586 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
586 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
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9 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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**** ****
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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There are many people, in all countries, who seem to enjoy
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individual and national decay. They love to prophesy the triumph of
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evil. They mistake the afternoon of their own lives for the evening
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of the world. To them everything has changed. Men are no longer
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honest or brave. and women have ceased to be beautiful. They are
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dyspeptic, and it gives them the greatest pleasure to say that the
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art of cooking has been lost.
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For many generations many of these people occupied the
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pulpits. They lifted the hand of warning whenever the human race
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took a step in advance. As wealth increased, they declared that
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honesty and goodness and self-denial and charity were vanishing
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from the earth. They doubted the morality of well dressed people --
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considered it impossible that the prosperous should be pious. Like
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owls sitting on the limbs of a dead tree. they hooted the obsequies
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of spring, Believing it would come no more.
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There are some patriots who think it their duty to malign and
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slander the land of their birth. They feel that they have a kind of
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Cassandra mission, and they really seem to enjoy their work. They
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honestly believe that every kind of crime is on the increase, that
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the courts are all corrupt, that the legislators are bribed, that
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the witnesses are suborned, that all holders of office are
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dishonest; and they feel like a modern Marius sitting amid the
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ruins of all the virtues.
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It is useless to endeavor to persuade these people that they
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are wrong. They do not want arguments, because they will not heed
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them. They need medicine. Their case is not for a philosopher, but
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for a physician.
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General Hawkins is probably right when he says that some
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fraudulent shoes, some useless muskets, and some worn-out vessels
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were sold to the Government during the war; but we must remember
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that there were millions and millions of as good shoes as art and
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honesty could make, millions of the best muskets ever constructed,
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and hundreds of the most magnificent ships ever built, sold to the
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Government during the same period. We must not mistake an eddy for
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the main stream. We must also remember another thing: there were
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millions of good, brave, and patriotic men to wear the shoes, to
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use the muskets, and to man the ships.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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So it is probably true that Congress was extravagant in land
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subsidies voted to railroads; but that this legislation was secured
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by bribery is preposterous. It was all done in the light of noon.
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There is not the slightest evidence tending to show that the
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general policy of hastening the construction of railways through
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the Territories of the United States was corruptly adopted -- not
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the slightest. At the same time, it may he that some members of
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Congress were induced by personal considerations to vote for such
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subsidies. As a matter of fact, the policy was wise, and through
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the granting of the subsidies thousands of miles of railways were
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built, and these railways have given to civilization vast
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territories which otherwise would have remained substantially
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useless to the world. Where at that time was a wilderness, now are
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some of the most thriving cities in the United States -- great, an
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industrious, and a happy population. The results have justified the
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action of Congress.
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It is also true that some railroads have been "wrecked" in the
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United States, but most of these wrecks have been the result of
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competition. It is the same with corporations as with individuals
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-- the powerful combine against the weak. In the world of commerce
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and business is the great law of the survival of the strongest.
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Railroads are not eleemosynary institutions. They have but little
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regard for the rights of one another. Some fortunes have been made
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by the criminal "wrecking" of roads, but even in the business of
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corporations honesty is the best policy, and the companies that
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have acted in accordance with the highest standard, other things
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being equal, have reaped the richest harvest.
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Many railways were built in advance of a demand; they had to
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develop the country through which they passed. While they waited
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for immigration, interest accumulated; as a result foreclosure took
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place; then reorganization. By that time the country had been
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populated; towns were springing up along the line; increased
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business was the result. On the new bonds and the new stock the
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company paid interest and dividends. Then the ones who first
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invested and lost their money felt that they had been defrauded.
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So it is easy to say that certain men are guilty of crimes --
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easy to indict the entire nation, and at the same time impossible
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to substantiate one of the charges. Everyone who knows the history
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of the Star-Route trials knows that nothing was established against
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the defendants, knows that every effort was made by the Government
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to convict them, and also knows that an unprejudiced jury of twelve
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men, never suspected of being improperly influenced, after having
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heard the entire case, pronounced the defendants not guilty. After
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this, of course, any one can say, who knows nothing of the evidence
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and who cares nothing for the facts, that the defendants were all
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guilty.
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It may also be true that some settlers in the far West have
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taken timber from the public lands, and it may be that it was a
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necessity. Our laws and regulations were such that where a settler
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was entitled to take up a certain amount of land he had to take it
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all in one place; he could not take a certain number of acres on
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the plains and a certain number of acres in the timber. The
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consequence was that when he settled upon the land -- the land that
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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he could cultivate -- he took the timber that he needed from the
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Government land, and this has been called stealing. So I suppose it
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may be said that the cattle stole the Government's grass and
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possibly drank the Governments water.
