Trade Unions
Henry George: Political
Dangers (Chapter 2 of Social Problems,
1883)
[18] The people are largely
conscious of all this, and there is among the masses
much dissatisfaction. But there is a lack of that
intelligent interest necessary to adapt political
organization to changing conditions. The popular idea
of reform seems to be merely a change of men or a
change of parties, not a change of system. Political
children, we attribute to bad men or wicked parties
what really springs from deep general causes. Our two
great political parties have really nothing more to
propose than the keeping or the taking of the offices
from the other party. On their outskirts are the
Greenbackers, who, with a more or less definite idea of
what they want to do with the currency, represent vague
social dissatisfaction; civil service reformers, who
hope to accomplish a political reform while keeping it
out of politics; and anti-monopolists, who propose to
tie up locomotives with packthread. Even the
labor organizations seem to fear to go further in their
platforms than some such propositions as eight-hour
laws, bureaus of labor statistics, mechanics' liens,
and prohibition of prison contracts. ... read the
entire essay
Henry George: The Wages of
Labor
What most strikingly shows how opposed to
Christianity is the existing system of raising public
revenue is its influence on thought.
Christianity teaches us that all men
are brethren; that their true interests are harmonious, not
antagonistic. It gives us, as the golden rule of life, that
we should do to others as we would have others do to us.
But, out of the system of taxing the products and processes
of labor, and out of its effects in increasing the price of
what some have to sell and others must buy, has grown the
theory of “Protection,”
which denies this gospel, which holds Christ ignorant of
political economy, and proclaims laws for the nation
utterly at variance with His teaching.
This theory sanctifies national
hatreds; it inculcates a universal war of hostile tariffs;
it teaches peoples that their prosperity lies in imposing
on the productions of other peoples restrictions they do
not wish imposed, on their own; and, instead of the
Christian doctrine of man’s brotherhood, it makes
injury of foreigners a civic virtue. ...
The vice of Socialism in all its
degrees is its want of radicalism, of going to the
root.
Its advocates generally teach the
preposterous and degrading doctrine that slavery was the
first condition of labor. It assumes that the tendency of
wages to a minimum is the natural law, and seeks to abolish
wages; it assumes that the natural result of competition is
to grind down workers, and seeks to abolish competition by
restrictions, prohibitions, and extensions of governing
power. Thus, mistaking effects for causes, and childishly
blaming the state for hitting it, it wastes strength in
striving for remedies that when not worse are
futile.
Associated though it is in many
places with democratic aspiration, yet its essence is the
same delusion to which the Children of Israel yielded when,
against the protest of their prophet, they insisted on a
king; the delusion that has everywhere corrupted
democracies and enthroned, tyrants – that power over
the people can be used for the benefit of the people; that
there may be devised machinery that through human agencies
will secure for the management of individual affairs more
wisdom and mare virtue than the people themselves possess.
This superficiality and this tendency may be seen in all
the phases of Socialism.
Though not usually classed as
Socialists; both the Trade Unionists and the Protectionists
have the same essential character. Take, for instance,
Protectionism. The Protectionists seek by governmental
prohibitions or taxes on imports to regulate the industry
and control the exchanges of their country, so as they
imagine, to diversify home industries and prevent the
competition of people of other countries.
What support Protectionism
has, beyond the mere selfish desire of sellers to compel
buyers to pay them more than their goods are worth,
springs from such superficial ideas as that production,
not consumption, is the end of effort; that money is more
valuable than money’s worth, and to sell more
profitable than to buy; and, above all, from a desire to
limit competition, springing from an unanalysing
recognition of the phenomena that necessarily follow when
men who have the need to labor are deprived by monopoly
of access to the natural and indispensable element of all
labor.
Its methods involve the idea that
Governments can more wisely direct the expenditure of labor
and the investment of capital than can laborers and
capitalists, and that the men who control Governments will
use this power for the general good and not in their own
interests. They tend to multiply officials, restrict
liberty, invent crimes. They promote perjury, fraud, and
corruption. And they would, were the theory carried to its
logical conclusion, destroy civilisation and reduce mankind
to savagery.
