CHAPTER III - BARBARY PIRATES
The American people became fully aroused
on one occasion to the iniquity of tipping on
an international scale.
In 1801 President Jefferson decided
that the United States could tolerate no longer the
system of tribute enforced by the Barbary States along
the shores of the Mediterranean.
Before our action, no European government
had made more than fitful, ineffectual attempts to
break up a practice at once humiliating to national
honor and disastrous to national commerce. Candor
requires the admission that we, too, submitted for
years to this system of paying tribute to Barbary
pirates for an unmolested passage of our ships, but
the significant fact is that American manhood did finally
and successfully revolt against the practice.
By 1805 our naval forces had brought
the pirates to their knees and all Europe breathed
grateful sighs of relief. Even the Pope commended
the American achievement. The practice was contrary
to every dictate of self-respect.
TRIBUTE
These pirates of Algiers, Tunis, Morocco
and Tripoli did not pretend to have any other right
behind their demands for tribute than the right they
could enforce with cutlass and cannon a
right ferociously employed. It was not robbery
in the ordinary sense of the word. They demanded
a fee based on the value of the cargo for the privilege
of sailing in the Mediterranean, and this being paid,
the ship could proceed to its destination. Ship-owners
soon began to figure tribute as a fixed expense of
navigation, like insurance, and passed the added cost
along to the ultimate consumer.
This practice of paying tribute was
a system of international tipping. The Barbary
pirates granted immunity to those who obeyed the custom,
but made it decidedly warm and expensive for those
who dared to protest against it just as
do our modern pirates in hotels, sleeping cars, restaurants,
barber shops and elsewhere.
If a ship refused to pay tribute it
was sunk, and the sailors went to slavery in the desert,
or to death by fearful torture. President Jefferson
could not see any basis of right in the position of
the Barbary States that the Mediterranean was their
private lake through which ships could not pass without
paying toll. He sent Decatur to register our
protest.
With the Pinckney slogan: “Millions
for defense not one
cent for tribute!” the American
naval forces made good our position. The tips
that skippers of our nation had been paying to the
pirates were saved and the custom soon was abandoned
by other nations.
To-day, the old battle cry is reversed
to read: “Millions for tribute not
one cent for defense!”
It is certain that a greater tribute
is paid in one week in the United States in the form
of tips, than our merchantmen paid during the whole
period that they knuckled to the Barbary pirates.
In New York City alone more than $100,000
a day is paid in gratuities to waiters, hotel employes,
chauffeurs, barbers and allied classes. But New
York has reached a subserviency to the tipping custom
that is amazing in a democratic country.
This vast tribute is paid for not
more real service than the Barbary pirates rendered
to those from whom they exacted tribute. It is
given to workers who are paid by their employers to
perform the services enjoyed by the public. If
the Barbary pirates could see the ease with which a
princely tribute is exacted from a docile public by
the tip-takers, they would yearn to be reincarnated
as waiters in America the Land of the Fee!