THE MACHINE BREAKERS
It was just before Ernest ran for
Congress, on the socialist ticket, that father gave
what he privately called his “Profit and Loss”
dinner. Ernest called it the dinner of the Machine
Breakers. In point of fact, it was merely a dinner
for business men small business men, of
course. I doubt if one of them was interested
in any business the total capitalization of which
exceeded a couple of hundred thousand dollars.
They were truly representative middle-class business
men.
There was Owen, of Silverberg, Owen
& Company a large grocery firm with several
branch stores. We bought our groceries from them.
There were both partners of the big drug firm of Kowalt
& Washburn, and Mr. Asmunsen, the owner of a large
granite quarry in Contra Costa County. And there
were many similar men, owners or part-owners in small
factories, small businesses and small industries small
capitalists, in short.
They were shrewd-faced, interesting
men, and they talked with simplicity and clearness.
Their unanimous complaint was against the corporations
and trusts. Their creed was, “Bust the Trusts.”
All oppression originated in the trusts, and one and
all told the same tale of woe. They advocated
government ownership of such trusts as the railroads
and telegraphs, and excessive income taxes, graduated
with ferocity, to destroy large accumulations.
Likewise they advocated, as a cure for local ills,
municipal ownership of such public utilities as water,
gas, telephones, and street railways.
Especially interesting was Mr. Asmunsen’s
narrative of his tribulations as a quarry owner.
He confessed that he never made any profits out of
his quarry, and this, in spite of the enormous volume
of business that had been caused by the destruction
of San Francisco by the big earthquake. For six
years the rebuilding of San Francisco had been going
on, and his business had quadrupled and octupled, and
yet he was no better off.
“The railroad knows my business
just a little bit better than I do,” he said.
“It knows my operating expenses to a cent, and
it knows the terms of my contracts. How it knows
these things I can only guess. It must have spies
in my employ, and it must have access to the parties
to all my contracts. For look you, when I place
a big contract, the terms of which favor me a goodly
profit, the freight rate from my quarry to market
is promptly raised. No explanation is made.
The railroad gets my profit. Under such circumstances
I have never succeeded in getting the railroad to
reconsider its raise. On the other hand, when
there have been accidents, increased expenses of operating,
or contracts with less profitable terms, I have always
succeeded in getting the railroad to lower its rate.
What is the result? Large or small, the railroad
always gets my profits.”
“What remains to you over and
above,” Ernest interrupted to ask, “would
roughly be the equivalent of your salary as a manager
did the railroad own the quarry.”
“The very thing,” Mr.
Asmunsen replied. “Only a short time ago
I had my books gone through for the past ten years.
I discovered that for those ten years my gain was
just equivalent to a manager’s salary. The
railroad might just as well have owned my quarry and
hired me to run it.”
“But with this difference,”
Ernest laughed; “the railroad would have had
to assume all the risk which you so obligingly assumed
for it.”
“Very true,” Mr. Asmunsen answered sadly.
Having let them have they say, Ernest
began asking questions right and left. He began
with Mr. Owen.
“You started a branch store
here in Berkeley about six months ago?”
“Yes,” Mr. Owen answered.
“And since then I’ve noticed
that three little corner groceries have gone out of
business. Was your branch store the cause of it?”
Mr. Owen affirmed with a complacent
smile. “They had no chance against us.”
“Why not?”
“We had greater capital.
With a large business there is always less waste and
greater efficiency.”
“And your branch store absorbed
the profits of the three small ones. I see.
But tell me, what became of the owners of the three
stores?”
“One is driving a delivery wagon
for us. I don’t know what happened to the
other two.”
Ernest turned abruptly on Mr. Kowalt.
“You sell a great deal at cut-rates.
What have become of the owners of the small drug stores
that you forced to the wall?”
A lowering of selling price to cost,
and even to less than cost. Thus, a large
company could sell at a loss for a longer period
than a small company, and so drive the small company
out of business. A common device of competition.
“One of them, Mr. Haasfurther,
has charge now of our prescription department,”
was the answer.
“And you absorbed the profits they had been
making?”
“Surely. That is what we are in business
for.”
