" lab-mam, OCTOBER es. H193] jNeW Democracy j anada’ lSays H erridge Canada’s Economic Problem An- alyzed In Noteworthy Address By Former "Canadian Minister At e-Washingtoii i a l» w. r mllowing is the text of the “mm; address on the Menace to Democracy in Canada. recenty gehvered at Sydney by Hon. W. D. Henjdgekfwmel‘ Canadian Min- ister to the United States: "illiis is a world of wars. Those past and present seem but the Offlllllsf? of the ones to be. . "Unrest. envelop. us- Change is constant. everywhere. “moi-able customs are forgotten, old politi- ca] doctrines abandoned. estab- lished sondards of value tom clown. 'l'i_ie individual mind sui"- reudira its being to the State and to ii. locks for safe conduct amid pie pLfllS of the times. --The power which bends the Dannie; out of their old forms of ipnught and action is the nation- u. impulse to survive, to prosper, w gffjw great, it is the universal will for security. Before its sweep, all things have been forced t0 give ivay; among them, liberty. , “For, ln the judgment of some nations. liberty as we know it and seilllflly as they would have it. are nos recuiicilable. Democracy is to them a weak, old-fashioned, use- less thing, a sort of ghost of es- pgrday, pale-faced beside the illi- bloom vigour of their new faith. "In this unfriendly world. de- mocracy still ‘has its place and power, though these are in doubt until democracy meets the new ‘leniunds Bmn it and is made to work. . ' Goal of Democracy "The goal is security, prosperity. gontqlll-fflfillt. Gan democracy show the wgy? I-f not, what takes its place. elsewhere: and here. in Camila? "If democracy can work in any country, it would seem that coun- try should be Canada. “Iihis l; the age of abundance. Io are its first fruit. Here, t/here gm the means by which to build a standard of livin! high" ma" flny nation has ever knotvn. ~w, have a people of great ca- pacity and intelligence; We have a powerful industrial machine and the stall-l Widi which t.o use it. We hrve boundless natural wealth. With these three fairly ilsed. sec- lflly should reign in every home Jiroughout the land- Bhuoflon Today "Afllllilf-l; this biIClI-iiflflmd of pD'<’1lIlill penly, examine our sit- unucii as it 1'5 WdRY- A 5911119“ prosperity, definitely class con- scious, moves among us. lllwilgh the nmjoi-lty do not encounter it. Nor dues it seriously disturb the old leills of unemployment and wlnl. Lien to its favorites, it is an uiisubtantlal thing. Business respond. to it as does a sleet) ivaiacr to a supernatural influence: and follows with sightless W05. unrensoning, helpless. "Wostcrii agriculture faces cat- astrophe Our rescue forinu'a is the iii-cad llllt‘. Influenced by the p‘.nc.<ii1_v oi ofiicialdoin, we dispose 0i crop failure a; just another lint \\'L"J'lllli'l' inviili~iit; when, in fact. it :5 a tcst of the practicability of . cfilliffiflilllfill, "Ciriaiii puffs of Canada. move steadily from bankruptcy actual to bankruptcy official. Orthodox finance sprells them on their way. ‘Ollr other national problems. feeding on neglect, have grown t0 l:~ uiiuiis, We try to talk them down. Tile results appropriately l." 'll'f‘l our efforts. " Jononiic night begins to fall ii the nation. What light rc- iuuln: is the miwholesome, lurid lieiil which sometimes conic", from gunfire. For the stimulus behind l>i-ispei"lty is the movement to- uiirds war. When that stimulus lweiis, the flush will go out of li.l.\llll‘$\' and we will sink into the depth; of another depression- Deinocriicy will be btuied at the boitoni of it. "Providence gave us Canada to ilso, not to throw away. And I tell you that we are let-ting it s0 by default. "Why, by our every act. do we defy the teachings of the present iiine and try to turn time back- ward. to our own undoing? "Why do we drift on in the wake of a shattered internation- alism, clutching the fragments of an economy which the modern minds of ancient nations are wise enough to jettison? "Why are we so old when we rhoufd be young; dependent when we might be independent; immo- bile when we should be on the trial-ch? "Why, with the power and rislii- to nationhood, do we lack the i? Must Act "is it nothing to you that thl-‘i country, the child of all good for- tune. in failing to meet the test: 0f nationhood and is nearly through? 