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It will also be admitted with pleasure that stock has been
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"watered" in this country. And what is the crime or practice know
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as watering stock? For instance, you have a railroad one hundred
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miles long, worth, we will say, $3,000,000 -- able to pay interest
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on that sum at the rate of six per cent. Now, we all know that the
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amount of stock issued has nothing to do with the value of the
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thing represented by the stock. If there was one share of stock
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representing this railroad, it would be worth three million
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dollars, whether it said on its face it was one dollar or one
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hundred dollars. If there were three million shares of stock issued
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on this property, they would be worth one dollar apiece, and, no
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matter whether it said on this stock that each share was a hundred
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dollars or a thousand dollars, the share would be worth one dollar
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-- no more, no less. If any one wishes to find the value of stock,
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he should find the value of the thing represented by the stock. It
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is perfectly clear that, if a pie is worth one dollar, and you cut
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it into four pieces, each piece is worth twenty-five cents; and if
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you cut it in a thousand pieces, you do not increase the value of
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the pie.
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If then, you wish to find the value of a share of stock, find
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its relation to the thing represented by all the stock.
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It can also be safely admitted that trusts have been formed.
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The reason is perfectly clear. Corporations are like individuals --
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they combine. Unfortunate corporations become socialistic,
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anarchistic, and cry out against the abuses of trusts. It is
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natural for corporations to defend themselves -- natural for them
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to stop ruinous competition by a profitable pool; and when strong
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corporations combine, little corporations suffer. It is with
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corporations as with fishes -- the large eat the little; and it may
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be that this will prove a public benefit in the end. When the large
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corporations have taken possession of the little ones, it may be
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that the Government will take possession of them -- the Government
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being the largest corporation of them all.
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It is to be regretted that all houses are not fireproof; but
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certainly no one imagines that the people of this country build
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houses for the purpose of having them burned, or that they erect
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hotels having in view the broiling of guests. Men act as they must;
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that is to say, according to wants and necessities. In a new
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country the buildings are cheaper than in an old one, money is
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scarcer, interest higher, and consequently people build cheaply and
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take the risks of fire. They do not do this on account of the
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Constitution of the United States, or the action of political
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parties, or the general idea that man is entitled to be free. In
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the hotels of Europe it may be that there is not as great danger of
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fire as of famine.
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The destruction of game and of the singing birds is to be
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greatly regretted, not only in this country, but in all others. The
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people of America have been too busy felling forests, plowing
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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fields, and building houses, to cultivate, to the highest degree,
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the restful side of their natures. Nature has been somewhat
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ruthless with us. The storms of winter breasted by the Western
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pioneer, the whirlwinds of summer, have tended, it may be, to
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harden somewhat the sensibilities; in consequence of which they
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have allowed their horses and cattle to bear the rigors of the same
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climate.
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It is also true that the seal-fisheries are being destroyed,
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in the interest of the present, by those who care nothing for the
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future. All these things are to be deprecated, are to be spoken
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against; but we must not hint, provided we are lovers of the
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Republic, that such things are caused by free institutions.
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General Hawkins asserts that "Christianity has neither
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preached nor practiced humanity towards animals," while at the same
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time "Sunday school children by hundreds of thousands are taught
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what a terrible thing it is to break the Sabbath;" that "museum
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trustees tremble with pious horror at the suggestion of opening the
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doors leading to the collections on that day," and that no protests
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have come "from lawmakers or the Christian clergy."
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Few people will suspect me of going out of my way to take care
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of Christianity or of the clergy. At the same time, I can afford to
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state the truth. While there is not much in the Bible with regard
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to practicing humanity toward animals, there is at least this: "The
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merciful man is merciful to his beast." Of course, I am not
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alluding now to the example set by Jehovah when he destroyed the
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cattle of the Egyptians with hailstones and diseases on account of
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the sins of their owners.
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In regard to the treatment of animals Christians have been
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much like other people.
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So, hundreds of lawmakers have not only protested against
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cruelty to animals, but enough have protested against it to secure
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the enactment of laws making cruelty toward animals a crime. Henry
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Bergh, who did as much good as any man who has lived in the
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nineteenth century, was seconded in his efforts by many of the
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Christian clergy not only, but by hundreds and thousands of
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professing Christians -- probably millions. Let us be honest.
