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CHAPTER 22
WILL COMMUNIST ANARCHISM WORK?
As we have seen in the preceding chapter, no
life can be free and secure, harmonious and satisfactory unless it is
built on principles of justice and fair play. The first requirement
of justice is equal liberty and opportunity.
Under government and exploitation there can be neither equal
liberty nor equal opportunity-hence all the evils and troubles of
present-day society.
Communist Anarchism is based on the understanding of this
incontrovertible truth. It is founded an the principle of
non-invasiveness and non-coercion; in other words, on liberty and
opportunity.
Life on such a basis fully satisfies the demands of justice. You
are to be entirely free, and everybody else is to enjoy equal
liberty, which means that no one has a right to compel or force
another, for coercion of any kind is interference with your liberty.
Similarly equal opportunity is the heritage of all. Monopoly and
the private ownership of the means of existence are therefore
eliminated as an abridgment of the equal opportunity of all.
If we keep in mind this simple principle of equal liberty and
opportunity, we shall be able to solve the questions involved in
building a society of Communist Anarchism.
Politically, then, man will recognize no authority which can force
or coerce him. Government will be abolished.
Economically he will permit no exclusive possession of the sources
of life in order to preserve his opportunity of free access.
Monopoly of land, private ownership of the machinery of
production, distribution, and communication can therefore not be
tolerated under Anarchy. Opportunity to use what every one needs in
order to live must be free to all.
In a nutshell, then, the meaning of Communist Anarchism is this:
the abolition of government, of coercive authority and all its
agencies, and joint ownership-which means free and equal
participation in the general work and welfare.
"You said that Anarchy will secure economic equality,"
remarks your friend. "Does that mean equal pay for all?"
It does. Or, what amounts to the same, equal participation in the
public welfare. Because, as we already know, labor is social. No man
can create anything all by himself, by his own efforts. Now, then, if
labor is social, it stands to reason that the results of it, the
wealth. produced, must also be social, belong to the collectivity. No
person can therefore justly lay claim to the exclusive ownership of
the social wealth. It is to be enjoyed by all alike.
"But why not give each according to the value of his work?"
you ask.
Because there is no way by which value can be measured. That is
the difference between value and price. Value is what a thing is
worth, while price is what it can be sold or bought for in the
market. What a thing is worth no one really can tell. Political
economists generally claim that the value of a commodity is the
amount of labor required to produce it, of "socially necessary
labor," as Marx says. But evidently it is not a just standard of
measurement. Suppose the carpenter worked three hours to make a
kitchen chair, while the surgeon took only half an hour to perform an
operation that saved your life. If the amount of labor used
determines value, then the chair is worth more than your life.
Obvious nonsense, of course. Even if you should count in the years of
study and practice the surgeon needed to make him capable of
performing the operation, how are you going to decide what "an
hour of operating" is worth? The carpenter and mason also had to
be trained before they could do their work properly, but you don't
figure in those years of apprenticeship when you contract for some
work with -.hem. Besides, there is also to be considered the
particular ability and aptitude that every worker, writer, artist or
physician must exercise in his labors. That is a purely individual,
personal factor. How are you going to estimate its value?
That is why value cannot be determined. The same thing may be
worth a lot to one person while it is worth nothing or very little to
another. It may be worth much or little even to the same person, at
different times. A diamond, a painting, or a book may be worth a
great deal to one man and very little to another. A loaf of bread
will be worth a great deal to you when you are hungry, and much less
when you are not. Therefore the real value of a thing cannot be
ascertained; it is an unknown quantity.
But the price is easily found out. If there are five loaves of
bread to be had and ten persons want to get a loaf each, the price of
bread will rise. If there are ten loaves and only five buyers, then
it will fall. Price depends on supply and demand.
The exchange of commodities by means of prices leads to profit
making, to taking advantage and exploitation; in short, to some form
of capitalism. If you do away with profits, you cannot have any price
system, nor any system of wages or payment. That means that exchange
must be according to value. But as value is uncertain or not
ascertainable, exchange must consequently be free, without "equal"
value, since such does not exist. In other words, labor and its
products must be exchanged without price, without profit, freely,
according to necessity. This logically leads to ownership in common
and to joint use. Which is a sensible, just, and equitable system,
and is known as Communism.