Take Trades
Unionism. The Trade Unionists seek the increase of
wages, the reduction of working hours, and the general
improvement in the condition of wage workers by organising
them into guilds or associations which shall fix the rates
at which they will sell their labor, shall deal as one body
with employers in case of dispute, shall use on occasion
their necessary weapon, the strike, and shall accumulate
funds for such purposes and for the purpose of assisting
members when on strike, or (sometimes) when out of
employment.
While within narrow lines trades
unionism promotes the idea of the mutuality of interests,
and often helps to raise courage and further political
education, and while it has enabled limited bodies of
working-men to improve somewhat their condition, and gain,
as it were, breathing space, yet it takes no note of the
general causes that determine the condition of labor, and
strives for the elevation of only a small part of the great
body by means that cannot help the rest.
Aiming at the restriction of
competition – the limitation of the right to labor
– its methods are like those of an army, which even
in a righteous cause are subversive of liberty and liable
to abuse, while its weapon, the strike, is destructive in
its nature both to combatants and non-combatants, being a
form of passive war. To apply the principle of Trades
Unionism to all industry, as some dream of doing, would be
to enthrall men in a caste system.
Or take even such moderate measures
as the limitation of working hours and of the labor of
women and children. They are superficial in looking no
further than to the eagerness of men and women and little
children to work unduly, and in proposing forcibly to
restrain overwork while utterly ignoring its cause, the
sting of poverty that forces human beings to
it.
And the methods by which these
restraints must be enforced, multiply officials, interfere
with personal liberty, tend to corruption, and are liable
to abuse. ...
Working-men’s associations may
promote fraternity among their members, extend social
intercourse, and provide assurance in case of sickness or
death – but if they go no further they are powerless
to affect wages even among their members.
As to trade unions proper, the
attitude of many good people is one of warm approbation
provided that they do not go too far. For
these good people abject to strikes they reprehend
societies that do their best to get into their hands the
whole field of labor and to force working-men either to
join them or to starve; they discountenance the coercing of
employers, and seem to think that arbitration might take
the place of strikes. ...
Labor associations of the nature of
Trade Guilds or Unions are necessarily selfish. By the law
of their being they must fight for their own hand,
regardless of who is hurt; they ignore and must ignore the
teaching of Christ that we should do to others as we would
have them do to us, which a true political economy shows is
the only way to the full emancipation of the masses; they
must do their best to starve workmen who do not join them;
they must by all means in their power force back the
“blackleg” – as the soldier in battle
must shoot down his mother’s son if in the opposing
ranks!
And who is the blackleg? A
fellow-creature seeking work – a fellow creature in
all probability more pressed and starved than those who so
bitterly denounce him, and often with the hungry, pleading
faces of wife and child behind him. ...
read the whole
article
Henry George: The Condition of Labor
— An Open Letter to Pope Leo XIII in response to
Rerum Novarum (1891)
I have said enough to show your Holiness the injustice
into which you fall in classing us, who in seeking
virtually to abolish private property in land seek more
fully to secure the true rights of property, with those
whom you speak of as socialists, who wish to make all
property common. But you also do injustice to the
socialists.
There are many, it is true, who feeling bitterly the
monstrous wrongs of the present distribution of wealth
are animated only by a blind hatred of the rich and a
fierce desire to destroy existing social adjustments.
This class is indeed only less dangerous than those who
proclaim that no social improvement is needed or is
possible. But it is not fair to confound with them those
who, however mistakenly, propose definite schemes of
remedy.
The socialists, as I understand them, and as the term
has come to apply to anything like a definite theory and
not to be vaguely and improperly used to include all who
desire social improvement, do not, as you imply, seek the
abolition of all private property. Those who do this are
properly called communists. What the socialists seek is
the state assumption of capital (in which they vaguely
and erroneously include land), or more properly speaking,
of large capitals, and state management and direction of
at least the larger operations of industry. In this way
they hope to abolish interest, which they regard as a
wrong and an evil; to do away with the gains of
exchangers, speculators, contractors and middlemen, which
they regard as waste; to do away with the wage system and
secure general cooperation; and to prevent competition,
which they deem the fundamental cause of the
impoverishment of labor. The more moderate of them,
without going so far, go in the same direction, and seek
some remedy or palliation of the worst forms of poverty
by government regulation. The essential character of
socialism is that it looks to the extension of the
functions of the state for the remedy of social evils;
that it would substitute regulation and direction for
competition; and intelligent control by organized society
for the free play of individual desire and effort.