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It is true that the clergy are apt to lose the distinction
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between offenses and virtues, to regard the little as the important
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-- that is to say, to invert the pyramid.
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It is true that the Indians have been badly treated. It is
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true that the fringe of civilization has been composed of many low
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and cruel men. It is true that the red man has been demoralized by
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the vices of the white. It is a frightful fact that, when a
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superior race meets an inferior, the inferior imitates only the
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vices of the superior, and the superior those of the inferior. They
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exchange faults and failings. This is one of the most terrible
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facts in the history of the human race.
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Nothing can be said to justify our treatment of the Indians.
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There is, however, this shadow of an excuse: In the old times, when
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we lived along the Atlantic, it hardly occurred to our ancestors
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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that they could ever go beyond the Ohio; so the first treaty with
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the Indians drove them back but a few miles. In a little while,
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through immigration, the white race passed the line, and another
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treaty was made, forcing the Indians still further west; yet the
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tide of immigration kept on, and in a little while; again the line
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was passed, the treaty violated. Another treaty was made, pushing
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the Indians still further toward the Pacific, across the Illinois,
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across the Mississippi, across the Missouri, violating at every
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step some treaty made; and each treaty born of the incapacity of
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the white men who made it to foretell the growth of the Republic.
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But the author of "Brutality and Avarice Triumphant" made a
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great mistake when he selected the last thirty years of our
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national life as the period within which the Americans have made a
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change of the national motto appropriate, and asserted that now
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there should be in place of the old motto the words, "Plundering
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Made Easy."
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Most men believe in a sensible and manly patriotism. No one
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should be blind to the defects in the laws and institutions of his
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country. He should call attention to abuses, not for the purpose of
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bringing his country into disrepute, but that the abuses may cease
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and the defects be corrected. He should do what he can to make his
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country great, prosperous, just, and free. But it is hardly fair to
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exaggerate the faults of your country for the purpose of calling
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attention to your own virtues, or to earn the praise of a nation
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that hates your own. This is what might be called wallowing in the
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gutter of reform.
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The thirty years chosen as the time in which we as a nation
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have passed from virtue to the lowest depths of brutality and
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avarice are, in fact, the most glorious years in the life of this
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or of any other nation.
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In 1861 slavery was, in a legal sense at least, a national
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institution. It was firmly imbedded in the Federal Constitution.
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The Fugitive Slave Law was in full force and effect. In all the
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Southern and in nearly all of the Northern States it was a crime to
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give food, shelter, or raiment to a man or woman seeking liberty by
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flight. Humanity was illegal, hospitality a misdemeanor, and
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charity a crime. Men and women were sold like beasts. Mothers were
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robbed of their babes while they stood under our flag. All the
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sacred relations of life were trampled beneath the bloody feet of
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brutality and avarice. Besides, so firmly was slavery fixed in law
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and creed. in statute and Scripture, that the tongues of honest men
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were imprisoned. Those who spoke for the slave were mobbed by
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Northern lovers of the "Union."
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Now, it seems to me that those were the days when the motto
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could properly have been, "Plundering Made Easy." Those were the
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days of brutality, and the brutality was practiced to the end that
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we might make money out of the unpaid labor of others.
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It is not necessary to go into details as to the cause of the
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then condition; it is enough to say that the whole nation, North
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and South, was responsible. There were many years of compromise,
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and thousands of statesmen, so-called, through conventions and
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platforms, did what they could to preserve slavery and keep the
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
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Union. These efforts corrupted politics, demoralized our statesmen,
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polluted our courts, and poisoned our literature. The Websters,
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Bentons, and Clays mistook temporary expedients for principles, and
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really thought that the progress of the world could be stopped by
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the resolutions of a packed political convention. Yet these men,
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mistaken as they really were, worked and wrought unconsciously in
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the cause of human freedom. They believed that the preservation of
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the Union was the one important thing, and that it could not be
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preserved unless slavery was protected -- unless the North would be
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faithful to the bargain as written in the Constitution. For the
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purpose of keeping the nation true to the Union and false to
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itself, these men exerted every faculty and all their strength.
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They exhausted their genius in showing that slavery was not, after
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all, very bad, and that disunion was the most terrible calamity
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that could by any possibility befall the nation, and that the
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Union, even at the price of slavery was the greatest possible
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blessing. They did not suspect that slavery would finally strike
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the blow for disunion. But when the time came and the South
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unsheathed the sword, the teachings of these men as to the infinite
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value of the Union gave to our flag millions of brave defenders.