1 think it is. Then we must act. Take what we have, and build a new world in Canada. Leave out of it. hardship and want- The - only tools we need. are self-re- liance and fortitude. We have them. haven't we‘! "In this land which should b8 the fulfilment of every riizhifill 1109c there is a reason why m‘! Dfiitmt of tomorrow is the pmm- l=e of imoertainty, ‘why anxiety Iideat-heminmofoldermemmd ‘CI ijagl: Fl Vi‘; s Need, opportunity eludes our youth. "That reason is our failure to recognize the supreme truth that in the world of today, the eco- nomic system cannot. effectively operate without/our help. "This is the end of an economic era. The old order has collapsed. Lalssez-faire is ended. Capitalism ' never again will work in the old way. Blame that truth on science, on our natural wealth, on the Ileadership of great men, on the labours of ail men. Call that truth, progress. It has brought us to the era. of abundance. In it, the only system which can work hereafter. is the system controlled and guided by the state. New Responsibility “Our political society has now a new responsibility to our economic society. The economic system needs the flrm guidance of the state; a clear and resolute mind which, by impartial judgments, will lift the wealth and power of this land out of its present chaos and set it to work to build a real pros- perity. _ "m the days of scarcity. when there was not enough for all of us. the economic system was in a sense self-regenerative and operated automatically upon a scheme 0f checks and balances within its Own control. It fulfilled the puropse for which it was designed. That pur- poge was not abundance "Iin these days, when there is m) need for scarcity, the old economic system still struggles to operate in |the old way. Of course. it does not; give u; abundance, since the sys- item was designed to work only in an economy of scarcity. "But the system no longer works efficiently in fulfilment even of its original purpose, because progress mas marred its old automatic per- lfection and has imperilled the {benefits which it once conferred. MUST REFORM OLD SYSTEM "Therefore _ii’ we want t0 g0 for- ward, so that abundance may serve the people, we must intervene ‘and reform the old system, Or do we uant to go buck? If s0. We must gear ourselves down again to that names. use the same old tricks. Resort to -the saome old stupid practices. They are not even funny. From beginning to end, it's a wretched burlesque. “Meanwhile, the people endure, there being nothing else for them to do. The highly favoured ones, selfrighteous, smug from ring-side seats elegantly look down upon this struggle for security. “Who will retrieve the state, so that the state may help it? If re- formed capitalism does not, then the state though unretrleved, will negatively support reactionary cap- italism. If the slate continues a8 it is. laissez-faire becomes the hand maiden of reaction; unwittingly Perhaps. but for all that, a very useful one; as you will see. " “The uncontrollable will of hum- ankind strains tow-lard prosperity. Prosperity begins with our emanci- pation from the thraldom of the old order. Whatever action we may take to set us free, seriously dis- turbs that order. The state with the old mind must instinctively resist such action, not because, that ac- tion la wise or foolish. legal or il- legal. constitutional oi" unconstitu- tional; but simply because it is ac- 11011 ailalnst the old order. "Likewise. action on behalf of the old order will win the approval oi’ the state with the old mind; whe- ther that. action is valid or invalid, fair or unfair; and even thouirh assent to un-Canadlan assaults up- 0n our personal liberties. “By the rules of the old oi"der shall all these acts be judged; as m their morality and as to their con- stitutionalty; and sentence accordingly. That's service to ream tion; menial if you like, but, mighty useful. “I sometimes think that a good "will" Canadians must have been