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Title: Selected Essays Author: Joseph Labadie Date: 1884–1918 Language: en Topics: socialism, anti-nationalism, trade unions Source: Retrieved om January 29, 1999 from [[http://members.aol.com/labadiejo/page6.html]] Notes: Edited by Carlotta Anderson
Labadie spent much of his childhood living among the Pottawatomi Indians
of Michigan, to whom his father served as interpreter for the Jesuit
missionaries, and had only a few months of formal schooling. With the
help of his schoolteacher wife and on-the-job exposure as a printer,
however, he developed into a lively, lucid and persuasive writer,
tempering his outrage at injustice with witty and sarcastic commentary.
A prolific writer, his columns were widely published in the national
labor and radical press as well as the Detroit News and other
"capitalist" papers. Many were written under the title, "Cranky
Notions." Labadie thought its apologetic name appropriate for his "stray
thoughts…crude and 'jerky' because they come from an unlearned mechanic
[craftsman] who has not had the time from the 'demnition grind' to
polish them up."
Labadie defined socialism as a general term which encompasses several
theories of how to create a more just society and bring about a greater
degree of human happiness. These included both the views of state
socialists, who would use government and the ballot as their instrument,
and anarchists, who would supplant the state with voluntary associations
using any system they chose.
He often said, "All anarchists are socialists, but not all socialists
are anarchists."
Labadie wrote the following thoughts a year after transferring his
allegiance from state socialism to anarchism. They were part of an
article titled "What is Socialism?" which appeared in the
November/December, 1884 issue of Truth: The Organ of Scientific
Socialism in America.
What is Socialism? There have been so many definitions given of it that
the minds of those who are not persistent in its study become confused,
and they finally cry out in despair: "What in the world do these people
want anyway?--what in the world is Socialism?" One school calling itself
Socialist wants to abolish the State, and contends that government is
tyranny; another school wants the State to assume control of all the
means of producing and distributing wealth and give to each according to
his deeds; and still another wants all property to be common and each to
receive according to his needs. One wants cooperation by the State,
another wants absolute free competition. One wants all taxes raised on
land values, and the taxes so high as to absorb rent; another wants to
abolish taxes entirely, and contends that rent is robbery…
The principal source of difference between the two most conflicting
schools, or in fact the two great sub-divisions of Socialists, is in the
methods of reaching the greatest happiness. The anarchists believe in
absolute personal liberty and that the institutions of society should
conform to the individualities of persons; and the State Socialists
believe in the authority of the majority and that the individual should
conform to the institutions of the State and that the State shall be an
absolute democracy. They all agree that the resources of nature--land,
mines, and so forth--should not be held as private property and subject
to being held by the individual for speculative purposes, that use of
these things shall be the only valid title, and that each person has an
equal right to the use of all these things. They all agree that the
present social system is one composed of a class of slaves and a class
of masters, and that justice is impossible under such conditions. But
when the questions are asked: "How are these conditions to be changed?"
and 'What will we substitute for the present system?" their answers are
as much at variance as are the forces of cohesion and repulsion…
Anarchism, as I see it, is a beautiful theory, and even if not capable
of complete realization the grandest of human aspirations. But I doubt
whether man will ever be far enough removed from the tadpole to enjoy it
as it is dreamed of. I believe, though, that the Labor movement in its
entirety is moving towards the ultimate of absolute, personal freedom…I
hope to see the day when the right to labor will be recognized and a
much larger share of the products go to the producer than now. It is
possible the powers and functions of the State will increase and methods
be adopted largely influenced by the doctrines of Karl Marx and Henry
George. State authority and State control over industry are taking
strong hold of the popular mind and…will possibly have to spend itself
before any large number of people will seriously consider that there may
be other and better ways to establish equity than by centralized
authority…
Between absolute autonomy and majority rule there is no middle ground.