Though not usually classed as socialists, both
the trades-unionists and the protectionists have the same
essential character. The trades-unionists seek
the increase of wages, the reduction of working-hours and
the general improvement in the condition of wage-workers,
by organizing them into guilds or associations which
shall fix the rates at which they will sell their labor;
shall deal as one body with employers in case of dispute;
shall use on occasion their necessary weapon, the strike;
and shall accumulate funds for such purposes and for the
purpose of assisting members when on a strike, or
(sometimes) when out of employment. The protectionists
seek by governmental prohibitions or taxes on imports to
regulate the industry and control the exchanges of each
country, so as, they imagine, to diversify home
industries and prevent the competition of people of other
countries. ...
With the socialists we have some points of agreement,
for we recognize fully the social nature of man and
believe that all monopolies should be held and governed
by the state. In these, and in directions where the
general health, knowledge, comfort and convenience might
be improved, we, too, would extend the functions of the
state.
But it seems to us the vice of socialism in all its
degrees is its want of radicalism, of going to the root.
It takes its theories from those who have sought to
justify the impoverishment of the masses, and its
advocates generally teach the preposterous and degrading
doctrine that slavery was the first condition of labor.
It assumes that the tendency of wages to a minimum is the
natural law, and seeks to abolish wages; it assumes that
the natural result of competition is to grind down
workers, and seeks to abolish competition by
restrictions, prohibitions and extensions of governing
power. Thus mistaking effects for causes, and childishly
blaming the stone for hitting it, it wastes strength in
striving for remedies that when not worse are futile.
Associated though it is in many places with democratic
aspiration, yet its essence is the same delusion to which
the children of Israel yielded when against the protest
of their prophet they insisted on a king; the delusion
that has everywhere corrupted democracies and enthroned
tyrants — that power over the people can be used
for the benefit of the people; that there may be devised
machinery that through human agencies will secure for the
management of individual affairs more wisdom and more
virtue than the people themselves possess. This
superficiality and this tendency may be seen in all the
phases of socialism.
Take, for instance, protectionism. What support it
has, beyond the mere selfish desire of sellers to compel
buyers to pay them more than their goods are worth,
springs from such superficial ideas as that production,
not consumption, is the end of effort; that money is more
valuable than money’s-worth, and to sell more
profitable than to buy; and above all from a desire to
limit competition, springing from an unanalyzing
recognition of the phenomena that necessarily follow when
men who have the need to labor are deprived by monopoly
of access to the natural and indispensable element of all
labor. Its methods involve the idea that governments can
more wisely direct the expenditure of labor and the
investment of capital than can laborers and capitalists,
and that the men who control governments will use this
power for the general good and not in their own
interests. They tend to multiply officials, restrict
liberty, invent crimes. They promote perjury, fraud and
corruption. And they would, were the theory carried to
its logical conclusion, destroy civilization and reduce
mankind to savagery.
Take trades-unionism. While within narrow
lines trades-unionism promotes the idea of the mutuality
of interests, and often helps to raise courage and
further political education, and while it has enabled
limited bodies of working-men to improve somewhat their
condition, and gain, as it were, breathing-space, yet it
takes no note of the general causes that determine the
conditions of labor, and strives for the elevation of
only a small part of the great body by means that cannot
help the rest. Aiming at the restriction of competition
— the limitation of the right to labor, its methods
are like those of an army, which even in a righteous
cause are subversive of liberty and liable to abuse,
while its weapon, the strike, is destructive in its
nature, both to combatants and non-combatants, being a
form of passive war. To apply the principle of
trades-unions to all industry, as some dream of doing,
would be to enthrall men in a caste system.
