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What is Mutualism?
published by the Vanguard Press
April, 1927.
MUTUALISM-A Social System Based on Equal
Freedom, Reciprocity, and the Sovereignty of
the Individual Over Himself, His Affairs, and
His Products, Realized Through Individual
Initiative, Free Contract, Cooperation,
Competition, and Voluntary Association for
Defense Against the Invasive and for the
Protection of Life, Liberty and Property of the
Non-invasive.
PUBLISHER'S PREFACE
This book is one of a series of Outlines of
Social Philosophies published by the Vanguard
Press. In publishing these outlines the Press
has offered to each definitely crystallized
social movement the privilege of telling its
own story and presenting as cogently as
possible the arguments which support its
social philosophy. Each group arranged to have
the material prepared in the way that seemed
most suitable to it. All the outlines follow
the same plan, so that the student of social
philosophy will find it possible to make exact
comparisons between any one and the others. The
Mutualist Associates assumed responsibility
for all arrangements covering this book and
collaborated with Mr. Swartz in its
preparation. As it is now published it has the
approval of important Mutualist and
Libertarian groups in the United States,
particularly the following:
The Mutualist associates
The Libertarian League
Foundation for Financial Research
Mutual Credit League
The Mutualist (E. H. Fulton, Publisher)
--------------------------------------------
Mutualism Essentially Libertarian
Here, then, is where Mutualism offers its
solution. The Mutualist wants every person to
have an equal right to do whatever he wills, at
his own cost. That demand is too moderate for
the man who says that his freedom is
interfered with by a game of ball played on
Sunday a mile or more away from his church or
his home. It is too mild and too reasonable for
him. He wants the freedom to do whatever he
wills--at the other fellow's cost. He insists
on doing on Sunday exactly what he wants to do,
but also he insists that everyone who doesn't
want to do what he wants to do be prevented
from exercising the same liberty that he
demands for himself.
Even prohibition. has been saddled on the people
in the name of freedom! The man who eats bread
that contains more than three per cent of
alcohol, and drinks tea, coffee, coca-cola and
other highly sweetened beverages that are
converted into alcohol in the bodily processes,
says that it is a denial of his freedom for
others to drink other beverages containing more
than one-half of one per cent of alcohol. He
doesn't prove such denial of freedom; he
merely asserts it.
It is, therefore, one of the purposes of
Mutualists, not only to awaken in the people
the appreciation of and desire for freedom, but
also to arouse in them a determination to
abolish the legal restrictions now placed upon
non-invasive human activities and to institute,
through purely voluntary associations, such
measures as will liberate all of us from the
exactions of privilege and the power of
concentrated capital.
Clearly enough, every product of a man's labor
must be his own. As a corollary, any product
of the labor of others, if it be given him or
if he acquires it by exchanging the products
of his own labor therefore is also a man's
own. A man's claim to such a "right" cannot be
disputed. But, in any discussion of rights,
the question always arises, With just what
rights is a human being born?
As a matter of elemental ethics, it can not be
argued that a human being is born with any
right that he is not powerful enough to assert
and maintain, since those that precede him are
in nowise bound to see that he obtains the
means of subsistence. Purely as a matter of
abstract right, it is no concern of theirs
whether the newcomer survive or perish. In
other words, the theory that the world owes
every man a living is a fallacy. Nevertheless,
the will to live is such that a human being
will fight to the limit for his existence if
he is hindered or thwarted in his efforts to
secure the satisfaction of his bodily needs.
This being so, the history of civilization has
been merely a record of attempts to compromise
between the old resident and the new arrival;
between the strong and the weak. Vested rights
and priority considerations have been forced
to yield here and there until today the masses
are freer from this domination of the classes
than ever before.
And so the formulation of the principle of equal
liberty, together with its application and
practicalization in the system of Mutualism, is
simply an attempt to carry this compromise to
its logical conclusion
---------------------------------------
Trial by Jury
When the Magna Carta was wrested from King John,
among the things which it granted was a trial
by a jury of one's peers. The purpose of this
provision was to take from the king and from
the nobles the power to send a subject to
prison for asserting the rights of the common
man against the man of privilege.
While the origin of trial by jury seems to be
historically hazy, it is a certainty that it
came to be most thoroughly established by the
Magna Carta; and at that time trial by jury
was, fundamentally, in a purer and better form
than it has been at any time since. The obvious
implications of that great instrument were
that the jury was to judge independently and
fearlessly everything involved in the charge,
and especially its intrinsic justice, and give
its decision thereupon; and this meant that the
jury was to judge the law as well as the fact.
Within a century of the time of the
promulgation of that great instrument, its
provisions had been so altered that courts
were beginning to take away from juries the
power to determine the justice of the laws.
In the seven hundred years that have passed
since that charter was granted, lawmakers and
judges have so modified trial by jury that
today the right of a jury to judge the law is
hardly recognized. It is interesting to note,
however, that, in America, there has of late
been a tendency to travel back toward the
original purpose and scope of trials by jury. A
case in point is that of Scarf vs. United
States (156 U. S. 61), in which the view of
the majority of the court was that it is the
duty of a jury in a criminal case to receive
the law from the court and to apply it as laid
down by the court, subject to the condition
that in giving a general verdict the jury may
incidentally determine both law and fact as
compounded in the issues submitted to them in
the particular case; and it was further held
that the power to give a general verdict
enables the jury to take its own view of the
terms and the merits of the law involved.
If juries were properly chosen by lot, out of
the whole population of a community, and not,
as they are now, taken out of a certain limited
panel, the jury would be representative of the
sentiment of the community.
With all the invasive laws that are now on the
books, and with. all those that the busybodies
are adding from time to time, the ordinary
citizen has need of a new Magna Carta, so that
he may not be smothered in this maze of laws
as the common man in King John's time was
crushed by the privileges exercised by the
rulers of that day. A return to the kind of
jury employed in that period would partly do
away with this maze, and invasive laws could
be vetoed by the simple expedient of declining
to enforce them.
If any law is to be enforced, a jury must
convict the alleged lawbreaker. If the jury is
representative of the general sentiment of the
community (and it will be, if fairly drawn by
lot from the whole community), there will be,
on an average, the same proportion of men on
the jury who are opposed to the invasive law
as there is among the people in general. Let it
be supposed, for instance, that one-twelfth of
the community is opposed to a certain invasive
law. This is only a small portion of the
majority necessary to repeal it by voting, and
at the ballot box that one-twelfth would be
powerless. But that one man, in every twelve,
who is opposed to that law can, if on a jury,
prevent a verdict from being rendered. Thus, if
only nine per cent of the community are
opposed to a bad law, they can prevent its
enforcement. This is less than one-fifth of the
number necessary to repeal a law through the
medium of an election. message of the
libertarian carries no weight. Their eyes are
blind to scenes of rapine and murder; their
ears are deaf to pleadings for justice; their
hearts are cold to appeals for fair-dealing;
and, above all, their reasoning faculties are
impotent in the face of arguments of
expediency. But let all sentiment be laid
aside, and it may still be shown that freedom
pays. And it pays from whatever point of view
it is regarded. It pays because it costs less
in actual cash; it pays because it is simpler
and more easily applied; it pays because it
reduces the possibility of error to the lowest
conceivable-point; it pays because it iS in
line with the process.of evolution; and
finally, and this is the greatest asset of all,
it pays because it is productive of the
largest degree of happiness.
The libertarian ideal is the only concept that
paves the way for the operation of Mutualism.
Perfect Mutualism could not exist under any
form of authority; it would be thwarted and
emasculated at every turn. Just as today every
social and economic evil that serves to enslave
humanity is the result of some form of
governmental interference with freedom and
with natural processes, so would the same or
similar forces tend to nullify and counteract,
to some extent, the advantages to be derived
from the application of the principles of
Mutualism. It is a plant that requires the
fertile soil of liberty in which to make its
unimpeded growth.
On the other hand, the merit of the system is
that it may be inaugurated without any
cataclysmic disturbance of the present regime.
Indeed, for the most important phase of
Mutualism-that of mutual banking-but one
federal law, together with its counterpart in a
number of states, would need to be repealed in
order to pave the way for the realization of
this great liberating idea. Again, in other
directions, Mutualism may be initiated in
spite of the untoward aspect of constituted
authority. In mercantile and industrial lines,
voluntary cooperation and other associative
activities may be carried on without any change
in present laws. In many instances, such
operations would be facilitated by the removal
of certain legal restrictions and obstacles,
but the start can be made, once there are
enough individuals so minded, without the
abolition of a single provision.
As a matter of fact, there are now many
voluntary mutualistic associations being
conducted with fair success, whose activities
would be immensely simplified and whose
accomplishments would be greatly augmented if
they could be relieved of the handicaps which
the law now places upon them. It is one of the
cardinal purposes of Mutualism to free them,
as rapidly as possible, of these obstacles.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Cooperation Is Libertarian
Will the Cooperative Movement increase
individual liberty? One of the tests of any
reform movement with regard to personal liberty
is this: will the movement prohibit or abolish
private property? If it does, it is an enemy
of liberty. For one of the most important
criteria of freedom is the right to private
property in the products of one's labor. State
Socialists, Communists, Syndicalists, and
Communist-Anarchists deny private property.
Even some of the cooperators, while admitting
the right of private property, believe that
the individual is better off when owning
capital jointly, as if there were some
particular evil in the individual ownership of
capital. But, happily, there are a great many
cooperators who realize that private property
is a prime essential for individuals, making
them independent, thrifty, responsible-effects
exactly opposite to those produced by public
ownership.