However much I may sympathize with those who seek to harmonize these two
conflicting elements, yet reason tells me that…one or the other must be
extinguished. Sooner or later this truth will become clear to every
social reformer, and the time will come when he will have to take his
stand either on the one side or on the other…
There is a possibility that, as it is darkest just before dawn, the
nearer we get to anarchy the more completely will the individual become
the child of the State. The State Socialist wants the land nationalized;
the Anarchist wants it individualized. The State Socialist wants money
nationalized ; the Anarchist wants it individualized. The State
Socialist wants governmental co-operation; the Anarchist wants
individual competition, the object in both cases being to make cost the
limit of price, and, as I see it, both methods capable of accomplishing
that result if only carried out consistently. If the people can be
persuaded through the State, or forced by the majority, to do those
things that are best for all, there may come a time when they will do
these things because it is best…may it not be possible that Anarchism
will be the result of State Socialism, or, in other words, is not State
Socialism only another way of reaching Anarchism?…
Labadie was a lively, incisive and often witty writer, although he had
only a few months of formal education. His columns titled "Cranky
Notions" were widely published in the labor and radical press, and in
Benjamin Tucker's Liberty, the leading journal of individualist
anarchism. "Uncle Sam, the Real Culprit," originally published in the
Detroit Labor Leaf, appeared in the October 3, 1885 issue of Liberty, at
a time when Chinese immigrant workers were widely reviled by labor
leaders because they were willing to work more cheaply than white
workers.
I hope that it is true that the Knights of Labor had nothing to do with
the brutal massacre of the Chinese in Rock Springs, Wyoming…It is my
opinion that this cry against foreigners is redounding more to the
benefit of the capitalist and monopolist classes than it is to the
working class. If our masters can only keep up the race prejudices, and
pit us against the foreigners in the scramble for the dear privilege of
using Nature's bounteous gifts, which, under existing law, are
absolutely under their control, there is little fear that their unjust
privileges will be questioned in such a manner as to endanger them…It is
the right of every human being to live wherever he chooses on this
earth. There is a good deal of nonsense in the idea that this is "our"
country. Who are "we," anyway? Are we not "foreigners," or the direct
descendants of foreigners? No more of this earth rightly belongs to any
individual or set of individuals than is necessary for the maintenance
of their own existence. There is room in America for a hundred times
more people than are now here. But monopolists would make us believe
that these poor wretches--who are brought here by themselves [the
monopolists] for their own ignoble purposes, by the way--are responsible
for our poverty. This is not true. No one who is willing to work and
earn his own living can be the cause of another's poverty. He who stands
between the laborer and the natural means of producing wealth is the
real cause of poverty. We are wont to look upon Uncle Sam as the
protector of the poor, of the laborer. This is a Great Mistake. Uncle
Sam is the aider and abettor of the robbery that is continuous and that
keeps you and me living from hand to mouth. Does not Uncle Sam uphold
landlordism in all its injustice and brutality? Does not Uncle Sam
sustain a law of his own making that no individual or set of individuals
shall exercise the right of issuing notes as money who has less than
fifty thousand dollars? Does not Uncle Sam establish agencies all over
the world that induce laborers to come here who are cheaper than those
at home to work for his privileged class? Does not Uncle Sam put on a
high duty to prevent you and me from buying goods wherever we can do the
best, thereby forcing us to buy of his pet robbers? Uncle Sam is really
at the bottom of nearly all this misery and degradation, and a great
deal of t would be abolished if he would only withdraw the suppose of
his big strong arm from these pickpockets…If we could only get the old
man out of the way, class conflicts, race conflicts, economic injustice,
and social degradation would gradually die out. This kind of talk may be
treason to Uncle Sam, but it is patriotism to the human race.
Appearing in Labor Leaf just weeks before the Haymarket bombing of May
4, 1886, which unleashed a frenzy of anti-anarchist denunciation, this
impassioned "Cranky Notions" column predicts a violent revolution and
the downfall of capitalism.
Into what a seething, turbulent, roaring condition the industrial world
has suddenly been thrown!
The cry from every capitalistic quarter is now, 'Go slow!'
But the cry comes too late.
For years a few hated and despised agitators have warned the people of
breakers ahead, but they were look upon with scorn and their warnings
were unheeded.
The privileged class are intoxicated with their successes at robbing the
wealth producers, and in their glee they clap their hands and dance with
joy.
Alas, it may prove the dance of death!
These industrial rumblings are only the more distinct thunder-claps that
precede the devastating storm.
No power on earth can now avert a violent revolution!
The Hoxies, the Jake Sharpes, the Goulds, the Vanderbilts, the Muirs;
the Lumber Barons, the Salt Dukes, the Land Lords, the Railroad Kings,
the Money Princes--in short, the privileged class, have invited a
revolution, and it will come upon them with relentless fury.