"But is it just that all should share alike?" you
demand. "The man of brains and the dullard, the efficient and
the inefficient, all the same? Should there be no distinction, no
special recognition for those of ability?"
Let me in turn ask you, my friend, shall we punish the man whom
nature has not endowed as generously as his stronger or more talented
neighbor? Shall we add injustice to the handicap nature has put upon
him? All we can reasonably expect from any man is that he do his
best-can any one do more? And if John's best is not as good as his
brother Jim's, it is his misfortune, but in no case a fault to be
punished.
There is nothing more dangerous than discrimination. The moment
you begin discriminating against the less capable, you establish
conditions that breed dissatisfaction and resentment: you invite
envy, discord, and strife. You would think it brutal to withhold from
the less capable the air or water they need. Should not the same
principle apply to the other wants of man? After all, the matter of
food, clothing, and shelter is the smallest item in the world's
economy.
The surest way to get one to do his best is not by discriminating
against him, but by treating him on an equal footing with others.
That is the most effective encouragement and stimulus. It is just and
human.
"But what will you do with the lazy man, the man who does not
want to work?" inquires your friend.
That is an interesting question, and you will probably be very
much surprised when I say that there is really no such thing as
laziness. What we call a lazy man is generally a square man in a
round hole. That is, the right man in the wrong place. And you will
always find that when a fellow is in the wrong place, he will be
inefficient or shiftless. For so-called laziness and a good deal of
inefficiency are merely unfitness, misplacement. If you are compelled
to do the thing you are unfitted for by your inclinations or
temperament, you will be inefficient at it; if you are forced to do
work you are not interested in, you will be lazy at it.
Every one who has managed affairs in which large numbers of men
were employed can substantiate this. Life in prison is a particularly
convincing proof of the truth of it and, after all, present-day
existence for most people is but that of a larger jail. Every prison
warden will tell you that inmates put to tasks for which they have no
ability or interest are always lazy and subject to continuous
punishment. But as soon as these "refractory convicts" are
assigned to work that appeals to their leanings, they become "model
men," as the jailers term them.
Russia has also signally demonstrated the verity of it. It has
shown how little we know of human potentialities and of the effect of
environment upon them-how we mistake wrong conditions for bad
conduct. Russian refugees, leading a miserable and insignificant life
in foreign lands, on returning home and finding in the Revolution a
proper field for their activities, have accomplished most wonderful
work in their right sphere, have developed into brilliant organizers,
builders of railroads and creators of industry. Among the Russian
names best known abroad today are those of men considered shiftless
and inefficient under conditions where their ability and energies
could not find proper application.
That is human nature: efficiency in a certain direction means
inclination and capability for it; industry and application signify
interest. That is why there is so much inefficiency and laziness in
the world today. For who indeed is nowadays in his right place? Who
works at what he really likes and is interested in?
Under present conditions there is little choice given the average
man to devote himself to the tasks that appeal to his leanings and
preferences. The accident of your birth and social station generally
predetermines your trade or profession. The son of the financier does
not, as a rule, become a woodchopper, though he may be more fit to
handle logs than bank accounts. The middle classes send their
children to colleges which turn them into doctors, lawyers, or
engineers. But if your parents were workers who could not afford to
let you study, the chances are that you will take any job which is
offered you, or enter some trade that happens to afford you an
apprenticeship. Your particular situation will decide your work or
profession, not your natural preferences, inclinations, or abilities.
Is it any wonder, then, that most people, the overwhelming majority,
in fact, are misplaced? Ask the first hundred men you meet whether
they would have selected the work they are doing, or whether they
would continue in it, if they were free to choose, and ninety-nine of
them will admit that they would prefer some other occupation.
Necessity and material advantages, or the hope of them, keep most
people in the wrong place.
It stands to reason that a person can give the best of himself
only when his interest is in his work, when he feels a natural
attraction to it, when he likes it. Then he will be industrious and
efficient. The things the craftsman produced in the days before
modern capitalism were objects of joy and beauty, because the artisan
loved his work. Can you expect the modern drudge in the ugly huge
factory to make beautiful things? He is part of the machine, a cog in
the soulless industry, his labor mechanical, forced. Add to this his
feeling that he is not working for himself but for the benefit of
some one else, and that he hates his job or at best has no interest
in it except that it secures his weekly wage. The result is shirking,
inefficiency, laziness.