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Now, let us see what has been accomplished during the thirty
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years of "Brutality and Avarice."
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The Republic has been rebuilt and reunited, and we shall
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remain one people for many centuries to come. The Mississippi is
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natures protest against disunion. The Constitution of the United
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States is now the charter of human freedom, and all laws
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inconsistent with the idea that all men are entitled to liberty
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have been repealed. The black man knows that the Constitution is
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his shield, that the laws protect him, that our flag is his, and
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the black mother feels that her babe belongs to her. Where the
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slave-pen used to be you will find the schoolhouse. The dealer in
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human flesh is now a teacher; instead of lacerating the back of a
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child, he develops and illumines the mind of a pupil.
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There is now freedom of speech. Men are allowed to utter their
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thoughts. Lips are no longer sealed by mobs. Never before in the
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history of our world has so much been done for education.
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|
The amount of business done in a country on credit is the
|
|||
|
measure of confidence, and confidence is based upon honesty. So it
|
|||
|
may truthfully be said that, where a vast deal of business is done
|
|||
|
on credit, an exceedingly large per cent. of the people are
|
|||
|
regarded as honest. In our country a very large per cent. of
|
|||
|
contracts are faithfully filled. Probably there is no nation in the
|
|||
|
world where so much business is done on credit as in the United
|
|||
|
States. The fact that the credit of the Republic is second to that
|
|||
|
of no other nation on the globe would seem to be at least an
|
|||
|
indication of a somewhat general diffusion of honesty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The author of "Brutality and Avarice Triumphant" seems to be
|
|||
|
of the opinion that our country was demoralized by the war. They
|
|||
|
who fought for the right are not degraded -- they are ennobled.
|
|||
|
When men face death and march to the mouths of the guns for a
|
|||
|
principle, they grow great; and if they come out of the conflict,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
they come with added moral grandeur; they become better men, better
|
|||
|
citizens, and they love more intensely than ever the great cause
|
|||
|
for the success of which they put their lives in pawn.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The period of the Revolution produced great men. After the
|
|||
|
great victory the sons of the heroes degenerated, and some of the
|
|||
|
greatest principles involved in the Revolution were almost
|
|||
|
forgotten.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
During the Civil war the North grew great and the South was
|
|||
|
educated. Never before in the history of mankind was there such a
|
|||
|
period of moral exaltation. The names that shed the brightest, the
|
|||
|
whitest light on the pages of our history became famous then.
|
|||
|
Against the few who were actuated by base and unworthy motives let
|
|||
|
us set the great army that fought for the Republic, the millions
|
|||
|
who bared their breasts to the storm. the hundreds and hundreds of
|
|||
|
thousands who did their duty honestly, nobly, and went back to
|
|||
|
their wives and children with no thought except to preserve the
|
|||
|
liberties of themselves and their fellow-men.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Of course there were some men who did not do their duty --
|
|||
|
some men false to themselves and to their country. No one expects
|
|||
|
to find sixty-five millions of saints in America. A few years ago
|
|||
|
a lady complained to the president of a Western railroad that a
|
|||
|
brakeman had spoken to her with great rudeness. The president
|
|||
|
expressed his regret at the incident, and said among other things:
|
|||
|
"Madam, you have no idea how difficult it is for us to get
|
|||
|
gentlemen to fill all those places."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is hardly to be expected that the American people should
|
|||
|
excel all others in the arts, in poetry, and in fiction. We have
|
|||
|
been very busy taking possession of the Republic. It is hard to
|
|||
|
overestimate the courage, the industry, the self-denial it has
|
|||
|
required to fell the forests. to subdue the fields, to construct
|
|||
|
the roads, and to build the countless homes. What has been done is
|
|||
|
a certificate of the honesty and industry of our people.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is not true that "one of the unwritten mottoes of our
|
|||
|
business morals seem to say in the plainest phraseology possible:
|
|||
|
'Successful wrong is right.'" Men in this country are not esteemed
|
|||
|
simply because they are rich; inquiries are made as to how they
|
|||
|
made their money, as to how they use it. The American people do not
|
|||
|
fall upon their knees before the golden calf; the worst that can be
|
|||
|
said is that they think too much of the gold of the calf -- and
|
|||
|
this distinction is seen by the calves themselves.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nowhere in the world is honesty in business esteemed more
|
|||