The downfall of Capitalism is inevitable!
The blind Sampson [sic] of Labor has been groping, lo! These many years;
the memories of the abuses heaped upon him are rankling in his breast;
he is at this moment tugging at the pillars of the Temple of Capitalism,
and its destruction is as sure as that tomorrow will come.
The agitators have sought to avert this calamity, but their warnings
have been as unheeded as the moaning of the wind.
It is useless now to try to escape the revolution.
All we can do is to prepare for it and try to modify its destructive
tendencies, and at the same time reap the full benefits that will
naturally result from the overturning of a vicious social system.
Samuel Gompers commissioned an article by Labadie, "Trades Unionism As I
Understand It," for the American Federation of Labor journal, American
Federationist. It appeared in the April, 1894, issue. As an anarchist,
Labadie was insistent that trade unions stay away from political action,
including lobbying and demands for pro-labor legislation. This stance
was philosophically in tune with Gompers, who believed in voluntary
methods and feared government intervention:
Trades unionism as I understand it is a co-operative effort on the part
of wage earners to better their economic conditions in a special way. It
is one of the many ways pointed out by social and political economists
for the betterment of the race. It is not its province to attempt to do
everything that is good, any more than should one person attempt to do
all the things that it is possible for one man to do. We have learned by
experience that it is more economical, more effective, for each person
to do one particular thing than it is for each person to do everything
that is necessary to be done, if that were not possible. There was a
time when almost every person was Jack of all trades and master of none,
but that time has long since gone by. The division of labor has made it
possible for one person to be master of one trade, or at least one
branch of a trade, and the result is that the productivity of labor has
increased to a wonderful degree. This specializing of efforts has taken
place in almost every avenue of life, and so far has been one of the
greatest actors in progress and civilization.
There is a tendency among trades unionists to fly in the face of this
law of progress, and to have the trades unions take upon themselves
multitudinous functions. It seems to me that a trade union should
confine its efforts strictly to those things that are peculiar to the
trade of which the union is formed...The failure of the K. of L.
[Knights of Labor] to succeed on trade lines was largely because the
members of one trade attempted to settle disputes in other trades,
instead of letting each trade settle its own disputes.
Trades unions are so named because they were intended, and rightly so,
to do that for the tradesman which a mixed body could not do so well,
and which is peculiar to the particular trade organized. Those things
which are not peculiar to any particular trades have no right to be
introduced into a trade union. Hence no political or religious problem
has any business in a trade union, because these are questions which
affect the whole body of citizens, whether they be tradesmen or
not....We must separate the trade organization from the political or the
religious organization to be in harmony with the law of progress and to
invite the largest degree of success.
Because this is so does not preclude workingmen from taking political
action, if they so choose, but they must organize for that especial
purpose. And I question the policy of organizing for political action on
class lines. If the lines between the three classes of
society--workingmen, beggarmen, thieves--were clearly drawn and easily
recognized by the mass of the people this doubt would not exist, but it
requires no argument to prove that this is not yet so...
Labadie expressed the belief that trade unions should confine their
efforts to economic problems more fully in "Different Phases of the
Labor Question," which was published in the Official Souvenir of the
International Typographical Union, 41^(st) Session, Chicago, June 12-17,
1893. In this article, he divided the labor problem into political,
economic, and social aspects and summarized the methods to equalize the
distribution of wealth proposed by the trade unionist, state socialist,
single-taxer, communist, and anarchist. He concluded that it was in the
true interests of both the working and business classes to repeal laws
rather than make new ones.
…Nothing exists without a cause, and the cause of the labor movement is
that labor products have not been justly distributed. This defect in the
present industrial system has brought into existence the trades unions,
the political labor parties, the socialists, communists, anarchists,
single-taxers, etc., the central aim of all being to give to the laborer
the full fruits of his toil…
Liberty of the individual should be the guiding principle of all
reforms…Individual liberty does not, however, destroy the right of
association for the accomplishment of specific objects. The entering
freely, voluntarily, into a contract with others to do something is not
a curtailment of one's liberty. You do not give up any rights when you
join a society. In the case of a trade union, for example, one does not
give up his freedom when he becomes a member, because the object of his
joining is to enlarge his sphere of liberty. It is the exemplification
of gaining freedom by association. Without his union, the workman is
much more the slave of his employer than he is with it.