born with a. high opinion of their natural gifts as constitutional law- YETS; and that some of us have not recovered from that initial disabil- ity. For we are prone to surrender °iir lflylnerfs ilrerogatives of coin- incn sense, and with a feverish 901mb. attempt to rearrange the "ilwtf-‘rlvs 0f the constitutions written word, without the remotest idea of the practical reasons for our doing so. Were we content to b9 Just ordinary citizens, I ain sure it would occur to us to first en- quire the reason why we desire to augment or lessen the power of the federal or provincial authority, "Quite Clearly. the draftsinen of the constitutlion did not envisage the PW-ivlit basic economic pro- blem and so may not have en_ Su-Yed the lt-‘gfll-lty of the statutory measures necessaiw to (‘lispnse of it- And. I submit. that all the. intlervening extraierritorial tinker mg has simply turned the coil- stitutions Original lmpnrfcetimisl into complete absurdities: fol" w-hlchw‘ react-ion should make suitable; aclmotviedgnient.‘ DISCUSSION PREMATURE l “But until we have declared our economic problem and the answer to it. I should think that any discus-l itandard of scarcity in which the old system alone could function; we must, intervene and curb those mew influences which tend to turn luv production and high profits lvtn high production and low pro- lift. | "Naturally, the people want to go iforward. Naturally, the beneficiar- ies of the old system, ivant to go .bock. So reform coilfronts react- Ficn; the people's need coiifimts the ambition of special privilege, pro- sperity for all. good tvages. full PliiplOlTllElil. confront pPOsperity for the few. low wages. that measure .cf uncinplovinent in which the old ‘svstem ideally operated. "I stiitc the situation in this way bgcgugg 1 see it in- this way, It need not provoke our rancour or lresentnient. Thesc are the WCEWHS of defeat. And We succeed whenwe resolve u» clral with this practical problem in an unemotional way. ACTION B1‘ STATE "Action by the stale is needed t0 take capitalism forward. Action by the slate is needed to take capital- i-m back, The reformer knows that l-"u also docs the reactionary. Andi both know that if the system is 110i to co forward, it will ccrtaintly g0 ‘bark, For capiialsm cannot stand .still. "There is no firm ground between ll)“. new capllfiliFm whose pllliioiic ls maximum prnductioti with pro- lflts compatible with it. and the old lcapiifilifiln whose piIFDO-iv‘ is ma)“ imum profits with tvhatevcr re- straint upon pcrlurtiou is IlCCCS-l sary to obtain i-hem "We all should have been warned of that. Yet in the treacherous middle ground —surely a no-inans land --behold that soveregln body.‘ the democratic state, mired in purpose and performance, because it. stubbornly insisted that its guide should be the blind facts of com- partlve antiquity. "What has this count?! 5°“ that its econom‘c truths should be spurned by the complacency of‘oul' leaders? They, with brave word; proclaim democracys Omfilllomlce and boast about our liberty as if they were the authors of it. But they should understand that. lin- democracy is condemned. and their incompetence will be its execution-i er. "Why do We harbour economic doctrines incontinently rejected by progressive nations, and ciinl W. met-finds based upon a myth? ' ISSUE WITHOUT SUBSTANCE "These hang us on i! refif lii the‘ swift current of the world's ad- vance. And in that iidl-tiillvill position, and seemingly Obllvlvill of it, officially and fervently. we give ourselves to make-believe. Min. leaders trot out issues wholly without substance and debate them with the awful aolemnlty of a failing mind. They make the ‘IMO old call the lime Old be. unless reform can sion of constitutional amendments “'35 premature and meaningless . ,Flor once in our immediate history, let us put the horse before the. cart and dispose of the sub- Stlllillve issues before we become hopelessly involved with issucs| procedural. Let us first deelde. where this country is going; ma,‘ ward or back. Then we will readily," decide what constitutional amend "lent-i are needed to take us there. And I. for