CHAPTER I
I: What Do You Want Out Of Life?
What is it that every one wants most in life? What do you want
most?
After all, we are all the same under our skins. Whoever you be -
man or woman, rich or poor, aristocrat or tramp, white, yellow, red
or black, of whatever land, nationality, or religion - we are all
alike in feeling cold and hunger, love and hate; we all fear disaster
and disease, and try to keep away from harm and death.
What you most want out of life, what you fear most, that
also is true, in the main, of your neighbor.
Learned men have written big books, many of them, on sociology,
psychology, and many other 'ologies', to tell you what you want, but
no two of those books ever agree. And yet I think that you know very
well without them what you want.
They have studied and written and speculated so much about this,
for them so difficult a question, that you, the individual, have
become entirely lost in their philosophies. And they have at last
come to the conclusion that you, my friend, don't count at all.
What's important, they say, is not you, but 'the whole', all the
people together. This 'whole' they call 'society', 'the
commonwealth', or 'the State', and the wiseacres have actually
decided that it makes no difference if you, the individual, are
miserable so long as 'society' is all right. Somehow they forget to
explain how 'society' or 'the whole' can be all right if the single
members of it are wretched.
So they go on spinning their philosophic webs and producing thick
volumes to find out where you really enter in the scheme of things
called life, and what you really want.
But you yourself know very well what you want, and so does your
neighbor.
You want to be well and healthy; you want to be free, to serve no
master, to crawl and humiliate yourself before no man; you want to
have well-being for yourself, your family, and those near and dear to
you. And not to be harassed and worried by the fear of to-morrow.
You may feel sure that every one else wants the same. So the whole
matter seems to stand this way:
You want health, liberty, and well-being. Every one is like
yourself in this respect.
Therefore we all seek the same thing in life.
Then why should we not all seek it together, by joint effort,
helping each other in it?
Why should we cheat and rob, kill and murder each other, if we all
seek the same thing? Aren't you entitled to the things you want as
well as the next man?
Or is it that we can secure our health, liberty, and well-being
better by fighting and slaughtering each other?
Or because there is no other way?
Let us look into this.
Does it not stand to reason that if we all want the same thing in
life, if we have the same aim, then our interests must also be
the same? In that case we should live like brothers, in peace and
friendship; we should be good to each other, and help each other all
we can.
But you know that it is not at all that way in life. You know that
we do not live like brothers. You know that the world is full of
strife and war, of misery, injustice, and wrong, of crime, poverty,
and oppression.
Why is it that way then?
It is because, though we all have the same aim in life, our
interests are different. It is this that makes all the trouble
in the world.
Just think it over yourself.
Suppose you want to get a pair of shoes or a hat. You go into the
store and you try to buy what you need as reasonably and cheaply as
you can. That is your interest. But the store-keeper's
interest is to sell it to you as dearly as he can, because then his
profit will be greater. That is because everything in the life
we live is built on making a profit, one way or another. We live in a
system of profit-making.
Now, it is plain that if we have to make profits out of each
other, then our interests cannot be the same. They must be different
and often even opposed to each other.
In every country you will find people who live by making a profit
out of others. Those who make the biggest profits are rich. Those who
cannot make profits are poor. The only people who cannot make any
profits are the workers. You can therefore understand that the
interests of the workers cannot be the same as the interests of the
other people. That is why you will find in every country several
classes of people with entirely different interests.
Everywhere you will find:
(1) a comparatively small class of persons who make big profits
and who are very rich, such as bankers, great manufacturers and land
owners - people who have much capital and who are therefore called
capitalists. These belong to the capitalist class;
(2) a class of more or less well-to-do people, consisting of
business men and their agents, real estate men, speculators, and
professional men, such as doctors, lawyers, inventors, and so on.
This is the middle class or the bourgeoisie.
(3) great numbers of workingmen employed in various industries- in
mills and mines, in factories and shops, in transport and on the
land. This is the working class, also called the proletariat.
The bourgeoisie and the capitalists really belong to the same
capitalistic class, because they have about the same interests, and
therefore the people of the bourgeoisie also generally side with the
capitalist class as against the working class.
You will find that the working class is always the poorest class,
in every country. Maybe you yourself belong to the workers, to the
proletariat. Then you know that your wages will never make you rich.
Why are the workers the poorest class? Surely they labor more than
the other classes, and harder. Is it because the workers are not very
important in the life of society? Perhaps we can even do without
them?
Let us see. What do we need to live? We need food, clothing, and
shelter; schools for our children; street cars and trains for travel,
and a thousand and one other things.
Can you look about you and point out a single thing that was made
without labor? Why, the shoes you stand in, and the streets you walk
on, are the result of labor. Without labor there would be nothing but
the bare earth, and human life would be entirely impossible.
So it means that labor has created everything we have - all the
wealth of the world. It is all the product of labor applied to
the earth and its natural resources.
But if all the wealth is the product of labor, then why does it
not belong to labor? That is, to those who have worked with their
hands or with their heads to create it - the manual worker and the
brain worker.
Everybody agrees that a person has a right to own the thing that
he himself has made.
But no one person has made or can make anything all by
himself. It takes many men, of different trades and professions, to
create something. The carpenter, for instance, cannot make a simple
chair or bench all by himself; not even if he should cut down a tree
and prepare the lumber himself. He needs a saw and a hammer, nails
and tools, which he cannot make himself. And even if he should make
these himself, he would first have to have the raw materials - steel
and iron - which other men would have to supply.
Or take another example - let us say a civil engineer. He could do
nothing without paper and pencil and measuring tools, and these
things other people have to make for him. Not to mention that first
he has to learn his profession and spend many years in study, while
others enable him to live in the meantime. This applies to every
human being in the world to- day.
You can see then that no person can by his own efforts alone make
the things he needs to exist. In early times the primitive man who
lived in a cave could hammer a hatchet out of stone or make himself a
bow and arrow, and live by that. But those days are gone. To-day no
man can live by his own work: he must be helped by the labor of
others. Therefore all that we have, all wealth, is the product of the
labor of many people, even of many generations. That is to say: all
labor and the products of labor are social, made by society as a
whole.
But if all the wealth we have is social, then it stands to reason
that it should belong to society, to the people as a whole. How does
it happen, then, that the wealth of the world is owned by some
individuals and not by the people? Why does it not belong to those
who have toiled to create it - the masses who work with hand or
brain, the working class as a whole?
You know very well that it is the capitalistic class which owns
the greatest part of the world's wealth. Must we therefore not
conclude that the working people have lost the wealth they created,
or that somehow it was taken away from them?
They did not lose it, for they never owned it. Then it must be
that it was taken away from them.
This is beginning to look serious. Because if you say that the
wealth they created has been taken away from the people who created
it, then it means that it has been stolen from them, that they have
been robbed, for surely no one has ever willingly consented to have
his wealth taken away from him.
It is a terrible charge, but it is true. The wealth the workers
have created, as a class, has indeed been stolen from them. And they
are being robbed in the same way every day of their lives, even at
this very moment. That is why one of the greatest thinkers, the
French philosopher Proudhon, said that the possessions of the rich
are stolen property.
You can readily understand how important it is that every honest
man should know about this. And you may be sure that if the workers
knew about it, they would not stand for it.
Let us see then how they are robbed and by whom.
|