THE WORLD WAR ITS MEANING AND ITS LESSONS FOR US
Whatever differences of opinion and
honest differences of opinion may have
existed and may still exist in America in regard to
the great world conflict, there is a wonderful unanimity
of thought that has crystallised itself into the concrete
form something must be done in order
that it can never occur again. The higher
intelligence of the nation must assert itself.
It must feel and think and act in terms of internationalism.
Not that the feeling of nationalism in any country
shall, or even can be eradicated or even abated.
It must be made, however, to coordinate itself with
the now rapidly growing sense of world-consciousness,
that the growing intelligence of mankind, aided by
some tremendously concrete forms of recent experience,
is now recognising as a great reality.
That there were very strong sympathies
for both the Allied Nations and for the Central Powers
in the beginning, goes without saying, How could it
be otherwise, when we realise the diverse and complex
types of our citizenship?
One of the most distinctive, and in
some ways one of the most significant, features of
the American nation is that it is today composed of
representatives, and in some cases, of enormous bodies
of representatives, numbering into the millions, of
practically every nation in the world.
There are single cities where, in
one case twenty-six, in another case twenty-nine,
and in other cases a still larger number of what are
today designated as hyphenated citizens are represented.
The orderly removal of the hyphen, and the amalgamation
of these splendid representatives of practically all
nations into genuine American citizens, infused with
American ideals and pushed on by true American ambitions,
is one of the great problems that the war has brought
in a most striking manner to our attention.
Not that these representatives of
many nations shall in any way lose their sense of
sympathy for the nations of their birth, in times of
either peace or of distress, although they have found
it either advisable or greatly to their own personal
advantage and welfare to leave the lands of their
birth and to establish their homes here.
The fact that in the vast majority
of cases they find themselves better off here, and
choose to remain and assume the responsibilities of
citizenship in the Western Republic, involves a responsibility
that some, if not indeed many, heretofore have apparently
too lightly considered. There must be a more
supreme sense of allegiance, and a continually growing
sense of responsibility to the nation, that, guided
by their own independent judgment and animated by their
own free wills, they have chosen as their home.
There is a difference between sympathy
and allegiance; and unless a man has found conditions
intolerable in the land of his birth, and this is
the reason for his seeking a home in another land more
to his liking and to his advantage, we cannot expect
him to be devoid of sympathy for the land of his birth,
especially in times of stress or of great need.
We can expect him, however, and we have a right to
demand his absolute allegiance to the land
of his adoption. And if he cannot give this,
then we should see to it that he return to his former
home. If he is capable of clear thinking and
right feeling, he also must realise the fundamental
truth of this fact.
There are public schools in America
where as many as nineteen languages are spoken in
a single room. Our public schools, so eagerly
sought by the children of parents of foreign birth,
in their intense eagerness for an education, that
is offered freely and without cost to all, can and
must be made greater instruments in converting what
must in time become a great menace to our institutions,
and even to the very life of the nation itself, into
a real and genuine American citizenship. Our
best educators, in addition to our clearest thinking
citizens, are realising as never before, that our
public-school system chiefly, among our educational
institutions, must be made a great melting-pot through
which this process of amalgamation must be carried
on.
We are also realising clearly now
that, as a nation, we have been entirely too lax in
connection with our immigration privileges, regulations
and restrictions. We have been admitting foreigners
to our shores in such enormous quantities each year
that we have not been able at all adequately to assimilate
them, nor have we used at all a sufficiently wise
discrimination in the admission of désirables
or undesirables.
We have received, or we have allowed
to be dumped upon our shores, great numbers of the
latter whom we should know would inevitably become
dependents, as well as great numbers of criminals.
The result has been that they have been costing certain
localities millions of dollars every year. But
entirely aside from the latter, the last two or three
years have brought home to us as never before the
fact that those who come to our shores must come with
the avowed and the settled purpose of becoming real
American citizens, giving full and absolute allegiance
to the institutions, the laws, the government of the
land of their adoption.