Or take even such moderate measures as the
limitation of working-hours and of the labor of women and
children. They are superficial in looking no further than
to the eagerness of men and women and little children to
work unduly, and in proposing forcibly to restrain
overwork while utterly ignoring its cause — the
sting of poverty that forces human beings to it. And the
methods by which these restraints must be enforced,
multiply officials, interfere with personal liberty, tend
to corruption, and are liable to abuse.
As for thoroughgoing socialism, which is the more to
be honored as having the courage of its convictions, it
would carry these vices to full expression. Jumping to
conclusions without effort to discover causes, it fails
to see that oppression does not come from the nature of
capital, but from the wrong that robs labor of capital by
divorcing it from land, and that creates a fictitious
capital that is really capitalized monopoly. It fails to
see that it would be impossible for capital to oppress
labor were labor free to the natural material of
production; that the wage system in itself springs from
mutual convenience, being a form of cooperation in which
one of the parties prefers a certain to a contingent
result; and that what it calls the “iron law of
wages” is not the natural law of wages, but only
the law of wages in that unnatural condition in which men
are made helpless by being deprived of the materials for
life and work. It fails to see that what it mistakes for
the evils of competition are really the evils of
restricted competition — are due to a one-sided
competition to which men are forced when deprived of
land. While its methods, the organization of men into
industrial armies, the direction and control of all
production and exchange by governmental or
semi-governmental bureaus, would, if carried to full
expression, mean Egyptian despotism.
We differ from the socialists in our diagnosis of the
evil and we differ from them as to remedies. We have no
fear of capital, regarding it as the natural handmaiden
of labor; we look on interest in itself as natural and
just; we would set no limit to accumulation, nor impose
on the rich any burden that is not equally placed on the
poor; we see no evil in competition, but deem
unrestricted competition to be as necessary to the health
of the industrial and social organism as the free
circulation of the blood is to the health of the bodily
organism — to be the agency whereby the fullest
cooperation is to be secured. We would simply take for
the community what belongs to the community, the value
that attaches to land by the growth of the community;
leave sacredly to the individual all that belongs to the
individual; and, treating necessary monopolies as
functions of the state, abolish all restrictions and
prohibitions save those required for public health,
safety, morals and convenience.
But the fundamental difference — the difference
I ask your Holiness specially to note, is in this:
socialism in all its phases looks on the evils of our
civilization as springing from the inadequacy or
inharmony of natural relations, which must be
artificially organized or improved. In its idea there
devolves on the state the necessity of intelligently
organizing the industrial relations of men; the
construction, as it were, of a great machine whose
complicated parts shall properly work together under the
direction of human intelligence. This is the reason why
socialism tends toward atheism. Failing to see the order
and symmetry of natural law, it fails to recognize
God.
On the other hand, we who call ourselves single-tax
men (a name which expresses merely our practical
propositions) see in the social and industrial relations
of men not a machine which requires construction, but an
organism which needs only to be suffered to grow. We see
in the natural social and industrial laws such harmony as
we see in the adjustments of the human body, and that as
far transcends the power of man’s intelligence to
order and direct as it is beyond man’s intelligence
to order and direct the vital movements of his frame. We
see in these social and industrial laws so close a
relation to the moral law as must spring from the same
Authorship, and that proves the moral law to be the sure
guide of man where his intelligence would wander and go
astray. Thus, to us, all that is needed to remedy the
evils of our time is to do justice and give freedom. This
is the reason why our beliefs tend toward, nay are indeed
the only beliefs consistent with a firm and reverent
faith in God, and with the recognition of his law as the
supreme law which men must follow if they would secure
prosperity and avoid destruction. This is the reason why
to us political economy only serves to show the depth of
wisdom in the simple truths which common people heard
gladly from the lips of Him of whom it was said with
wonder, “Is not this the Carpenter of
Nazareth?”
And it is because that in what we propose — the
securing to all men of equal natural opportunities for
the exercise of their powers and the removal of all legal
restriction on the legitimate exercise of those powers
— we see the conformation of human law to the moral
law, that we hold with confidence that this is not merely
the sufficient remedy for all the evils you so strikingly
portray, but that it is the only possible remedy.
...