“And you?” Ernest said
suddenly to Mr. Asmunsen. “You are disgusted
because the railroad has absorbed your profits?”
Mr. Asmunsen nodded.
“What you want is to make profits yourself?”
Again Mr. Asmunsen nodded.
“Out of others?”
There was no answer.
“Out of others?” Ernest insisted.
“That is the way profits are made,” Mr.
Asmunsen replied curtly.
“Then the business game is to
make profits out of others, and to prevent others
from making profits out of you. That’s it,
isn’t it?”
Ernest had to repeat his question
before Mr. Asmunsen gave an answer, and then he said:
“Yes, that’s it, except
that we do not object to the others making profits
so long as they are not extortionate.”
“By extortionate you mean large;
yet you do not object to making large profits yourself?
. . . Surely not?”
And Mr. Asmunsen amiably confessed
to the weakness. There was one other man who
was quizzed by Ernest at this juncture, a Mr. Calvin,
who had once been a great dairy-owner.
“Some time ago you were fighting
the Milk Trust,” Ernest said to him; “and
now you are in Grange politics. How did it happen?”
Many efforts were made during this
period to organize the perishing farmer class
into a political party, the aim of which was
destroy the trusts and corporations by drastic legislation.
All such attempts ended in failure.
“Oh, I haven’t quit the
fight,” Mr. Calvin answered, and he looked belligerent
enough. “I’m fighting the Trust on
the only field where it is possible to fight the
political field. Let me show you. A few years
ago we dairymen had everything our own way.”
“But you competed among yourselves?” Ernest
interrupted.
“Yes, that was what kept the
profits down. We did try to organize, but independent
dairymen always broke through us. Then came the
Milk Trust.”
“Financed by surplus capital
from Standard Oil," Ernest said.
The first successful
great trust almost a generation in
advance of the rest.
“Yes,” Mr. Calvin acknowledged.
“But we did not know it at the time. Its
agents approached us with a club. “Come
in and be fat,” was their proposition, “or
stay out and starve.” Most of us came in.
Those that didn’t, starved. Oh, it paid
us . . . at first. Milk was raised a cent a quart.
One-quarter of this cent came to us. Three-quarters
of it went to the Trust. Then milk was raised
another cent, only we didn’t get any of that
cent. Our complaints were useless. The Trust
was in control. We discovered that we were pawns.
Finally, the additional quarter of a cent was denied
us. Then the Trust began to squeeze us out.
What could we do? We were squeezed out.
There were no dairymen, only a Milk Trust.”
“But with milk two cents higher,
I should think you could have competed,” Ernest
suggested slyly.
“So we thought. We tried
it.” Mr. Calvin paused a moment. “It
broke us. The Trust could put milk upon the market
more cheaply than we. It could sell still at
a slight profit when we were selling at actual loss.
I dropped fifty thousand dollars in that venture.
Most of us went bankrupt. The dairymen were wiped
out of existence.”
Bankruptcy a peculiar
institution that enabled an individual, who had
failed in competitive industry, to forego paying
his debts. The effect was to ameliorate the too
savage conditions of the fang-and-claw social struggle.
“So the Trust took your profits
away from you,” Ernest said, “and you’ve
gone into politics in order to legislate the Trust
out of existence and get the profits back?”
Mr. Calvin’s face lighted up.
“That is precisely what I say in my speeches
to the farmers. That’s our whole idea in
a nutshell.”
“And yet the Trust produces
milk more cheaply than could the independent dairymen?”
Ernest queried.
“Why shouldn’t it, with
the splendid organization and new machinery its large
capital makes possible?”
“There is no discussion,”
Ernest answered. “It certainly should, and,
furthermore, it does.”
Mr. Calvin here launched out into
a political speech in exposition of his views.
He was warmly followed by a number of the others, and
the cry of all was to destroy the trusts.
“Poor simple folk,” Ernest
said to me in an undertone. “They see clearly
as far as they see, but they see only to the ends of
their noses.”
A little later he got the floor again,
and in his characteristic way controlled it for the
rest of the evening.
“I have listened carefully to
all of you,” he began, “and I see plainly
that you play the business game in the orthodox fashion.