If any other government is not able
so to manage as to make it more desirable for its
subjects to remain in the land of their birth, rather
than to seek homes in the land with institutions more
to their liking, or with advantages more conducive
to their welfare, that government then should not
expect to retain, even in the slightest degree, the
allegiance of such former subjects. A hyphenated
citizenship may become as dangerous to a republic
as a cancer is in the human body. A country with
over a hundred hyphens cannot fulfil its highest destiny.
We, as a nation, have been rudely
shaken from our long dream of almost inevitable national
security. We have been brought finally, and although
as a nation we have no desire for conquest or empire,
and no desire for military glory, and therefore no
need of any great army or navy for offensive purposes,
we have been brought finally to realise that we do,
nevertheless, stand in need of a national strengthening
of our arm of defence. A land of a hundred million
people, where one could travel many times for a sixmonth
and never see the sign of a soldier, is brought, though
reluctantly, to face a new state of affairs; but one,
nevertheless, that must be faced calmly
faced and wisely acted upon. And while it is
true that as a nation we have always had the tradition
of non-militarism, it is not true that we have had
the tradition of military or of naval impotence or
weakness.
Preparedness, therefore, has assumed
a position of tremendous importance, in individual
thought, in public discussion, and almost universally
in the columns of the public press. One of the
most vital questions among us then is, not so much
as to how we shall prepare, but how shall we prepare
adequately for defensive purposes, in case of any
emergency arising, without being thrown too far along
the road of militarism, and without an inordinate
preparation that has been the scourge and the bane
of many old-world countries for so many years, and
that quite as much as anything has been provocative
of the horrible conflict that has literally been devastating
so many European countries.
It is clearly apparent that the best
thought in America today calls for an adequate preparation
for purposes of defence, and calls for a recognition
of facts as they are. It also clearly sees the
danger of certain types of mind and certain interests
combining to carry the matter much farther than is
at all called for. The question is How
shall we then strike that happy balance that is the
secret of all successful living in the lives of either
individuals or in the lives of nations?
All clear-seeing people realise that,
as things are in the world today, there is a certain
amount of preparedness that is necessary for influence
and for insurance. As within the nation a police
force is necessary for the enforcement of law, for
the preservation of law and order, although it is
not at all necessary that every second or third man
be a policeman, so in the council of nations the individual
nation must have a certain element of force that it
can fall back upon if all other available agencies
fail. In diplomacy the strong nations win out,
the weaker lose out. Military and naval power,
unless carried to a ridiculous excess does not, therefore,
lie idle, even when not in actual use.
Our power and influence as a nation
will certainly not be in proportion to our weakness.
Although righteousness exalteth a nation, it is nevertheless
true that righteousness alone will not protect a nation while
other nations are fully armed. National weakness
does not make for peace.
Righteousness, combined with a spirit
of forbearance, combined with a keen desire to give
justice as well as to demand justice, if combined
with the power to strike powerfully and sustainedly
in defence of justice, and in defence of national
integrity, is what protects a nation, and this it
is that in the long run exalteth a nation while
things are as they are.
While conditions have therefore brought
prominently to the forefront in America the matter
of military training and military service an
adequate military preparation for purposes of defence,
for full and adequate defence, the best thought of
the nation is almost a unit in the belief that, for
us as a nation, an immense standing army is unnecessary
as well as inadvisable.
No amount of military preparation
that is not combined definitely and completely with
an enhanced citizenship, and therefore with an advance
in real democracy, is at all worthy of consideration
on the part of the American people, or indeed on the
part of the people of any nation. Pre-eminently
is this true in this day and age.
Observing this principle we could
then, while a certain degree of universal training
under some system similar to the Swiss or Australian
system is being carried on, and to serve our immediate
needs, have an army of even a quarter of a million
men without danger of militarism and without heavy
financial burdens, and without subverting our American
ideas providing it is an industrial arm.