one. before agreeing to amendments. would have to knmvl that the authority proposing thcm.l was pledged to take this country. forward (‘LEW me (‘firiiv the argument. a- gainst the inactivity of the state‘ to its most. unhappy (‘.0llclll510n_ . illllliort: its mind and hand. reac- tionsmind and hand Rpligllgn then l5 the state, And we my, m1- Pd bl’ that mllPn llillif! (‘allcd fas- Clfim. Fascism is tllr‘ reliicariiaion nf all the sins which civlliyiition has struggled to subdue, class thrill Rs 0110 and (znll it, grpgd " Grid directs the thought; mid (iced; of several nutoiis, It makes them predatory. To live, itiqisiu must conquer. Iii; enemy is pomp ml and economic democracy, ll. fascism relentlessly assnils; iodnv:' in Europe and Asia: iomovi-oiv. in. Cmladil- Why should not fascism come here, if We ccniiiiiic to pre- lfflff‘ the way for it? “Bcftlfe the last will". we did not mlleve that there could be another wnr. Few now bcleve that thcrc could ever be fascist. mic in CR- nada. But there can be. and will win its fight: reaction, dfllllflflygf-y ‘mi fli-‘@l5"l~ the neonlc against the cle- nial of their rights. That l5 the. "Blit- There is no other becauapj "if"? is no other enoinv, Fascism‘ includes them all And so the vlc-. w?!’ of fascism would mean that there is not to be, security. pros- Pf-‘Tlby Contentment. You who can bring that fact home to us, will de- serve well of th-‘s county, “We wonder how sllCh a hateful‘ reform vs, did anything. INACTION A CRIME Our state. at. all times studiously l‘ innocuous, except when it. 0131909854 its inertia and futili‘; against the‘ vitality and power of a new‘ thought, nevertheless sins. be- [cause in these times. inaction itself become, a. crime. And long ago. tihe state was tied and found guilty by the jury of lost hopee and Pplwrtunitiea. TOGILV, the sluilglfili- nest; of democracy makes it an accessory before the fact of fas- cism. ' Have the people the power to di- i-ect the state to reject reaction ‘and to sup U reform? Can demo- dfly be node so INK’ m" Ii such approval may involve the sly_ passed l THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUAR Olhlll For C "Most positively. the will of the -- a majority o! the Canadian people is for progress; passionately against. the coming of another de- pressioii Yet depression continues to be an actuating element in the national economy. Progress is ar- rested. Because it depends upon re- form. Though reform is the business of the state, the state takes no action. The reason is, that. in matters fundamentally affecting the char- acter of our economic society the majority will does not move the‘ state. That is a fact I wish to em- l -phasize. A determined minority can thwart the will of the major-j ity, This uninans democracy. for it prevents our unity. And unity is the heart of the new democracy. You must give democracy heart. if you want liberty, if you want security. “In the world economy of today, it would seem that in a sense, the nation and not the individual, is the unit. Thus collective action is essential to the disposition of basic problems. In the olden days we did not move in peace or war as nations. but as individuals. In the last war, the nations fought as un- its. Since the last war. some ha- omplete Heatinlgllsatislaction lions have leamed to work as u“- i . Their achievements are spectacular. STATE MERE CONVENIENCE "Since the last war Canada has learned llie arts of dlstinit-y. Our achievements are contemptlble, 1n the noble halite of liberty we have pursued the nlilbltlOlis of self. class, "i308 and creed, without regard to their disabling influence upon the l1)‘ inciplo and purpose of democracy. The Stale has been a mere conven- ience, and naturally has turned in-l ‘lo a drudev. The common good has l Ihecn a (‘;ll(‘l\—\\'()l‘(‘l. used only; to iltlistlllise some greedy project, We. weather sets in liefo stalling a furnace- NOW is the time to ha work done. your furnace proper stalled and ready to when \ 'intei" arrives. delay! today! Gold Weather Ahead Don't. ilirait until the cold We can give you better service now and have Get in touch with our Hardware Department re in- Right vc the I_v iii light Don’! lcall this. lilx-rtv. But if liberty} means that every other interesri itheii liberty is anarchy and will .destroy us, “You caiutot divide the unit and A Size And Type For Every minis! Expert Installations The lit-ailing of your home i.