The need of activity is one of the most fundamental urges of man.
Watch the child and see how strong is his instinct for action, for
movement, for doing something. Strong and continuous. It is the same
with the healthy man. His energy and vitality demand expression.
Permit him to do the work of his choice, the thing he loves, and his
application will know neither weariness nor shirking. You can observe
this in the factory worker when he is lucky enough to own a garden or
a patch of ground to raise some flowers or vegetables on. Tired from
his toil as he is, he enjoys the hardest labor for his own benefit,
done from free choice.
Under Anarchism each will have the opportunity of following
whatever occupation will appeal to his natural inclinations and
aptitude. Work will become a pleasure instead of the deadening
drudgery it is today. Laziness will be unknown, and the things
created by interest and love will be objects of beauty and joy.
"But can labor ever become a pleasure?" you demand.
Labor is toil today, unpleasant, exhausting, and wearisome. But
usually it is not the work itself that is so hard: it is the
conditions under which you are compelled to labor that make it so.
Particularly the long hours, unsanitary workshops, bad treatment,
insufficient pay, and so on. Yet the most unpleasant work could be
made lighter by improving the environment. Take gutter cleaning, for
instance. It is dirty work and poorly paid for. But suppose, for
example, that you should get 20 dollars a day instead of s dollars
for such work. You will immediately find your job much lighter and
pleasanter. The number of applicants for the work would increase at
once. Which means that men are not lazy, not afraid of hard and
unpleasant labor if it is properly rewarded. But such work is
considered menial and is looked down upon. Why is it considered
menial? Is it not most useful and absolutely necessary? Would not
epidemics sweep our city but for the street and gutter cleaners?
Surely, the men who keep our town clean and sanitary are real
benefactors, more vital to our health and welfare than the family
physician. From the viewpoint of social usefulness the street cleaner
is the professional colleague of the doctor: the latter treats us
when we are ill, but the former helps us keep well. Yet the physician
is looked up to and respected, while the street cleaner is slighted.
Why? Is it because the street cleaner's work is dirty? But the
surgeon often has much "dirtier" jobs to perform. Then why
is the street cleaner scorned? Because he earns little.
In our perverse civilization things are valued according to money
standards. Persons doing the most useful work are lowest in the
social scale when their employment is ill paid. Should something
happen, however, that would cause the street cleaner to get 100
dollars a day, while the physician earns so, the "dirty"
street cleaner would immediately rise in estimation and social
station, and from the "filthy laborer" he would become the
much-sought man of good income.
You see that it is pay, remuneration, the wage scale, not
worth or merit, that today-under our system of profit determines the
value of work as well as the "worth" of a man.
A sensible society -- under Anarchist conditions -- would have
entirely different standards of judging such matters. People will
then be appreciated according to their willingness to be socially
useful.
Can you perceive what great changes such a new attitude would
produce? Every one yearns for the respect and admiration of his
fellow men; it is a tonic we cannot live without. Even in prison I
have seen how the clever pickpocket or safe blower longs for the
appreciation of his friends and how hard he tries to earn their good
estimate of him. The opinions of our circle rule our behavior. The
social atmosphere to a profound degree determines our values and our
attitude. Your personal experience will tell you how true this is,
and therefore you will not be surprised when I say that in an
Anarchist society it will be the most useful and difficult toil that
men will seek rather than the lighter job. If you consider this, you
will have no more fear of laziness or shirking.
But the hardest and most onerous task could be made easier and
cleaner than is the case today. The capitalist employer does not care
to spend money, if he can help it, to make the toil of his employees
pleasanter and brighter. He will introduce improvements only when he
hopes to gain larger profits thereby, but he will not go to extra
expense out of purely humanitarian reasons. Though here I must remind
you that the more intelligent employers are beginning to see that it
pays to improve their factories, make them more sanitary ant
hygienic, and generally better the conditions of labor. They realize
it is a good investment: it results in the increased contentment and
consequent greater efficiency of their workers. The principle is
sound. Today, of course, it is being exploited for the sole purpose
of bigger profits. But under Anarchism it would be applied not for
the sake of personal gain, but in the interest of the workers'
health, for the lightening of labor. Our progress in mechanics is so
great and continually advancing that most of the hard toil could be
eliminated by the use of modern machinery and labor saving devices.