There are great engineering projects that could be
carried on, thereby developing many of our now latent
resources; there is an immense amount of road-building
that could be projected in many parts of, if not throughout
the entire country; there are great irrigation projects
that could be carried on in the far West and Southwest,
reclaiming millions upon millions of acres of what
are now unproductive desert lands; all these could
be carried on and made even to pay, keeping busy a
large number of men for half a dozen years to come.
This army of this number of men could
be recruited, trained to an adequate degree of military
service, and at the same time could be engaged in
profitable employment on these much-needed works.
They could then be paid an adequate wage, ample to
support a family, or ample to lay up savings if without
family. Such men leaving the army service, would
then have a degree of training and skill whereby they
would be able to get positions or employment, all
more remunerative than the bulk of them, perhaps,
would ever be able to get without such training and
experience.
An army of this number of trained
men, somewhat equally divided between the Atlantic
and the Pacific seaboards, the bulk of them engaged
in regular constructive work, work that needs to
be done and that, therefore, could be profitably done,
and ready to be called into service at a moment’s
notice, would constitute a tremendous insurance against
any aggression from without, and would also give a
tremendous sense of security for half a dozen years
at least. This number could then be reduced,
for by that time several million young men from eighteen
years up would be partially trained and in first-class
physical shape to be summoned to service should the
emergency arise.
In addition to the vast amount of
good roads building, whose cost could be borne in
equal proportions by nation, state and county a
most important factor in connection with military
necessity as well as a great economic factor in the
successful development and advancement of any community the
millions of acres of now arid lands in the West, awaiting
only water to make them among the most valuable and
productive in all the world, could be used as a great
solution of our immigration problem.
Up to the year when the war began,
there came to our shores upwards of one million immigrants
every twelve months, seeking work, and most of them
homes in this country. The great bulk of them
got no farther than our cities, increasing congestion,
already in many cases acute, and many of them becoming
in time, from one cause or another, dependents, the
annual cost of their maintenance aggregating many millions
every year.
With these vast acres ready for them
large numbers could, under a wise system of distribution,
be sent on to the great West and Southwest, and more
easily and directly now since the Panama Canal is open
for navigation. Allotments of these lands could
be assigned them that they could in time become owners
of, through a wisely established system of payments.
Many of them would thereby be living lives similar
to those they lived in their own countries, and for
which their training and experience there have abundantly
fitted them. They would thus become a far more
valuable type of citizens landowners than
they could ever possibly become otherwise, and especially
through our present unorganised hit-or-miss system.
They would in time also add annually hundreds of millions
of productive work to the wealth of the country.
The very wise system that was inaugurated
some time ago in connection with the Coast Defence
arm of our army is, under the wise direction of our
present Secretary of War, to be extended to all branches
of the service. For some time in the Coast Artillery
Service the enlisted man under competent instruction
has had the privilege of becoming a skilled machinist
or a skilled electrician. Now the system is to
be extended through all branches of the military service,
and many additional trades are to be added to the
curricula of the trade schools of the army. The
young man can, therefore, make his own selection and
become a trained artisan at the same time that he
serves his time in the army, with all expenses for
such training, as well as maintenance, borne by the
Government. He can thereby leave the service fully
equipped for profitable employment.
This will have the tendency of calling
a better class of young men into the service; it will
also do away with the well-founded criticism that
army life and its idleness, or partly-enforced idleness,
unfits a man for useful industrial service after he
quits the army. If this same system is extended
through the navy, as it can be, both army and navy
service will meet the American requirement that
neither military nor naval service take great numbers
of men from productive employment, to be in turn supported
by other workers. Instead of so much dead timber,
they are all the time producing while in active service,
and are being trained to be highly efficient as producers,
when they leave the service.
Under this system the Federal Government
can build its own ordnance works and its own munition
factories and become its own maker of whatever may
be required in all lines of output. We will then
be able to escape the perverse influence of gain on
the part of large munition industries, and the danger
that comes from that portion of a military party whose
motives are actuated by personal gain.
If the occasion arises, or if we permit
the occasion to arise, Kruppism in America will become
as dangerous and as sinister in its influences and
its proportions, as it became in Germany.
