<h2><SPAN name="XI" id="XI"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_257" id= "Page_257"></SPAN>XI</h2>
<h2>THE EMANCIPATION OF BUSINESS</h2>
<p>In the readjustments that are about to be undertaken in this
country not one single legitimate or honest arrangement is going to
be disturbed; but every impediment to business is going to be
removed, every illegitimate kind of control is going to be
destroyed. Every man who wants an opportunity and has the energy to
seize it, is going to be given a chance. All that we are going to
ask the gentlemen who now enjoy monopolistic advantages to do is to
match their brains against the brains of those who will then
compete with them. The brains, the energy, of the rest of us are to
be set free to go into the game,—that is all. There is to be
a general release of the capital, the enterprise, of millions of
people, a general opening of the doors of opportunity. With what a
spring of determination, with what a <SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258"></SPAN>shout of jubilance, will the people rise to their
emancipation!</p>
<p>I am one of those who believe that we have had such restrictions
upon the prosperity of this country that we have not yet come into
our own, and that by removing those restrictions we shall set free
an energy which in our generation has not been known. It is for
that reason that I feel free to criticise with the utmost frankness
these restrictions, and the means by which they have been brought
about. I do not criticise as one without hope; in describing
conditions which so hamper, impede, and imprison, I am only
describing conditions from which we are going to escape into a
contrasting age. I believe that this is a time when there should be
unqualified frankness. One of the distressing circumstances of our
day is this: I cannot tell you how many men of business, how many
important men of business, have communicated their real opinions
about the situation in the United States to me privately and
confidentially. They are afraid of somebody. They are afraid to
make their real opinions known publicly; <SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></SPAN>they tell them to me behind their hand. That is very
distressing. That means that we are not masters of our own
opinions, except when we vote, and even then we are careful to vote
very privately indeed.</p>
<p>It is alarming that this should be the case. Why should any man
in free America be afraid of any other man? Or why should any man
fear competition,—competition either with his
fellow-countrymen or with anybody else on earth?</p>
<p>It is part of the indictment against the protective policy of
the United States that it has weakened and not enhanced the vigor
of our people. American manufacturers who know that they can make
better things than are made elsewhere in the world, that they can
sell them cheaper in foreign markets than they are sold in these
very markets of domestic manufacture, are afraid,—afraid to
venture out into the great world on their own merits and their own
skill. Think of it, a nation full of genius and yet paralyzed by
timidity! The timidity of the business men of America is to me
nothing less <SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></SPAN>than amazing.
They are tied to the apron strings of the government at Washington.
They go about to seek favors. They say: "For pity's sake, don't
expose us to the weather of the world; put some homelike cover over
us. Protect us. See to it that foreign men don't come in and match
their brains with ours." And, as if to enhance this peculiarity of
ours, the strongest men amongst us get the biggest favors; the men
of peculiar genius for organizing industries, the men who could run
the industries of any country, are the men who are most strongly
intrenched behind the highest rates in the schedules of the tariff.
They are so timid morally, furthermore, that they dare not stand up
before the American people, but conceal these favors in the
verbiage of the tariff schedule itself,—in "jokers." Ah! but
it is a bitter joke when men who seek favors are so afraid of the
best judgment of their fellow-citizens that they dare not avow what
they take.</p>
<p>Happily, the general revival of conscience in this country has
not been confined to those <SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></SPAN>who
were consciously fighting special privilege. The awakening of
conscience has extended to those who were <i>enjoying</i> special
privileges, and I thank God that the business men of this country
are beginning to see our economic organization in its true light,
as a deadening aristocracy of privilege from which they themselves
must escape. The small men of this country are not deluded, and not
all of the big business men of this country are deluded. Some men
who have been led into wrong practices, who have been led into the
practices of monopoly, because that seemed to be the drift and
inevitable method of supremacy, are just as ready as we are to turn
about and adopt the process of freedom. For American hearts beat in
a lot of these men, just as they beat under our jackets. They will
be as glad to be free as we shall be to set them free. And then the
splendid force which has lent itself to things that hurt us will
lend itself to things that benefit us.</p>
<p>And we,—we who are not great captains of industry or
business,—shall do them more good <SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></SPAN>than we do now, even in a material way. If you have
to be subservient, you are not even making the rich fellows as rich
as they might be, because you are not adding your originative force
to the extraordinary production of wealth in America. America is as
rich, not as Wall Street, not as the financial centres in Chicago
and St. Louis and San Francisco; it is as rich as the people that
make those centres rich. And if those people hesitate in their
enterprise, cower in the face of power, hesitate to originate
designs of their own, then the very fountains which make these
places abound in wealth are dried up at the source. By setting the
little men of America free, you are not damaging the giants.</p>
<p>It may be that certain things will happen, for monopoly in this
country is carrying a body of water such as men ought not to be
asked to carry. When by regulated competition,—that is to
say, fair competition, competition that fights fair,—they are
put upon their mettle, they will have to economize, and they cannot
economize unless they get rid of that water.<SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263"></SPAN> I do not know how to squeeze the water out, but
they will get rid of it, if you will put them to the necessity.