- li scientific priililt-ili. l! fie- |)(‘ll(l\ on silch thine» ;l\' lili- >llililllflll ziiitl cuii-liwii-tion of _\nlii" hull-e. llli‘ lziynili ilflfl s-ize of riiiiiils iiiirl nliiny other things". \\i- li:i".u hzlti yours of (‘.\'])t.‘|'i(‘llit' in iii- sllillinu lllfllilCus ziud lllUUJ- furl-I know exact‘; \\ hut is ' |'(‘t|llll‘t'(l so ihzil ltilll‘ homi- ivill he properly and effici- vulll" heated. l"lS'l.'l.\li\'l'Iu‘,\‘ A N I) A l) VICE FREE expect it to work. You cannot, em national democracy in half and‘ inzike it function. To generate its l maximum power. we must. serve de- "nwciacy. not exploit it To make it lilimiter than the sum total of its‘ parts: we must rake those conces- lszons to generosity and fair dealing‘. which are the essence of denier» iraav. Otherwise, we fall in llllt" and are denied the rightful uses o democracy. N0 UNITY 1N CANADA “We have no unity in Canada. We ' are an aggregation oi minorities» cacti oni- i-lumourlng for its own: filllitfi- W8 have no common point.‘ HEALTH -- COMFORT -- ECONOMY. i‘ With A HOLMAN-ENTERPRISE Furnace .._.._, w- _.__ .___ Wm. Use the ‘(Liavy-To-llay" Holman Home Plan (July a small Douii Pay- i" _. .. iiient installs your Furnace r- aiin the Holman Home Plan. l » ‘WI, Billfillfifl can be paid in small monthly iihiuuills. N0 In- terest or I£.\"li":i (‘barges for of \'l(‘\\', no common love. nol _ l . a _ e _ v -. ", "r _ l-llillnlllltllllfllilllzlllivlilzfé) tfollillzlll lmeat‘ "Us plan ls gum’ a simple 9m" Pa“ lb 511ml) SWOTd in hand’ m“ Y ‘ l ' ° ‘ u“ 1m“ To tizvert lis from the real oblCl-‘L "It will be a fascist goverelintent in. ‘ l‘ of its assault ilpon the Stale, reoc- we we .0 son“. o; that tel-m‘ IL Wm" "No iiatzoii is s0 dlsuiiited as are “on determines w brcmc a PM)“. \\~p, 1-110“. l5 the (llsiinily of race cum“, and m mm Us on him The ‘lnld Creed and of small nunlbers dclzvls of the plan art‘ ivl clrccii-il ira fll't"iil.‘t0l'l‘lll0l'_\'f V ,Ic\\'a'(ls the accomplishment of ths _"Thei*.- 1s the dlsunlty of iignoblv purposm stituiton, which, when We the present disposition to pursue the theoretical pflSslblll-J ties of Provincial autonomy, "eaves the Ifcdefnl authority jlisl once removed from actual con- have practically l "Reactions enemy is pffllllllsS. It desires to make that enemy, ours also. All the signs of pFOgYCsS are ‘hateful to roction, It urires lis to ahdica-"join ii. in prescribing them. 1°11’ "Ono of the $12115 oi progress un- "There is the ciisunity of a pro- doublcdly is trade unionism in its tectlve system which plays both vital from. Reaction tlicrfore io- (‘lids against the middle; tariffs in "causes, upon its destruction. l Central Canada against free trade “Itself (*Xll'(‘l‘ll.f‘l_\' linicd, reaction I,l the East and West. "llfllllfkllly has great. iullli iii the pn- “There is the (llfillllliy of Prn-‘i-rncyi of fear. So it dresses up trudg- VlllClfll efforts to find a gllbfiti-illlllOfllsln in a frightful way. It liti- lute for the plan of national re- ports imagiiiaijy i-ev0lliiioiiai"ics, and form on which the Federal au-ltries to frighten us to death with thority has defaulted. ‘ihff-Pftasl-S of what they will do with "Then there is the disunily whichllaboiir, and make labour do. follows upon ille unnatural struu- pie to destroy" the truth that ll] this land. prnslveriiy never" hereto- MFST AVOID REACTION "If flit‘ Stale does not support re-llore known »‘i.v any people, is "This plun is not a ‘hid one. pro- {Qim- it REES-shill." condollcs reacqwlllilli UN‘ iirtllt. is within the vied that reaction does not ovcr- tion; nay favours it. That, nuieh is reach, of every one of its, play it For in this country we may clear." The next stiillfl‘ litllilws cas- "Thus we have divsion between rightly boast a popular innocence. eily. From passive Support, of fpflC-,(‘lll<S and class: l1(‘l\\‘£‘I‘ll reaction a singular creduliLv, an eagerness‘ U011. i118 stale moves on to active and reform; between lllissez-falrc to believe all we are told. which and state fluldiiiicn; between those surely Dlllg i, further obligation, if.