Another great service that the war
has done us, is by way of bringing home to us the
lesson that has been so prominently brought to the
front in connection with the other nations at war,
namely, the necessity of the speedy and thorough mobilisation
of all lines of industries and business; for the thoroughness
and the efficiency with which this can be done may
mean success that otherwise would result in failure
and disaster. We are now awake to the tremendous
importance of this.
It is at last becoming clearly understood
among the peoples and the nations of the world that,
as a nation, we have no desire for conquest, for territory,
for empire we have no purposes of aggression;
we have quite enough to do to develop our resources
and our as yet great undeveloped areas.
A few months before the war broke,
I had conversations with the heads or with the representatives
of leading publishing houses in several European countries.
It was at a time when our Mexican situation was beginning
to be very acute. I remember at that time especially,
the conversation with the head of one of the largest
publishing houses in Italy, in Milan. I could
see plainly his scepticism when, in reply to his questions,
I endeavoured to persuade him that as a nation we had
no motives of conquest or of aggression in Mexico,
that we were interested solely in the restoration
of a representative and stable government there.
And since that time, I am glad to say that our acts
as a nation have all been along the line of persuading
him, and also many other like-minded ones in many
countries abroad, of the truth of this assertion.
By this general course we have been gaining the confidence
and have been cementing the friendship of practically
every South American republic, our immediate neighbours
on the southern continent. This has been a source
of increasing economic power with us, and an element
of greatly added strength, and also a tremendous energy
working all the time for the preservation of peace.
One can say most confidently, even
though recognising our many grave faults as a nation,
that our course along this line has been such, especially
of late years, as to inspire confidence on the part
of all the fair-minded nations of the world.
Our theory of the state, the theory
of democracy, is not that the state is above all,
and that the individual and his welfare are as nothing
when compared to it, but rather that the state is the
agency through which the highest welfare of all its
subjects is to be evolved, expressed, maintained.
No other theory to my mind, is at all compatible with
the intelligence of any free-thinking people.
Otherwise, there is always the danger
and also the likelihood, while human nature is as
it is, for some ruler, some clique, or factions so
to concentrate power into their own hands, that for
their own ambitions, for aggrandisement, or for false
or short-sighted and half-baked ideas of additions
to their country, it is dragged into periodic wars
with other nations.
Nor do we share in the belief that
the state is above morality, but rather that identically
the same moral ideals, precepts and obligations that
bind individuals must be held sacred by the state,
otherwise it becomes a pirate among nations, and it
will inevitably in time be hunted down and destroyed
as such, however great its apparent power. Nor
do we as a nation share in the belief that war is
necessary and indeed good for a nation, to inspire
and to preserve its manly qualities, its virility,
and therefore its power. Were this the only way
that this could be brought about, it might be well
and good; but the price to be paid is a price that
is too enormous and too frightful, and the results
are too uncertain. We believe that these same
ideals can be inculcated, that these same energies
can be used along useful, conserving, constructive
lines, rather than along lines of destruction.
A nation may have the most colossal
and perfect military system in the world, and still
may suffer defeat in any given while, because of those
unseen things that pertain to the soul of another people,
whereby powers and forces are engendered and materialised
that make defeat for them impossible; and in the matter
of big guns, it is well always to remember that no
nation can build them so great that another nation
may not build them still greater. National safety
does not necessarily lie in that direction. Nor,
on the other hand, along the lines of extreme pacificism surely
not as long as things are as they are. The argument
of the lamb has small deterrent effect upon the wolf as
long as the wolf is a wolf. And sometimes wolves
hunt in packs. The most preeminent lesson of
the great war for us as a nation should be this there
should be constantly a degree of preparedness sufficient
to hold until all the others, the various portions
of the nation, thoroughly coordinated and ready, can
be summoned into action. Thus are we prepared,
thus are we safe, and there is no danger or fear of
militarism.