They will have to get rid of it, or those of us who don't carry
tanks will outrun them in the race. Put all the business of America
upon the footing of economy and efficiency, and then let the race
be to the strongest and the swiftest.</p>
<p>Our program is a program of prosperity; a program of prosperity
that is to be a little more pervasive than the present
prosperity,—and pervasive prosperity is more fruitful than
that which is narrow and restrictive. I congratulate the monopolies
of the United States that they are not going to have their way,
because, quite contrary to their own theory, the fact is that the
people are wiser than they are. The people of the United States
understand the United States as these gentlemen do not, and if they
will only give us leave, we will not only make them rich, but we
will make them happy. Because, then, their conscience will have
less to carry. I have lived in a state that was owned by a series
of corporations.<SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></SPAN> They handed
it about. It was at one time owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad;
then it was owned by the Public Service Corporation. It was owned
by the Public Service Corporation when I was admitted, and that
corporation has been resentful ever since that I interfered with
its tenancy. But I really did not see any reason why the people
should give up their own residence to so small a body of men to
monopolize; and, therefore, when I asked them for their title deeds
and they couldn't produce them, and there was no court except the
court of public opinion to resort to, they moved out. Now they eat
out of our hands; and they are not losing flesh either. They are
making just as much money as they made before, only they are making
it in a more respectable way. They are making it without the
constant assistance of the legislature of the State of New Jersey.
They are making it in the normal way, by supplying the people of
New Jersey with the service in the way of transportation and gas
and water that they really need. I do not believe that there are
<SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></SPAN>any thoughtful officials of
the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey that now seriously
regret the change that has come about. We liberated government in
my state, and it is an interesting fact that we have not suffered
one moment in prosperity.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>What we propose, therefore, in this program of freedom, is a
program of general advantage. Almost every monopoly that has
resisted dissolution has resisted the real interests of its own
stockholders. Monopoly always checks development, weighs down
natural prosperity, pulls against natural advance.</p>
<p>Take but such an everyday thing as a useful invention and the
putting of it at the service of men. You know how prolific the
American mind has been in invention; how much civilization has been
advanced by the steamboat, the cotton-gin, the sewing-machine, the
reaping-machine, the typewriter, the electric light, the telephone,
the phonograph. Do you know, have you had occasion to learn, that
there is no hospitality for invention nowadays? There <SPAN name=
"Page_266" id="Page_266"></SPAN>is no encouragement for you to set
your wits at work to improve the telephone, or the camera, or some
piece of machinery, or some mechanical process; you are not invited
to find a shorter and cheaper way to make things or to perfect
them, or to invent better things to take their place. There is too
much money invested in old machinery; too much money has been spent
advertising the old camera; the telephone plants, as they are, cost
too much to permit their being superseded by something better.