‘ be fascist. in its autocracy, irrespon-l sibilityi and fanatzcal belief in the Lcht of lls own wmiig-doiiig. "To impose upon lls ccoiiomici plTtClICCs iiiimicul io our iughts in] this ale of abundance: to thrust l“'i'tll'lll beyond oiii" grasp; lo drag u.»- bn/uk to hardships upon which Si'll‘llf'(\ has put the mark of itsi‘ (‘.’lll(lt‘ll1lll|ll0n requires the kind oi siiercgrznty ivhich lOOks not t0 the Home Pllin privileges. Elli-y ‘(hlini lci" lavfv ties of” thyallpeln zirspecl. of i‘@l"-.ui1l‘i\i<»'1' V h,“ ' "llie Cllllvlls of this country i"? "J- > NH- ‘vm? ,6 l ' solved that. tlicri- shall not. be au- zli. We t} ml“ m "l" LllPlT busi- other ClPflTPsslilll- Thu; restitution, l "m. i "e are any l)(‘ll(‘\('. will pllllpg our history ii. r. ~ the _\'(‘lll'l4 to l‘l‘lll(‘. lrli-"l "Do you sec llli\V,-\\ll\' fuscsln is ',\I|~'l ‘ mu" tlllvlll)? Ctllllt? iieur to him. su \ ' “Ml cone“ there iiiiit" be no doubt. ti Qrpllt body "Dvvllllp to he ilPlllflfil. Lt-l. this fl ..lil)ili' Rio and Wm fireut. €l'l.~l.~. sire us ncw discerii- ;.ii~i.,. it 1%‘ 11v Befilbéa lllPlli Will-ii lll‘ aPDefus it) colour?» ltlltl fill-fill‘. lwll (i. a ilgh - not lll\ i:"iii~ one». strp them iron. lPolilP for support, ,hiin. \t'lien lie presents the issue as ii ‘ii d snug-e‘ qqnd this novel-Inch,‘ Wm begin ‘ mp...- iliun ll 1,4. drag" llii- lilllii bc- iiiuu lull, ‘N. “ a p; rule Wm, a Compmhellslvc (lc_ll'llilfl his lll(l‘_‘l'lll'llllll' llllfl lite -uwll.,(‘ii..i flashed. Patioiiary plan in which budccts tricks (ll slaiv- fllifii‘. m1 lllll.lll(‘l"(l mi a deflatfonary’ basis "“"\7"EP'O““- Or h“ “,"‘,,,-‘m.,',‘,.§ will hp a pious- aspiration, This plan '1 "1' l" "m" "mum , n], . Q01 m i. ciillod tightening the belt. It in-i “'““' MN“ a“ a“ ‘I (M “But wlvps l-(‘ajlufctial-ls in government It. ii it» w il<\y;1nc1.p<.~y- or lasv- s mo.‘ be‘ cvpoiirlitlircs. grants. subventions, lsm- ~<“““'l" "Y m“ “mwmy °l “YA _ tic elimination of pilblic works and WRIT-ll"? L _ ' ‘Won re hmisiiifr programmes. abandonment .01“. {HUM K m W. own hand,‘ ~ "P of labour 0i M10131 security’. the reduction oflnm. (WITHIN. 3",“. Nmc‘. "my 1nd,, V) f‘ Q ‘. _ ma, pilims and wages‘ These are the’ )(‘l'(l‘]ll “llllll"l\" will dr- eriiiliic :'..‘.. i‘ i.‘ . l‘ l i I inlris ‘of nmpsmnpg on me mad back ml,“ h‘ vol»: will known no“ Choose‘ ‘l-l ' v v l, l ‘a full siarcittv. The old capitalism can‘: “VP '. l;-l.i[:n(l$ and hwqm" \Y‘/ll‘1(l hmm‘ Nnrlvln, “(Wk only m an economy of Sea“ I lls" flux" in h. who iii like; ~ ‘flolit n“; ‘I I i ' . ‘l- all do: c W‘ The vulva‘? of mslllsm l“ I ilrliflufroilllfcin ‘u 1)"(\<‘tF‘l'|‘l\' lvclorlm l l l ‘l. A I ((111129 ~l Canada will be to restore the ni<l|',rl'v___‘, [hiwp h“... mlhiynliul‘ so coni- ». m‘! cflpilalisnl lpi-iti- the issue Saw i-es" 01- not, l" L "It will be a fascist. government. nonetheless. Lllflllgli before it l5 el- ;i".,_.i"c "‘ i" ii. And you hiive said all I speak with a \'i"llf‘l'llt‘ll('l" I u» who believe that the Way forward fliither obligation there could be, cried. it. will hidc the substance of spiii".iii;lv. But I believe ilim y) Ilhlllll)! l; is the way buck; and those ivliolllllflii 111059 lii authority. t0 speak is purpose behind a front which lflisLffllillil speech ivill help us tr- .1.- lmllffl’ lliti? the will‘ forward lsliiolliing" but the truth tin llll\\'ill'_v will s-ecm like (lflllfifl-I(i(‘])(‘ll(ll‘l!l lll.l‘klll!. and thii" in- the \\‘-'ll' iuruxircl. “But reaction should be careful. T <'.\' llsclf. You will not know ll byydt-licliflvlll '.li.i in: will .\llri'.\ u» T‘ ,1 "And flum;_-li_ of emu-es 5-,,“ Wm 1L can appeal go Oui- dglike of lie adnriiniciils which. to ihc (‘an- boil, the (‘uiiiizei-s and ; . find lTtfllCfils in finance and dio-uivhiilence to our l\‘5f‘lil'.lll0lll. of i-tllilll iiiznd. invcsi its forcieil ]lI(ll0-‘|i(ll'lilllll c. oi till‘ lllllllll iii . llufds 0n thi- broad line. 1 think it‘llllt‘l"lf‘l'(‘llC0 from lliOse without 1pc at limes iviih a (infinite ale-l "n is a Llliiili ilniv. All 1 iiir to trail llll‘ first group which islautliority to interfere, to our in- incnt of comedy- It “ill l)!