You state that you approach the subject with confidence,
yet in all that greater part of the Encyclical (19-67)
devoted to the remedy, while there is an abundance of
moral reflections and injunctions, excellent in
themselves but dead and meaningless as you apply them,
the only definite practical proposals for the improvement
of the condition of labor are:
1. That the state should step in to prevent
overwork, to restrict the employment of women and
children, to secure in workshops conditions not
unfavorable to health and morals, and, at least where
there is danger of insufficient wages provoking
strikes, to regulate wages (39-40).
2. That it should encourage the acquisition of
property (in land) by working-men (50-51).
3. That working-men’s associations should be
formed (52-67). These remedies so far as they go are
socialistic, and though the Encyclical is not without
recognition of the individual character of man and of
the priority of the individual and the family to the
state, yet the whole tendency and spirit of its
remedial suggestions lean unmistakably to socialism
— extremely moderate socialism it is true;
socialism hampered and emasculated by a supreme respect
for private possessions; yet socialism still. But,
although you frequently use the ambiguous term
“private property” when the context shows
that you have in mind private property in land, the one
thing clear on the surface and becoming clearer still
with examination is that you insist that whatever else
may be done, the private ownership of land shall be
left untouched. ...
I have already referred generally to the defects that
attach to all socialistic remedies for the evil condition
of labor, but respect for your Holiness dictates that I
should speak specifically, even though briefly, of the
remedies proposed or suggested by you.
Of these, the widest and strongest are that the state
should restrict the hours of labor, the employment of
women and children, the unsanitary conditions of
workshops, etc. Yet how little may in this way be
accomplished.
A strong, absolute ruler might hope by such
regulations to alleviate the conditions of chattel
slaves. But the tendency of our times is toward
democracy, and democratic states are necessarily weaker
in paternalism, while in the industrial slavery, growing
out of private ownership of land, that prevails in
Christendom today, it is not the master who forces the
slave to labor, but the slave who urges the master to let
him labor. Thus the greatest difficulty in enforcing such
regulations comes from those whom they are intended to
benefit. It is not, for instance, the masters who make it
difficult to enforce restrictions on child labor in
factories, but the mothers, who, prompted by poverty,
misrepresent the ages of their children even to the
masters, and teach the children to misrepresent.
But while in large factories and mines regulations as
to hours, ages, etc., though subject to evasion and
offering opportunities for extortion and corruption, may
be to some extent enforced, how can they have any effect
in those far wider branches of industry where the laborer
works for himself or for small employers?
All such remedies are of the nature of the remedy for
overcrowding that is generally prescribed with them
— the restriction under penalty of the number who
may occupy a room and the demolition of unsanitary
buildings. Since these measures have no tendency to
increase house accommodation or to augment ability to pay
for it, the overcrowding that is forced back in some
places goes on in other places and to a worse degree. All
such remedies begin at the wrong end. They are like
putting on brake and bit to hold in quietness horses that
are being lashed into frenzy; they are like trying to
stop a locomotive by holding its wheels instead of
shutting off steam; like attempting to cure smallpox by
driving back its pustules. Men do not overwork themselves
because they like it; it is not in the nature of the
mother’s heart to send children to work when they
ought to be at play; it is not of choice that laborers
will work under dangerous and unsanitary conditions.
These things, like overcrowding, come from the sting of
poverty. And so long as the poverty of which they are the
expression is left untouched, restrictions such as you
indorse can have only partial and evanescent results. The
cause remaining, repression in one place can only bring
out its effects in other places, and the task you assign
to the state is as hopeless as to ask it to lower the
level of the ocean by bailing out the sea.
