those about land, taxes,
and property. And, therefore, all the attempts of those who wish to improve the
position of the workers are inevitably, though unconsciously, directed against
those three legislations.
One set of people repeal taxes weighing on the working classes and
transfer them on to the rich; others propose to abolish the right of private
property in land, and attempts are being made to put this in practice both in
New Zealand and in one of the American States (the limitation of the landlord's
rights in Ireland is a move in the same direction) ; a third set-the
Socialists-propose to communalise the means of production, to tax incomes and
inheritances, and to limit the rights of capitalist-employers. It would,
therefore, seem as if the legislative enactments which cause slavery were being
repealed, and that we may, therefore, expect slavery to be abolished in this
way. But we need only look more closely at the conditions under which the
abolition of those legislative enactments is accomplished or proposed to be
convinced that not only the practical, but even the theoretical projects for the
improvement of the workers' position are merely the substitution of one
legislation producing slavery for another establishing a newer form of slavery.
Thus, for instance, those who abolish taxes and duties on the poor, first
abolishing direct dues and then transferring the burden of taxation from the
poor to the rich, necessarily have to retain, and do retain, the laws making
private property of landed property, means of production, and other articles, on
to which the whole burden of the taxes is shifted. The retention of the laws
concerning land and property keeps the workers in slavery to the landowners and
the capitalists, even though the workers are freed from taxes. Those who, like
Henry George and his partisans, would abolish the laws making private property
of land, propose new laws imposing an obligatory rent on the land. And this
obligatory land- rent will necessarily create a new form of slavery, because a
man compelled to pay rent, or the single tax, may at any failure of the crops or
other misfortune have to borrow money from a man who has some to lend, and he
will again lapse into slavery. Those who, like the Socialists, in theory, wish
to abolish the legislation of property m land and in means of production, retain
the legalization of taxes, and must, moreover, inevitably introduce laws of
compulsory labor-that is, they must re-establish slavery in its primitive form.
So that, this way or that way, all the practical and theoretical repeals
of certain laws maintaining slavery in one form have always and do always
replace it by new legislation creating slavery in another and fresh form.
What happens is something like what a jailer might do who shifted a
prisoner's chains from the neck to the arms, and from the arms to the legs, or
took them off and substituted bolts and bars. All the improvements that have
hitherto taken place in the position of the workers have been of this kind.
The laws giving a master the right to compel his slaves to do compulsory
work were replaced by laws allowing the masters to own all the land. The laws
allowing all the land to become the private property of the masters may be
replaced by taxation-laws, the control of the taxes being in the hands of the
masters. The taxation-laws are replaced by others defending the right of private
property in articles of use and in the means of production. The laws of right of
property in land and in articles of use and means of production it is proposed
to replace by the enactment of compulsory labour.
So it is evident that the abolition of one form of legalization producing
the slavery of our time, whether taxes, or landowning, or property in articles
of use or in the means of production, will not destroy slavery, but will only
repeal one of its forms, which will immediately be replaced by a new one, as was
the case with the abolition of chattel-slavery, of serfdom, and with the repeals
of taxes. Even the repeal of all three groups of laws together will not abolish
slavery, but evoke a new and as yet unknown form of it, which is now already
beginning to show itself and to restrain the freedom of labor by legislation
concerning the hours of work, the age and state of health of the workers, as
well as by demanding obligatory attendance at schools, deductions for old-age
insurance or accidents, by all the measures of factory- inspection, the
restrictions on co-operative societies, etc.
All this
is nothing but the transference of legalization- preparing a new and as yet
untried form of slavery.
So that it becomes evident that the essence of slavery lies not in those
three roots of legislation on which it now rests, and not even in such or such
other legislative enactments, but in the fact that legislation exists; that
there are people who have power to decree laws profitable for themselves, and
that as long as people have that power there will be slavery.
Formerly it was profitable for people to have chattel- slaves, and they
made laws about chattel-slavery. Afterwards it became profitable to own land, to
take taxes, and to keep things one had acquired, and they made laws
correspondingly. Now it is profitable for people to maintain the existing
direction and division of labor; and they are devising such laws as will compel
people to work under the present apportionment and division of labor. Thus the
fundamental cause of slavery is legislation, the fact that there are people who
have the power to make laws.
What is
legislation? and what gives people the power to make laws?
CHAPTER XII.
THE ESSENCE OF LEGISLATION IS ORGANIZED
VIOLENCE
WHAT is
legislation? And what enables people to make laws?
There exists a whole science, more ancient and more mendacious and
confused than political economy, the servants of which in the course of
centuries have written millions of books (for the most part contradicting one
another) to answer these questions. But as the aim of this science, as of
political economy, is not to explain what now is and what ought to be, but
rather to prove that what now is what ought to be, it happens that in this
Science (of jurisprudence) we find very many dissertations about rights, about
object and subject, about the idea of a state and other such matters which are
unintelligible both to the students and to the teachers of this science, but we
get no clear reply to the question, What is legislation?
According to science, legislation is the expression of the will of the
whole people; but as those who break the laws, or who wish to break them, and
only refrain from fear of being punished, are always more numerous than those
who wish to carry out the code, it is evident that legislation can certainly not
be considered as the expression of the will of the whole people.
For instance, there are laws about not injuring telegraph posts, about
showing respect to certain people, about each man performing military service or
serving as a juryman, about not taking certain goods beyond a certain boundary,
or about not using land considered the property of some one else, about not
making money- tokens, not using articles which are considered to be the property
of others, and about many other matters.
All these laws and many others are extremely complex, and may have been
passed from the most diverse motives, but not one of them expresses the will of
the whole people.
There is but one general characteristic of all these laws-namely, that if
any man does not fulfil them, those who have made them will send armed men, and
the armed men will beat, deprive of freedom, or even kill the man who does not
fulfil the law.
If a man does not wish to give as taxes such part of the produce of his
labor as is demanded of him, armed men will come and take from him what is
demanded, and if he resists he will be beaten, deprived of freedom, and
sometimes even killed. The same will happen to a man who begins to make use of
land considered to be the property of another. The same will happen to a man who
makes use of things he wants, to satisfy his requirements or to facilitate his
work, if these things are considered to be the property of some one else. Armed
men will come and will deprive him of what he has taken, and if he resists they
will beat him, deprive him of liberty, or even kill him. The same thing will
happen to any one who will not show respect to those whom it is decreed that we
are to respect, and to him who will not obey the demand that he should go as a
soldier, or who makes monetary tokens.
For every non-fulfillment of the established laws there is punishment: the
offender is subjected by those who make the laws to blows, to confinement, or
even to loss of life.
Many constitutions have been devised, beginning with the English and the
American, and ending with the Japanese and the Turkish, according to which
people are to believe that all laws established in their country are established
at their desire. But every one knows that not in despotic countries only, but
also in the countries nominally most free-England, America, France-the laws are
made, not by the will of all, but by the will of those who have power; and,
therefore, always and everywhere are only such as are profitable to those who
have power, whether they are many, a few, or only one man. Everywhere and always
the laws are enforced by th