‘ (‘liflllll- hlilc mibllld’? <' " no tllv v r - thp minority tlrOllp, that. of spec‘ 1l>lblUIlCC upon the safe. saiio conduct -*‘>t‘cl and lllictlious. and by its prcl- for iiiimeiliult- <‘.<1.'l‘llll11l\ll()ll, li" ' i. l llilVllvi-T‘. bit: business. iiiici"n.itfnial of affairs. This it can do with some llllscs \\lll eclipse all our l‘lll'l t‘l' lioviiig tliui. l null nu "Dainty , ,_ fiiliiii-e. The second group is thalhssuiuiiicc of success. provided, (if C'lll('t‘17ll‘lllr~ of a lltlllllllllll siiiitu whiit I _c-u_v ll : ,- liir- wii _. ‘ill llll‘ DPQiJlL‘. course, we are williiil; i-i believe it. Cl-‘iiifi? .\\’hi.'-li l siia- _i_ u", ‘l‘ hit"- " ti i l' "The minor"; gTOlIP is ailainst Bill ".1 cannot. plajv upon our ll‘ Will be a llfivifil 110W‘ liiilriil ttrutli. ' iricriii and fixes its iiivsiiivrfc elclliiiiid., because ll li-lllllPllb lliill “°'l"lll“l“>*- illflililh at lllo oukcz. ii Il. ‘ " i'li- i i 4'1"" l~~ i upon tlic fluff‘. 1M» it inislit t"_\" iotwe are not timid. 'I‘hiii card is a i‘1l.\' have ziinnnu its lPatlPfs rho-w (‘i - " .. t. ill dim», mu -. l~lp us m our trophy‘, Th. mnjtndijokiri" and will make u,- laiigh. And villa lull d<'iiioi-i"."ic_v .iiid llt‘lli"\‘i‘ pz-u. .' llllt‘ llli‘ l't‘lll ..ii- s, _ , i_v is for avian; the nliliorify foruvhsii we laugh. we MW‘ ills liiilil is lllr‘\' ' u:- lll its ("also llll‘ll'.ll(‘l‘_' to i»- .|ll' ' llhlfll ,- < - i- : react nii. Tllllg ill'lllf‘i'l'ili‘_\' ls inllm-‘jllsl a silly. stupid p hi. the Neill" "l" l l: would be iiitvnillvioie to 1 ."-li"ll i'l"'i-' ‘ i ‘ llw . int flllil the sfuiv- pathetic; un- inute brain-child 0i its originators. i zht. lioiinui".i'.ilr~. iindriilbtcdly well- lllflllllllgl but quite pathete iraction casts itself as a hcrozc fiiz- "BP-‘Ofv the flvliicsslon. in ii. ancliure. flu», champion of the cause of zziter it. hie" lius nvss. high liiuuil-p; law and order. whatever‘ 1s flit‘ il-"lnlc justly in de- "A. a distance. it is quite zmivos- scribe the i"ea;liiiiiai"_v forces, 11nd sivi- in its balilc ClUlllPs. Only. ils chance to give this country when you draw near. can you 50C security. It. had full say, we never that the foi"ni beneath ilie uniform tried to lll\\ art i'_t. It failed. ills- our ls lilo-st» illillkc a horns. l turn now. Stand back from it and you “ill only see the sham and you will only hear the voice lt lifts volcc. lzriiiidly trained fol" propagan- "If the right way l5 the u-M» Q1 dist purposes. hioncy is ilsefiil here. progress. if our claim to pl‘fiSl'lf‘l'll,y'Nllllll and day. ll will be i-allinc is a tialirl one. if the Ollfhnvry olfyou. Believe lllP- it will be llf-‘i-“ii-"lir rm; RIGHT war I958 the“. service to democracy ex. "ii-w g,- a» 1., ,-.~- _.v- m" C; depression i5 llll,‘ touchstone of ivo. As \'Oll listen. you will sci‘ a tends beyond their Dfusent our Present chant-raw so.» which new ewilomlc iiv- tilcn i'l‘-'il‘t."-lii.i>lvliil"‘ vi "it tl°°<i °i<l lllll“ wit" oratoricul miinhandllng of it, never did wrong because it never must $lll‘l‘(‘ll(‘l(‘l' tn tho advance, uudgthe contentment and calin \\'ll\‘l1 orthodoxy become part of the mov-iare heart's desire to all oi us. You Jlnfi fame in reform. lit-ill be promised them oiice more. “That 500K115 reasonable and falnlAs you listen on, yOli will sce ali- But. the only wily lo NiSUlY- the sur- other picture of the storm ahead. render of reaction ls to mavshiill be- with your hero slaughtered and‘ hind reform. the collective will oflyolireslves dispersed. l the people In that way 310MB can Then reaction‘; volt-e will sound reform retricm thn state. Other-a still more solemn note. It sets vise. IVRCHGII w-ill go on lo securelthis picture of contentment in n by “that only effective means, the,fi"amc of patriotism. and Calls on us res rn ion 0f the old economy of to salute it. If We o not stoll to scarcity, h hlnk. to examine, to make sure. we | "The restore the old ocoiiomi". re- will snhlle h. God help us! Rctlfm as l have suggested needs £01! power than it. has at. pivsviit. milst put its heavy hand upon the indecisive stale and bend it. “For this picture l5 the picture of more from economic eminence iolfaecism, This government will be a political control. It must be rcck-ifiiscist government; its purpose a lieu; and if recklessness succeeds, triumph the _ fascist purpose; its than riiflileq also. triumph of faeciam. m: fascism is PIFTIlRI-I OF FASFISM kilccilat that all lczidivs in a IQSPINlIGll "In this scene cl rinl and revolt. liin\._»iiii~iit. enter ii with knnivledgl" n! dviiiowziii". . 