CHAPTER XIV - THE GOVERNMENT AND TIPPING
It has been asserted in this discussion
that tipping is incompatible with a democratic form
of government. Yet we find officials of our Government
following the custom and allowing tips as a legitimate
item of expense of traveling to be paid out of the
public treasury.
FREE AND EQUAL
This state of affairs proves that
the work of 1776 and 1787 was limited practically
to one phase of democracy, namely, the political.
Washington and Jefferson lived in a day when political
equality was the passionate ideal. This they
and their associates achieved in ample measure.
They gave the waiter or the barber or the bootblack
an equal voice in government with themselves.
Let those Americans who think that
the abolition of tipping would be too radical a step
toward social democracy consider how repulsive the
attitude of Washington and Jefferson was to the aristocratic
thought of their day. No matter what arguments
the aristocrats presented against political democracy,
their real objection was just this granting of voting
equality to persons whom they rated as socially submerged.
But having founded our government
upon political democracy, the straight line of development
is toward social and industrial democracy, in order
to complete the ideal entertained by Washington and
Jefferson. That both of these idealists tipped
servants and that Washington owned slaves is indisputable,
but they left records that prove that they merely
“suffered it to be so now.” Washington
clearly foresaw the trouble in which slavery would
involve his country, and would have freed his slaves
if he could have done so without precipitating what
to him appeared a greater evil in view of all the
circumstances of his day.
The Revolutionary period did all that
can be asked of one generation when political equality
was established. It remains for our generation
to finish the work of democracy by establishing social
and industrial democracy. The prospect of a street
cleaner or your valet being your social and industrial
equal may seem either utopian or undesirable, but
it must be remembered, as stated, that two centuries
ago the thought of granting an equal vote to such
persons was precisely as distasteful to the aristocratic
mind.
EQUALITY AND UNIFORMITY
Much loose thinking along these lines
would be obviated if every one could learn clearly
the distinction between “equality” and
“uniformity.” It is the thought of
uniformity that makes most persons belligerent toward
democratic impulses in industry or society. They
dislike the idea of a dead level of compulsory uniformity.
A bootblack and a banker are “equal” in
the right to vote, but they are not “uniform”
in function or culture. Social democracy will
abolish an aristocratic custom like tipping so that
every citizen will stand upon an equality of self-respect.
It will delete the adjective “menial” from
any form of service so that a garbage collector will
stand in as honorable a relation to society as a lawyer.
But social democracy will not and cannot make naturally
uncongenial minds live in a relation of compulsory
fellowship.
Thus in the United States we have
only one-third of a democracy. The other two-thirds social
and industrial democracy must be attained
before we can consider our government as ideal.
The tipping custom stands squarely in the path of
this attainment. The slavery system is not worse
in competition with free labor than is the tipping
system of compensation. In neither system are
values determined by merit or production.
In the list of the 5,000,000 Americans
with itching palms were national or city government
employees like mail carriers, garbage collectors and
policemen. In the larger cities a system of giving
gratuities to these and other government employees
has grown up that emphasizes the distance we have
to travel to attain true democracy.
Any one of these three classes of
government employees is paid well for the service
he renders. Yet there are mail carriers who will
lose a courteous, friendly bearing toward those who
fail to “remember” them at Christmas,
or at more frequent intervals, or who will actually
curtail the service they are paid to render.
MISGUIDED GENEROSITY
There seems to be something about
the continual contact of a person serving and a person
served that makes the one think the other owes him
something on the side. A mail carrier will bring
your mail once, twice or several times a day for a
period and then enters the feeling that he is entitled
to some substantial token of appreciation of his faithful,
cheerful service, other than the compensation paid
by the government. Often the person being served
feels a generous appreciation of good service and
bestows a token of it without the person serving having
expected or wanted it. The tipping custom is not
wholly the outgrowth of greed. It is frequently
misguided generosity. Where the error creeps in
is in expressing appreciation in terms of money.
Self-respect is satisfied with verbal appreciation.
As an employer the government, of
all employers, should set an example of true democracy,
should practice sound economics and ethics in the
relations it permits between its employees and the
public. There is no justification from any viewpoint
for giving gratuities to public servants. If
garbage collectors render slipshod service to citizens
who fail to tip them and they do this regularly a
complaint should bring immediate relief. It does
not now because the higher officials are under the
same illusion about tipping that envelopes the subordinates.
An inspector of street cleaning in
Philadelphia was investigating a complaint against
a street sweeper in a residence district. The
sweeper told him that he felt the complaint must be
ill-founded and that the people in the neighborhood
must be satisfied with his sweeping, because he had
recently received from residents in one block twenty-one
dollars in Christmas tips.
How many public servants in your own
neighborhood did you tip last Christmas?
It should not be assumed that the
indictment here read is against all mail carriers
or garbage collectors, or policemen. With tipping,
as with many other abuses “there are more than
seven thousand who have not bowed the knee to Baal.”
THE GOLDEN RULE
At Christmas the spirit of generosity
finds many curious and misdirected expressions.
Policemen on certain traffic corners are remembered
by many gifts of money and cigars from persons who
have no other contact with them than a nod from a
limousine as they pass the corner daily. Why
should the feeling of appreciation run to thought of
money as a token of expression? It is because
the persons who give entertain the idea that the policeman
is in a stratum of society under them and that, being
an underling, his self-respect will not be hurt by
offering money. The same persons would not think
of offering a friend money and would be insulted if
any one offered them money. The golden rule is
a dead letter to them.
Some clubs have handled the tipping
custom by forbidding gratuities during the year and
then allowing the members to contribute to a fund to
be divided among the servitors at Christmas. This
is a great improvement over the tipping custom but
it is still short of the democratic ideal. A
servant who is adequately paid for his work throughout
the year has no more call upon the generosity of patrons
at Christmas than a clerk in a shoe store from whom
you purchase shoes four or six times a year.
GOVERNMENT HOTELS
The Government operates hotels in
the Canal Zone, and tipping is permitted. Guests
who fail to tip are treated by the servitors precisely
like they are treated in private hotels, but the writer,
who boarded three months in one of the Government
hotels in the Canal Zone, during which time he did
not tip the waiter, found that a complaint to the
manager about poor service would result in the prompt
discipline of the offending servitor. This is
more than can be said of many privately operated hotels.
In this connection, it is noteworthy
that the only whisper of graft in the building of
the $400,000,000 canal was the charge made against
the purchasing agent of the Commissary that he split
commissions with the houses from which he purchased
supplies. Splitting commissions is the itching
palm in commerce.
It would seem that before passing
laws to regulate tipping among citizens, the Government,
state and national, should be able to come into court
with clean hands. Until the Government rids its
service of the spirit of graft the law-makers are
beating around the bush.