In many industries, as in coal mining, for instance, new safety and
sanitary appliances are not introduced because of the masters'
indifference to the welfare of their employees and on account of the
expenditure involved. But in a non-profit system technical science
would work exclusively with the aim of making labor safer, healthier,
lighter, and more pleasant.
"But however light you'll make work, eight hours a day of it
is no pleasure," objects your friend.
You are perfectly right. But did you ever stop to consider why we
have to work eight hours a day? Do you know that not so long ago
people used to slave twelve and fourteen hours, and that it is still
the case in backward countries like China and India?
It can be statistically proven that three hours' work a day, at
most, is sufficient to feed, shelter, and clothe the world and supply
it not only with necessities but also with all modern comforts of
life. The point is that not one man in five is today doing any
productive work. The entire world is supported by a small minority of
toilers.
First of all, consider the amount of work done in present-day
society that would become unnecessary under Anarchist conditions.
Take the armies and navies of the world, an] think how many millions
of men would be released for useful and productive effort once war is
abolished, as would of course be the case under Anarchy.
In every country today labor supports the millions who contribute
nothing to the welfare of the country, who create nothing, and
perform no useful work whatever. Those millions are only consumers,
without being producers. In the United States, for instance, out of a
population of 120 millions there are less than 30 million workers,
farmers included.1
A similar situation is the rule in every land.
Is it any wonder that labor has to toil long hours, since there
are only 30 workers to every 120 persons? The large business classes
with their clerks, assistants, agents, and commercial travelers; the
courts with their judges, record keepers, bailiffs, etc.; the legion
of attorneys with their staffs; the militia and police forces; the
churches and monasteries; the charity institutions and poorhouses;
the prisons with their wardens, officers, keepers, and the
non-productive convict population; the army of advertisers and their
helpers, whose business it is to persuade you to buy what you don't
want or need, not to speak of the numerous elements that live
luxuriously in entire idleness. All these mount into the millions in
every country.
Now, if all those millions would apply themselves to useful labor,
would the worker have to drudge eight hours a day? If 30 men have to
put in eight hours to perform a certain task, how much less time
would it 'take 120 men to accomplish the same thing? I don't want to
burden you with statistics, but there are enough data to prove that
less than 3 hours of daily physical effort would be sufficient to do
the world's work.
Can you doubt that even the hardest toil would become a pleasure
instead of the cursed slavery it is at present, if only three hours a
day were required, and that under the most sanitary and hygienic
conditions, in an atmosphere of brotherhood and respect for labor?
But it is not difficult to foresee the day when even those short
hours would be still further reduced. For we are constantly improving
our technical methods, and new labor saving machinery is being
invented all the time. Mechanical progress means less work and
greater comforts, as you can see by comparing life in the United
States with that in China or India. In the latter countries they toil
long hours to secure the barest necessities of existence, while in
America even the average laborer enjoys a much higher standard of
living with fewer hours of work. The advance of science and invention
signifies more leisure for the pursuits we love.
I have sketched in large, broad outline the possibilities of i e
under a sensible system where profit is abolishes. It is not
necessary to go into the minute details of such a social condition:
sufficient has been said to show that Communist Anarchism means the
greatest material welfare with a life of liberty for each and all.
We can visualize the time when labor will have become a pleasant
exercise, a joyous application of physical effort to the needs of the
world. Man will then look back at our present day and wonder that
work could ever have been slavery, ant question the sanity of a
generation that suffered less than one fifth of its population to
earn the bread for the rest by the sweat of their brow while those
others idled and wasted their time, their health, and the people's
wealth. They will wonder that the freest satisfaction of man's needs
could have ever been considered as anything but self-evident, or that
people naturally seeking the same objects insisted on making life
hard and miserable by mutual strife. They will refuse to believe that
the whole existence of man was a continuous struggle for food in a
world rich with luxuries, a struggle that left the great majority
neither time nor strength for the higher quest of the heart and mind.