1v -<'i,l: . ,. ‘.'".."-" o.’ il¢.'":: in» not. BUSHIPSS has been to one ool niily, where ll “'35 taught 11ml. lll(‘l'(\ Was oilc economy onlyl - lllp old economy: and lhat it was; iliiliiiihitalo and he'll-mi. eternal and lylcssed. “It is natural enough lo tho old methods when you h knoivledep oi the now ones. invoke ave no It is a mighty ra-“y Pnmiiih to we lflur own wel-‘(lotvii n iilt".. which nil the fare as- 'hc public 200d. Let be lllf‘ epitaph of the sincere naflilin fascist: est faith in ll 0l'fl(‘l‘. a flfilllllllp distrust llifitis tn change it, <‘llll\'l(‘ll(ll‘l that. if git alone. it ivill return to a state of prosperity all but that section of the people nev. er intended. under the jllsllbe of the economy of scarcity, in know mos- potty "I say this seriously" Because. tlili old economy was built upon lhp foundations of hardship and ivani. They went down deep, than Cli- of all me- OLD CAPITALISM "But the degree of llill0(’f‘llt"f‘ o!" igiiilt. with which the movement "warts is unimpouant, If its pur- pose is to support the old capitalism. uhen it is fascism. hotvevei" much it may call itself democracy. For de- ‘lmocracy will nevc. again tolerate the old capitalism, Scaitiby in the midatofplentyiebeoomingaqll- ‘trade lllllfiliklll. tho public cite he who has an hon-' 1c virtue or m‘. 01.1.‘ and a ‘very real, w so ll\ (I'm. "Tu i..l.l. ' " “ ...-"l.- ll To rcmlii imwiw l"\|".-l\‘| mm - r r' as log- stroy (leiiiocruiw in illl~ modern ".ll.'i‘l'l form. l~'iv: thvrc i.>l'|ll.\‘. he, u". llll‘ For the iii- salnp f. "w, f:l.\(.'l.~lli iilid trade llli- an Ill- lmilgnq 3nd. .i_~; there (‘illllltll he _i\. n‘, izis- ti... 5,1111‘: limit. filly and niuhl. ‘4A.I.]ll_(‘ When law-imp (‘t‘lll(‘.< lift‘! ll"\‘l‘l~ i‘ Lllliliii trade lllllfllTlvlll 2N1. out. Write illnt u»; iial.’ pious -ii‘.'li:"c l; [)IOL(‘$ll\l.lilli.~ o. euodivill i" lrlb“lli< * i wliin zig- l-HIHOL qilul !_\ - "i. i‘ o “Therein by lESEr-lll. i-~',l*-i"il\_~ ~l ix (lsposcr lhlfpflllllll; "will be \'i\ll(li‘ll‘ll"<l, m, for. . .iLll'lt'llll‘.ll'1 though b": cilllcctive ‘)2ll"_‘l|llllllL‘ lu- . i~~-",\.i~: L-ilinur a: bnui- ("on Pqlllp ll.~(‘ll to l)!‘ the .-ll a. .l.s boss needed i"llillli“]')l1l‘{ of capital in the -i:"-~ will hi 'moile:"ii (‘fllllflllllil svsiriii. ll c LZIIPtWoS-lill l‘|'-Il‘i' flit‘ moll- l'.\'B<\l..\.\'('.I-1D S '\ ‘all PPFDOE- i-oi" e000 l "Disoruaiiizerl lubuui" liii.iii.\ all pniriiic :~ cor unbalanced svstciii. The vmisliiiivi" - v i. i (‘V/Wflqlnf is the vii liin ol it. ;\ \ll:\l iiuule uii- i vi. "tr/v; ivill irt uni-m f‘ll(‘filll'il2t‘fl pinttiii-titui to .\‘.il Lllv hflllcr thi mulch our olriiiiiim c.il\'\c"". ~ l roii- r l‘ ‘l, mos. For the Hlllli‘. ll is a ljilglli l!\!ll'- to llI'l\—' ' - l l M's pieces ei-vss- Pill out l.ll.\l iFlillZ t-"viis". IJ- vt-i-iiiimi" lyre. l)t.lll"'.< pnivci" flown. and ui- d. 'l‘lll_ U,“ "um-q pm, ill!‘ only knid oi txipztiilsm wiuli t ,1 ..' it-ir" of our infill» ‘will u ll'llll“i' (lIlllll(‘l'1l(‘\' i. l . . piiulii- g il i-iiiinmii ixiglv l "Yet. to us. as llll‘ coliisiiiiwv lllt‘ l‘ l lltliil‘! _ E iiu-v slioifld hart ‘ngrtviiltunilist. the ivhilh vtiliiil‘ i» li"lllIll\ll iiniiv» "o pron-ct thoiu. ,woi"kc". slots out. the cl‘.\' lo W-uniil, » \\<=.l'l lino bun quite a. ‘labour by forbidding u. t-lic cmliilitil ‘right of collective bargaining. Be- iCfllliif‘ it la said that collective bar- gu-ining may provide n fruitful inc- had z~~t m t-flmmellced it by tiriirng the produce __' . .11 2 (Continued on page 8, CO1 L], 7,1; J -z= ee- swan-a.“ r El F! . ._ p v l. "-4 . ' hi‘ all \\I