Wherever there is monopoly, not only is there no incentive to
improve, but, improvement being costly in that it "scraps" old
machinery and destroys the value of old products, there is a
positive motive against improvement. The instinct of monopoly is
against novelty, the tendency of monopoly is to keep in use the old
thing, made in the old way; its disposition is to "standardize"
everything. Standardization may be all very well,—but suppose
everything had been standardized thirty years ago,—we should
still be writing by hand, by gas-light, we should be without the
inestimable aid of <SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></SPAN>the
telephone (sometimes, I admit, it is a nuisance), without the
automobile, without wireless telegraphy. Personally, I could have
managed to plod along without the aeroplane, and I could have been
happy even without moving-pictures.</p>
<p>Of course, I am not saying that all invention has been stopped
by the growth of trusts, but I think it is perfectly clear that
invention in many fields has been discouraged, that inventors have
been prevented from reaping the full fruits of their ingenuity and
industry, and that mankind has been deprived of many comforts and
conveniences, as well as of the opportunity of buying at lower
prices.</p>
<p>The damper put on the inventive genius of America by the trusts
operates in half a dozen ways: The first thing discovered by the
genius whose device extends into a field controlled by a trust is
that he can't get capital to make and market his invention. If you
want money to build your plant and advertise your product and
employ your agents and make a market for it, where are you going to
get it? The <SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></SPAN>minute you apply
for money or credit, this proposition is put to you by the banks:
"This invention will interfere with the established processes and
the market control of certain great industries. We are already
financing those industries, their securities are in our hands; we
will consult them."</p>
<p>It may be, as a result of that consultation, you will be
informed that it is too bad, but it will be impossible to
"accommodate" you. It may be you will receive a suggestion that if
you care to make certain arrangements with the trust, you will be
permitted to manufacture. It may be you will receive an offer to
buy your patent, the offer being a poor consolation dole. It may be
that your invention, even if purchased, will never be heard of
again.</p>
<p>That last method of dealing with an invention, by the way, is a
particularly vicious misuse of the patent laws, which ought not to
allow property in an idea which is never intended to be realized.
One of the reforms waiting to be undertaken is a revision of our
patent laws.</p>
<p>In any event, if the trust doesn't want you <SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></SPAN>to manufacture your invention, you will not be
allowed to, unless you have money of your own and are willing to
risk it fighting the monopolistic trust with its vast resources. I
am generalizing the statement, but I could particularize it. I
could tell you instances where exactly that thing happened. By the
combination of great industries, manufactured products are not only
being standardized, but they are too often being kept at a single
point of development and efficiency. The increase of the power to
produce in proportion to the cost of production is not studied in
America as it used to be studied, because if you don't have to
improve your processes in order to excel a competitor, if you are
human you aren't going to improve your processes; and if you can
prevent the competitor from coming into the field, then you can sit
at your leisure, and, behind this wall of protection which prevents
the brains of any foreigner competing with you, you can rest at
your ease for a whole generation.</p>
<p>Can any one who reflects on merely this attitude of the trusts
toward invention fail to <SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></SPAN>understand how substantial, how actual, how great
will be the effect of the release of the genius of our people to
originate, improve, and perfect the instruments and circumstances
of our lives? Who can say what patents now lying, unrealized, in
secret drawers and pigeonholes, will come to light, or what new
inventions will astonish and bless us, when freedom is
restored?</p>
<p>Are you not eager for the time when the genius and initiative of
all the people shall be called into the service of business? when
newcomers with new ideas, new entries with new enthusiasms,
independent men, shall be welcomed? when your sons shall be able to
look forward to becoming, not employees, but heads of some small,
it may be, but hopeful, business, where their best energies shall
be inspired by the knowledge that they are their own masters, with
the paths of the world open before them? Have you no desire to see
the markets opened to all? to see credit available in due
proportion to every man of character and serious purpose who can
use it safely and to advantage? to see <SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></SPAN>business disentangled from its unholy alliance with
politics? to see raw material released from the control of
monopolists, and transportation facilities equalized for all? and
every avenue of commercial and industrial activity levelled for the
feet of all who would tread it? Surely, you must feel the
inspiration of such a new dawn of liberty!</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>There is the great policy of conservation, for example; and I do
not conceive of conservation in any narrow sense. There are forests
to conserve, there are great water powers to conserve, there are
mines whose wealth should be deemed exhaustible, not inexhaustible,
and whose resources should be safeguarded and preserved for future