"But will not life under Anarchy, in economic and social
equality mean general leveling?" you ask.
No, my friend, quite the contrary. Because equality does not mean
an equal amount but equal opportunity. It does not mean, for
instance, that if Smith needs five meals a day, Johnson also must
have as many. If Johnson wants only three meals while Smith requires
five, the quantity each consumes may be unequal, but both men are
perfectly equal in the opportunity each has to consume as much as he
needs, as much as his particular nature demands.
Do not make the mistake of identifying equality in liberty with
the forced equality of the convict camp. True Anarchist equality
implies freedom, not quantity. It does not mean that every one must
eat, drink, or wear the same things, do the same work, or live in the
same manner. Far from it; the very reverse, in fact.
Individual needs and tastes differ, as appetites differ. It is
equal opportunity to satisfy them that constitutes true
equality.
Far from leveling, such equality opens the door for the greatest
possible variety of activity and development. For human character is
diverse, and only the repression of this diversity results in
leveling, in uniformity and sameness. Free opportunity of expressing
and acting out your individuality means development of natural
dissimilarities and variations.
It is said that no two blades of grass are alike. Much less so are
human beings. In the whole wide world no two persons are exactly
similar even in physical appearance; still more dissimilar are they
in their physiological, mental, and psychical make-up. Yet in spite
of this diversity and of a thousand and one differentiations of
character we compel people to be alike today. Our life and habits,
our behavior and manners, even our thoughts and feelings are pressed
into a uniform mold and fashioned into sameness. The spirit of
authority, law, written and unwritten, tradition and custom force us
into a common groove and make of man a will-less automaton without
independence or individuality. This moral and intellectual bondage is
more compelling than any physical coercion, more devastating to our
manhood and development. All of us are its victims, and only the
exceptionally strong succeed in breaking its chains, and that only
partly.
The authority of the past and of the present dictates not only our
behavior but dominates our very minds and souls, and is continuously
at work to stifle every symptom of nonconformity, of independent
attitude and unorthodox opinion The whole weight of social
condemnation comes down upon the head of the man or woman who dares
defy conventional codes. Ruthless vengeance is wreaked upon the
protestant who refuses to follow the beaten track, or upon the
heretic who disbelieves in the accepted formulas. In science and art,
in literature, poetry, and painting this spirit compels adaptation
and adjustment, resulting in imitation of the established and
approved, in uniformity and sameness, in stereotyped expression. But
more terribly still is punished nonconformity in actual life, in our
every-day relationships and behavior. The painter and writer may
occasionally be forgiven for defiance of custom and precedent
because, after all, their rebellion is limited to paper or canvas: it
affects only a comparatively small circle. They may be disregarded or
labeled cranks who can do little harm, but not so with the man of
action who carries his challenge of accepted standards into social
life. Not harmless he. He is dangerous by the power of example, by
his very presence. His infraction of social canons can be neither
ignored nor forgiven. He will be denounced as an enemy of society.
It is for this reason that revolutionary feeling or thought
expressed in exotic poetry or masked in high-brow philosophic
dissertations may be condoned, may pass the official and unofficial
censor, because it is neither accessible to nor understood by the
public at large. But give voice to the same dissenting attitude in a
popular manner, and immediately you will face the frothing
denunciation of all the forces that stand for the preservation of the
establishes.
More vicious and deadening is compulsory compliance than the most
virulent poison. Throughout the ages it has been the greatest
impediment to man's advance, hedging him in with a thousand
prohibitions and taboos, weighting his mind and heart down with
outlived canons and codes, thwarting his will with imperatives of
thought and feeling, with "thou shalt" and "thou shalt
not" of behavior and action. Life, the art of living, has become
a dull formula, flat and inert.