Life sums itself up to you in profits. You have
a firm and abiding belief that you were created for
the sole purpose of making profits. Only there
is a hitch. In the midst of your own profit-making
along comes the trust and takes your profits away
from you. This is a dilemma that interferes somehow
with the aim of creation, and the only way out, as
it seems to you, is to destroy that which takes from
you your profits.
“I have listened carefully,
and there is only one name that will epitomize you.
I shall call you that name. You are machine-breakers.
Do you know what a machine-breaker is? Let me
tell you. In the eighteenth century, in England,
men and women wove cloth on hand-looms in their own
cottages. It was a slow, clumsy, and costly way
of weaving cloth, this cottage system of manufacture.
Along came the steam-engine and labor-saving machinery.
A thousand looms assembled in a large factory, and
driven by a central engine wove cloth vastly more cheaply
than could the cottage weavers on their hand-looms.
Here in the factory was combination, and before it
competition faded away. The men and women who
had worked the hand-looms for themselves now went into
the factories and worked the machine-looms, not for
themselves, but for the capitalist owners. Furthermore,
little children went to work on the machine-looms,
at lower wages, and displaced the men. This made
hard times for the men. Their standard of living
fell. They starved. And they said it was
all the fault of the machines. Therefore, they
proceeded to break the machines. They did not
succeed, and they were very stupid.
“Yet you have not learned their
lesson. Here are you, a century and a half later,
trying to break machines. By your own confession
the trust machines do the work more efficiently and
more cheaply than you can. That is why you cannot
compete with them. And yet you would break those
machines. You are even more stupid than the stupid
workmen of England. And while you maunder about
restoring competition, the trusts go on destroying
you.
“One and all you tell the same
story, the passing away of competition
and the coming on of combination. You, Mr. Owen,
destroyed competition here in Berkeley when your branch
store drove the three small groceries out of business.
Your combination was more effective. Yet you feel
the pressure of other combinations on you, the trust
combinations, and you cry out. It is because
you are not a trust. If you were a grocery trust
for the whole United States, you would be singing another
song. And the song would be, ‘Blessed are
the trusts.’ And yet again, not only is
your small combination not a trust, but you are aware
yourself of its lack of strength. You are beginning
to divine your own end. You feel yourself and
your branch stores a pawn in the game. You see
the powerful interests rising and growing more powerful
day by day; you feel their mailed hands descending
upon your profits and taking a pinch here and a pinch
there the railroad trust, the oil trust,
the steel trust, the coal trust; and you know that
in the end they will destroy you, take away from you
the last per cent of your little profits.
“You, sir, are a poor gamester.
When you squeezed out the three small groceries here
in Berkeley by virtue of your superior combination,
you swelled out your chest, talked about efficiency
and enterprise, and sent your wife to Europe on the
profits you had gained by eating up the three small
groceries. It is dog eat dog, and you ate them
up. But, on the other hand, you are being eaten
up in turn by the bigger dogs, wherefore you squeal.
And what I say to you is true of all of you at this
table. You are all squealing. You are all
playing the losing game, and you are all squealing
about it.
“But when you squeal you don’t
state the situation flatly, as I have stated it.
You don’t say that you like to squeeze profits
out of others, and that you are making all the row
because others are squeezing your profits out of you.
No, you are too cunning for that. You say something
else. You make small-capitalist political speeches
such as Mr. Calvin made. What did he say?
Here are a few of his phrases I caught: ’Our
original principles are all right,’ ’What
this country requires is a return to fundamental American
methods free opportunity for all,’
’The spirit of liberty in which this nation
was born,’ ’Let us return to the principles
of our forefathers.’
“When he says ‘free opportunity
for all,’ he means free opportunity to squeeze
profits, which freedom of opportunity is now denied
him by the great trusts. And the absurd thing
about it is that you have repeated these phrases so
often that you believe them. You want opportunity
to plunder your fellow-men in your own small way, but
you hypnotize yourselves into thinking you want freedom.
You are piggish and acquisitive, but the magic of
your phrases leads you to believe that you are patriotic.
