The Air Trust eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about The Air Trust.

The Air Trust eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about The Air Trust.

“Whatever happens our hands are clean.  The plutocrats are the attacking force.  They have chosen, and must take the consequences; they have sown, and must reap.  One by one, they have limited and withdrawn every political right.  They have taken away free speech and free assemblage, free press and universal suffrage.  They have limited the right to vote, by property qualifications that have deprived the proletariat of every chance to make their will felt.  They have put through this National Censorship outrage and—­still worse—­the National Mounted Police Bill, making Cossack rule supreme in the United States of America, as they have made it in the United States of Europe.

“Before they elected that tool of tools, President Supple, in 1920, on the Anti-Socialist ticket, we still had some constitutional rights left—­a few.  But now, all are gone.  With the absorption and annexation of Canada, Mexico and Central America, slavery full and absolute settled down upon us.  The unions simply crumbled to dust as you know, in face of all those millions of Mexican peons swamping the labor-market with starvation-wage labor.  Then, as we all remember, came the terrible series of strikes in 1921 and 1922, and the massacres at Hopedale and Boulder, at Los Angeles and Pittsburg, and, worst of all, Gary.  That finished what few rights were left, that killing did.  And then came the army of spies, and the proscriptions, and the electrocution of those hundred and eleven editors, speakers and organizers—­why bring up all these things that we all know so well? We were willing to play the game fair and square, and they refused.  Say that, and you say all.

“No need to dwell on details, comrades.  The Air Trust has had its will with the world, so far.  It has crushed all opposition as relentlessly as the car of Juggernaut used to crush its blind, fanatical devotees.  True, our Party still exists and has some standing and some representatives; but we all know what power it has—­in the open!  Not that much!” And he snapped his fingers in the air.

“In the open, none!” said Craig, blowing a cloud of smoke.  “I admit that, Gabriel.  But, underground—­ah!”

“Underground,” Gabriel took up the word, “forces are now at work that can shatter the whole infernal slavery to dust!  This way of working is not our choice; it is theirs.  They would have it so—­now let them take their medicine!”

“Yes, yes,” eagerly exclaimed Catherine, her face flushed and intense.  “I’m with you, Gabriel.  To work!”

“To work, yes,” put in Craig, “but with system, order and method.  My experience in Congress has taught me some valuable lessons.  The universal, all-embracing Trust made marionettes of us, every one.  Our strength was, to them, no more than that of a mouse to a lion.  Their system is perfect, their lines of supply and communication are without a flaw.  The Prussian army machine of other days was but a bungling experiment by comparison

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Air Trust from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.