Yet so strong is the innate diversity of man's nature that
centuries of this stultification have not succeeded in entirely
eradicating his originality and uniqueness. True, the great majority
have fallen into ruts so deepened by countless feet that they cannot
get back to the broad spaces. But some do break away from the beaten
track and find the open road where new vistas of beauty and
inspiration beckon to heart and spirit. These the world condemns, but
little by little it follows their example and lead, and finally it
comes up abreast of them. In the meantime those pathfinders have gone
much further or tied, and then we build monuments to them and glorify
the men we have vilified and crucified as we go on crucifying their
brothers in spirit, the pioneers of our own day.
Beneath this spirit of intolerance and persecution is the habit of
authority: coercion to conform to dominant standards,
compulsion-moral and legal-to be and act as others, according to
precedent and rule.
But the general view that conformity is a natural trait is
entirely false. On the contrary, given the least chance, unimpeded by
the mental habits instilled from the very cradle, man evidences
uniqueness and originality. Observe children, for instance, and you
will see most varied differentiation in manner and attitude, in
mental and psychic expression. You will discover an instinctive
tendency to individuality and independence, to non-conformity,
manifested in open and secret defiance of the will imposed from the
outside, in rebellion against the authority of parent and teacher.
The whole training ant "education" of the child is a
continuous process of stifling ant crushing this tendency, the
eradication of his distinctive characteristics, of his unlikeness to
others, of his personality and originality. Yet even in spite of
yearlong repression, suppression, and molding, some originality
persists in the child when it reaches maturity, which shows how deep
are the springs of individuality. Take any two persons, for example,
who have witnessed some tragedy, a big fire, let us say, at the same
time and place. Each will tell the story in a different manner, each
will be original in his way of relating it and in the impression he
will produce, because of his naturally different psychology. But talk
to the same two persons on some fundamental social matter, about life
and government, for instance, and immediately you hear expressed an
exactly similar attitude, the accepted view, the dominant mentality.
Why? Because where man is left free to think and feel for himself,
unhindered by precept and rule, and not restrained by the fear of
being "different" and unorthodox, with the unpleasant
consequences it involves, he will be independent and free. But the
moment the conversation touches matters within the sphere of our
social imperatives, one is in the clutches of the taboos and becomes
a copy and a parrot.
Life in freedom, in Anarchy, will do more than liberate man merely
from his present political and economic bondage. That will be only
the first step, the preliminary to a truly human existence. Far
greater and more significant will be the results of such
liberty, its effects upon man's mind, upon his personality. The
abolition of the coercive external will, and with it of the fear of
authority, will loosen the bonds of moral compulsion no less than of
economic and physical. Man's spirit will breathe freely, and that
mental emancipation will be the birth of a new culture, of a new
humanity. Imperatives and taboos will disappear, and man will begin
to be himself, to develop and express his individual tendencies and
uniqueness. Instead of "thou shalt not," the public
conscience will say "thou mayest, taking full responsibility."
That will be a training in human dignity and self-reliance, beginning
at home and in school, which will produce a new race with a new
attitude to life.
The man of the coming day will see and feel existence on an
entirely different plane. Living to him will be an art and a joy. He
will cease to consider it as a race where every one must try to
become as good a runner as the fastest. He will regard leisure as
more important than work, and work will fall into its proper,
subordinate place as the means to leisure, to the enjoyment of life.
Life will mean the striving for finer cultural values, the
penetration of nature's mysteries, the attainment of higher truth.
Free to exercise the limitless possibilities of his mind, to pursue
his love of knowledge, to apply his inventive genius, to create, and
to soar on the wings of imagination, man will reach his full stature
and become man indeed. He will grow and develop according to his
nature. He will scorn uniformity, and human diversity will give him
increased interest in, and a more satisfying sense of, the richness
of being. Life to him will not consist in functioning but in living,
and he will attain the greatest kind of freedom man is capable of,
freedom in joy.
"That day lies far in the future," you say; "how
shall we bring it about?)'
Far in the future, maybe; yet perhaps not so far-one cannot tell.
At any rate we should always hold our ultimate object in view if we
are to remain on the right road. The change I have described will not
come over night; nothing ever does. It will be a gradual development,
as everything in nature and social life is. But a logical, necessary,
and, I dare say, an inevitable development. Inevitable, because the
whole trend of man's growth has been in that direction; even if in
zigzags, often losing its way, yet always returning to the right
path.
How, then, might it be brought about?
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