Your desire for profits, which is sheer selfishness,
you metamorphose into altruistic solicitude for suffering
humanity. Come on now, right here amongst ourselves,
and be honest for once. Look the matter in the
face and state it in direct terms.”
There were flushed and angry faces
at the table, and withal a measure of awe. They
were a little frightened at this smooth-faced young
fellow, and the swing and smash of his words, and
his dreadful trait of calling a spade a spade.
Mr. Calvin promptly replied.
“And why not?” he demanded.
“Why can we not return to ways of our fathers
when this republic was founded? You have spoken
much truth, Mr. Everhard, unpalatable though it has
been. But here amongst ourselves let us speak
out. Let us throw off all disguise and accept
the truth as Mr. Everhard has flatly stated it.
It is true that we smaller capitalists are after profits,
and that the trusts are taking our profits away from
us. It is true that we want to destroy the trusts
in order that our profits may remain to us. And
why can we not do it? Why not? I say, why
not?”
“Ah, now we come to the gist
of the matter,” Ernest said with a pleased expression.
“I’ll try to tell you why not, though the
telling will be rather hard. You see, you fellows
have studied business, in a small way, but you have
not studied social evolution at all. You are in
the midst of a transition stage now in economic evolution,
but you do not understand it, and that’s what
causes all the confusion. Why cannot you return?
Because you can’t. You can no more make
water run up hill than can you cause the tide of economic
evolution to flow back in its channel along the way
it came. Joshua made the sun stand still upon
Gibeon, but you would outdo Joshua. You would
make the sun go backward in the sky. You would
have time retrace its steps from noon to morning.
“In the face of labor-saving
machinery, of organized production, of the increased
efficiency of combination, you would set the economic
sun back a whole generation or so to the time when
there were no great capitalists, no great machinery,
no railroads a time when a host of little
capitalists warred with each other in economic anarchy,
and when production was primitive, wasteful, unorganized,
and costly. Believe me, Joshua’s task was
easier, and he had Jéhovah to help him. But God
has forsaken you small capitalists. The sun of
the small capitalists is setting. It will never
rise again. Nor is it in your power even to make
it stand still. You are perishing, and you are
doomed to perish utterly from the face of society.
“This is the fiat of evolution.
It is the word of God. Combination is stronger
than competition. Primitive man was a puny creature
hiding in the crevices of the rocks. He combined
and made war upon his carnivorous enemies. They
were competitive beasts. Primitive man was a combinative
beast, and because of it he rose to primacy over all
the animals. And man has been achieving greater
and greater combinations ever since. It is combination
versus competition, a thousand centuries long struggle,
in which competition has always been worsted.
Whoso enlists on the side of competition perishes.”
“But the trusts themselves arose
out of competition,” Mr. Calvin interrupted.
“Very true,” Ernest answered.
“And the trusts themselves destroyed competition.
That, by your own word, is why you are no longer in
the dairy business.”
The first laughter of the evening
went around the table, and even Mr. Calvin joined
in the laugh against himself.
“And now, while we are on the
trusts,” Ernest went on, “let us settle
a few things. I shall make certain statements,
and if you disagree with them, speak up. Silence
will mean agreement. Is it not true that a machine-loom
will weave more cloth and weave more cheaply than a
hand-loom?” He paused, but nobody spoke up.
“Is it not then highly irrational to break the
machine-loom and go back to the clumsy and more costly
hand-loom method of weaving?” Heads nodded in
acquiescence. “Is it not true that that
known as a trust produces more efficiently and cheaply
than can a thousand competing small concerns?”
Still no one objected. “Then is it not
irrational to destroy that cheap and efficient combination?”
No one answered for a long time. Then Mr. Kowalt
spoke.
“What are we to do, then?”
he demanded. “To destroy the trusts is the
only way we can see to escape their domination.”
Ernest was all fire and aliveness on the instant.
“I’ll show you another
way!” he cried. “Let us not destroy
those wonderful machines that produce efficiently
and cheaply. Let us control them. Let us
profit by their efficiency and cheapness. Let
us run them for ourselves. Let us oust the present
owners of the wonderful machines, and let us own the
wonderful machines ourselves. That, gentlemen,
is socialism, a greater combination than the trusts,
a greater economic and social combination than any
that has as yet appeared on the planet. It is
in line with evolution. We meet combination with
greater combination. It is the winning side.