Nor can the state cure poverty by regulating wages. It
is as much beyond the power of the state to regulate
wages as it is to regulate the rates of interest. Usury
laws have been tried again and again, but the only effect
they have ever had has been to increase what the poorer
borrowers must pay, and for the same reasons that all
attempts to lower by regulation the price of goods have
always resulted merely in increasing them. The general
rate of wages is fixed by the ease or difficulty with
which labor can obtain access to land, ranging from the
full earnings of labor, where land is free, to the least
on which laborers can live and reproduce, where land is
fully monopolized. Thus, where it has been comparatively
easy for laborers to get land, as in the United States
and in Australasia, wages have been higher than in Europe
and it has been impossible to get European laborers to
work there for wages that they would gladly accept at
home; while as monopolization goes on under the influence
of private property in land, wages tend to fall, and the
social conditions of Europe to appear. Thus, under the
partial yet substantial recognition of common rights to
land, of which I have spoken, the many attempts of the
British Parliament to reduce wages by regulation failed
utterly. And so, when the institution of private property
in land had done its work in England, all attempts of
Parliament to raise wages proved unavailing. In the
beginning of this century it was even attempted to
increase the earnings of laborers by grants in aid of
wages. But the only result was to lower commensurately
what wages employers paid.
The state could maintain wages above the tendency of
the market (for as I have shown labor deprived of land
becomes a commodity), only by offering employment to all
who wish it; or by lending its sanction to strikes and
supporting them with its funds. Thus it is, that the
thoroughgoing socialists who want the state to take all
industry into its hands are much more logical than those
timid socialists who propose that the state should
regulate private industry — but only a little.
The same hopelessness attends your suggestion that
working-people should be encouraged by the state in
obtaining a share of the land. It is evident that by this
you mean that, as is now being attempted in Ireland, the
state shall buy out large landowners in favor of small
ones, establishing what are known as peasant proprietors.
Supposing that this can be done even to a considerable
extent, what will be accomplished save to substitute a
larger privileged class for a smaller privileged class?
What will be done for the still larger class that must
remain, the laborers of the agricultural districts, the
workmen of the towns, the proletarians of the cities? Is
it not true, as Professor De Laveleye says, that in such
countries as Belgium, where peasant proprietary exists,
the tenants, for there still exist tenants, are
rack-rented with a mercilessness unknown in Ireland? Is
it not true that in such countries as Belgium the
condition of the mere laborer is even worse than it is in
Great Britain, where large ownerships obtain? And if the
state attempts to buy up land for peasant proprietors
will not the effect be, what is seen today in Ireland, to
increase the market value of land and thus make it more
difficult for those not so favored, and for those who
will come after, to get land? How, moreover, on the
principle which you declare (36), that “to the
state the interests of all are equal, whether high or
low,” will you justify state aid to one man to buy
a bit of land without also insisting on state aid to
another man to buy a donkey, to another to buy a shop, to
another to buy the tools and materials of a trade —
state aid in short to everybody who may be able to make
good use of it or thinks that he could? And are you not
thus landed in communism — not the communism of the
early Christians and of the religious orders, but
communism that uses the coercive power of the state to
take rightful property by force from those who have, to
give to those who have not? For the state has no purse of
Fortunatus; the state cannot repeat the miracle of the
loaves and fishes; all that the state can give, it must
get by some form or other of the taxing power. And
whether it gives or lends money, or gives or lends
credit, it cannot give to those who have not, without
taking from those who have.
But aside from all this, any scheme of dividing up
land while maintaining private property in land is
futile. Small holdings cannot coexist with the treatment
of land as private property where civilization is
materially advancing and wealth augments. We may see this
in the economic tendencies that in ancient times were the
main cause that transformed world-conquering Italy from a
land of small farms to a land of great estates. We may
see it in the fact that while two centuries ago the
majority of English farmers were owners of the land they
tilled, tenancy has been for a long time the all but
universal condition of the English farmer. And now the
mighty forces of steam and electricity have come to urge
concentration. It is in the United States that we may see
on the largest scale how their power is operating to turn
a nation of landowners into a nation of tenants. The
principle is clear and irresistible. Material progress
makes land more valuable, and when this increasing value
is left to private owners land must pass from the
ownership of the poor into the ownership of the rich,
just as diamonds so pass when poor men find them. What
the British government is attempting in Ireland is to
build snow-houses in the Arabian desert! to plant bananas
in Labrador!
There is one way, and only one way, in which
working-people in our civilization may be secured a share
in the land of their country, and that is the way that we
propose — the taking of the profits of
landownership for the community.