The Cooperative Movement is founded on the
principle of voluntary association. Any member
may withdraw from his Cooperative, taking with
him that which belongs to him. In other words,
he is free, in that respect. And, since the
ultimate aim of the movement is the gradual
disappearance of monopolistic and compulsory
institutions, the individual will enjoy a
progressively larger freedom than he does now,
if this aim is reached. A cooperative
association can tolerate criticism; it can be
threatened by any member with non-support, or
even with opposition; any number of members
may actually secede and be free to start a
counter organization, without being shot for
treason. In fact, a true cooperative is a
creature of its members; it has no power over
them except what has been accepted by
voluntary agreement; they can overthrow it at
any time; and it will only be able to exist if
it gives the service for which it was intended.
This is freedom; and, because cooperators
acknowledge this freedom, there is hope that,
in the course of time, they will acknowledge
freedom as the most important requirement in
all the relations of men. Moreover, they will,
no doubt, also find that the only liberty
possible in human relations is equal
liberty-that is, the largest amount of personal
liberty that is compatible with the like
liberty of all.
The fact that the Cooperatives are purely
voluntary associations, and are, as far as
they go, wholly libertarian, gives them a high
place in the esteem of Mutualists, who
maintain that the world's best work is done in
the absence of compulsion, and in spite of,
rather than with the aid of, the arbitrary
power of organized authority. It is this
characteristic of their structure, in the view
of Mutualists, that renders the Cooperatives of
peculiar value in advancing the principles of
Mutualism and in developing its processes.
It is a significant fact that the Bolsheviks,
after trying to squeeze the Russian
Cooperative Movement into their State
capitalism, were forced by the bad results to
give back to the Cooperatives their freedom,
and that they now expect more help in the
socialization of Russian economic life from
the cooperatives than from any other agency.
But, if these remain true cooperatives, the
Communists will be sadly disappointed in their
expectations.
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Rights Not Natural or Inalienable
In discussions, such as this, in which ethics is
mingled with politics, the word "rights" is
often loosely and vaguely used. Fundamentally
and elementally, of course, there is only one
right-the right of might. To talk about
"natural" rights and "inalienable" rights is to
talk about something that does not exist. To
speak of natural rights implies that there is
an unquestioned or an indisputable right of
some kind that is inherent in the individual
when he is born. If that were really true, then
the right of might could not operate against
it. In order that the right of might could not
so operate, the inherent or natural or
inalienable right would have to be of such a
nature that no force could overcome it. Merely
to state the case in that way is sufficient to
show the nonsense of the notion that there can
be anything superior to the right of might;
unless there is some metaphysical meaning
attached to those three adjectives that is not
fathomable by the finite mind. The real truth
of the matter is that, since there is no right
superior to that of might, all other rights, of
whatever nature, exist only by sufferance; in
other words, by contract or agreement. For
certain considerations (such as the desire for
peace and tranquillity and other things that
make for happiness) the strongest have agreed
to yield, in certain fields, their prerogative;
they have consented to forego the privileges
which their strength assures them-and thereby
there come into existence the elements of
modern society.
It should be emphasized that the term "society,"
as used herein, refers to that social organism
which, in its abstract sense, implies the union
or sum of relations by which the individuals
of any group are associated, and not to that
political organization known as "government" or
"state."
The difference between the two is fundamental
and vital, and, if not clearly distinguished
in the mind of the student, serious confusion
of thought will result. All political states
and governments are founded on physical force,
and, as explained in Chapter I, are necessarily
aggressive and invasive in character.
Considering their origin and functions, they
must be of that nature in order to survive.
Society, on the other hand, has no such origin
and has no such functions. Out of it may issue
and from it may be adapted any organization
that, in the course of evolution, may arise.
Society, then, as thus defined, is constituted
of myriads of compacts, both express and
implied, which are supposed to enable all,
regardless of individual strength, to live in
peace and harmony, since all recognize, more
or less clearly, that that is a necessary
condition of happiness. And s Mutualists,
since they are keenly aware of this fundamental
condition, are concerned with what they
consider to be the best adaptation of means to
the end. Accepting frankly the ethical concept
outlined above, they hold that they have
devised a social system that will conform in
the best possible way to all the conditions of
modern life, since it is based on equal
freedom and reciprocity and the sovereignty of
the individual over himself, his affairs, and
the product of his labor, to be realized
through individual initiative, free contract,
and voluntary association.
Mutualism means that there shall be no coercion
by society of any person who commits no
antisocial act, and that all the collective
affairs of society shall be conducted by
voluntary associations, wherein payment shall
be made for services rendered, and for nothing
else.