Come on over with us socialists and play on the winning
side.”
Here arose dissent. There was
a shaking of heads, and mutterings arose.
“All right, then, you prefer
to be anachronisms,” Ernest laughed. “You
prefer to play atavistic roles. You are doomed
to perish as all atavisms perish. Have you ever
asked what will happen to you when greater combinations
than even the present trusts arise? Have you ever
considered where you will stand when the great trusts
themselves combine into the combination of combinations into
the social, economic, and political trust?”
He turned abruptly and irrelevantly upon Mr. Calvin.
“Tell me,” Ernest said,
“if this is not true. You are compelled
to form a new political party because the old parties
are in the hands of the trusts. The chief obstacle
to your Grange propaganda is the trusts. Behind
every obstacle you encounter, every blow that smites
you, every defeat that you receive, is the hand of
the trusts. Is this not so? Tell me.”
Mr. Calvin sat in uncomfortable silence.
“Go ahead,” Ernest encouraged.
“It is true,” Mr. Calvin
confessed. “We captured the state legislature
of Oregon and put through splendid protective legislation,
and it was vetoed by the governor, who was a creature
of the trusts. We elected a governor of Colorado,
and the legislature refused to permit him to take
office. Twice we have passed a national income
tax, and each time the supreme court smashed it as
unconstitutional. The courts are in the hands
of the trusts. We, the people, do not pay our
judges sufficiently. But there will come a time ”
“When the combination of the
trusts will control all legislation, when the combination
of the trusts will itself be the government,”
Ernest interrupted.
“Never! never!” were the
cries that arose. Everybody was excited and belligerent.
“Tell me,” Ernest demanded,
“what will you do when such a time comes?”
“We will rise in our strength!”
Mr. Asmunsen cried, and many voices backed his decision.
“That will be civil war,” Ernest warned
them.
“So be it, civil war,”
was Mr. Asmunsen’s answer, with the cries of
all the men at the table behind him. “We
have not forgotten the deeds of our forefathers.
For our liberties we are ready to fight and die.”
Ernest smiled.
“Do not forget,” he said,
“that we had tacitly agreed that liberty in
your case, gentlemen, means liberty to squeeze profits
out of others.”
The table was angry, now, fighting
angry; but Ernest controlled the tumult and made himself
heard.
“One more question. When
you rise in your strength, remember, the reason for
your rising will be that the government is in the hands
of the trusts. Therefore, against your strength
the government will turn the regular army, the navy,
the militia, the police in short, the whole
organized war machinery of the United States.
Where will your strength be then?”
Dismay sat on their faces, and before
they could recover, Ernest struck again.
“Do you remember, not so long
ago, when our regular army was only fifty thousand?
Year by year it has been increased until to-day it
is three hundred thousand.”
Again he struck.
“Nor is that all. While
you diligently pursued that favorite phantom of yours,
called profits, and moralized about that favorite fetich
of yours, called competition, even greater and more
direful things have been accomplished by combination.
There is the militia.”
“It is our strength!”
cried Mr. Kowalt. “With it we would repel
the invasion of the regular army.”
“You would go into the militia
yourself,” was Ernest’s retort, “and
be sent to Maine, or Florida, or the Philippines, or
anywhere else, to drown in blood your own comrades
civil-warring for their liberties. While from
Kansas, or Wisconsin, or any other state, your own
comrades would go into the militia and come here to
California to drown in blood your own civil-warring.”
Now they were really shocked, and
they sat wordless, until Mr. Owen murmured:
“We would not go into the militia.
That would settle it. We would not be so foolish.”
Ernest laughed outright.
“You do not understand the combination
that has been effected. You could not help yourself.
You would be drafted into the militia.”
“There is such a thing as civil law,”
Mr. Owen insisted.
“Not when the government suspends
civil law. In that day when you speak of rising
in your strength, your strength would be turned against
yourself. Into the militia you would go, willy-nilly.
Habeas corpus, I heard some one mutter just now.
Instead of habeas corpus you would get post mortems.
