The New Freedom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The New Freedom.

The New Freedom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The New Freedom.

The third party says that the present system of our industry and trade has come to stay.  Mind you, these artificially built up things, these things that can’t maintain themselves in the market without monopoly, have come to stay, and the only thing that the government can do, the only thing that the third party proposes should be done, is to set up a commission to regulate them.  It accepts them.  It says:  “We will not undertake, it were futile to undertake, to prevent monopoly, but we will go into an arrangement by which we will make these monopolies kind to you.  We will guarantee that they shall be pitiful.  We will guarantee that they shall pay the right wages.  We will guarantee that they shall do everything kind and public-spirited, which they have never heretofore shown the least inclination to do.”

Don’t you realize that that is a blind alley?  You can’t find your way to liberty that way.  You can’t find your way to social reform through the forces that have made social reform necessary.

The fundamental part of such a program is that the trusts shall be recognized as a permanent part of our economic order, and that the government shall try to make trusts the ministers, the instruments, through which the life of this country shall be justly and happily developed on its industrial side.  Now, everything that touches our lives sooner or later goes back to the industries which sustain our lives.  I have often reflected that there is a very human order in the petitions in our Lord’s prayer.  For we pray first of all, “Give us this day our daily bread,” knowing that it is useless to pray for spiritual graces on an empty stomach, and that the amount of wages we get, the kind of clothes we wear, the kind of food we can afford to buy, is fundamental to everything else.

Those who administer our physical life, therefore, administer our spiritual life; and if we are going to carry out the fine purpose of that great chorus which supporters of the third party sang almost with religious fervor, then we have got to find out through whom these purposes of humanity are going to be realized.  It is a mere enterprise, so far as that part of it is concerned, of making the monopolies philanthropic.

I do not want to live under a philanthropy.  I do not want to be taken care of by the government, either directly, or by any instruments through which the government is acting.  I want only to have right and justice prevail, so far as I am concerned.  Give me right and justice and I will undertake to take care of myself.  If you enthrone the trusts as the means of the development of this country under the supervision of the government, then I shall pray the old Spanish proverb, “God save me from my friends, and I’ll take care of my enemies.”  Because I want to be saved from these friends.  Observe that I say these friends, for I am ready to admit that a great many men who believe that the development of industry in this country through monopolies is inevitable intend to be the friends of the people.  Though they profess to be my friends, they are undertaking a way of friendship which renders it impossible that they should do me the fundamental service that I demand—­namely, that I should be free and should have the same opportunities that everybody else has.

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Project Gutenberg
The New Freedom from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.