There is, however, too often an inclination on the part of the ruling
power in the union, as well as in other societies, to disregard the
letter and the spirit of the contract (which is the constitution), and
by superior force or threats compel members to do what they have not
contracted to do. This is what every true, intelligent union man should
enter his most vigorous protest against, because it is the germ which
will in time destroy any society if allowed to grow. The personal
responsibility of a vote in a society is not always, in fact it is very
rarely, fully appreciated, and this leads to grave abuses. Persons are
too prone to cast a vote, especially a secret one, to have the society
do acts which they would not do as individuals. This is the weakness of
all democracies, and one which to avoid requires a high degree of
intelligence, and a fine sense of the rights of others.
It seems to me that those who are desirous of reform should keep these
things in mind, namely, that the movement is international, and any
attempt to confine it within national boundaries simply retards it; that
immigration or the prevention of immigration is no means of reform, and
is of no practical benefit to the movement in general; that occupancy
and use only must be recognized as a valid title to land; that the
monopoly of machinery must be destroyed by the abolition of the patent
right system; that the furnishing of a currency, of a medium of
exchange, must be left to individuals and associations, taking away from
the general governments the monopoly of making the tools of
exchange--that, in fact, general governments have no more right to
monopolize the making of the tools of trade than they have to monopolize
the making of the tools of production; that the true interests of the
working and business classes is in the repeal of laws instead of the
making of new ones, and that the powers and functions of governments
must be reduced as so as to leave the individual a greater degree of
freedom and responsibility for his own acts.
The men who form the trades unions in all countries will probably
continue to lead in this movement. The trades unions themselves will be
powerful factors in accomplishing good results. There is no doubt in my
mind that, contrary to the advice of many well-meaning friends of trades
unions, the unions to enhance their usefulness will have to restrict
their own functions rather than enlarging them, and confine their
efforts to economic problems, leaving the political and the social to
associations especially formed for carrying on the work peculiar to
those two departments of sociology. They must learn the utility of
specializing the work to be done, and they may learn from modern
industry the power that comes from the division of labor.
"The Violent Hypocrites," written after World War I, displays Labadie's
often acerbic, sarcastic writing style in his indictment of governments
as the perpetrators of violence and injustice. It exists in manuscript
form.
All of this talk and legislation against the use of force and violence
as means of changing sociological conditions is hypocrisy on the part of
exploiters. Force and violence are at the bottom of exploitation.
Government itself is force and violence. Tell me, some of you
governmentalists who are so averse to the use of force and violence, not
only here in American but the world over, how did you become possessed
of the land on which the native races earned their living? How did
England get to be ruler of India, Egypt, Ireland, Canada, Australia, and
so much of the world elsewhere if not by force and violence? How did the
U.S. become possessed of Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Philippines;
indeed, how did these super-Americans--the spoilators, become the owners
of the land and nearly every thing else in this country? How did the
robbers, the pirates, land sharks, brigands, freebooters,
buccaneers--governmentalists, every one--the world over get possession
of the world, if not by force and violence?…
Say, Mr. Burglar, Mr. Exploiter, Mr. Profiteer--all of you capitalistic
buccaneers--get out while the getting is good. It'll soon be daylight,
and you can't put that out. The sun is painting the eastern sky an
illuminating red and flooding the western horizon. They who have been
asleep are yawning. They are about ready to get up out of a long and
troubled sleep. If you don't get out soon you may be put out, and there
is no guarantee that they will be overly gentle in doing the job. Safety
first, you know?
We who don't like to have the place all mussed up want the job done
orderly, gently--all of us gentle anarchists do--as this will save
breaking up the furniture, shooting up the windows, covering the rugs
with smudge and smutch; and, also, we have some regard of our own
composure, dignity, and flesh and bones. We are not insured against
rough-house stuff, and so we want to preserve what we've got and prevent
you from taking any more than you have. If you're a real high-class
bandit you'll recognize the fact that the jig is up, make the best of a
bad situation and smilingly back out and scoot around the corner before
the boys get you…
The war opened the lid and they looked in. This was fatal to governments
and their favorites. What they saw was convincing that war is a
governmental trades; that invasion, conquest, spoilation are inseparable
from government; that peoples rarely ever make war; that the desire for
more rulership is the prime cause of war, and that rulership is not
beneficial to the masses, but the means by which they bcome the tools of
a class as wealth producers for that class…
The World War surely uncovered a great prodigality of wrong in the
world, and may also have gleamed to the world's people that the
rulership of man over man is a false doctrine that leads only to enmity,
discord, and all that is eternally pernicious.