If you refused to go into the militia, or to obey after
you were in, you would be tried by drumhead court martial
and shot down like dogs. It is the law.”
“It is not the law!” Mr.
Calvin asserted positively. “There is no
such law. Young man, you have dreamed all this.
Why, you spoke of sending the militia to the Philippines.
That is unconstitutional. The Constitution especially
states that the militia cannot be sent out of the country.”
“What’s the Constitution
got to do with it?” Ernest demanded. “The
courts interpret the Constitution, and the courts,
as Mr. Asmunsen agreed, are the creatures of the trusts.
Besides, it is as I have said, the law. It has
been the law for years, for nine years, gentlemen.”
“That we can be drafted into
the militia?” Mr. Calvin asked incredulously.
“That they can shoot us by drumhead court martial
if we refuse?”
“Yes,” Ernest answered, “precisely
that.”
“How is it that we have never
heard of this law?” my father asked, and I could
see that it was likewise new to him.
“For two reasons,” Ernest
said. “First, there has been no need to
enforce it. If there had, you’d have heard
of it soon enough. And secondly, the law was
rushed through Congress and the Senate secretly, with
practically no discussion. Of course, the newspapers
made no mention of it. But we socialists knew
about it. We published it in our papers.
But you never read our papers.”
“I still insist you are dreaming,”
Mr. Calvin said stubbornly. “The country
would never have permitted it.”
“But the country did permit
it,” Ernest replied. “And as for my
dreaming ” he put his hand in his
pocket and drew out a small pamphlet “tell
me if this looks like dream-stuff.”
He opened it and began to read:
“’Section One, be it enacted,
and so forth and so forth, that the militia shall
consist of every able-bodied male citizen of the respective
states, territories, and District of Columbia, who
is more than eighteen and less than forty-five years
of age.’
“’Section Seven, that
any officer or enlisted man’ remember
Section One, gentlemen, you are all enlisted men ’that
any enlisted man of the militia who shall refuse or
neglect to present himself to such mustering officer
upon being called forth as herein prescribed, shall
be subject to trial by court martial, and shall be
punished as such court martial shall direct.’
“’Section Eight, that
courts martial, for the trial of officers or men of
the militia, shall be composed of militia officers
only.’
“’Section Nine, that the
militia, when called into the actual service of the
United States, shall be subject to the same rules and
articles of war as the regular troops of the United
States.’
“There you are gentlemen, American
citizens, and fellow-militiamen. Nine years ago
we socialists thought that law was aimed against labor.
But it would seem that it was aimed against you, too.
Congressman Wiley, in the brief discussion that was
permitted, said that the bill ’provided for
a reserve force to take the mob by the throat’ you’re
the mob, gentlemen ’and protect at
all hazards life, liberty, and property.’
And in the time to come, when you rise in your strength,
remember that you will be rising against the property
of the trusts, and the liberty of the trusts, according
to the law, to squeeze you. Your teeth are pulled,
gentlemen. Your claws are trimmed. In the
day you rise in your strength, toothless and clawless,
you will be as harmless as any army of clams.”
“I don’t believe it!”
Kowalt cried. “There is no such law.
It is a canard got up by you socialists.”
“This bill was introduced in
the House of Representatives on July 30, 1902,”
was the reply. “It was introduced by Representative
Dick of Ohio. It was rushed through. It
was passed unanimously by the Senate on January 14,
1903. And just seven days afterward was approved
by the President of the United States."
Everhard was right in the essential
particulars, though his date of the introduction
of the bill is in error. The bill was introduced
on June 30, and not on July 30. The Congressional
Record is here in Ardis, and a reference to it shows
mention of the bill on the following dates: June
30, December 9, 15, 16, and 17, 1902, and January
7 and 14, 1903. The ignorance evidenced
by the business men at the dinner was nothing
unusual. Very few people knew of the existence
of this law. E. Untermann, a revolutionist,
in July, 1903, published a pamphlet at Girard,
Kansas, on the “Militia Bill.”
This pamphlet had a small circulation among workingmen;
but already had the segregation of classes proceeded
so far, that the members of the middle class never
heard of the pamphlet at all, and so remained
in ignorance of the law.