|
highly than here. There are millions of business men -- merchants,
|
|||
|
bankers, and men engaged in all trades and professions -- to whom
|
|||
|
reputation is as dear as life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is one thing in the article "Brutality and Avarice
|
|||
|
Triumphant" that seems even more objectionable than the rest, and
|
|||
|
that is the statement, or, rather the insinuation, that all the
|
|||
|
crimes and the shortcomings of the American people can be accounted
|
|||
|
for by the fact that our Government is a Republic. We are told that
|
|||
|
not long ago a French official complained to a friend that he was
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
compelled to employ twenty clerks to do the work done by four under
|
|||
|
the empire, and on being asked the reason answered: "It is the
|
|||
|
Republic." He was told that, as he was the head of the bureau, he
|
|||
|
could prevent the abuse, to which he replied: "I know I have the
|
|||
|
power; but I have been in this position for more than thirty years,
|
|||
|
and am now too old to learn another occupation, and I must make
|
|||
|
places for the friends of the deputies. "And then it is added by
|
|||
|
General Hawkins: "And so it is here."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It seems to me that it cannot be fairly urged that we have
|
|||
|
abused the Indians because we contend that all men have equal
|
|||
|
rights before the law, or because we insist that governments derive
|
|||
|
their just powers from the consent of the governed. The probability
|
|||
|
is that a careful reading of the history of the world will show
|
|||
|
that nations under the control of kings and emperors have been
|
|||
|
guilty of some cruelty. To account for the bad we do by the good we
|
|||
|
believe, is hardly logical. Our virtues should not be made
|
|||
|
responsible for our vices.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is it possible that free institutions tend to the
|
|||
|
demoralization of men? Is a man dishonest because he is a man and
|
|||
|
maintains the rights of men? In order to be a moral nation must we
|
|||
|
be controlled by king or emperor? Is human liberty a mistake? Is it
|
|||
|
possible that a citizen of the great Republic attacks the liberty
|
|||
|
of his fellow-citizens? Is he willing to abdicate? Is he willing to
|
|||
|
admit that his rights are not equal to the rights of others? Is he,
|
|||
|
for the sake of what he calls morality, willing to become a serf,
|
|||
|
a servant or a slave?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is it possible that "high character is impracticable" in this
|
|||
|
Republic? Is this the experience of the author of "Brutality and
|
|||
|
Avarice Triumphant"? Is it true that "intellectual achievement pays
|
|||
|
no dividends"? Is it not a fact that America is to-day the best
|
|||
|
market in the world for books, for music, and for art?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is in our country no real foundation for these wide and
|
|||
|
sweeping slanders. This, in my judgment, is the best Government,
|
|||
|
the best country, in the world. The citizens of this Republic are,
|
|||
|
on the average, better clothed and fed and educated than any other
|
|||
|
people. They are fuller of life, more progressive, quicker to take
|
|||
|
advantage of the forces of nature, than any other of the children
|
|||
|
of men. Here the burdens of government are lightest, the
|
|||
|
responsibilities of the individual greatest, and here, in my
|
|||
|
judgment, are to be worked out the most important problems of
|
|||
|
social science.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here in America is a finer sense of what is due from man to
|
|||
|
man than you will find in other lands. We do not cringe to those
|
|||
|
whom chance has crowned; we stand erect.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Our sympathies are strong and quick. Generosity is almost a
|
|||
|
national failing. The hand of honest want is rarely left unfilled.
|
|||
|
Great calamities open the hearts and hands of all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here you will find democracy in the family -- republicanism by
|
|||
|
the fireside. Say what you will, the family is apt to be patterned
|
|||
|
after the government. If a king is at the head of the nation, the
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
husband imagines himself the monarch of the home. In this country
|
|||
|
we have carried into the family the idea on which the Government is
|
|||
|
based. Here husbands and wives are beginning to be equals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The highest test of civilization is the treatment of women an
|
|||
|
children. By this standard America stands first among nations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is a magnitude, a scope, a grandeur, about this country
|
|||
|
-- an amplitude -- that satisfies the heart and the imagination. We
|
|||
|
have our faults, we have our virtues, but our country is the best.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
No American should ever write a line that can be sneeringly
|
|||
|
quoted by an enemy of the great Republic.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Robert G. Ingersoll.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bank of Wisdom Inc. is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
|||
|
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
|||
|
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
|||
|
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
|||
|
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
|||
|
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
|||
|
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
|||
|
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
|||
|
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
|||
|
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
|||
|
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
9
|
|||
|
|