As to working-men’s associations, what your
Holiness seems to contemplate is the formation and
encouragement of societies akin to the Catholic
sodalities, and to the friendly and beneficial societies,
like the Odd Fellows, which have had a large extension in
English-speaking countries. Such associations may promote
fraternity, extend social intercourse and provide
assurance in case of sickness or death, but if they go no
further they are powerless to affect wages even among
their members. As to trades-unions proper, it is hard to
define your position, which is, perhaps, best stated as
one of warm approbation provided that they do not go too
far. For while you object to strikes; while you reprehend
societies that “do their best to get into their
hands the whole field of labor and to force working-men
either to join them or to starve;” while you
discountenance the coercing of employers and seem to
think that arbitration might take the place of strikes;
yet you use expressions and assert principles that are
all that the trades-unionist would ask, not merely to
justify the strike and the boycott, but even the use of
violence where only violence would suffice. For you speak
of the insufficient wages of workmen as due to the greed
of rich employers; you assume the moral right of the
workman to obtain employment from others at wages greater
than those others are willing freely to give; and you
deny the right of any one to work for such wages as he
pleases, in such a way as to lead Mr. Stead, in so widely
read a journal as the Review of Reviews, approvingly to
declare that you regard “blacklegging,” i.e.,
the working for less than union wages, as a crime.
To men conscious of bitter injustice, to men steeped
in poverty yet mocked by flaunting wealth, such words
mean more than I can think you realize.
When fire shall be cool and ice be warm, when armies
shall throw away lead and iron, to try conclusions by the
pelting of rose-leaves, such labor associations as you
are thinking of may be possible. But not till then. For
labor associations can do nothing to raise wages but by
force. It may be force applied passively, or force
applied actively, or force held in reserve, but it must
be force. They must coerce or hold the power to coerce
employers; they must coerce those among their own members
disposed to straggle; they must do their best to get into
their hands the whole field of labor they seek to occupy
and to force other working-men either to join them or to
starve. Those who tell you of trades-unions bent on
raising wages by moral suasion alone are like those who
would tell you of tigers that live on oranges.
The condition of the masses today is that of men
pressed together in a hall where ingress is open and more
are constantly coming, but where the doors for egress are
closed. If forbidden to relieve the general pressure by
throwing open those doors, whose bars and bolts are
private property in land, they can only mitigate the
pressure on themselves by forcing back others, and the
weakest must be driven to the wall. This is the way of
labor-unions and trade-guilds. Even those amiable
societies that you recommend would in their efforts to
find employment for their own members necessarily
displace others.
For even the philanthropy which, recognizing the evil
of trying to help labor by alms, seeks to help men to
help themselves by finding them work, becomes aggressive
in the blind and bitter struggle that private property in
land entails, and in helping one set of men injures
others. Thus, to minimize the bitter complaints of taking
work from others and lessening the wages of others in
providing their own beneficiaries with work and wages,
benevolent societies are forced to devices akin to the
digging of holes and filling them up again. Our American
societies feel this difficulty, General Booth encounters
it in England, and the Catholic societies which your
Holiness recommends must find it, when they are
formed.
Your Holiness knows of, and I am sure honors, the
princely generosity of Baron Hirsch toward his suffering
coreligionists. But, as I write, the New York newspapers
contain accounts of an immense meeting held in Cooper
Union, in this city, on the evening of Friday, September
4, in which a number of Hebrew trades-unions protested in
the strongest manner against the loss of work and
reduction of wages that are being effected by Baron
Hirsch’s generosity in bringing their own
countrymen here and teaching them to work. The resolution
unanimously adopted at this great meeting thus
concludes:
We now demand of Baron Hirsch himself that he
release us from his “charity” and take back
the millions, which, instead of a blessing, have proved
a curse and a source of misery.
Nor does this show that the members of these Hebrew
labor-unions — who are themselves immigrants of the
same class as those Baron Hirsch is striving to help, for
in the next generation they lose with us their
distinctiveness — are a whit less generous than
other men.