In a democracy it should, without
question, be a fundamental fact that hand in hand
with equal rights there should go a sense of equal
duty. A call for defence should have a universal
response. So it is merely good common-sense,
good judgment, if you please, for all the young men
of the nation to have a training sufficient to enable
them to respond effectively if the nation’s
safety calls them to its defence. It is no crime,
however we may deprecate war, to be thus prepared.
For young men and we must
always remember that it is the young men who are called
for this purpose for young men to be called
to the colours by the tens or the hundreds of thousands,
unskilled and untrained, to be shot down, decimated
by the thoroughly trained and skilled troops of another
nation, or a combination of other nations, is indeed
the crime. Never, moreover, was folly so great
as that shown by him or by her who will not see.
And to look at the matter without prejudice, we will
realise that this is merely policing what we have.
It is meeting force with adequate force, if it
becomes necessary, so to meet it.
This is necessary until such time
as we have in operation among nations a thoroughly
established machinery whereby force will give place
to reason, whereby common sense will be used in adjusting
all differences between nations, as it is now used
in adjusting differences between individuals.
Our period of isolation is over.
We have become a world-nation. Equality of rights
presupposes equality of duty. In our very souls
we loathe militarism. Conquest and aggression
are foreign to our spirit, and foreign to our thoughts
and ambitions. But weakness will by no means
assure us immunity from aggression from without.
Universal military training up to a reasonable point,
and the joint sense of responsibility of every man
and every woman in the nation, and the right of the
national government to expect and to demand that every
man and woman stand ready to respond to the call to
service, whatever form it may take this
is our armour.
All intelligent people know that the
national government has always had the power to draft
every male citizen fit for service into military service.
It is not therefore a question of universal military
service. The real and only question is whether
these or great numbers of these go out illy prepared
and equipped as sheep to the shambles perchance, or
whether they go out trained and equipped to do a man’s
work more adequately prepared to protect
themselves as well as the integrity of the nation.
It is not to be done for the love or the purpose of
militarism; but recognising the fact that militarism
still persists, that with us it may not be triumphant
should we at any time be forced to face it. There
are certain facts that only to our peril as well as
our moral degradation, we can be blind to. Said
a noted historian but a few days ago:
“I loathe war and militarism.
I have fought them for twenty years. But I am
a historian, and I know that bullies thrive best in
an atmosphere of meekness. As long as this military
system lasts you must discourage the mailed fist by
showing that you will meet it with something harder
than a boxing glove. We do not think it good
to admit into the code of the twentieth century that
a great national bully may still with impunity squeeze
the blood out of its small neighbours and seize their
goods.”
We need not fear militarism arising
in America as long as the fundamental principles of
democracy are preserved and continually extended,
which can be done only through the feeling of the individual
responsibility of every man and every woman to take
a keen and constant interest in the matters of their
own government community, state, national,
and now international. We must realise and ever
more fully realise that in a government such as ours,
the people are the government, and that when in it
anything goes wrong, or wrongs and injustices are
allowed to grow and hold sway, we are to blame.
Universal military training has not
militarised Switzerland nor has it Australia.
It is rather the very essence of democracy and the
very antithesis of militarism.
“Let each son of Freedom
bear
His portion of
the burden. Should not each one do his share?
To
sacrifice the splendid few
The
strong of heart, the brave, the true,
Who
live or die as heroes do,
While cowards
profit is not fair!”
Many still recall that not a few well-meaning
people at the close of the Civil War proclaimed that,
with upwards of two million trained men behind him,
General Grant would become a military dictator, and
that this would be followed by the disappearance of
democracy in the nation. But the mind, the temper,
the traditions of our people are all a guarantee against
militarism. The gospel, the hallucination of the
shining armour, the will to power, has no attraction
for us. We loathe it; nor do we fear its undermining
and crushing our own liberties internally. Nevertheless,
it is true that vigilance is always and always will
be the price of liberty. There must be a constant
education towards citizenship. There must be
an alert democracy, so that any land and sea force
is always the servant of the spirit; for only otherwise
it can become its master but otherwise
it will become its master.