Rulership is inevitably anti-social. To love one's master is sanely
unthinkable. Only brutes do that, and those who have been brutalized.
And even that which appears as love of a master is simply fear. Those
who preach fear of God get further and further away from the carpenter
of Nazareth. No sane person can love a fear-inspiring God…
He who wields physical power over his fellows is sure, sooner or later,
to use it badly. It is given to but few to have the wisdom of not
abusing this power. This is the truth which those who seek the powers of
government fail to realize. They see the disaster that comes from the
possession of this power in the hands of others and mislead themselves
into the belief that they are made of sterner stuff and will resist the
temptation to become despotic. Vain belief. I wouldn't trust Jesus
himself with political power over me. He who believes himself holier
than others is ready for a good awakening.
All of this talk and legislation against the use of force and violence
as means of changing sociological conditions is hypocrisy on the part of
exploiters. Force and violence are at the bottom of exploitation.
Government itself is force and violence. Tell me, some of you
governmentalists who are so averse to the use of force and violence, not
only here in American but the world over, how did you become possessed
of the land on which the native races earned their living? How did
England get to be ruler of India, Egypt, Ireland, Canada, Australia, and
so much of the world elsewhere if not by force and violence? How did the
U.S. become possessed of Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Philippines;
indeed, how did these super-Americans--the spoilators, become the owners
of the land and nearly every thing else in this country? How did the
robbers, the pirates, land sharks, brigands, freebooters,
buccaneers--governmentalists, every one--the world over get possession
of the world, if not by force and violence?…
Say, Mr. Burglar, Mr. Exploiter, Mr. Profiteer--all of you capitalistic
buccaneers--get out while the getting is good. It'll soon be daylight,
and you can't put that out. The sun is painting the eastern sky an
illuminating red and flooding the western horizon. They who have been
asleep are yawning. They are about ready to get up out of a long and
troubled sleep. If you don't get out soon you may be put out, and there
is no guarantee that they will be overly gentle in doing the job. Safety
first, you know?
We who don't like to have the place all mussed up want the job done
orderly, gently--all of us gentle anarchists do--as this will save
breaking up the furniture, shooting up the windows, covering the rugs
with smudge and smutch; and, also, we have some regard of our own
composure, dignity, and flesh and bones. We are not insured against
rough-house stuff, and so we want to preserve what we've got and prevent
you from taking any more than you have. If you're a real high-class
bandit you'll recognize the fact that the jig is up, make the best of a
bad situation and smilingly back out and scoot around the corner before
the boys get you…
The war opened the lid and they looked in. This was fatal to governments
and their favorites. What they saw was convincing that war is a
governmental trades; that invasion, conquest, spoilation are inseparable
from government; that peoples rarely ever make war; that the desire for
more rulership is the prime cause of war, and that rulership is not
beneficial to the masses, but the means by which they bcome the tools of
a class as wealth producers for that class…
The World War surely uncovered a great prodigality of wrong in the
world, and may also have gleamed to the world's people that the
rulership of man over man is a false doctrine that leads only to enmity,
discord, and all that is eternally pernicious.
Rulership is inevitably anti-social. To love one's master is sanely
unthinkable. Only brutes do that, and those who have been brutalized.
And even that which appears as love of a master is simply fear. Those
who preach fear of God get further and further away from the carpenter
of Nazareth. No sane person can love a fear-inspiring God…
He who wields physical power over his fellows is sure, sooner or later,
to use it badly. It is given to but few to have the wisdom of not
abusing this power. This is the truth which those who seek the powers of
government fail to realize. They see the disaster that comes from the
possession of this power in the hands of others and mislead themselves
into the belief that they are made of sterner stuff and will resist the
temptation to become despotic. Vain belief. I wouldn't trust Jesus
himself with political power over me. He who believes himself holier
than others is ready for a good awakening.