Labor associations of the nature of trade-guilds or
unions are necessarily selfish; by the law of their being
they must fight for their own hand, regardless of who is
hurt; they ignore and must ignore the teaching of Christ
that we should do to others as we would have them do to
us, which a true political economy shows is the only way
to the full emancipation of the masses. They must do
their best to starve workmen who do not join them, they
must by all means in their power force back the
“blackleg” — as the soldier in battle
must shoot down his mother’s son if in the opposing
ranks. And who is the blackleg? A fellow-creature seeking
work — a fellow-creature in all probability more
pressed and starved than those who so bitterly denounce
him, and often with the hungry pleading faces of wife and
child behind him.
And, in so far as they succeed, what is it that
trade-guilds and unions do but to impose more
restrictions on natural rights; to create
“trusts” in labor; to add to privileged
classes other somewhat privileged classes; and to press
the weaker closer to the wall?
I speak without prejudice against trades-unions, of
which for years I was an active member. And in pointing
out to your Holiness that their principle is selfish and
incapable of large and permanent benefits, and that their
methods violate natural rights and work hardship and
injustice, I am only saying to you what, both in my books
and by word of mouth, I have said over and over again to
them. Nor is what I say capable of dispute. Intelligent
trades-unionists know it, and the less intelligent
vaguely feel it. And even those of the classes of wealth
and leisure who, as if to head off the demand for natural
rights, are preaching trades-unionism to working-men,
must needs admit it.
Your Holiness will remember the great London dock
strike of two years ago, which, with that of other
influential men, received the moral support of that
Prince of the Church whom we of the English speech hold
higher and dearer than any prelate has been held by us
since the blood of Thomas à Becket stained the
Canterbury altar.
In a volume called “The Story of the
Dockers’ Strike,” written by Messrs. H.
Llewellyn Smith and Vaughan Nash, with an introduction by
Sydney Buxton, M.P., which advocates trades-unionism as
the solution of the labor question, and of which a large
number were sent to Australia as a sort of official
recognition of the generous aid received from there by
the strikers, I find in the summing up, on pages 164-165,
the following:
If the settlement lasts, work at the docks will be
more regular, better paid, and carried on under better
conditions than ever before. All this will be an
unqualified gain to those who get the benefit from it.
But another result will undoubtedly be to contract the
field of employment and lessen the number of those for
whom work can be found. The lower-class casual will, in
the end, find his position more precarious than ever
before, in proportion to the increased regularity of
work which the “fitter” of the laborers
will secure. The effect of the organization of dock
labor, as of all classes of labor, will be to squeeze
out the residuum. The loafer, the cadger, the failure
in the industrial race — the members of
“Class B” of Mr. Charles Booth’s
hierarchy of social classes — will be no gainers
by the change, but will rather find another door closed
against them, and this in many cases the last door to
employment.
I am far from wishing that your Holiness should join
in that pharisaical denunciation of trades-unions common
among those who, while quick to point out the injustice
of trades-unions in denying to others the equal right to
work, are themselves supporters of that more primary
injustice that denies the equal right to the
standing-place and natural material necessary to work.
What I wish to point out is that trades-unionism, while
it may be a partial palliative, is not a remedy; that it
has not that moral character which could alone justify
one in the position of your Holiness in urging it as good
in itself. Yet, so long as you insist on private property
in land what better can you do?
... read
the whole letter
Clarence Darrow: How to Abolish Unfair
Taxation (1913)
... The laboring man takes no account of fundamentals.
Millions of working men have organized themselves into
great unions to protect themselves, to force up their
side to counteract the forcing up by the other side.
These millions have organized for a most impossible
purpose. They seek to change the social life in an
impossible way. Their higher wages will be handed back to
monopoly in higher prices. If a small fraction of the
energy and money that has been given by the working men
to support labor unions had been spent to change
fundamental conditions, there would be no need of a labor
union in the world today. Everywhere about us we can see
that the conditions cannot change while land monopoly
continues. ... read the whole
speech
Albert Jay Nock — Henry George: Unorthodox
American
He laid down the law to organized labor in the same
style, showing that there was no such thing as a
labor-problem, but only a monopoly-problem, and that when
natural-resource monopoly disappeared, every question of
wages, hours, and conditions of labor would automatically
disappear with it. ...read the whole
article
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