generations. But there is much more. There are the lives and
energies of the people to be physically safeguarded.</p>
<p>You know what has been the embarrassment about conservation. The
federal government has not dared relax its hold, because, not
<i>bona fide</i> settlers, not men bent upon the legitimate
development of great states, but men bent upon <SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></SPAN>getting into their own exclusive control great
mineral, forest, and water resources, have stood at the ear of the
government and attempted to dictate its policy. And the government
of the United States has not dared relax its somewhat rigid policy
because of the fear that these forces would be stronger than the
forces of individual communities and of the public interest. What
we are now in dread of is that this situation will be made
permanent. Why is it that Alaska has lagged in her development? Why
is it that there are great mountains of coal piled up in the
shipping places on the coast of Alaska which the government at
Washington will not permit to be sold? It is because the government
is not sure that it has followed all the intricate threads of
intrigue by which small bodies of men have tried to get exclusive
control of the coal fields of Alaska. The government stands itself
suspicious of the forces by which it is surrounded.</p>
<p>The trouble about conservation is that the government of the
United States hasn't any policy at present. It is simply marking
time.<SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></SPAN> It is simply standing
still. Reservation is not conservation. Simply to say, "We are not
going to do anything about the forests," when the country needs to
use the forests, is not a practicable program at all. To say that
the people of the great State of Washington can't buy coal out of
the Alaskan coal fields doesn't settle the question. You have got
to have that coal sooner or later. And if you are so afraid of the
Guggenheims and all the rest of them that you can't make up your
mind what your policies are going to be about those coal fields,
how long are we going to wait for the government to throw off its
fear? There can't be a working program until there is a free
government. The day when the government is free to set about a
policy of positive conservation, as distinguished from mere
negative reservation, will be an emancipation day of no small
importance for the development of the country.</p>
<p>But the question of conservation is a very much bigger question
than the conservation of our natural resources; because in summing
up our natural resources there is one great natural <SPAN name=
"Page_274" id="Page_274"></SPAN>resource which underlies them all, and
seems to underlie them so deeply that we sometimes overlook it. I
mean the people themselves.</p>
<p>What would our forests be worth without vigorous and intelligent
men to make use of them? Why should we conserve our natural
resources, unless we can by the magic of industry transmute them
into the wealth of the world? What transmutes them into that
wealth, if not the skill and the touch of the men who go daily to
their toil and who constitute the great body of the American
people? What I am interested in is having the government of the
United States more concerned about human rights than about property
rights. Property is an instrument of humanity; humanity isn't an
instrument of property. And yet when you see some men riding their
great industries as if they were driving a car of juggernaut, not
looking to see what multitudes prostrate themselves before the car
and lose their lives in the crushing effect of their industry, you
wonder how long men are going to be permitted to think more of
their machinery than they think of their <SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275"></SPAN>men. Did you never think of it,—men are cheap,
and machinery is dear; many a superintendent is dismissed for
overdriving a delicate machine, who wouldn't be dismissed for
overdriving an overtaxed man. You can discard your man and replace
him; there are others ready to come into his place; but you can't
without great cost discard your machine and put a new one in its
place. You are less apt, therefore, to look upon your men as the
essential vital foundation part of your whole business. It is time
that property, as compared with humanity, should take second place,
not first place. We must see to it that there is no over-crowding,
that there is no bad sanitation, that there is no unnecessary
spread of avoidable diseases, that the purity of food is
safeguarded, that there is every precaution against accident, that
women are not driven to impossible tasks, nor children permitted to
spend their energy before it is fit to be spent. The hope and
elasticity of the race must be preserved; men must be preserved
according to their individual needs, and not according to the
programs of <SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></SPAN>industry merely.
What is the use of having industry, if we perish in producing it?
If we die in trying to feed ourselves, why should we eat? If we die
trying to get a foothold in the crowd, why not let the crowd
trample us sooner and be done with it? I tell you that there is
beginning to beat in this nation a great pulse of irresistible
sympathy which is going to transform the processes of government
amongst us. The strength of America is proportioned only to the
health, the energy, the hope, the elasticity, the buoyancy of the
American people.</p>
<p>Is not that the greatest thought that you can have of
freedom,—the thought of it as a gift that shall release men
and women from all that pulls them back from being their best and
from doing their best, that shall liberate their energy to its
fullest limit, free their aspirations till no bounds confine them,
and fill their spirits with the jubilance of realizable hope?</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />