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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67811 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67811)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Roosevelt in the Kansas City Star, by
-Theodore Roosevelt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Roosevelt in the Kansas City Star
- War-time Editorials
-
-Author: Theodore Roosevelt
-
-Contributor: Ralph Stout
-
-Release Date: April 10, 2022 [eBook #67811]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY
-STAR ***
-
-
-
-
-
- PUBLICATIONS OF THE
- ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION
-
- II. ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR
-
-
-
-
-COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATIONS
-
-ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION INC.
-
-
- R. J. CUDDIHY
- ARTHUR W. PAGE
- MARK SULLIVAN
- E. A. VAN VALKENBURG
-
-[Illustration: _Theodore Roosevelt and W. R. Nelson_]
-
-
-
-
- ROOSEVELT
-
- IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR
-
- WAR-TIME EDITORIALS
-
- BY
-
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
-
- RALPH STOUT
- _Managing Editor of The Star_
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
- 1921
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1917, 1918, AND 1919, BY THE KANSAS CITY STAR
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY RALPH STOUT
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- INTRODUCTION, BY RALPH STOUT xiii
-
- DR. FITZSIMONS’S DEATH, SEPTEMBER 17, 1917 1
-
- BLOOD, IRON, AND GOLD, SEPTEMBER 23, 1917 2
-
- THE GHOST DANCE OF THE SHADOW HUNS, OCTOBER 1,
- 1917 5
-
- SAM WELLER AND MR. SNODGRASS, OCTOBER 2, 1917 8
-
- BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS, OCTOBER 4, 1917 10
-
- THE BONDHOLDERS AND THE PEOPLE, OCTOBER 7, 1917 12
-
- FACTORIES OF GOOD CITIZENSHIP, OCTOBER 10, 1917 13
-
- PILLAR-OF-SALT CITIZENSHIP, OCTOBER 12, 1917 16
-
- BROOMSTICK APOLOGISTS, OCTOBER 14, 1917 18
-
- THE LIBERTY LOAN AND THE PRO-GERMANS, OCTOBER 16, 1917 20
-
- A DIFFICULT QUESTION TO ANSWER, OCTOBER 18, 1917 23
-
- NOW HELP THE LIBERTY LOAN, OCTOBER 20, 1917 25
-
- A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE TRAINING CAMPS, OCTOBER 21, 1917 26
-
- THE PASSING OF THE CRIPPLE, OCTOBER 23, 1917 28
-
- THE PEACE OF COMPLETE VICTORY, OCTOBER 23, 1917 30
-
- FIGHTING WORK FOR THE MAN OF FIGHTING AGE, OCTOBER
- 25, 1917 32
-
- WISE WOMEN AND FOOLISH WOMEN, OCTOBER 27, 1917 34
-
- WHY CRY OVER SPILT MILK? OCTOBER 28, 1917 36
-
- SAVE THE FOODSTUFF, OCTOBER 30, 1917 38
-
- ON THE FIRING LINE, OCTOBER 31, 1917 40
-
- NINE TENTHS OF WISDOM IS BEING WISE IN TIME, NOVEMBER
- 1, 1917 42
-
- WE ARE IN THIS WAR TO THE FINISH, NOVEMBER 2, 1917 43
-
- SINISTER ALLIES, NOVEMBER 3, 1917 45
-
- THE NEW YORK MAYORALTY ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8, 1917 47
-
- GERMAN HATRED OF AMERICA, NOVEMBER 13, 1917 49
-
- START THE SYSTEM OF UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING
- AT ONCE, NOVEMBER 17, 1917 52
-
- A FIFTY-FIFTY WAR ATTITUDE, NOVEMBER 20, 1917 54
-
- THE GERMANIZED SOCIALISTS AND PEACE, NOVEMBER 26, 1917 56
-
- MOBILIZE OUR MAN POWER, DECEMBER 1, 1917 58
-
- THE LANSDOWNE LETTER, DECEMBER 2, 1917 60
-
- THE PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE, DECEMBER 5, 1917 62
-
- FOUR BITES OF A CHERRY, DECEMBER 7, 1917 64
-
- THE RED CROSS CHRISTMAS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE, DECEMBER
- 12, 1917 66
-
- BEING BRAYED IN A MORTAR, DECEMBER 18, 1917 68
-
- RENDERING A GREAT PUBLIC SERVICE, DECEMBER 20, 1917 71
-
- A BETRAYAL OF DEMOCRACY, DECEMBER 21, 1917 73
-
- BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS--A STUDY IN CAUSE AND
- EFFECT, DECEMBER 27, 1917 76
-
- OUR DUTY FOR THE NEW YEAR, JANUARY 1, 1918 78
-
- TELL THE TRUTH AND SPEED UP THE WAR, JANUARY 4, 1918 80
-
- THE COST OF UNPREPAREDNESS, JANUARY 6, 1918 82
-
- COÖPERATION AND CONTROL, JANUARY 8, 1918 85
-
- THE ARTEMUS WARD THEORY OF WAR, JANUARY 17, 1918 87
-
- THE FRUITS OF WATCHFUL WAITING, JANUARY 18, 1918 89
-
- TELL THE TRUTH, JANUARY 21, 1918 92
-
- JUSTIFICATION OF CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM, JANUARY
- 28, 1918 93
-
- SECRETARY BAKER’S GENERAL DENIAL, FEBRUARY 2, 1918 96
-
- LET GEORGE SPEED UP THE WAR, FEBRUARY 3, 1918 98
-
- LET UNCLE SAM GET INTO THE GAME, FEBRUARY 5, 1918 101
-
- CONSERVATION IS IMPORTANT AND PRODUCTION IS MORE
- IMPORTANT, FEBRUARY 15, 1918 103
-
- THE PEOPLE’S WAR, FEBRUARY 26, 1918 105
-
- THE FRUITS OF FIFTY-FIFTY LOYALTY, MARCH 2, 1918 109
-
- QUIT TALKING PEACE, MARCH 5, 1918 111
-
- THE WORST ENEMIES OF CERTAIN LOYAL AMERICANS,
- MARCH 10, 1918 113
-
- GIRD UP OUR LOINS, MARCH 16, 1918 115
-
- BOLSHEVIKI AT HOME AND ABROAD, MARCH 19, 1918 117
-
- THE FRUITS OF OUR DELAY, MARCH 26, 1918 120
-
- HOW THE HUN EARNS HIS TITLE, MARCH 31, 1918 122
-
- THANK HEAVEN! APRIL 2, 1918 128
-
- CITIZENS OR SUBJECTS? APRIL 6, 1918 129
-
- WOMEN AND THE WAR, APRIL 12, 1918 133
-
- TO MY FELLOW AMERICANS OF GERMAN BLOOD, APRIL 16, 1918 135
-
- AN EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT IN HUMAN UPBUILDING,
- APRIL 17, 1918 138
-
- FREEDOM STANDS WITH HER BACK TO THE WALL, APRIL
- 20, 1918 140
-
- A SQUARE DEAL FOR ALL AMERICANS, APRIL 27, 1918 142
-
- THE GERMAN HORROR, MAY 2, 1918 145
-
- SEDITION, A FREE PRESS, AND PERSONAL RULE, MAY 7, 1918 147
-
- THE DANGERS OF A PREMATURE PEACE, MAY 12, 1918 150
-
- THE WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN, MAY 27, 1918 155
-
- ANTI-BOLSHEVISM, JUNE 5, 1918 158
-
- GENERAL WOOD, JUNE 15, 1918 160
-
- HELP RUSSIA NOW, JUNE 20, 1918 162
-
- AN AMERICAN FOURTH OF JULY, JUNE 23, 1918 166
-
- HOW NOT TO ADJOURN POLITICS, JUNE 25, 1918 167
-
- HATS OFF TO THE INTERNATIONAL TYPOGRAPHICAL
- UNION, JUNE 27, 1918 170
-
- THE PERFORMANCE OF A GREAT PUBLIC DUTY, JULY 3, 1918 172
-
- REPEAL THE CHARTER OF THE GERMAN-AMERICAN ALLIANCE,
- JULY 11, 1918 174
-
- EVERY MAN HAS A RIGHT TO ONE COUNTRY, JULY 15, 1918 177
-
- MURDER, TREASON, AND PARLOR ANARCHY, JULY 18, 1918 180
-
- BACK UP THE FIGHTING MEN AT THE FRONT, JULY 26, 1918 183
-
- THE AMERICANS WHOM WE MOST DELIGHT TO HONOR,
- AUGUST 1, 1918 186
-
- SOUND NATIONALISM AND SOUND INTERNATIONALISM,
- AUGUST 4, 1918 188
-
- THE MAN WHO PAYS AND THE MAN WHO PROFITS, AUGUST
- 9, 1918 196
-
- OUR DEBT TO THE BRITISH EMPIRE, AUGUST 16, 1918 200
-
- THE CANDIDACY OF HENRY FORD, AUGUST 20, 1918 202
-
- SPEED UP THE WORK FOR THE ARMY AND GIVE ALL WHO
- ENTER IT FAIR PLAY, AUGUST 23, 1918 206
-
- SENATOR LODGE’S NOBLE SPEECH, SEPTEMBER 1, 1918 209
-
- APPLIED PATRIOTISM, SEPTEMBER 8, 1918 211
-
- GOOD LUCK TO THE ANTI-BOLSHEVISTS OF KANSAS, SEPTEMBER
- 12, 1918 213
-
- THE FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN, SEPTEMBER 17, 1918 216
-
- FAIR PLAY AND NO POLITICS, SEPTEMBER 20, 1918 218
-
- SPIES AND SLACKERS, SEPTEMBER 24, 1918 221
-
- QUIT PLAYING FAVORITES, SEPTEMBER 30, 1918 224
-
- WAR AIMS AND PEACE PROPOSALS, OCTOBER 12, 1918 226
-
- PERMANENT PREPAREDNESS AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS,
- OCTOBER 15, 1918 229
-
- HIGH-SOUNDING PHRASES OF MUDDY MEANING, OCTOBER
- 17, 1918 231
-
- AN AMERICAN PEACE _versus_ A RUBBER-STAMP PEACE,
- OCTOBER 22, 1918 236
-
- UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER, OCTOBER 26, 1918 239
-
- WHAT ARE THE FOURTEEN POINTS? OCTOBER 30, 1918 241
-
- FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF THE FOURTEEN POINTS,
- OCTOBER 30, 1918 243
-
- FOURTEEN SCRAPS OF PAPER, OCTOBER 31, 1918 248
-
- THE TURKS SURRENDER UNCONDITIONALLY, NOVEMBER 3, 1918 251
-
- PEACE, NOVEMBER 12, 1918 253
-
- SACRIFICE ON COLD ALTARS, NOVEMBER 13, 1918 255
-
- THE RED FLAG AND THE HUN PEACE DRIVE, NOVEMBER
- 14, 1918 258
-
- THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS, NOVEMBER 17, 1918 261
-
- AN AMERICAN CONGRESS, NOVEMBER 18, 1918 265
-
- THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS AND THE ENSLAVEMENT OF
- MANKIND, NOVEMBER 22, 1918 269
-
- PRESIDENT WILSON AND THE PEACE CONFERENCE, NOVEMBER
- 26, 1918 272
-
- THE LEAGUE TO ENFORCE PEACE, DECEMBER 2, 1918 277
-
- THE MEN WHOSE LOT HAS BEEN HARDEST, DECEMBER 8, 1918 281
-
- THE BRITISH NAVY, THE FRENCH ARMY, AND AMERICAN
- COMMON SENSE, DECEMBER 17, 1918 283
-
- LET US HAVE STRAIGHTFORWARD SPEAKING, DECEMBER
- 24, 1918 287
-
- A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE MEN AT THE FRONT, DECEMBER
- 25, 1918 289
-
- THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS, JANUARY 13, 1919 292
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT AND W. R. NELSON
-
- From a snapshot _Photogravure Frontispiece_
-
- FACSIMILE OF A NOTE FROM ROOSEVELT TO W. R.
- NELSON xxii
-
- FACSIMILE OF A PAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT OF ONE OF
- ROOSEVELT’S EDITORIALS 2
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-I
-
-The request, repeated and urgent, has come from many sources that the
-editorial articles, contributed by Colonel Theodore Roosevelt to The
-Kansas City Star during our country’s participation in the World War,
-be preserved for the future. It is in response to this request that
-this volume is published.
-
-Newspaper publication is ephemeral. Newspaper files are short-lived.
-Anybody who has examined a newspaper of thirty years ago knows how
-flimsy it is, how it breaks and disintegrates to the touch. It lacks
-the enduring quality of the newspaper of sixty or seventy-five years
-ago when other elements entered into the composition of news-print
-paper. Newspaper publication is the thought of to-day; to-morrow, it
-is gone save for the impression left on the mind of the reader. That
-the recollection of Colonel Roosevelt’s articles may have something to
-appeal to aside from crumbling newspaper files is the aim of this book.
-And so these expressions on the events in a crisis in our national
-history--from the mind of a man whose intense love of country was the
-admiration of all who knew him, expressions which at the time of their
-publication stirred many to greater sacrifice for country, some to
-anger, even to rage--are here presented in enduring form.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt’s contributions to The Star were his most frequent
-expressions on the war; they were the outpouring of a great soul deeply
-stirred by the country’s situation. There were more than one hundred
-articles from his pen. They covered the vital time of our part in the
-war from October, 1917, until his death January 6, 1919.
-
-The reason he chose The Star as his medium of reaching the people,
-in a period when a large section of the American people sought and
-was guided by what he said, was that Colonel Roosevelt and The Star
-had known and understood each other for a long, long time. Their
-acquaintance dated back to the period of his service in the New York
-legislature. The Star saw behind his conduct then the qualities and
-the spirit which it was continually seeking to place at a premium in
-offices of public trust.
-
-Later, in 1889, when President Harrison appointed him a civil service
-commissioner, The Star said:
-
- The appointment of Theodore Roosevelt as one of the civil service
- commissioners is a hopeful sign that President Harrison desires to
- give civil service reform a fair representation in the government. Mr.
- Roosevelt is an accomplished gentleman, with sincere aspirations for
- reformed methods of administration, as shown by his career in the New
- York legislature when Grover Cleveland was governor. Mr. Roosevelt is
- too independent ever to serve as a party henchman, and his voice and
- influence will always be in favor of what he believes to be the most
- efficient and business-like administration of affairs.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt and the founder and editor of The Star, the late
-William R. Nelson, had met, but they did not really know each other
-until after the war with Spain. In his canvass for the vice-presidency
-in 1900 Colonel Roosevelt was entertained at the Nelson home, Oak Hall,
-Kansas City. From this visit dated better acquaintance. They had much
-in common and were alike in many characteristics: frank, outspoken,
-impulsive, and passionately devoted to the same ideals of private life
-and public service.
-
-I recall a story of an impulsive act of Colonel Roosevelt back in his
-ranchman days. A man of shady reputation had been appointed Indian
-Agent with the Sioux on a Dakota reservation. He put into effect many
-sharp practices with the Indians which would line his pockets with
-money. Roosevelt’s ranch was not far away and ranch affairs took him to
-the agency. One day he went to the agency and sought the agent.
-
-“You are Mr. ----?” the ranchman asked.
-
-“Yes,” was the reply.
-
-“I have heard what you have been doing with the Indians. You are a
-thief! Good-day!”
-
-The story, as told, was that the agent, aghast at the boldness of his
-visitor, turned and walked away.
-
-The late Curtis Guild, Jr., of Boston, and Senator Beveridge, of
-Indiana, were with Colonel Roosevelt on the Oak Hall visit. They found
-delight in the paintings and books in Mr. Nelson’s home and Colonel
-Roosevelt gave proof of his wide range of knowledge by his instant
-recognition of the work of painters of long-established reputation. In
-his inspection of the library he asked to see what Mr. Nelson had on
-the Greek dramatists. “I always ask for them in a man’s library,” he
-remarked.
-
-During this visit I was a listener at an argument between the two men
-on partisanship. Mr. Nelson had in his early days affiliated with
-the Democratic Party. In 1876 he was Mr. Tilden’s personal manager
-in Indiana. But with the party’s treatment of Tilden Mr. Nelson lost
-partisan zeal, and never after could he be considered a party man. He
-founded The Star in 1880 as an independent newspaper; it has remained
-an independent newspaper.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt’s argument was, that to accomplish anything in public
-affairs a man or a newspaper had to belong to a party organization. He
-probably had in mind his experience in the Blaine campaign of 1884. His
-conclusion was that the American people were wedded to the two-party
-system and that one who aspired to do anything for the country could
-achieve only by working through a party organization.
-
-Mr. Nelson granted what he said was true as to an individual, but
-not as to a newspaper of the right sort. It was perhaps true as to
-a newspaper which had as one of its aims the securing of political
-honor for its owner, but the newspaper sincerely devoted to the public
-interest could wield greater power by retaining its independence and
-in the end could accomplish more substantial achievements, a statement
-verified by his own conduct of The Star. Colonel Roosevelt saw the
-force of Mr. Nelson’s contention, but stuck to his point that, with an
-individual, accomplishment outside of party ranks was impossible.
-
-It is interesting to look back over the growth of the mutual
-understanding and the fondness of the two men for each other dating
-from that visit in 1900. After leaving Kansas City, Colonel Roosevelt
-sent back a letter expressing his delight at the day spent at Oak Hall,
-closing with “How I do wish I could spend the week in your library
-instead of upon this infernal campaigning trip!”
-
-When the assassin’s bullet struck down President McKinley, Mr. Nelson
-sent a telegram to Colonel Roosevelt expressing his horror at the deed
-and pledging the whole-hearted support of his newspaper in aiding him
-to carry the great burden which had been placed on his shoulders.
-
-Mr. Nelson had no wish to be a distributor of federal patronage; he was
-concerned in higher things. When Colonel Roosevelt turned to him for
-advice on political matters, he was reluctant to give it, feeling his
-own lack of real knowledge of the politics of Kansas and Missouri and
-of the men who sought appointments. Late in 1901 Colonel Roosevelt,
-asking about conditions in Missouri, wrote, referring to St. Louis
-men, “I think they have been rather after the offices and not after
-success.... I should like to have some office-holder in Missouri to
-whom I could tie.”
-
-Mr. Nelson asked the political writers of The Star to write their
-estimate of the men seeking office and leadership, and these were
-sent to the President with his endorsement. The President repeatedly
-followed the ideas of these letters, and it is a pleasure to record
-that in no instance was there subsequently cause for regret for any
-selection based on the letters.
-
-In 1908 the President’s appointment of the Farm Life Commission
-received Mr. Nelson’s commendation, for he had long recognized the need
-of making farm life more attractive; indeed, he would have financed
-experiments along this line had he been younger. At the same time
-Mr. Nelson spoke approvingly of the President’s recent comment on
-the courts, adding, “Courts need such criticism the worst kind. They
-steadily undermine confidence in law and legal justice.”
-
-“I am sick at heart,” the President replied, “over the way in which
-the courts have been prostituting justice in the last few years.
-The greatest trouble will follow if they do not alter their present
-attitude. I suppose I shall ‘pay’ myself in some way for what I have
-said about the courts, but I have got to take the risk.”
-
-In 1909, in the closing days of the Roosevelt Administration the
-President issued an executive order looking to a quick settlement of a
-long-pending controversy over the channel of the Kaw River at Kansas
-City. It was unexpected; indeed, few in Kansas City knew that the
-President was considering the subject. The order cut straight to the
-heart of the controversy in true Roosevelt fashion. The same day Mr.
-Nelson sent this telegram to the President:
-
- It is quite worth while to have a real President of the United States.
-
-The next day this reply came from the President:
-
- It is even better worth while to have a real editor of just the right
- kind of paper.
-
-
-II
-
-The Star supported Taft in the campaign of 1908 because it had faith
-that he would carry out the Roosevelt policies. Events early in the
-Taft Administration weakened that faith; the Winona speech withered
-it. Mr. Nelson had had no correspondence with Colonel Roosevelt while
-he was hunting in Africa. Two letters came from the ex-President,
-one March 12, 1910, from the White Nile saying he expected to return
-in June; another from Porto Maurizio, a month later, saying, “I know
-you will understand how delicate my position is,” and asking for an
-early conference with Mr. Nelson on his return to this country. Mr.
-Nelson’s final, open break with President Taft was “more in sorrow than
-in anger”; there was never bitterness of feeling, solely regret at a
-mistake in believing Mr. Taft stood for principles which events early
-in his administration showed convincingly he did not stand for.
-
-Writing to Colonel Roosevelt, in 1910, after his return from Africa,
-Mr. Nelson referred to the Winona speech and the Ballinger case,
-concluding: “I have wondered whether sooner or later there would not
-have to be a new party of the Square Deal.”
-
-The succeeding two years there were frequent conferences and
-interchange of letters between Colonel Roosevelt and Mr. Nelson. The
-latter had absolute confidence and abiding faith in Roosevelt. Late
-in 1910 the Colonel’s enemies were seeking to torment him from many
-angles. Mr. Nelson wrote him:
-
- It has occurred to me that the opposition will constantly be prodding
- you and lying about you with the evident purpose of getting you angry
- and so putting you to a disadvantage. That is the only hope on earth
- they have of stopping you.
-
- Your comment on Wm. Barnes was fine. It recalled to me an incident
- connected with Governor Tilden, who was the wisest politician I ever
- knew. As a young man I was his manager in Indiana. After the defeat of
- Lucius Robinson, whom he was backing for Governor of New York, I went
- East at his invitation to confer with him. He asked me to see Kelly,
- Clarkson, Potter, Dorsheimer, and Sam Cox, and some of the other men
- who had been fighting him, to get their views. “What shall I tell them
- about your position if they ask me?” I said. “Oh, tell them,” he said,
- “that I am very amiable.” In my adventures since that time I have
- often had occasion to remember that as sound advice. Amiability is a
- great weapon at times.
-
- But my point is that you never need to defend yourself at all. The
- people will take care of your defense. Besides, it is always a bad
- policy, in my opinion, to get to talking about the past. You are a
- Progressive. Your nose is to the front. The past doesn’t interest you.
- So I hope you will ignore the critics, no matter how exasperating they
- may be. And if you can’t ignore them, laugh at them!
-
-To this the Colonel replied:
-
- I guess you are right; but it does make me flame with indignation when
- men who pretend to be especially the custodians of morals, and who sit
- in judgment from an Olympian height of virtue on the deeds of other
- men, themselves offend in a way that puts them on a level with the
- most corrupt scoundrel in a city government....
-
- But this does not alter the fact that, as you say, my business is to
- pay no heed to the slanders of the past, but to keep my face steadily
- turned toward the future. Here in New York the outlook is rather
- dark. There are a great multitude of men, some of them nominally
- respectable, but timid or misled, who do certainly, although rather
- feebly, object to the domination of Barnes and his fellow bosses; but
- who do sincerely, but rather feebly, prefer clean politics to corrupt
- politics; but who, nevertheless, dread any interference with what they
- regard as the rights of big business, any assault on what I regard as
- an improperly arranged tariff, any effort to work for the betterment
- of social conditions in the spirit of Abraham Lincoln; who regard all
- assaults and efforts of this nature as being worse than the rule of
- small bosses and the petty corruption of local politicians.
-
-
-III
-
-As the presidential campaign of 1912 developed, there were frequent
-exchanges of views. In May Colonel Roosevelt wrote that he was
-confident of victory in the Republican Convention in spite of all that
-was being done against him by the men in control of the party. Only
-those who were in the thick of the Republican Convention in Chicago
-in June realize how the fighting blood of the men on the progressive
-side, from the leader down, was aroused. Mr. Nelson was at Chicago
-during the Republican Convention. Colonel Roosevelt sought his advice
-throughout. The course which was ultimately followed had Mr. Nelson’s
-full approval. In a telegram to Colonel Roosevelt after the break from
-the Republican Party, Mr. Nelson said: “I am with you tooth and nail,
-to the limit and to the finish.”
-
-Following those vivid days and nights of the Republican Convention--a
-period no active participant can ever erase from his memory--came
-the Orchestra Hall meeting, the first definite step to organize the
-Progressive Party, the National Progressive Party Convention in August,
-and then the memorable three-party campaign.
-
-In the midst of the campaign Mr. Nelson and the Colonel had the time
-and inclination to carry on a correspondence on things not directly
-touching the issues on which the fight was made. In a letter from
-his summer home at Magnolia, Massachusetts, Mr. Nelson dropped into
-a discussion of what he called his two hobbies--to drive money out
-of the voting booth and out of the courthouse. His idea was that all
-legitimate expenses of candidates for office should be paid by the
-State, and that there should be a reform of the voting system which
-would avoid the necessity of party organization to get out the vote.
-Having the vote taken by letter carriers was one way that appealed to
-him. He would make justice free, “not for sale as it is to-day when
-the rich man gets the best lawyers.” Lawyers should be officers of the
-court in fact as well as in theory, and should be compensated for their
-work by the State, not by the litigants.
-
-Replying to this letter late in July, Colonel Roosevelt said:
-
- I am with you in principle on both the points you raise. I am with you
- on the question of the State paying the election expenses right
- away now. I have always stood for that course as the only one to give
- the poor man a fair chance in politics.
-
- Your other idea is new, but I have long been feeling my way to the
- same conclusion. A lawyer is not like a doctor. No real good for the
- community comes from the development of legalism, from the development
- of that kind of ability shown by the great corporation lawyers who
- lead our bar; whereas good does come from medical development. The
- high-priced lawyer means, when reduced to his simplest expression,
- that justice tends to go to the man with the longest purse. But the
- proposal is such a radical one that I do not know how it would be
- greeted, and it is something we will have to fight for later.
-
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Tʰᵉ Outlook
- 287 Fourth Avenue
- New York
-
- Office of
- Theodore Roosevelt
-
- May 24, 1912
-
- My dear Colonel Nelson:
-
- It certainly is fine, and it looks now as though we shall be able to
- win in the Convention.
-
- Faithfully yours,
-
- _Theodore Roosevelt
- Good luck, oh staunchest of
- friends!_
-
- Colonel W. R. Nelson,
- Kansas City, Mo.]
-
-Late in September, during a campaign tour of the West, Colonel
-Roosevelt spent a Sunday evening at Oak Hall. The subject of campaign
-contributions came up, and the candidate became reminiscent,
-recounting his first experience as governor of New York with campaign
-contributions. It was an incident, he said, that might readily be
-misconstrued and so he had not discussed it publicly.
-
-Soon after he was elected governor of New York, he had discovered that
-the street railways were paying almost no taxes. Accordingly he took
-steps to introduce a franchise tax bill into the legislature. Mr. Odell
-at once came to him and told him that he was following in the footsteps
-of Bryan and “Potato” Pingree, which was the most severe condemnation
-at that time. That warning having no effect, Mr. Platt came to him
-and said, “Governor, you can’t do this. Don’t you know that the
-Whitney-Ryan combination was one of the heaviest contributors to your
-campaign fund?”
-
-“The deuce they were,” said Roosevelt; “I supposed they made their
-contributions to Tammany.”
-
-“Of course,” Platt returned, “they contributed to Tammany, but they
-gave us just half as much as they did Tammany. If they hadn’t expected
-fair treatment from us they would have given it all to Tammany.”
-
-“I told Platt they would get fair treatment from us,” Roosevelt said,
-in telling the story, “but if they expected immunity from taxation they
-were going to be left.”
-
-At that time the Whitney-Ryan combination owned the New York street
-railways and so were going to be hard hit by the franchise tax. Mr.
-Roosevelt added that the franchise tax bill went through and created
-quite a scandal in high finance at that time. “Everybody was talking
-about it,” he said, “and all the big financiers knew about it. So
-I never could have any sympathy with the view that Harriman or the
-Standard Oil people--if they really contributed to my campaign fund--or
-any other interest of that sort gave any money for campaign purposes
-under a misapprehension. They knew from my deeds as well as my words
-that they could not buy immunity from me, and that the best they could
-expect was a square deal. I said one time to Bacon, ‘Bob, why is it
-that Morgan and all his crowd are against me? Don’t they know that they
-would get justice from me?’ Bacon smiled, hesitated, and then said,
-‘Yes, I suppose they do.’”
-
-In the Progressive campaign Mr. Nelson violated a personal rule of
-many years’ standing which forbade his personal participation in
-politics. Into this campaign he went with his whole soul. Then past
-seventy years of age, he was abundantly able to direct but not to give
-of his physical strength. He assumed responsibility for organizing the
-party in Missouri and lent his newspaper organization to that end.
-He thought day and night for the party’s candidate and the party’s
-principles, and at the end of the campaign he had left undone nothing
-which he could have done for the candidate who had his absolute and
-unqualified confidence. After the election Colonel Roosevelt wrote Mr.
-Nelson:
-
- I can never overstate how much I appreciate all that you have done and
- been throughout this fight. My dear Sir, I am very grateful and I know
- that the only way I can show my gratitude is so to bear myself that
- you will feel no cause for regret at having stood by me.
-
-After the campaign of 1912, which showed the remarkable strength of
-Colonel Roosevelt with the people and demonstrated that he was still
-a factor in American public life to be reckoned with, the tormenting
-by his political enemies continued. From many quarters darts had been
-hurled at “the old lion.” In July, 1914, after a libel suit for fifty
-thousand dollars had been started, Mr. Nelson telegraphed the Colonel
-at Oyster Bay:
-
- Too bad so much of the burden should fall on you. _Would gladly share
- it with you._
-
-In a few days the message brought this letter:
-
- When a man is under constant fire and begins to feel, now and then,
- as if he did not have very many friends, and as if the forces against
- him were perfectly overwhelming, then, even though he is prepared to
- battle alone absolutely to the end, he is profoundly appreciative of
- the support of those whose support is best worth having. Your telegram
- not only gave me real comfort, but touched and moved me profoundly.
-
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-
-That was the end of the recorded correspondence between Colonel
-Roosevelt and Mr. Nelson. The former came West on a speaking tour in
-the fall of 1914 and during his stay in Kansas City was a guest again
-at Oak Hall. Mr. Nelson accompanied him to a campaign meeting in a
-skating rink packed with people in Kansas City, Kansas, where he spoke
-in a sweltering atmosphere for more than an hour preaching with all his
-old vigor and enthusiasm the doctrines of the Progressive Party.
-
-There was the same display from great crowds of people, along the
-streets around the hall and everywhere he went, of the keen interest
-and personal admiration which Colonel Roosevelt’s presence in Kansas
-City territory always brought out. Kansas City and its vicinity
-had been Roosevelt ground since Kansas and Western Missouri became
-acquainted with him; indeed, any appearance by him was sufficient to
-fill Convention Hall in Kansas City to its capacity of fifteen thousand
-people.
-
-Following Mr. Nelson’s death in April, 1915, there came from Colonel
-Roosevelt a sincere appreciation of his sorrow, ending, “We have lost
-literally one of the foremost citizens of the United States, one of the
-men whom our Republic could least afford to spare.”
-
-
-IV
-
-In the 1916 campaign Colonel Roosevelt and The Star were of the same
-mind. Deeply attached to the principles on which the battle of 1912 had
-been conducted by the Progressive Party, they were conscious of the
-futility of continuing the fight for those principles in a third party.
-The American devotion to the two-party system had been convincingly
-demonstrated again. The World War had been in progress two years, the
-Lusitania had been sunk without stirring the Administration to more
-than impotent words. Both thought that the Republican Party presented
-the only hope of accomplishment. Colonel Roosevelt was The Star’s
-choice for the nomination, but his nomination was too much to expect
-after the break of 1912, and it gave its support to Mr. Hughes.
-
-Early in June, 1917, Mr. Irwin Kirkwood, Mr. Nelson’s son-in-law, on
-his way West from New York, chanced to meet Colonel Roosevelt on the
-train. A visit in the Colonel’s stateroom followed. The conversation
-turned to the seeming impossibility of a Roosevelt division for France,
-a subject in which Mr. Kirkwood was personally interested, for he had
-been assured service in France if the Colonel’s ambition were realized.
-The Colonel was discouraged over his failure to get active service
-and restless at the Administration’s slow preparation for war. Of the
-Nation’s whole-hearted support of the war he was certain, and the high
-thought with him at the time was to bring influences to bear on the
-Administration to speed up.
-
-At this time Colonel Roosevelt was contributing a monthly article for
-The Metropolitan Magazine written long in advance of its publication.
-Daily, momentous problems of the war were coming up. Mr. Kirkwood
-felt strongly that the American people were eager to know what
-Theodore Roosevelt thought on these questions. If he could reach the
-public quickly, great good would result to this country’s cause.
-Recalling that Mr. Nelson had said, when there was criticism of the
-ex-President’s purpose to write for The Outlook, when it was first
-announced, he would be mighty glad to have him write for The Star, Mr.
-Kirkwood said:
-
-“Colonel Roosevelt, wouldn’t it be fine if you could get your ideas on
-the war to the people before they were twenty-four hours old? The only
-way that could be done is through a newspaper.”
-
-“By George!” said the Colonel, with emphasis, “I never thought of that:
-it sounds like a good idea.”
-
-Mr. Kirkwood said if he would consider the suggestion, The Star would
-certainly welcome him.
-
-“Such a proposition would not tempt me from many newspapers,” Colonel
-Roosevelt continued. “In fact I know of no others except The Kansas
-City Star and The Philadelphia North American from which I would
-consider it. The Star particularly appeals to me as being printed
-in the heart of the great progressive Middle Western country, and
-because, too, of my love and affection for Colonel Nelson.”
-
-Colonel Roosevelt remarked that he would like to discuss the proposal
-with Mrs. Roosevelt and his daughter, Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, for he
-had great confidence in the judgment of both. On Mr. Kirkwood’s return
-to New York a fortnight later, Colonel Roosevelt said he was still
-“filled up” with the idea and asked Mr. and Mrs. Kirkwood out to dinner
-at Oyster Bay with Mrs. Roosevelt and himself. Mrs. Kirkwood was unable
-to go. Mr. Kirkwood again discussed the proposal. Colonel Roosevelt’s
-position was that if The Star was still unafraid, he was willing to
-start. The next time the Colonel came to New York he had tea with Mr.
-and Mrs. Kirkwood, and there was a further full and frank discussion.
-
-“You, of course, know what you are doing,” Colonel Roosevelt said.
-“Many people do not like my ideas and probably many of your subscribers
-will be perfectly furious at The Star for printing my editorials.”
-
-Both Mr. and Mrs. Kirkwood assured him full consideration had been
-given to that phase, and while it was possible he and The Star
-might not always agree, that fact would not stand in the way of the
-arrangement.
-
-So the agreement was there entered into. Colonel Roosevelt suggested
-that as 1920 was a presidential year the connection be for two years or
-until October, 1919, to which Mr. and Mrs. Kirkwood assented.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt said he never pretended to be much of a business
-man, but a formal contract was the usual thing; he had one with The
-Metropolitan. Anyhow he would gladly sign it. He was asked if he
-desired a contract and answered he did not.
-
-“You understand and we do--” said Mr. Kirkwood.
-
-Without waiting for the sentence to be finished, Colonel Roosevelt
-said quickly, “That’s all I want to know. Let’s don’t bother with a
-contract.”
-
-And on that basis the Colonel wrote for The Star until his death.
-
-Early in September I was delegated to go to New York, as Managing
-Editor of The Star, to discuss with the Colonel the details of his work
-for the paper. I met him at a hotel in Fifty-Seventh Street where he
-went on the days he came in from Oyster Bay. Mrs. Roosevelt was with
-him. Roosevelt was in high spirits, which was no uncommon thing. I
-recall vividly my introduction to Mrs. Roosevelt.
-
-“Edith,” he said, leading me into the room where Mrs. Roosevelt was,
-“_here is my new boss_!”
-
-I didn’t say it, but the thought came to me that I would prefer the
-task of “bossing” a tornado.
-
-The talk that followed was that The Star had no desire to guide what
-he wrote; that it desired him to write whatever was in him, and it
-would print it. The Colonel said that was exactly what he wanted; he
-could do nothing else. We discussed the distribution over the country
-of his writings, which he left entirely to The Star, with the request
-that they be not offered to certain newspapers which had long shown a
-spirit of personal animosity to him and of habitual hostility toward
-his principles, a suggestion which was wholly agreeable to The Star.
-He asked about the length and frequency of the articles he was to
-write. It was agreed that an editorial of around five hundred words
-was ideal, and at the start there would be two contributions a week.
-Later they were more frequent. The Colonel said he would probably find
-it difficult to keep down to five hundred words, but he recognized the
-limitations of newspaper space and would do his best.
-
-“Now,” he said, “if I get too highbrow, don’t hesitate to tell me. I’m
-no tender flower; I can stand criticism.”
-
-His secretary had come into the room to receive dictation from
-accumulated correspondence. I arose to go. “Stay with us,” the Colonel
-said, “until I finish this; you are a member of the family now.”
-
-Short, crisp sentences came from him as he dictated, each with the
-animation of a face-to-face conversation with the writers of the
-letters.
-
-It was arranged that the Colonel was to take up his duties the first
-of October, and a few days after this meeting announcement was made
-the country over that Theodore Roosevelt was to write for The Kansas
-City Star. Immediately applications for the right to print the articles
-poured in from newspapers throughout the country.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt came West in September on a speaking tour which
-included Kansas City. So he came into the office of The Star on the
-morning of September 22, 1917, and went to a desk which had been
-assigned him, with the remark, “The cub reporter will now begin work.”
-He was fond of that designation and often in conversation referred
-to himself as “The Star’s cub reporter.” With pencil he wrote out
-on newspaper copy-paper, with much scratching and interlining, the
-editorial, “Blood, Iron, and Gold,” which appeared the following day.
-His first editorial, however, was, a short time before, written on
-suggestion of Mr. Kirkwood, a brief piece on the death of Dr. W. S.
-Fitzsimons, of Kansas City, who was killed by a bomb in an airplane
-attack on a hospital in France--the first American officer to fall in
-the war.
-
-The same day Colonel Roosevelt wrote another editorial for later
-publication. He was good nature itself that Saturday morning in the
-office, joked and chatted with members of the staff, and seemed to be
-enjoying the novelty of his new connection.
-
-The following Sunday there was a luncheon of The Star family at
-the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kirkwood, at which the “new cub reporter”
-made himself thoroughly at home. Editors, reporters, and men of the
-mechanical and circulation departments were there and had luncheon
-with the Colonel. He mingled with all and took delight in chatting
-with them of their work. During the afternoon he made an informal talk
-to “the family” out on the lawn, in which he commended the spirit of
-working together shown in the expression “The Star family.” He spoke,
-too, of his long acquaintance with the aims and purposes of Mr. Nelson
-which were the aims and purposes of The Star, and said, as he had said
-before, that The Star was one of two daily newspapers with which he
-would be proud of a connection.
-
-The arrangement was that Colonel Roosevelt was to telegraph his
-editorials to The Star from Oyster Bay or wherever he was when he
-wrote them. They were put in type in The Star office and sent out from
-there for simultaneous publication in a selected list of about fifty
-newspapers. These included the best-known newspapers in the country
-and represented every section. The service was without charge beyond
-telegraph tolls, it being The Star’s wish to give the widest diffusion
-possible to Colonel Roosevelt’s ideas on the conduct of the war through
-the best channel in each city.
-
-Frequently there were suggestions from The Star to the Colonel. Always
-he was gracious in his treatment of those suggestions, invariably
-writing along the lines indicated and often amplifying and bettering
-them. On the other hand--except in two instances--the Colonel’s
-editorials were printed just as they were written, and if any change
-in copy were considered advisable it was made only after he had been
-consulted by wire and had approved it.
-
-From the start the country was much interested in the expressions from
-the Colonel. The newspapers which received them printed them faithfully
-and conspicuously. However, the service had been in operation not more
-than a fortnight before there came rumbles of disapproval and doubt,
-almost altogether from newspapers published south of Mason and Dixon’s
-Line.
-
-One of the early editorials, entitled “Sam Weller and Mr. Snodgrass,”
-presented Uncle Sam, “eight months after Germany went to war with us,
-and we severed relations with Germany as the first move in our sixty
-days’ stern foremost drift into, not going to, war,” as the boastful
-Mr. Snodgrass, still taking off his coat and announcing in a loud voice
-what he was about to do. This drew from the mayor of Abilene, Texas,
-the following letter to The Star-Telegram, of Fort Worth, Texas, which
-was publishing the Roosevelt articles:
-
- ABILENE, TEXAS, October 3, 1917. Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Fort Worth,
- Tex. The Roosevelt article appearing in your paper of this date
- is nothing short of the expression of the thoughts of a seditious
- conspirator who should be shot dead, and, the Editor-in-Chief of your
- paper should be tarred and feathered for publishing it, and your
- paper should be excluded from the mails of the United States. You may
- publish this if you wish, and stop my paper.
-
- E. N. KIRBY
- Mayor of Abilene
-
-
-The Fort Worth Star-Telegram promptly published Mayor Kirby’s letter,
-under the caption “The Retort Courteous,” adding the following:
-
- The Editor-in-Chief presents his compliments to the Mayor of Abilene
- and begs to say that should he conclude personally to conduct a tar
- and feather expedition in our direction, he will experience no great
- difficulty in locating the said Editor-in-Chief. Meanwhile we can
- assure him that his reception will not be lacking in hospitality or
- warmth.
-
-The mayor of Abilene and the editor did not meet. Later, in an
-editorial devoted to apologists for the delay in making war who were
-saying, “Why cry over spilt milk?” Colonel Roosevelt referred to the
-incident, saying:
-
- Recently the mayor of Abilene, Texas, expressed his disapproval of my
- pointing out that we, as a Nation, had wholly failed to prepare, by
- saying that I was “a seditious conspirator who ought to be shot dead,”
- and that the editor of the newspaper publishing the article “should
- be tarred and feathered.” Although differing in method of expression,
- this slight homicidal bleat of the gentle-souled (and doubtless
- entirely harmless) mayor of Abilene, Texas, is exactly similar in
- thought to the utterances of all these sheeplike creatures who raise
- quavering or incoherent protests against every honest and patriotic
- man who points out the damage done by our failure to prepare.
-
-
-V
-
-When the “cub reporter” came to take on his “new job,” he learned
-for the first time of the conditions at Camp Funston, in Kansas, the
-big national army training camp of the Middle West, to which his old
-friend, Major-General Leonard Wood, had been assigned. The drafted men
-were assembled there from the farms and towns of the Middle West before
-adequate provision had been made for their care or their training.
-They were trained with wooden cannon, and broomsticks served in place
-of rifles. Colonel Roosevelt wrote an editorial entitled “Broomstick
-Preparedness,” which touched mildly on the conditions at Funston. The
-expression “Broomstick Preparedness” caught popular fancy as typifying
-the Administration’s delay in many aspects of war preparation. It
-stuck in the public mind. It was widely used by newspapers and by
-speakers who thought the Government was not showing sufficient speed.
-An editorial, “Broomstick Apologists,” followed, directed at people who
-answered criticism of delay by making excuses for delay.
-
-From the beginning Colonel Roosevelt had in the main devoted his
-articles to speeding up the preparations for making war. The boosting
-of Liberty bonds and the various war drives, the pacifists and
-hyphenated enemies on our own soil, were not overlooked by any means,
-but the thing that seared his soul was the lack of speed in making
-ready for actual warfare. When his connection with The Star began,
-we had been officially at war nearly six months, and how little the
-Government had accomplished toward equipping for actual warfare was
-continuously held up in his articles.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt used the method, followed by newspaper writers who
-earnestly seek to achieve results, of pounding continually on a few
-things, dressing each article in different language, but keeping to
-the front all the time the central idea, presenting the same thoughts
-in article after article, but striving in each so to change the
-presentation that the ideas would finally enter the reader’s mind and
-stir him to action. Mr. Nelson used this method in the conduct of The
-Star. For many years, beginning with its first publication, The Star
-advocated parks and boulevards for Kansas City. It hammered away on the
-subject in nearly every issue. It took almost twenty years to do it,
-but at the end a splendid system of parks and boulevards stands as a
-monument to The Star’s persistence.
-
-Article after article Colonel Roosevelt devoted to the slow speed in
-war-making until there was finally a response in Washington. It heard
-from public opinion. War-making was speeded up, although at the best
-and in the end there were many, many deficiencies in our war machine.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt’s criticisms of the Administration were not widely
-popular. The Star never had any idea they would be popular, but it
-believed they were right and for the real good of the country. As he
-had foreseen when the connection was made, “Many of your subscribers
-will be perfectly furious at The Star for printing my editorials.”
-They were. They wrote to The Star to denounce the Colonel for writing
-the articles and The Star for printing them. In popular discussion in
-the Middle West forms of disapproval ranged from “He should stand by
-the President” to “He should be stood before a stone wall and shot.”
-Generally the user of the latter phrase added “at sunrise.” That was an
-expression often heard. It was used by political orators with effect.
-Colonel Roosevelt knew full well of the feeling in the West and South
-toward his articles. He wrote once asking what effect the storm was
-having on The Star. Never a word from him to show he cared one whit
-about himself. He knew he was doing the right thing for the country; he
-went ahead.
-
-The frank truth is, there was a strong and active pacifist element
-in the territory in which The Star circulated. It had not been for
-preparedness. It had voted for President Wilson in 1916 largely
-“because he kept us out of war.” Undeniably that idea was popular.
-A candidate for governor in a neighboring state, running on the
-Republican ticket, had made a campaign identical with the Democratic
-slogan and had carried the state, which at the same time gave its vote
-to the Democratic presidential candidate. But once we were in war the
-people of this section responded nobly; they went to the limit, but for
-a long time after we were in war they did not approve the prodding-up
-of Washington. The hostility toward the Roosevelt articles in the South
-was more pronounced. At the beginning of the service ten Southern
-newspapers were taking it. Their statements about discontinuance ran
-from “We find further publication inadvisable in our territory” to an
-apology to their readers for ever having allowed the Roosevelt articles
-to enter their columns.
-
-Colonel Roosevelt was not without defenders; many of them thought and
-said he was rendering the greatest service to the country in all his
-career. But in the excited state of mind in the spring of 1918, when
-the Germans were driving toward Paris, it required courage to defend
-the articles. Many, however, spoke out boldly; others did not. Party
-lines were not followed strictly. Republicans were not so bitter as
-men of the President’s party. “We must stand by the President” had a
-popular appeal regardless of whether the Government was functioning
-efficiently or not. The view was widely held that it was unpatriotic
-to criticize the President. Frequently it was charged that Colonel
-Roosevelt’s purposes were political, not patriotic. The articles were
-often decried as pro-German propaganda and The Star was branded as
-pro-German for publishing them.
-
-In April, 1918, when this feeling was at its height, when the people
-in Kansas City’s territory were in a highly inflamed state of feeling
-toward criticism of the Government, Colonel Roosevelt sent a ringing
-editorial, “Freedom Stands with her Back to the Wall,” which The Star
-did not consider it advisable to publish. It had no doubt of the entire
-righteousness of the criticism passed on the officials at Washington,
-for the fruition of their slowness was shown in the poor showing
-America was making in these critical days, but it could see no good
-to come from the publication: in its opinion the article would only
-further inflame Colonel Roosevelt’s enemies and irritate his friends.
-Colonel Roosevelt was informed of the office opinion of this article
-as he was on a later article (“How Not to Adjourn Politics,” June
-25) which was not published. He acquiesced in the decision, saying
-that he could readily conceive of local conditions which made their
-publication ill-advised. He asked that they be telegraphed to two
-other newspapers, which was done. The Star was willing to go as far as
-it could go without, in its judgment, lessening the effectiveness of
-the articles in accomplishing the speeding-up of the war, but it would
-not go beyond this point.
-
-In July, when criticism had caused the removal of many inefficients at
-Washington and when American troops were beginning to reach France,
-The Star was barred from the Public Library at Fulton, Missouri, an
-intensely Democratic town in Central Missouri, “for disloyalty to the
-present Administration.” The notice read:
-
- DEAR SIR: By order from the library board of the Public Library I am
- advised to have you discontinue our subscription to The Daily Star
- and The Times. Disloyalty to the present Administration is the reason
- given for the action taken.
-
- Yours sincerely
- FRANCES F. WATSON
- Librarian
-
-Answering this editorially, The Star said that throughout the war
-it had taken the course of calling attention to the mistakes of the
-Government rather than remaining silent on its mistakes; that it
-did not believe in saying the country was doing finely when it was
-not; that it believed in exposing inefficiency and rooting it out.
-It directed attention to results already accomplished by criticism
-in bringing into the war preparations men like Schwab, Goethals,
-Stettinius, March, Baruch, and others, adding: “The Star is proud
-to belong to the little group of constructive critics, including
-preëminently Colonel Roosevelt, who worked to get wrong conditions
-changed and to contribute to the present result, which to-day is the
-salvation of the cause we fight for. For it to have done anything else
-would have been faithlessness to its trust.”
-
-When at last the stirring-up of the Administration had borne fruit and
-American troops were in France and on the way in considerable, though
-disappointing, numbers, Colonel Roosevelt slowed down his bombardment
-of the Washington authorities. His campaign had produced results. He
-was right in doing all he could to speed up war preparations, and
-he stood his ground in the face of widespread censure in the way he
-always did. Hostile newspapers had demanded that the Postmaster-General
-suppress the circulation of the Roosevelt articles; indeed, a
-post-office inspector had visited Kansas City with the idea of denying
-The Star admission to the mails, but the Administration made no further
-move in this direction.
-
-Even when the turning of the tide had set in, Roosevelt’s demand was
-for men, more men, and then more men for France. He would have in
-all six or seven million men in training, and four million American
-soldiers in France in the spring of 1919. In the first article he sent
-after the news of Quentin’s death, he said:
-
- Now and always afterwards we of this country will walk with our heads
- high because of the men who face death and wounds, and so many of
- whom have given their lives for this nation and for the great ideals
- of humanity across the sea. But we must not let our pride and our
- admiration evaporate in mere pride, in mere admiration of what others
- have done. We must put the whole strength of this nation back of the
- fighting men at the front. We owe it to them.
-
-Later on the good effect of Colonel Roosevelt’s criticism was widely
-recognized. The Nation, one of the Colonel’s bitterest opponents,
-in general a strong supporter of the Administration, said of his
-editorials: “It is largely to him that we owe our ability to discuss
-peace terms and to criticize at all.”
-
-Summing up the effect of Colonel Roosevelt’s campaign to speed up our
-part in the war, The Star said editorially:
-
- There were periods of intolerance when neither Mr. Roosevelt nor The
- Star was under any illusions as to the reception that would be given
- frank criticism. But it was essential that such criticism be made in
- order to correct evils that were really threatening the outcome of the
- war....
-
- The selective draft was the big achievement of the Administration
- in 1917. But having prepared this, the Government proceeded in most
- leisurely fashion, apparently not getting the slightest comprehension
- of the danger to the Allied cause resulting from Russia’s collapse.
-
- The War Department continued to be run, as it had been in the past,
- by amiable old gentlemen who were wholly unfit for the task. Although
- airplanes had become an essential feature of modern warfare, it was
- not until weeks after war had been declared that the department sent a
- commission to Europe to learn what a military airplane was. Rifles are
- usually regarded as a part of the military equipment of troops. But it
- was two months after the declaration of war before the War Department
- decided what type of rifle to make. An army of millions of men was
- certain to need uniforms, but the easy-going quartermaster-general
- turned down the offer of the wool manufacturers’ association for the
- entire output of the country and the result was that the soldiers
- went into the winter without warm clothing or overcoats. As for
- artillery, the incapacity was complete.
-
- Meanwhile we sent a small expeditionary force to France, and in the
- autumn began sending troops across in a leisurely way, at the rate of
- ten thousand a week.
-
- Then suddenly, late in March, with the German army driving straight on
- Paris and the Allied defenses giving way, under the appeal of Lloyd
- George we suddenly woke to the fact that we had been playing with the
- war. From that time on we acted as if we had a man’s job, and we got
- into the line just in time to save the situation.
-
- All through the fall and winter of last year what Mr. Roosevelt and
- the other outspoken critics were trying to do was to arouse the
- country and the Administration to the magnitude of the task and to the
- danger from delay. They succeeded only partly. But they did succeed
- to the extent of forcing the removal of incompetent departmental
- chiefs, and the substitution of efficient men who were able to handle
- the emergency when the Administration finally discovered that the
- emergency existed.
-
- Looking back over the events of the last eighteen months, we believe
- no fair-minded American can fail to perceive the patriotic service
- done by Mr. Roosevelt and other critics, who were seeking to awaken
- the Government from a lethargy that just missed proving fatal to the
- Allied cause.
-
-
-VI
-
-Colonel Roosevelt’s last visit to his desk in the editorial rooms of
-The Star was early in October, 1918. It struck those who had been
-associated with him that he was not quite as fit as usual. I asked
-him if it were true the physicians had placed him on a diet. He
-said it was, but, to be frank, he had not given much heed to their
-recommendations. In a discussion at his desk with men of the editorial
-force a recent article about Roosevelt by George Creel came up. “I
-must admit,” said Colonel Roosevelt, laughing, “he took a rather
-jaundiced view of me.”
-
-Mr. Kirkwood was away in the army, but Mrs. Kirkwood was in Kansas
-City and the Colonel stayed at their home during his visit. At this
-time a subject was brought up which had been talked over along in the
-summer--a visit from him to the battle front to write at first hand
-of the American forces. Newspapers which were receiving the service
-and others which had heard of the suggestion were eager for Roosevelt
-articles from France, but from the first the Colonel had demurred and
-now said a final “No.” His reason was that he could not go as a private
-citizen, as he had been denied permission to go as a soldier; it would
-not only be unbecoming for a former president of the United States
-to go in any newspaper capacity, but how to treat him would be an
-embarrassing question to France.
-
-The tide had turned toward the Allies, and the country was certain the
-defeat of the enemy was a question of a short time. Colonel Roosevelt’s
-articles turned to a discussion of the kind of peace there should be
-and examinations of the President’s “Fourteen Points” and his notes
-to Austria. On November 11--the day the armistice was signed--it was
-considered necessary for Colonel Roosevelt to go to a hospital in New
-York. From his hospital room he telegraphed that day an editorial
-joining in the general rejoicing over peace and appraising tersely our
-part in the war.
-
-A few days later there came an editorial prompted by a letter from a
-woman friend in California. Visiting this friend was another woman
-whose son had died of influenza in the navy. That mother had said she
-had given her boy proudly to her country, “but if only he could have
-died with a gun in his hand--a little glory for him and a thought for
-me that my sacrifice had not been useless.” The California friend had
-written: “There must be other mothers who feel they have laid their
-sacrifices on cold altars. You have written much that will comfort the
-mothers whose sons have paid with their bodies in battle. Isn’t there
-something you can say to comfort these other mothers?”
-
-The letter touched Colonel Roosevelt deeply. “I felt a real pang when
-I received this letter,” he wrote, “because the thought suggested had
-been in my mind and yet I had failed to express it.” The editorial,
-“Sacrifices on Cold Altars,” which he wrote in response, gave
-consolation from the heart. It made it clear that all who had given
-their lives in the country’s service, whether in action or from
-disease, stood on “an exact level of service and sacrifice and honor
-and glory.” It concluded:
-
- The mother or wife whose son or husband has died, whether in battle
- or by fever or in the accident inevitable in hurriedly preparing a
- modern army for war, must never feel that the sacrifice has been laid
- on “a cold altar.” There is no gradation of honor among these gallant
- men and no essential gradation of service. They all died that we might
- live; our debt is to all of them, and we can pay it even personally
- only by striving so to live as to bring a little nearer the day when
- justice and mercy shall rule in our own homes and among the nations
- of the world.
-
-From his entrance to the hospital until his departure on Christmas
-day, the editorials were less frequent. The Peace Conference, the
-Congressional elections, and the League of Nations were uppermost
-in public thought, and on these subjects the Colonel wrote several
-editorials. Both Colonel Roosevelt and The Star were anxious to
-find some means to lessen the chance of war through international
-organization. Both feared, from President Wilson’s addresses, that he
-had in view some grandiose plan that would be impractical. In December
-a member of The Star’s staff visited the Colonel in Roosevelt Hospital,
-New York. At that time he had written one or two editorials discussing
-the subject in a tentative way. He was asked if he did not think he
-could say something more positive.
-
-“I doubt it,” he said. “I feel there is so little that really can
-be done by any form of treaty to prevent war that it would be
-disappointing for me to point it out. Any treaty adopted under the
-influence of war emotions would be like the good resolutions adopted
-at a mass meeting. We have an anti-vice crusade. Everybody is aroused.
-The movement culminates in a big meeting and we adopt resolutions
-abolishing vice. But vice isn’t abolished that way.”
-
-Correspondence on the subject followed, and December 28, 1918, he wrote
-this letter to the member of the staff who had been talking with him:
-
- In substance, or, as our friends the diplomats say, in principle, I
- am in hearty accord with you. But do you really think we ought to
- guarantee to stand with France and Italy in all future continental
- wars? It’s a pretty big guarantee and I don’t know whether it would be
- made good. Indeed, I don’t know whether it ought to be made good. I am
- most heartily with France and England now, but I certainly would not
- have been with France fifty years ago or with England sixty years ago,
- and our clear duty to antagonize Germany has slowly become apparent
- during the last thirty or forty years. Remember that you are freer to
- write unsigned editorials than I am when I use my signature. If you
- propose a little more than can be carried out, no harm comes, but if I
- do so it may hamper me for years. However, I will do my best to write
- you such an article as you suggest: and then probably one on what I
- regard as infinitely more important, namely, our business to prepare
- for our own self-defense.
-
- As for Wilson having with him the bulk of the people who are taken in
- by this name [The League of Nations], I attach less importance to this
- than you do. He is a conscienceless rhetorician and he will always
- get the well-meaning, foolish creatures who are misled by names. At
- present anything he says about the World League is in the domain of
- empty and windy eloquence. The important point will be reached when he
- has to make definite the thing for which he stands.
-
-The article written in response to the promise in this letter was
-Colonel Roosevelt’s last contribution to The Star. It was dictated at
-his home at Oyster Bay, January 3, which was Friday. His secretary
-expected to take it to him for correction the following Monday. Instead
-an early call on the telephone that morning told of his passing away in
-his sleep.
-
- RALPH STOUT
-
-
-
-
-ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-DR. FITZSIMONS’S DEATH[1]
-
-SEPTEMBER 17, 1917
-
-
-The first name on the casualty list of the American army in France is
-that of Dr. William T. Fitzsimons, of Kansas City, killed in a German
-air raid on our hospitals. Dr. Fitzsimons had already served for some
-time in a French hospital. As soon as this Nation went to war he
-volunteered for service abroad.
-
-There is sometimes a symbolic significance in the first death in a war.
-It is so in this case. To the mother he leaves, the personal grief
-must in some degree be relieved by the pride in the fine and gallant
-life which has been crowned by the great sacrifice. We, his fellow
-countrymen, share this pride and sympathize with this sorrow. But
-his death should cause us more than pride or sorrow; for in striking
-fashion it illustrates the two lessons this war should especially teach
-us--German brutality and American unpreparedness.
-
-The first lesson is the horror of Germany’s calculated brutality. As
-part of her deliberate policy of frightfulness she has carried on a
-systematic campaign of murder against hospitals and hospital ships.
-The first American in our army to die was killed in one of these
-typical raids. We should feel stern indignation against Germany for the
-brutality of which this was merely one among innumerable instances.
-But we should feel even sterner indignation towards--and fathomless
-contempt for--the base or unthinking folly of those Americans who aid
-and abet the authors of such foul wickedness; and these include all men
-and women who in any way apologize for or uphold Germany, who assail
-any of our allies, who oppose our taking active part in the war, or who
-desire an inconclusive peace.
-
-The second lesson is our unpreparedness. We are in the eighth month
-since Germany went to war against us; and we are still only at the
-receiving end of the game. We have not in France a single man on the
-fighting line. The first American killed was a doctor. No German
-soldier is yet in jeopardy from anything we have done.
-
-The military work we are now doing is work of preparation. It should
-have been done just three years ago. Nine tenths of wisdom is being
-wise in time.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Although Colonel Roosevelt did not begin his regular contributions
-to The Star until October 1, the death of Dr. W. T. Fitzsimons, of
-Kansas City, moved him to send this article.
-
-
-
-
-BLOOD, IRON, AND GOLD
-
-SEPTEMBER 23, 1917
-
-
-Bismarck announced that his policy for Germany was one of blood and
-iron. The men who now guide, and for some decades have guided,
-German international policy have added gold as the third weapon in
-Germany’s armory.
-
-[Illustration: A PAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT OF ONE OF ROOSEVELT’S
-EDITORIALS]
-
-To a policy based on callous disregard of death and suffering, and
-the brutal use of force, they have added the habitual and extensive
-employment of corruption as a means for weakening their foes and
-bending other nations to their service.
-
-The Administration at Washington recently made public the proof that
-Ambassador Bernstorff, on behalf of the German Government, was, up to
-the very last moment of his stay, engaged in efforts to bribe with
-German money American organizations or individuals who could be used to
-further Germany’s purpose by protesting against war, demanding peace
-at any price, opposing the measures necessary for war, denouncing
-the Allied nations, praising unpreparedness, or by some other of the
-methods habitual with pro-German Senators, Congressmen, editors, heads
-of peace societies and the like.
-
-No well-informed man was surprised at the revelation. Every reasonably
-well-informed man, who has known about matters at Washington, has
-known that for nearly three years German money and governmental power
-has been used for the corruption of American newspapers and pacifist
-organizations and for the pay of German, and the bribery of native,
-scoundrels to wreck our industries with dynamite and in all ways
-debauch our political life. The Government, from the highest official
-down, knew all these facts over two years ago. The New York World
-published the names of some of the editors and other individuals who
-had received money, and the amounts received. The Austrian Ambassador,
-Dumba, and two of the German attachés, Boy-Ed and Von Papen, were
-dismissed for inspiring and countenancing the intrigues. It was
-absolutely impossible that what they did was not ordered and supervised
-by Bernstorff, under the direction of the Berlin Government. It was
-deeply to our discredit that we did not then show the courage and
-manliness to break at once with Germany, instead of hiding our heads in
-the sand so as to avoid seeing the guilt of the German Government, and
-punishing the minor instruments of wrongdoing who, under no conceivable
-circumstances, would or could have acted save as their superiors bade
-them act. Germany has hitherto been able to do but little against us
-with blood and iron; gold has been her weapon, and her agents have been
-the foes of our own household.
-
-Every man in this country who is now playing the pro-German game
-should be made to feel that he must overcome a presumption of guilty
-motive. There are misguided pro-Germans who are uninfluenced by corrupt
-motives, just as there were in the Civil War copperheads who were
-merely misguided and not conscious wrongdoers. But these men are in
-mighty unpleasant company!
-
-The pacifist, the man who wishes a peace without victory, the supporter
-of Senator La Follette or Senator Stone, the man who in any way now
-aids Germany, may be honest; but he stands cheek by jowl with hired
-traitors, and he is serving the cause of the malignant and unscrupulous
-enemies of his country.
-
-
-
-
-THE GHOST DANCE OF THE SHADOW HUNS
-
-OCTOBER 1, 1917
-
-
-Ten days ago a ghost dance was held in St. Paul under the auspices
-of the Non-Partisan League, with Senator La Follette as the star
-performer. We have the authority of the German Kaiser for the use of
-the word Hun in a descriptive sense, as representing the ideal to which
-he wished his soldiers in their actions to approximate. It is therefore
-fair to use the word descriptively as a substitute for the German
-in this war. It is also fair to use it descriptively of the German
-sympathizer in this country, of the man who aids and abets Germany by
-condoning the German offenses against us, by seeking to raise class
-division in this country, with, of course, the attendant benefit to
-Germany; by screaming against the war, or in favor of an inconclusive
-peace; or by belittling or sneering at or declaring inopportune the
-effort to arouse the spirit of Americanism. The Americans who thus
-serve Germany deserve the title of Shadow Huns.
-
-It was to me a matter of sincere regret to have the Non-Partisan League
-play the part it did at St. Paul in connection with the meeting
-which Senator La Follette addressed. They held what was in effect a
-disloyalty day festival. When the Non-Partisan League movement was
-first started, I was inclined to hail it, because I am exceedingly
-anxious to do everything in my power to grapple with and remedy every
-injustice or wrong or mere failure to give ample opportunity to the
-farmer. With most of the avowed objects and with some of the methods of
-the Non-Partisan League I was in entire sympathy, although there were
-certain things it did which I felt should be condemned, and certain
-ways of achieving its objects which I believed to be mischievous. But
-when the League, on the disloyalty day in question, ranged itself on
-the side of the allies of Germany and the enemies of this country,
-it became necessary for every loyal American severely to condemn it.
-Morally, although doubtless not legally, it thereby came perilously
-near ranging itself beside the I.W.W., the German-American Alliance,
-and the German Socialist party machine in America.
-
-When I spoke in Minneapolis three men spoke from the same platform
-with me. One was that fine and loyal American, Governor Burnquist,
-of Swedish ancestry. One was a blacksmith, born in Sweden, a former
-member of the Socialist party, who left the party within the last six
-months when he became convinced that it was the tool or ally of German
-autocracy. The third was another working-man, of German birth.
-
-At the meeting in Wisconsin I was on the platform with the Mayor of
-Racine, an American citizen of German birth. My companions throughout
-the trip were Judge Harry Olson, of Swedish parentage, and Mr.
-Otto Butz, of German parentage, both of whom represent that kind
-of Americanism to which we all must subscribe if we are to be good
-Americans.
-
-The Americanism of all these men is the Americanism I profess, and it
-is the exact antithesis of the attitude of the Shadow Huns, who, under
-the lead of native-born Americans like Messrs. La Follette and Townley,
-by their utterances, stir dissensions among our own people and weaken
-us in the prosecution of the war.
-
-The two working-men of whom I speak, the man born in Sweden and the man
-born in Germany, spoke with rugged emphasis of their devotion to this
-country, and of their sense of the duty of every man fit to be called
-an American in this crisis. They emphasized the fact that Germany’s
-social system was based upon the duty of the average man to cringe
-before the insolence of his superiors and his right himself to behave
-with insolence to his inferiors. It is for this system of cringing
-abasement before the powerful, and of brutal insolence to the weak
-for which the Shadow Huns in this country stand when they directly or
-indirectly talk against our Government for going to war or talk against
-any step which it takes for the efficient waging of the war; and, above
-all, when they directly or indirectly apologize for or champion Germany.
-
-It is the duty of every American citizen fearlessly, but truthfully,
-to criticize not only his Government but his people, for wrongdoing,
-or for failure to do what is right. It is his duty to obey the
-injunction of President Wilson by insisting upon pitiless publicity of
-inefficiency, of subordination of public to private considerations,
-or of any other form of governmental failure to perform duty. Such
-criticism is absolutely indispensable if we are to do our duty in this
-war, and if we are to adopt a permanent policy of preparedness which
-will make this Nation safe. But the men who oppose the war; who fail
-to support the Government in every measure which really tends to the
-efficient prosecution of the war; and above all who in any shape or way
-champion the cause and the actions of Germany, show themselves to be
-the Huns within our own gates and the allies of the men whom our sons
-and brothers are crossing the ocean to fight.
-
-I do not admire these Shadow Huns. But least of all do I admire those
-among them, whether Senators, Congressmen, or public officials of any
-other kind who, although on Uncle Sam’s pay-roll, nevertheless seek to
-stab Uncle Sam in the back.
-
-
-
-
-SAM WELLER AND MR. SNODGRASS
-
-OCTOBER 2, 1917
-
-
-Readers of “Pickwick,” if such there still be, will recall the time
-when Mr. Pickwick was arrested and some of his followers resisted
-arrest. Sam Weller made no boasts; but he spoiled the looks of various
-opponents. Mr. Snodgrass began ostentatiously to take off his coat,
-announcing in a loud voice that he was going to begin. But he gave no
-further trouble.
-
-Over eight months have elapsed since Germany went to war with us,
-and we severed relations with Germany as the first move in our sixty
-days’ stern foremost drift into, not going to, war, but admitting
-that we were already at war. During those eight months we have paid
-the penalty for our criminally complete failure to prepare during the
-previous three years by not having yet to our credit one single piece
-of completed achievement. The Administration has unwisely striven to
-cover this past failure to prepare, and present failure to achieve, by
-occasional grandiloquent pronunciamentos as to the wonderful things
-we are going to do in the future; and usually the language used is
-designed to convince ignorant people that these things have already
-been done.
-
-One day it is announced that we have discovered an infallible remedy
-against submarine attacks; and the next day it is announced that the
-toll by submarines is heavier than during any previous month. We read
-that the British drive is successful, but stubbornly resisted; that
-some thousands of prisoners have been taken; and that the losses have
-been terribly heavy. We read at the same time that we are going to have
-an immense army of aircraft--some time next spring. And actually there
-is less boasting over the former statement than over the latter! We
-read of the valor and suffering of the French in some heroic assault;
-and the Administration proudly announces that, after eight months, the
-drafted men are beginning to assemble in their camps--and omits to
-mention that they have neither guns nor uniforms, are short of blankets
-and sweaters.
-
-So far the Sam Wellers who have done things are our allies. Uncle
-Sam is still complacently engaged in taking off his coat, like Mr.
-Snodgrass. Under such circumstances it is unwise for him to announce
-overloudly what he is going to do when at last he begins. Let him wait
-until he has done it; and meanwhile bend all his energies to doing it,
-and doing it soon. Brag is a good dog. But Holdfast is a better.
-
-
-
-
-BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS
-
-OCTOBER 4, 1917
-
-
-At present we Americans have two prime duties.
-
-The first is to make the best of actual conditions; to prepare our
-army, navy, merchant marine, air service, munition plants, agriculture,
-food conservation, and everything else as speedily as possible, so as
-to fight this war to a completely victorious conclusion.
-
-The second is not to fool ourselves, but to face the fact of our
-complete and lamentable unpreparedness. And to inaugurate a policy of
-permanent preparedness which will prevent our ever again being caught
-in such a humiliating condition.
-
-The men of the national guard and of the drafted army are of admirable
-type. I do not believe that any other great nation can produce quite
-their equals on such a scale as we can; the zeal, energy, and adaptable
-intelligence with which they are doing all they can in the various
-camps must be a matter of pride for all Americans. There is all the
-more reason why such first-class material should be given a first-class
-chance for speedy and efficient action. It has not been given that
-chance. The steps we as a nation are now taking ought to have been
-taken three years ago. Failure to take them then has meant broomstick
-preparedness now. Failure to take them as a permanent policy now means
-broomstick preparedness in some future vital crisis when we may not
-have allies willing and able to protect us while we slowly prepare to
-meet the enemy.
-
-The Ordnance Bureau of the War Department admits that we have not
-rifles for our national army, but attempts to excuse matters by saying
-that it is of no consequence because we shall have rifles a few months
-hence when our men are ready to go abroad. The admission is correct.
-The excuse is not. Even for training, it is better to arm infantrymen
-each with the weapon he is to use rather than to give each man a
-broomstick or to give every four men an antiquated rifle which cannot
-be used in service, and most of our artillery regiments at present
-either have no guns or wooden guns or, in rather rare cases, old-style
-guns which cannot be matched against any present-day artillery.
-Moreover, and this is the vital point, we now have the time to prepare
-only because the English and French fleets and armies protect us. Eight
-months have passed since Germany openly went to war with us. As yet
-we have not rifles for our infantry. As yet we have not guns for our
-artillery. It will be at least a year after we were dragged into the
-war before our army will have received the weapons with which we are to
-wage the war.
-
-This is broomstick preparedness, and there is not the slightest use in
-trying to justify or excuse broomstick preparedness.
-
-
-
-
-THE BONDHOLDERS AND THE PEOPLE
-
-OCTOBER 7, 1917
-
-
-Not many years ago one of the favorite cries of those who wished to
-exploit for their own advantage the often justifiable popular unrest
-and discontent was that “the people were oppressed in the interest
-of the bondholders.” The more ardent souls of this type wished to
-repudiate the national debt, to “wipe it out as with a sponge,” in order
-to remove the “oppression.” The bondholders were always held up as
-greedy creatures who had obtained an unfair advantage of the people as
-a whole.
-
-Well, the Liberty Loan now offers the chance to make the people and the
-bondholders interchangeable terms. The bonds are issued in such a way
-that the farmer and the wage-worker have exactly the same chance as the
-banker to purchase and hold as many or as few as they wish. No matter
-how small a man’s means, he can get some part of a bond if he wishes.
-The Government and the big financiers are doing all they can to make
-the sale as widely distributed as possible. Some bankers are serving
-without pay in the effort to put all the facts before the people as a
-whole, and so make the loan in very truth a people’s loan. It rests
-with the people themselves to decide whether it shall be such.
-
-The Government must have the money. It is a patriotic duty to purchase
-the bonds. And they offer an absolutely safe investment. The money
-invested is invested on the best security in the world--that of the
-United States; of the American Nation itself. The money cannot be lost
-unless the United States is destroyed, and in that case we would all
-of us be smashed anyhow, so that it would not make any difference.
-The people can, if they choose, now make themselves the bondholders.
-If they do not so choose, and if they force Wall Street to become the
-largest purchaser of the bonds, which must be bought somehow, then they
-will have no right in the future to grumble about the bondholders as a
-special class. We can now, all of us, join that class if we wish.
-
-
-
-
-FACTORIES OF GOOD CITIZENSHIP
-
-OCTOBER 10, 1917
-
-
-The training camps for the drafted men of the national army are huge
-factories for turning out first-class American citizens. Not only are
-they fitting our people for war; they are fitting them for the work
-of peace. They are making patriotism, love of country, devotion to the
-flag, and a sense of duty to others living facts, instead of unreal
-phrases. The public schools are laboratories of Americanism for our
-children; the training camps are laboratories of Americanism for our
-young men.
-
-I have just seen a party of drafted men from the East Side of New
-York City start for Camp Upton with a band playing, an American flag
-flying. And two of their number in front, one dressed as Uncle Sam,
-and the other as the Kaiser, dragged along in manacles. There is no
-fifty-fifty Americanism in men with such spirit. A captain at this
-camp, a Plattsburg man, told me that his company of East Side New
-Yorkers showed all the intelligence and the zealous desire to learn
-which the fine young college graduates at Plattsburg have shown.
-Another captain told me that one of his men, a young Jew, had come
-to him and said that at first the East Siders had hated coming, not
-knowing what was ahead of them, but that now they felt that they were
-in a University of American Citizenship. A surgeon in the camp told me
-that men also, proved physically lacking after a week’s trial, were
-in most cases bitterly chagrined at being sent away. A colonel from
-a Southern camp has reported that already his country boys from the
-remote farms are straightening and broadening morally, mentally, and
-physically, and that the improvement is really incalculable. From every
-camp we hear of the eagerness with which the men are doing their duty,
-of their resourcefulness and of the real patriotism which is being
-rapidly learned. All this means not merely good soldiers in war, but
-good citizens in peace; it means an immense growth in the spirit of
-Americanism.
-
-The young men are learning to be efficient, alert, self-respectful and
-respectful of others; they are learning to scorn laziness, slackness,
-and cowardice. All are serving on a precise equality of privilege
-and of duty and are judged each only on his merits. The sons of the
-foreign-born learn that they are exactly as good Americans as any one
-else, and when they return to their home their families will learn it,
-too.
-
-Let all good Americans insist that now, without delay, we make this
-state of affairs our permanent national policy by law. We have
-built the camp, we have encountered the failures to provide army
-uniforms and blankets and all the other exasperating delays which are
-inevitable when a nation like ours has foolishly trusted to broomstick
-preparedness. We shall avoid all these things for the future if we
-continue these camps, as permanent features of the life of all our
-young men, and change the selective draft unto a system of universal
-obligatory military training for all our young men of nineteen and
-twenty, it being understood that they are not to go to war until they
-are twenty-one. We are now suffering, and the whole world is now
-suffering, from the effects of our broomstick preparedness. Let us do
-away with broomstick preparedness for the future and substitute real
-preparedness.
-
-
-
-
-PILLAR-OF-SALT CITIZENSHIP
-
-OCTOBER 12, 1917
-
-
-When Lot’s wife was journeying to safety, she could not resist looking
-back to the land she had left and was thereupon turned to a pillar of
-salt. The men from the Old World who, instead of adopting an attitude
-of hearty and exclusive loyalty to their land, try also to look
-backward to their old countries, become pillars-of-salt citizens, who
-are not merely useless, but mischievous members of our commonwealth.
-
-The dispatches of the German Government, just published by the State
-Department, give us an illuminating glimpse, not only of German methods
-and of German conduct towards this country, but also of certain phases
-of our own citizenship. The German Government proposed to use this
-country as a basis of operations for wrecking the Canadian railway. It
-also proposed to use and pay its agents and certain of our citizens for
-“sabotage in every kind of American factory for supplying munitions of
-war,” and for “a vigorous campaign to secure a majority in both houses
-favorable to Germany.” The German staff, in issuing these directions
-and in naming certain American citizens as tools for the treacherous
-work, insisted that the embassy should not be compromised and that
-“similar precautions must be taken in regard to Irish pro-German
-propaganda.”
-
-Good citizens who have been misled by false counsel must now clearly
-see that the campaign of dynamite against our industries, with the
-attendant wreckage and murder, was a deliberate act of secret war by
-the German Government; that the attempt by Americans to secure an
-embargo on sending munitions to the Allies was an effort to aid Germany
-in thus making war on the United States; that the Irish pro-German
-movement in this country was financed and guided from Germany, and that
-our citizens, whether of foreign or native birth, whether of native
-American or German or Irish origin, who took part in pushing these
-movements, were doing substantially the same kind of work that Benedict
-Arnold once tried to do.
-
-Some of them were doubtless paid, others were doubtless not paid,
-but the paid and the unpaid alike were serving Germany against the
-United States. These matters are now all of public record. The excuse
-of ignorance can no longer avail any one. Henceforth the citizens of
-German or Irish birth who take part in such activities as those of most
-of the German-American alliances and the like, are at best standing in
-the position of pillar-of-salt citizenship; at worst they, and above
-all their native American associates, who now indulge in pacifist
-movements or demand a peace without overwhelming victory or ask for
-a referendum on the war, or in any other way serve the brutal and
-conscienceless ambition of Germany, stand unpleasantly near the lonely
-eminence occupied by Benedict Arnold.
-
-
-
-
-BROOMSTICK APOLOGISTS
-
-OCTOBER 14, 1917
-
-
-The chief of the Ordnance Bureau of the army, in commenting on the
-shortage of rifles, has said that it is of no consequence, because
-“every soldier will be supplied a rifle when he starts for France.”
-
-Of course he will, otherwise he cannot start. One of the leading papers
-of New York backs up the statement by saying that the “drilling in the
-camps without rifles is ended now” and that “General Crozier delayed
-the work so as to get rifles with the same ammunition our allies are
-using.”
-
-Neither statement is correct. The last is the reverse of truth. On
-October 2 in one camp there were still only one hundred rifles for
-twenty thousand men and other camps were scarcely better off, and the
-delay in getting rifles during the last eight months has been due
-primarily to the refusal of the Ordnance Department to get rifles using
-the ammunition of our allies.
-
-If during the two years preceding our entry into the war the Government
-factories had been run full speed, we would have had over two million
-of Springfield rifles instead of under one million. Our shortage was
-due solely to our policy of dawdle. Our factories produced a mere
-dribble of rifles and no big field guns until the inevitable happened.
-
-War came. Having no rifles of our own for the new army, the War
-Department decided to adopt the English rifle, the Enfield, which was
-being built in this country at the rate of nearly nine thousand a day
-in private plants, and by speeding them up the number could have been
-immediately increased to fourteen thousand a day. But the authorities
-insisted that the Enfields should be changed to take our ammunition,
-and that certain parts should be standardized and made interchangeable.
-As regards this excuse, it is sufficient to point out that in the
-first place it was a very grave error, while making the parts of our
-Enfields interchangeable, at the same time to make their ammunition not
-interchangeable with that of the British Enfields, for the number of
-Springfields on hand was negligible compared to the millions of rifles
-we would ultimately need, and in the second place the delay even for
-this purpose was wholly inexcusable. The German submarine note came on
-January 31. An alert War Department would have had its rifle programme
-minutely mapped out within two weeks. The delay in furnishing final
-specifications to the factories was such that they could not begin on
-the complete rifle until the latter part of August. Six months is a
-“perfectly endurable delay” only if we are content to accept the speed
-standards in war of Tiglath-Pileser and Pharaoh Necho. The United
-States must learn to adopt the war speed standards of the Twentieth
-Century, A.D., instead of those of the Seventh Century, B.C.
-
-If in April we had been ready to proceed with the Enfield rifle, we
-would now have about two million of the new rifles instead of about
-one-fiftieth of that number. General Crozier says that we have only had
-to wait “two or three months--a perfectly endurable delay.” Surely if
-there is anything this war teaches it is the vital importance of time.
-Two or three months’ waiting in order to get a rifle which does not
-carry the ammunition of our allies represents not merely an undesirable
-delay but grave unwisdom.
-
-General Crowder handled the draft to perfection because he appreciated
-that the difference between sending a telegram at 5 or at 4:45 might
-be of momentous consequence. General Crozier has bungled the rifle
-situation because of the attitude which makes him regard two or three
-months as “a perfectly endurable delay.”
-
-For two years and a half before entering the war we relied upon
-broomstick preparedness. For the first eight months of the war we have
-followed the same policy as regards the vital matter of rifles for our
-troops.
-
-
-
-
-THE LIBERTY LOAN AND THE PRO-GERMANS
-
-OCTOBER 16, 1917
-
-
-Mr. Victor Berger, the Socialist leader of Milwaukee, is reported in
-the press as sneering at the Liberty bonds, berating the Administration
-for, as he says, appointing thirty-three wealthy capitalists on the
-National Council of Defense, and in effect seeming to persuade his
-hearers that they ought, at this crisis of foreign war, to be hostile
-to those of their countrymen who are “capitalists” instead of the
-Kaiser.
-
-This is natural. The Socialist party machine in this country is run by
-Germans. Socialists, who were sincerely desirous of social betterment
-and who were sincere in this hatred of tyranny and wrongdoing, have
-left the Socialist party. Those who remain in it have turned it into a
-mere tool of the brutal militaristic autocracy which now threatens the
-world. These men are completely dominated by the Germans, and German
-Socialists in America have shown in this crisis that they are Germans
-first, Socialists a long way second, and not Americans at all. In
-fact, they are venomously hostile to the country in which they dwell
-and claim citizenship, and are eagerly ready to sacrifice Socialism
-itself to the interests of the Germany of the Hohenzollerns. They stand
-well to the front among the Shadow Huns who, within our gates, are the
-allies of the Huns without our gates.
-
-While in Wisconsin I was told that the German-American Alliance, in its
-efforts to persuade American citizens to betray their citizenship in
-the interests of Germany, had relatively as many adherents among the
-Socialists as among the two great parties.
-
-When the Socialists under such leadership oppose or sneer at the
-Liberty Loan, it is proof positive that all patriotic citizens should
-buy Liberty bonds up to the limit of their ability. The Socialists
-attack the Liberty Loan in order to hurt America and help Germany.
-The domination of “American capitalism” is a mere blind to obscure the
-service they are trying to render to the capitalists and militarists of
-Germany.
-
-For the composition of the National Council of Defense, I am sorry
-that more labor men and farmers are not on it, but I wish they could
-be put on in addition to, not as substitutes for, the men of means who
-are on it, for these men of means, taken as a whole, have at much cost
-to themselves rendered devoted and invaluable service to the Nation.
-Their absence would be a general calamity to America and a great aid
-to Germany, and all true lovers of America should recognize this
-fact. I know some of these men personally, and those whom I know have
-sacrificed time, effort, and money in order to be of help to the Nation
-at this juncture. In fact, I have never known more devoted public
-service than that they rendered at this crisis.
-
-It is unpatriotic at this time to attack good Americans because they
-have capital and are trying to make this capital of service in the
-war. Capital is necessary to business and industry, and in this war
-industrial efficiency is almost as necessary as military skill. The
-factories at home are almost as important as the armies in the field.
-Wise war taxation of capital and profits is eminently necessary, but it
-must not go to an extent that will interfere with production and the
-forward movement of business, or widespread calamity would result.
-
-We are a great Nation, engaged in a stupendous war. Let us use dollars
-as we use the loaded shells, and each can do its best work only under
-the leadership of the ablest man: the business man in one case, the
-military man in the other. By all means let the people be masters of
-the capital of the country at the present time. The surest way to do
-this is for the people themselves to buy the Liberty bonds and not
-leave them to Wall Street. They are the one absolutely safe investment,
-both for men of small means and men of large means.
-
-
-
-
-A DIFFICULT QUESTION TO ANSWER
-
-OCTOBER 18, 1917
-
-
-A correspondent in Pueblo, Colorado, writes me as follows:
-
- By what logic are we “at peace” with Austria, when she is furnishing
- troops or artillery to Germany to fight and kill our soldiers on the
- western front? The same question might apply to Turkey. Remember, too,
- that we are furnishing money and supplies to Italy, our ally, in her
- struggle with Austria. The Western folks are looking to you to answer
- hard questions of this sort for us which we don’t understand.
-
-Neither I nor any one else can satisfactorily answer the question.
-A limited liability war in which we fight Germany ourselves and pay
-money to Italy and Russia to enable them to fight Austria and Turkey,
-with whom we are at peace, savors of sharp practice and not of
-statesmanship. It is a good rule either to stay out of war or to go
-into it, but not to try to do both things at once.
-
-Moreover, this matter squarely tests our sincerity when we announced
-that we went to war to make the world safe for democracy. The phrase
-must have been used in a somewhat oratorical fashion, anyhow, because
-we have ourselves within the last year or two made the world entirely
-unsafe for democracy in the two small and weak republics of Haiti and
-San Domingo. Therefore, the phrase must have meant that we intended to
-make the world safe for well-behaved nations, great or small, to enjoy
-their liberty and govern themselves as they wished. If it did not mean
-this, the phrase was much worse than an empty flourish, for it was
-deliberately deceitful. If it did mean this, then we are recreant to
-our promise unless we at once go to war with Austria and Turkey.
-
-Both these nations are racial conglomerates, in which one or two
-nationalities tyrannize over other subject nationalities. The world
-will not and cannot be safe for democracy until the Armenians, the
-Syrian Christians, and the Arabs are freed from Turkish tyranny, and
-until the Poles, Bohemians, and Southern Slavs, now under the Austrian
-yoke, are made into separate, independent nations, and until the
-Italians of Southwest Austria are restored to Italy and the Rumanians
-of Eastern Hungary to Rumania.
-
-Unless we propose in good faith to carry out this programme, we have
-been guilty of a rhetorical sham when we pledged ourselves to make
-the world safe for democracy. The United States must not make promises
-which it has no intention of performing. We are breaking this promise
-and incidentally are acting absurdly every day that we continue at
-nominal peace with Germany’s fellow tyrants and subject allies, Austria
-and Turkey.
-
-
-
-
-NOW HELP THE LIBERTY LOAN
-
-OCTOBER 20, 1917
-
-
-The concrete services to the United States which every decent American
-not fortunate enough to be a soldier can now render, is to buy as many
-Liberty bonds as he can afford.
-
-The Treasury Department has set forth in the public press the facts
-about the campaign which the pro-Germans in the United States are
-waging against the Liberty Loan. The campaign is being waged by trying
-to prevent banks from handling the Liberty Loan, and by the publication
-in certain newspapers of articles tending to discourage people from
-investing in the bonds. Senator La Follette’s speeches, which are to
-the same effect, are also being circulated with a view to check popular
-subscriptions. Senator La Follette, by the way, represents exactly
-the type which tries to prevent the people from owning the bonds and,
-nevertheless, will in the future probably rail at the purchasers of the
-bonds as having, somehow or other, obtained an improper and excessive
-profit.
-
-Inasmuch as the enemies of the Liberty Loan are of this type, all
-patriotic Americans should strain every nerve to make the sale a
-success. Moreover, this happens to be one of those rare cases where the
-performance of a patriotic duty is a first-class financial investment.
-The patriot is rendering a great service to the Nation while he is also
-making a capital investment for himself. If the people do not take the
-bonds, they will be taken by the big capitalists. The people have the
-first call, and while it is desirable in the interest of everybody to
-make this a people’s loan, it is more desirable from the standpoint of
-the people themselves. The investment is absolutely safe. The men and
-women who fail to take advantage of it are not standing by the country
-and they are not standing by their own interests. Every man, from the
-day laborer to the bank president, should, according to his means,
-invest in the Liberty bonds.
-
-
-
-
-A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE TRAINING CAMPS
-
-OCTOBER 21, 1917
-
-
-The Playgrounds and Recreation Association of America has undertaken a
-capital work in pushing the War Camp Community Committee, of which Mr.
-John N. Willys, of Toledo, is chairman. The War Camp Committee work
-for Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, and Colorado has made
-Mr. I. R. Kirkwood chairman, and has begun an active drive to get the
-three-quarter of a million dollars allotted to this district out of the
-total of four million to be raised in the country.
-
-The movement should receive the heartiest backing. It represents much
-more even than the very important work of providing amusements for the
-hundreds of thousands of enlisted men in the various camps, for it
-also has to deal with the moral and sanitary surroundings, not only
-in camps, but in the neighboring towns and cities. In former wars the
-number of men incapacitated by diseases contracted in the camps often
-surpassed the number incapacitated by the sickness due to the hardships
-and exposure at the front. This was because of lax supervision of the
-neighborhood moral and sanitary conditions, and also from failure to
-instruct the soldiers that it is a shameful and unsoldierly thing to
-expose themselves to disease due to indulgence in vice.
-
-The committee is working not only in the interests of national morality
-and decency. It is also working in the interest of military efficiency,
-for it will save scores of thousands of soldiers from being shamefully
-incapacitated before reaching the front, and the gain to the Nation
-from the economical as well as the moral standpoint, after the war,
-will be very great.
-
-The work of the committee will be carried on outside the camps in the
-adjacent communities acting in coöperation with churches, clubs, and
-organizations of public-spirited men and women. It will be wholly
-different from the work inside the camps, which is done by the
-Y.M.C.A., the Knights of Columbus, the Y.M.H.A., and similar bodies.
-In many places the local authorities already have done much work along
-the lines sketched by the national committee, and wherever this is the
-case, the national committee will surely aid the local bodies.
-
-All good and patriotic men and women should heartily back this work to
-keep Uncle Sam’s soldiers clean, decent, and self-respecting; to make
-them better citizens and more formidable fighting men.
-
-
-
-
-THE PASSING OF THE CRIPPLE
-
-OCTOBER 23, 1917
-
-
-If men are alert, resolute, and energetic, they can usually secure some
-compensation from any calamity. This dreadful war, attended by the
-killing and crippling of men on a scale hitherto unknown, has brought
-as a compensation a determined move to do away with the cripple; that
-is, to cease the mere effort to keep a crippled man alive and, instead,
-to endeavor by reconstructive surgery to restore him to himself and to
-the community as an economic asset.
-
-Surgeon-General Gorgas and his associates have worked out, and are
-ready practically to test, an organized system under which any
-seemingly crippled man is to be kept under the guidance of the medical
-branch of the army until either the usefulness of the damaged part
-has been restored or else until he has been trained in other ways so
-as to enable him measurably to overcome the handicap. In almost every
-case something will be done to make the cripple less of a burden
-to himself and others, and in most cases, the army medical service
-confidently believes, the cripple will once more become a useful and
-therefore a happy citizen. In all our special hospitals that are now
-being planned, the curative workshop is part of the plant. The effort
-is to be not only for the physical development and physical reëducation
-of the wounded part, but also for any intellectual training necessary
-to produce new forms of effective ability which will offset any loss
-in physical ability. The aim is not merely to save the life of, and
-then turn loose, a crippled pensioner who can be little but a burden
-on the community; it is to take care of the wounded man until the very
-best of which he is capable has been developed, so that when once more
-in the outside world he will be a real asset to the Nation. This is a
-fine thing for the Nation, and is of incalculable consequence from the
-standpoint of the self-respect and happiness of the man.
-
-This represents the complete reversal of the old point of view, which
-was that the cripple was turned loose with a pension for less than what
-if sound in body he would have earned, and a burden on the community.
-The purpose of Surgeon-General Gorgas and his associates is that the
-Government shall stand behind the man and invest money in him so as to
-develop all his latent resources, fitting him to make good as a citizen
-and expecting him thus to make good. There will be, where necessary, a
-money compensation for the injury, but the great compensation will be
-the return to useful life of the man himself.
-
-The far-reaching effect of such a policy is evident. The purpose is
-to insist that every man, no matter how maimed, shall be made of
-further use in the world. If once the army acts on this theory, the
-great industries will follow suit. The cripple, in the sense of being
-a helpless or useless cripple, will largely be eliminated, and out
-of this war will have come another step in the slow march of mankind
-towards a better and more just life.
-
-
-
-
-THE PEACE OF COMPLETE VICTORY
-
-OCTOBER 23, 1917
-
-
-It is stated in a press report from Washington that the Allies wish the
-United States to stop sending men abroad and use its ships for food and
-munitions instead, but that the Administration will not agree to the
-plan, and furthermore that the Administration is determined that there
-shall be no peace until Germany is completely beaten. If the report is
-correct, the Administration is absolutely right on both points.
-
-As to the first point, we can well understand, in view of the steady
-U-boat campaign, how greatly the Allies desire food and munitions, and
-we regret with bitter shame the folly of our Government in dawdling
-and delaying for six vital months after the German note of January 31
-last before seriously beginning the work of building big, swift cargo
-boats. But this cannot alter the fact that for the sake of our honor
-and our future world usefulness we must ourselves fight and not merely
-hire others to fight for us. If we do not follow this course, our
-children’s heads will be bowed with humiliation. With proper energy we
-could already have had some hundreds of thousands of men in the firing
-line, and we should send our troops over as rapidly as possible, with
-the purpose to put at least two million men against the German lines
-next year, an entirely possible programme if the Government will lend
-its energies with a single mind to the task.
-
-As regards the second point, every decent citizen should make the
-pacifist and the home Hun realize that agitation for a premature
-peace, for a peace without victory, is seditious. Shame on every man,
-and above all on every public servant and every leader of public
-opinion, who endeavors to weaken the determination of America to see
-the war through and at all costs secure an overwhelming triumph for
-the principles for which we contend. If Germany is left unbeaten,
-the Western Hemisphere will stand in cowering dread of an assault by
-Germany’s ruthless and barbarous autocracy. The liberties of the free
-peoples of the world are at stake.
-
-We must now fight with all our might on European soil beside our allies
-or else fear the day when we will have to fight without allies beside
-our burning homes. While this war lasts, the cause of our allies is
-our cause, their defeat would be our defeat, and whoever assails them
-or defends Germany is a traitor to the United States. There must be
-no negotiated peace. Belgium is entitled to an enormous indemnity and
-France to annexation of Alsace and Lorraine. By her marine murders and
-her shore raids and her utter treachery and abominable cruelty, Germany
-has made herself the outlaw among nations, and with her we should
-negotiate only through the mouths of our cannon. All who now advocate
-a negotiated peace with her are seeking to betray civilization in the
-interest of brute force and international outrage. The United States
-owes her entrance into this war almost as much to the American pacifist
-as to the German militarist, and now the former is meanly eager once
-more to serve the latter by securing an unjust peace. Let every brave
-and patriotic American spurn the base counsels of the pro-Germans
-and pacifists, and insist that this country, at whatever cost, fight
-steadfastly until the war closes with Germany’s complete overthrow.
-
-
-
-
-FIGHTING WORK FOR THE MAN OF FIGHTING AGE
-
-OCTOBER 25, 1917
-
-
-The Y.M.C.A. is one of the most powerful agencies for good in our
-military camps here at home and with our armies abroad. It would be
-a veritable calamity not to have it do this work. The women and the
-elderly men who have gone abroad under present conditions are rendering
-a patriotic service of high value, but every young man of fighting age
-who has gone abroad for the Y.M.C.A. at this time is a positive damage
-to the work and should be instantly sent home. It is an ignoble thing
-for an able-bodied man to be in such a position of bodily safety where
-his example must naturally excite contempt and resentment among the men
-who, unlike him, are risking their lives and have left their families
-for the sake of a great ideal. Of course, no man of draft age should
-be sent over, but this is not enough. The draft represents merely the
-minimum performance of duty. No man of age to permit his entering the
-army abroad or at home should be sent over. If any such man is not
-in the army, it should be either because he has been turned down by
-the army authorities for physical reasons or because his work at home
-either for his family or for the Government imperatively demands his
-presence here. If he is able to go abroad at all, he should go abroad
-in the army. The fact that he is abroad for the Y.M.C.A. is proof
-positive that he has no business to be there.
-
-An officer in high command in France recently wrote home a letter,
-which I have seen, describing the experiences of the junior
-officers of his command with some of the young able-bodied Y.M.C.A.
-representatives. He began by an emphatic testimony to the admirable
-work the Y.M.C.A. had done and to its great importance, and by an
-emphatic statement that it had a thoroughly bad effect on the enlisted
-men to see a young man of their own age engaged in such work. He then
-illustrated its effect on the young officers with whom these Y.M.C.A.
-men messed, writing:
-
- Two young Y.M.C.A. men have been at two of the battalion messes. They
- are of the age whose presence here is an annoyance to the army because
- they seem to have been exempted from the draft. They have obtained
- bullet-proof jobs and their presence here is a bad example to all
- the young men in the army. Last night at one mess the officers were
- so disgusted with the Y.M.C.A., who was actually wearing a uniform
- with an officer’s belt on, that they began to chaff him, telling him
- that they were married men and were entitled to play safety first
- themselves and thought they would apply for jobs in the Salvation
- Army. The Y.M.C.A. had to stand for this because he was the only
- unmarried man there, and it is said that his mother persuaded him that
- he owed her a duty not to go in a dangerous place. He evidently feels
- his duty keenly. The other young fellow from the Y.M.C.A. was a real
- man and he left the soft job and has enlisted as a private.
-
-The Y.M.C.A. is so very useful an organization that it is profoundly to
-be regretted that it should in any way damage its usefulness. Its work
-with the armies abroad should be done exclusively by women and elderly
-men. No able-bodied man under forty-five should represent the Y.M.C.A.
-in the war zone or with the army camps.
-
-
-
-
-WISE WOMEN AND FOOLISH WOMEN
-
-OCTOBER 27, 1917
-
-
-There are wise and foolish women just as there are wise and foolish
-men, and in any great crisis the welfare of this country depends
-upon the extent to which the wise and patriotic men and the wise and
-patriotic women can offset or overcome the folly of the foolish.
-
-The woman who bravely and cheerfully sends her men to battle when the
-country calls takes her place high on the national honor roll. She
-stands beside the mothers and wives of the men of ’76 and of the men
-who wore the blue and the gray in the Civil War. Where would this
-country now be if Washington’s mother had not raised her boy to be a
-soldier for the right?
-
-But the women who do not raise their boys to be soldiers when the
-country needs them are unfit to live in this republic. The women who at
-this time try to dissuade their husbands or sons who are of military
-age from entering the army or navy are thoroughly unworthy citizens.
-The kind of affection which shows itself by refusing to allow the boy
-to face hard work when it is his duty to do so, the mother who brings
-up her boy to be a worthless idler, because she is too fond of him to
-see him suffer the discomfort of hard work, and the mother who desires
-her boy to play the coward or the shirk, in time of war, are not merely
-foolish; they are poor citizens. They are the real enemies of their
-sons, for there can be no more dangerous enemy than the human being,
-man or woman, who teaches another human being to lose his soul in order
-to save his body. The wise mother is the best of all good citizens
-and the foolish mother stands almost at the other end of the scale.
-I wish every mother in the land could read Theodosia Garrison’s poem,
-recently sent out by that stirring body of patriots, the Vigilantes. It
-describes the youth of twenty years, eager to play a manly part while
-his mother seeks to hold him from the post of danger and duty, and two
-of the verses run:
-
- Mother of his twenty years, who holds against his will
- The eager heart, the quick blood, and bids them to be still,
- What of the young untrammeled soul you seek to blunt and kill?
-
- You would save the body stainless and complete,
- Fetters on the hands of it, shackles on the feet;
- And in the crippling of them make soul and body meet.
-
-
-
-
-WHY CRY OVER SPILT MILK?
-
-OCTOBER 28, 1917
-
-
-Nice, short-sighted persons, when the evil effects of our folly in
-failing to prepare are pointed out, sometimes ask, “Why cry over spilt
-milk?” The answer is that we wish to be sure that we do not spill it
-again, and, unfortunately, the nice persons who bleat against any one
-who points out our shortcomings in preparedness or who excuse and
-champion those responsible for this unpreparedness, are doing all they
-can to invite future disaster for the Nation.
-
-The bleat assumes different expressions in different localities.
-Recently the Mayor of Abilene, Texas, expressed his disapproval of my
-pointing out that we, as a Nation, had wholly failed to prepare, by
-saying that I was “a seditious conspirator who ought to be shot dead,”
-and that the editor of the newspaper publishing the article “should be
-tarred and feathered.” Although differing in method of expression, this
-slightly homicidal bleat of the gentle-souled (and doubtless entirely
-harmless) Mayor of Abilene, Texas, is exactly similar in thought to
-the utterances of all these sheeplike creatures who raise quavering or
-incoherent protests against every honest and patriotic man who points
-out the damage done by our failure to prepare.
-
-These persons cannot deny one fact I state. Nine months have passed
-since, on January 31, Germany sent us a note which was practically a
-declaration of war. We have only just put troops in the trenches; many
-of the troops of our draft army training at home have until recently
-only had broomsticks, and now only have one old Spanish War rifle for
-every eight soldiers; most of the artillery regiments in these camps
-either have no guns or wooden guns. After nine months we are still
-wholly unable to defend ourselves or to render efficient military aid
-to our allies, and we owe safety from invasion only to the protection
-of the fleets and armies of the war-worn and weary nations to whose
-help we nominally came. No man can truthfully deny these statements,
-no man can seriously regard this situation as satisfactory. To try
-to cover up the truth by bluster and brag and downright falsehoods
-may possibly deceive ourselves, but will deceive no one else, whether
-friend or foe. Is such foolish deceit worth while?
-
-Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time. We were not wise in time.
-Let us learn from our past folly future wisdom. Our first duty is to
-win this war, and therefore the Shadow Hun within our gates is our
-worst internal foe. Our next and equally important duty is to prepare
-against disaster in the future, and therefore our next worst internal
-foe is the sheeplike creature who invites national disaster for the
-future by bleating against the telling of the truth in the present.
-
-
-
-
-SAVE THE FOODSTUFF
-
-OCTOBER 30, 1917
-
-
-Mr. Hoover has been appointed as the man to lead us of this Nation in
-the vitally important matter of producing and saving as much food as
-we possibly can in order that we can send abroad the largest possible
-amount for the use of our suffering allies and for the use of our own
-gallant soldiers. Mr. Hoover’s preëminent services in Belgium pointed
-him out as of all the men in this country the man most fit for the
-very position to which he has been appointed. Let us give him our most
-hearty and loyal support.
-
-In this great and terrible war the slaughter, starvation, and
-exhaustion are on a scale never before known. They are nation-wide.
-Therefore every individual of every nation engaged must do his full
-part or else must be held to have failed in his duty. The man of
-fighting age must fight. The man with especial business capacity or
-mechanical skill must produce arms or equipment or ammunition. And
-every man, woman, or child must help produce food if possible, and in
-any event must help economize it.
-
-Mr. Hoover has asked us during this week to devote ourselves to getting
-all our people voluntarily to pledge themselves to certain forms of
-food economy,--which are of great consequence from the standpoint of
-sending abroad the foodstuffs needed by our Allies and by our own
-troops. There are certain foods which are easily transported which are
-nourishing and which are peculiarly suited for the use both of our
-allies and of our troops in the field. Mr. Hoover’s plan is that we
-shall all of us voluntarily limit along strict lines our consumption
-of these food products and replace them by other foods which are not
-suitable for sending abroad, and that we shall rigidly avoid waste.
-Full particulars are given in the pamphlets sent out by Mr. Hoover from
-his Washington Bureau of Food Conservation.
-
-What Mr. Hoover asks entails not the slightest real hardship on any of
-us. It merely requires each of us to exercise a little self-control and
-perhaps to make some trivial sacrifice of personal preference in what
-we eat. Surely this is a very, very small service to be rendered by us
-stay-at-homes in support of our sons and brothers who have gone or are
-going to risk their lives in battle for us and mankind.
-
-
-
-
-ON THE FIRING LINE
-
-OCTOBER 31, 1917
-
-
-Our men are now actually on the firing line, and while, of course, they
-are as yet there primarily for purposes of instruction, nevertheless,
-they are there. They are at times under fire. They are at any moment
-liable to death in upholding the honor of their country, of your
-country, my reader, and of mine.
-
-General Pershing’s original division under his direction and
-the direction of his lieutenants, such as Major-General Sibert,
-Brigadier-General Duncan, and their associates, has evidently been
-trained to a high point of efficiency. The accounts show that the
-infantry effected their entrance to the trenches with the precision
-of veterans. Evidently the artillery is being handled with similar
-efficiency. Apparently, from the account, our artillerymen are using
-French guns.
-
-All Americans must feel a glow of pride as he reads of the soldierly
-manner in which our American troops have made their entry into the
-fire zone. But we must not confine ourselves merely to feeling pride
-in our fellow countrymen who are at the front risking their lives
-in doing their duty on behalf of all of us. We must back them up.
-We must support the Government in every movement taken efficiently
-to put the strength of this Nation behind our soldiers, and we must
-vigilantly insist upon the efficiency including the speed absolutely
-indispensable. We must support the Liberty Loans, conserve food,
-cheerfully pay taxes, and tolerate neither improper profit-making out
-of the war by capitalists or strikers,--nor slackness and malingering
-which interferes with our military efficiency by laboring men. Every
-American civilian should now do his work with the same sense of duty as
-is shown by the soldiers in the field.
-
-And now let good patriots keep in mind that the Huns within our gates
-from this time on are the allies of the Huns who are actually doing
-battle against our soldiers at the front. The men who directly or
-indirectly advise people not to take Liberty bonds, the men who clamor
-for an early peace, an inconclusive or negotiated peace, the men who
-condone the offenses of Germany directly or indirectly, the men who say
-we have not ample cause for war against Germany, the men who attack our
-allies or seek to breed dissension between them and us, are each and
-every one to a greater or less degree acting as friends of Germany and
-therefore as enemies of the United States. Every patriotic American
-should now clearly understand what is really implied in the attitude
-taken during the last nine months by the Stones and La Follettes,
-the Hearsts and Hillquits. These men are out of place in America.
-It is sincerely to be regretted that they cannot be put where they
-belong--under the Hohenzollerns.
-
-
-
-
-NINE TENTHS OF WISDOM IS BEING WISE IN TIME
-
-NOVEMBER 1, 1917
-
-
-A few days ago I expressed in The Star the regret and uneasiness
-felt by all men with knowledge of international matters at the
-failure of this country to declare war on Austria and Turkey. Various
-Administration, and, of course, the leading pro-German, newspapers took
-exception to this statement and announced that the procedure advocated
-would be unwise or improper. Since then the great defeat of the Italian
-army by the Germans and Austrians has occurred, and among the Italians
-there has been much bitter criticism of our failure to help them,
-although we have now for many months been at war, at least in theory,
-with Germany.
-
-A leading Administration newspaper of high standing, the Brooklyn
-Eagle, accurately states the case as follows:
-
- Italy’s defeat is shocking and alarming. Only its unexpectedness
- excuses the failure of Italy’s allies, including ourselves, to meet
- it. This Government cannot evade responsibility if Italy is lost, for
- we have been up to the present, quite as indifferent as the rest of
- the Entente to Italy’s fate. Italy suffers and is endangered by our
- own negative attitude. We have loaned her money, but we are not at
- war with Austria, and we have failed to give Italy such whole-hearted
- support as her critical position demands. No time should be lost in
- reversing this policy. Italy is fighting our battles as well as her
- own. She is a valuable ally; her cause is just. No effort should be
- spared to save her. There is no time to compromise or equivocate. Our
- own soldiers in Europe will have to pay in blood for every hour’s
- delay in throwing all possible help to Italy.
-
-This is the exact truth. I call attention to the fact that it is from
-a strong supporter of the Administration and that it takes the view
-I have for months been taking, and which various well-meaning but
-sheeplike creatures have bleated against on the ground that it implies
-criticism of the Administration. I was merely advocating before the
-event the course, which, after the event, all will agree ought to have
-been followed. It is in this matter precisely as it was in regard to
-our building ships to meet the terrible U-boat menace. We should, with
-the utmost energy and speed, have begun to build them within a week,
-within a day, of the German note of January 31. Instead of this we
-dawdled and wrangled for six months before seriously beginning. In
-the one case as in the other foolish creatures did immense harm by
-protesting against pointing out our blunders on the ground that we must
-not speak of spilt milk, whereas, of course, we can only stop future
-spilling by showing where it has been spilt in the past.
-
-Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time, is the lesson as taught
-afresh by the Italian disaster and the shortage of cargo ships. Let us
-at last profit by it.
-
-
-
-
-WE ARE IN THIS WAR TO THE FINISH
-
-NOVEMBER 2, 1917
-
-
-The disaster to our Italian ally should make every American worth
-calling such awake to the real needs of the hour and should arouse in
-him the inflexible purpose to see that this war is fought through to a
-victorious conclusion, no matter how long it takes, no matter what the
-expense and loss may be.
-
-Our first troops are now actually in the trenches; American infantry
-and American artillerymen are under fire; blood has been shed. Our sons
-and brothers have begun the trench life of wearing fatigue, of cold, of
-inconceivable hardship and exposure and of cruel danger. A few women
-at home suffer as much. Otherwise, no civilians outside the regions
-conquered by the Germans can begin to realize the terrible strain to
-which constantly increasing numbers of our soldiers will be exposed as
-additional divisions are trained for and put into the actual fighting.
-
-We who stay at home must back up those men in every way. We must stand
-by and energetically support every effort of the Government to add to
-their efficiency and to back them up, including the sending over of
-constantly increasing numbers of soldiers to the aid of the men already
-there. We must back up the loans and taxes necessary in order to supply
-them with arms, munitions, equipment, food, hospitals. We must hold
-to the strictest accountability before the bar of public opinion any
-Government official responsible for needless delay, or for shortage in
-shipping, clothing, or material, or for deficient ammunition, or faulty
-gas-masks, or for any other shortage which exposes our men at the
-front to needless danger and hardship. We must make their effort and
-their suffering avail by highly resolving that the whole power of this
-Nation, and all its resources in men and in wealth, shall be used to
-bring the peace of complete and overwhelming triumph over Germany and
-over Germany’s subject allies, Austria and Turkey.
-
-Finally, every brave and patriotic American owes it to the men at the
-front to make the lash of scorn felt by the Hearsts and La Follettes
-and by all others like them. These men have given or now give aid
-and comfort to Germany, and therefore show themselves enemies to the
-soldiers in the American uniform by opposing the war, or by asking for
-an inconclusive peace, or by assailing the allies of the United States,
-or by condoning or keeping silent concerning the hideous atrocities
-which have made the Prussianized empire of the Hohenzollerns the arch
-enemy of every liberty-loving and self-respecting civilized nation on
-the face of the globe.
-
-
-
-
-SINISTER ALLIES
-
-NOVEMBER 3, 1917
-
-
-There are well-meaning, but not overwise, persons who bleat against
-any sincere and truthful effort to make us more efficient in this war
-by protesting against grave shortcomings. These worthy persons should
-realize that they are acting against the interest of the United States
-and in the interest of Germany. If they doubt this, they have only to
-ponder the fact that in their attitude they stand beside such sinister
-allies as German papers like the New York Staats Zeitung and Illinois
-Staats Zeitung and the various papers of Mr. Hearst.
-
-These papers have opposed our going to war, or have assailed our
-allies, or have condoned or passed over in silence the brutal infamy
-of Germany. They have opposed the Government in its actions against
-Germany. In so doing they have been the enemies of America. And they
-have been no less the enemies of America when they have eagerly
-defended the Government from criticism for shortcomings which impair
-our efficiency and therefore tell in favor of Germany. Exactly as they
-once opposed preparedness, or excused the murderous sinking of the
-Lusitania, or protested against our going to war, so they now zealously
-exhibit a sham loyalty of the most hurtful kind by denouncing honest
-and truthful men because they tell the truth.
-
-In order really to serve this country, it is necessary to point out
-the dreadful damage done by our failure to prepare; of the evil effect
-of trying to train our troops with broomsticks and wooden guns; the
-worse than folly of failing to declare war on Austria and Turkey, and
-the harm done by the delays, including the dawdling for six months
-before we began the vitally necessary work of shipbuilding. To cover
-up such shortcomings deceives no one but ourselves. Germany knows all
-about them. We help her to find out by our failure to treat her spies
-with drastic severity. And the men who suffer know all about them;
-the artillerymen with only a wooden cannon, or the sentry in a cotton
-uniform on a cold night stands in no need of enlightenment on the
-subject. When these pro-German papers with loud professions of loyalty
-protest against telling our people the truth about such matters, they
-are merely serving Germany against the United States.
-
-Loyalty to the Nation demands that we subscribe to the Liberty Loans;
-that we practice food conservation; that we ardently support sending
-our soldiers abroad until we have millions of men on the firing
-line; that we stand for universal obligatory military training and
-service; that we heartily uphold our allies and condemn as traitors
-to America all who attack them; that we insist on prosecuting the war
-to complete victory and condemn as false to this country all who seek
-an inconclusive peace. Loyalty to the Nation no less demands that we
-make our people understand the lasting harm done by our failure to
-prepare during the two and a half years before the war broke out and
-the grave damage now caused by needless delay, by irresolution, by the
-appointment or retention of inefficient men, and by any and all types
-of half-heartedness in waging the war.
-
-
-
-
-THE NEW YORK MAYORALTY ELECTION
-
-NOVEMBER 8, 1917
-
-
-The triumph of Tammany in New York City and the large Socialist vote
-have in some quarters been hailed as showing that New York City is for
-peace at any price and that it is against the Administration. Neither
-statement is warranted by the facts.
-
-The Socialist vote was about one-fifth of the total vote. It included
-most of those who wished the war stopped at once, this number being
-made up of professional pacifists, of red flag Anarchists, and of poor,
-ignorant people who pathetically believed that a Socialist mayor would
-somehow bring peace at once. But it also included its professional
-Socialists and poor, ignorant people who did not think of the war, but
-who pathetically believed that a Socialist mayor would somehow give
-them five-cent milk. The voters in New York City who wish immediate
-peace without any regard to national honor, or to what future horrors
-such a peace would bring, are certainly less than a fifth of the whole.
-
-The vote was not anti-Administration. A far larger proportion of the
-supporters of the Administration voted for Mr. Hylan than for Mr.
-Mitchel, and officially the Administration was neutral between the two.
-A goodly number of pro-Germans supported Mr. Hylan, but he was also
-supported by a large number of entirely loyal men, and he himself,
-unlike the Socialist candidate, Mr. Hillquit, was avowedly for America
-against Germany, and for the prosecution of the war. The election in
-actual fact turned directly on local issues. New York occasionally
-witnesses an occasional insurrection of virtue, but the city has
-never in fifty years given a good administration a second term. The
-insurrection of virtue at one election is followed by a Tammany
-revival at the next.
-
-The result of the election in New York City was not heartening
-to patriotic persons, but right next door, in the Connecticut
-congressional district which includes Bridgeport, a contest for a
-vacant congressional seat resulted in a way that speaks well for the
-Republic. The Republican candidate, Schuyler Merritt, a man of high
-probity and capacity, with a forward look in international affairs,
-came out in bold and straightforward fashion, saying he would support
-the President in all measures for the efficient prosecution of the
-war until victory came, that he would do all he could to prevent our
-again falling into the condition of shameful unpreparedness we had for
-three years occupied, and that he was for universal obligatory military
-training for our young men. He won by a majority much greater than that
-which his predecessor received at the time of the presidential election
-last year.
-
-
-
-
-GERMAN HATRED OF AMERICA
-
-NOVEMBER 13, 1917
-
-
-There have recently been published various books by Americans who,
-during the Great War, have officially represented this country in
-Germany and in Belgium, when the Germans conquered it. Ambassador
-Gerard is one writer. Mr. Gibson, secretary of our legation at
-Brussels, is another. Mr. Curtis Roth, until recently vice-consul at
-Plauen, Saxony, is a third. Their testimony is of profound significance
-because of their official position and personal standing.
-
-Two facts leap to the eye from their writings. The first is that the
-German people have stood practically united behind their Government
-in upholding and insisting upon the systematic infliction of hideous
-brutality upon their foes. With deliberate purpose the German
-Government has carried on a war of horror, a war of obscene cruelty, of
-wholesale slaughter, of foul treachery and bestiality, a war in which
-civilians, including women, children, nurses, doctors, and priests,
-as well as wounded soldiers, have been murdered wholesale. The German
-people have enthusiastically supported and approved their acts. Our
-war is as much with the German people as with their Government, and we
-should regard with loathing all Americans, whether men or women, who
-any way attempt to justify or defend Germany’s action. The Americans
-who so act are traitors to their country and to humanity at large.
-
-The second fact is the extreme malevolence of hatred with which Germany
-regards America, a hatred which blossomed into full growth before we
-went to war, and which was immensely aggravated because of the contempt
-inspired by our tame submission to outrage for over two years. Mr.
-Roth’s testimony is peculiarly interesting. He shows that the Berlin
-Government actively stimulated the campaign of hatred and revenge
-against America, that the German people eagerly accepted the view
-that Americans were cowardly, avaricious, and effeminate, and that in
-Germany it was constantly announced that, sooner or later, there would
-be a day of reckoning when America would have to pay a huge indemnity
-or suffer the fate of Belgium.
-
-Mr. Roth shows that the German people think exactly as their leaders
-think. They now hate and despise us Americans as they hate others of
-their foes. Says Mr. Roth:
-
- They are resolved to make our country drink to the dregs out of the
- bitter cup of humiliation. Nothing do they find more despicable
- than our talk about peace, which they attribute to cowardice and
- flabbiness. They look on the American pacifist as a weakling, as a
- God-given tool in the hands of German interest.... The Germans, if
- possible, feel more bitterly towards Americans of German extraction
- than towards Americans of other lines of descent.
-
-Germany has definitely decided on America’s ruin. She has definitely
-decided that there must be an intense anti-American spirit in both
-Government and people. She may bide her time, and she will doubtless
-try to separate us from our allies, but her purpose towards us is both
-relentless and ruthless.
-
-If we are true to ourselves, if we prepare our armed strength and keep
-it prepared, if we show farsightedness and valor of soul, we can be
-sternly indifferent to this foul and evil hatred. But we must keep
-steadily in mind that Germany respects nothing whatever except courage
-and prepared strength and that the pacifists and pro-Germans, the Huns
-within our gates, the Hearsts and the La Follettes, are playing the
-game of our German foes, and if they have their way will bring shame
-and disaster to our land.
-
-
-
-
-START THE SYSTEM OF UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING AT ONCE
-
-NOVEMBER 17, 1917
-
-
-Lieutenant-General S. B. M. Young, U.S.A., retired, gave long,
-faithful, and efficient service to this country, from the beginning of
-the Civil War, for nearly half a century. But he never has rendered
-greater service than by his steady insistence upon the immediate
-introduction by law in this country of the system of obligatory
-universal military training as our permanent policy. This should be
-done at once; and all the young men from nineteen to twenty-one should
-be called out as soon as there are means of training them. They need
-not fight until they are twenty-one. But they are least needed as
-economic assets; they are most needed as military assets; and it is
-cruelty to them not to train them in advance.
-
-The selective draft was far better than nothing. But let us never
-forget that it represented doing imperfectly after the event that which
-ought to have been done thoroughly long before the event. We have
-been at war three quarters of a year, and the drafted men, admirable
-material though they are, are only just beginning to be trained and
-as yet are not even armed and properly clothed. We are trying to train
-our soldiers to perform the duties of soldiers after the war has begun;
-and we can attempt the experiment at all only because the English and
-French protect us from our enemies while we make it. Hereafter let us
-train the man to perform the tasks of a soldier before he is called to
-be a soldier in war. Only thus can we be just both to him and to the
-country.
-
-The present economic disturbance in the Nation was inevitable, in view
-of our failure at the outset of the Great War to introduce the system
-of universal, obligatory military training; and this failure is also
-responsible for the fact that our national army, nine months after our
-entry into the war, has only begun training, instead of being already
-trained. Let us now at least provide for the future. The amendment
-to the law above outlined, as advocated by the National Association
-for Universal Military Training, of which General Young is president,
-would add nearly two million men to our army, would cause the minimum
-of interference with our economic life, and would not necessitate any
-additional expense for training quarters.
-
-The men thus trained will be immensely benefited from the standpoint of
-their success in civil life; for universal training would be of immense
-economic benefit to the Nation. As Cardinal Gibbons has well said, “The
-legislation proposed will benefit youths from nineteen to twenty-one
-years, morally as well as physically, and help to prepare them for
-their work in peace as well as for the sterner needs of war.”
-
-This is the only democratic system. General Young himself rose from
-being an enlisted man in the ranks to being the lieutenant-general
-of the army of the United States. Under universal training let all
-candidates for West Point and all other candidates for commissions be
-chosen with absolute fairness from among the men who have served a year
-in the field with the colors. And in the navy let all candidates for
-Annapolis be chosen from enlisted men of the navy who have served at
-least a year as such and who are still serving.
-
-
-
-
-A FIFTY-FIFTY WAR ATTITUDE
-
-NOVEMBER 20, 1917
-
-
-The attitude of the United States at this moment toward Germany’s three
-vassal allies, Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria, is a fifty-fifty attitude
-between peace and war. It is not honest war, neither is it honest
-neutrality. It is the attitude of the backwoodsman, who, seeing a black
-animal in his pasture at dusk and not knowing whether it was a bear or
-a calf, fired so as to hit it if it was a bear and miss it if it was a
-calf. Such marksmanship is never happy.
-
-Bulgaria is now simply the tool of Germany and Turkey. I was formerly
-a stanch champion of Bulgaria, and would be again if she returned to
-her senses. But she now serves the devil, and shame be upon us if we do
-not treat her accordingly. No one can doubt that the Bulgarian Legation
-is an agency for German spies in this country. The Administration
-has published reports showing that for over a year, previous to our
-entry into the war, the German Embassy was the center of the spies and
-dynamiters with whom Germany was already waging war against us. These
-papers show that Germany’s allies are her mere tools and that Germany
-is withheld by no scruple from the commission of every conceivable
-treacherous intrigue and brutal outrage against us. Under these
-conditions it is a grave offense against our allies not to declare war
-on all of Germany’s allies.
-
-Turkey has been and is the tool of Germany, but Germany has permitted
-her on her own account to perpetrate massacres on the Armenian and
-Syrian Christians which renders it little short of an infamy now to
-remain at peace with her. It is hypocritical to express sympathy with
-the Armenians and appoint messages to be read in the churches about
-them and yet refuse to do the only thing that will permanently help
-them which is to declare war on Turkey.
-
-With Austria our present relations are less definable than our
-relations with any other power. No one can truthfully say exactly
-whether our attitude is one of peace or war. We have not declared war
-on Austria and yet we are furnishing money, coal, and munitions to
-Italy in order to enable her to fight Austria. If we really are at
-peace with Austria, we are flagrantly violating our duty as a neutral
-and we ought to be condemned in any international court. But if we are
-really at war, then we are committing the cardinal crime of hitting
-soft. If we had gone to war with Austria when we broke with Germany and
-had acted with proper energy, the disaster to Cadorna would probably
-not have occurred.
-
-We are now taking part in the general council of our allies. The only
-way in which to make our part in the war thoroughly effective and our
-leadership felt to the utmost is whole-heartedly to throw ourself into
-the war on the side of all our allies and against all their and our
-enemies.
-
-
-
-
-THE GERMANIZED SOCIALISTS AND PEACE
-
-NOVEMBER 26, 1917
-
-
-The American Socialist party at the present time is a thoroughly
-Germanized annex of the Prussianized militaristic and capitalistic
-autocracy of the Hohenzollerns. Honest social reformers have left it.
-No patriotic American ought longer to stay in it. It is purely an aid
-to the capitalist and militarist Hohenzollern party of Germany. It
-is a bitter enemy of the United States and a traitor to the cause of
-liberty throughout the world. Its leaders are the supporters of an
-alien autocracy and are seeking to secure a peace which would immensely
-benefit this Prussian autocracy. They stand beside the Bolsheviki,
-whose antics have made Russia at this moment a by-word, both of
-derision and hope to every believer in despotism and every opponent of
-liberty throughout the world.
-
-Any man who feels that there is the slightest exaggeration in the above
-statements would do well to read the articles in which the New York
-Tribune has recently set forth the connection of Mr. William Bayard
-Hale with the pro-German propaganda in this country, with the Hearst
-papers and with the Socialist campaign in New York on behalf of Mr.
-Hillquit and a peace satisfactory to Germany. These articles should
-be published in permanent form and circulated as a tract among all
-decent Americans who still believe that the Germanized Socialist party
-in America to-day is anything except the foe of America, the foe of
-democratic liberty throughout the world, and the tool and ally of the
-autocrats, the capitalists, and the brutal and unscrupulous military
-chiefs of the Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns.
-
-Exactly as the reactionary is in the end the worst foe of order;
-exactly as the conscienceless and greedy man of wealth is in the end
-the worst foe of property and of honest and duty-performing holders
-of property, so the Anarchist and the wild Socialist, whose doctrines
-when applied necessarily lead to Anarchy and the I.W.W., and the
-crack-brained professional pacifists inevitably themselves are the
-worst enemies of freedom, of true democracy, and of righteousness. It
-is natural that in this terrible and melancholy world crisis these men
-should have struck hands with the sordid tools of German intrigue in
-this country. The masters of Germany find all these men, whatever their
-nominal differences, united in the evil bond of a common subserviency
-to German purposes. The German rulers, who at home trample on the
-Socialists and dragoon the labor organizations and bully the leader
-of democratic thought, cynically profit by aiding in other countries
-the men who in the name of social reform seek to overthrow orderly
-liberty and thereby show themselves the sinister allies of tyranny and
-despotism.
-
-
-
-
-MOBILIZE OUR MAN POWER
-
-DECEMBER 1, 1917
-
-
-It has been announced from Washington that, in view of the shortage of
-labor on the farms, there will be an effort in Congress to permit the
-importation for temporary use on the farms of Chinese coolies. I do not
-believe the effort will be successful, and if it were successful it
-would be one of the greatest calamities that could befall the American
-people.
-
-Never under any condition should this Nation look at an immigrant as
-primarily a labor unit. He should always be looked at primarily as a
-future citizen and the father of other citizens who are to live in
-this land as fellows with our children and our children’s children. Our
-immigration laws, permanent or temporary, should always be constructed
-with this fact in view. No temporary advantages from the importation of
-Chinese coolies would offset the far-reaching ultimate damage it would
-cause.
-
-Neither ought we to approve the plan, sometimes set forth by zealous
-and high-minded men, to get the Government to open up vast tracts of
-land and farm it with wage labor. This is a proposal to substitute a
-wage-earning agricultural proletariat for a farming population which
-owns the land it tills. It is a move in exactly the wrong direction.
-We ought by law to do everything possible to put a stop to the growth
-of an absentee landlord class and of huge estates worked by tenant
-farmers. Methods identical with or similar to those advocated by me, in
-my recent book, “The Foes of Our Own Household,” point the way to the
-proper permanent solution of the question.
-
-As a war measure, rather than adopt either of the proposals above
-enumerated, let us deal boldly with the situation created by the
-existence of such vast numbers of men in good physical condition, who
-are not being utilized. The best war asset and labor asset in this
-country is the mass of young men from eighteen to twenty-one. This
-draft law explicitly and unjustifiably excepts this class, although
-in the Civil War most of the soldiers entered the army when they were
-under twenty-one. Let us proclaim as our policy that while this war
-lasts no man shall be excused from doing the full duty which the
-Nation finds it necessary to demand from him. Make all the young men
-from eighteen to twenty-one immediately liable to service, permit no
-exceptions for any men, no matter how wealthy, who are not already in
-the army. Use as many of the men thus taken as are necessary to fill
-the camps when the present drafted men of the national army leave them.
-Use all the others, and use these men, too, until the camps are ready
-for them, as labor which the Nation shall mobilize for farm work or any
-other work which it is imperative to do, and mobilize all the alien
-labor now in the country in similar fashion.
-
-
-
-
-THE LANSDOWNE LETTER
-
-DECEMBER 2, 1917
-
-
-Lord Lansdowne’s proposal is for a peace of defeat for the Allies and
-of victory for Germany. Such a peace would leave oppressed peoples
-under the yoke of Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria. Such a peace would
-leave the liberty-loving nations of mankind at the ultimate mercy of
-the triumphant militarism and capitalism of the German autocracy.
-
-It merely makes such a peace worse to try to hide the shame of the
-defeat behind the empty pretense of forging a league of nations,
-including Germany, to secure future peace. Such a peace would mean
-that Germany saw her unspeakable brutality and treachery crowned by
-essential triumph and therefore would put a premium upon her repeating
-the brutality and treachery at the earliest convenient moment. It is
-mere hypocrisy to promise to put a stop to wrongdoing in the future
-unless we are willing to undergo the labor and peril necessary to stop
-wrongdoing in the present. In our own country nothing but harm was
-done by the worthy persons who, a couple of years ago, formed a league
-to enforce peace in the future, while at the same time they nervously
-declared that they would have nothing to do with enforcing peace by
-stopping international wrong in the present. Lord Lansdowne’s proposal
-to hide the admission of present defeat behind the camouflage of
-pretended international peace agreements for the future is unworthy of
-his distinguished services and reputation.
-
-Our people ought never to forget that Germany respects nothing but
-strength and the readiness and ability to use it. Germany has made a
-fetish of able brutality. She regards with utter derision the pacifists
-and pro-Germans in this country. She will use them as her tools and pay
-them when necessary, but if through this aid she was able to conquer
-this country after previously separating us from our allies, she
-would with utter indifference break these tools and throw them on the
-scrap-heap with the rest of the American people.
-
-There is but one safe course to follow, and that is to fight this war
-through to victory at no matter what cost. This Nation should declare
-war on Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria, this week. Let us definitely
-announce that our aims include restoring and indemnifying Belgium,
-giving back Alsace and Lorraine to France, creating a Poland which
-shall include all the Poles and a greater Bohemia and a great Jugo-Slav
-commonwealth and restoring Rumanian Hungary to Rumania, and Italian
-Austria to Italy, and driving the Turk from Europe and freeing Armenia
-and Syria and Arabia. After victory let us join in any arrangement to
-increase the likelihood of future international peace, but let us treat
-this as an addition to, and never as a substitute for, the preparedness
-which is the only sure guarantee against either war or measureless
-disaster. Therefore let us at once introduce as our permanent national
-policy the system of universal obligatory military training of all our
-young men.
-
-
-
-
-THE PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
-
-DECEMBER 5, 1917
-
-
-The President has in admirable language set forth the firm resolve
-of the American people that the war shall be fought through to the
-end until it is crowned by the peace of complete victory. He states
-unequivocally that our task is to win the war, that nothing shall turn
-us aside from it until it is accomplished, and that every power and
-resource we possess will be used to achieve this purpose. He states
-that there shall be no peace until the war is won. He says that this
-peace must deliver, not only Belgium and Northern France, but the
-peoples of Austria-Hungary, of the Balkan Peninsula, and of Turkey in
-Europe and Asia from “the impudent and alien dominion of the Prussian
-military and commercial autocracy.” He emphatically states that we have
-no purpose to wrong the German people or subject them to oppression,
-but merely to prevent others from being oppressed by them. He states
-that if Germany persists in adherence to her present rulers and their
-policies, it will be impossible, even after the war, to treat her as
-other nations are treated, but that, although we intend to right the
-wrongs inflicted by Germany on other nations, we have no intention to
-inflict similar wrongs on Germany in return. He says that the mind of
-the Russian people has been poisoned by the rulers of Germany, exactly
-as the latter have poisoned the minds of their own people.
-
-To all of this the heart of the American people will answer a devout
-amen. The message is a solemn pledge on behalf of this Nation that we
-shall use every energy we possess to win the war, and that we shall
-accept no peace not based on the complete overthrow of Germany. The
-American people must now devote themselves with grim resolution and
-whole-hearted purpose to the effective translation of this pledge into
-action, for, of course, the sole value of such a promise lies in the
-manner in which it is actually made good. The people must back the
-Government in every step to carry into effect this pledge and must
-tolerate no failure in any official charged with the duty of carrying
-it into effect.
-
-I shall shortly discuss the proposals of the President in reference to
-Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria. But in this editorial I wish merely,
-as one among the countless Americans to whom the honor and welfare
-and high ideals of America are dear, to say amen to the President’s
-expressed purpose to wage this war through to the end with all our
-strength and to accept no peace save that of complete victory.
-
-
-
-
-FOUR BITES OF A CHERRY
-
-DECEMBER 7, 1917
-
-
-In his recent message to Congress President Wilson stated that in
-order “to push our great war of freedom and justice to its righteous
-conclusion we must clear away with a thorough hand all impediments to
-success,” and added, “The very embarrassing obstacle that stands in our
-way is that we are at war with Germany, but not with her allies.” He
-recommended that we declare war on Austria, and added, “The same logic
-would lead also to a declaration of war against Turkey and Bulgaria.”
-But inferentially and for reasons not apparent he advised against such
-action.
-
-The President is entirely right in stating that our failure hitherto
-to declare war on the allies of Germany has been a very embarrassing
-obstacle to our success, and he is entirely right in advising a
-declaration of war against Austria. Incidentally I wish to point out
-that this is precisely what I insisted upon in these columns two
-months ago, and what I had elsewhere advocated six months ago, and it
-is worth while remembering that the Administration papers then assailed
-me for urging the course which, although there has not been the
-slightest change in the situation, the President now urges.
-
-There was no justification whatever for failure to declare war
-on Austria when we declared war on Germany, and there is now no
-justification for failure to declare war on Bulgaria and Turkey when
-we declare war on Austria. There is no use in making four bites of a
-cherry. There is no use in going to war a little, but not much. The
-President has sent a message pledging support to Rumania, but it is
-worse than an empty form to send such a message unless we forthwith
-declare war on Bulgaria. The President has appointed a Sunday for the
-special expression of sympathy with Armenia, but such expression of
-sympathy is utterly meaningless unless we go to war with Turkey. The
-Austro-Hungarian and Turkish empires must be broken up if we intend
-to make the world even moderately safe for democracy. There must
-be a revived Poland, taking in all the Poles of Austria, Prussia,
-and Russia; a greater Bohemia, taking in Moravia and the Slovaks;
-a great Jugo-Slav commonwealth, including Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia,
-and Herzegovina, while the Rumanians in Hungary should become part
-of Rumania and the Italians in Austria part of Italy. The Turk must
-be driven from Europe and Christian and Arab freed. Only in this
-manner can we do justice to the subject peoples tyrannized over by
-the Germans, Magyars, and Turks. Only in this way can we remove the
-menace of German aggression, which has become a haunting nightmare
-for all civilizations, especially in the case of small, well-behaved,
-liberty-loving peoples.
-
-By declaring war on Germany’s allies we do not commit ourselves to
-asking anything that is not just for our own allies. But by failing to
-declare war on Germany’s allies we are ourselves guilty of injustice to
-our own allies.
-
-
-
-
-THE RED CROSS CHRISTMAS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
-
-DECEMBER 12, 1917
-
-
-Next week, the week before Christmas, the Red Cross wishes to add ten
-million new members to the five million members it already possesses.
-Last June the Red Cross War Council asked the people of the United
-States to raise one hundred millions of dollars for Red Cross work, and
-the people responded by raising one hundred and nineteen millions. The
-purpose now is to increase threefold its membership.
-
-This is the people’s war. All people should, so far as possible, share
-the burden and the glory. The whole fighting manhood of the Nation,
-without any exception save in the interest of the Nation, should be
-trained to arms and made ready for the front. The Liberty Loans should
-be taken by every one so that the bondholders of the Nation may be
-the people of the Nation, and now this Red Cross membership campaign
-is one more Nation-wide effort to bring home to all our people their
-obligations to this country and to suffering humanity.
-
-We must realize that every single individual in this country is
-derelict to his duty unless according to his capacity he does his part
-in helping organize for the war. Individual effort alone will not avail
-and Germany’s strength has come from her keen realization of this fact.
-We must have an organized Nation, both at the front and at home. There
-can be no organization without discipline, and the Red Cross is one
-of the great agencies through which we can make progress toward such
-self-discipline.
-
-The Red Cross does not ask for the new members primarily because of
-the money they bring. The money will do great good, for the need is
-pressing; but even more important than the money will be the effect if
-on Christmas morning the Red Cross can flash around the world the news
-that ten million more Americans have joined its ranks and thereby put
-themselves unqualifiedly behind our army and navy.
-
-The Red Cross has done an extraordinary work abroad and is doing an
-extraordinary work at home. Abroad it is in every way supplementing
-the army and navy medical corps in Europe and is accumulating enormous
-hospital supplies for the use of our soldiers and sailors. It has sent
-over a million dollars in money and stores to Italy. It is giving
-both military and civilian relief in France. It is supplying over
-thirty-five hundred French military hospitals and two thousand French
-civil hospitals with surgical dressings, drugs, and supplies. It is
-helping to care for half a million tuberculosis victims and restore
-a million and a half French refugees to normal life. At home it is
-helping to care for the dependent families of our soldiers and sailors.
-It has organized fifty-seven army and navy base hospitals, over a dozen
-of which have already been sent to France. Its useful activities in
-different lines are well-nigh innumerable.
-
-This is the work the Red Cross has done and is doing for America and
-the world. Now let all Americans in their turn stand by the Red Cross
-and help in its Christmas membership drive.
-
-
-
-
-BEING BRAYED IN A MORTAR
-
-DECEMBER 18, 1917
-
-
-President Wilson speaks in military matters through his Secretary of
-War. The sole importance of the Secretary of War’s report comes from
-its being the official declaration of the President. I discuss it as
-such.
-
-According to the reports in the New York World, the Secretary of
-War states that “he does not favor universal military training as a
-permanent policy.” Mr. Wilson’s secretary, therefore, takes what is in
-effect the position of Mr. Bryan, which was picturesquely phrased as
-being that a million men can at need spring to arms overnight. The
-Administration’s attitude is less picturesquely expressed, but it is
-precisely as futile and as unspeakably mischievous from a standpoint
-of permanent national interest. Moreover, it is taken at the very
-time when the disastrous effect of the Administration’s policy of
-complete unpreparedness is being shown by the admissions of General
-Crozier on the first day of the congressional investigation. Mr.
-Baker’s report, Mr. Bryan’s theory, and the things already shown by
-the congressional investigation dovetail into one another. They stand
-in the relation of cause and effect. The Administration now officially
-and complacently announces that the policy which at this very moment
-has proved disastrous is to be persevered in for the future, therefore
-assumes complete responsibility for every blunder and delay, and for
-all the misconduct, and announces that these blunders and delays and
-all this misconduct have taught us nothing, and that we are to amble
-onward in the same futile path until disaster overtakes. Mr. Wilson’s
-Administration officially declares that we shall persist in our own
-folly until we are brayed in the mortar of dreadful calamity.
-
-If the Administration frankly and manfully acknowledged its evil errors
-in the past and championed a policy which would prevent the repetition
-of these errors in the future, I would think only of the future and not
-of the past, but now it is necessary to emphasize the past in order to
-avoid disaster in the future.
-
-We are in the eleventh month since Germany went to war with us. We have
-not yet built an aeroplane fit to match the speedy battle planes of our
-foes. We have not built a heavy field gun; on the contrary, we have
-had to draw on burdened friends to give us artillery. In the training
-camps of the national army the artillery regiments still have about
-ten wooden guns for every old field piece, and they have none of the
-modern guns they are to use in the war. There are rifles only for every
-third or fourth man. Until ten months had elapsed there was no target
-practice save for a few specially selected units. The troops still
-have only wooden machine guns and the trench mortars they themselves
-improvise.
-
-Until ten months had elapsed they lacked even the necessary warm
-clothing. They have endured entirely needless suffering and hardship.
-Our troops in France have received thousands of coffins, but an
-insufficient number of shoes. At this moment not more than one tenth of
-our soldiers, taken altogether, are fit to go to battle. Nine tenths of
-our gallant and fine-spirited men are still without the training, arms,
-and equipment that would permit them to meet any trained foes. After
-ten months of war and the expenditure of huge sums of money, we are
-still absolutely unable to defend ourselves and owe our own safety only
-to the fleets and armies of our war-worn allies.
-
-This condition is due solely and entirely to the policy of
-unpreparedness to which the Administration adhered for two and one
-half years when even the blind ought to have read the lesson of the
-great war. The Administration now announces that we are not to alter
-this policy and that we are to continue the do-nothing policy of
-refusing to help. If the American people follow the lead thus given
-them, they will be guilty of criminal folly.
-
-
-
-
-RENDERING A GREAT PUBLIC SERVICE
-
-DECEMBER 20, 1917
-
-
-Senator Chamberlain has rendered a public service by presenting the
-bill to provide universal obligatory military training for all the
-young men of the Nation. Senator Wadsworth has rendered a public
-service by pushing the senatorial investigation of our lamentable
-military unpreparedness. Congressman Medill McCormick has rendered a
-public service by showing that we have heavily burdened our war-worn
-ally, France, by demanding from her the guns which it was inexcusable
-in us not previously to have built.
-
-These three services all hang together. Senator Chamberlain’s proposal
-is to supplant selective conscription after war has begun by universal
-service, which would probably mean the avoidance of war altogether. It
-was grave misfortune that at the outset of this war we did not call for
-a million volunteers and at the same time put all the young men between
-nineteen and twenty-two into the training camps. There has been some
-very gross favoritism in granting exemption and, moreover, the men
-between twenty-two and thirty-one include a high percentage of married
-men and of others who ought not to go to war at present. This unwise,
-wasteful, and inefficient system should not be patched up. The Nation
-sorely needs, both as a war measure and as a permanent policy, the
-immediate introduction of universal military training and service for
-all our young men as proposed above.
-
-Senator Wadsworth and Representative McCormick are in straightforward
-fashion showing the inevitable results of the policy of unpreparedness
-which we have followed for three and a half years, and which the
-Administration, through Secretary Baker, now actually advocates as
-our permanent policy. Senator Wadsworth has shown, beyond possibility
-of anything except willful misrepresentation, that he has no partisan
-purpose whatever and that the investigation is designed solely to
-rouse the Government and the public to greater efforts in speeding up
-the war. The Committee on Military Affairs of the Senate is showing
-no partisanship. They realize that we cannot win the war merely by
-announcing programmes. They realize that we have a long road to
-travel and that we have made a slow start. They wish to help the
-Administration, and in order to do this it is imperative to tell the
-truth.
-
-Some of the fault for the present situation is due to the shortcomings
-of individuals during the last ten months, but the major part is due to
-our failure as a Nation to embark on the policy of preparedness three
-and a half years ago. Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time.
-Now our people must brace themselves to face unpleasant truths. There
-is not the slightest reason for discouragement. If we choose, we can,
-through our governmental representatives, quickly remedy the defects
-and then exert with decisive effect our tremendous latent powers. But
-we need to know the truth and then to act with instant and resolute
-efficiency and with single-minded patriotism.
-
-
-
-
-A BETRAYAL OF DEMOCRACY
-
-DECEMBER 21, 1917
-
-
-President Wilson has announced that we are in this war to make the
-world safe for democracy. Either this declaration was worse than empty
-rhetoric or we are in honor bound to make it good. Indeed, to prove
-false to it now is to be guilty of peculiarly offensive hypocrisy.
-
-The only way to make the world safe for democracy is to free the people
-over whom Turkey and Austria tyrannize. Every day’s delay in declaring
-war on Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria has represented and now represents
-a betrayal of democracy and of our allies. It is hypocritical to send
-an encouraging message to Rumania and not to declare war on Bulgaria.
-It is hypocritical to shed crocodile tears over Armenia and not to
-declare war on Turkey.
-
-When President Wilson says, “We do not wish in any way to rearrange
-the Austria-Hungarian Empire; it is no affair of ours what they do,”
-he is engaged in the betrayal of democracy, and if his present words
-are to be taken seriously, then his declaration about making the world
-safe for democracy was false and empty rhetoric. Either one statement
-or the other must be unsparingly condemned by all honest men. In view
-of the last statement there is small wonder that the Austrian Foreign
-Minister says that “it is to our interest to nail down” the statement
-in question, because it abandons the proposal, or, as the Austrian
-minister phrases it, “the catch phrase,” to allow all small states
-to determine their own destinies. No wonder that the leading Vienna
-paper contemptuously states that President Wilson wishes to act as an
-“European peace intermediary,” being one of the leaders who “apparently
-consider a warlike noise the best overture to a peace conference.”
-
-There is also no wonder that the Czech Slovaks feel with intense
-bitterness about this betrayal. One of their papers in this country
-describes how loyally they have supported America and the Allies, and
-describes the dreadful butcheries and persecutions of their men, women,
-and children in Bohemia, and then asks whether it can be true that
-America now really proposes to keep them “under the merciless tyranny
-of the Huns.”
-
-This is precisely what President Wilson proposes when he says that
-it is no affair of ours to rearrange the Austrian-Hungarian Empire,
-or, in other words, no affair of ours to free the Czechs, Slovaks,
-Jugo-Slavs, Italians, and Rumanians, who, together with the Poles, make
-up the majority of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and who are ground down
-by tyranny of the Germans and the Magyars.
-
-The President’s proposal represents three separate betrayals.
-
-It is the betrayal of the Slavs of Austria, to whose cause our allies
-have pledged themselves and who form a democratic population oppressed
-by a militaristic autocracy.
-
-It is the betrayal of democracy, because we abandon the majority who
-are our friends into the hands of a minority, who despise and hate us.
-
-It is the betrayal of the free people everywhere to Germany, for
-Germany is now a world menace, chiefly because Austria and Turkey are
-her subject allies, and President Wilson’s proposal is to leave them
-undisturbed.
-
-A peace without a change of frontiers and without indemnification for
-brutal wrongdoing, a peace which does not create an independent and
-united Poland and a greater Bohemia and Jugo-Slovak commonwealth, as
-well as a greater Italy and a greater Rumania, and which does not free
-and indemnify Belgium, would leave every perilous problem of Europe
-unsolved. It would be timid and calamitous folly to refuse to touch the
-disputed questions which, if left unanswered, are absolutely certain to
-invite a future war.
-
-
-
-
-BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS--A STUDY IN CAUSE AND EFFECT
-
-DECEMBER 27, 1917
-
-
-It is earnestly to be hoped that the congressional investigation into
-the fruits of our military unpreparedness will keep two objects clearly
-in mind. First, the aim must be to speed up the work of efficient war
-preparation by doing away with all the present practices that are
-wrong. Second, the aim should be to make evident to all our people that
-our present shameful shortcomings are due to failure to prepare in
-advance and that never again ought we to allow our governmental leaders
-to put us in such a humiliating and unworthy position.
-
-It will be quite impossible to get at all the facts of our
-unpreparedness. Most officers will be very reluctant to testify to
-the whole truth. They know that they will suffer if they do so,
-because they have seen the punishment inflicted by the Administration
-on Major-General Wood for the sole reason that he dared to tell the
-truth about our shortcomings, and dared to advocate preparedness in
-advance. For this reason I am not at liberty to quote the generals,
-colonels, captains, and lieutenants of the artillery, infantry, medical
-corps, and quartermaster corps who have told me of their troubles with
-unheated hospitals, insufficient drugs, summer underclothes in winter
-weather, lack of overcoats, of shoes, of rifles, of ammunition, of
-cannon. But in the camps I visited I saw some things so evident that
-no harm can come to any officer from my speaking of them.
-
-Last fall I saw thousands of men drilling with broomsticks. I have such
-a broomstick now before me. Last fall I saw thousands of men drilling
-with rudely whittled wooden guns. I have one such before me now. I saw
-them drilling with wooden machine guns as late as the beginning of
-December. I saw barrels mounted on sticks, on which zealous captains
-were endeavoring to teach their men how to ride a horse. I saw in the
-national army camps in Illinois and Ohio scores of wooden cannon.
-Doubtless any man can see them now if he goes there.
-
-The excellent officers in the camps are as rapidly as possible
-remedying these deficiencies. I hope and believe that by spring they
-will all be remedied. But let our people not forget that for one year
-after Germany went to war with us we were wholly unable to defend
-ourselves and owed our safety only to the English and French ships and
-armies.
-
-The cause was our refusal to prepare in advance. President Wilson’s
-message of December, 1914, in which he ridiculed those who advocated
-preparedness, was part of the cause. His presidential campaign on the
-“He kept us out of war” issue was part of the cause. We paid the price
-later with broomstick rifles, logwood cannon, soldiers without shoes,
-and epidemics of pneumonia in the camps. We are paying the price now.
-We pay the price in the doubled cost of necessary war supplies. We
-pay the price in shortage of coal and congested transportation. The
-refusal to prepare and the price we now pay because of the refusal
-stand in the relation of cause and effect.
-
-I do not dwell on these facts to blame anybody. I dwell on them in
-order to wake our people to the necessity of learning the lesson they
-teach. Our next and permanent duty is to introduce the policy of
-universal obligatory military training for all our young men before
-they are twenty-one.
-
-
-
-
-OUR DUTY FOR THE NEW YEAR
-
-JANUARY 1, 1918
-
-
-In the papers there recently appeared a brief statement made by an
-unnamed young American major to his troops in the trenches in France.
-He said:
-
- We have reached the top in training. If you need anything, come and
- tell me and I will get it for you if I can. If I do not get it, I do
- not want to hear about it again, for it means that I cannot get it. We
- will have three meals a day if we can get them. If we have to miss one
- meal, we will not be badly off, and if we miss two or three, it will
- not be much worse. We are expected to work from midnight of one day to
- midnight of the next day. If there is any chance to sleep between, all
- right. It will also be all right if there is no chance. Let everybody
- pitch in. While mud and water must be fought, it may be much worse.
- The hopes of the Nation are fixed on each man.
-
-The ideal of duty thus set before our soldiers, before the Americans
-who at this time risk most and suffer most, is substantially the ideal
-of duty toward which all of the rest of us here in America should, in
-our turn, likewise strive. We must brace ourselves for effort and for
-endurance through a hard and dangerous year. High of heart and with
-unfaltering soul, we must do our part in the grim work of toiling and
-fighting to bring a little nearer the day when there shall be orderly
-liberty throughout the world and when justice and mercy and brotherly
-love shall obtain between man and man and among all the nations of
-mankind. We must show our faith by our works. We must prove our truth
-by our endeavor. We must scorn the baseness which uses high-sounding
-speech to cloak ignoble action and which seems to betray suffering
-right with the Judas kiss of the treacherous peace.
-
-During the year that is opening we at home will suffer discomfort and
-privation and wearing anxiety. What of it? What we at home endure will
-be as nothing compared to that which is faced by the sons and brothers,
-by the husbands and fathers at the front, and what the fighting men of
-to-day face and bear will be no harder than what was faced and borne by
-Washington’s troops at Valley Forge and Trenton and by the soldiers of
-Grant and Lee when they wrestled in the Wilderness. We inherit as free
-men this fair and mighty land only because our fathers and forefathers
-had iron in their blood. We can leave our heritage undiminished to
-those who come after us only if we in our turn show a resolute and
-rugged manliness in the dark days of trial that have come upon us.
-
-Let us all individually and collectively do our whole duty with brave
-hearts. Let us pay our taxes, subscribe to the government loans, work
-at our several tasks with all our strength, support all the agencies
-which take care of our troops, and accept the stinting in fuel or food
-as part of the price we pay. Let our prime care be the welfare and
-warlike efficiency of the men at the front and in the training camps.
-Let us hold to sharp account every public servant who in any way comes
-short of his duty in this respect. But let us also insist that the
-soldiers at the front and in the camps treat every shortcoming merely
-as an obstacle to be overcome or remedied or offset by their own energy
-and courage and resourcefulness. The one absolute essential for our
-people is to insist that this war be seen through at no matter what
-cost until it is crowned with the peace of overwhelming victory for the
-right.
-
-
-
-
-TELL THE TRUTH AND SPEED UP THE WAR
-
-JANUARY 4, 1918
-
-
-Any man who at this time leaves undone anything to increase our
-fighting efficiency is a foe of America and a friend of Germany. The
-man who objects to fearless exposure and criticism of the governmental
-shortcomings which must be exposed if they are to be corrected is a
-foe to America and a friend to Germany, and in addition shows that
-he possesses a thoroughly servile mind. The critic whose criticism
-is not constructive, or who treats shortcomings as causes for being
-disheartened about the war instead of as an incentive to strive for the
-greater efficiency in waging the war and in preparing for the future,
-is a foe to America and a friend to every present or future foe of
-America.
-
-When the Administration stands against universal military training and
-talks with vague looseness of future paper guarantees against war,
-it renders it imperatively necessary to bring home to our people the
-tremendous damage done by our lamentable folly in refusing to prepare
-since August, 1914. It is a betrayal of our country to protest against
-telling the truth for this purpose.
-
-This is the twelfth month since Germany in effect declared war on us
-and we broke relations with Germany. We have developed our military
-strength so slowly that as yet we would be wholly unable to defend
-ourselves if we were not protected by the fleets and armies of our
-allies. No modern armies can fight without training in modern war
-methods and without modern field guns, auto rifles and airplanes. As
-yet we only have either cannon borrowed from the hard-pressed French
-or else wooden cannon. We have no auto rifles. Our airplanes are still
-unfit to fight modern war planes.
-
-The Patriotic Education Society of Washington has done capital
-constructive work in truthfully telling our needs. It has fearlessly
-shown our dreadful shortage in shipbuilding and the deceitful wording
-of government announcements designed to conceal this shortage. It has
-shown the vital need of our, at this late time, bending every energy to
-building ships by working three eight-hour shifts a day in order to put
-our soldiers and supplies at the front at the earliest possible moment.
-The building of transport ships was the central feature of the problem
-we faced on January 31 a year ago. It was not only a misfortune, but a
-crime, to neglect it, as for nine months afterward it was neglected.
-The newspapers have just printed the statement that Colonel House’s
-committee reports that it is of the utmost importance to get our troops
-quickly to the front. Of course it is. Every man of broad vision has
-known this for a year. If there had been more fearless truth-telling
-during the year there would have been much less governmental delay and
-inefficiency.
-
-Tell the truth and speed up the war. Tell the truth only for
-constructive purposes and only with the unalterable determination to
-exert every particle of our strength at the earliest possible moment,
-so as to win peace by overwhelming victory.
-
-
-
-
-THE COST OF UNPREPAREDNESS
-
-JANUARY 6, 1918
-
-
-Senator Chamberlain, in order to minimize the chance of future war and
-to insure us against disaster, if in future war should unhappily come,
-has introduced a bill for universal military training of our young
-men under the age of twenty-one. The Administration declares against
-universal training and therefore for a continuance of the policy of
-unpreparedness, the fruits of which we are enjoying. Some of these
-fruits are as follows:
-
-According to the statement of Mr. Fitzgerald, the chairman of the
-Committee on Appropriations of the House, Congress appropriated during
-the last year $18,880,000,000 and provided authorization for which
-cash must be supplied before next July of $2,510,000,000, making our
-year’s war expenses a grand total of $21,390,000,000. This equals the
-entire sum Great Britain expended during the first three years of the
-war. It is over twenty times as great as for any previous year in our
-history, except the year that saw the close of the Civil War, and it
-is seventeen times as great as that. The appropriations for the year
-are twenty-two times as great as the total interest-bearing debt of
-the United States one year ago. They come within four billion dollars
-of the total expenditures of the United States Government from 1776 to
-1917. They equal the expenditure of twenty dollars a minute for every
-minute since the birth of Christ.
-
-Had we started to prepare in time, one half of this cost would
-have been saved. The tremendous pressure coming suddenly caused an
-immense increase in expenditures, even aside from the futile waste,
-extravagance, and misdirection. Had we gone into the war when the
-Lusitania was sunk, we would have saved a third of the sum, for we have
-provided to loan our allies about seven billions. Our delay in going
-to war and, above all, delay in preparing, have resulted in a huge
-increase in the money chest and in the length of the war and in the
-terrible total of avoidable human suffering.
-
-The lack of preparedness is responsible for the sickness among our
-soldiers. Take as an example the ravages of pneumonia in the training
-camps. The men in the training camps are physically of exceptional type
-and are in the prime of life. Their death-rate ought not normally to be
-more than a small fraction of that in New York City, where the total
-population includes the very young, the very old, the weak and sick,
-the badly nurtured. The population of New York City is 4,800,000. The
-population of the thirty camps is about six hundred thousand. In the
-two weeks of last December the death-rate in the city from pneumonia
-was one to every 16,500 people. In the camps it was one to 2800.
-Therefore, the specially selected men of the camps suffered from a
-death-rate six times as great as in the heterogeneous city population.
-And of every three men attacked, one died.
-
-Doubtless administrative blundering during the last year is largely
-responsible for this showing. But the prime cause is the failure to
-prepare in advance. Our first duty at the moment is to speed up the
-war. Our second duty is to secure real preparedness as outlined in
-Senator Chamberlain’s bill.
-
-
-
-
-COÖPERATION AND CONTROL
-
-JANUARY 8, 1918
-
-
-The assumption of control by the Government over the railroads was
-certainly necessary. Exactly how far it will go is not evident.
-At present what has been done is merely to introduce government
-supervision and control over railroads which are required to combine
-their operations in flat defiance Of the Sherman Law. In other words,
-the Government has wisely abandoned the effort to enforce competition
-among the railroads and has introduced the principle of control over
-corporative organizations.
-
-The Attorney-General has just announced that he will, for the time
-being, abandon the suits under the Sherman Law to break up the
-harvester and steel corporations, because it is not wise to do so
-during the war. Mr. Culbertson, the able expert on the government
-tariff board, has announced that the Sherman Law is mischievous
-in international trade. Mr. Francis Heney, than whom in all the
-country there is no more determined and efficient enemy of wrongdoing
-corporations, has stated that the Sherman Law, the so-called Anti-Trust
-Law, is mischievous in our domestic business and should be repealed.
-In other words, under the strain of the war the Sherman Law has
-completely broken down and the Government is not merely conniving at,
-but encouraging, its violation by many different corporations.
-
-The Sherman Law, or so-called Anti-Trust Law, is just as mischievous
-in peace as in war. It represents an effort to meet a great evil in
-the wrong way. As long as corporations claimed complete immunity from
-government control, the first necessity was to establish the right of
-the Government to control them. This right and power of the Government
-was established by the Northern Securities suit, which prevented all
-the railroads of the country from being united under one corporation
-which defied government control. The suits against the Standard Oil
-and Tobacco trusts followed. The Supreme Court decreed that the trusts
-had been guilty of grave misconduct and should be dissolved, but not
-a particle of good followed their dissolution. It is evident that the
-Sherman Law, or so-called Anti-Trust Law, in no way meets the evils of
-the industrial world. To try to break up corporations because they are
-big and efficient is either ineffective or mischievous. What is needed
-is to exercise government control over them, so as to encourage their
-efficiency and prosperity, but to insure that the efficiency is used in
-the public interest and that the prosperity is properly passed around.
-
-Merely to repeal the Sherman Law without putting anything in its place
-would do harm. It should at once be amended or superseded by a law
-which would in some shape permit and require the issuing of licenses
-by the Federal Government to corporations doing an interstate or
-international business. Corporations which did not take out such
-licenses or comply with the rules of the Government’s administrative
-board would be subject to the Sherman Law. The others would be under
-government control and would be encouraged to coöperate and in every
-way to become prosperous and efficient, the Government guaranteeing by
-its supervision that the corporations’ prosperity and efficiency were
-in the public interest.
-
-
-
-
-THE ARTEMUS WARD THEORY OF WAR
-
-JANUARY 17, 1918
-
-
-The great American humorist, Artemus Ward, whose writings gave such
-delight to Abraham Lincoln, once remarked that he was willing to
-sacrifice all his wife’s relatives on the altar of the country. Mr.
-Ward was not in President Lincoln’s Cabinet. Mr. Baker is in President
-Wilson’s Cabinet. He takes substantially the same ground that Artemus
-Ward took, although possibly with a more unconscious humor. He has just
-uttered a heroic sentiment expressing his pleased acquiescence in the
-sacrifice of France and England’s armies for the defense of the common
-cause.
-
-On Wednesday of last week, discussing the likelihood that the Germans,
-relieved from anxiety of Russia, would make a tremendous assault on
-the western front, Mr. Baker said: “The impending German offensive
-will possibly be their greatest assault. The French and British armies
-can be relied upon to withstand the shock.” Mr. Baker is President
-Wilson’s Secretary of War. He holds at this time the most important
-office in our Government. He thus announces to our allies and the world
-that in the twelfth month after Germany went to war with us, America,
-the richest country of the world with a population of one hundred
-million people, after being at war nearly a year and after such warning
-as never a nation had before, is wholly unable to send any effective
-assistance to repel the greatest assault of the war, and that the only
-military measure which can be taken is to express through Mr. Baker
-the belief that the British and French armies can be relied upon to do
-alone the duty which we ought to share with them.
-
-This statement of Mr. Baker absolves us from all necessity of
-commenting on his ingenuous defense of a system of preparedness which
-leaves our small army at the front with no artillery except what we
-get from the French and our army at home with batteries made out of
-telegraph poles and logwood. It is not necessary to discuss the exact
-amount of pride we should as a Nation take in the fact that as a Nation
-after eleven months of war we are proudly emerging from the broomstick
-rifle stage preparedness into the telegraph pole stage preparedness.
-Mr. Baker’s statement sums up the situation exactly. We have been at
-war nearly a year, and when the Germans make their greatest assault our
-preparedness is only such as to warrant our expressing belief that our
-allies can win without our help.
-
-The New York Times, a supporter of the Administration, comments
-truthfully on the situation:
-
- Nine months after entering the war not only are we giving our allies
- no effective military aid, but all our bustle and stir doesn’t hide
- the fact that, through incompetence and lack of organization and
- system, we are far behind in our preparations to supply rifles,
- ammunition, machine guns, airships, uniforms, clothing for the troops
- we shall some time have at the front. Our backwardness is naturally
- disquieting to our allies. If one million American soldiers, or half
- that number, fully equipped, had stood on the soil of France, Lloyd
- George would have made no speech to British working-men restating
- after a fashion the war aims of the Allies. There would have been no
- occasion, nor demand for a speech telling the labor unions what the
- troops of Britain are fighting for.
-
-The pacifists and the agencies of German intrigue would not be working
-for a peace in the interests of the capitalistic and militaristic
-autonomy of Germany. As the Times well says, the man who now works for
-such a peace while Germany is unconquered “is the most heartless of
-militarists or enemy of the world’s peace and freedom.”
-
-
-
-
-THE FRUITS OF WATCHFUL WAITING
-
-JANUARY 18, 1918
-
-
-We have been at war nearly one year. We have failed to do any damage to
-Germany, but we have done a great deal of damage to ourselves. Recently
-the President’s Secretary of War announced that the war was three
-thousand miles away and so he had not prepared to meet it. Incidentally
-the feats of the German submarine off Newport in the fall of 1916
-showed that if it had not been for the Allied fleets and armies the war
-would then have been on our own shores. But at the moment it is three
-thousand miles away, and yet this Nation is suffering the kind of grave
-economic derangement that we would suffer if a hostile army was on our
-own shores. We have accomplished very little. We have suffered very
-much. Both the failure in accomplishment and the amount of avoidable
-suffering are due to the resolute refusal of our Government to prepare
-in advance and to its fatuous persistence in the policy of watchful
-waiting.
-
-Doubtless part of the present trouble in connection with coal is due
-to unwisdom in the price-fixing of bituminous coal. Doubtless part of
-it is due to the railway congestion, which in its turn is due to the
-complete lack of system and consequent chaos due to suddenly imposing
-on well-meaning, stodgy government officials of average capacity the
-duty of dealing in a tremendous hurry with a situation of unprecedented
-size, complexity, and importance, but the temporary causes are all
-secondary to the great cause of complete failure to prepare in advance.
-
-Our economic unpreparedness is just as complete as our military
-unpreparedness and is one of the chief factors therein. We are now
-paying bitterly for the fact that two and three years ago it was deemed
-politically wise to shape our governmental policy along the lines of
-“Watchful waiting” and “He kept us out of war.”
-
-If three years ago we had begun in good faith and earnestly to prepare,
-and if, when the Lusitania was sunk, we had acted as precisely as we
-did act with no more provocation in February, last, this war would now
-have been over. An immense amount of bloodshed would have been spared
-and the danger of German militarism would have been forever averted. In
-such case we would have greatly developed the trained administrators
-and the coherent system necessary to deal wisely with the economic no
-less than the military features of a great war. Our refusal to prepare
-in advance and our fatuous acceptance of rhetorical platitudes as a
-substitute for preparations have resulted in our present military
-impotence and profound and far-reaching economic derangement. The
-profound business distrust, the unrest of labor, the coal famine, the
-congestion of traffic, and the shutting down of industries at the
-time when it is most important that production should be speeded to
-the highest point, all are due primarily to the refusal to face facts
-during the first two years and a half of the World War and the seething
-welter of inefficiency and confusion in which the policy of watchful
-waiting finally plunged us. Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in
-time. All far-sighted patriots most earnestly hope that this Nation
-will learn the bitter lesson and that never again will we be caught so
-shamefully unprepared, spiritually, economically, and from the military
-standpoint as has been the case in the year that is now passing.
-
-
-
-
-TELL THE TRUTH
-
-JANUARY 21, 1918
-
-
-Nearly a year has passed since, on February 3, by formally breaking
-relations with Germany, we reluctantly admitted that she had gone to
-war with us. During that year it has been incessantly insisted that it
-was unpatriotic under any consideration to tell an unpleasant truth or
-to point out a governmental shortcoming. The result has not been happy.
-
-The famous war correspondent, Mr. Caspar Whitney, has returned from the
-front so that he might avoid our fatuous and sinister censorship, and
-tell our people the truth about our army in France. He shows that this
-army, which, Secretary Baker had just assured our people, was admirably
-equipped, in reality had no cannon or machine guns except those it had
-borrowed from the hard-pressed French; that there was a lamentable
-shortage of shoes; that the motor cars were poor; that we had no
-airplanes. From another source it appeared that many thousand coffins
-had been sent over. Our troops had no shoes, but they had plenty of
-coffins. Their ammunition was defective, and they had neither cannon
-nor auto rifles; but they had plenty of coffins.
-
-At the same time the death of gallant Major Gardner from pneumonia
-called sharp attention to the evil health conditions in most of our
-home training camps, and the Senate investigating committee showed a
-really appalling slackness and inefficiency in the management of the
-War Department under Mr. Baker. There is no particular reason to blame
-Mr. Baker; he did not appoint himself; he did not seek the office.
-Logwood cannon and wooden auto rifles are mostly incidental features of
-the inevitable outcome.
-
-All this was done in the face of repeated and explicit warnings from
-the best authority. Major-General Leonard Wood told the military
-committee of the Senate and of the House in detail about our
-shortcomings two years ago, and again one year ago. The Administration
-not only refused to remedy these shortcomings, but has spitefully
-punished General Wood ever since.
-
-Criticism should be both truthful and constructive. I have told not the
-whole truth, but the minimum truth absolutely necessary in order that
-we may, before it is too late, speed up the war, and in order that we
-may insist on the passage of the Chamberlain Bill, so that never again
-may we be caught utterly and shamefully unprepared. Let us insist that
-the truth be told. The truth only harms weaklings. The American people
-wish the truth, and can stand the truth.
-
-
-
-
-JUSTIFICATION OF CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM
-
-JANUARY 28, 1918
-
-
-Senator Chamberlain and his excellent committee have already seen the
-justification of their investigation. They have forced the appointment
-of Mr. Stettinius, a trained and capable expert, as head of the war
-supplies purchasing department. The fact that the appointment is made
-in order to obviate the need of following Senator Chamberlain’s more
-thoroughgoing programme does not alter the fact that it represents
-a certain advance and that this advance is primarily due to the
-investigation by Senator Chamberlain’s committee. It is a striking
-tribute to the necessity for and the good results of that investigation.
-
-The investigation has been wholly non-partisan. It has been conducted
-with an eye single to the needs of the army and of our country. Senator
-Chamberlain is a Democrat, just as Secretary Baker is a Democrat. The
-committee has fearlessly exposed very grave abuses and shortcomings
-and has taken constructive action to remedy them. Secretary Baker’s
-testimony shows that, to use the language of Senator Chamberlain, the
-President has been misled as to the facts. His statements as to the
-satisfactory condition of things in the camps are not in accord with
-the facts. It is, of course, exceedingly difficult to get testimony
-from army officers because they have vividly before their eyes the
-signal punishment inflicted by the Administration on General Wood
-for fearlessly telling the truth, and those of us who have examined
-conditions and know how bad they are cannot give our authorities in
-many cases because we will not expose good officers to punishment in
-order to save ourselves from contradiction.
-
-But certain vitally important facts are easily attainable. At the very
-time that Secretary Baker was testifying that the army had enough
-rifles, the governor of Mississippi in the public press on January 17
-stated that he had been helpless to prevent the burning alive of a
-negro because the home guards had no rifles and because “there are over
-five hundred national guardsmen at Camp Jackson, but they are equally
-helpless because they have no rifles.” Many deficiencies can be covered
-up or their existence denied, but some cannot thus be concealed. Any
-one can see the wooden cannon and wooden machine guns in the training
-camps, every one knows that our army at the front has French cannon
-and French machine guns. Will not Secretary Baker state frankly when
-our own cannon and machine guns will be ready? After one year of war
-we have none. Must we wait another year before getting them? Caspar
-Whitney, a responsible man, has stated lamentable shortcomings of our
-army at the front. Will not the Secretary advise us what steps he has
-taken to investigate this statement and remedy the shortcomings?
-
-The appointment of Mr. Stettinius is a good thing, but it does
-not represent even a half step toward bringing order out of the
-administrative chaos at Washington. Drastic action is needed to secure
-a plan providing for coördination, responsibility and efficiency, and
-above all, for securing the right men to administer the plan.
-
-
-
-
-SECRETARY BAKER’S GENERAL DENIAL
-
-FEBRUARY 2, 1918
-
-
-Secretary Baker’s denial of any serious shortcomings in the
-administration of the War Department comes under several heads. Part
-of it is prophecy, which we all hope will turn out to be justified.
-Part of it is explanation or denials of facts, as to which it is easy
-to get first-hand information. With this part I shall deal in my next
-editorial. Part of it relates to allegations as to which it is almost
-impossible to get first-hand information except from officers whose
-names cannot be quoted, because this would probably entail punishment
-upon them. It is with this part that I now deal.
-
-General Wood two years ago, before the congressional committee, and
-again one year ago, before the congressional committee, set forth in
-detail our unpreparedness. Every fact he stated has proved to be true
-and to be but a small part of the truth. Yet he has been singled out
-for punishment because of thus having told Congress the truth, and this
-although we and our allies are now paying dearly for our failure to act
-on the truth which he thus told. Under such conditions it is impossible
-to make public the names of the officers and enlisted men through
-whom we occasionally learn of abuses. Nevertheless, it is imperative
-to try to correct the abuses. If the Administration had not punished
-General Wood for telling the truth, the complaints would be at once
-laid before the department and the wrongs remedied. Under existing
-conditions it is imperative to call public attention to them.
-
-A major-general informed me in October that he had one hundred rifles
-for twenty thousand men, and most strongly felt that these men should
-not have been brought to the camp until the hospitals, barracks,
-heating arrangements, clothes, and arms were ready for them. Another
-major-general told me, in explanation of the shortage of supplies
-abroad, that one shipload of big coast defense guns had to be returned
-because when they reached France it was discovered that there were
-no carriages for them. Hundreds of officers and non-commissioned
-officers have told me of lack of overcoats, of winter under-clothing,
-of heavy socks. One quartermaster, being unable otherwise to get
-woolen gloves for the men in cold weather, finally got them from the
-Red Cross and was officially reprimanded for so doing. Two officers
-informed me that when in France there was a shortage of shoes. They
-were told it was due to a shipment of coffins, one being told that
-they were not regular coffins, but boxes containing grave-clothes.
-The newspaper correspondents repeatedly have told of the shortage of
-shoes, one recent statement being that a shipment of clay pigeons,
-not coffins, was sent over, while Mr. Caspar Whitney recites that the
-surplusage was a large shipment of hospital cots. At any rate, the
-shortage of shoes is unquestioned, whether their places were taken by
-coffins, clay pigeons, or hospital cots. A leading New York business
-man has just written me of the complete lack of hospital and medical
-facilities in one camp. The superintendent of a Bible teachers’
-training school writes that his son volunteered, leaving a wife and two
-little children; that his pay was over a month in arrears, and that at
-Christmas time he wrote as follows:
-
- We have not yet received our November pay. At this time of the year
- the boys don’t want it for themselves; they want to send some little
- thing home to their mothers or wives or sweethearts, and in lots of
- cases to their children, to whom just a little something from daddy
- means so much. Yet even that little pleasure is denied us. Can you
- not bring this to the attention of the people who are supporting this
- Government?
-
-I have received many hundreds such appeals. To give the names of
-the writers would insure their punishment. To pay no heed to their
-appeals means that the abuses go unremedied. Doubtless an occasional
-informant is in error in his statement. But Senator Chamberlain’s
-speech and the testimony taken before his committee prove that the
-important statements I have made during the last few months as to the
-shortcomings in our army have been more than warranted by the facts.
-
-
-
-
-LET GEORGE SPEED UP THE WAR
-
-FEBRUARY 3, 1918
-
-
-In my last editorial I spoke of the things of which Secretary Baker
-explicitly or implicitly denies the existence, in justifying the
-Administration for the military delay and shortcomings that have
-marked our entry into war. But as to the major facts there is no room
-for denial. As to these Secretary Baker falls back on the comfortable
-doctrine that all our shortcomings are of no consequence because
-they are made good anyhow by the efforts of our allies--who, by the
-way, with preposterous silliness, are in official circles merely
-termed our associates. Secretary Baker explains that, although our
-forces in France have no field artillery or auto rifles, this is of
-no consequence because the French love to give us artillery and auto
-rifles. He explains that the greatest German offensive movement of the
-war is about to take place, an offensive movement which, if successful,
-means that we have lost the war, and he adds that we can trust England
-and France to repel this offensive. This is a naked statement that we
-are to let George do it. We are to announce that after being at war
-just a year our delays have been so great that we are almost negligible
-in the military sense and that we must trust to our allies to speed up
-the war.
-
-This verifies the prediction of von Hindenburg and von Tirpitz that
-it would take us eighteen months to become a real factor in the war.
-Americans laughed at this statement, but the ruthless and brutal and
-intelligent Germans were right and our own soft sentimentalities were
-their efficient allies. We are in the position of letting George speed
-up the war. Are the citizens of a proud and high-spirited Nation to be
-content with such a position?
-
-Our major shortcomings can neither be concealed nor denied. In October
-I personally saw thousands of infantrymen drilling with sticks. In
-December, I still saw artillerymen with sticks instead of rifles.
-A month ago most of the cannon in the national army camps, which I
-saw, were made of logs or of sections of telegraph poles and all the
-machine guns I saw were wooden dummies. The daily press has repeatedly
-published photos of these wooden rifles, cannon, and machine guns.
-Secretary Baker cannot deny this nor can he deny that in modern war
-an army without artillery is helpless. We are now getting a small
-number of machine guns. We are turning some heavy coast guns into field
-artillery, but as yet gallant General Pershing and his gallant men in
-France have to trust to the French for artillery and machine guns and
-war planes, and, thanks to our dawdling and indecision, we have an
-utterly insufficient number of cargo ships.
-
-We have been at war for a year. In April Congress stated that Germany
-had already committed repeated acts of war against us and that our
-own declaration of war was formal. It was then too late to undo the
-criminal mischief caused by our refusal to prepare during the preceding
-two and a half years, but we aggravated the damage immensely by our
-delays and follies. If we had exercised reasonable energy we would in
-six months have achieved more than we have actually achieved in a year.
-The least we can do now is to speed up the war ourselves. Let us insist
-that this be the end toward which with all our energy we now strive.
-
-
-
-
-LET UNCLE SAM GET INTO THE GAME
-
-FEBRUARY 5, 1918
-
-
-No one can tell how long this war will last. It may last three years
-more, and we should prepare accordingly. But it may close this year,
-and it is unpardonable of us not to act with such speed as to make our
-help available in substantial form at once. Uncle Sam must not be put
-in the position of the sub, who only gets into the game just before the
-whistle blows. Above all, he must not so act as to rouse suspicion that
-this attitude is due to deliberate shirking on his part.
-
-The prime aid in getting Uncle Sam into the game has come from the men
-who, in order to achieve this object, have truthfully set forth the
-unpleasant facts about our delay, military inefficiency, and total
-unpreparedness. The critics of these men have been either unwise or
-insincere. The most fatuous form of objection to such truth-telling is
-the assertion that it tends to prolong the war. It is the only thing
-that will shorten the war. Suppression of the truth as the habitual
-governmental policy has been successful in preventing our people from
-realizing our mistakes and even more successful in preventing their
-remedy.
-
-An excellent example of this policy of falsehood is furnished in a
-letter from a news agency offering to various newspapers cartoons
-assailing me because I had “criticized our unpreparedness and urged
-an immediate movement toward universal obligatory military training,”
-the cartoonist saying that I had said that I had seen artillerymen
-drilling with “wooden guns made from pieces of telegraph poles.” The
-writer admitted this, but stated that “these wooden imitations were as
-efficient for the purposes of learning as the real guns.” I suppose
-that this particular Champion of military inefficiency would believe
-that a rifle team could train for a championship match with dummy
-rifles of wood.
-
-Every important criticism made of our military unpreparedness and
-inefficiency during the past six months, and indeed during the
-preceding three years, has been proved true and in no case has there
-been correction of the abuse until it was exposed. General Pershing has
-just written home a scathing indictment of the military shortcomings of
-our higher officers abroad. This is after we have been at war a year,
-and it is directly due to the character of both the civilian and the
-military control that has been exercised from the swivel chairs of the
-War Department during this year.
-
-Our duty is solely to the country and to every official high or low
-precisely to the extent to which he loyally, disinterestedly, and
-efficiently serves the country. Let us get behind the United States.
-Let us think only of our patriotic duty. I care not a rap for politics
-at such a time as this. I supported Senator Chamberlain, my political
-and to some extent my personal opponent in the past, because on the
-great issue now up he served the country. I supported General Crowder,
-of whose politics I know nothing and care less, because he served the
-country. Stand behind America.
-
-
-
-
-CONSERVATION IS IMPORTANT AND PRODUCTION IS MORE IMPORTANT
-
-FEBRUARY 15, 1918
-
-
-It is very important that we should conserve many things, but
-especially food. It is, however, very much more important that we shall
-produce the food in order to conserve it. The governmental attitude
-toward production during the past year has been, at points, very
-unwise. There has not only been failure to encourage producing the one
-thing vitally necessary to this Nation at this time, but there has been
-at times, by unwise price-fixing, a direct discouragement of producing.
-
-We have suffered severely during this winter because of this attitude
-in the matter of coal production. One of the factors in producing the
-misery and discomfort, especially among people of limited means during
-the severe weather of the last few months, was the improperly low price
-rate established last summer, and the uncertain and contradictory
-attitude of the Government on the question of coal production.
-
-But important though all production is, the production of food, the
-production which we owe to the farmer, is the most important of all.
-This country needs more food. Its allies need more food. Only the
-farmer can give the food. It is nonsense to expect him to produce
-it unless he can make his livelihood by so doing. The farmer is
-thoroughly patriotic; he stands ready now as he has stood ready in
-every crisis of the Nation, pledged to do his full duty, and a little
-more than his duty. But he makes his livelihood by producing what is
-essential to the livelihood of the rest of us. He cannot produce unless
-he makes his livelihood. Not a step should be taken that interferes
-with his welfare, save after such wise and cautious inquiry as to make
-us certain that the step is necessary.
-
-We should do whatever is necessary to help the farmer produce the
-maximum of food at this time. Moreover, every step we take should be
-conditioned upon securing the farmer’s permanent well-being. The city
-man is often utterly ignorant of the work and of the needs of the man
-who lives in the open country. The working-man and the business man who
-growl about one another are a little apt to join in growling about the
-farmer. The city Socialist is more utterly ignorant of the farmer than
-any other human being. Last fall the Socialist campaign in New York
-had for one of its battle cries the announcement that they intended to
-make the farmer give them five-cent milk. Apparently the detail that
-the farmer had to feed the cows and take care of them struck them as
-unworthy of notice.
-
-The farmer must have labor. But there must be no importation of Chinese
-or any other cheap labor, whether permanent or temporary. The emergency
-need of farm labor for planting and harvesting can be met at this time
-just as the need for the national army was met. The farmer must have
-first-class prices for his products. No price-fixing at his expense
-must be gone into without the clearest necessity being shown, and above
-all there must be no repetition of the folly that marked the dealing
-with the fuel situation last summer. The farmer must have what capital
-he needs at a rate of interest not excessive, in order to plant and
-reap his crop this year. The aid can be given to groups of farmers who
-underwrite one another, so to speak, and, of course, if he can be given
-it by private means, so much the better. If that is impossible, then
-the Government should act. We should profit by the admirable California
-example to see that the help is given only to the man who is a real
-farmer and can really make use of it, but that it is extended in such a
-way as to be of genuine and material benefit.
-
-This is the immediate need, and let us treat meeting this need as the
-opening wedge of a policy designed to prevent the growth of tenant
-farms at the expense of the farm owner who tills his own soil, and
-designed also to put a premium upon the permanent prosperity of the
-small farmer as compared with the big landowner.
-
-
-
-
-THE PEOPLE’S WAR
-
-FEBRUARY 26, 1918
-
-
-It is not agreeable to keep insisting on the need of doing better
-than we have done. It is not agreeable to keep pointing out our
-shortcomings, but to do so is the only way of remedying them and of
-securing better action in the future.
-
-The people, some of them well-meaning, some of them anything but
-well-meaning, who denounce criticism and who object to telling the
-minimum of truth necessary to correct our faults, are the efficient
-allies of Germany and the foes of the United States. Actual events
-have shown that fatuous complacency on the part of our officials has
-resulted in inefficiency and delay which would have meant overwhelming
-disaster to this Nation if we had not been protected by the fleets and
-armies of England and France.
-
-For the first eleven months of this war the inefficiency at vital
-points in our Government, notably in the matter of shipping and in
-the management of the War Department, was worse than anything Russia
-herself has ever seen. Nearly thirteen months have now passed since
-Germany went to war with us and we broke relations with Germany and
-afterwards timidly and helplessly drifted stern foremost into what we
-styled a “formal” state of war. The Russo-Japanese War likewise began
-before there was any formal declaration of war. It only lasted sixteen
-months. We have been accustomed to hold out Russia’s action during that
-sixteen months as a miracle of inefficiency, but she showed herself
-far less inefficient than we have shown ourselves during the thirteen
-months that have just passed, and, of course, there was nothing in her
-conduct quite as bad as our criminal folly in utterly failing in any
-shape or way to prepare during the two and a half previous years.
-There is just one difference between the two cases. Russia did not
-have England and France to protect her from the effects of her folly.
-That we have been at liberty to indulge in our folly with impunity is
-due only to the fact that England and France have protected us with
-the blood of their bravest, while we have refused to prepare and then
-delayed and blundered and fatuously boasted after the war came on.
-Every pro-German, of course, heartily applauds these blunders and
-delays and bitterly objects to their being pointed out, but every
-American with a particle of patriotism in him, every American proud
-of his country, should learn the bitter lesson and should resolve
-that never again will we permit our great Nation to be put in such an
-ignoble position.
-
-Our worst failure, of course, has been our failure to grapple with
-the shipping problem. But there have been many such failures. One was
-the failure to equip Pershing’s army. I do not believe a more gallant
-little army than Pershing’s was ever sent abroad, but without abundant
-artillery, machine guns, and airplanes a modern army is as helpless as
-if its men were armed only with stone-headed axes. Pershing’s army has
-only the field artillery, machine guns, and airplanes that the French
-have given it, and this, although since our troops landed last June,
-a longer time has elapsed than covered the whole Franco-Prussian War.
-As regards the field artillery, the fault is due to the blind refusal
-of the Government to prepare in advance to build the guns. As regards
-the machine guns and auto rifles, the fault is due to our Government’s
-refusal during the last thirteen months to utilize the Lewis gun.
-
-Steps have been taken to remedy some of the worst of these evils in the
-War Department. They have been taken only and purely because of public
-criticism of them and because of the fearless exposure of inefficiency
-of Senator Chamberlain and his colleagues of the Senate investigating
-committee. Until this committee began its labor, the War Department
-had striven to conceal and had refused to remedy its inefficiency,
-blundering, and delay. There has been some improvement, and this
-improvement is due solely to the Senate committee.
-
-This is the people’s war. It is not the President’s war any more than
-it is Congress’s war. It is America’s war. We are in honor bound in
-conducting it to stand by every official who does well and against
-every official who fails to do well. Any other attitude is a servile
-attitude. Congress on the whole has done well. Until Congress finally
-asserted itself the executive branch of the Government did very badly.
-If Congress follows the lead outlined in the Chamberlain Bill, it
-will continue to do well; if it follows the lead outlined in Senator
-Overman’s Bill, it will condone the inefficiency of the past and put a
-premium upon inefficiency in the future. Congress must not shirk its
-duty to the people. Let the machinery of the Government be modernized
-and above all let this machinery be manned by men of distinguished and
-demonstrated ability who will make the governmental conduct efficient
-instead of grossly inefficient, as it was during the first year of the
-war.
-
-Let us quit being content with feeble mediocrity. Let us demand really
-first-class efficiency in both preparation and performance. That is the
-only way to do what we must do and see this war through to a triumphant
-conclusion.
-
-
-
-
-THE FRUITS OF FIFTY-FIFTY LOYALTY
-
-MARCH 2, 1918
-
-
-A captain in the regular army of the United States has just been justly
-sentenced to twenty-five years’ imprisonment for trying to combine
-loyalty to this country with loyalty to Germany. He was born here of
-German parents. In Germany, for such an offense, he would have been
-instantly shot or hung. And in Germany organizations and newspapers
-responsible for causing such action would be instantly suppressed and
-their organizers and editors heavily punished.
-
-The unfortunate army officer in question is paying the penalty for
-heeding such organizations as the German-American Alliance. Mr.
-Gustavus Ohlinger has put before Congress facts concerning the past
-actions and activities of this organization which warrant and require
-its instant suppression. Its leaders have sometimes been men who
-practiced a fifty-fifty loyalty between this country and Germany and
-sometimes men all of whose loyalty was for Germany and all whose enmity
-was for the nationality, ideals, and language of the American people.
-It is an outrage that such an organization should be permitted longer
-to exist. Congress should act against it at once and the Department
-of Justice should abandon its slack attitude toward German spies and
-should so act as to convince our enemies that Uncle Sam is not a timid
-and soft-headed fool, and that hereafter German spies, dynamiters, and
-murderers who ply their trade here will do so at the risk of their
-necks.
-
-Teaching German in the public schools should be prohibited. German
-language newspapers should have a time limit act, after which it
-should not be lawful to publish them save in English. A few of their
-newspapers have a most honorable past and are doing excellent work in
-the present. A number of English language newspapers have preached
-moral treason to the American people, often covering it by zeal in
-denouncing all honest and truthful men who point out the delays and
-inefficiencies in government, actions which make those responsible for
-them enemies of the American people and aids to Germany; but moral
-treason in English is at least open, whereas in a foreign language
-it is hidden. Moral treason is not necessarily legal treason, but it
-may be as dangerous, and from senators to school teachers, all public
-servants who deal in it should promptly be removed from office.
-
-The organizations, newspapers, and public servants who thus betray
-the honor of America in the interest of Germany wrong all their fellow
-citizens. But above all they cruelly wrong those loyal Americans,
-the great majority of our citizens who are in whole or in part of
-German blood. The loyal majority should lend their utmost energies to
-securing the condign and summary punishment of the disloyal minority
-of Americans of German blood who are a disgrace and a menace to this
-country. Gustavus Ohlinger is an admirable example of the Americans in
-whole or in part of German blood who is an American and nothing else.
-All good Americans, and especially all good Americans of German blood,
-should actively and heartily back him. There is no room in this country
-for fifty-fifty Americanism.
-
-
-
-
-QUIT TALKING PEACE
-
-MARCH 5, 1918
-
-
-The experience of Trotzky, Lenine, and the other Bolshevist leaders
-in their peace negotiations with Germany ought to be illuminating to
-our own people. Germany encouraged them to enter peace negotiations,
-spoke fairly to them, got them committed to the abandonment of their
-allies, used them to demoralize Russia and make it impossible for her
-to organize effective resistance, and then threw them over, instantly
-invaded their land, and now holds a part of Russia.
-
-Let our people take warning and insist that all peace talk cease
-forthwith. Germany is the enemy of humanity generally and in a special
-sense is the enemy of the United States. She has introduced into
-warfare horrors which not another civilized nation would have dreamed
-of using. Her conduct toward Belgium stands out on the high peak of
-infamy. She has murdered innocent women and children wholesale on the
-high seas and hundreds of Americans have thus been slain. She has
-organized murder, rape, robbery, and devastation on a gigantic scale in
-every conquered territory. Our own sons and brothers are at this moment
-facing death by the awful torture of the poison gas because Germany has
-invented methods of warfare more cruel than those of the Dark Ages.
-Peace on equal terms with such a foe would mean black shame in the
-present and the certainty of renewed and wholesale war in the future.
-
-To talk peace means to puzzle the ignorant and to weaken the will of
-even the stout-hearted. It is hailed with evil joy by all the men in
-this country who have opposed war and have wished us to submit tamely
-to German brutality. When there comes from Washington an announcement
-about peace terms which the pacifists and pro-Germans are able to
-interpret as favorable to their views, the Hearst papers gleefully
-champion it as undoing the effect of previous declarations that we
-are in this war to the end, and Mr. Hillquit, the New York mayoralty
-candidate of the Germanized Socialists and the pacifists, expresses
-his hearty approval and says that the President has now taken his (Mr.
-Hillquit’s) position.
-
-Let us quit talking peace with a foe who, if we entered into peace
-negotiations, would, according to his ability, trick us as he has
-already tricked the Bolsheviki of Russia. Let us not put ourselves on
-the moral and intellectual level of Trotzky and Lenine. Every peace
-utterance pleases the Germans, renders our allies uneasy, strengthens
-the pacifists, the pro-Germans, and the various seditious elements in
-our own country, and bewilders, disheartens, and weakens our honest
-citizens.
-
-The time when words about peace were useful passed a very long time
-ago. Let us now merely announce that we are in this war to fight until
-Germany is beaten to her knees. Then let us bend our entire energy
-to building ships and more ships at the greatest possible speed and
-putting a couple of million men on the firing line at the earliest
-possible moment. That is the effective way to bring a just and lasting
-peace.
-
-
-
-
-THE WORST ENEMIES OF CERTAIN LOYAL AMERICANS
-
-MARCH 10, 1918
-
-
-The army and navy of the United States in the training camps, on
-the high seas, and at the battle front, are at this moment proving
-themselves the most potent agencies of Americanism that our country
-contains. All good Americans should feel a peculiar pride in the fine
-and gallant loyalty with which the great majority of the Americans of
-German descent have come forward to do their part to win this war
-against the brutal and merciless tyranny of the Prussianized Germany
-of the Hohenzollerns. As regards able-bodied men, this service must be
-rendered in the army, for in war-time no other form of activity can be
-accepted as a substitute for the fighting work of the fighting man.
-
-I continually meet officers from the front. A captain recently out of
-the trenches called on me the other day. His father and mother were
-born in Germany. He himself, after going through a small American
-college, had spent three years at Heidelberg. He mentioned that
-one of his lieutenants was born in Norway, and that another was
-of Irish parentage, and then continued by saying that already his
-brief experience of the war had given him a horror of the Germany of
-to-day, had convinced him that our only safety lay in the complete
-Americanization of all our people and therefore in the insistence
-that English should be the only language of this country and the only
-language taught in any primary school, and that he regarded such
-organizations as the German-American Alliance as guilty of moral
-treason to America as the worst and most dangerous foes of good
-Americans of German blood, and as richly deserving to be promptly
-suppressed and punished.
-
-An officer from our destroyer squadron across the seas informed me that
-our destroyers had accounted for nearly a score of submarines; that
-about a quarter of their crews were, as indicated by their names, of
-German descent, but straight-out Americans and nothing else; that his
-own best gun-pointer was named Fritz Heinz; and that their keenest
-indignation was reserved for the German officials in Germany and the
-German-American Alliance in America whose actions tended to make a wall
-between them and their fellow Americans and who inflicted the most
-cruel wrong possible upon them by exciting among other Americans an
-indiscriminate distrust and anger toward all men of German origin.
-
-These men were absolutely right. We speak in the name of all good
-Americans and on behalf of Fritz and Adolph and Gustav exactly as
-on behalf of Bill and Harry and Edward, when we demand the prompt
-suppression of the German-American Alliance and of all similar
-organizations. The German blood is exactly as good as any other blood,
-but exactly as, under the corroding influence of slavery, masses of
-Americans of the best blood once became the enemies of the Union
-and of humanity, so under the debasing and brutalizing influence of
-the _kultur_ of the last fifty years, Germany has become the cruel
-and treacherous enemy of the United States and of all the other
-liberty-loving nations of mankind.
-
-
-
-
-GIRD UP OUR LOINS
-
-MARCH 16, 1918
-
-
-The Bible warns us to gird up our loins if we wish to win a race. Most
-certainly we cannot expect to do well in the present struggle unless
-we bend every energy to the task and exercise all our forethought in
-instant preparation.
-
-Russia’s betrayal of the Allied cause under the foolish and iniquitous
-lead of the Bolsheviki has been a betrayal of the United States and of
-the cause of liberty and democracy and justice throughout the world.
-Above all, it has been a betrayal of Russia herself, and it has, of
-course, absolved us of every obligation to her. Our duty is to stand
-by England and France and Belgium and Serbia, who have stood by us.
-Russia has ruined herself in Germany’s interest, and has immensely
-increased the peril for the rest of us. This simply means that we
-ought to re-double our effort. We should be building the cargo ships
-in three eight-hour shift days and should treat work on them as being
-equivalent to work in the army. We should speed to the utmost the work
-on the cannon and flying machines so that our army may cease having to
-rely on the French for artillery and airplanes. The army should copy
-the wisdom of the navy in regard to the Lewis auto rifle and should use
-this weapon to the utmost limit now, even although it prove wise later
-to supersede it with the Browning weapon.
-
-We ought at once to introduce obligatory universal military training
-for our young men between nineteen and twenty-one. They would not
-be sent to war until they were twenty-one. This would be the most
-effective step in preparing to get ready an army of five million men.
-Such an army would be relatively no larger than the four hundred
-thousand men which gallant Canada, to her eternal honor, has already
-raised. Let us begin now to prepare ourselves for a three years’ war.
-
-If we had prepared as we ought to have done during the two and a half
-years before we at last reluctantly faced our duty and went to war, we
-would have put a couple of million of fighting men into Europe last
-June. Russia would never have broken, and in all probability the war
-would have ended at once with almost no fighting. There is no use in
-crying over the enormous quantities of milk we have already spilled,
-unless it becomes necessary in order to prevent us from continuing
-to spill it in the present and future. Failure to prepare as above
-outlined may cause us as much trouble in the future as our past failure
-to prepare has already caused us. General Pershing’s gallant little
-army has already made the entire United States its debtor. But it is
-not as yet as important a military factor as the army of Belgium or of
-Portugal or of Serbia. Let us back it up and equip it and reënforce it
-to the utmost of our strength. Let us quit talking peace and bend all
-our energies to winning the war, and thereby winning the only kind of
-peace that will be safe, honorable, and lasting.
-
-
-
-
-BOLSHEVIKI AT HOME AND ABROAD
-
-MARCH 19, 1918
-
-
-The answer of the Bolsheviki to the President’s message was an example
-of mean and studied impertinence. There was no gratitude, no apology
-for their betrayal of America and of the cause of liberty, and no
-expression of hostility to their German masters, but there was a
-gratuitous and insulting expression for a class war in America against
-what the Bolsheviki with ignorant folly speak of as capitalism.
-A couple of days afterward the Bolshevist authorities definitely
-concluded with Germany their peace of ignominy and treachery.
-
-There is now no possible reason for our Government to draw the sharp
-distinction they have drawn between the Bolsheviki abroad and the
-Bolsheviki at home. The Government is prosecuting Victor Berger and
-has suppressed the paper of Max Eastman. But Berger and Eastman are
-essentially the same as Lenine and Trotzky. All four have played
-Germany’s game; all four have been the enemies of the cause of the
-United States and of liberty. The utter ruin which the Bolsheviki have
-brought on Russia offers an illuminating example of the destruction
-which would befall the United States if it ever submitted to the
-leadership of men like Messrs. Hillquit, Townley, Haywood, and Berger.
-
-We have had many evil capitalists in the United States, but on the
-whole the worst capitalists could not do the permanent damage to the
-farmers and working-men in America which these foreign and native
-Bolsheviki would do if they had the power. Our people should keep
-steadily in mind that the Russian Bolsheviki have not attacked the
-big Russian capitalists who were in alliance with the autocracy of
-the Romanoffs and they have been the tools, paid or unpaid, of the
-German militarists and capitalists. They have spent their energies
-in attacking the revolutionists who overthrew the Romanoffs and
-in persecuting the peasants who have become small farmers and the
-working-men who are skilled mechanics and the small shopkeepers. They
-hate and envy those thrifty and self-respecting workers who in this
-country make up the great majority of our people and who are our most
-typical and characteristic Americans.
-
-The Bolsheviki have concluded a peace with Germany which includes
-handing back to the Turks, or, in other words, plunging back into
-brutal savagery, a district in Asia in which there are multitudes of
-Armenians and other Christians. Our Government has been derelict in
-its duty to the Armenians, to the Christians of Syria and to the Jews
-of Palestine, by its failure to declare war on Turkey. It is a grave
-error to coddle the Bolsheviki and support them in any way against our
-allies unless we are also willing fearlessly to condemn their betrayal
-of us and of the Allied cause, and unless we are ready to war to the
-end against both Germany and Turkey in order to rescue from tyranny and
-to give independence to the unfortunate people whom the Bolsheviki have
-abandoned to a cruel fate.
-
-
-
-
-THE FRUITS OF OUR DELAY
-
-MARCH 26, 1918
-
-
-The shameful betrayal of the Allies’ cause by the Russian Bolshevists
-and the delay and incompetence of the American Government have given
-the Germans a free hand for their drive against the British army.
-England is at this moment fighting our battles just as much as she
-is fighting her own, yet, although three years have passed since the
-Lusitania was sunk and a year since Congress declared that we had
-“formally” entered the war, America is still merely an onlooker.
-
-We owe this ignoble position to the folly and the procrastination of
-our Government and its inveterate tendency to substitute rhetoric for
-action. We have a gallant little army across the ocean, but it is
-smaller than the Belgian army. We are not holding a greater extent of
-the battle front than the army of little Portugal. We have at the front
-no airplanes or field artillery and very few machine guns except those
-we have gotten from the French. Even the clothes of our troops are
-mainly obtained from the English. Yet we are the richest nation and one
-of the most populous nations on the earth.
-
-Our Government is responsible for our dreadful shortcomings, but
-the responsibility is shared by all the foolish creatures who have
-willfully blinded themselves to these shortcomings and have clamored
-against the faithful public servants, like Senator Chamberlain, who
-laid bare the shortcomings for the purpose of remedying them. The truly
-patriotic men in this crisis have been the men who have fearlessly told
-the truth in order to speed up the war. The other men who have decried
-the truth-telling as “crying over spilt milk” have been profoundly
-unpatriotic. It was the failure to point out how much milk had been
-spilt which was primarily responsible for the failure to stop further
-spilling of milk.
-
-In the face of the terrible battle which our English allies are now
-waging, and in view of the fact that for three years and a half we have
-owed our safety to the British fleet and to the French spirit typified
-by Premier Clemenceau, let the American people now demand that the
-Government recognize the need of instant and efficient action. Let
-our Government quit flirting with the Bolshevists at home and abroad.
-Let it declare war on Turkey at once. Let it acknowledge its dreadful
-failures and delays and henceforth act with all possible speed. Let it
-manfully endeavor to make our weight felt in the war this year. Let it
-stop boasting about the future and begin to act in the present.
-
-Let the Government use common sense. It has talked magnificently about
-having twenty thousand airplanes ready in June, but it has not one
-American war plane at the front to-day. Let it quit boasting and act.
-Let it push the shipping programme by night and day. Let it give France
-and England the men they so sorely need.
-
-Our Government has delayed until the Allies have been brought to the
-brink of destruction. Let it act at once lest the chance for action
-pass completely by.
-
-
-
-
-HOW THE HUN EARNS HIS TITLE
-
-MARCH 31, 1918
-
-THE CURSE OF THE SYSTEM
-
-BY D. THOMAS CURTIN
-
-
-I
-
-A scene in Schabatz, when the Austro-Hungarians attempted to flank
-Belgrade in early August, 1914, has seared itself into my memory. I
-was in the shambles of an overgrown village. The blood of both armies
-flowed in the streets and the wine from broken casks and bottles flowed
-in the cellars, soldiers walking in it up to their knees.
-
-The street was deserted save for an _Unteroffizier_ who was passing.
-An old woman, bent and shriveled, her white locks escaping the yellow
-sash around her head, tottered from a whitewashed mixture of mud and
-thatch, saw the enemy soldier, started back, thought better of it, and
-sank to her knees while she extended her bony arms for mercy. He drew
-his saber--still a relic of war. “A little despicable stage play and
-magnanimous pardon,” I thought. I was mistaken. The saber whistled and
-slashed the outstretched arms, the woman’s shriek cut me like saws and
-knives, and I turned away bewildered.
-
-I came face to face with the man a few minutes later. He was not drunk.
-Nor did he look like a wild man from the hills. He was a Viennese, the
-kind of man I had seen on scores of occasions lolling in a café, mild
-and gentle as a kitten. He looked mild and gentle now.
-
-“Why did you do it?” I had to ask.
-
-“She was a pig-dog Serb, an enemy of my country. I did my duty.” And he
-said it in a manner which showed him satisfied in his conscience that
-he had done what was right.
-
-I realize now that I had had my first war-time example of the German
-system of education. The code is that anything done in the name of the
-Fatherland is correct. A man can be educated in such a manner that he
-will wipe out “crawling verminous pests of his country” with as little
-compunction as a farmer would rid his field of potato bugs.
-
-
-II
-
-On Thanksgiving Day, 1914, I visited the American Hospital in Munich,
-a military hospital supported by contributions from the United States.
-While talking with three men in one room I was actually saying to
-myself that such as these could not be guilty of atrocities, when one
-of them told me a story which forced me to change my mind.
-
-“I was a member of a relief company marching in the Vosges,” he said.
-“As we were about to halt for lunch, we came upon a French priest in a
-wood who was judged quickly to be a spy by our officers. These turned
-him over to us and we had great amusement after we had finished eating.
-I laugh still whenever I think of it. We tied a rope around his neck
-and threw it over a limb of a tree. Some comrades pulled and up went
-the priest while the rest of us stood around and jabbed him with our
-bayonets. ‘Higher, higher!’ we shouted. And then we had a jumping
-contest to see which could thrust his bayonet highest.”
-
-The man told me the story because he thought it funny and his eyes
-danced with happy recollections as he told it.
-
-
-NO GUNS
-
- _General Pétain, commander, French army, said: “Send guns; so that
- some of us may be alive to fight by your side, when at last America is
- ready.”_
-
- What! in France and no guns!
- Have I sent forth my sons
- With proud boasts of great deeds--
- And fallen down at plain needs?
- Who proclaimed to the world
- With my banners unfurled
- The dread foe will succumb,
- I, America, come!
-
- In France, and no guns!
- And I’ve sent forth my sons
- With those wolves of the Huns at their throats,
- While the Kaiser and Hindenburg gloat,
- And France, stricken France,
- Fills the breach, while my lance
- I sent flaming with pride
- Hangs behind, not beside!
-
- In France! and no guns,
- Empty hands, and my sons
- Who would tear out their hearts for my fame,
- Are held up to derision and shame,
- Because statesmen so small
- Hew out roads to a wall
- While the fire bells of death
- Crash souls out, and breath!
-
- In France, and no guns!
- Why, you’re worse than the Huns,
- You men who are shaming my honor
- When the stress of the Nation’s upon her.
- With your quibbles and greed
- Can the trampled be freed?
- Oh, my heart’s sick with scorn,
- I, America, suborned.
-
- In France, and no guns!
- Let’s forever be done
- With our boasts and our brags, and succumb
- To the scorning before which we’re dumb.
- When at last France is free
- And her glory acclaimed
- Let none look at me,
- At America, shamed.
-
- Henrietta Keith, Minneapolis
-
-
-We live such sheltered lives here, three thousand miles away from the
-war, that most of us don’t even yet realize what Germany has done
-and has stood for in this war and what a terrible menace she is to
-us and to all civilization. The other day I met a very able writer
-and observer who at the outbreak of the Great War spent many months
-with the German and Austrian armies and then lived in Germany until
-it became impossible for a self-respecting American longer to stay
-there. He is Mr. D. Thomas Curtin. His father was born in Ireland.
-He is himself a Catholic. I mention these facts merely because they
-refute the cheap and vicious falsehoods so often promulgated by the
-pro-Germans to the effect that the accounts of the German atrocities
-are due to English propaganda.
-
-I ask all good Americans, whatever their creed, and I especially ask
-American women, to read these two straightforward statements by Mr.
-Curtin, the account of the killing by torture of the priest who fell
-into the hands of the German soldiers and the account of the fearful
-brutality of an Austrian German to a poor old woman. These were not
-isolated cases of brutality. They were both part of the policy of
-deliberate horror, which Mr. Curtin speaks of as “the system.” All
-in America who have played the game of Germany, from Hearst and the
-Germanized Socialists and the German-American Alliance at one end of
-the line to foolish pacifist preachers at the other end of the line,
-have been, according to their power, working to bring about the day
-when we here in this country would see our own women and helpless
-non-combatant men and our own children exposed to such hideous wrongs
-and torture as is described by Mr. Curtin. I very seriously ask our
-people to read what Mr. Curtin says and to ponder the full meaning of
-the facts he sets forth.
-
-In the next place, I ask them to read the poem--and it is a real poem,
-not merely verse--of Mrs. Keith, a Minneapolis woman, called “No Guns.”
-Well-meaning, foolish people, and some people who in ordinary relations
-of life are not foolish, are fond of telling us not to point out the
-defects in the army, because this encourages Germany, and because
-anyhow it is a case of spilt milk, and there is no use of crying over
-spilt milk. The answer is twofold. In the first place, Germany knows
-all our shortcomings. Inasmuch as we have wickedly refused to go to
-war with Turkey and Bulgaria, we have left open avenues by which it
-is absolutely certain that Germany gets full knowledge of everything
-she wishes to know about this country. It is only our own people who
-are kept in ignorance. In the next place, as regards the spilt-milk
-proposition, the trouble is that we have kept on spilling the milk
-and that only by pointing out that it has been spilled is it possible
-to solder the milk cans and stop further spilling. Until Senator
-Chamberlain and his committee boldly and truthfully pointed out the
-evil caused by the delays and shortcomings of the War Department, the
-Administration made not the slightest effort to remedy them. Some of
-the more salient of these shortcomings have been remedied, and this
-fact is primarily due to the courage and patriotism of these public
-servants, Senator Chamberlain and his committee.
-
-If fourteen months ago our people had been willing to demand the truth
-and to listen to those who told the truth, we would at this moment have
-four times the force we now have in France; and we would have guns and
-airplanes, and auto rifles of our own make with it; and we would have
-had plenty of ships to carry our men across and to give them food and
-munitions. The reason why our fighting army at the front in France is
-no larger, and the reason why we have had to get the necessary field
-guns, airplanes, and auto rifles for that army from the French, is
-because we, as a people, were not willing to insist upon knowing the
-truth. It is precisely because certain men are now telling the truth
-that there is reason to hope that gradually the milk spilling will be
-stopped; that gradually we shall get the guns, the airplanes, and auto
-rifles for our men, and above all the ships that are vitally necessary.
-I ask the mothers of this country whose sons are now in the army, or
-may go into the army, to read and ponder this poem by a woman, and to
-cast the weight of their great influence in favor of demanding that
-every ounce of energy we as a Nation possess be used to speed up the
-war, to relieve our allies of the burden of supplying us with weapons
-of war, and to see that the American troops abroad are furnished from
-this country with American-made weapons of the highest type.
-
-The don’t-cry-over-spilt-milk appeal represents unpardonable wrong to
-America and to civilization.
-
-
-
-
-THANK HEAVEN!
-
-APRIL 2, 1918
-
-
-At last, thank Heaven, comes the news that our little American army
-at the front has been put absolutely at the disposal of the French
-and English military leaders for use of any kind in the gigantic and
-terrible battle now being waged. All Americans who are proud of the
-great name of America will humbly and reverently thank Heaven that at
-any rate the army we have at the front is not to remain in the position
-of an onlooker, but is to be put into the battle.
-
-The wanton and cruel bombardment of Paris, undertaken for no military
-reason and with its characteristic slaughter of women and children
-in a church, proves that the German barbarity is as deliberate and
-as infamous now as at the beginning of the war. The Allies in this
-battle are fighting for humanity and civilization. They are fighting
-the battle of the United States. Any man in the United States who at
-this time directly or indirectly expresses approval of or sympathy with
-Germany in this battle or in this war, should be arrested and either
-shot, hung, or imprisoned for life, according to the gravity of his
-offense.
-
-Thank Heaven that our sons and brothers are now to stand at Armageddon.
-Thank Heaven that American soldiers are now to fight in the great
-battle against the bestial foe of America and of mankind. Words count
-for little at this time and for nothing whatever except in so far as
-they are of help to the men of deeds who are at the front.
-
-It is these men at the front who are now making all Americans, born
-and unborn, forever their debtors. They are the men who have paid with
-their bodies for their soul’s desire. Let no one pity them, whatever
-their fate, for they have seen the mighty days and have risen level to
-the need of the mighty days. And let no one pity the wives and mothers
-and fathers whose husbands and lovers and sons now face death in battle
-for the mightiest of all high causes. Our hearts are wrung with sorrow
-and anxiety, but our heads are held aloft with pride. It is a terrible
-thing that our loved ones should face the great danger, but it would
-be a far more terrible thing if, whatever the danger, they were not
-treading the hard path of duty and honor.
-
-
-
-
-CITIZENS OR SUBJECTS?
-
-APRIL 6, 1918
-
-
-In a self-governing country the people are called citizens. Under a
-despotism or autocracy the people are called subjects. This is because
-in a free country the people are themselves sovereign, while in a
-despotic country the people are under a sovereign. In the United States
-the people are all citizens, including its President. The rest of them
-are fellow citizens of the President. In Germany the people are all
-subjects of the Kaiser. They are not his fellow citizens, they are his
-subjects. This is the essential difference between the United States
-and Germany, but the difference would vanish if we now submitted to the
-foolish or traitorous persons who endeavor to make it a crime to tell
-the truth about the Administration when the Administration is guilty
-of incompetence or other shortcomings. Such endeavor is itself a crime
-against the Nation. Those who take such an attitude are guilty of moral
-treason of a kind both abject and dangerous.
-
-Our loyalty is due entirely to the United States. It is due to the
-President only and exactly to the degree in which he efficiently serves
-the United States. It is our duty to support him when he serves the
-United States well. It is our duty to oppose him when he serves it
-badly. This is true about Mr. Wilson now and it has been true about
-all our presidents in the past. It is our duty at all times to tell
-the truth about the President and about every one else, save in the
-cases where to tell the truth at the moment would benefit the public
-enemy. Since this war began, the suppression of the truth by and about
-the Administration has been habitual. In rare cases this has been
-disadvantageous to the enemy. In the vast majority of cases it has
-been advantageous to the enemy, detrimental to the American people,
-and useful to the Administration only from the political, not the
-patriotic, standpoint.
-
-The Senate Judiciary Committee has just recommended the passage
-of a law in which, among many excellent propositions to put down
-disloyalty, there has been adroitly inserted a provision that any
-one who uses “contemptuous or slurring language about the President”
-shall be punished by imprisonment for a long term of years and by a
-fine of many thousand dollars. This proposed law is sheer treason to
-the United States. Under its terms Abraham Lincoln would have been
-sent to prison for what he repeatedly said of Presidents Polk, Pierce,
-and Buchanan. Under its terms President Wilson would be free to speak
-of Senator-elect Lenroot as he has spoken, but Senator Lenroot would
-not be free truthfully to answer President Wilson. It is a proposal
-to make Americans subjects instead of citizens. It is a proposal to
-put the President in the position of the Hohenzollerns and Romanoffs.
-Government by the people means that the people have the right to do
-their own thinking and to do their own speaking about their public
-servants. They must speak truthfully and they must not be disloyal to
-the country, and it is their highest duty by truthful criticism to make
-and keep the public servants loyal to the country.
-
-Any truthful criticism could and would be held by partisanship to
-be slurring or contemptuous. The Delaware House of Representatives
-has just shown this. It came within one vote of passing a resolution
-demanding that the Department of Justice proceed against me because, in
-my recent speeches in Maine, I “severely criticized the conduct of our
-National Government.” I defy any human being to point out a statement
-in that speech which was not true and which was not patriotic, and
-yet the decent and patriotic members of the Delaware legislature were
-only able to secure a majority of one against the base and servile
-partisanship of those who upheld the resolution.
-
-I believe the proposed law is unconstitutional. If it is passed,
-I shall certainly give the Government the opportunity to test its
-constitutionality. For whenever the need arises I shall in the future
-speak truthfully of the President in praise or in blame, exactly as
-I have done in the past. When the President in the past uttered his
-statements about being too proud to fight and wishing peace without
-victory, and considering that we had no special grievance against
-Germany, I spoke of him as it was my high duty to speak. Therefore,
-I spoke of him truthfully and severely, and I cared nothing whether
-or not timid and unpatriotic and short-sighted men said that I spoke
-slurringly or contemptuously. In as far as the President in the future
-endeavors to wage this war efficiently and to secure the peace of
-overwhelming victory, I shall heartily support him. But if he wages it
-inefficiently or if he should now champion a peace without victory,
-or say that we had no grievance against Germany, I would speak in
-criticism of him precisely as I have spoken in the past. I am an
-American and a free man. My loyalty is due to the United States, and
-therefore it is due to the President, the Senators, the Congressmen,
-and all other public servants only and to the degree in which they
-loyally and efficiently serve the United States.
-
-
-
-
-WOMEN AND THE WAR
-
-APRIL 12, 1918
-
-
-A Kansas woman has just written me in part as follows: “I have given
-my all, my two sons, gladly and proudly, as volunteers to my country,
-for they enlisted last August. But my heart grows sick at the confusion
-and blunders and apathy. I thank The Star for printing that poem of the
-Minnesota mother. It appeals to all of us mothers who stay at home and
-pray and work as we can.”
-
-I think more continually of such mothers of soldiers as this Kansas
-woman, than I do even of the soldiers themselves. They have high and
-gallant souls. They are the spiritual heirs of the mothers and wives of
-Washington’s Continentals and of the mothers and wives of the soldiers
-of Grant and Lee. I am proud beyond measure that I am their fellow
-countryman. In everything that I do or say, I seek to make and to
-keep this land a land in which their daughters can dwell in honorable
-safety and to make our common citizenship such that both their sons and
-daughters shall hold their heads high because they are Americans.
-
-But exactly as I revere such women, so I condemn the women whose
-short-sightedness or frivolous love of ease and vapid pleasure or whose
-timid fear of danger and labor makes them fit companions for those
-unworthy men whose lives represent merely the shirking of duty. The
-mother who, by perpetual complaint and lamentation about unavoidable
-hardships and risks, seeks to weaken the heart of her soldier son
-stands no higher than the money-getting or ease-loving man who dodges
-the draft. The woman who cares so little for the honor of America and
-the interests of civilization as now to wish a peace without victory
-is no better than the men in uniform who seek soft positions of safety
-among the slickers and slackers.
-
-The things that are best worth having in life must be paid for whether
-by forethought or by toil or by downright facing of danger. This is
-true in peace. It is even more true in war. It is just as true of women
-as of men.
-
-All wise and good women and all wise and good men abhor war. Washington
-and Lincoln abhorred war. But no man or woman is either wise or good
-unless he or she abhors some things even more than war, exactly as
-Washington and Lincoln abhorred them. We are none of us fit to be free
-men in a republic if we are not willing to fight when the Republic is
-wronged as Germany has wronged this country. We are none of us entitled
-to say that we love mankind if we are not willing to do battle against
-the Turk and the German in order to right such wrongs as have been
-perpetrated on Belgium and Armenia. And we deserve to be brayed in a
-mortar if we are ever again guilty of such folly as that of which we
-have been guilty by our foolish failure to prepare our strength in
-efficient fashion during the last three and a half years.
-
-The women of this country who love their husbands and sons should
-realize now that only by thorough preparedness in advance can war be
-avoided, if possible, or successfully waged if it has to come. Recently
-men in high position whose own bodies are safe have stated that they
-are glad that we were not prepared in advance to do our duty when this
-war came. These men have purchased their own safety and advantage by
-the blood of our sons at the front. Let the women who do not wish to
-see their men go up against the cannon see that hereafter all our sons
-are well trained in advance. If America’s strength is fully prepared in
-advance, she will in all probability never have to go to war and will
-be a potent factor in preserving the peace of justice throughout the
-world, and the first step in securing such a peace is to devote all
-our energies to speeding up the war until it is ended by the complete
-triumph of our allies and ourselves.
-
-
-
-
-TO MY FELLOW AMERICANS OF GERMAN BLOOD
-
-APRIL 16, 1918
-
-
-Hermann Hagedorn, an American whose father and mother were born in
-Germany, an American of the best and bravest and most loyal type,
-has just written a little book called “Where Do You Stand? An Appeal
-to Americans of German Origin.” I wish it could be read by every
-individual of those to whom it is addressed, and by all other Americans
-also.
-
-I am, myself, partly of German blood, and I make my appeal as an
-American does, to and on behalf of all other Americans who have German
-blood in their veins. We have room in this country only for Americans
-who are Americans, and nothing else. They must be loyal to only one
-flag; they must speak one language; they must serve only American
-ideals. I mean literally what I say, that every man who bears even
-the smallest allegiance to any other country should be sent out of
-this country. The native American who, during this war, directly or
-indirectly, assails any of our allies, notably England, but also
-Japan, is a traitor to America and should be promptly imprisoned. The
-German-American, and especially the German-American editor, guilty
-of such conduct or of any exaltation of any German victory should be
-instantly interned and then sent back to Germany. The Sinn Feiner who
-attacks England should be immediately interned and then sent back to
-Ireland. The German-American Alliance and all similar organizations
-should immediately be broken up by Congress and by the state
-legislatures. Our people would do well to remember that even when such
-organizations keep quiet for the moment, they are certain to revive and
-to work against America with the utmost malignity when peace comes.
-The time to crush them is now. Foreign language newspapers should be
-required to follow the example of the New York Herald and begin the
-change, which is to convert their newspapers into English, the language
-of the United States.
-
-As for spies, preachers of sedition, men who practice sabotage, and all
-other such persons, the Government already has much power, but should
-be given any needed additional power to proceed against them, and this
-power should be used in drastic fashion, if necessary under martial
-law, and after a summary trial the guilty men should be shot.
-
-So much for the men of German blood, or of any other blood, who are
-not good Americans; but remember that it is also our highest duty from
-the standpoint of Americanism to stand by the good American of German
-blood, just exactly as we stand by any other American. We must refuse
-to permit any division along the lines of blood or ancestry. We must
-demand whole-hearted Americanism, and if a man gives this, we must
-treat him exactly on his merits, like any other American. In other
-words, we must give every man a square deal. Shoot the spy or the
-traitor, whether of native American, Irish, or German blood; whether a
-Protestant, Catholic, or Jew. Stand by the good American of any creed,
-no matter where he was born or whence his parents came.
-
-It is an outrage to discriminate against a good American in civil life
-because he is of German blood. It is an even worse outrage for the
-Government to permit such discrimination against him in the army or in
-any of the organizations working under government supervision. Let us
-insist on the immediate stopping of such discriminations, which cruelly
-wound good Americans and tend to drive them back into the ranks of
-the half-loyal. In return let good Americans of German blood band
-together and take the lead in organization action against all disloyal
-or half-loyal citizens of German blood and against all German language
-or English language newspapers which are not whole-heartedly loyal and
-against all such organizations as the German-American Alliance.
-
-
-
-
-AN EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT IN HUMAN UPBUILDING
-
-APRIL 17, 1918
-
-
-Major E. C. Simmons, of St. Louis, the manager of the Southwestern
-Division of the American Red Cross, has just returned from our army
-in France. He relates a really extraordinary achievement of the
-division of orthopædic surgery with the army under the direction of
-Surgeon-Major Joel E. Goldthwaite.
-
-All the divisions of troops sent across, of course, contain a number
-of men who show physical shortcomings under the strain of actual
-campaigning. In General Edwards’s division these men numbered in the
-neighborhood of fifteen per cent, not an unusual proportion in the
-history of past wars. Dr. Goldthwaite got permission to try his hand on
-the treatment of a body composed of somewhat over five hundred of them,
-and instantly began vigorous but careful work to build up all their
-physical defects.
-
-As his work for each man was finished, he was put in one of four
-classes. Class A included those to whom the training gave such vigor
-that they were fit to go right to the front as battle units. Class B
-included those who could be made fit for hard physical labor back of
-the front, although not for the tremendous strain of the trenches.
-Class C included those fitted for clerical and similar duties. Class D
-included those whose physical condition would not be improved and who
-had to be sent home.
-
-Dr. Goldthwaite was able to place over eighty per cent of the men
-in Class A, and all the remainder in either Class B or Class C. Not
-a man had to be sent home. Remember that the physical shortcomings
-of these men were all present before they entered the army and were
-not acquired in the army. The work done for them made them not only
-fit to be soldiers, but fit to be citizens. Moreover, it affected
-them morally exactly as much as physically. They had become utterly
-dispirited and downcast. After Dr. Goldthwaite was through with them,
-they were all self-reliant, energetic Americans, vigorous, upstanding,
-and self-respecting, having lost all trace of either moral or physical
-crooked back and stooping shoulders.
-
-When we get universal obligatory military training for all our young
-men, this is what will happen everywhere and the benefit to our people
-will be incalculable. Such training will minimize the chance of our
-ever having to go to war and will render it certain that hereafter we
-shall always be able to defend ourselves instead of trusting to our
-allies to defend us. Moreover, it will do us even more good as regards
-the tasks of peace than as regards the tasks of war, for it will turn
-out every young man far better able to earn his living and far better
-fitted to be a good citizen.
-
-
-
-
-FREEDOM STANDS WITH HER BACK TO THE WALL
-
-APRIL 20, 1918
-
-
-This is a terrible hour of trial and suffering and danger for our
-war-worn allies, who in France are battling for us no less than for
-themselves. If shame is even more dreadful than suffering, then it is
-a no less terrible hour for our own country. Our allies stand with
-their backs to the wall in the fight for freedom, and America looks
-on. The free nations stand at bay in the cause that is ours no less
-than theirs; and after over a year of war the army we have sent to
-their aid is smaller than that of poor heroic, ruined Belgium, is
-hardly more than a twentieth the size which gallant and impoverished
-Italy has in the field. And this great wealthy Nation of ours has
-not yet furnished to our own brave troops in the field any cannon
-or airplanes, and almost no machine guns, save those which we have
-obtained from hard-pressed France--and let our people remember that
-every gun thus made for us by hard-pressed France is a gun left unmade
-for hard-pressed Italy.
-
-Our few gallant fighting men overseas have won high honor for
-themselves, and have made all other Americans forever their debtors;
-but it is a scandal and a reproach to this Nation that they are so
-few. If in this mighty battle our allies win, it will be due to no
-real aid of ours; and if they should fail, black infamy would be our
-portion because of the delay and the folly and the weakness and the
-cold, time-serving timidity of our Government, to which this failure
-would be primarily due. If those responsible for our failure, if those
-responsible for the refusal to prepare during the two and a half years
-in which we were vouchsafed such warning as never nation previously
-received, if those responsible for the sluggish feebleness with which
-we have acted since we helplessly drifted into the war--if these men
-now repented of the cruel wrong they have done this Nation and mankind,
-we could afford to wrap their past folly and evil-doing in the kindly
-mantle of oblivion. But they boast of their foolishness, they excuse
-and justify it, they announce that they feel pride and delight in
-contemplating it. Therefore, it is for us, the people, to bow our heads
-on this our penitential day; for we are laggards in the battle, we have
-let others fight in our quarrel, we have let others pay with their
-shattered bodies for the fire in their burning souls.
-
-The trumpets of the Lord sounded for Armageddon; but our hearts were
-not swift to answer nor our feet jubilant; coldly we watched others die
-that we might live. Our rulers were supple and adroit, but they were
-not mighty of soul. They have shown that they will not lead us, and
-will ever stand in front only if we force them forward. Therefore, the
-reason is all the greater why we, the American people, must search our
-own hearts and with unflinching will insist that from now on not a day,
-not an hour, shall be wasted until our giant but soft and lazy strength
-is hardened, until we ourselves take the burden from the shoulders of
-others, until we pay whatever price our past shortcomings demand, and
-with heads uplifted and spirit undaunted stride forward to the great
-goal of the peace of victorious right.
-
-
-
-
-A SQUARE DEAL FOR ALL AMERICANS
-
-APRIL 27, 1918
-
-
-There is no room in this country for the man who tries to be both
-an American and something else. There can be no such thing as a
-fifty-fifty loyalty between America and Germany. Either a man is
-whole-hearted in his support of America and her allies, and in his
-hostility to Germany and her allies, or he is not loyal to America at
-all. In such case he should be at once interned or sent out of the
-country. But if he is whole-hearted in his loyal support of America,
-then no matter what his birthplace or parentage he is entitled to stand
-on a full and exact equality with every other American.
-
-Therefore the obligation is twofold, and one side is just as important
-as the other. Every American of German birth or parentage must act
-as an American and nothing else, and if he does not so act he should
-be treated as an alien enemy. But if he acts exactly as other good
-Americans act, then it is a shame and a disgrace not to treat him
-absolutely like these other good Americans. The immense majority of
-Americans who are in whole or in part of German blood are as stanch
-Americans as are to be found in the land. They are serving in our
-armies precisely as other Americans serve. They are exactly as fit as
-any other American to fill the highest positions anywhere in our armies
-or in civil life. Any discrimination against them, active or passive,
-military or political, social or industrial, is an intolerable outrage.
-Moreover, such a discrimination is itself profoundly anti-American in
-its effects, for it not only cruelly wounds brave and upright and loyal
-Americans, but tends to drive them back into segregation, away from the
-mass of American citizenship.
-
-America is a Nation and not a mosaic of nationalities. The various
-nationalities that come here are not to remain separate, but to blend
-into the one American nationality--the nationality of Washington and
-Lincoln, of Muhlenberg and Sheridan. Therefore, we must have but one
-language, the English language. Every immigrant who comes here should
-be required within five years to learn English or to leave the country,
-for hereafter every immigrant should be treated as a future fellow
-citizen and not merely as a labor unit. English should be the only
-language taught or used in the primary schools. We should provide by
-law so that after a reasonable interval every newspaper in this country
-should be published in English.
-
-A square deal for all Americans means relentless attack on all men
-in this country who are not straight-out Americans and nothing else.
-It just as emphatically means to stand by every good American of
-German blood exactly as much as by every other good American. In
-every loyalty organization a special effort should be made to see
-that in the leadership and in the ranks the Americans of German
-blood come in on precisely the same basis as every one else. And the
-straight-out Americans, in whole or in part of German blood, should
-themselves insist on this, not as a favor which they request, but
-as a right which they demand, a right predicated on their fervid
-and militant Americanism. I wish we could see such an organization
-formed, an uncompromisingly straight-out American organization,
-including Americans of all our different blood strains, but with as
-large a proportion of Americans in whole or in part of German blood as
-possible, and then let this organization take the lead in aggressively
-loyal Americanism, in the demand to fight this war with all speed
-and efficiency, until it is crowned by the peace of complete victory
-and in the purpose to make this peace mark the glorious rebirth, the
-purification and the giant growth of the American spirit--the spirit of
-an intense and unified American nationalism.
-
-We Americans must be loyal first to our own Nation and to our own
-national ideals, and we must develop to the utmost the virile hardihood
-of body, mind, and soul without which there can be no real greatness.
-And our devotion to America shall in part show itself in the unswerving
-effort to make this great democratic Republic both strong for
-self-defense and strong for wise and brotherly help to other nations,
-to make it both the leader and the servant of all mankind.
-
-
-
-
-THE GERMAN HORROR
-
-MAY 2, 1918
-
-
-The Hague conferences laid down a number of rules which the signatory
-powers, including Germany, agreed to observe in order to mitigate the
-horrors of war. Germany has with equal cynicism and brutality violated
-every one of these rules. She has waged war as it was waged in the Dark
-Ages. She has shown revolting cruelty toward soldiers and especially
-toward non-combatants, including women and children.
-
-At this moment a great cannon is bombarding Paris. Not a soldier
-has been killed by it; it has not in the smallest degree affected
-France’s military power, nor was it intended to do so. It was intended
-to terrorize the French civilian population by the destruction of
-churches, hospitals, and private buildings and the murder of women and
-children. On Good Friday one of the shells wrecked a church and killed
-a number of the little choir boys and a number of women who were at
-prayer. Among the killed were three American women whom I knew, who
-were abroad working for our soldiers. An American friend who saw the
-horror writes me:
-
- Evidently the Germans do not worry over the fact that their shells
- descend on women and children kneeling in prayer on a Good Friday,
- before the crucifix.
-
-Another American friend, a Red Cross woman, writes:
-
- One shell burst in a maternity hospital, killing a nurse, a young
- mother, and a little baby. Several other mothers and new-born babies
- were injured.
-
-The Zeppelins and airplanes are continually bombarding undefended
-English and French cities and have killed women and children by the
-hundreds. The submarines have waged war with callous mercilessness.
-Their crews have continually practiced torture on the prisoners they
-have taken. They leave women and children to drown. They shoot into the
-lifeboats. At this moment Americans are dying from the poison gas which
-the Germans, in contemptuous defiance of The Hague rules, have made
-an ordinary weapon of war. I have just been talking with an American
-soldier absolutely trustworthy, who himself saw the body of a Canadian
-whom the Germans had just crucified.
-
-Every violation of the laws of war has been practiced by Germany. By
-her outrages on humanity she has made herself an outlaw among nations,
-and unless she pays heavily for her crimes, the whole world will be
-in danger. It is Germany, and only Germany, who is responsible for
-the hideous atrocities that have marked this war, atrocities which
-all civilized men outside of Germany believed to have been eliminated
-forever from civilized warfare. Germany has habitually and as a matter
-of policy practiced the torture of men, the rape of women, and the
-killing of children.
-
-It was deeply to our discredit that during the shameful years of our
-neutrality we refused to protest against these hideous atrocities. Now
-at last this Nation has awakened and has gone to war against the enemy
-of America and of mankind. Let our people now keep steadily in mind
-just what kind of a foe we are fighting and just what kind of infamy
-that foe is habitually practicing. Then let us resolve that, come what
-may, we will fight this war through to a finish until the authors of
-this hideous infamy have paid in full and have been punished as they
-deserve. For in no other way can a peace worth having be obtained.
-
-
-
-
-SEDITION, A FREE PRESS, AND PERSONAL RULE
-
-MAY 7, 1918
-
-
-The legislation now being enacted by Congress should deal drastically
-with sedition. It should also guarantee the right of the press and
-people to speak the truth freely of all their public servants,
-including the President, and to criticize them in the severest terms of
-truth whenever they come short in their public duty. Finally, Congress
-should grant the Executive the amplest powers to act as an executive
-and should hold him to stern accountability for failure so to act, but
-it should itself do the actual lawmaking and should clearly define the
-lines and limits of action and should retain and use the fullest powers
-of investigation into and supervision over such action. Sedition is a
-form of treason. It is an offense against the country, not against the
-President. At this time to oppose the draft or sending our armies to
-Europe, to uphold Germany, to attack our allies, to oppose raising the
-money necessary to carry on the war are at least forms of sedition,
-while to act as a German spy or to encourage German spies to use
-money or intrigue in the corrupt service of Germany, to tamper with
-our war manufactures and to encourage our soldiers to desert or to
-fail in their duty, and all similar actions are forms of undoubtedly
-illegal sedition. For some of these offenses death should be summarily
-inflicted. For all the punishment should be severe.
-
-The Administration has been gravely remiss in dealing with such acts.
-
-Free speech, exercised both individually and through a free press, is
-a necessity in any country where the people are themselves free. Our
-Government is the servant of the people, whereas in Germany it is the
-master of the people. This is because the American people are free and
-the German are not free. The President is merely the most important
-among a large number of public servants. He should be supported or
-opposed exactly to the degree which is warranted by his good conduct
-or bad conduct, his efficiency or inefficiency in rendering loyal,
-able, and disinterested service to the Nation as a whole. Therefore
-it is absolutely necessary that there should be full liberty to tell
-the truth about his acts, and this means that it is exactly necessary
-to blame him when he does wrong as to praise him when he does right.
-Any other attitude in an American citizen is both base and servile. To
-announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we
-are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic
-and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. Nothing
-but the truth should be spoken about him or any one else. But it is
-even more important to tell the truth, pleasant or unpleasant, about
-him than about any one else.
-
-During the last year the Administration has shown itself anxious to
-punish the newspapers which uphold the war, but which told the truth
-about the Administration’s failure to conduct the war efficiently,
-whereas it has failed to proceed against various powerful newspapers
-which opposed the war or attacked our allies or directly or indirectly
-aided Germany against this country, as these papers upheld the
-Administration and defended the inefficiency. Therefore, no additional
-power should be given the Administration to deal with papers for
-criticizing the Administration. And, moreover, Congress should closely
-scrutinize the way the Postmaster-General and Attorney-General have
-already exercised discrimination between the papers they prosecuted and
-the papers they failed to prosecute.
-
-Congress should give the President full power for efficient executive
-action. It should not abrogate its own power. It should define how he
-is to reorganize the Administration. It should say how large an army we
-are to have and not leave the decision to the amiable Secretary of War,
-who has for two years shown such inefficiency. It should declare for an
-army of five million men and inform the Secretary that it would give
-him more the minute he asks for more.
-
-
-
-
-THE DANGERS OF A PREMATURE PEACE
-
-MAY 12, 1918
-
-
-As now seems likely, if the great German drive fails, it is at least
-possible that, directly or indirectly, the Germans will then start a
-peace drive. In such case they will probably endeavor to make such
-seeming concessions as to put a premium upon pacifist agitation
-for peace in the free countries of the West against which they are
-fighting. To yield to such peace proposals would be fraught with the
-greatest danger to the Allies, and especially to our own country in the
-future.
-
-Let us never forget that no promise Germany makes can be trusted.
-The _kultur_ developed under the Hohenzollerns rests upon shameless
-treachery and duplicity no less than upon ruthless violence and
-barbarity.
-
-For example, there are strong indications that Germany may be prepared,
-if she now fails on the western front, to abandon all that for which
-she has fought on her western front, provided that in Middle Europe
-and in the East there is no interference with her. In other words,
-she would be prepared to give back Alsace and Lorraine to France, to
-give Italian Austria to Italy, to give Luxemburg to Belgium, and to
-let the Allies keep the colonies they have conquered, on condition
-that her dominance in Russia and in the Balkans, her dominance of the
-subject peoples of Austria through the Austrian Hapsburgs, and her
-dominance of Western Asia through her vassal state, Turkey, should be
-left undisturbed. To the average American, and probably to the average
-Englishman and Frenchman, there is much that is alluring in such a
-programme. It might be urged as a method of stopping the frightful
-slaughter of war, while securing every purpose for which the free
-peoples who still fight are fighting. Yet it would be infinitely better
-that this war were carried on to the point of exhaustion than that we
-yield to such terms.
-
-Such terms would mean the definite establishment of Germany’s military
-ascendancy on a scale never hitherto approached in the civilized world.
-It would mean that perhaps within a dozen years, certainly within the
-lifetime of the very men now fighting this war, this country and the
-other free countries would have to choose between bowing their necks
-to the German yoke or else going into another war under conditions far
-more disadvantageous to them.
-
-A premature and inconclusive peace now would spell ruin for the world,
-just as in 1864 a premature and inconclusive peace would have spelled
-ruin to the United States, and in the present instance the United
-States would share the ruin of the rest of the free peoples of mankind.
-
-On the face of it Germany would not become a giant empire. Just exactly
-as on the face of it at present Germany, Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria
-call themselves simply four allied nations, standing on equal terms.
-But in reality those four powers are merely Germany and her three
-vassal states, whose military and economic and political powers are all
-disposed of by the Hohenzollerns. A peace such as that above outlined
-would leave these as really one huge empire. The population of these
-four countries, plus the populations of Russian regions recently
-annexed by Germany, is over two hundred millions. This population
-would be directed and dominated by the able, powerful, and utterly
-brutal and unscrupulous German governing class, which the very fact of
-the peace would put in the saddle, and the huge empire thus dominated
-and directed would become a greater menace to the free peoples than
-anything known for the last thousand years.
-
-Short-sighted people will say that this power would only menace Asia,
-and therefore that we need feel no concern about it. There could be no
-error greater or more lamentable. Twenty years hence by mere mass and
-growth Germany would dominate the Western European powers that have now
-fought her. This would mean that the United States would be left as her
-victim.
-
-In the first place, she would at once trample the Monroe Doctrine under
-foot, and treat tropical and south temperate America as her fields for
-exploitation, domination, and conquest. In the next place, she would
-surely trample this country under foot and bleed us white, doing to us
-on a gigantic scale what she has done to Belgium. If such a peace as is
-above described were at this time made, the United States could by no
-possibility escape the fate of Belgium and of the Russian territories
-taken by Germany unless we ourselves became a powerful militarist state
-with every democratic principle subordinated to the one necessity of
-turning this Nation into a huge armed camp--I do not mean an armed
-nation, as Switzerland is armed, and as I believe this country ought to
-be armed. I mean a nation whose sons, every one of them, would have to
-serve from three to five years in the army, and whose whole activities,
-external and internal, would be conditioned by the one fact of the
-necessity of making head, single-handed, against Germany.
-
-I very strongly believe that never again should we be caught unprepared
-as we have been caught unprepared this time. I believe that all our
-young men should be trained to arms as the Swiss are trained. But I
-would regard it as an unspeakable calamity for this Nation to have to
-turn its whole energies into the kind of exaggerated militarism which
-under such circumstances would alone avail for self-defense.
-
-The military power of Germany must be brought low. The subject nations
-of Austria, the Balkans, and Western Asia must be freed. We ought not
-to refrain an hour longer from going to war with Turkey and Bulgaria.
-They are part of Germany’s military strength. They represent some of
-the most cruel tyrannies over subject peoples for which Germany stands.
-It is idle for us to pretend sympathy with the Armenians unless we war
-on Turkey, which, with Germany’s assent, has well-nigh crushed the
-Armenians out of existence.
-
-When President Wilson stated that this war was waged to make democracy
-safe throughout the world, he properly and definitely committed the
-American people to the principles above enunciated, and for the
-American people to accept less than their President has thus announced
-that he would insist upon would be unworthy. The President has also
-said that “there is therefore but one response possible for us.
-Force--force to the utmost--force without stint or limit--the righteous
-and triumphant force which shall make right the law of the world and
-cast every selfish dominion down in the dust.”
-
-The American people must support President Wilson unflinchingly in
-the stand to which he is thus committed and must resolutely refuse
-to accept any other position. We must guard against any slackening of
-effort. We must refuse to accept any premature peace or any peace other
-than the peace of overwhelming victory.
-
-We must secure such complete freedom for the peoples of Central Europe
-and Western Asia as will shatter forever the threat of German world
-domination. Our honorable obligations to our allies, our loyalty to our
-own national principles, the need to protect our American neighbors,
-the need to defend our own land and people, and our hopes for the peace
-and happiness of our children’s children all forbid us to accept an
-ignoble and inconclusive peace.
-
-
-
-
-THE WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN
-
-MAY 27, 1918
-
-
-Of course the primary factor in deciding this war is and will be the
-army. But there can be no great army in war to-day unless a great
-nation stands back of it. The most important of all our needs is
-immensely to strengthen the fighting line at the front. But it cannot
-be permanently strengthened unless the whole Nation is organized back
-of the front. We need increased production by all. We need thrift and
-the avoidance of extravagance and of waste of money upon non-essentials
-by all. We need the investment of our money in government securities by
-all of us.
-
-The Government, through the War Savings campaign, offers the
-opportunity to every individual in the Nation to join in a great
-national movement to secure these ends. The Treasury Department
-proposes as a means to achieve these ends that all our people form
-themselves into Thrift clubs or War Savings societies. This is the
-people’s war. The responsibility for the Government rests on the people
-as a whole. The army is the people’s army. It can be supported only
-if the people invest in the securities of the Government. And this
-investment by the people should be as nearly universal as possible.
-All the men and the women and half the children of the land should
-be active members of Uncle Sam’s team. The War Savings campaign
-offers them the chance to be active members. This campaign means
-the encouragement of thrift and production. But it means much more
-than this. It also means to make our people realize their solidarity
-and mutual interdependence and to make them understand that the
-Government is really theirs. Therefore it is a movement for genuine
-Americanization of all our people. It is a movement to fuse all our
-different race stocks into one great unified nationality. It is
-emphatically a movement for nationalism and patriotism.
-
-Between thirty and forty millions of our people to-day own Liberty
-bonds or War Savings Stamps. All of us who come in this class have an
-increased sense of loyalty and responsibility to the Government. The
-Treasury Department has offered through the War Savings plan a great
-opportunity for the entire Nation to group itself into War Savings
-societies or Thrift clubs and thus be of immediate and direct service
-to the Government. Neither through government programme and traditions
-nor through the habits of the people were we in any way prepared for
-this struggle. We were a spendthrift Nation. One of the roads to
-national unity and national force in this war is through thrift, using
-the word to include both increased production in every field and also
-the conservation of those things which are so desperately needed for
-the winning of the war. The conscientious thrifty man to-day will
-conserve food as requested by the Food Administration. He will conserve
-fuel as requested by the Fuel Administration. And he will conserve to
-the best of his ability the labor and materials which the Government
-needs by not using his money for purchasing any of the non-essentials
-and thereby using up materials and labor needed by the Government. He
-will, by purchasing government securities, entrust the spending of his
-money to the Government in order to speed up the war and to secure the
-peace of overwhelming victory.
-
-Let all of us join in this movement. The success of the War Savings
-campaign means an immense addition to our war strength. It also means
-the first step in economic preparedness for what is to come after the
-war. We must never return to our haphazard spendthrift ways. Thrift
-should be made a national habit as part of our social and industrial
-readjustment.
-
-We are just finishing our Red Cross campaign. Now let us put through
-the War Savings campaign.
-
-
-
-
-ANTI-BOLSHEVISM
-
-JUNE 5, 1918
-
-
-On the whole the worst fate that can befall any country is to fall
-into the hands of the Bolsheviki. Therefore, we should visit with
-heavy condemnation the Romanoffs of politics and industry who, by
-Bourbon-like inability to see or refusal to face the future, make ready
-the way for Bolshevism. Utter ruin will befall this country if it
-falls into the hands of Haywoods and Townleys and of the politicians
-who truckle to them, but the surest way to secure their temporary
-and disastrous triumph is to refuse to make every effort, in sane,
-good-tempered, resolute fashion, to deal with the problems which affect
-unfavorably the welfare of the farmer and the working-man.
-
-Mere stolid inaction, mere refusal to acknowledge the existence of
-trouble and duty to remedy it amounts to playing into the hands of the
-worst and most evil agitators. Such an attitude on the part of our
-political leaders is almost as bad as the failure to act with instant
-readiness and full strength against disorder or as the time-serving
-cowardice which bows to and flatters the leaders of disorder. What is
-needed is unhesitating and thoroughgoing condemnation of, and action
-against, the anarchists and inciters to sedition and to class envy and
-hatred, and at the same time genuine and radical effort to secure for
-the farmer and the working-man and for every one else the square deal
-in actual fact. Neither attitude is enough by itself; the two must go
-together if results of lasting worth are to be secured.
-
-The leaders in such movements as the I.W.W. include a large proportion
-of men whose activities are criminal, and who, as regards civilization
-and all that makes life worth living for decent, hard-working men and
-women, stand merely as human beasts of prey. But very many of these
-fellows are not bad men at all, but merely unfortunates who turn to
-an evil organization because no good organization offers them relief
-or concerns itself with their welfare. I am not speaking of theory;
-I am speaking of fact. I know of cases in connection with the forest
-service where government officials, by acting on behalf of maltreated
-crews of lumber companies and by seeing that they got justice and fair
-treatment, turned them into zealous, right-feeling, public-spirited
-citizens, who, for instance, worked hard and disinterestedly in putting
-out forest fires.
-
-It is idle to say that no governmental action is needed on behalf of
-farmers and wage-workers. Unquestionably such action will merely do
-harm unless at the same time the interests and permanent welfare of
-the business men of the country, great and small, are considered. But
-the action itself is necessary. It should be based on the theory that
-so far as possible the work of betterment, alike as regards farmers,
-working-men, and business men, take the form of coöperation among
-themselves, with the maximum amount of individual and collective
-private effort, and the minimum necessary amount of governmental
-control and encouragement. It is not possible to state empirically in
-advance just how far this governmental control and encouragement shall
-go. This must be determined by actual experience in settling what is
-necessary in each individual set of cases. The best result will always
-come where the organization of private citizens is not limited to any
-one class, but include farmers, working-men, business men; just as is
-true of one such great organization in the State of Iowa; just as is
-true of a smaller but successful organization in and around the city
-of Springfield, Massachusetts; just as is preëminently true of many
-of the state councils of defense. There must be sincere purpose to
-push forward and remedy wrong; but there must likewise be firm refusal
-to submit to the leadership of either the criminal fringe or the
-lunatic fringe. Class hatred is a mighty poor substitute for American
-brotherhood. If we are wise we will proceed by evolution and not
-revolution. But Bourbon refusal to move forward at all merely invites
-revolution.
-
-
-
-
-GENERAL WOOD
-
-JUNE 15, 1918
-
-
-Senator Hiram Johnson has rendered many notable services to the public,
-and among them is his recent speech concerning the cruel injustice
-with which Major-General Leonard Wood has been treated and the very
-grave damage thereby done the army and the Allied cause at this
-critical moment of the war.
-
-General Wood’s entire offense consists in his having, before the war,
-continually advocated our doing things which now every one in his
-senses admits ought to have been done. Nine tenths of wisdom consists
-of being wise in time. General Wood was wise in time. Moreover,
-by twenty years of hard, practical work, he fitted himself to do
-peculiarly well in this very crisis. He was our senior general in rank,
-he was recognized by the best French and English military authorities
-as by experience trained to play an immediate and important part in
-the difficult and perilous joint work of the war. He had testified
-at length and with exhaustive professional knowledge before the
-congressional military committees, one year and two years prior to
-our entry into the war, pointing out all the military lacks, which
-experience has since shown to exist and which the War Department then
-denied existed. He is to be credited with the only piece of serious
-military preparedness in advance which is to our credit. In the service
-of 1915, in the teeth of indifference and hostility from his superiors,
-he created the Plattsburg officers’ reserve training camp, starting the
-system of training camps which has enabled us to officer our draft army.
-
-He is in splendid physical condition. Recently when in France he
-was severely wounded by a shell burst, and the surgeons reported his
-recovery as being more rapid than would have been the case with the
-average young man of robust bodily health and vigor. He has done
-excellent work in training his men at Camp Funston. He has been
-unwearied in looking after the health and welfare of his men. He has
-been rewarded by their loyal devotion; they have been profoundly
-grieved and moved by having him suddenly taken from them. The refusal
-to use his great ability and energy means a distinct subtraction from
-the sum total of our military efficiency, a distinct addition to the
-risk from disease and discomfort which some of our men at the front
-will have to incur, and a distinct benefit to the cause of Germany.
-
-No explanation has been given the American people for the action
-concerning him. Nothing has been made public which warrants our belief
-that this action was due either to professional or to patriotic
-considerations.
-
-
-
-
-HELP RUSSIA NOW
-
-JUNE 20, 1918
-
-
-Russia has been thrown under the iron tyranny of German militarism
-and capitalism by the Bolshevists of the Lenine type. The Russian
-people are slowly awakening to this bitter truth. The far-sighted, the
-Russians of genuine patriotism, have long been awake, but the peasants,
-who are at heart good, but who are ignorant and misled, are now
-awakening also. Plenty of them, especially among the Cossacks, are well
-aware that submission to Germany now means death for Russia. Plenty of
-them are eager to fight and know well that only by successful war on a
-grand scale can Russia now be saved and regenerated, but they must have
-help and the help must be given immediately or it may be too late, and
-America can best give the help.
-
-A Russian peasant woman who can hardly write her name is here to ask
-that the help be given immediately and that it be given in Siberia.
-She is a remarkable character in her strength, her simplicity, her
-direct straightforwardness, and her intense earnestness and entire
-disinterestedness. She was a major in the Russian army until the
-Russian army was betrayed and dissolved. Her peasant husband was
-killed in the ranks. She served in the ranks of a regiment of men. She
-commanded in a regiment of women. She has been wounded four times. She
-was born in Tomsk, Siberia. She is a peasant of the best class, in
-habits of thought and belief and life and sympathy. But she has a wide
-outlook. She knows that America will keep her word about Siberia, just
-as America kept her word about Cuba. She asks that for our own sake,
-just as much as for Russia’s sake, we now send an army to Siberia,
-entering through Vladivostok or Harbin, or through both. She asks us to
-announce that after the war is over we guarantee to return to Russia
-her country with the right for her people to decide for themselves
-how they are to be governed, and that in the war we fight with and for
-all the Russians who will fight against Germany for Russia, and that
-we fight to the death against the Germans and against all Russians who
-side with the Germans.
-
-Siberia is in chaos. Eastern Siberia has plenty of food and contains
-large elements of the population, especially Cossacks, who would
-promptly join with an Allied force which they believed would, in good
-faith, aid in the reconquest of Russia for the purpose of giving it
-back to the Russians themselves. West of Lake Baikal is a region
-dominated by a German army, some twenty thousand strong, composed of
-former German prisoners of war, who are organized under the name of
-the German Red Guards and who are the permanent adherents of German
-autocracy, but who help the cause of Russian anarchy in order to
-conquer Russia for the German autocracy. West of these again a stretch
-of country, which includes the passes of the Ural Mountains, is held
-by the splendid Czechs, who, by the way, must at the end of this
-war be rewarded by seeing an independent Czech-Slovak commonwealth
-established, just as there must also be a great Jugo-Slav commonwealth.
-
-At once there should be in East Siberia an American army of say thirty
-thousand men with a Japanese army of the same size and a British
-imperial army of as nearly the same size as possible. If there was
-difficulty as to the command of the Allied forces, borrow some man of
-great reputation, Joffre, for instance, from France. Let the woman
-major above spoken of and other Russian friends of the peasants and of
-a Russian republic go in advance to make clear that the Allied army
-comes only to restore Russia to the Russians. Let all Russians who
-join be paid by the United States on the same scale as our own troops,
-and if necessary let the United States guarantee the payment of the
-Japanese. Move against the German Red Guards as quickly as possible
-and then push instantly to join the heroic Czechs in the Urals. Let
-the railroads be organized back of the army by our best railroad men
-and let them carry immediately behind the army immense quantities of
-clothing, boots, and farm machinery. Siberia has food and it will
-furnish hundreds of thousands of soldiers who will rally around such
-an Allied army as a nucleus. Before this army reached the Urals, the
-Germans would have to prepare to meet it and their pressure on the
-Western front would thereby be relieved.
-
-Russia is at this moment lost, so that no change in Russia can make
-things worse for the Allies than they now are. We ought to have acted
-with energy and intelligence on her behalf a year ago. Let us at least
-act now, for no possible action can be worse than our inaction. She
-does not need talk and envoys to study the situation. She needs an
-army to serve as a nucleus around which she can create her own immense
-armies. The above plan is better than none. If our Government can
-devise a better, let them do so, but let us act at once.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN FOURTH OF JULY
-
-JUNE 23, 1918
-
-
-It is announced that on the Fourth of July the celebration is to be
-by race groups--that is, by Scandinavians, Slavs, Germans, Italians,
-and so forth. In sport organizations it may be necessary to have such
-a kind of divided celebration in some places, but I most emphatically
-protest against such a type of celebration being general, and I doubt
-whether it is advisable to have it anywhere. On the contrary, I believe
-that we should make the Fourth of July a genuine Americanization day,
-and should use it to teach the prime lesson of Americanism, which is
-that there is no room in the country for the perpetuation of separate
-race groups or racial divisions; that we must all be Americans and
-nothing but Americans, and that therefore on the Fourth of July we
-should all get together simply as Americans and celebrate the day as
-such without regard to our several racial origins.
-
-At two thirds of the places where I have made speeches on Americanism
-(and these speeches have at least been free from any pussy-footing on
-Americanism), I have been introduced by straight Americans who were
-in whole or in part of German blood. At Milwaukee, for example, I was
-introduced by August Vogel, who has three sons already in the army and
-a fourth who will enter this summer. At Martinsville, Indiana, I was
-introduced by the mayor, George F. Schmidt, who has two sons in the
-army. One of the sons, Wayne Schmidt, was the catcher of the University
-of Indiana baseball nine. He was in the same regiment with my two
-sons, Ted and Archie, and like Archie has been severely wounded. Mayor
-Schmidt writes me:
-
- We are proud of Wayne and hope that his wounds will soon heal and that
- he may get back to his regiment and continue to serve his country.
- There is nothing fifty-fifty in this boy’s blood or any of his kin.
- His greatest ambition is to lead a company up the streets of Berlin.
-
-This speaks the true American!
-
-I also have German blood in my veins. We Vogels and Schmidts and
-Roosevelts intend to celebrate the Fourth of July with all our fellow
-Americans, without regard to whether they are of German, English or
-Irish, French, Scandinavian, Spanish, or Italian blood. Unless they
-are Americans and nothing else, they are out of place at a Fourth of
-July celebration, and if they are straight Americans, absolutely loyal
-to America, and resolutely bent on putting this war through until
-it is crowned by the peace of complete victory, then we are their
-brothers, their fellow Americans, and we decline to permit any lines of
-separation between us and them.
-
-
-
-
-HOW NOT TO ADJOURN POLITICS
-
-JUNE 25, 1918
-
-
-In the current North American Review and its supplemental War Weekly
-there are two strong and deeply patriotic articles on the President’s
-recent announcement that politics is to be adjourned. When contrasted
-with the injection of politics by the President into the senatorial
-contests in Wisconsin and Michigan, never before in any great crisis in
-this country has there been such complete subordination of patriotism
-to politics as by this Administration during this war. Witness the
-activities of the organization under Messrs. Burleson and Creel and the
-working alliance between the Administration and the Hearst newspapers,
-while Vice-President Marshall and Secretary McAdoo give the signal for
-frank partisanship of an extreme type in their public speeches. The
-various activities are, of course, co-related and directed toward the
-same end.
-
-In Wisconsin the President interfered by a personal appeal for the
-Democratic senatorial candidate against the Republican. He based his
-appeal on certain alleged positions taken by the Republican candidate,
-Mr. Lenroot, during the two years and a half preceding our entry into
-the war, which positions, he asserted, did not meet the “acid test” of
-patriotism. The President made the conduct of our public men during
-the two years and a half prior to the war the test by which they are
-to be judged, and where he himself applies this test to others he must
-himself be judged by it.
-
-His supporters make the plea that to call attention to the President’s
-record during these two and a half years is to cry over spilt milk. But
-the President’s attack on Lenroot was a square repudiation of this
-plea when it applied to anybody except himself. In reality the “acid
-test” of patriotism during these two and a half years is to be found
-in the use of phrases like “too proud to fight” and “peace without
-victory” and the refusal to act instead of merely talking after the
-sinking of the Lusitania; in the fatuous refusal to prepare and in the
-insistence on preserving an ignoble neutrality between right and wrong
-between those who were fighting to make the world safe for democracy
-and liberty and those who were fighting to overthrow both. Tried by the
-test of past conduct which the President applied to Mr. Lenroot, he is
-himself found wanting. Mr. Lenroot spilled a teaspoonful of milk, but
-Mr. Wilson spilled a bucketful and he must not call attention to the
-teaspoon and expect to escape having attention called to the bucket.
-
-The President has now personally requested Mr. Henry Ford to come
-forward as his personal candidate for the Senate in Michigan. This
-action cannot be reconciled either with the President’s statement that
-politics must be adjourned or with the reasons he alleged for opposing
-Mr. Lenroot. No man was a more intense pacifist, no man struggled
-harder against preparedness, no man was more eagerly hailed as an
-ally by the pro-Germans than Mr. Ford during the two and a half years
-before we did our duty and entered the war. He is not a Republican;
-he is not a Democrat. He supported Mr. Wilson on the “he kept us out
-of war” issue. Mr. Wilson can only desire his election on grounds of
-personal politics, as Mr. Wilson wishes as associates not strong men,
-but servants, and from the servants he demands servility even more
-than service. I have not the slightest political feeling when politics
-comes into hostile contact with patriotism and Americanism. There is no
-public servant whom during the past year I have supported more heartily
-than the Democratic Senator, Chamberlain. I oppose Mr. Ford, because
-in the great crisis I feel that his election would be a calamity from
-the standpoint of far-sighted and patriotic Americanism. I would oppose
-him if he had been nominated by the Republican Party. I oppose him in
-precisely the same spirit now that he has been nominated on personal
-grounds by Mr. Wilson.
-
-
-
-
-HATS OFF TO THE INTERNATIONAL TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION
-
-JUNE 27, 1918
-
-
-The published reports of the International Typographical Union,
-issued from Indianapolis, make a very remarkable showing and put that
-organization high on the honor roll of America for the Great War.
-
-Forty-one hundred journeymen members of the union and seven hundred
-apprentices are in the military and naval forces of the United States
-and Canada. Seventy-five members have already paid with their lives
-for their devotion to their country. The union has paid $22,000
-mortuary benefits to the widows, orphans, and mothers of these men.
-The union, through its executive council, has invested $90,000 in the
-Liberty loans, and subordinate local unions and individual members have
-invested $3,000,000 in the Liberty loans.
-
-These are war-time activities. During the same period the International
-Typographical Union has continued all its ordinary benefit works. It
-has paid over $350,000 to fifteen hundred old-age pensioners, over
-$300,000 in mortuary benefits, and $170,000 to the Union Printers’
-Home at Colorado Springs. Every dollar has been paid by members of the
-organization in the form of regular dues and assessments. The union
-neither solicits nor accepts contributions to its benefit funds.
-
-During the same period the union has expended only $1200 for strike
-expenses. The union acts in thoroughgoing patriotic fashion on the
-conviction that there should be no strikes or lockouts during the
-war. Its officers regard themselves as volunteers in the army for the
-preservation of industrial peace, at least for the duration of the
-war, and I hope for long after the war. Such conduct offers a striking
-contrast to the action of certain corporations which during this war
-have refused to permit their employees to organize. Labor has as much
-right as capital to organize. It is tyranny to forbid the exercise
-of this right, just as it is tyranny to misuse the power acquired by
-organization. The people of the United States do not believe in tyranny
-and do believe in coöperation.
-
-The International Typographical Union has offered an admirable
-example of Americanism and patriotism. Its attitude is typical of the
-attitude of organized labor generally. Hats off to the International
-Typographical Union! And hats off to the working-men and working-women
-of the United States!
-
-
-
-
-THE PERFORMANCE OF A GREAT PUBLIC DUTY
-
-JULY 3, 1918
-
-
-It is announced from Washington that the President has been converted
-to the need of universal military training of our young men, as a
-permanent policy. This is excellent. If this policy is forthwith
-incorporated into our laws, it will represent an immense national
-advance. In the first place, it will guarantee us against a repetition
-of the humiliating experiences of the last four years, when our
-helpless refusal to prepare invited Germany’s attack upon us and then
-forced us to rely entirely upon our allies to protect us from that
-attack while for over a year we slowly made ready to defend ourselves.
-In the next place, it will immeasurably increase the moral and physical
-efficiency of the young men who are trained and fit them both to do
-better for themselves and to perform in better fashion the tasks of
-American citizenship. Finally it is essential that the policy should
-be adopted now while we are at war and therefore while our people are
-awake to the needs of the situation. As soon as peace comes, there
-will be a revival of the sinister agitation of the pro-German or other
-anti-American leaders and of the silly clamor of the pacifists, all
-of whom will with brazen folly again reiterate that preparedness ends
-with war, and that, anyhow, all war can be averted by signing scraps
-of paper. The adoption at once of the policy of obligatory universal
-military training will be the performance of a great public duty.
-
-For three years the foremost advocates of this policy have pointed
-out that it can advantageously be combined with a certain amount of
-industrial training. It is earnestly to be hoped that this element of
-industrial training will be incorporated in the law. Of course, in such
-case the length of service with the colors in the field, aside from
-preliminary training in the higher school grades, ought to be a year,
-so as to avoid superficiality. Credit should be given the graduates of
-certain scholastic institutions or to individuals who speedily attain
-a high degree of proficiency, and for them the time of service could
-be shortened. All officers or other candidates for officers’ training
-schools would be chosen from among the best of the men who had gone
-through the training, without regard to anything except their fitness.
-This would represent the embodiment in our army of the democratic
-principle which insists upon an equal chance for all, equal justice for
-all, and the need for leadership, and therefore for special rewards for
-leadership. The industrial training could be so shaped as to emphasize
-the need that hard workers who are efficient should become in a real
-sense partners in industry, and that insistence upon efficiency should
-be accompanied by a fair division of the rewards of efficiency, and by
-insistence that the work should be made healthful and interesting, so
-that its faithful performance would be a matter of pride and pleasure.
-
-At this moment our training camps are huge universities, huge
-laboratories of fine American citizenship. Let us make them permanent
-institutions. They develop both power of initiative and power of
-obedience. They inculcate self-reliance and self-respect. They also
-inculcate respect for others and readiness for discipline, which
-means readiness to use our collective power in such shape as to make
-us threefold more efficient than we have been. To make these camps
-permanent training schools for all our young men would mean the
-greatest boon this Nation could receive.
-
-
-
-
-REPEAL THE CHARTER OF THE GERMAN-AMERICAN ALLIANCE
-
-JULY 11, 1918
-
-
-The United States Senate has struck an effective blow against the
-Hun within our gates by unanimously voting to repeal the charter of
-the German-American Alliance. It is earnestly to be hoped that the
-House will at once follow suit with like unanimity. The Alliance has
-been thoroughly mischievous in its activities. It has acted in the
-interest of Germany and against the interest of America. It has tried
-to perpetuate Germanism as a separate nationality with a separate
-language in the United States; it has attacked our allies; it has
-encouraged disloyalty; it was decorated by the Kaiser for its services
-to Germany. It has endeavored to prostitute our politics to German
-needs. I have personally had the honor of being specially singled out
-by it for attack. It received money from the Brewers’ Association for
-the campaign against prohibition.
-
-At this time, when the campaign of German frightfulness is in full
-blast, when the Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns is steadily
-adding to its list of literally unforgivable offenses against
-civilization, there is no room in this country for any organization,
-great or small, which either defends Germany or is lukewarm in the
-great crusade against her in which America will henceforth play
-a leading part. Germany has recently scored another victory for
-frightfulness by sinking a Canadian hospital ship without warning and
-drowning two hundred persons, including women nurses. The ship was a
-mercy vessel, not a warship, and was so distinctly marked that it was
-impossible to mistake it. The attack upon it was sheer murder. Yet the
-German people tolerate, applaud, and approve the action of the German
-Government in this continuous and methodically organized campaign of
-murder, rape, and outrage.
-
-The most complete exposure of Germany’s infamous purpose in forcing
-this dreadful war upon the world is contained in the pamphlet written
-by the leading German steel magnate, Herr August Thyssen. This pamphlet
-has been translated into English, has been put into the official
-record by Senator Owen, of Oklahoma, has been printed in full in
-the San Francisco Argonaut and Baltimore Manufacturers’ Record, and
-circulated in pamphlet form by Mr. J. G. Butler, Jr., of Youngstown,
-Ohio. It is accessible to everybody. Herr Thyssen has no conception
-of the monstrous turpitude of the plan which he supported. His only
-complaint is that he and the other German financiers were fooled by
-the German Kaiser and the German Government, who promised them victory
-and failed to furnish it. He proves that German capitalism was just as
-responsible for the war as German militarism (which incidentally shows
-the peculiar infamy of the Russian Bolshevists and American Socialists
-and their allies in playing Germany’s game). He shows that Germany’s
-ruthless brutality was equaled by her sordid greed. He showed that
-the Hohenzollern Government, through the Emperor and the Chancellor,
-deliberately planned the war over a year and a half before it broke
-out, and at that time and on several occasions gathered the leading
-business men of Germany, informed them of the plans, and got their
-support by holding out the war as one of sheer plunder. The other
-nations were to be attacked simply in order to rob them naked. Herr
-Thyssen himself was promised thirty thousand acres in Australia. The
-Emperor particularly dwelt on the conquest of India, saying that the
-English allowed the vast Indian revenue to be used for and by the
-Indians themselves, but that Germany after her conquest would turn the
-whole “Golden Stream into the Fatherland.” There could be no finer
-tribute to England when compared with Germany than that which is thus
-furnished by the Emperor.
-
-In point of international morality the Germany of the Hohenzollerns has
-become the wild beast of the nations. Whoever directly or indirectly
-works for her or against our allies or who is merely lukewarm in the
-war is an enemy of this country, and an enemy of all mankind.
-
-
-
-
-EVERY MAN HAS A RIGHT TO ONE COUNTRY
-
-JULY 15, 1918
-
-
-Every man ought to love his country. If he does not love his country
-and is not eager to serve her, he is a worthless creature and should
-be contemptuously thrown out of the country when possible, and at any
-rate debarred from all rights of citizenship in the country. He is only
-entitled to one country. If he claims loyalty to two countries, he is
-necessarily a traitor to at least one country. If he claims to be loyal
-to both Germany and America, he is necessarily a traitor to America. No
-man can be a good American now unless he is an enemy of Germany and
-Germany’s allies and a stanch supporter of America’s allies.
-
-But it is just as wicked and just as un-American to deny the loyal
-American, of whatever origin, the full benefit of his allegiance to
-one country as it is to permit the disloyal American to exercise a
-treacherous alternative allegiance to two countries. Every man has a
-right to one country. He has a right to love and serve that country and
-to feel that it is absolutely his country and that he has in it every
-right possessed by any one else. It is our duty to require the man of
-German blood who is an American citizen to give up all allegiance to
-Germany whole-heartedly and without on his part any mental reservation
-whatever. If he does this, it becomes no less our duty to give him the
-full rights of an American, including our loyal respect and friendship
-without on our part any mental reservation whatever. The duties are
-reciprocal, and from the standpoint of American patriotism one is as
-important as the other.
-
-There has been nothing finer in this war, nothing of better augury
-for the future of America, than the high courage and splendid loyalty
-shown by the American soldiers and sailors who are of German blood.
-Relatively to their number they have come forward as freely into the
-ranks of our fighting men as the Americans of any other stock, and
-all alike have shown the same soldierly efficiency, the same devoted
-patriotism, and, when the need arose, the same heroism. The crew of
-the torpedo destroyer who face the submarine, and the airmen of the
-battle planes whose lives are in peril every hour, and the infantry
-stoggers and doughboys and marines who stand the killing and suffer the
-grueling hardship and misery of the line fighting, all alike number in
-their ranks relatively just as many Americans of German as of any other
-blood. Any one can see this who will look over the lists of casualties
-and the lists of men cited for deeds of high gallantry. The official
-reports of the German officers bear unintended testimony to the intense
-and patriotic Americanism of these men whom the Hohenzollern officials
-sneer at as “half Americans,” and who, even when taken prisoners, are
-admitted by the German army officers to “express without hesitation
-purely American sentiments.” In other words, the Pan-German propaganda
-on behalf of German _kultur_ has broken down in America, and as a
-consequence there are no people in this country so hated in the
-Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns as the Americans of German
-blood.
-
-The very worst enemies of these Americans have been the traitors and
-dupes of traitors who have been during the last few years the leaders
-of the German-American Alliance and of the newspapers in German or
-English who have backed up the Alliance and similar organizations. The
-dissolution by law of the Alliance and the gradual change of German
-newspapers into newspapers published in English will be of benefit to
-true Americans of German blood more than any other of our citizens.
-But the Americans of other blood must remember that the man who in good
-faith and without reservations gives up another country for this must
-in return receive exactly the same rights, not merely legal, but social
-and spiritual, that other Americans proudly possess. We of the United
-States belong to a new and separate nationality. We are all Americans
-and nothing else, and each, without regard to his birthplace, creed, or
-national origin, is entitled to exactly the same rights as all other
-Americans.
-
-
-
-
-MURDER, TREASON, AND PARLOR ANARCHY
-
-JULY 18, 1918
-
-
-One of the cheapest methods by which some well-meaning, silly people,
-and some sinister people who are not well-meaning, achieve a reputation
-for broad-minded liberality in matters relating to social reforms is
-to champion or excuse criminality on the ground that it is due to
-social conditions. The parlor anarchist or parlor Bolshevist is not
-an attractive person, and he may be mischievous when he joins the
-genuine anarchist, the “direct” man with the bomb, because selfish
-and unpatriotic politicians then find it advantageous to pander to
-both. This species of parlor anarchist appeals to emotional persons of
-superficial cultivation, whether writers, college men, sham economists,
-or sham religious and charitable workers, because it makes no demand
-either upon robust vigor of soul or thoroughness of mental process.
-At the moment it manifests itself in sympathy for the I.W.W. and for
-convicted dynamiters and murderers like Mooney.
-
-There are honest and ignorant working-men who join the I.W.W. because
-they are misled or because in some given locality industrial conditions
-really are intolerable. I have heard on good authority of logging
-camps, for instance, where the men joined the I.W.W. and practiced
-sabotage because they were treated tyrannically and foolishly and
-where good treatment turned them into good citizens. But I know far
-more numerous instances in which the leaders have simply been thugs
-and murderous malefactors whose criminality was not in the least due
-to social conditions, but to their own foul natures. By all means let
-us remedy the social conditions that are wrong, but let us shun, as we
-would shun the plague, that mawkish sentimentality of downright moral
-and physical cowardice which fears to call murder, treason, violence,
-arson, and rape by their right names and treat them as crimes to be
-punished with relentless severity.
-
-Actually there have been make-believe social reformers who have sought
-to excuse a brute who raped a little girl on the ground that social
-conditions made him what he was, and others who on similar grounds have
-protested against the condign punishment of men who burn haystacks,
-ruin machinery, dynamite peace parades, and, in the interest of
-German agents, destroy machinery in mines or munition factories. Any
-man who is misled in these matters can get full information by buying
-a pamphlet recently written by a former Socialist, Mr. Everett Harri,
-called “The I.W.W. an Auxiliary of the German Espionage System.” The
-simple truth is that the men who lead and give the tone to the I.W.W.
-are more dangerous criminals than an equal number of white-slavers and
-black-handers, and to give aid and comfort to one set of enemies of the
-Nation is as bad as to give aid and comfort to the others.
-
-The ablest, most far-sighted, and most patriotic of the heads of
-organized labor are more opposed to the I.W.W. as it is at present
-handled than are any other persons in the Nation. In just the same way
-the farmers whose resentment of wrongdoing is keenest should repudiate
-the Non-Partisan League just as long as it submits to such leadership
-as that of most of the men who are at present at its head, and just so
-long as it stands for covert disloyalty, as it has recently done on so
-many different occasions in so many different places. I am well aware
-that great numbers of honest and loyal farmers of high character have
-joined the League, because they rightly think that many of the economic
-conditions now affecting the farmer imperatively call for remedy. There
-are any number of men like myself who will join with the farmers in
-any sane and patriotic movement to remedy these conditions, no matter
-how radical such a movement may be. But we will join with no movement
-whose leaders are tainted with disloyalty, or who refuse to give to
-others the same square deal they demand for themselves, or who fail to
-insist that here in America the one organization to which we all of
-us owe a loyalty greater than is any other, greater than to any labor
-union or farmers’ league or business or professional body, is the union
-of the entire American people.
-
-
-
-
-BACK UP THE FIGHTING MEN AT THE FRONT
-
-JULY 26, 1918
-
-
-There is no American worth calling such whose veins do not thrill with
-pride when he reads of what has been done by General Pershing and his
-gallant army in France. The soldiers over there who wear the American
-uniform have made all good Americans forever their debtors. Now and
-always afterward we of this country will walk with our heads high
-because of the men who face death and wounds, and so many of whom have
-given their lives fighting for this Nation and for the great ideals of
-humanity across the seas.
-
-But we must not let our pride and our admiration evaporate in mere
-pride, in mere admiration of what others have done. We must put the
-whole strength of this Nation back of the fighting men at the front. We
-owe it to them. We owe it at least as much to the gallant Allies, who
-for near four years fought the great battle that was our battle, no
-less than theirs.
-
-At last we have begun to come to their assistance, but let us solemnly
-realize that we came very late, and that it is a dreadful thing if we
-waste one hour that can now be saved, or weaken in the smallest degree
-any effort that can be made. The inability, or refusal, of Bolshevist
-Russia to do her part in the great war for liberty and democracy has
-cast a terrible added burden upon the Allies. On the eastern front
-this has meant the temporary Allied ruin and the freeing of the armies
-of the autocracy for action against the western peoples. England,
-France, and Belgium for four years and Italy for over three years have
-been fighting the battle of civilization. Their man power is terribly
-depleted. Thank Heaven, we have got some hundreds of thousands of
-soldiers across in time to be a real element in saving Paris. Our first
-duty, if we wish to win the war, is to save Paris. Temporarily, at
-least, and I hope permanently, we have done our part in this respect.
-But the least faltering, the least letting-up, or failure in pushing
-forward our preparations and our assistance, would be dangerous to the
-Allied cause and a wicked desertion of our allies.
-
-From now on America should make this peculiarly America’s war. From now
-on we should take the burden of the war upon our shoulders. We should
-move forward at once with all the force that there is in us. We should
-not allow the war to drag for so much as a day, and above all we should
-not permit our people to fall under the spell of pacifist dreams or
-possible pacifist actions. There should not be intermission of so much
-as a week in sending our troops across the seas. This war won’t be won
-by food, or by money, or by savings, or by Thrift Stamps, or by the Red
-Cross, or by anything else, although all of these will help win the
-war. It will be won by the valor of the fighting men at the front, and
-this valor will fail unless our fighting men at the front are millions
-strong.
-
-Every week this summer and fall we should be putting fresh troops by
-scores of thousands across the ocean, and now, to-day, this week, we
-should provide for placing a larger army in the field next spring than
-Germany itself, or France and England combined. We are a more populous,
-a richer country than Germany, we have a larger population than Great
-Britain and France combined. These nations have fought for four years.
-We have only just begun to fight. Let us at once mobilize the whole
-man power of this country between the ages of nineteen and fifty or
-sixty. The draft should take in all men of nineteen, even if they were
-not sent abroad until they were twenty years old. Let us act at once.
-Perhaps we can beat the Germans this year if we keep pouring our troops
-over with the utmost speed. But let us take no chances. Let us proceed
-upon the assumption that Germany will fight next spring, and therefore
-let us act instantly so that by spring we will have in France an army
-of fighting men, exclusive of non-combatants and exclusive of home
-dépôts, which shall amount to four million armed soldiers at the very
-least. Let us fight beside the French, the British, the Italians, and
-be ready to fight instantly in the Balkan Peninsula and in Asia Minor
-against the Germans and all her vassal states. There must be no delay,
-not by so much as one hour, and no letting-up for one moment in the
-cause of our entire strength.
-
-
-
-
-THE AMERICANS WHOM WE MOST DELIGHT TO HONOR
-
-AUGUST 1, 1918
-
-
-At long intervals in the history of a nation there come great days
-when the picked sons of the Nation determine for generations to come
-that nation’s place in history. During the last few weeks our fighting
-men in France have rendered all the rest of us forever their debtors.
-They have won high honor for themselves and for their country. Our
-children’s children will owe them deep gratitude for what they have
-done. All Americans hold their heads higher because of their deeds.
-
-Their achievement has been won at the cost of perseverance in training
-and of resolution in facing unbelievable hardship and fatigue. It has
-also cost and will cost the death, the crippling, and the wounding of
-many scores of thousands of our best and bravest. We who stay behind
-in ease and comfort, who show our patriotism by economizing on sugar
-or wheat or beef instead of by living in our clothes until they rot
-off us in the trenches, or who pay money for taxes and bonds and Thrift
-Stamps instead of paying with our blood, owe an incalculable debt to
-the men at the front and to the mothers, wives, and little children of
-those who are killed at the front. We must pay this debt.
-
-The debt is due to our wonderful fighting men at the front
-individually, to our army collectively, and to this Nation as a whole.
-We must provide for the crippled men and for the widows and children
-of the dead. Nothing that we can do will lighten the bitter sorrow of
-those who have lost the men they loved; stern pride in the courage
-and gallant devotion of those who are dead is the only staff that
-will help to carry that burden for the living. But the material needs
-of the survivors must be met with ample generosity and yet in the
-only permanently effective fashion, by training those who need help
-to help themselves and achieve an ever-increasing self-respect and
-self-reliance.
-
-We must now help the army as a whole by straining every nerve without
-a day’s delay immensely to increase our strength, our numbers, and our
-resources at the front. We should provide now, and as a matter of fact
-we ought to have provided six months ago, for an army of six or seven
-million men, so that when next spring opens we may have at least four
-million fighting men at the front. We are more populous than Germany,
-or France and Great Britain combined, and we should provide so that two
-years after we entered the war our army shall be as large as Germany’s
-or as the combined forces of our allies in France. We should speed to
-the limit the work of the ships, guns, and airplanes. At present our
-army is in France mainly because of the aid of British ships, and it
-is able to fight mainly because of the field cannon and even airplanes
-it has received from the French. The draft limit should be immensely
-increased and the exceptions immensely decreased.
-
-To stand by the army is to stand by the Nation, and therefore to stand
-by the Allies to whom our national faith is plighted. This war will
-be won by the fighting men at the front. All other work is merely
-auxiliary and is entirely subordinate to theirs. Let us provide for the
-army instantly, and let us provide for the Nation’s future permanently
-by at once introducing the policy of universal obligatory military
-training for all our young men.
-
-The fighting men at the front are the men most worthy of honor. Let
-every American lad hereafter be trained so that in time of need he can
-fill this most honorable of all positions.
-
-
-
-
-SOUND NATIONALISM AND SOUND INTERNATIONALISM
-
-AUGUST 4, 1918
-
-
-The glorious victory of the Allies in the second battle of the Marne, a
-victory in which the hard-fighting soldiers of the American army have
-borne so distinguished and honorable a part, may mean the failure of
-the German military offensive for this year. Therefore it may mean a
-renewal of the German peace offensive. No man can prophesy in these
-matters, but the Germans may continue the war for a long time; and
-therefore we should prepare to have in France an army of four million
-fighting men for the battle front next spring. But the Germans may try
-to make peace instead of continuing the war, and may seek to cover
-their retention of some of their ill-gotten substantial gains by
-nominal and theoretical support of some glittering proposal about a
-league of nations to end all war. They will thereby hope to keep part
-of their booty by appealing to what is vaguely called internationalism
-and getting the support not only of sentimentalists who do not like to
-look unpleasant facts in the face, but also of the good people who are
-appalled and puzzled and panic-struck by the horror Germany has brought
-on the world, and who, instead of bracing themselves to put down this
-horror by their own hardened strength and iron will, clutch at any
-quack remedy which false prophets hold out as offering a substitute for
-such action.
-
-Therefore it is well at this time for sober and resolute men and
-women to apply that excellent variety of wisdom colloquially known as
-“horse sense” to the problems of nationalism and internationalism.
-These problems will not be solved by rhetoric. Least of all will
-they be solved by competitive rhetoric. Masters of phrase-making may
-win immense, although evanescent, applause by outvying one another
-in words that glitter, but these glittering words will not have one
-shred of lasting effect on the outcome except in so far as they may
-have a very mischievous effect if they persuade people to abandon the
-possible real good in the fantastic effort to achieve an impossible,
-unreal perfection. Let honest men and women remember that this kind of
-phrase-mongering does not represent idealism. The only idealism worth
-considering in the workaday business of this world is applied idealism.
-This is merely another way of saying that permanent good to humanity
-only comes from actually trying to reduce ideals to practice, and this
-means that the ideals must be substantially or at least measurably
-realizable.
-
-The professed internationalist usually sneers at nationalism, at
-patriotism, and at what we call Americanism. He bids us forswear
-our love of country in the name of love of the world at large. We
-nationalists answer that he has begun at the wrong end; we say that as
-the world now is, it is only the man who ardently loves his country
-first who in actual practice can help any other country at all. The
-internationalist bids us promise to abandon the idea of keeping America
-permanently ready to defend her rights by her strength, and to trust,
-instead, to scraps of paper, to written agreements by which all nations
-form a league, and agree to disarm and agree each to treat all other
-nations, big or little, on an exact equality. We nationalists answer
-that we are ready to join any league to enforce peace or similar
-organization which offers a likelihood of in some measure lessening
-the number and the area of future wars, but only on condition that
-in the first place we do not promise what will not or ought not to
-be performed, or be guilty of proclaiming a sham, and that in the
-second place we do not surrender our right and duty to prepare our own
-strength for our own defense instead of trusting to the above-mentioned
-scraps of paper. In justification we point to certain very obvious
-facts which ought to be patent to every man of common sense.
-
-Any such league of nations must, of course, include the nine nations
-which have the greatest military strength or it will be utterly
-impotent. These nine nations include Germany, Austria, Turkey, and
-Russia. The first three have abundantly shown during the last four
-years that no written or other promise of the most binding kind has
-even the slightest effect upon their actions. The fourth, Russia,
-under the lead and dominion of the Bolsheviki, has just been guilty
-of the grossest possible betrayal of her allies and of the small
-kindred Slavonic peoples and of world democracy. This betrayal was in
-the interest of a military and despotic autocracy and included the
-direct violation of Russia’s plighted faith. Under such conditions it
-is unnecessary to say that Russia’s signature to any future league
-to enforce peace will not be worth the paper on which it is written.
-Therefore the creation of any such league for the future will simply
-mean a pledge by the present Allies to make their alliance perpetual
-and all to go to war again whenever one of them is attacked. This may
-become necessary, but it certainly does not imply future disarmament.
-
-Nor is this all. The United States must come into court with clean
-hands. She must not pledge herself without reservation to the right
-of “self-determination” for each people while she has behaved toward
-Haiti and San Domingo as she is now behaving. It is not possible for
-me to say whether our action in these two cases has been right or
-wrong, because the Administration, with its usual horror of publicity,
-whether pitiless or otherwise, and its inveterate predilection for
-secret and furtive diplomacy, has kept most of the facts hidden. I
-believe that there was no possible excuse for such secret diplomacy in
-these cases and that the same course should have been followed as was
-followed in the case of the Panama revolution, where every fact was
-immediately laid without reservation before Congress. But even if I
-am wrong in my belief in the general principle of open diplomacy, and
-even if the Administration is right in its consistent policy of secret
-diplomacy as regards the mass of questions which I think ought to be
-made public, the fact remains that we have with armed force invaded,
-made war upon, and conquered the two small republics, have upset
-their governments, have denied them the right of self-determination,
-and have made democracy within their limits not merely unsafe but
-non-existent. As we have no published facts to go on, I cannot say
-whether their misconduct did or did not warrant such drastic action on
-our part, but on the assumption that the Administration acted properly,
-we are committed to the principle that some nations are not fit for
-self-determination, that democracy within their limits is a sham, and
-that their offenses against justice and right are such as to render
-interference by their more powerful and more civilized neighbors
-imperative. I do not doubt that this principle is true in some
-cases, whether or not it ought to be applied in these two particular
-cases. In any event, our continuing action in San Domingo and Haiti
-makes it hypocritical for us to lay down any universal rules about
-self-determination for all nations.
-
-Our action also shows how utterly futile it would be to try to treat a
-league to enforce peace as a substitute for training our own strength
-for our own defense. Let China be the witness of the truth of this
-statement. China has actually realized the ideal of the pacifists
-who insist that unpreparedness for war secures peace. The ideal of
-the internationalists is that patriotism and sense of nationalism
-are detrimental to humanity, and the ideal of the Socialists is that
-the capitalist régime is the only cause of popular misery. China is
-helpless to attack others or defend herself, her people have little
-sense of national unity and pride, and there are in China huge
-districts where there are no capitalists and where the misery of
-the people is greater than in any country of the Occident. China’s
-helplessness, instead of helping toward world peace, has been a
-positive encouragement to war and violence among her neighbors. Her
-future depends primarily, not on herself, but on what her neighbors
-choose to do. In spite of her size and her enormous population and
-resources, she is helpless to do good to others because she is
-powerless to prevent others from doing evil to her. Her agreement to a
-league of nations or to a league to enforce peace would be worthless,
-because she is unable to put strength back of justice either for
-herself or for any one else. The pacifists and internationalists if
-they had their way would turn the United States into the China of the
-Occident.
-
-Let us put our trust neither in rhetoric nor hypocrisy, whether
-conscious or unconscious. Let us be honest with ourselves. Let us look
-the truth in the face. Let us remember what Germany, Austria, and
-Turkey have actually done. Let us remember what Russia has suffered
-from Germany and the worse than folly with which she has behaved to
-every one else. Let us remember what has happened to China and what we
-have made happen to Haiti and San Domingo. Then let us trust for our
-salvation to a sound and intense American nationalism.
-
-The horse sense of the matter is that all agreements to further the
-cause of sound internationalism must be based on recognition of the
-fact that as the world is actually constituted our present prime need
-is this sound and intense American nationalism. The first essential
-of this sound nationalism is that the Nation shall trust to its own
-fully prepared strength for its own defense. So far as possible, its
-strength must also be used to secure justice for others and must
-never be used to wrong others. But unless we possess and prepare the
-strength, we can neither help ourselves nor others. Let us by all means
-go into any wise league or covenant among nations to abolish neutrality
-(for, of course, a league to enforce peace is merely another name for a
-league to abolish neutrality in every possible war). But let us first
-understand what we are promising, and count the cost and determine
-to keep our promises. Above all, let us treat any such agreement or
-covenant as a mere addition to, and never as a substitute for, the
-preparation in advance of our own armed power. Next time we behave with
-the ignoble folly we have shown during the last four years we may not
-find allies to do what France and England and Italy have done for us.
-They have protected us with their navies and armies, their blood and
-their treasure, while we first refused to do anything and then slowly
-and reluctantly began to harden and make ready our giant but soft and
-lazy strength.
-
-No proper scheme designed to secure peace without effort and safety
-without service and sacrifice will either make this country safe or
-enable it to do its international duty toward others.
-
-An American citizen, personally unknown to me, writes me that his
-three sons entered the army at the outbreak of the war, and that one
-of them, an aviator, was killed in battle at the front just two weeks
-before my own son was killed as he fought in the air. In his letter my
-correspondent adds:
-
- Would that my country might learn and never forget that not only
- the winning of peace now, but the maintenance of peace at all times
- depends not fundamentally on treaties or leagues of nations, but on
- the readiness of citizens to fly to the aid of the wronged and to give
- their lives if need be that justice may be secured.
-
-There speaks the true American spirit which holds fast alike to
-fearlessness and to wisdom, to gentleness and to iron resolution.
-There speaks the spirit of that fervent nationalism which would forbid
-America either to inflict or to endure wrong.
-
-
-
-
-THE MAN WHO PAYS AND THE MAN WHO PROFITS
-
-AUGUST 9, 1918
-
-
-The men who do the fighting at the front and their mothers and
-wives back here are those who in this great and terrible crisis are
-paying--the blood of the men and the tears of the women, and with the
-suffering of men, women, and children--for our failure to prepare
-during the two and a half years before we entered the World War. For
-this failure to prepare, in spite of the most vivid warning ever given
-a Nation, the warning that befell the rest of the world during those
-two and a half years, the professed pacifists and the politicians who
-pandered to them are more responsible than any one else, except the
-pro-Germans. If, when the World War broke out, or at latest when the
-Lusitania was sunk, we had done our plain duty, we had then begun to
-build ships, field cannon and airplanes, and to train men exactly as
-we have been doing during the last year and a quarter, except that
-we should have done the work on a larger scale with more efficiency
-and with much less waste and extravagance. Remember that failure to
-provide great numbers of cannon and airplanes means that the infantry
-has to pay for it with a huge increase of slaughter. All the guns and
-airplanes we left unbuilt during the first three years of the war
-has meant so much more bloodshed, so many more Americans killed and
-crippled, not to speak of the tremendous loss of life to our allies.
-Moreover, when men in small numbers are put into battle, when only a
-few hundred thousand are forced to suffer heavy loss in doing work
-which two or three million men could have accomplished speedily and
-thoroughly and with very little loss, the responsibility rests on those
-who prevented the preparation in advance. If we had built quantities of
-ships and trained large numbers of men in advance, the World War would
-have ended almost as soon as we entered, and an infinite amount of
-bloodshed would have been prevented.
-
-The best roll of our army overseas is the American roll of honor. These
-men have paid with their bodies for the safety of this Nation in the
-present and the future. They have died, and by their death have earned
-for the rest of us the right to hold our heads high with pride. But
-it is no less true that their blood has been shed, but their gallant
-lives have been spent because we did not prepare in advance. We did
-not prepare because our people were misled. For this misleading of the
-people the professional profiteers share the responsibility with the
-pro-Germans, with sham sentimentalists, with the sordid, short-sighted
-materialists, and with all the politicians, publicists, and private
-citizens, rich or poor, whose vanity or folly or self-interest profited
-thereby. We ought not to remember this in any spirit of revenge, but
-most certainly, unless we are worse than foolish, we shall remember
-it and other warnings to teach us how to behave in the future, and as
-a very stern warning against again trusting to the leadership of the
-men thus responsible for the deaths of so many fine and fearless young
-Americans.
-
-Most of the men who are misled, and some of the men who misled them,
-have come frankly forward to admit their error. What is even more
-important, most of them have made the real atonement of deeds. They
-have, if young, themselves gone into the army, and if not young have
-sent their sons or permitted them to go into the army and fight in
-freedom’s belated battle. All these men are paying their share of
-the joint payment in blood of the Nation. They are to be heartily
-respected. They are not seeking to profit by the valor and blood of
-others.
-
-So much for the men who pay; now for the men who profit. Some of these
-men profit in money. If such profit is excessive it is iniquitous.
-But a proper money profit is absolutely necessary, for no business
-can be permanent without profit any more than a working-man can
-permanently work without wages. The unpardonable profit is that of
-the man, especially the rich man, who, having preached pacifism and
-unpreparedness, now, when war comes, sees brave men face a death which
-pacifism and unpreparedness have made infinitely more probable while
-he himself and his sons profit by these other men’s courage and sit at
-home in the ease and safety secured by the fact that these others face
-death. The worst profiteers in this country are the men and the sons of
-the men who decline to face the death which their own actions have made
-more probable for others.
-
-Unless in exceptional cases there is no need to discuss individuals
-in private life. But when a man seeks public office, it becomes a
-duty to discuss his record. Mr. Henry Ford is a candidate for United
-States Senator in Michigan. No man in this country strove harder in
-the cause of pacifism and unpreparedness than he did during the vital
-two years and a half before this country went to War. He received
-the cordial applause of the peace-at-any-price people who were
-themselves, of course, efficiently playing the pro-German game. He is
-a multi-millionaire. If any of his kin are killed, their families are
-not merely guarded against poverty, but are sure of wealth. The son of
-Mr. Ford ought to feel it absolutely obligatory on him to go to the
-war. There is not in this country any other man who ought to feel it
-more honorably necessary to pay with his body, if necessary, to atone
-with his life for the dreadful wrong done this country by the preachers
-of pacifism and unpreparedness during the two years and a half that
-preceded our entry into the war. Yet it is announced in the press that
-Mr. Ford’s son has obtained exemption from military service and is
-employed in the money-making business of his wealthy father.
-
-Mr. Ford’s proper place is on the mourner’s bench and not at the
-council board of the Nation.
-
-
-
-
-OUR DEBT TO THE BRITISH EMPIRE
-
-AUGUST 16, 1918
-
-
-Judge Ben Lindsey has recently written two or three striking
-pieces about what Great Britain has done and is doing in this war.
-Incidentally he points out how far ahead of us she now is in certain
-types of social legislation, such as that dealing with children. But
-the lesson he inculcates which is of most immediate concern is the
-giant part England has played in this war and the debt we owe to
-her because, in standing up for Belgium and France, she was really
-defending us during our days of folly when we followed the lead of our
-worst enemies, the pacifists and pro-Germans.
-
-The English pacifists are, if anything, even more silly than our own.
-They did their best to make England keep out of this war. If they had
-succeeded the British Empire would for a few years have trod the broad,
-smooth road of peaceful and greedy infamy and would then have tumbled
-into the bottomless pit of utter destruction. But in August, 1914,
-Great Britain and the gallant overseas commonwealths which share her
-empire chose the hard path of immediate danger, of ultimate safety, and
-of high heroism. Thereby they saved their own souls and the bodies of
-their children, and in so doing rendered an inestimable service to us.
-
-England has raised an immense army which has fought in Europe, Asia,
-and Africa. If it were not for this army even the highly trained valor
-of the French could not have averted German victory. At the same time
-the British fleet has kept the seas free for the food and coal and
-munitions needed for the Allied people and armies and has furnished
-the transports necessary to enable us to put under Pershing a force
-large enough to be of real consequence in the vitally important battle
-which has been raging for the last thirty days. If Great Britain had
-not been far-sighted enough to realize what her own welfare demanded
-when France was invaded, and if she had not been stirred to noble
-indignation by the Belgian horror, the whole civilized world would now
-have been cowering under the brutal dominion of Germany. If she had not
-controlled the seas, not an American battalion could have been sent
-to the aid of France as she struggled to save the soul of the world,
-and no help could have been given gallant Italy or any others of these
-Allied nations to whose stern fighting efficiency we owe it that this
-earth is still a place on which free men can live.
-
-We must stand by Great Britain precisely as we stand by our other
-allies--in the first place, by waging the war with all our strength,
-and in the next place by seeing that the peace is of a kind which
-justifies them for all the sacrifices they have made.
-
-One item in waging the war ought to be insistence that every American
-of fighting age who resides in the British Empire and every Englishman
-of fighting age who resides in the United States be invariably put in
-either the British or the American armies. One item in making peace
-ought to be insistence that Britain keep every colony she has conquered
-from Germany, both in the South Seas and in Africa. Germany has behaved
-abominably in Africa. The course Germany has followed in Africa has
-made her a menace of evil to the Boer and British Africanders, and to
-return to her the colonies which have been taken from her, whether in
-Africa or Asia, by Australia or Great Britain, or by France or Japan or
-Belgium, would be a crime against civilization.
-
-
-
-
-THE CANDIDACY OF HENRY FORD
-
-AUGUST 20, 1918
-
-
-Every loyal American citizen in Michigan should read the last two
-numbers of Mr. George Harvey’s War Weekly. In these numbers there are
-quotations from Mr. Henry Ford’s speeches made two years ago and again
-since we entered the war. Mr. Ford has not questioned the accuracy of
-these quotations given by Mr. Harvey.
-
-Speaking of American flags over his own factory Mr. Ford said: “I don’t
-believe in the flag. When the war is over these flags shall come down
-never to go up again.”
-
-The Sedition Act, approved by President Wilson, inflicts a maximum
-punishment of twenty years in the penitentiary for any man who, while
-we are at war, utters “language intended to bring the flag of the
-United States into contempt or disrepute.” During the last year many
-poor and ignorant men have been convicted and sentenced for using
-language thus forbidden by law. In my view the fact that Mr. Ford is
-an enormously wealthy man ought not to give him immunity from the law
-if he cannot show that he did not use the language quoted in the War
-Weekly. But whether or not amenable to the law, no patriotic American
-can afford to put in the Senate, perhaps to help negotiate the peace
-treaty, a man who announces that as soon as peace comes he wishes to
-haul down the American flag and never again to hoist it. To send such a
-man to the Senate professing such sentiments under existing conditions
-would give the enemy a wholly wrong idea of the pacifist sentiment in
-our country. There is nothing in the world which would now help Germany
-as much, or give her so much heart in her struggle for the overthrow of
-liberty and democracy as the belief that men professing such sentiments
-would have part in the peace negotiations on behalf of this country.
-
-Among the further utterances of Mr. Ford (as given in the War Weekly)
-is one that he does “not believe in patriotism” and that he does not
-care any more for the United States “than for China or Hindustan.”
-The man who does not believe in patriotism is not fit to live in this
-country, still less to represent it in the Senate. If these words of
-Mr. Ford mean anything, then Mr. Ford is unpatriotic and has no more
-right to sit in the United States Senate than a Hindu or a Chinaman.
-Unless Mr. Ford can show that he never uttered these words no man
-worthy to be called an American, and least of all any religious or
-patriotic man, can afford to support him for the Senate.
-
-Mr. Ford has been given immensely valuable war contracts of the
-Government. No doubt he has executed them as well as the thousands
-of other contractors who now render service to the Government for
-pay. But no service he can thus render the Government can offset the
-frightful damage he did our people by the lavish use he made of his
-enormous wealth in a gigantic and profoundly anti-American propaganda
-against preparedness and against our performance of international duty
-during the two and a half years before we entered the war. This crusade
-against righteousness included the sending of the ridiculous “peace
-ship” to Europe. This particular manifestation was too absurd even to
-do harm, but so far as it had any effect at all it encouraged Germany
-to believe that we were as neutral between right and wrong as Pontius,
-and that as far as we were concerned she could safely proceed with
-wrongdoing because we held the scales of judgment even between the
-wrongdoer and his victim. The crusade also included an extraordinary
-series of advertisements issued long after the Lusitania was sunk, in
-which Mr. Ford violently opposed and denounced preparedness, advocated
-and approved the McLemore resolutions, and announced that it was our
-duty to keep out of war; and not merely himself kept silent about the
-wrongdoing of Germany, but assailed those who set forth this wrongdoing
-on the ground that they “had bred racial hatred by the printing of
-incendiary news stories and articles.” It may well be doubted whether
-this propaganda did not do more damage to the American people than the
-propaganda carried on at the same time by Ambassador Bernstorff.
-
-If we had seen our duty and had fully prepared during these two and a
-half years, either we would never have had to enter the war or we would
-have brought it to a close immediately after we entered it. The best
-and bravest of the young men of the Nation are now paying with their
-blood for our unpreparedness and therefore for the pacific propaganda
-quite as much as for the pro-German propaganda carried on in this
-country during the two and a half years before we entered the war. But
-wealthy Mr. Ford’s son is not among these men. He is of draft age. He
-applied for exemption. The local board refused his application. He
-applied to the President. The President did not act for two months.
-Then the revised draft regulations were promulgated, and Mr. Ford was
-excepted under the deferred or exempted class which included a married
-man with a child, however wealthy that man might be. He has exercised
-his legal right. Very many thousands of young Americans, men of small
-means who are not sons of multi-millionaires, have declined to take
-advantage of this legal right. They have left their wives and babies to
-go to war for a great ideal, for love of country, for love of liberty
-and of civilization. But Mr. Ford’s son stays at home. These other
-young Americans face death and endure unspeakable hardships and misery
-and fatigue for the sake of America and have surrendered all hope of
-money-getting, of comfort and of safety. But young Mr. Ford, in ease
-and safety, is in the employ of his wealthy father.
-
-In private relations I understand that Mr. Ford is an amiable man. But
-I am not dealing with him in his private relations. I am discussing him
-as a candidate for high office. We are bound truthfully to set forth
-what we believe will be the effect of his election, and therefore we
-are bound to say that it would be damaging to the United States and
-would be encouraging to Germany. No patriotic American should support
-Mr. Ford.
-
-
-
-
-SPEED UP THE WORK FOR THE ARMY AND GIVE ALL WHO ENTER IT FAIR PLAY
-
-AUGUST 23, 1918
-
-
-Our Government must learn that needless delay is worse than a blunder.
-We are sending troops to Siberia. This is good, but it would have
-been ten times better to have sent them last spring when the need was
-precisely as evident as it is now. The Administration is now preparing
-to ask Congress to arrange for putting between three and four million
-men in France by next July. Six months ago our best military advisers
-and our most far-sighted civilian leaders were urging that we prepare
-to put five million men in France by next March. The delay has been
-absolutely needless and may be very harmful. When last spring the
-demand for five million men was being incessantly urged, President
-Wilson treated it as merely a case for competitive rhetoric, and asked,
-with dramatic effect, why we should limit the number at all. But he
-actually has limited it to a much smaller number at a much later date.
-Therefore let there at least be no further delay. And above all let
-us not be misled by the persons who say that Germany will make peace
-before next spring. Our business is to act on the assumption that we
-shall have to put forth our utmost effort next spring and not to take
-any unnecessary chances.
-
-The Government is now very properly proposing to enlarge the draft age
-limits to include all the men of fighting age, all the men of the ages
-which furnished the enormous majority of the soldiers of the Civil War.
-The number of men in the excepted classes should be greatly reduced.
-There are too many exceptions. It is earnestly to be hoped that the
-plan will include the institution of universal obligatory military
-training of all our young men of eighteen to twenty years old as a
-permanent policy.
-
-But we ought not to adopt the plan recently proposed for special
-advantages to be given by the Government to young men who go to college
-and take certain special courses with a view to becoming officers. This
-would amount to giving a special privilege to persons with money enough
-to send their boys to college in order to have them escape the draft
-and secure commissions. This is not fair. It means giving a privilege
-to money. There is no excuse for giving such a preference to young men
-of eighteen or nineteen at this time when we have been at war eighteen
-months. There is still need to give some of the older men a special
-chance to train. But there is no such need in the case of men under
-twenty-one.
-
-There was every reason of sound public policy at the outset of the
-war to take advantage of the forethought and self-denial of the young
-men who at the Plattsburg and similar camps had at their own expense
-prepared themselves before the war began, and when, owing to the
-failure of the Government to do its duty, they were the only men who
-did prepare. There has been good reason for similar camps for young men
-during the last eighteen months before our general training camps began
-to show their full results. But from now on every young officer should
-be chosen on his merits from the men who enter the army in the ranks.
-Only the men who show their fitness, by whatever tests are deemed
-necessary after service in the ranks, should be sent to officers’
-schools, and money should play no part whatever in the matter.
-
-
-
-
-SENATOR LODGE’S NOBLE SPEECH
-
-SEPTEMBER 1, 1918
-
-
-Senator Lodge’s speech dealing with the principles for which we are
-fighting and setting forth in detailed outline the kind of peace which
-alone will mean the peace of victory was a really noble speech. Nothing
-is easier, and from the national standpoint as distinguished from the
-standpoint of personal benefit to the speaker, nothing is less useful
-than a speech of such glittering generalities that almost anybody can
-interpret it in almost any manner. Only a great statesman possesses the
-courage, the knowledge, and the power of expression to set forth in
-convincing fashion the detailed statement of the objects which must be
-attained if such a war as that in which we are engaged is to be crowned
-by a peace wholly worth the terrible cost of life and happiness caused
-by the war. This is the service which Senator Lodge has rendered to
-this Nation and to our allies.
-
-From time to time in our history the Senate has rendered services
-of exceptional magnitude to the Nation. Never in our history has it
-rendered greater service than during the last nine months. The greatest
-men who have ever sat in it, men such as Clay and Webster and Calhoun
-and Benton, did not stand forth in leadership more clearly than a
-dozen of the Senators who, during the last nine months, have fearlessly
-and disinterestedly borne the burden of speeding up the war and
-endeavoring to place our international relations on exactly the right
-lines.
-
-These leaders have in actual fact adjourned politics. They have
-considered only their patriotic duty in all matters concerning this war
-and our relations with our allies and our enemies. The most efficient
-service toward speeding up the war and enabling this Nation to do its
-duty that has been rendered by any civilian public servants of the
-Nation is the service rendered by Senator Chamberlain and the Senators,
-both Democrats and Republicans, who acted with him on the Military
-Affairs Committee in the investigation of the War Department last
-winter. Within the last fortnight a service of similar character has
-been rendered by Senator Thomas and his associates in both parties on
-the sub-committee which has at last put before the people the truth
-about the breakdown of our aircraft programme. The fact that this
-summer we have put masses of armed men into France is primarily due to
-Senator Chamberlain and the Senators of both parties who have acted
-with him. The fact that next summer we shall at last back up American
-troops with American airplanes will be due primarily to Senator Thomas
-and his associates.
-
-
-
-
-APPLIED PATRIOTISM
-
-SEPTEMBER 8, 1918
-
-
-The official record of the Illinois branch of the United Mine Workers
-of America furnishes an instructive lesson in applied patriotism.
-The president of the branch is Mr. Frank Farrington. The United Mine
-Workers are affiliated with the American Federation of Labor.
-
-President Farrington’s circulars to the Illinois mine workers set
-forth the need and the justice of this war and the duty of patriotic
-Americans in the most straightforward and clear-cut fashion. He
-states that this is the war for liberty and humanity and for American
-rights, and that there rests “upon every American and upon every man
-who has partaken of America’s bounty the solemn obligation of loyally
-doing their part to win victory for the cause America represents.” He
-promises the mine workers that their rights shall be protected and
-secured, but insists that they shall lend every energy to increase the
-output of coal so as to help our army at the front, which, as he finely
-says, includes “sons of the rich and sons of the poor men who love life
-as one, but who prefer death to life without liberty and who have made
-common cause and entered the lists in answer to the Nation’s need.”
-
-The improper practices are specifically pointed out and condemned,
-such as shutting down mines in violation of agreement in order to
-force some desired condition, or making improper restrictions to
-curtail production. The appeal is solemnly made to, and on behalf
-of, the miners’ union that there must be full service to the Nation
-and no shirking of duty, and that no agreement into which the union
-enters shall be treated as a scrap of paper, but shall be in good
-faith fulfilled. President Farrington in his official circulars lays
-constantly increasing stress upon the seriousness of the obligation
-resting upon the miners to aid and sustain the Allied armies in
-their fight for the freedom of humanity by hard, steady work and by
-increasing the output of coal. He condemns with genuine loftiness of
-feeling and expression all who fail to give the utmost help to the men
-who at the front are doing so much and suffering so much.
-
-The Illinois mine workers number about ninety thousand members. They
-are divided into three hundred and twenty local unions. Of these I
-have figures from only one hundred and twenty. They have sent over
-four thousand men into the army and navy of the United States, have
-purchased over two million dollars’ worth of Liberty bonds, $700,000 of
-War Savings Stamps, and have contributed over $90,000 to the Red Cross
-and over $20,000 to other war funds.
-
-The Illinois mine workers have made a fine showing in applied
-patriotism.
-
-
-
-
-GOOD LUCK TO THE ANTI-BOLSHEVISTS OF KANSAS
-
-SEPTEMBER 12, 1918
-
-
-The absolute prerequisite for successful self-government in any
-people is the power of self-restraint which refuses to follow either
-the wild-eyed extremists of radicalism or the dull-eyed extremists
-of reaction. Either set of extremists will wreck the Nation just as
-certainly as the other. The Nation capable of self-government must
-show the Abraham Lincoln quality of refusing to go with either. The
-dreadful fall which has befallen Russia is due to the fact that when
-her people cast off the tyranny of the autocracy, they did not have
-sufficient self-control and common sense to avoid rushing into the gulf
-of Bolshevist anarchy.
-
-In this country there are plenty of highbrow Bolsheviki who like to
-think of themselves as intellectuals, and who in parlors and at pink
-teas preach Bolshevism as a fad. They are fatuously ignorant that it
-may be a dangerous fad. Some of them are mere make-believe, sissy
-Bolsheviki, almost or quite harmless. Others are sincere and foolish
-fanatics, who mean well and who do not realize that their doctrines
-tend toward moral disintegration. But there are practical Bolsheviki
-in this country who are in no sense highbrows. The I.W.W. and the
-Non-Partisan League, just as long and so far as its members submit
-to the dominion of leaders like Mr. Townley, represent the forces
-that under Lenine and Trotzky have brought ruin to Russia. If these
-organizations obtained power here, they would cast this country into
-the same abyss with Russia.
-
-The I.W.W. activities may have been officially set forth by the Chicago
-jury which found the I.W.W. leaders guilty of treasonable practices.
-These leaders protested that they were only trying to help “the wage
-slave of to-day,” and had not taken German money. But the jury found
-them guilty as charged. The American people, when fully awake and
-aroused, will tolerate neither treason nor anarchy. No Americans are
-more patriotic than the honest American labor men, and these above all
-had cause to rejoice in the verdict. Undoubtedly there are plenty of
-poor ignorant men who join the I.W.W. because they feel they do not
-receive justice. We should all of us actively unite in the effort to
-right any wrongs from which these men suffer. But we should set our
-faces like flint against such criminal leadership as that of the I.W.W.
-
-The Non-Partisan League endeavored to ally itself with the I.W.W. since
-we entered the war. When the League was started, I felt much sympathy
-with its avowed purposes. I hope for and shall welcome wisely radical
-action on behalf of the farmer. But only destruction to all of us can
-come from the venomous class hatred preached by the present leadership
-of the League. Some of its leaders have been convicted and imprisoned
-for treasonable activities. Some of the League’s representatives have
-been actively pro-Germans. Some are Socialists or Socialist-Anarchists.
-For the first six months of the war and until it became too dangerous,
-they were openly against the war, against our allies, and for Germany.
-The only half-secret alliance between these leaders and certain high
-Democratic politicians is deeply discreditable to the latter. The
-victory of the League in its recent efforts to gain control of the
-Republican Party in Minnesota and Montana would have given immense
-strength to the pro-German and Bolshevist element throughout the
-country and its defeat was a matter of rejoicing to all right-minded
-and patriotic men.
-
-Mr. Townley’s leadership in its moral purpose and national effect
-entitles him to rank with Messrs. Lenine and Trotzky, and the
-utterances of the League’s official organ, especially in its appeals to
-class hatred, puts the official representatives of the League squarely
-in the clan with the Bolshevist leaders who have done such evil in
-Russia.
-
-I have before me an official letter from the League written in January
-last refusing to coöperate in non-political work for the benefit of the
-farmers, saying, “This organization is a political one, the farmers
-being organized for the purpose of controlling legislation in their
-own interests.” In other words, the title, Non-Partisan, is a piece
-of pure hypocrisy, and its league is really partisan in the narrowest
-and worst sense. Americans should organize politically as Americans
-and not as bankers, or lawyers, or farmers, or wage-workers. To
-organize politically on the basis adopted by the League is thoroughly
-anti-American and unpatriotic, and if copied generally by our citizens,
-would mean the creation in this country of rival political parties
-based on cynically brutal class selfishness.
-
-I have no doubt that the rank and file of the members of the League
-are good, honest people who have been misled. I am certain that
-there has been much neglect of the rights of the farmers and that it
-is a high duty for this country to begin a constructive, practical
-agricultural policy. But no good American can support the League while
-it is dominated by its present leadership. The Kansans who have joined
-to fight the League because it represents Bolshevism are rendering a
-patriotic service to America.
-
-
-
-
-THE FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN
-
-SEPTEMBER 17, 1918
-
-
-The Government of the United States is asking us Americans, is asking
-us, the citizens of the United States, to subscribe to the Fourth
-Liberty Loan, a bigger loan than any yet issued. It is our duty to back
-up the Government by floating the loan. Moreover, the performance of
-this duty should be treated by us as a high privilege. It opens to us
-a fine opportunity to put our shoulders with all the strength we have
-into the great shove which is pushing the German barrier back across
-the Rhine.
-
-The Liberty bonds are the best of all possible investments. Their
-security and their interest returns give them a peculiar position.
-Moreover, every one can invest in big or little amounts, exactly as
-his resources permit. All the people of this country can now become
-bondholders if they wish. Therefore, all investors in the bonds will
-get benefits, but what is vastly more important, they will give
-benefits. They will therefore render service to the country.
-
-We Americans are not, and must not permit ourselves to become, swayed
-by question of material gain in this war. We must think primarily of
-our duties. We must keep our minds fixed on what we owe to others, and
-what we owe to ourselves. We owe a service to humanity. Our sons and
-brothers at the front pay this service in blood. The rest of us must
-pay it in money.
-
-Commensurate with the great resources and unparalleled prosperity with
-which our Nation has been blessed, we owe all the more because for
-three years the debt accumulated, while other nations were bearing the
-burden for us. We thank God we have begun to pay. From every village
-and city of every state the best of our young men are streaming across
-the Atlantic to join the victorious army under Foch and Pershing. The
-men and women of America are keeping mill and shipyard and munition
-factory and mine busy to the limit, so that the troops may not fail nor
-the supplies on which they depend be lacking.
-
-All this is not one whit more than we ought to do; it is what we owe
-to the world and owe to ourselves. We are glad and proud to do it.
-Let us, as part payment of our great debt, subscribe and oversubscribe
-to the bonds of the Fourth Liberty Loan. This is a service which lies
-within the ability of the poorest of us. It is the duty and privilege
-of every right American. Every dollar put into Liberty loans is a
-dollar working for the downfall of the system of greed and treachery,
-of tyranny and callous brutality which has drenched the world in blood.
-
-Americans are not quitters. The Kaiser’s troops cannot stop our men at
-the front. Nothing must be permitted to stop the flow into the treasury
-of the money with which we back up these men. Sloth and easy living
-have no place in America now. We must give, give to the utmost. If
-putting our money at the disposal of the Government requires us to work
-harder and live more simply, we shall be the better for it. Let us buy
-these Liberty bonds to the utmost of our capacity and thereby show the
-men at the front that the people at home will back them to the limit.
-
-
-
-
-FAIR PLAY AND NO POLITICS
-
-SEPTEMBER 20, 1918
-
-
-A Democratic member of the Senate has introduced a resolution to
-investigate the primary campaign expenses of certain Republican
-candidates for the Senate, including Commander Truman Newberry,
-whose recent triumph over Mr. Henry Ford in the Michigan Republican
-primaries was greeted with heartfelt thanks by every sincere and
-far-sighted American patriot.
-
-This Senate, which comes to an end on March 4 next, has the same, and
-only the same right to investigate the election conduct of candidates
-for the Senate, which comes into existence on March 4 that it has to
-investigate the campaign conduct of any other candidates for office.
-
-Moreover, any such proposed investigation undertaken on the eve of
-an election is tainted with bad faith unless it is conducted with
-conspicuous fairness and impartiality and is undertaken at once so that
-it can be finished at least a month before the elections. Personally,
-I shall be glad if the election expenses or any other conduct of any
-of the candidates be investigated, provided that the investigation be
-undertaken at once and finished within the next fortnight, and provided
-that it be entirely impartial. Therefore, it must deal comprehensively
-with all serious charges affecting the desirability of candidates as
-governmental representatives of the American people at this time.
-
-If the men backing the proposal are acting in good faith they will
-investigate Mr. Ford’s record on the following points in order to
-determine his fitness to represent patriotic Americans at this time.
-They will find out how much money he spent on the peace ship, and
-on his lavishly expensive newspaper advertising campaign against
-preparedness, and against our standing up for Belgium’s rights, and
-against our taking action about Germany’s sinking the Lusitania and
-her other assaults on us, and in favor of the McLemore resolution. This
-was part of the great pacifist campaign of which another part, as our
-government investigations show, was financed by the German authorities
-themselves or by their affiliated societies in this country.
-
-The investigation should include Mr. Ford’s contributions in the last
-presidential campaign and the names of the candidates he supported, for
-his politics seem to have been purely personal and pacifist.
-
-Moreover, the investigation should include a full examination of the
-justification for Mr. Ford’s aiding and abetting his son Edsell in
-escaping draft and staying at home when the great majority of young
-Americans of his age are eagerly striving for places of honor and peril
-at the front. Mr. Ford is an enormously wealthy man. Mr. Newberry is
-not. Mr. Newberry himself at once entered the military service of
-the United States. His two sons have wives and children, but they
-immediately entered the service, striving eagerly to get to the front.
-Mr. Edsell Ford waited until he was drafted, then fought hard for an
-exemption, which the local board disallowed. He succeeded, however, in
-escaping service and is at home.
-
-Unless the investigation takes up these matters, it will be stamped
-with the stamp of unworthy and improper partisanship. The simple truth
-is that all patriotic Americans rejoice in the nomination and will
-rejoice in the election at this time of such Americans as Mr. Newberry
-in Michigan and Mr. Medill McCormick in Illinois.
-
-
-
-
-SPIES AND SLACKERS
-
-SEPTEMBER 24, 1918
-
-
-Mercy to the German spy or pacifist slacker in America is foul
-injustice to the American soldier in France and to his brother, who
-is preparing to go to France. Our Government has been altogether too
-weak in dealing with the pacifist slackers and so-called conscientious
-objectors. It has actually issued elaborate instructions for and to
-these creatures practically telling them how to escape doing the duty
-which all patriotic Americans are proudly eager to perform.
-
-There is not the slightest excuse for such weakness. No man has any
-right to remain in a free country like ours if he refuses, whether
-conscientiously or unconscientiously, to do the duties of peace and of
-war which are necessary if it is to be kept free. The true lovers of
-peace recognize their duty to fight for freedom. The Society of Friends
-has furnished the same large proportion of soldiers for this war that
-it did for the Civil War.
-
-It is all wrong to permit conscientious objectors to remain in camp or
-military posts or to go back to their homes. They should be treated
-in one of three ways: First, demand of them military service, except
-the actual use of weapons with intent to kill, and if they refuse
-to render this service treat them as criminals and imprison them at
-hard labor; second, put them in labor battalions and send them to
-France behind the lines, where association with soldiers might have a
-missionary effect on them and cause them to forget their present base
-creed and rise to worthy levels in an atmosphere of self-sacrifice and
-of service and struggle for great ideals; third, if both of the above
-procedures are regarded as too drastic, intern them with alien enemies
-and send them permanently out of the country as soon as possible.
-
-As for the spies, there is no question as to the treatment needed. They
-should be shot or hung. They are public enemies and this is war-time
-and they should no more be dealt with by the civil law than the enemy
-armies should be so dealt with. The German spies and secret agents
-and dynamiters and murderers in this country are as much a part of
-Germany as the soldiers of von Hindenburg. Bismarck employed thirty
-thousand of them to disorganize Germany’s foes fifty years ago, and
-now Germany is employing them by the hundred thousand. They are as
-formidable as the visible German army. It was these German Spies,
-agents, and propagandists who, in 1917, disintegrated and destroyed
-Russia, and inflicted a crushing disaster on Italy, and conducted the
-most dangerous intrigue in France, and aided and abetted the British
-pacifists.
-
-In this country Senator Overman has estimated their number at four
-hundred thousand, and Mr. Flynn, the recently resigned chief of the
-secret service, has put them at a quarter of a million. Our official
-government reports have shown that in obedience to orders from the
-German Government they have carried on in all hostile and even neutral
-countries a systematic warfare by means of aiding pacifists’ movements,
-inciting strikes, fomenting disloyalty, and employing direct action
-dynamiters and murderers. They have received aid and coöperation,
-conscientiously and unconscientiously, by many evils in pacifist
-and Bolshevist societies and in organizations like the I.W.W. and
-Non-Partisan League.
-
-The activities of the German spies, agents, and sympathizers vary from
-mere disloyal utterances, which the Attorney-General of the United
-States has stated to be the cause of most of the disorder in the
-country, up to seeking to corrupt our soldiers and practicing sabotage
-in our munitions works and factories for war materials. All offenders
-of the latter type, wherever committed, can, under the existing law,
-be tried by court-martial and executed, and this is the proper course
-to follow. It was the course followed under Lincoln’s administration,
-which is one of the reasons why Lincoln’s administration differed so
-markedly from Buchanan’s.
-
-The former chief of the secret service says that there are a quarter
-of a million of these German spies and agents in this country. We
-have ample law to warrant these being punished with death by summary
-court-martial, under military law as military enemies. We have been at
-war eighteen months, but not one Spy has thus been punished. This means
-grave remissness in the performance of our duty.
-
-
-
-
-QUIT PLAYING FAVORITES
-
-SEPTEMBER 30, 1918
-
-
-It is announced that the young men of eighteen or nineteen included in
-the draft will be sent free to college by the Government and will there
-be given the chance to earn commissions and escape service in the ranks.
-
-Either this represents sheer deception or it will mean gross
-favoritism. We now have plenty of young men who have been serving in
-the ranks for nearly eighteen months. Scores of thousands of these left
-college to go or had just finished high school when they went. All
-these boys, whether they have or have not been to college, are entitled
-to the first chance for commissions on equal terms with one another,
-except that preference should be given those who have been engaged in
-the fighting overseas. Almost all the second lieutenancies should now
-be filled in this manner by promotion from the ranks. To give to boys
-now about to enter college the preference over those who have actually
-served in the ranks, and especially over those who have actually faced
-death overseas, would be a cruel injustice.
-
-But the injustice would be equally great among the new recruits
-themselves. It is wholly illusory for the Government to say it will
-send to college all who wish to go. The average working-man or small
-farmer has not had money enough to educate his son so that the boy can
-now enter college without further training. Yet that boy may have in
-him the qualities of leadership which especially fit him for command.
-Such a working-man or farmer ought to wish, and does wish, that his
-son be tested on his merits by actual service in the ranks, alongside
-of all other boys, no favors being shown either him or them. For the
-Government at this time to send some of these boys to college and thus
-give them a start over the bulk of their fellows represents privilege
-given to money and is thoroughly unfair.
-
-For the two years before we entered the war the only important piece
-of preparedness was that of the men who at their own expense went to
-the Plattsburg training camp established by General Wood, and when
-Germany forced us into war it was imperatively necessary at once to
-establish many additional camps of this kind or we should have had no
-officers whatever for our army. It is still advisable to keep a few
-training camps for older men whose age and qualifications especially
-fit them for certain kinds of service. But it is not wise nor right for
-the Government now to put certain especially favored classes of boys
-of eighteen and nineteen into college with a view to giving them an
-advantage over their fellows. This is undemocratic. It is not fair to
-the other boys of their age who are not in the army. It is exceedingly
-unfair and unjust to the young men who are already enlisted in the
-army, and especially to those who have seen service overseas.
-
-From now on no young officer should be appointed saving after service
-in the ranks out of which he is chosen by fair test in comparison with
-his fellows as fit to enter an officers’ training camp. Moreover,
-there should be a resolute effort to give preference to the men who
-have served in the front in France, the very men who are now apt to be
-neglected.
-
-
-
-
-WAR AIMS AND PEACE PROPOSALS
-
-OCTOBER 12, 1918
-
-
-Our war aim ought to be unconditional surrender of Germany and of her
-vassal allies, Austria and Turkey. We ought not to consider any peace
-proposals from Germany until this war aim has been accomplished by the
-victorious arms of our allies and ourselves.
-
-It is worthy of note that the Central Powers show a greedy eagerness to
-accept the so-called “fourteen points” laid down by President Wilson. I
-earnestly hope that when the time for discussing peace proposals comes,
-we shall ourselves repudiate some of these fourteen points, and that we
-shall insist on having all of them put into plain and straightforward
-language before we assent to any of them. Let us remember that Congress
-shares with the President the right to make treaties and that the
-people are bound to insist that they, the people, are the ultimate
-arbiters and that their will in the peace treaty is followed by both
-the President and the Congress.
-
-For example, what does that one of the fourteen points referring to the
-freedom of the seas mean? If it means what Germany interprets it to
-mean, then every decent American ought to be against it. The kind of
-freedom of the seas upon which it is really vital to count is freedom
-from murder. International law at present condemns exactly the kind
-of murder which Germany practiced in the case of the Lusitania and in
-hundreds of other cases, and is still practicing. We ought to make her
-atone heavily for such conduct and explicitly renounce it before we
-ever discuss any other kind of freedom of the seas.
-
-Again, we ought to know just what the President means by freedom of
-commercial intercourse. If he means that he proposes to allow Germany
-to dump her manufactures on us without restriction, we ought to be
-against it. We ought to insist on keeping in our hands the complete
-right to handle our tariff as the vital interests of our own citizens,
-and especially our own working-men, demand.
-
-Again, what is meant by the league of nations? If it means that
-Germany, Austria, Turkey, and Russia, as at present constituted, are to
-have the say-so about America’s future destiny, we ought to be against
-it. They would treat any agreement with us as a scrap of paper wherever
-it suited their interests, and we ought to realize this fact. Moreover,
-we already belong to a _de facto_ league of nations which is a going
-concern. Let us stand by our allies before entering into a league with
-our enemies. Therefore, let us at once declare war on Turkey. Any such
-league is of value only if all its members are willing to make war
-on the same offenders, and the culpable failure of our Government to
-make war on Turkey and Bulgaria makes it absurd and hypocritical for
-us to promise to enter such a league in the future until this failure
-is confessed and atoned for. And let us at once send Major-General
-Wood and fifty thousand men to aid the Czecho-Slovaks in Siberia and
-establish our front well to the west of the Ural Mountains.
-
-Again, the talk of merely giving autonomy to the subject races of
-Austria amounts to betrayal of the Czecho-Slovaks, the Jugo-Slavs,
-the Italians, and the Rumanians. The first should be given their
-independence and the other three united to the nations with which they
-really belong. Moreover, it is a betrayal of civilization to leave the
-Turk in Europe and fail to free the Armenians and the other subject
-races of Turkey.
-
-Again, let us define what is meant by abolishing secret diplomacy. If
-it means that the Administration is to renounce the system of secret
-and furtive diplomacy which it now perseveres in concerning what has
-happened in Mexico, Haiti, and San Domingo, I heartily agree; but I
-do not see why it needs an international mandate before it tells our
-people the truth in these matters. Moreover, before it undertakes a
-fresh agreement, let it explain why for two years it kept secret from
-our people the full knowledge it had of Germany’s conduct and attitude
-toward us, including all the matters set forth in Ambassador Gerard’s
-books. The American Nation has never seen such secret diplomacy
-practiced by its Government as it has seen during the last five years.
-
-It is evident, before these fourteen points are accepted as the basis
-for peace discussion, they should be stated in such straightforward
-language that we may understand what they mean. The prime necessities
-at present are simplicity of language and the squaring of deeds with
-words. The thing we do not need is adroit and supple rhetoric which can
-be interpreted to mean anything or nothing.
-
-
-
-
-PERMANENT PREPAREDNESS AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
-
-OCTOBER 15, 1918
-
-
-The vital military need of this country as regards its future
-international relations is the immediate adoption of the policy of
-permanent preparedness based on universal training. This is its prime
-duty from the standpoint of American nationalism and patriotism. Then,
-as an addition or supplement to, but under no conditions as substitute
-for, the policy of permanent preparedness, we can afford cautiously to
-enter into and try out the policy of a league of nations. There is no
-difficulty whatever in prattling cheerfully about such a league or in
-winning applause by rhetoric concerning it prior to the effort to make
-it work in practice; but there will be much difficulty in making it
-work at all when any serious strain comes, and it will prove entirely
-unworkable if the effort is made to unload upon it, in the name of
-internationalism, duties which in the present state of the world will
-be efficiently performed by the free nations only if they perform them
-as national duties.
-
-In a recent adverse, but courteous and friendly article on my attitude
-in this matter which appeared in a great daily paper, the following
-language was used: “The colonel is letting himself be bothered,
-irritated, and sidetracked by fools. There is no way of preventing
-a fool from saying that he is in favor of the league of nations.
-The American people will be making up their minds about the league
-of nations and about permanent preparedness. They will be told by
-certain sorts of pacifists that if they accept the league they can
-safely reject preparedness. They will be told that the two ideas are
-opposites.”
-
-The “certain sort of pacifist” who has made this statement to the
-people of the United States is the President of the United States in
-the now famous “fourteen points” which he enunciated last January. He
-advocated as one part of his plan the league or association of nations,
-as he has elsewhere advocated it, and he advocated as another part of
-his plan “the guarantees that national armaments will be reduced to the
-lowest point consistent with domestic safety.” Unless this language was
-used with intent to deceive, domestic safety must mean merely freedom
-from riot, and the President’s proposal is that America’s national
-preparedness be limited to a police force to prevent domestic disorder.
-Therefore, the President has told the American people that if they
-accept the league they can safely reject preparedness.
-
-The President may change his mind, and I sincerely hope he will do so.
-Until he does so it is the duty of every sincere American patriot to
-lay far more emphasis on the onerous and indispensable duty of national
-preparedness than on the wholly untested scheme of a league of nations,
-which the President has presented as an alternative. I heartily favor
-true internationalism as an addition to, but never as substitute for, a
-fervid and intensely patriotic nationalism. I will gladly back any wise
-and honest effort to create a league of nations, but only on condition
-that it is treated as an addition to, and not as a substitute for, the
-full preparedness of our own strength for our own defense.
-
-
-
-
-HIGH-SOUNDING PHRASES OF MUDDY MEANING
-
-OCTOBER 17, 1918
-
-
-A keen observer of what is now happening in the world writes me that
-there is very grave danger that this country will be cheated out of the
-right kind of peace if our people remain fatuously content to accept
-high-sounding phrases of muddy meaning, instead of clear-cut and
-truthful statements of just what we demand and just what we intend to
-do.
-
-The recent action of President Wilson in connection with Germany
-has shown the imperative need of our people informing themselves of
-his announced purpose and keeping track of what he does toward the
-achievement of this purpose. Therefore, we should insist upon the
-purpose being stated in understandable fashion and being adhered to
-after it has been stated. This isn’t the President’s war. It is the
-people’s war. The peace will not be a satisfactory peace unless it
-is the people’s peace. As a people we have no right to permit the
-President to commit us to that of which we do not approve or to that
-which, after honest effort, we are unable to understand.
-
-President Wilson’s first communication to the German Government, if
-words mean anything, meant an effort to treat on the basis of his
-so-called “fourteen points.” The German Government answered that it
-accepted these fourteen points and approved of them. This made them
-public property, and it behooves the Americans to examine them. I
-believe that such an examination will show the American people that
-their meaning is so muddy that we should insist upon their being
-clearly defined before we in any way accept them as ours. When the
-peace terms come to be reduced to action, we cannot afford to accept
-empty competitive rhetoric for straightforward plain dealing.
-
-As regards some of the points, either the meaning is so muddy as to
-be wholly incomprehensible or else the proposals are very treacherous.
-The fourth article, for example, proposes guarantees for the reduction
-of national armaments to the lowest point consistent with domestic
-safety. If this article means anything, it means that this Nation, for
-instance, is only to keep whatever armed forces are necessary to police
-the country in the event of domestic disturbance. Now, let our people
-face what this really implies. It is a proposal that we give up our
-navy, which, of course, cannot be used for such police purposes, and
-that we give up all of our army that could be used against a foreign
-foe. And according to point fourteen of his address to Congress of
-January 8 last, and according to point three in his speech of September
-27 last, this lack of armament on our part is to be supplied by mutual
-guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity within
-the league of nations covering the world.
-
-Now, such guarantees are precisely and exactly the scraps of paper to
-which the German Chancellor likened them when his Government tore up
-those affecting Belgium. The proposal of President Wilson is that this
-country shall put itself in the position of Belgium; shall trust to
-guarantees precisely such as those to which Belgium trusted four and
-one quarter years ago, and he also proposes, as far as his meaning can
-be made out at all, that the very powers that treated these guarantees
-as scraps of paper in the case of Belgium shall be among the powers to
-whose guarantee we are to trust to the exclusion of all preparation
-for our own self-defense. All nations are to be asked to render
-themselves helpless with fatuous indifference to the obvious fact that
-every weak-minded nation which accepted and acted in the proposal would
-be at the mercy of every ruthless and efficient nation that chose to
-treat the proposal as a scrap of paper.
-
-I gravely doubt whether a more silly or more mischievous plan was ever
-seriously proposed by the ruler of a great nation. Yet, this is exactly
-the plan to which President Wilson, by his correspondence with Germany,
-has sought definitely to commit the United States. If his words do not
-mean exactly what is above set forth, then their meaning is so muddy
-that no two disinterested outsiders would be warranted in interpreting
-them the same way.
-
-There is small cause for wonder that Germany eagerly accepted and
-made her own President Wilson’s fourteen points to which he, without
-any warrant whatever, seemed to commit this Nation. Incidentally I
-may add that Mr. Wilson has at different times enunciated at least as
-many other points, some of them contradictory to the fourteen which he
-enumerated in January last. The outburst of popular indignation led by
-such men as Senators Lodge, Poindexter, and Thomas, which forced him
-to repudiate the negotiations which he had begun with Germany, should
-be supplemented by a resolute insistence upon the duty of the American
-public to inform itself as to what it wishes in the peace before the
-President, without authority, commits it to any peace proposal, and
-above all to peace proposals which may mean anything or nothing.
-
-Secretary McAdoo, with fine family loyalty, announced that the
-acceptance by Germany of the fourteen points would have meant Germany’s
-unconditional surrender. He might as well have said that the acceptance
-of disunion and the perpetuation of slavery in 1864 would have meant
-a surrender by the Confederate states. Not only Germany, but every
-pacifist and pro-German here at home, hailed the fourteen points as
-representing what they desired. I recently spoke to a body of loyal
-Americans of German descent on behalf of the Liberty Loan. A member of
-their organization who was not a straight American, but a hyphenated
-American, and who did not venture to do more than sign himself
-as “German-American,” wrote me that in view of my repudiation of
-President Wilson’s so-called fourteen points he could not, as a loyal
-German-American, do otherwise than condemn me. The individual himself
-is doubtless as unimportant as the anonymous letter writer usually
-is, but there is a real significance in his endorsement of President
-Wilson’s fourteen points in view of his calling himself so emphatically
-not a straight-out American, but a German-American. Evidently his
-loyalty is to Germanism and not to Americanism, and this German loyalty
-of his made him back the President’s fourteen points, which Germany had
-so gladly accepted.
-
-The American people should insist that these fourteen points and any
-other points are stated in clear-cut language, and that there be a full
-understanding of just what is meant by them and a full knowledge of how
-far the American people approve of them before any foreign power is
-permitted to think that they represent America’s position at the peace
-council.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN PEACE _VERSUS_ A RUBBER-STAMP PEACE
-
-OCTOBER 22, 1918
-
-
-In Wallace’s Farmer, a journal devoted to the interests of the farmer,
-and also to the interests of every good American citizen, but which has
-no concern with partisan politics, there is a strong editorial against
-our acceptance of a peace on the terms of the famous fourteen points
-laid down by President Wilson in his message of January last. It reads
-in part as follows:
-
- Of course, Germany would like to make peace on the terms laid down
- by President Wilson in his speech of January 8, for it would allow
- Germany to escape the just penalty of her crimes and restore her to
- her condition before the war.
-
-On the other hand, the leading Socialist paper of New York
-enthusiastically champions the fourteen points, especially those
-demanding a league of nations, freedom of the seas according to
-the German party, and the removal of all economic barriers. This
-championship is natural, for the Socialists, like the I.W.W. of this
-country, who have been bitterly pro-German and anti-American, and
-like the worst Russian Bolsheviks, have steadily worked in Germany’s
-interests; and like all its professional internationalists they hate
-the liberty-loving nations so bitterly that they are eagerly working
-for peace satisfactory to the German autocracy. All such persons,
-so far as they are not merely silly, seek their own profit in the
-destruction of civilization, and they would hail an inconclusive peace,
-which would mean the triumph of militarism, rather than see the free
-nations triumphant over both militarism and anarchy.
-
-But in his last note to Austria, President Wilson himself flatly
-repudiates one of his fourteen points--that relating to autonomy for
-the Czecho-Slovaks and Jugo-Slavs under the Austro-Hungarian yoke. He
-announces that he has changed his position because facts have changed,
-but in reality the facts have not changed in even the smallest degree
-between January and October so far as these two nationalities are
-concerned. Many persons, including myself, had then been demanding for
-over a year this complete independence. Nothing whatever has changed in
-the situation except Mr. Wilson’s mind, and obviously this has changed
-merely because the American people have gradually waked up and have
-forced him in this matter to take a course diametrically opposed to
-the one he had been advocating, precisely as a week ago an aroused and
-indignant public opinion forced him to absolutely reverse the course
-of negotiation on which he entered with Germany. The popular feeling
-would have been inarticulate and helpless if it had not received
-expression from various patriotic public servants and private citizens
-and from those fearless newspapers, which, at the risk of grave
-financial disaster, have ventured when the crisis was serious to defy
-the sinister efforts of the Administration to do away with the freedom
-of the press. Senators Lodge, Poindexter, and Thomas and Congressman
-Fess are examples of the public servants, and Professor Hobbs, of the
-University of Michigan, and Professor Thayer, of Harvard, are examples
-of private citizens who have well served the people of the United
-States in this crisis.
-
-Of course, the entire cuckoo or rubber-stamp tribe of politicians
-tumbled over themselves in the effort to assure the President that no
-matter what somersault he turned they would flop with equal quickness,
-and that their responsibility was solely to him and not to the people
-of the United States or to the cause of right and of fearlessness
-and of honorable dealing. Senator Lewis, of Illinois, introduced a
-resolution stating that “the United States Senate approves whatever
-course may be taken by the President in dealing with the German
-Imperial Government and the Austrian Imperial Government and endorses
-and approves whatever methods he may employ.” Senator Lewis is, in
-private life, an amiable and kindly gentleman, but the above resolution
-is a somewhat abject announcement that in public life he aspires only
-to be a rubber stamp. If such position is proper, then there is no
-need of Senators or Congressmen, and our people should merely send
-written proxies to Washington and should otherwise copy the example
-of those big private corporations which are controlled by one man
-according to his own will and for his own benefit.
-
-I do not believe that the American people will accept a view which
-is both so abject and so profoundly unpatriotic. This is the war of
-the American people and the peace which concludes it should be the
-peace imposed by the American people. Therefore, they should send to
-Washington public servants who will be self-respecting Americans and
-not rubber stamps.
-
-
-
-
-UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER
-
-OCTOBER 26, 1918
-
-
-When the American people speak for unconditional surrender, it means
-that Germany must accept whatever terms the United States and its
-allies think necessary in order to right the dreadful wrongs that have
-been committed and to safeguard the world for at least a generation
-to come from another attempt by Germany to secure world dominion.
-Unconditional surrender is the reverse of a negotiated peace. The
-interchange of notes, which has been going on between our Government
-and the Governments of Germany and Austria during the last three weeks,
-means, of course, if persisted in, a negotiated peace. It is the
-abandonment of force and the substitution of negotiation. This fact
-should be clearly and truthfully stated by our leaders, so that the
-American people may decide with their eyes open which course they will
-follow.
-
-Those of us who believe in unconditional surrender regard Germany’s
-behavior during the last five years as having made her the outlaw among
-nations. In private life sensible men and women do not negotiate with
-an outlaw or grow sentimental about him, or ask for a peace with him
-on terms of equality if he will give up his booty. Still less do they
-propose to make a league with him for the future, and on the strength
-of this league to abolish the sheriff and take the constable. On the
-contrary, they expect the law officers to take him by force and to
-have him tried and punished. They do not punish him out of revenge,
-but because all intelligent persons know punishment to be necessary in
-order to stop certain kinds of criminals from wrongdoing and to save
-the community from such wrongdoing.
-
-We ought to treat Germany in precisely this manner. It is a sad
-and dreadful thing to have to face some months or a year or so of
-additional bloodshed, but it is a much worse thing to quit now and
-have the children now growing up obliged to do the job all over again,
-with ten times as much bloodshed and suffering, when their turn comes.
-The surest way to secure a peace as lasting as that which followed the
-downfall of Napoleon is to overthrow the Prussianized Germany of the
-Hohenzollerns as Napoleon was overthrown. If we enter into a league
-of peace with Germany and her vassal allies, we must expect them to
-treat the arrangement as a scrap of paper whenever it becomes to their
-interest to do so.
-
-
-
-
-WHAT ARE THE FOURTEEN POINTS?
-
-OCTOBER 30, 1918
-
-
-The European nations have been told that the fourteen points enumerated
-in President Wilson’s message of January last are to be the basis of
-peace. It is, therefore, possible that Americans may like to know what
-they are. It is even possible that they may like to guess what they
-mean, although I am not certain that such guessing is permitted by the
-Postmaster-General and the Attorney-General under the new theory of
-making democracy safe for all kinds of peoples abroad who have never
-heard of it by interpreting democracy at home as meaning that it is
-unlawful for the people to express any except favorable opinions of
-the way in which the public servants of the people transact the public
-business.
-
-The first point forbids “all private international understandings of
-any kind,” and says there must be “open covenants of peace, openly
-arrived at,” and announces that “diplomacy shall always proceed
-frankly in the public view.” The President has recently waged war on
-Haiti and San Domingo and rendered democracy within these two small
-former republics not merely unsafe, but non-existent. He has kept
-all that he has done in the matter absolutely secret. If he means
-what he says, he will at once announce what open covenant of peace he
-has openly arrived at with these two little republics, which he has
-deprived of their right of self-determination. He will also announce
-what public international understanding, if any, he now has with these
-two republics, whose soil he is at present occupying with the armed
-forces of the United States and hundreds of whose citizens have been
-killed by these armed forces. If he has no such public understanding,
-he will tell us why, and whether he has any private international
-understanding, or whether he invaded and conquered them and deprived
-them of the right of self-determination without any attempt to reach
-any understanding, either private or public.
-
-Moreover, he has just sent abroad on a diplomatic mission Mr. House,
-of Texas. Mr. House is not in the public service of the Nation, but he
-is in the private service of Mr. Wilson. He is usually called Colonel
-House. In his official or semi-official biography, published in an
-ardently admiring New York paper, it is explained that he was once
-appointed colonel on a governor’s staff, but carried his dislike of
-military ostentation to the point of giving his uniform to a negro
-servant to wear on social occasions. This attitude of respect for the
-uniform makes the President feel that he is peculiarly fit to negotiate
-on behalf of our fighting men abroad for whom the uniform is sacred.
-Associated with him is an editor of the New York World, which paper
-has recently been busy in denouncing as foolish the demand made by so
-many Americans for unconditional surrender by Germany.
-
-I do not doubt that these two gentlemen possess charming social
-attributes and much private worth, but as they are sent over on a
-diplomatic mission, presumably vitally affecting the whole country, and
-as their instructions and purposes are shrouded in profound mystery,
-it seems permissible to ask President Wilson why in this particular
-instance diplomacy does not “proceed frankly in the public view”?
-
-This first one of the fourteen points offers such an illuminating
-opportunity to test promise as to the future by performance in the
-present that I have considered it at some length. The other thirteen
-points and the subsequent points laid down as further requirements for
-peace I shall briefly take up in another article.
-
-
-
-
-FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF THE FOURTEEN POINTS
-
-OCTOBER 30, 1918
-
-
-The second in the fourteen points deals with freedom of the seas. It
-makes no distinction between freeing the seas from murder like that
-continually practiced by Germany and freeing them from blockade of
-contraband merchandise, which is the practice of a right universally
-enjoyed by belligerents, and at this moment practiced by the United
-States. Either this proposal is meaningless or it is a mischievous
-concession to Germany.
-
-The third point promises free trade among all the nations, unless
-the words are designedly used to conceal President Wilson’s true
-meaning. This would deny to our country the right to make a tariff
-to protect its citizens, and especially its working-men, against
-Germany or China or any other country. Apparently this is desired on
-the ground that the incidental domestic disaster to this country will
-prevent other countries from feeling hostile to us. The supposition is
-foolish. England practiced free trade and yet Germany hated England
-particularly, and Turkey practiced free trade without deserving or
-obtaining friendship from any one except those who desired to exploit
-her.
-
-The fourth point provides that this Nation, like every other, is to
-reduce its armaments to the lowest limit consistent with domestic
-safety. Either this is language deliberately used to deceive or else it
-means that we are to scrap our army and navy and prevent riot by means
-of a national constabulary, like the state constabulary of New York or
-Pennsylvania.
-
-Point five proposes that colonial claims shall all be treated on the
-same basis. Unless the language is deliberately used to deceive,
-this means that we are to restore to our brutal enemy the colonies
-taken by our allies while they were defending us from this enemy. The
-proposition is probably meaningless. If it is not, it is monstrous.
-
-Point six deals with Russia. It probably means nothing, but if it means
-anything, it provides that America shall share on equal terms with
-other nations, including Germany, Austria, and Turkey, in giving Russia
-assistance. The whole proposition would not be particularly out of
-place in a college sophomore’s exercise in rhetoric.
-
-Point seven deals with Belgium and is entirely proper and commonplace.
-
-Point eight deals with Alsace-Lorraine and is couched in language
-which betrays Mr. Wilson’s besetting sin--his inability to speak in
-a straightforward manner. He may mean that Alsace and Lorraine must
-be restored to France, in which case he is right. He may mean that a
-plebiscite must be held, in which case he is playing Germany’s evil
-game.
-
-Point nine deals with Italy, and is right.
-
-Point ten deals with the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and is so foolish
-that even President Wilson has since abandoned it.
-
-Point eleven proposes that we, together with other nations, including
-apparently Germany, Austria, and Hungary, shall guarantee justice in
-the Balkan Peninsula. As this would also guarantee our being from
-time to time engaged in war over matters in which we had no interest
-whatever, it is worth while inquiring whether President Wilson proposes
-that we wage these wars with the national constabulary to which he
-desired to reduce our armed forces.
-
-Point twelve proposes to perpetuate the infamy of Turkish rule in
-Europe, and as a sop to the conscience of humanity proposes to give the
-subject races autonomy, a slippery word which in a case like this is
-useful only for rhetorical purposes.
-
-Point thirteen proposes an independent Poland, which is right; and then
-proposes that we guarantee its integrity in the event of future war,
-which is preposterous unless we intend to become a military nation more
-fit for overseas warfare than Germany is at present.
-
-Point fourteen proposes a general association of nations to guarantee
-to great and small states alike political independence and territorial
-integrity. It is dishonorable to make this proposition so long as
-President Wilson continues to act as he is now acting in Haiti and
-San Domingo. In its essence Mr. Wilson’s proposition for a league of
-nations seems to be akin to the holy alliance of the nations of Europe
-a century ago, which worked such mischief that the Monroe Doctrine was
-called into being especially to combat it. If it is designed to do away
-with nationalism, it will work nothing but mischief. If it is devised
-in sane fashion as an addition to nationalism and as an addition to
-preparing our own strength for our own defense, it may do a small
-amount of good; but it will certainly accomplish nothing if more than a
-moderate amount is attempted and probably the best first step would be
-to make the existing league of the Allies a going concern.
-
-As to the supplementary points or proposals, the four advanced or laid
-down in February were sound moral aphorisms of no value save as they
-may be defined in each particular case.
-
-But the supplementary five proposals set forth by President Wilson
-last September were, on the whole, mischievous and were capable of a
-construction that would make them ruinous in their essence. They set
-forth the doctrine that there must be no discrimination between our
-friends and our enemies and no special economic or political alliances
-among friendly nations, but uniform treatment of all the league of
-nations; the said league, therefore, to include Germany, Austria,
-Turkey, and Russia upon a footing of equality of our allies. Either
-the words used mean nothing or they mean that we are to enter a league
-in which we make-believe that our deadly enemies, stained with every
-kind of brutality and treachery, are as worthy of friendship as the
-Allies who have fought our battles for four years. No wonder that the
-proposal is enthusiastically applauded by Germany, Austria, and Turkey
-and by all our own pro-Germans and pacifists and Germanized Socialists
-and anti-American internationalists. It is the kind of proposition
-made by cold-blooded men who at least care nothing for the sufferings
-of others. It is eagerly championed by foolish and hysterical
-sentimentalists. It is accepted and used for sinister purposes by
-powerful and cynical wrongdoers. When the President was making this
-proposition and during the subsequent month Germany was committing
-inhuman murders of the people on the Ticonderoga and Leinster at
-sea, and on shore was committing every species of murder, rape,
-enslavement, plunder, and outrage as her armies withdrew from France
-and Belgium.
-
-President Wilson’s announcement was a notice to the malefactors that
-they would not be punished for the murders. Let us treat the league of
-nations only as an addition to, and not as a substitute for, thorough
-preparedness and intense nationalism on our part. Let none of the
-present international criminals be admitted until a sufficient number
-of years has passed to make us sure it has repented. Make conduct the
-test of admission to the league. In every crisis judge each nation by
-its conduct. Therefore, at the present time let us stand by our friends
-and against our enemies.
-
-
-
-
-FOURTEEN SCRAPS OF PAPER
-
-OCTOBER 31, 1918
-
-
-In my article yesterday I discussed Mr. Wilson’s fourteen peace points
-which had been accepted by Germany. After the article was sent in, Mr.
-Wilson explained one of the points by stating that it meant exactly the
-opposite of what it said. A New York paper has asked for the election
-of a Congress that shall see eye to eye with Mr. Wilson. But only a
-Congress of whirling dervishes could see eye to eye with Mr. Wilson for
-more than twenty-four hours at a time.
-
-When Germany broke her treaty with Belgium, the German Chancellor
-called it a scrap of paper. Any individual who proposes a treaty which
-plainly means one thing, and then, as soon as he finds it disagreeable
-to adhere to that obvious meaning, instantly interprets it as meaning
-exactly the opposite, is treating it as a scrap of paper. Mr. Wilson’s
-recent interpretation of what he meant in the point about economic
-barriers makes all the fourteen points scraps of paper unworthy of
-serious discussion by anybody, because no human being is supposed
-to say what any one of them means or to do more than guess whether
-to-morrow Mr. Wilson will not interpret each and all of them in a sense
-exactly the opposite to their meaning.
-
-Mr. Wilson’s language in the point in question was that he intended
-the removal “of all economic barriers and the establishment of an
-equality of trade conditions among all the nations.” By no honest
-construction of language can this be held to mean anything except that
-this Nation, for example, could have no tariff of its own, but must
-live under exactly the same tariff, or no tariff, conditions with all
-other nations. But Mr. Wilson now notifies a Democratic Senator that he
-did not mean any “restriction upon the free determination by any nation
-of its own economic policy.” If he meant this, why did he not say
-it? Why did he say the exact opposite? His first statement is wholly
-incompatible with the interpretation he now puts on it. If anybody in
-private life entered into a contract in such manner and then sought
-to repudiate it by interpreting it in such manner, there is not a
-court in Christendom that would not adjudge him guilty of having used
-language with deliberate intent to deceive.
-
-Nor is this all. In his new interpretation of what he did not
-originally mean, the President now says that he proposes to prevent
-any nation, including the United States, from using its tariff to
-discriminate in favor of friendly nations and against hostile nations.
-This is what he now says and what he now means, but, of course,
-to-morrow he may say that in this new interpretation he again meant
-exactly the opposite of what he says. However this may be for the
-future, President Wilson at this moment says, for instance, we ought
-to abandon reciprocity treaties; that we ought to refuse to make such
-treaties with our friends, such as Cuba and Brazil, and ought to punish
-these friends by treating them on an exact equality with our embittered
-and malevolent enemy, Germany. I hold this to be thoroughly mischievous
-doctrine.
-
-The great scientist, Huxley, who loved truth and abhorred falsehood,
-said that “the primary condition of honest literature is to leave the
-reader in no doubt as to the author’s meaning.” Evidently this primary
-condition is not fulfilled by Mr. Wilson’s fourteen points. They should
-now be treated as scraps of paper and put where they belong, in the
-scrap-basket.
-
-
-
-
-THE TURKS SURRENDER UNCONDITIONALLY
-
-NOVEMBER 3, 1918
-
-
-The British have beaten Turkey to her knees and she has surrendered
-unconditionally. America has no share in the honor of what has been
-done. President Wilson, although we were at war with Germany, has
-refused to aid our allies against Turkey and has preserved the same
-cold neutrality between the Armenians and their Turkish butchers that
-he formerly did between the Belgians and their German oppressors.
-
-Turkey had inflicted inhuman wrongs on the subject peoples and had
-infringed our own treaty rights, but President Wilson refused to go to
-war with her. Yet with our navy at the very outbreak of hostilities
-and then with a considerable and constantly growing army, if we had
-been willing we could have materially aided the British and French. In
-such event Constantinople would doubtless have been taken long ago.
-As it is, thanks to President Wilson, we Americans can only look on
-and rejoice that others did better than our rulers let us do. We have
-had no hand in the freeing of Palestine, Syria, and Armenia. Under the
-great law of service and sacrifice it is the British and French alone
-who have the moral right to determine the fate of Turkey. They, and
-especially the British, have poured out their blood freely, and now,
-after the victory has been gained, expenditure of ink on our part
-is of mighty small consequence in comparison. I earnestly hope that
-permanent justice will be done by expelling the Turk from Europe and
-making all Armenia independent. But we have lost the right to insist on
-these points.
-
-The beginning of the end came when, two or three weeks ago, Bulgaria
-was forced to surrender unconditionally. Here again, thanks to
-President Wilson, America had no part in the honor and credit of the
-vital triumph. Our Government was still neutral about Bulgaria, still
-too proud to fight either Turkey or Bulgaria, still hoping for peace
-without victory over them.
-
-Now Turkey has surrendered and Austria has broken up. In the case of
-Austria, after ten months’ unpardonable delay, we did finally go to
-war, and we have a very small share in the great glory won by Italy and
-the other Allies.
-
-The greatest contest was on the western front, and here the hundreds
-of thousands of American troops engaged under Foch and Pershing have
-shown such extraordinary gallantry and efficiency that we are all
-forever their debtors. Nearly a month ago President Wilson entered
-into negotiations with Germany which, if continued along the line
-he started, might have caused disaster. Fortunately there was such
-an outburst of protest in the country that our allies took part and
-President Wilson himself took warning. President Wilson may still
-serve as a channel of communication. But General Foch will be the
-real master of the situation. The men with guns and not the men with
-fountain pens will dictate the terms.
-
-
-
-
-PEACE
-
-NOVEMBER 12, 1918
-
-
-Four years and a quarter have passed since Germany, by the invasion
-of Belgium, began the World War and made it at the same time a war of
-cynical treachery and of bestiality and of inhuman wrongdoing. Almost
-from the beginning our governmental authorities were well informed
-of the organized brutality with which it was waged and of the fact
-that the Kaiser and the leading soldiers, politicians, and commercial
-magnates of Germany had deliberately plunged the world into war because
-they expected to profit by conquest, while the Socialist Party aided
-and abetted them in the hope of sharing some of the profit.
-
-The rest of us ordinary Americans were successfully hoodwinked because
-the facts were concealed from us. But gradually the truth leaked
-through to us. First we learned that the stories of the atrocities were
-true. Then, although not until much later, we found out that there was
-ample proof that Germany had brought on the war to gratify her greed
-for gold and her arrogant and conscienceless lust for world domination.
-Finally we were permitted to learn that Germany intended to strike us
-down as soon as she had made the free nations her victims. Now our
-troops have played a manful part, a part not only heroic and efficient,
-but also of decisive consequence in the final terrible struggle.
-
-It is not pleasant to think that the two first crushing blows in
-bringing about the end, the overthrow of Bulgaria and the overthrow of
-Turkey, were due in no way to us, but solely to our allies, England
-and France. We never made war on either offending nation; we remained
-neutral, and this exhibition of feeble diplomacy on our part made us
-onlookers instead of partakers of the triumph. But with Austria, after
-much hesitation and wabbling, we did finally go to war, and, although
-our part was very small, we have a modest right to share the general
-satisfaction over the victory. In the case of Germany, however, we
-played a really great part, and although until the very end we were
-unable to put on the fighting line any tanks or field guns or battle
-planes, and relatively only a small number of machine guns and bombing
-and observation planes, our soldiers themselves were probably on the
-average the finest troops who fought in Europe.
-
-And now the German imperial military and capitalistic authority has
-been beaten to its knees and forced to accept all the terms the Allies
-have imposed upon it. The able and wicked men who thought to wade
-through a sea of blood to world domination must now bow their heads
-before the outside peoples whom they have so cruelly wronged and face
-the sullen distrust and hostility of their own people, whom they misled
-by promising them a share in the profits of successful guilt. Their
-doom has come upon them.
-
-A little over a month ago the Administration embarked upon a career
-of note-writing with Germany, which, if unchecked, might have meant a
-peace of practical profit to Germany. But the feeling of the American
-people, especially in the West, showed itself in such direct and
-straightforward fashion that this effort was soon abandoned. Moreover,
-at the recent election, the American people, with the issue squarely
-before them, declared that they were the masters of their public
-servants and not rubber stamps, and that this was the people’s war
-and not the war of any one man or any one party, and that loyalty to
-ourselves and our allies stood ahead of adherence to any man. Germany
-has been beaten down abroad and at home. The pro-Germans and the
-pacifists and the defeatists and the Germanized Socialists, and all the
-crew who stand for any form of either Bolshevism or Kaiserism, have
-been warned that they shall not betray this Nation.
-
-
-
-
-SACRIFICE ON COLD ALTARS
-
-NOVEMBER 13, 1918
-
-
-A friend, a California woman, writes me that there is staying with
-her a widow whose only son has been in the navy and has just died of
-influenza, and that the mother said:
-
- I gave my boy proudly to my country. I never held him back, even in my
- heart. But if only he had died with a gun in his hand--a little glory
- for him and a thought for me that my sacrifice had not been useless.
-
-My correspondent continues:
-
- There must be so many mothers who feel that they have laid their
- sacrifice on cold altars. You have written much that will comfort the
- mothers whose sons have paid with their bodies in battle. Isn’t there
- something you can say to help these other mothers?
-
-I felt a real pang when I received this letter, because the thought
-suggested had been in my mind, and yet I had failed to express it. It
-had happened that my own sons and nephews and young cousins and their
-close friends were where death or wounds came to them on the field of
-action. For example, on the day I received this letter we also got news
-that the closest school and college and army friend of my son, Quentin,
-who was killed, had himself just been killed. He was a man who had been
-promoted for a series of hazardous and successful battles with German
-airmen. He was as gentle and clean and lovable as a girl, yet terrible
-in his battle, and no more high and fearless soul ever fronted death
-joyously in the high heavens. My mind had, because of facts like this,
-turned toward the deaths of the men on the firing line; and I regret
-that I did not make it evident as I meant to make it, and but for this
-oversight would have made it, that all who have given their lives
-or the lives dearest to them in this war stand on an exact level of
-service and sacrifice and honor and glory.
-
-The men who have died of pneumonia or fever in the hospitals, the men
-who have been killed in accidents on the airplane training fields are
-as much heroes as those who were killed at the front, and their shining
-souls shall hereafter light up all to a clearer and greater view of the
-duties of life. The war is over now. The time of frightful losses among
-the men at the front and of heartbreaking anxiety for their mothers
-and wives, their sisters and sweethearts at home has passed. No great
-triumph is ever won save by the payment of the necessary cost. All of
-us who have stayed at home and all the others who have returned safe
-will, as long as life shall last, think of the men who died as having
-purchased for us and for our children’s children, as long as this
-country shall last, a heritage so precious that even their precious
-blood was not too great a price to pay. Whether they fell in battle or
-how they died matters not at all, and it matters not what they were
-doing as long as, high of soul, they were doing their duty with all the
-strength and fervor of their natures.
-
-The mother or the wife whose son or husband has died, whether in battle
-or by fever or in the accident inevitable in hurriedly preparing a
-modern army for war, must never feel that the sacrifice has been laid
-“on a cold altar.” There is no gradation of honor among these gallant
-men and no essential gradation of service. They all died that we might
-live; our debt is to all of them, and we can pay it even personally
-only by striving so to live as to bring a little nearer the day when
-justice and mercy shall rule in our own homes and among the nations of
-the world.
-
-
-
-
-THE RED FLAG AND THE HUN PEACE DRIVE
-
-NOVEMBER 14, 1918
-
-
-The war is won. A twofold duty is now incumbent on us. We must strive
-to make the peace one of justice and righteousness and to throw out
-such safeguards around it as will give us the greatest possible chance
-of permanency. Then we must turn to setting aright the affairs of our
-own household. But before we set ourselves to the performance of these
-two tasks we should thoroughly enlighten our enemies at home and abroad
-on one or two points.
-
-Let all anti-Americans stand aside. Let them understand that we are not
-merely against some enemies of the country--we are against all enemies
-of the country. This week in New York there was a red flag of Anarchy
-or Socialistic meeting which was the cause of a riot. It was perfectly
-natural that it should be the cause of a riot. The red flag is as much
-an enemy as the flag of the Hohenzollerns. The internationalist of the
-red flag or black flag type is an enemy to this Nation just exactly
-as much as Hindenburg or Ludendorff was an enemy only a week ago. He
-is an even more treacherous enemy and equally brutal. Congress should
-pass a law without waiting a day prohibiting the use of the red flag
-or the black flag or any other flag of the kind here in America. We
-have universal suffrage in America. The majority of our people can
-have what they wish in the way of industrial and political change, if
-they seriously desire it. There isn’t any excuse in this country for
-any paltering with revolutionary movements. A riot is riot, without
-reference to what the people rioting claim to be for. When a mob gets
-started, it always acts the same way, no matter what the theoretical
-cause of the outbreak may have been. A Bolshevist mob in New York in
-all essentials resembles the anti-draft mob of 1863, although the
-arguments of the parlor Bolsheviki of to-day would be totally different
-from those of the constitutional copperheads of fifty-five years ago.
-
-When the Romanoffs were overthrown the Russian people lacked
-self-control and they permitted the dominion of a Bolshevist gang,
-which has brought wholesale robbery, murder, and starvation in
-its trail. The overthrow of the Hohenzollerns in Germany has been
-accompanied by Bolshevist uprising in that country also. There is some
-excuse for excesses in a revolution against a despotism, but in this
-country there is no more excuse for Bolshevism in any form than there
-is for despotism itself. Any foreign-born man who parades with or backs
-up a red flag or black flag organization ought to be instantly deported
-to the country from which he came. Appropriate punishment should be
-devised for the even more guilty native-born.
-
-Our National Government should take the most vigorous action and have
-it understood that America is a bulwark of order no less than of
-liberty. We must make it evident that we will stamp out Bolshevism
-within our borders just as quickly as Kaiserism.
-
-Moreover, let us realize the nonsense of the pretense that the German
-people have not been behind the German Government. They were behind
-their Government with hearty enthusiasm until the Government was
-smashed by the military powers of General Foch. The effort now being
-made by the German Government to bring dissensions between the Allies
-by appealing to the United States against the Allies proper should be
-spurned by our Government. The French, English, Italians, and Belgians
-have been fighting side by side with our men under Foch. They have
-acted as comrades under Foch, and we could not have done anything if we
-had not acted as comrades like the rest. Now let’s play the game when
-the effort is made to divide us by the German peace drive.
-
-Senator Poindexter was entirely right in his proposed bill. The United
-States must make absolutely common cause with the Allies. We regret
-that the German and Russian people should suffer; the fault lies solely
-with the past or present governments. To the very minute of the closing
-of the war the hideous German brutalities continued unabated, and
-apparently the Turks are still slaughtering Armenians. We will do our
-best to help even our enemies now that they have been stricken down,
-but we will not do so at the cost of doing injustice to our friends.
-We will not permit Hun hypocrisy to succeed where Hun violence has
-failed. And we are equally uncompromising foes of Bolshevism and
-Kaiserism at home and abroad.
-
-
-
-
-THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
-
-NOVEMBER 17, 1918
-
-
-There are so many prior things to do and so much uncertainty as to the
-form of agreement for permanently increasing the chances of peace that
-it is difficult to do more than make a general statement as to what is
-desirable and possibly feasible in the league of nations plan. It would
-certainly be folly to discuss it overmuch until some of the existing
-obstacles to peace are overcome. That such discussion may be not
-futile, but mischievous, has been vividly shown in the last six weeks.
-During the first week of October President Wilson and Germany agreed on
-the famous fourteen points of Mr. Wilson’s as a basis for peace. But
-this agreement amounted to nothing whatever except for a moment it gave
-Germany the hope that she could escape disaster by a negotiated peace.
-The emphatic protest of our own people caused this hope to vanish, and
-just five weeks later peace came, not on Mr. Wilson’s fourteen points,
-but on General Foch’s twenty-odd points, which had all the directness,
-the straightforwardness, and the unequivocal clearness which the
-fourteen points strikingly lacked.
-
-Nevertheless, it is well to begin considering now the things which
-we think can be done and the things that we think cannot be done in
-making a league of nations. In the first place, we ought to realize
-that the population of the world clearly understands that in this
-war they have been involved to a degree never hitherto known. In
-consequence the horror of the war is very real, and people are at
-least thinking of the need of coöperation with much greater fixity of
-purpose and of understanding than ever before. Of course, fundamentally
-war and peace are matters of the heart rather than of organization,
-and any declaration or peace league which represents the high-flown
-sentimentality of pacifists and doctrinaires will be worse than
-useless; but if, without in the smallest degree sacrificing our belief
-in a sound and intense national aim, we all join with the people of
-England, France, and Italy and with the people in smaller states who
-in practice show themselves able to steer equally clear of Bolshevism
-and of Kaiserism, we may be able to make a real and much-needed advance
-in the international organization. The United States cannot again
-completely withdraw into its shell. We need not mix in all European
-quarrels nor assume all spheres of interest everywhere to be ours,
-but we ought to join with the other civilized nations of the world in
-some scheme that in a time of great stress would offer a likelihood of
-obtaining just settlements that will avert war.
-
-Therefore, in my judgment, the United States at the peace conference
-ought to be able to coöperate effectively with the British and French
-and Italian Governments to support a practical and effective plan
-which won’t attempt the impossible, but which will represent a real
-step forward.
-
-Probably the first essential would be to limit the league at the outset
-to the Allies, to the peoples with whom we have been operating and with
-whom we are certain we can coöperate in the future. Neither Turkey nor
-Austria need now be considered as regards such a league, and we should
-clearly understand that Bolshevist Russia is, and that Bolshevist
-Germany would be, as undesirable in such a league as the Germany and
-Russia of the Hohenzollerns and Romanoffs. Bolshevism is just as much
-an international menace as Kaiserism. Until Germany and Russia have
-proved by a course of conduct extending over years that they are
-capable of entering such a league in good faith, so that we can count
-upon their fulfilling their duties in it, it would be merely foolish to
-take them in.
-
-The league, therefore, would have to be based on the combination
-among the Allies of the present war--together with any peoples like
-the Czecho-Slovaks, who have shown that they are fully entitled to
-enter into such a league if they desire to do so. Each nation should
-absolutely reserve to itself its right to establish its own tariff and
-general economic policy, and absolutely ought to control such vital
-questions as immigration and citizenship and the form of government it
-prefers. Then it would probably be best for certain spheres of interest
-to be reserved to each nation or a group of nations.
-
-The northernmost portion of South America and Mexico and Central
-America, all of them fronting on the Panama Canal, have a special
-interest to the United States, more interest than they can have for
-any European or Asiatic power. The general conduct of Eastern Asiatic
-policy bears a most close relationship to Japan. The same thing is
-true as regards other nations and certain of the peculiarly African
-and European questions. Everything outside of what is thus reserved,
-which affects any two members of the league or affects one member of
-the league and outsiders, should be decided by some species of court,
-and all the people of the league should guarantee to use their whole
-strength in enforcing the decision.
-
-This, of course, means that all the free peoples must keep reasonably
-prepared for defense and for helping well-behaved nations against the
-nations or hordes which represent despotism, barbarism, and anarchy.
-As far as the United States is concerned, I believe we should keep our
-navy to the highest possible point of efficiency and have it second in
-size to that of Great Britain alone, and we should then have universal
-obligatory military training for all our young men for a period of,
-say, nine months during some one year between the ages of nineteen and
-twenty-three inclusive. This would not represent militarism, but an
-antidote against militarism. It would not represent a great expense. On
-the contrary, it would mean to give to every citizen of our country an
-education which would fit him to do his work as a citizen as no other
-type of education could.
-
-There are some nations with which there would not be the slightest
-difficulty in going much further than this. The time has now come when
-it would be perfectly safe to enter into universal arbitration treaties
-with the British Empire, for example, reserving such rights only as
-Australia and Canada themselves would reserve inside the British
-Empire; but there are a number of outside peoples with whom it would
-not be safe to go much further than above outlined. If we only made
-this one kind of agreement, we could keep it, and we should make no
-agreement that we would not and could not keep. More essential than
-anything else is it for us to remember that in matters of this kind
-an ounce of practical performance is worth a ton of windy rhetorical
-promises.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMERICAN CONGRESS
-
-NOVEMBER 18, 1918
-
-
-The election of a Republican Congress a fortnight ago was first and
-foremost a victory for straight Americanism. To the Republican Party
-it represents not so much a victory as an opportunity. To the American
-people, including not only Republicans and independents, but all
-patriotic Democrats who put loyalty to the Nation above servility to
-a political leader, the victory was primarily won for straight-out
-Americanism. A very important feature to remember is that this victory
-was won in the West. On the whole, the East also showed gains, but
-the greatest gains were in the West. The South, of course, and most
-unfortunately, never permits its political or patriotic convictions to
-alter the result at the ballot box.
-
-Now the Westerners, the strong, masterful, self-reliant men who won
-such exacting victories in Kansas, Minnesota, Colorado, Wyoming, and
-South Dakota, are just as opposed to what may be called Kaiserism in
-our political and industrial life as they are to Bolshevism. I firmly
-believe that this is true of the rank and file of the Republican Party
-everywhere. They haven’t the slightest patience with Townleyism in
-agricultural districts or I.W.W.-ism in labor circles. But resolutely
-they intend to shape our internal policy for the real substantial
-benefit of the average man, of the ninety per cent of our people
-who are farmers, working-men, small shopkeepers, doctors, and the
-like. They haven’t the slightest patience with the Bolshevist desire
-to establish proletariat class tyranny, which is just as odious as
-aristocratic class tyranny. They haven’t the slightest patience in
-persecution of, or failure generously to reward, the man who by nature
-or by training is a leader in industrial matters. They want to see
-farming, for instance, offer a chance to the man of ability to become a
-scientific farmer on a large scale. They wish to see the young business
-man whose leadership in manufactures or commerce is of incalculable
-worth to everybody receive in generous fashion the big reward to which
-he is entitled.
-
-But they wish to do all this as an incident to securing not only
-this right to, but a much better chance for, the average man. They
-wish the tenant farmer class to be made a diminishing instead of an
-increasing class so that tenant farming itself may not be a permanent
-status, but a step toward farm ownership by the hired man or the
-son of the small farm owner. They wish to see the working-man, and
-especially the working-man in such huge businesses as those connected
-with transportation, steel production, mining, and the like, become
-not a mere cog in an industrial machine, but a man whose self-respect
-and reasonable prosperity are guaranteed if the business succeeds,
-and he is entitled through representation on the directory to have
-his voice heard at the council board of the business, even although
-at first and until the ability to use power is slowly developed by
-the habit of using it, the control may have to do primarily with the
-things of which he has special knowledge and in which he has special
-interest. Moreover, there are plenty of great natural resources, such
-as water power, where small ownership cannot provide capital for the
-development, but where the outright ownership of the people should not
-be disposed of. The happy line must be struck between the all-pervading
-straight regimentation, which would be as deadening as paralysis, and
-the regimentation of mere individualism. The Government must exercise
-control in a spirit of justice to all concerned and with a stern
-readiness to check injustice by any of those concerned.
-
-The Republican leadership in Congress has on the whole been singularly
-patriotic and singularly free from the vice of mere partisanship during
-the lifetime of the present Congress. We can be certain that it will
-continue to be so in the new Congress. In the future as in the past
-the President can count on the hearty and ungrudging support of the
-Republican Party at every point where he is endeavoring efficiently
-and in good faith to serve the interests of the Nation. But he can
-also rest assured that the Republican Party will judge its duty by
-the standard of loyalty to the country and will scornfully refuse
-to adopt that extreme baseness of attitude, worthy only of slaves,
-which shrieks that we must stand by the Administration whether the
-Administration is right or wrong. Moreover, the Republican Party will
-certainly demand to have an accounting of some of the enormous sums of
-money that have been expended and will in due time doubtless demand
-to know what explanation there is of the Administration’s persistence
-in hidden and secret diplomacy in so many important matters. Every
-question will be approached from the standpoint of a generous desire,
-without any higgling or dealing on small points, to do whatever the
-Administration demands that is proper and to give it a full chance to
-declare, and perhaps develop, its policy; but the Republican Congress
-will understand how to show that it is not a rubber-stamp body, but an
-integral and self-respecting part of the American governmental system,
-wholly and solely responsible to the American people.
-
-
-
-
-THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS AND THE ENSLAVEMENT OF MANKIND
-
-NOVEMBER 22, 1918
-
-
-The surest way to kill a great cause is to reduce it to a hard-and-fast
-formula and insist upon the application of the formula without regard
-to actual existing conditions.
-
-It is announced in the press that the President is going to the Peace
-Conference especially to insist, among other things, on that one of his
-fourteen points dealing with the so-called “freedom of the seas.” The
-President’s position in the matter is, of course, eagerly championed by
-Germany, as it has been Germany’s special position throughout the war.
-It is, of course, eagerly championed by the New York World, the Hearst
-papers, and all the rubber-stamp gentry. It is antagonized by England
-and France and by every anti-German in America who understands the
-situation.
-
-It is utterly impossible, in view of the immense rapidity of the change
-in modern war conditions, to formulate abstract policies about such
-matters as contraband and blockades. These policies must be actually
-tested in order to see how they work. Both England and the United
-States have reversed themselves in this matter on several different
-occasions. This is interesting as a matter of history, but from no
-other standpoint. If we are honorable and intelligent we will follow
-the course in this matter which, under existing conditions at this
-time, seems most likely to work justice in the immediate future.
-
-Germany’s position was that England had no right to blockade her so as
-to cut off her supplies from the outside world. President Wilson at
-the time accepted this view and talked a good deal about the freedom
-of the seas. Meanwhile Germany, through her submarines, began an
-unprecedented course of wholesale murder on the seas. President Wilson
-protested against this in language much more apologetic and tender than
-he had used in protesting against Great Britain blockading Germany in
-what was essentially the same manner in which we blockaded the South
-during the Civil War. He put the dollar above the man and incidentally
-above the women and the children. He protested more vigorously upon the
-interference with American goods than against the taking of American
-lives.
-
-Then we finally went to war with Germany ourselves. We instantly
-adopted toward Germany and toward neutrals like Holland exactly the
-position which President Wilson had been denouncing England for
-adopting toward Germany and toward us. Our action in this case was
-quite right, whereas our protest against England’s action had been
-entirely wrong.
-
-President Wilson now proposes to accept the German view and provide a
-system which, if it had been in existence in 1914, would have meant
-the inevitable and rapid triumph of Germany.
-
-If this particular one of the proposed fourteen points had been in
-treaty form and had been lived up to in 1914, Germany would have had
-free access to the outside world. England’s fleet would not have
-enabled her to bring economic pressure to bear upon Germany and
-doubtless Germany would have won an overwhelming victory within a
-couple of years. Therefore Mr. Wilson’s proposal is that now, when
-no human being can foretell whether Germany will feel chastened and
-morally changed, we shall take steps which will mean that if the war
-has to be fought over again, Germany’s triumph will have been secured
-in advance so far as we are able to secure it. All such conditions, all
-merely academic questions as to the attitude of America or of England
-before the outbreak of the Great War, are insignificant. Whatever our
-views prior to the Great War, we are fools, indeed, if we have not
-learned the lessons these last four and a half terrible years have
-taught. The freedom of the seas in the sense used by Germany and Mr.
-Wilson would have meant the enslavement of mankind to Germany. It
-would have meant that this country would at this time either be lying
-prostrate under the feet of German invaders or be purchasing peace by
-ransoms heavier than were paid by Belgium. No patriotic American has
-the right to stand quiet and see the President of the country, without
-any warrant from the country, try to bring upon us such outrageous
-potentiality and disaster as would be implied in the general
-international adoption of the so-called “freedom of the seas.” Such
-freedom of the seas means the enslavement of mankind.
-
-
-
-
-PRESIDENT WILSON AND THE PEACE CONFERENCE
-
-NOVEMBER 26, 1918
-
-
-No public end of any kind will be served by President Wilson’s going
-with Mr. Creel, Mr. House, and his other personal friends to the
-Peace Conference. Inasmuch as the circumstances of his going are so
-extraordinary, and as there is some possibility of mischief to this
-country as a result, there are certain facts which should be set forth
-so clearly that there can be no possibility of misunderstanding either
-by our own people, by our allies, or by our beaten enemies, or by Mr.
-Wilson himself.
-
-Ten days before election Mr. Wilson issued an appeal to the American
-people in which he frankly abandoned the position of President of the
-whole people; assumed the position, not merely of party leader, but
-of party dictator, and appealed to the voters as such. Most of Mr.
-Wilson’s utterances on public questions have been susceptible to at
-least two conflicting interpretations. But on this question he made the
-issue absolutely clear. He asked that the people return a Democratic
-majority to both the Senate and the House of Representatives. He
-stated that the Republican leaders were pro-war, but that they were
-anti-Administration. His appeal was not merely against any Republican
-being elected, but against any Democrat who wished to retain his
-conscience in his own keeping. He declared himself explicitly
-against the pro-war Republicans. He declared explicitly for all
-pro-Administration Democrats, without any reference as to whether
-they were pro-war or anti-war. He said that if the people approved of
-his leadership and wished him to continue to be their “unembarrassed
-spokesman in affairs at home and abroad, they must return a Democratic
-majority to both the Senate and the House of Representatives.” He
-explicitly stated that on the other side of the water the return of a
-Republican majority to either House of Congress would be interpreted
-as a repudiation of his leadership, and informed his fellow countrymen
-that to elect a Democratic majority in Congress was the only way to
-sustain him, Mr. Wilson.
-
-The issue was perfectly, clearly drawn. The Republican Party was
-pro-war and anti-Administration, the Democratic Party was officially
-pro-Administration without any mind or conscience of its own and
-pro-war or anti-war according to the way in which Mr. Wilson changed
-his mind overnight or between dawn and sunset. The Americans refused to
-sustain Mr. Wilson. They elected a heavily Republican House and to the
-surprise of every one carried a majority in the Senate. On Mr. Wilson’s
-own say-so they repudiated his leadership. In no other free country in
-the world to-day would Mr. Wilson be in office. He would simply be a
-private citizen like the rest of us.
-
-Under these circumstances our allies and our enemies, and Mr. Wilson
-himself, should all understand that Mr. Wilson has no authority
-whatever to speak for the American people at this time. His leadership
-has just been emphatically repudiated by them. The newly elected
-Congress comes far nearer than Mr. Wilson to having a right to speak
-the purposes of the American people at this moment. Mr. Wilson and
-his fourteen points and his four supplementary points and his five
-complementary points and all his utterances every which way have ceased
-to have any shadow of right to be accepted as expressive of the will
-of the American people. He is President of the United States, he is
-part of the treaty-making power, but he is only part. If he acts in
-good faith to the American people, he will not claim on the other
-side of the water any representative capacity in himself to speak for
-the American people. He will say frankly that his personal leadership
-has been repudiated and that he now has merely the divided official
-leadership which he shares with the Senate. If he will in good faith
-act in this way all good citizens in good faith will support him, just
-as they will support the Senate under similar circumstances.
-
-But there isn’t the slightest indication that he intends so to act.
-The most striking manifestation of his purpose is that he sent over
-Mr. Creel and sixteen of his employees who are officially announced
-as “the United States official press mission to the Peace Conference,”
-and, with more self-satisfaction, the committee announces, “to
-interpret the work of the Peace Conference by keeping up world-wide
-propaganda to disseminate American accomplishments and American
-ideals.” At the same time Mr. Burleson seized the cables after the war
-is over and when there can be no possible object except to control
-the news in the interest of President Wilson as Mr. Burleson and Mr.
-Creel see that interest. The action of the Creel “official press” would
-really seem more like an excessively bad joke if it weren’t so serious.
-But during the war the Administration, often incompetent to the verge
-of impudence in dealing with war problems and with the Hun within our
-gates, showed itself a past-master in bullying, browbeating, deceiving,
-and puzzling our own people. It is utterly impossible that the Creel
-“official press” and the Burleson-owned cables can have any other real
-purpose than to make the news sent out from the Peace Conference, both
-to ourselves, our allies, and our enemies, what they desire to have
-told from their own standpoint and nothing more.
-
-This is a very grave offense against our own people, but it may be a
-worse offense against both our allies and ourselves. America played
-in the closing months of the war a gallant part, but not in any way
-the leading part, and she played this part only by acting in strictest
-agreement with our allies and under the joint high command. She should
-take precisely the same attitude at the Peace Conference. We have lost
-in this war about two hundred and thirty-six thousand men killed and
-wounded. England and France have lost about seven million. Italy and
-Belgium and the other Allies have doubtless lost three million more.
-Of the terrible sacrifice which has enabled the Allies to win the
-victory, America has contributed just about two per cent. At the end,
-I personally believe that our intervention was decisive because the
-combatants were so equally matched and were so weakened by the terrible
-strain that our money and our enthusiasm and the million fighting
-men whom we got to the front, even although armed substantially with
-nothing but French field cannon, tanks, machine guns, and airplanes,
-was decisive in the scale. But we could render this decisive aid only
-because for four years the Allies, in keeping Germany from conquering
-their own countries, had incidentally kept her from conquering ours.
-
-It is our business to act with our allies and to show an undivided
-front with them against any move of our late enemies. I am no Utopian.
-I understand entirely that there can be shifting alliances, I
-understand entirely that twenty years hence or thirty years hence we
-don’t know what combination we may have to face, and for this reason
-I wish to see us preparing our own strength in advance and trust to
-nothing but our own strength for our own self-defense as our permanent
-policy. But in the present war we have won only by standing shoulder
-to shoulder with our allies and presenting an undivided front to the
-enemy. It is our business to show the same loyalty and good faith at
-the Peace Conference. Let it be clearly understood that the American
-people absolutely stand behind France, England, Italy, Belgium, and the
-other Allies at the Peace Conference, just as she has stood with them
-during the last eighteen months of war. Let every difference of opinion
-be settled among the Allies themselves and then let them impose their
-common will on the nations responsible for the hideous disaster which
-has almost wrecked mankind.
-
-
-
-
-THE LEAGUE TO ENFORCE PEACE
-
-DECEMBER 2, 1918
-
-
-Ex-Ambassador Harry White is a capital appointee for the Peace
-Commission. He is not a Republican, but an independent in politics who
-has worked as closely with Mr. Cleveland and Mr. Olney as with Mr.
-McKinley and Mr. Root.
-
-It is a good thing to have him on in view of the exceedingly loose talk
-about the League of Nations or League to Enforce Peace. Fortunately
-Mr. Taft has set forth the proposal for such a league under existing
-conditions with such wisdom in refusing to let adherence to the
-principle be clouded by insistence upon improper or unimportant methods
-of enforcement that we can speak of the League as a practical matter.
-I think that most of our people are in favor of the establishment of
-the principle of such a league under common-sense conditions which will
-not attempt too much and thereby expose the movement to the absolute
-certainty of ridicule and failure. There must be an honest effort
-to eliminate some of the causes that may produce future wars and to
-minimize the area of such wars.
-
-Mr. Taft explicitly admits and insists that the League is to be a
-supplement to, and in no sense a substitute for, the duty of our Nation
-to prepare its own strength for its own defense. He also explicitly
-provides that, among the various peoples who would not be admitted to
-the League on an equality with the others, there shall be different
-spheres of interest assumed by the different powers who have entered
-into the League. For example, the affairs of hither Asia, the Balkan
-Peninsula, and of North Africa are of prime concern to the powers of
-Europe, and the United States should be under no covenant to go to
-war about matters in which its people have no concern and probably
-no intelligent interest. On the other hand, the Monroe Doctrine--at
-least for all America between the equator and the southern boundary of
-the United States--is a vital point of American policy, and must in
-no shape or way be interfered with. We do not interfere with existing
-conditions, but aside from these no European or Asiatic power is to
-have any say-so in the future of Mexico, Central America, and the lands
-whose coasts are washed by the Caribbean Sea. The Panama Canal must not
-be internationalized. It is our canal; we built it; we fortified it,
-and we will protect it, and we will not permit our enemies to use it in
-war. In time of peace all nations shall use it alike, but in time of
-war our interest at once becomes dominant.
-
-Most wisely Mr. Taft’s plan reserves for each nation certain matters
-of such vital national interest that they cannot be put before any
-international tribunal. This country must settle its own tariff and
-industrial policies, and the question of admitting immigrants to work
-or to citizenship, and all similar matters, the exercise of which was
-claimed as a right when in 1776 we became an independent Nation. We
-will not surrender our independence to a league of nations any more
-than to a single nation. Moreover, no international court must be
-entrusted with the decision of what is and what is not justiciable.
-
-In the articles of agreement the non-justiciable matters should be as
-sharply defined as possible, and until some better plan can be devised,
-the Nation itself must reserve to itself the right, as each case
-arises, to say what these matters are.
-
-But let us steadily remember that before dealing with schemes such as
-the League of Nations, which are necessarily more or less visionary,
-we must join in good faith with our allies in securing practical right
-and justice at the Peace Conference. We should treat as an enemy to
-this country every man who at this time seeks directly or indirectly
-to stir up dissension between us and England or France, or any other
-of our allies. Side by side we have fought against the hideous twin
-terrors of Bolshevism and Kaiserism and we must stand undivided at the
-Peace Conference. What the distant future may hold no man can say, and
-this is the very reason why I insist that America must prepare its own
-strength for its own defense. But our duty at the moment is clear. We
-have fought the war through beside the Allies and we must stand with
-them with hearty loyalty throughout the peace negotiations. There must
-be no division in the face of our enemies. At the very close of the war
-we played an honorable and probably decisive part, but we were enabled
-to do so only because for the four preceding years England and France
-and their associates in defending their own rights had also saved us
-from destruction. Our sacrifice is infinitesimal compared to theirs.
-We have had a quarter of a million men killed and wounded; England
-has had over three million, France nearly four million, and the other
-Allies during their time of warfare against the common foe suffered in
-proportion. Our loss has been no more than one or two per cent of the
-entire loss suffered by the Allied armies and navies.
-
-The immediate cause of bringing the war to an end was the forcing of
-unconditional surrender upon Bulgaria and Turkey, with whom we had
-shamefully refused to go to war at all. The English navy protected us
-exactly as it protected Britain. Under such circumstances it behooves
-us to remember that while we at the very end did our duty, yet that
-our comrades in arms for over four years performed incalculable feats
-and suffered incalculable losses and won the right of gratitude of all
-mankind. The American envoys must not sit at the peace table as umpires
-between the Allies and the conquered Central Powers, but as loyal
-brothers of the Allies, as loyal members of the league of free peoples,
-which has brought about peace by overthrowing Turkey, Bulgaria, and
-Austria, and beating Germany to her knees.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEN WHOSE LOT HAS BEEN HARDEST
-
-DECEMBER 8, 1918
-
-
-There recently died of pneumonia in France Major Willard Straight, of
-the American army. He was above the draft age, he was a man of large
-and many interests, he had a wife and three children. There was every
-excuse for him not to have gone to the front, but both he and his wife
-had in their souls that touch of heroism which makes it impossible for
-generous natures to see others pay with their bodies and not to wish
-to do so themselves. The one regret that Major Straight felt--and he
-felt it most bitterly--was that he had not been able in spite of all
-his efforts to get to the actual firing front. This failure was really
-a cause of great anguish of soul to him. In the same way I know of the
-four sons of an ex-Cabinet officer, all of whom instantly went into
-the army at the outbreak of the war. Two were at the fighting front,
-one was in the navy, and the other, because of the special excellence
-as an instructor, was kept here, and the gallant young fellow who
-left his wife and baby to enlist really feels as if the refusal of
-the War Department to permit him to go where he could be shot at had
-caused a blight in his life. I know three other men who, because of
-their excellence, were kept as instructors at one of our camps, whose
-feelings of regret are so bitter that they can hardly bear to look at
-their uniforms and the sight of wounded soldiers causes them agonies of
-thwarted longing.
-
-All this is most natural, and just what we should expect from
-high-minded, gallant fellows. But it is entirely unwarranted. I utterly
-abhor the swivel-chair slacker who got some safe job in order to avoid
-doing his duty at the front. But for the hundreds of thousands of
-young Americans in the ranks or with commissions who did everything
-they could to get in the firing lines, and who through no fault of
-theirs failed, I have precisely the same feeling that I have for the
-men who took part in the most dangerous work. General Leonard Wood,
-in his recent capital address, has taught the right lesson to these
-men. He was dismissing to their homes the men whom he had trained
-with his usual, extraordinary capacity to fit them for work overseas,
-and he dwelt to them upon the fact that the all-important point was
-that they should remember that it was not the position they achieved,
-but the eager readiness to do duty in whatever position they were
-given that really counted. General Wood has himself been treated
-with the most cruel injustice in this war, yet he has rendered signal
-service in bringing before Congress our military needs, and, above
-all, in training scores of thousands of our best fighting men. When
-he was denied, from the very meanest motives, the chance to fill a
-distinguished position, instead of sulking he devoted all of his
-energy to doing the best he could in the positions to which he was
-assigned. In consequence he comes out of the war as one of those who
-most materially helped to win it. What is true of him in a big place
-is true of every other soldier, whether in a big or little place. The
-hardest task was for the men who were denied the chance of glory, and
-if they did this hard task well and served faithfully wherever they
-were assigned, they have exactly the same right for pride in their
-participation in the Great War as any of the gallant fellows who have
-come back maimed or crippled from the front. All alike have made the
-rest of us forever their debtors, and to all alike we pay the same meed
-of loyal admiration and respect.
-
-
-
-
-THE BRITISH NAVY, THE FRENCH ARMY, AND AMERICAN COMMON SENSE
-
-DECEMBER 17, 1918
-
-
-The first essential in an alliance is loyalty. The first effort of an
-enemy to an alliance is to produce disloyalty to one another among the
-Allies. To any man who knows anything of history these facts are of
-bromidic triteness. But the Administration, as usual, stands in urgent
-need of learning the elements of fair play and common sense.
-
-It was announced from the peace ship that President Wilson was going
-to work for the reduction of naval armaments and for a form of naval
-agreement which, if it had existed four years ago, would have meant
-Germany’s victory and the subjugation of not only Germany’s foes,
-but of all neutrals like ourselves. At the same time over here the
-representatives of the Administration are demanding a navy bigger than
-that of Great Britain. The only possible interpretation of these facts
-is that the Administration proposes to threaten Great Britain with
-having to get in a neck-and-neck competition with America to build the
-greatest navy in the world, and to do this as a bluff so as to make for
-Great Britain’s adherence to Mr. Wilson’s exceedingly nebulous ideas.
-
-Under these conditions the American people should, with common sense,
-look at what their own needs are and at what the needs of their
-allies are. Sooner or later any programme will have to be tested by
-its results, and even if the United States started to emulate Great
-Britain’s navy, the enthusiasm to do so would vanish when it appeared
-that there was no earthly interest of ours to be served by the action.
-
-In winning the present war very many instrumentalities have been
-necessary. On the whole the four most important in their order have
-been: (1) the French army; (2) the British navy; (3) the British army;
-(4) the Italian army. Our own gallant army and navy did exceedingly
-well, but came in so late that the part they played, taking the four
-and a half years as a whole, does not entitle them to rank with the
-instrumentalities given above.
-
-Great Britain is an island, separated from the huge military
-commonwealths of Europe by very narrow seas, and separated from her
-own greatest colonies by all the greatest oceans. To her, supremacy
-in the navy is a matter of life and death. America ought to have a
-first-class navy, but if she did not have a ship she might yet secure
-herself from any invasion. But Great Britain’s empire would not last
-one week, and she could not make herself safe at home one week if her
-navy lost its supremacy. Incidentally to saving herself, the British
-navy has rendered incalculable service to us during the last four and
-one-half years, and for the last thirty years has been a shield to
-the United States. Great Britain is not a military power in the sense
-that any of the nations of continental Europe, or indeed of Asia, are
-military powers. She had almost as much difficulty in developing her
-army in this war as we had in developing our army. Her army is no more
-of a threat to other peoples than ours is. Therefore, we Americans
-find ourselves, as regards the British navy, in this position, that it
-is of vital consequence to Great Britain to have the greatest navy in
-the world; it is emphatically not of any consequence to us to have as
-big a navy as Great Britain, for we are not in the slightest danger
-from Great Britain, and under all ordinary circumstances the British
-navy can be counted upon as a help to the United States and never as
-a menace. Under such circumstances to set ourselves to work to build
-a navy in rivalry to Great Britain’s, and above all to do this as a
-political bluff, is worse than silly.
-
-Our own navy should be ample to protect our own coasts and to maintain
-the Monroe Doctrine. There are in Europe and Asia several great
-military commonwealths, each one of which will in all probability
-always possess a far more formidable army than ours, even though, as
-I earnestly hope, we adopt some development of universal military
-training on the lines of the Swiss system. Therefore, it is of the
-highest consequence that our navy should be second to that of Great
-Britain.
-
-The analogy with the case of the French army is complete. If the French
-army had not been able to hold the German army and be the chief factor
-in the German military overthrow, the British navy could not have
-averted Germany’s complete victory. Great Britain is separated by the
-narrow seas from the military powers of continental Europe. We are
-separated from them by the width of the ocean. Under the circumstances,
-it is sheer impertinence for either American or English statesmen
-to tell France, or, for that matter Italy, what ought to be done in
-abolishing armaments or abandoning universal service or anything of
-the kind. The interest of France and Italy in the matter is vital.
-The interest of England and America is partly secondary. If we have
-well-thought-out arguments to put before the French, put them before
-them, but treat France as having the vital interest in the matter, and
-therefore the final say-so as far as we are concerned. And when France
-has determined what the needs of the future demand, so far as her
-military preparedness is concerned, and when Italy has made a similar
-determination, and our other allies likewise, back them up. It is not
-the business of America to tell Great Britain what she should do with
-her navy. It is not the business of either America or England to tell
-France what she should do with her army. The plain American common
-sense of the situation is that we should recognize our immense debt
-to the British navy and the French army, and stand by Britain in what
-she decides her vital needs demand so far as her navy is concerned,
-and stand by France in the position she takes as to what the situation
-demands so far as her army is concerned.
-
-
-
-
-LET US HAVE STRAIGHTFORWARD SPEAKING
-
-DECEMBER 24, 1918
-
-
-Senator Lodge in his admirable speech has given the reasons why at
-least five of the famous fourteen points should not be considered in
-the peace negotiations proper. But the special merit of Senator Lodge’s
-statement lies in the fact that it is straightforward and clear. There
-is no need of a key to find out what he means. The men who represent,
-or assume to represent, the United States at the Peace Conference,
-should be equally clear with our allies and our enemies and also with
-the American people. Above all things we need some straightforward
-statement as to just what is proposed and as to just why it is proposed.
-
-Take, for example, the very extraordinary conflict between that one
-of the fourteen points in which the Administration has demanded
-practically complete disarmament and the action of the Administration
-at the same moment demanding that we shall build the biggest navy in
-the world. Either one course or the other must necessarily be improper.
-In such a matter we especially need a straightforward statement of
-reasons and principles.
-
-The worst thing we could do would be to build a spite navy, a navy
-built not to meet our own needs, but to spite some one else. I am
-speaking purely as an American. No man in this country who is both
-intelligent or informed has the slightest fear that Great Britain will
-ever invade us or try to go to war with us. The British navy is not in
-the slightest degree a menace to us. I can go a little further than
-this. There is in Great Britain a large pacifist and defeatist party
-which behaves exactly like our own pacifists, pro-Germans, Germanized
-Socialists, defeatists, and Bolsheviki. If this party had its way and
-Great Britain abandoned its fleet, I should feel, so far from the
-United States being freed from the necessity of building up a fleet,
-that it behooved us to build a much stronger one than is at present
-necessary. Our need is not as great as that of the vast scattered
-British Empire, for our domains are pretty much in a ring fence. We
-ought not to undertake the task of policing Europe, Asia, and Northern
-Africa. Neither ought we to permit any interference with the Monroe
-Doctrine or any attempt by Europe or Asia to police America. Mexico is
-our Balkan Peninsula. Some day we will have to deal with it. All the
-coasts and islands which in any way approach the Panama Canal must be
-dealt with by this Nation, and by this Nation alone, in accordance with
-the Monroe Doctrine. With this object in view our navy should be second
-to that of Great Britain and superior to that of any other power--and
-if Great Britain chooses to abolish its navy it would mean that we
-ought to build a larger navy than is now necessary.
-
-
-
-
-A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE MEN AT THE FRONT
-
-DECEMBER 25, 1918
-
-
-We should show our respect for the men at the front by more than mere
-adulation. They are the Americans who have done most and suffered most
-for this country. It was announced in the press that in many cases they
-and the families they have left behind have not for months received
-their full pay. This is an outrage. All civil officials are paid. The
-Secretary of War is paid, and he ought not to touch a dollar of his
-salary and no high official should touch a dollar of his salary until
-the enlisted men and junior officers are paid every cent that is owing
-to them, and this payment should be prompt. There is literally no
-excuse for even so much as three days’ delay in the payment.
-
-Moreover, these men, at great cost to themselves in paying everything
-including, in fifty or sixty thousand cases, their lives, have gone to
-the front at a wage from one half to one fifth as great as that their
-companions who stayed behind have received during the same period.
-They enlisted to do a specific job. They made the sacrifice in order
-to do that job. We on our side should see that just as soon as the job
-is done the men are taken home, allowed to leave the army, and begin
-earning their livelihood and take care of the wives and children that
-the married ones among them have left behind.
-
-Recently in the public press there have appeared various artless and
-chatty statements from the State, War, and Navy departments that our
-men might be kept in Europe to do general police work and might not be
-brought back here until the summer of 1920. There are three types of
-soldiers on the other side. There are the Regular Army men, who have
-entered the Regular Army as a profession, and to whom it is a matter
-of indifference whether they stay in Europe, come back here, go to the
-Philippines, or do anything else. That is a small proportion of our
-force on the other side. The bulk are divided between volunteers, who
-enlisted in the National Guard or sometimes in the regular regiments
-to fight this war through, and the drafted men who were put into the
-army under a law designed to meet this war and this war only. Not
-one in ten of the volunteers would have dreamed of volunteering to
-do police work in European squabbles. Not ten Congressmen would have
-voted for the Draft Law if it was to force selective men to do police
-duty after the war was over. All these men went in to fight this war
-through to a finish and then to come home. It is not a square deal to
-follow any other course as regards them. The minute that peace comes
-every American soldier on the other side should be brought home as
-speedily as possible save, of course, the regulars who make the Regular
-Army their life profession, and any other man who chose to volunteer
-to go over, or who can with entire propriety be used for gathering up
-the loose ends. The American fighting man at the front has given this
-country a square deal during the war. Now let the country give him a
-square deal by letting him get out of the army and go to his home as
-soon as the war is finished. The Red Cross has done wonderful work in
-taking care of the dependents of these men pending settlement by the
-Government, but the Government should not be content to rely on any
-outside organization to make up its own shortcomings.
-
-
-
-
-THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS[2]
-
-JANUARY 13, 1919
-
-
-It is, of course, a serious misfortune that our people are not getting
-a clear idea of what is happening on the other side. For the moment the
-point as to which we are foggy is the League of Nations. We all of us
-earnestly desire such a league, only we wish to be sure that it will
-help and not hinder the cause of world peace and justice. There is not
-a young man in this country who has fought, or an old man who has seen
-those dear to him fight, who does not wish to minimize the chance of
-future war. But there is not a man of sense who does not know that in
-any such movement if too much is attempted the result is either failure
-or worse than failure.
-
-The trouble with Mr. Wilson’s utterances, so far as they are reported,
-and the utterances of acquiescence in them by European statesmen, is
-that they are still absolutely in the stage of rhetoric precisely
-like the “fourteen points.” Some of the fourteen points will probably
-have to be construed as having a mischievous significance, a smaller
-number might be construed as being harmless, and one or two even as
-beneficial, but nobody knows what Mr. Wilson really means by them,
-and so all talk of adopting them as basis for a peace or a league is
-nonsense and, if the talker is intelligent, it is insincere nonsense
-to boot. So Mr. Wilson’s recent utterances give us absolutely no
-clue as to whether he really intends that at this moment we shall
-admit Germany, Russia,--with which, incidentally, we are still waging
-war,--Turkey, China, and Mexico into the League on full equality with
-ourselves. Mr. Taft has recently defined the purposes of the League and
-the limitations under which it would act, in a way that enables most of
-us to say we very heartily agree in principle with his theory and can,
-without doubt, come to an agreement on specific details.
-
-Would it not be well to begin with the League which we actually have
-in existence, the League of the Allies who have fought through this
-great war? Let us at the peace table see that real justice is done as
-among these Allies, and that while the sternest reparation is demanded
-from our foes for such horrors as those committed in Belgium, Northern
-France, Armenia, and the sinking of the Lusitania, nothing should be
-done in the spirit of mere vengeance. Then let us agree to extend the
-privileges of the League, as rapidly as their conduct warrants it, to
-other nations, doubtless discriminating between those who would have a
-guiding part in the League and the weak nations who would be entitled
-to the privileges of membership, but who would not be entitled to a
-guiding voice in the councils. Let each nation reserve to itself and
-for its own decision, and let it clearly set forth questions which
-are non-justiciable. Let nothing be done that will interfere with our
-preparing for our own defense by introducing a system of universal
-obligatory military training modeled on the Swiss plan.
-
-Finally make it perfectly clear that we do not intend to take a
-position of international Meddlesome Matty. The American people do
-not wish to go into an overseas war unless for a very great cause and
-where the issue is absolutely plain. Therefore, we do not wish to
-undertake the responsibility of sending our gallant young men to die
-in obscure fights in the Balkans or in Central Europe, or in a war
-we do not approve of. Moreover, the American people do not intend to
-give up the Monroe Doctrine. Let civilized Europe and Asia introduce
-some kind of police system in the weak and disorderly countries at
-their thresholds. But let the United States treat Mexico as our Balkan
-Peninsula and refuse to allow European or Asiatic powers to interfere
-on this continent in any way that implies permanent or semi-permanent
-possession. Every one of our allies will with delight grant this
-request if President Wilson chooses to make it, and it will be a great
-misfortune if it is not made.
-
-I believe that such an effort made moderately and sanely, but sincerely
-and with utter scorn for words that are not made good by deeds, will be
-productive of real and lasting international good.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] This article on “The League of Nations” is the last contribution
-that Colonel Roosevelt prepared for The Star. It was dictated at
-his home in Oyster Bay, January 3, the Friday before his death. His
-secretary expected to take the typed copy to him for correction Monday.
-Instead she was called on the telephone early Monday morning and told
-of his death. A delay of several days naturally ensued, before the
-editorial reached the office of The Star.
-
-In view of the immense moment of the issues before the Peace
-Conference, The Star had asked Colonel Roosevelt to give his countrymen
-the benefit of his discussion of the possibilities of a League of
-Nations as a preventive of war. He consented, although, as he wrote,
-he expected to follow this editorial with one “on what I regard as
-infinitely more important, namely, our business to prepare for our own
-self-defense.” That article, however, was never written.
-
-This article, then, his final contribution to The Star, represents his
-matured judgment based on protracted discussion and correspondence. It
-is of peculiar importance as the last message of a man who, above every
-other American of his generation, combined high patriotism, practical
-sense, and a positive genius for international relations.
-
-
-
-
- THIS LARGE-PAPER EDITION CONSISTS OF THREE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE
- NUMBERED COPIES, OF WHICH THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY ARE FOR SALE. THIS
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-Transcriber’s Notes
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-Obvious errors in punctuation have been fixed.
-
-In the table of contents, “The Landsdowne Letter” changed to “The
-Lansdowne Letter”
-
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-
-Page 54: “seeking a black animal” changed to “seeing a black animal”
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Roosevelt in the Kansas City Star, by Theodore Roosevelt</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Roosevelt in the Kansas City Star</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>War-time Editorials</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Theodore Roosevelt</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Contributor: Ralph Stout</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 10, 2022 [eBook #67811]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center">PUBLICATIONS OF THE
-ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center">II. ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATIONS</p>
-
-<p class="center">ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION INC.</p>
-
-
-<p class="ml p0">
-<span class="smcap">R. J. Cuddihy</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Arthur W. Page</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Mark Sullivan</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">E. A. Van Valkenburg</span><br />
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img004">
- <img src="images/004.jpg" class="w50" alt="Theodore Roosevelt and W. R. Nelson" />
-</span></p>
-
-
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1>ROOSEVELT <br /><span class="small">IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR</span></h1>
-
-<p class="center p2 big">WAR-TIME EDITORIALS</p>
-
-<p class="center">BY</p>
-
-<p class="center big">THEODORE ROOSEVELT</p>
-
-
-<p class="center small">WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY</p>
-
-<p class="center">RALPH STOUT<br />
-<span class="small"><i>Managing Editor of The Star</i></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img001">
- <img src="images/001.jpg" class="w10" alt="Publisher mark" />
-</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p4">BOSTON AND NEW YORK</p>
-
-<p class="center big">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="center small">The Riverside Press Cambridge</p>
-
-<p class="center big">1921
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1917, 1918, AND 1919, BY THE KANSAS CITY STAR</p>
-
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY RALPH STOUT</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-</p></div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#INTRODUCTION"><span class="smcap">Introduction, by Ralph Stout</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#fitz"><span class="smcap"><abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Fitzsimons’s Death, September 17, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_1">1</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BLOOD_IRON_AND_GOLD"><span class="smcap">Blood, Iron, and Gold, September 23, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_2">2</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_GHOST_DANCE_OF_THE_SHADOW"><span class="smcap">The Ghost Dance of the Shadow Huns, October 1,
-1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_5">5</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SAM_WELLER_AND_MR_SNODGRASS"><span class="smcap">Sam Weller and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Snodgrass, October 2, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_8">8</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BROOMSTICK_PREPAREDNESS"><span class="smcap">Broomstick Preparedness, October 4, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_10">10</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_BONDHOLDERS_AND_THE_PEOPLE"><span class="smcap">The Bondholders and the People, October 7, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FACTORIES_OF_GOOD_CITIZENSHIP"><span class="smcap">Factories of Good Citizenship, October 10, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_13">13</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#PILLAR-OF-SALT_CITIZENSHIP"><span class="smcap">Pillar-of-Salt Citizenship, October 12, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_16">16</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BROOMSTICK_APOLOGISTS"><span class="smcap">Broomstick Apologists, October 14, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_18">18</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_LIBERTY_LOAN_AND_THE"><span class="smcap">The Liberty Loan and the Pro-Germans, October
-16, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_20">20</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_DIFFICULT_QUESTION_TO_ANSWER"><span class="smcap">A Difficult Question to Answer, October 18, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#NOW_HELP_THE_LIBERTY_LOAN"><span class="smcap">Now Help the Liberty Loan, October 20, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_25">25</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_THE"><span class="smcap">A Square Deal for the Training Camps, October 21,
-1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_26">26</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_PASSING_OF_THE_CRIPPLE"><span class="smcap">The Passing of the Cripple, October 23, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_PEACE_OF_COMPLETE_VICTORY"><span class="smcap">The Peace of Complete Victory, October 23, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FIGHTING_WORK_FOR_THE_MAN_OF"><span class="smcap">Fighting Work for the Man of Fighting Age, October
-25, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WISE_WOMEN_AND_FOOLISH_WOMEN"><span class="smcap">Wise Women and Foolish Women, October 27, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_34">34</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WHY_CRY_OVER_SPILT_MILK"><span class="smcap">Why Cry over Spilt Milk? October 28, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_36">36</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SAVE_THE_FOODSTUFF"><span class="smcap">Save the Foodstuff, October 30, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_38">38</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#ON_THE_FIRING_LINE"><span class="smcap">On the Firing Line, October 31, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_40">40</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#NINE_TENTHS_OF_WISDOM_IS_BEING"><span class="smcap">Nine Tenths of Wisdom is being Wise in Time, November
-1, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_42">42</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WE_ARE_IN_THIS_WAR_TO_THE_FINISH"><span class="smcap">We are in this War to the Finish, November 2, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_43">43</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SINISTER_ALLIES"><span class="smcap">Sinister Allies, November 3, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_45">45</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[vi]</span>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_NEW_YORK_MAYORALTY_ELECTION"><span class="smcap">The New York Mayoralty Election, November 8,
-1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_47">47</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#GERMAN_HATRED_OF_AMERICA"><span class="smcap">German Hatred of America, November 13, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_49">49</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#START_THE_SYSTEM_OF_UNIVERSAL"><span class="smcap">Start the System of Universal Military Training
-at Once, November 17, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_FIFTY-FIFTY_WAR_ATTITUDE"><span class="smcap">A Fifty-Fifty War Attitude, November 20, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_54">54</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_GERMANIZED_SOCIALISTS_AND"><span class="smcap">The Germanized Socialists and Peace, November
-26, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#MOBILIZE_OUR_MAN_POWER"><span class="smcap">Mobilize Our Man Power, December 1, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_58">58</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_LANSDOWNE_LETTER"><span class="smcap">The Lansdowne Letter, December 2, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_60">60</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_PRESIDENTS_MESSAGE"><span class="smcap">The President’s Message, December 5, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_62">62</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FOUR_BITES_OF_A_CHERRY"><span class="smcap">Four Bites of a Cherry, December 7, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_64">64</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_RED_CROSS_CHRISTMAS"><span class="smcap">The Red Cross Christmas Membership Drive, December
-12, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_66">66</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BEING_BRAYED_IN_A_MORTAR"><span class="smcap">Being Brayed in a Mortar, December 18, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_68">68</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#RENDERING_A_GREAT_PUBLIC_SERVICE"><span class="smcap">Rendering a Great Public Service, December 20,
-1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_71">71</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_BETRAYAL_OF_DEMOCRACY"><span class="smcap">A Betrayal of Democracy, December 21, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_73">73</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BROOMSTICK_PREPAREDNESS_A"><span class="smcap">Broomstick Preparedness&mdash;a Study in Cause and
-Effect, December 27, 1917</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_76">76</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#OUR_DUTY_FOR_THE_NEW_YEAR"><span class="smcap">Our Duty for the New Year, January 1, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_78">78</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#TELL_THE_TRUTH_AND_SPEED_UP"><span class="smcap">Tell the Truth and Speed up the War, January 4,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_80">80</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_COST_OF_UNPREPAREDNESS"><span class="smcap">The Cost of Unpreparedness, January 6, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_82">82</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#COOPERATION_AND_CONTROL"><span class="smcap">Coöperation and Control, January 8, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_ARTEMUS_WARD_THEORY_OF_WAR"><span class="smcap">The Artemus Ward Theory of War, January 17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_87">87</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_FRUITS_OF_WATCHFUL_WAITING"><span class="smcap">The Fruits of Watchful Waiting, January 18, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_89">89</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#TELL_THE_TRUTH"><span class="smcap">Tell the Truth, January 21, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_92">92</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#JUSTIFICATION_OF_CONSTRUCTIVE"><span class="smcap">Justification of Constructive Criticism, January
-28, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_93">93</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SECRETARY_BAKERS_GENERAL_DENIAL"><span class="smcap">Secretary Baker’s General Denial, February 2,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_96">96</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#LET_GEORGE_SPEED_UP_THE_WAR"><span class="smcap">Let George Speed up the War, February 3, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#LET_UNCLE_SAM_GET_INTO_THE_GAME"><span class="smcap">Let Uncle Sam get into the Game, February 5, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_101">101</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#CONSERVATION_IS_IMPORTANT_AND"><span class="smcap">Conservation is Important and Production is More
-Important, February 15, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_103">103</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_PEOPLES_WAR"><span class="smcap">The People’s War, February 26, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_105">105</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_FRUITS_OF_FIFTY-FIFTY_LOYALTY"><span class="smcap">The Fruits of Fifty-Fifty Loyalty, March 2, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_109">109</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#QUIT_TALKING_PEACE"><span class="smcap">Quit Talking Peace, March 5, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_111">111</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_WORST_ENEMIES_OF_CERTAIN"><span class="smcap">The Worst Enemies of Certain Loyal Americans,
-March 10, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_113">113</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#GIRD_UP_OUR_LOINS"><span class="smcap">Gird up our Loins, March 16, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_115">115</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BOLSHEVIKI_AT_HOME_AND_ABROAD"><span class="smcap">Bolsheviki at Home and Abroad, March 19, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_117">117</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_FRUITS_OF_OUR_DELAY"><span class="smcap">The Fruits of Our Delay, March 26, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_120">120</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#HOW_THE_HUN_EARNS_HIS_TITLE"><span class="smcap">How the Hun Earns his Title, March 31, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_122">122</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THANK_HEAVEN"><span class="smcap">Thank Heaven! April 2, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_128">128</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#CITIZENS_OR_SUBJECTS"><span class="smcap">Citizens or Subjects? April 6, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_129">129</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WOMEN_AND_THE_WAR"><span class="smcap">Women and the War, April 12, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_133">133</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#TO_MY_FELLOW_AMERICANS_OF"><span class="smcap">To my Fellow Americans of German Blood, April
-16, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_135">135</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#AN_EXTRAORDINARY_ACHIEVEMENT"><span class="smcap">An Extraordinary Achievement in Human Upbuilding,
-April 17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_138">138</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FREEDOM_STANDS_WITH_HER_BACK"><span class="smcap">Freedom stands with her Back to the Wall, April
-20, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_140">140</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_ALL_AMERICANS"><span class="smcap">A Square Deal for All Americans, April 27, 1918</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_142">142</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_GERMAN_HORROR"><span class="smcap">The German Horror, May 2, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_145">145</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SEDITION_A_FREE_PRESS_AND"><span class="smcap">Sedition, a Free Press, and Personal Rule, May 7,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_DANGERS_OF_A_PREMATURE_PEACE"><span class="smcap">The Dangers of a Premature Peace, May 12, 1918</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_150">150</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_WAR_SAVINGS_CAMPAIGN"><span class="smcap">The War Savings Campaign, May 27, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_155">155</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#ANTI-BOLSHEVISM"><span class="smcap">Anti-Bolshevism, June 5, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_158">158</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#GENERAL_WOOD"><span class="smcap">General Wood, June 15, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_160">160</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#HELP_RUSSIA_NOW"><span class="smcap">Help Russia Now, June 20, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_162">162</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#AN_AMERICAN_FOURTH_OF_JULY"><span class="smcap">An American Fourth of July, June 23, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_166">166</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#HOW_NOT_TO_ADJOURN_POLITICS"><span class="smcap">How not to Adjourn Politics, June 25, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_167">167</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#HATS_OFF_TO_THE_INTERNATIONAL"><span class="smcap">Hats off to the International Typographical
-Union, June 27, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_170">170</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_PERFORMANCE_OF_A_GREAT"><span class="smcap">The Performance of a Great Public Duty, July 3,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_172">172</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#REPEAL_THE_CHARTER_OF_THE"><span class="smcap">Repeal the Charter of the German-American Alliance,
-July 11, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_174">174</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#EVERY_MAN_HAS_A_RIGHT_TO_ONE"><span class="smcap">Every Man has a Right to One Country, July 15,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_177">177</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#MURDER_TREASON_AND_PARLOR"><span class="smcap">Murder, Treason, and Parlor Anarchy, July 18,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_180">180</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#BACK_UP_THE_FIGHTING_MEN"><span class="smcap">Back up the Fighting Men at the Front, July 26,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_183">183</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_AMERICANS_WHOM_WE_MOST"><span class="smcap">The Americans whom we most Delight to Honor,
-August 1, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_186">186</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SOUND_NATIONALISM_AND_SOUND"><span class="smcap">Sound Nationalism and Sound Internationalism,
-August 4, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_188">188</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_MAN_WHO_PAYS_AND_THE_MAN"><span class="smcap">The Man who Pays and the Man who Profits, August
-9, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_196">196</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#OUR_DEBT_TO_THE_BRITISH_EMPIRE"><span class="smcap">Our Debt to the British Empire, August 16, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_200">200</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_CANDIDACY_OF_HENRY_FORD"><span class="smcap">The Candidacy of Henry Ford, August 20, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_202">202</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SPEED_UP_THE_WORK_FOR_THE_ARMY"><span class="smcap">Speed up the Work for the Army and Give all who
-Enter it Fair Play, August 23, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_206">206</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SENATOR_LODGES_NOBLE_SPEECH"><span class="smcap">Senator Lodge’s Noble Speech, September 1, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_209">209</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#APPLIED_PATRIOTISM"><span class="smcap">Applied Patriotism, September 8, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_211">211</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#GOOD_LUCK_TO_THE_ANTI-BOLSHEVISTS"><span class="smcap">Good Luck to the Anti-Bolshevists of Kansas, September
-12, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_213">213</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_FOURTH_LIBERTY_LOAN"><span class="smcap">The Fourth Liberty Loan, September 17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_216">216</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FAIR_PLAY_AND_NO_POLITICS"><span class="smcap">Fair Play and No Politics, September 20, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_218">218</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SPIES_AND_SLACKERS"><span class="smcap">Spies and Slackers, September 24, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_221">221</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#QUIT_PLAYING_FAVORITES"><span class="smcap">Quit Playing Favorites, September 30, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_224">224</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WAR_AIMS_AND_PEACE_PROPOSALS"><span class="smcap">War Aims and Peace Proposals, October 12, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_226">226</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#PERMANENT_PREPAREDNESS_AND"><span class="smcap">Permanent Preparedness and the League of Nations,
-October 15, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_229">229</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#HIGH-SOUNDING_PHRASES_OF"><span class="smcap">High-sounding Phrases of Muddy Meaning, October
-17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_231">231</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#AN_AMERICAN_PEACE_VERSUS"><span class="smcap">An American Peace</span> <i>versus</i> <span class="smcap">a Rubber-Stamp Peace,
-October 22, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_236">236</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#UNCONDITIONAL_SURRENDER"><span class="smcap">Unconditional Surrender, October 26, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_239">239</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#WHAT_ARE_THE_FOURTEEN_POINTS"><span class="smcap">What are the Fourteen Points? October 30, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_241">241</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FURTHER_CONSIDERATION_OF_THE"><span class="smcap">Further Consideration of the Fourteen Points,
-October 30, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_243">243</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#FOURTEEN_SCRAPS_OF_PAPER"><span class="smcap">Fourteen Scraps of Paper, October 31, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_248">248</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_TURKS_SURRENDER"><span class="smcap">The Turks Surrender Unconditionally, November
-3, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_251">251</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#PEACE"><span class="smcap">Peace, November 12, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_253">253</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#SACRIFICE_ON_COLD_ALTARS"><span class="smcap">Sacrifice on Cold Altars, November 13, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_255">255</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_RED_FLAG_AND_THE_HUN"><span class="smcap">The Red Flag and the Hun Peace Drive, November
-14, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_258">258</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_LEAGUE_OF_NATIONS"><span class="smcap">The League of Nations, November 17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_261">261</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#AN_AMERICAN_CONGRESS"><span class="smcap">An American Congress, November 18, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_265">265</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_FREEDOM_OF_THE_SEAS_AND_THE"><span class="smcap">The Freedom of the Seas and the Enslavement of
-Mankind, November 22, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_269">269</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#PRESIDENT_WILSON_AND_THE"><span class="smcap">President Wilson and the Peace Conference, November
-26, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_272">272</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_LEAGUE_TO_ENFORCE_PEACE"><span class="smcap">The League To Enforce Peace, December 2, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_277">277</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_MEN_WHOSE_LOT_HAS_BEEN"><span class="smcap">The Men Whose Lot Has Been Hardest, December 8,
-1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_281">281</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_BRITISH_NAVY_THE_FRENCH"><span class="smcap">The British Navy, the French Army, and American
-Common Sense, December 17, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_283">283</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#LET_US_HAVE_STRAIGHTFORWARD"><span class="smcap">Let us have Straightforward Speaking, December
-24, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_287">287</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_THE_MEN"><span class="smcap">A Square Deal for the Men at the Front, December
-25, 1918</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_289">289</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#THE_LEAGUE_OF_NATIONS2"><span class="smcap">The League of Nations, January 13, 1919</span></a>
-</td><td class="tdr page">
-<a href="#Page_292">292</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">
-<a href="#img004"><span class="smcap">Theodore Roosevelt and W. R. Nelson</span></a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc">
-From a snapshot
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<i>Photogravure Frontispiece</i>
-</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#img005"><span class="smcap">Facsimile of a Note from Roosevelt to W. R.
-Nelson</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_xxii">xxii</a>
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">
-<a href="#img003"><span class="smcap">Facsimile of a Page of the Manuscript of one of
-Roosevelt’s Editorials</span></a>
-</td>
-<td class="tdr">
-<a href="#Page_2">2</a>
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The request, repeated and urgent, has come from
-many sources that the editorial articles, contributed
-by Colonel Theodore Roosevelt to The Kansas City
-Star during our country’s participation in the World
-War, be preserved for the future. It is in response to
-this request that this volume is published.</p>
-
-<p>Newspaper publication is ephemeral. Newspaper
-files are short-lived. Anybody who has examined a
-newspaper of thirty years ago knows how flimsy it
-is, how it breaks and disintegrates to the touch. It
-lacks the enduring quality of the newspaper of sixty
-or seventy-five years ago when other elements entered
-into the composition of news-print paper.
-Newspaper publication is the thought of to-day; to-morrow,
-it is gone save for the impression left on
-the mind of the reader. That the recollection of
-Colonel Roosevelt’s articles may have something to
-appeal to aside from crumbling newspaper files is the
-aim of this book. And so these expressions on the
-events in a crisis in our national history&mdash;from the
-mind of a man whose intense love of country was the
-admiration of all who knew him, expressions which
-at the time of their publication stirred many to
-greater sacrifice for country, some to anger, even to
-rage&mdash;are here presented in enduring form.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt’s contributions to The Star
-were his most frequent expressions on the war; they
-were the outpouring of a great soul deeply stirred by
-the country’s situation. There were more than one
-hundred articles from his pen. They covered the
-vital time of our part in the war from October, 1917,
-until his death January 6, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>The reason he chose The Star as his medium of
-reaching the people, in a period when a large section
-of the American people sought and was guided by
-what he said, was that Colonel Roosevelt and The
-Star had known and understood each other for a
-long, long time. Their acquaintance dated back to
-the period of his service in the New York legislature.
-The Star saw behind his conduct then the qualities
-and the spirit which it was continually seeking to
-place at a premium in offices of public trust.</p>
-
-<p>Later, in 1889, when President Harrison appointed
-him a civil service commissioner, The Star said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The appointment of Theodore Roosevelt as one of the civil
-service commissioners is a hopeful sign that President Harrison
-desires to give civil service reform a fair representation in
-the government. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roosevelt is an accomplished gentleman,
-with sincere aspirations for reformed methods of administration,
-as shown by his career in the New York legislature
-when Grover Cleveland was governor. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roosevelt is too
-independent ever to serve as a party henchman, and his voice
-and influence will always be in favor of what he believes to be
-the most efficient and business-like administration of affairs.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt and the founder and editor of
-The Star, the late William R. Nelson, had met, but
-they did not really know each other until after the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">[xv]</span>
-war with Spain. In his canvass for the vice-presidency
-in 1900 Colonel Roosevelt was entertained at
-the Nelson home, Oak Hall, Kansas City. From this
-visit dated better acquaintance. They had much in
-common and were alike in many characteristics:
-frank, outspoken, impulsive, and passionately devoted
-to the same ideals of private life and public
-service.</p>
-
-<p>I recall a story of an impulsive act of Colonel
-Roosevelt back in his ranchman days. A man of
-shady reputation had been appointed Indian Agent
-with the Sioux on a Dakota reservation. He put into
-effect many sharp practices with the Indians which
-would line his pockets with money. Roosevelt’s
-ranch was not far away and ranch affairs took him to
-the agency. One day he went to the agency and
-sought the agent.</p>
-
-<p>“You are <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> &mdash;&mdash;?” the ranchman asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard what you have been doing with the
-Indians. You are a thief! Good-day!”</p>
-
-<p>The story, as told, was that the agent, aghast at
-the boldness of his visitor, turned and walked away.</p>
-
-<p>The late Curtis Guild, <abbr title="junior">Jr.</abbr>, of Boston, and Senator
-Beveridge, of Indiana, were with Colonel Roosevelt
-on the Oak Hall visit. They found delight in the
-paintings and books in <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s home and
-Colonel Roosevelt gave proof of his wide range of
-knowledge by his instant recognition of the work of
-painters of long-established reputation. In his inspection
-of the library he asked to see what <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</span>
-Nelson had on the Greek dramatists. “I always ask
-for them in a man’s library,” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>During this visit I was a listener at an argument
-between the two men on partisanship. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson
-had in his early days affiliated with the Democratic
-Party. In 1876 he was <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Tilden’s personal manager
-in Indiana. But with the party’s treatment of
-Tilden <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson lost partisan zeal, and never after
-could he be considered a party man. He founded
-The Star in 1880 as an independent newspaper; it
-has remained an independent newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt’s argument was, that to accomplish
-anything in public affairs a man or a newspaper
-had to belong to a party organization. He probably
-had in mind his experience in the Blaine campaign
-of 1884. His conclusion was that the American
-people were wedded to the two-party system and
-that one who aspired to do anything for the country
-could achieve only by working through a party
-organization.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson granted what he said was true as to
-an individual, but not as to a newspaper of the right
-sort. It was perhaps true as to a newspaper which
-had as one of its aims the securing of political honor
-for its owner, but the newspaper sincerely devoted to
-the public interest could wield greater power by
-retaining its independence and in the end could accomplish
-more substantial achievements, a statement
-verified by his own conduct of The Star. Colonel
-Roosevelt saw the force of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s contention,
-but stuck to his point that, with an individual,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</span>
-accomplishment outside of party ranks was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to look back over the growth of
-the mutual understanding and the fondness of the
-two men for each other dating from that visit in
-1900. After leaving Kansas City, Colonel Roosevelt
-sent back a letter expressing his delight at the day
-spent at Oak Hall, closing with “How I do wish I
-could spend the week in your library instead of upon
-this infernal campaigning trip!”</p>
-
-<p>When the assassin’s bullet struck down President
-McKinley, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson sent a telegram to Colonel
-Roosevelt expressing his horror at the deed and
-pledging the whole-hearted support of his newspaper
-in aiding him to carry the great burden which had
-been placed on his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson had no wish to be a distributor of federal
-patronage; he was concerned in higher things. When
-Colonel Roosevelt turned to him for advice on political
-matters, he was reluctant to give it, feeling his
-own lack of real knowledge of the politics of Kansas
-and Missouri and of the men who sought appointments.
-Late in 1901 Colonel Roosevelt, asking
-about conditions in Missouri, wrote, referring to St.
-Louis men, “I think they have been rather after
-the offices and not after success.... I should like
-to have some office-holder in Missouri to whom I
-could tie.”</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson asked the political writers of The Star
-to write their estimate of the men seeking office and
-leadership, and these were sent to the President<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</span>
-with his endorsement. The President repeatedly
-followed the ideas of these letters, and it is a pleasure
-to record that in no instance was there subsequently
-cause for regret for any selection based on
-the letters.</p>
-
-<p>In 1908 the President’s appointment of the Farm
-Life Commission received <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s commendation,
-for he had long recognized the need of making
-farm life more attractive; indeed, he would have
-financed experiments along this line had he been
-younger. At the same time <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson spoke approvingly
-of the President’s recent comment on the
-courts, adding, “Courts need such criticism the
-worst kind. They steadily undermine confidence in
-law and legal justice.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sick at heart,” the President replied, “over
-the way in which the courts have been prostituting
-justice in the last few years. The greatest trouble
-will follow if they do not alter their present attitude.
-I suppose I shall ‘pay’ myself in some way for what
-I have said about the courts, but I have got to take
-the risk.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1909, in the closing days of the Roosevelt Administration
-the President issued an executive order
-looking to a quick settlement of a long-pending controversy
-over the channel of the Kaw River at Kansas City.
-It was unexpected; indeed, few in Kansas
-City knew that the President was considering the
-subject. The order cut straight to the heart of the
-controversy in true Roosevelt fashion. The same
-day <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson sent this telegram to the President:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xix">[xix]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is quite worth while to have a real President of the
-United States.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The next day this reply came from the President:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is even better worth while to have a real editor of just
-the right kind of paper.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>The Star supported Taft in the campaign of 1908
-because it had faith that he would carry out the
-Roosevelt policies. Events early in the Taft Administration
-weakened that faith; the Winona speech
-withered it. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson had had no correspondence
-with Colonel Roosevelt while he was hunting in
-Africa. Two letters came from the ex-President, one
-March 12, 1910, from the White Nile saying he
-expected to return in June; another from Porto
-Maurizio, a month later, saying, “I know you will
-understand how delicate my position is,” and asking
-for an early conference with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson on his return
-to this country. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s final, open break with
-President Taft was “more in sorrow than in anger”;
-there was never bitterness of feeling, solely regret at
-a mistake in believing <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Taft stood for principles
-which events early in his administration showed convincingly
-he did not stand for.</p>
-
-<p>Writing to Colonel Roosevelt, in 1910, after his
-return from Africa, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson referred to the Winona
-speech and the Ballinger case, concluding: “I
-have wondered whether sooner or later there would
-not have to be a new party of the Square Deal.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xx">[xx]</span></p>
-
-<p>The succeeding two years there were frequent conferences
-and interchange of letters between Colonel
-Roosevelt and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson. The latter had absolute
-confidence and abiding faith in Roosevelt. Late in
-1910 the Colonel’s enemies were seeking to torment
-him from many angles. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson wrote him:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It has occurred to me that the opposition will constantly
-be prodding you and lying about you with the evident purpose
-of getting you angry and so putting you to a disadvantage.
-That is the only hope on earth they have of stopping
-you.</p>
-
-<p>Your comment on <abbr title="william">Wm.</abbr> Barnes was fine. It recalled to me
-an incident connected with Governor Tilden, who was the
-wisest politician I ever knew. As a young man I was his manager
-in Indiana. After the defeat of Lucius Robinson, whom
-he was backing for Governor of New York, I went East at
-his invitation to confer with him. He asked me to see Kelly,
-Clarkson, Potter, Dorsheimer, and Sam Cox, and some of the
-other men who had been fighting him, to get their views.
-“What shall I tell them about your position if they ask me?”
-I said. “Oh, tell them,” he said, “that I am very amiable.”
-In my adventures since that time I have often had occasion
-to remember that as sound advice. Amiability is a great
-weapon at times.</p>
-
-<p>But my point is that you never need to defend yourself at
-all. The people will take care of your defense. Besides, it is
-always a bad policy, in my opinion, to get to talking about
-the past. You are a Progressive. Your nose is to the front.
-The past doesn’t interest you. So I hope you will ignore the
-critics, no matter how exasperating they may be. And if you
-can’t ignore them, laugh at them!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>To this the Colonel replied:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I guess you are right; but it does make me flame with indignation
-when men who pretend to be especially the custodians
-of morals, and who sit in judgment from an Olympian
-height of virtue on the deeds of other men, themselves offend<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxi">[xxi]</span>
-in a way that puts them on a level with the most corrupt
-scoundrel in a city government....</p>
-
-<p>But this does not alter the fact that, as you say, my business
-is to pay no heed to the slanders of the past, but to keep
-my face steadily turned toward the future. Here in New York
-the outlook is rather dark. There are a great multitude of
-men, some of them nominally respectable, but timid or misled,
-who do certainly, although rather feebly, object to the
-domination of Barnes and his fellow bosses; but who do sincerely,
-but rather feebly, prefer clean politics to corrupt
-politics; but who, nevertheless, dread any interference with
-what they regard as the rights of big business, any assault on
-what I regard as an improperly arranged tariff, any effort to
-work for the betterment of social conditions in the spirit of
-Abraham Lincoln; who regard all assaults and efforts of this
-nature as being worse than the rule of small bosses and the
-petty corruption of local politicians.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>As the presidential campaign of 1912 developed,
-there were frequent exchanges of views. In May
-Colonel Roosevelt wrote that he was confident of
-victory in the Republican Convention in spite of all
-that was being done against him by the men in control
-of the party. Only those who were in the thick
-of the Republican Convention in Chicago in June
-realize how the fighting blood of the men on the
-progressive side, from the leader down, was aroused.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson was at Chicago during the Republican
-Convention. Colonel Roosevelt sought his advice
-throughout. The course which was ultimately followed
-had <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s full approval. In a telegram
-to Colonel Roosevelt after the break from the
-Republican Party, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson said: “I am with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxii">[xxii]</span>
-you tooth and nail, to the limit and to the finish.”</p>
-
-<p>Following those vivid days and nights of the Republican
-Convention&mdash;a period no active participant
-can ever erase from his memory&mdash;came the
-Orchestra Hall meeting, the first definite step to
-organize the Progressive Party, the National Progressive
-Party Convention in August, and then the
-memorable three-party campaign.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the campaign <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson and the
-Colonel had the time and inclination to carry on a
-correspondence on things not directly touching the
-issues on which the fight was made. In a letter from
-his summer home at Magnolia, Massachusetts, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Nelson dropped into a discussion of what he called
-his two hobbies&mdash;to drive money out of the voting
-booth and out of the courthouse. His idea was that
-all legitimate expenses of candidates for office should
-be paid by the State, and that there should be a reform
-of the voting system which would avoid the
-necessity of party organization to get out the vote.
-Having the vote taken by letter carriers was one
-way that appealed to him. He would make justice
-free, “not for sale as it is to-day when the rich man
-gets the best lawyers.” Lawyers should be officers
-of the court in fact as well as in theory, and should
-be compensated for their work by the State, not by
-the litigants.</p>
-
-<p>Replying to this letter late in July, Colonel Roosevelt
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I am with you in principle on both the points you raise. I
-am with you on the question of the State paying the election<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiii">[xxiii]</span>
-expenses right away now. I have always stood for that course
-as the only one to give the poor man a fair chance in politics.</p>
-
-<p>Your other idea is new, but I have long been feeling my
-way to the same conclusion. A lawyer is not like a doctor.
-No real good for the community comes from the development
-of legalism, from the development of that kind of ability
-shown by the great corporation lawyers who lead our bar;
-whereas good does come from medical development. The
-high-priced lawyer means, when reduced to his simplest expression,
-that justice tends to go to the man with the longest
-purse. But the proposal is such a radical one that I do not
-know how it would be greeted, and it is something we will
-have to fight for later.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Theodore Roosevelt</span><br />
-</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img005">
- <img src="images/005.jpg" class="w75" alt="Facsimile of a Note from Roosevelt to W. R. Nelson" />
-</span></p>
-
-<p>Late in September, during a campaign tour of the
-West, Colonel Roosevelt spent a Sunday evening at
-Oak Hall. The subject of campaign contributions
-came up, and the candidate became reminiscent,
-recounting his first experience as governor of New
-York with campaign contributions. It was an incident,
-he said, that might readily be misconstrued
-and so he had not discussed it publicly.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after he was elected governor of New York,
-he had discovered that the street railways were paying
-almost no taxes. Accordingly he took steps to
-introduce a franchise tax bill into the legislature.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Odell at once came to him and told him that
-he was following in the footsteps of Bryan and
-“Potato” Pingree, which was the most severe
-condemnation at that time. That warning having
-no effect, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Platt came to him and said, “Governor,
-you can’t do this. Don’t you know that the
-Whitney-Ryan combination was one of the heaviest
-contributors to your campaign fund?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiv">[xxiv]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The deuce they were,” said Roosevelt; “I supposed
-they made their contributions to Tammany.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” Platt returned, “they contributed
-to Tammany, but they gave us just half as much as
-they did Tammany. If they hadn’t expected fair
-treatment from us they would have given it all to
-Tammany.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told Platt they would get fair treatment from
-us,” Roosevelt said, in telling the story, “but if
-they expected immunity from taxation they were
-going to be left.”</p>
-
-<p>At that time the Whitney-Ryan combination
-owned the New York street railways and so were
-going to be hard hit by the franchise tax. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Roosevelt added that the franchise tax bill went
-through and created quite a scandal in high finance
-at that time. “Everybody was talking about it,” he
-said, “and all the big financiers knew about it. So I
-never could have any sympathy with the view that
-Harriman or the Standard Oil people&mdash;if they
-really contributed to my campaign fund&mdash;or any
-other interest of that sort gave any money for campaign
-purposes under a misapprehension. They
-knew from my deeds as well as my words that they
-could not buy immunity from me, and that the best
-they could expect was a square deal. I said one
-time to Bacon, ‘Bob, why is it that Morgan and all
-his crowd are against me? Don’t they know that
-they would get justice from me?’ Bacon smiled,
-hesitated, and then said, ‘Yes, I suppose they do.’”</p>
-
-<p>In the Progressive campaign <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson violated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxv">[xxv]</span>
-a personal rule of many years’ standing which forbade
-his personal participation in politics. Into this
-campaign he went with his whole soul. Then past
-seventy years of age, he was abundantly able to
-direct but not to give of his physical strength. He
-assumed responsibility for organizing the party in
-Missouri and lent his newspaper organization to that
-end. He thought day and night for the party’s candidate
-and the party’s principles, and at the end of
-the campaign he had left undone nothing which he
-could have done for the candidate who had his absolute
-and unqualified confidence. After the election
-Colonel Roosevelt wrote <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I can never overstate how much I appreciate all that you
-have done and been throughout this fight. My dear Sir, I
-am very grateful and I know that the only way I can show
-my gratitude is so to bear myself that you will feel no cause
-for regret at having stood by me.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the campaign of 1912, which showed the remarkable
-strength of Colonel Roosevelt with the
-people and demonstrated that he was still a factor
-in American public life to be reckoned with, the tormenting
-by his political enemies continued. From
-many quarters darts had been hurled at “the old
-lion.” In July, 1914, after a libel suit for fifty
-thousand dollars had been started, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson telegraphed
-the Colonel at Oyster Bay:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Too bad so much of the burden should fall on you. <em>Would
-gladly share it with you.</em></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In a few days the message brought this letter:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxvi">[xxvi]</span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>When a man is under constant fire and begins to feel, now
-and then, as if he did not have very many friends, and as if
-the forces against him were perfectly overwhelming, then,
-even though he is prepared to battle alone absolutely to the
-end, he is profoundly appreciative of the support of those
-whose support is best worth having. Your telegram not only
-gave me real comfort, but touched and moved me profoundly.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Theodore Roosevelt</span><br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was the end of the recorded correspondence
-between Colonel Roosevelt and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson. The
-former came West on a speaking tour in the fall of
-1914 and during his stay in Kansas City was a
-guest again at Oak Hall. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson accompanied
-him to a campaign meeting in a skating rink packed
-with people in Kansas City, Kansas, where he spoke
-in a sweltering atmosphere for more than an hour
-preaching with all his old vigor and enthusiasm the
-doctrines of the Progressive Party.</p>
-
-<p>There was the same display from great crowds of
-people, along the streets around the hall and everywhere
-he went, of the keen interest and personal
-admiration which Colonel Roosevelt’s presence in
-Kansas City territory always brought out. Kansas
-City and its vicinity had been Roosevelt ground
-since Kansas and Western Missouri became acquainted
-with him; indeed, any appearance by him
-was sufficient to fill Convention Hall in Kansas City
-to its capacity of fifteen thousand people.</p>
-
-<p>Following <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson’s death in April, 1915, there
-came from Colonel Roosevelt a sincere appreciation
-of his sorrow, ending, “We have lost literally one of
-the foremost citizens of the United States, one of the
-men whom our Republic could least afford to spare.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxvii">[xxvii]</span></p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>In the 1916 campaign Colonel Roosevelt and The
-Star were of the same mind. Deeply attached to the
-principles on which the battle of 1912 had been conducted
-by the Progressive Party, they were conscious
-of the futility of continuing the fight for those
-principles in a third party. The American devotion
-to the two-party system had been convincingly
-demonstrated again. The World War had been in
-progress two years, the Lusitania had been sunk
-without stirring the Administration to more than
-impotent words. Both thought that the Republican
-Party presented the only hope of accomplishment.
-Colonel Roosevelt was The Star’s choice for the
-nomination, but his nomination was too much to
-expect after the break of 1912, and it gave its
-support to <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hughes.</p>
-
-<p>Early in June, 1917, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Irwin Kirkwood, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Nelson’s son-in-law, on his way West from New
-York, chanced to meet Colonel Roosevelt on the
-train. A visit in the Colonel’s stateroom followed.
-The conversation turned to the seeming impossibility
-of a Roosevelt division for France, a subject in
-which <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood was personally interested, for
-he had been assured service in France if the Colonel’s
-ambition were realized. The Colonel was discouraged
-over his failure to get active service and restless
-at the Administration’s slow preparation for war.
-Of the Nation’s whole-hearted support of the war he
-was certain, and the high thought with him at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxviii">[xxviii]</span>
-time was to bring influences to bear on the Administration
-to speed up.</p>
-
-<p>At this time Colonel Roosevelt was contributing
-a monthly article for The Metropolitan Magazine
-written long in advance of its publication. Daily,
-momentous problems of the war were coming up.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood felt strongly that the American
-people were eager to know what Theodore Roosevelt
-thought on these questions. If he could reach the
-public quickly, great good would result to this
-country’s cause. Recalling that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson had
-said, when there was criticism of the ex-President’s
-purpose to write for The Outlook, when it was first
-announced, he would be mighty glad to have him
-write for The Star, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood said:</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel Roosevelt, wouldn’t it be fine if you
-could get your ideas on the war to the people before
-they were twenty-four hours old? The only way that
-could be done is through a newspaper.”</p>
-
-<p>“By George!” said the Colonel, with emphasis,
-“I never thought of that: it sounds like a good
-idea.”</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood said if he would consider the suggestion,
-The Star would certainly welcome him.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a proposition would not tempt me from many
-newspapers,” Colonel Roosevelt continued. “In
-fact I know of no others except The Kansas City
-Star and The Philadelphia North American from
-which I would consider it. The Star particularly
-appeals to me as being printed in the heart of the
-great progressive Middle Western country, and because,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxix">[xxix]</span>
-too, of my love and affection for Colonel
-Nelson.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt remarked that he would like
-to discuss the proposal with Mrs. Roosevelt and his
-daughter, Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, for he had
-great confidence in the judgment of both. On <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Kirkwood’s return to New York a fortnight later,
-Colonel Roosevelt said he was still “filled up” with
-the idea and asked <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> and Mrs. Kirkwood out to
-dinner at Oyster Bay with Mrs. Roosevelt and
-himself. Mrs. Kirkwood was unable to go. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Kirkwood again discussed the proposal. Colonel
-Roosevelt’s position was that if The Star was still
-unafraid, he was willing to start. The next time the
-Colonel came to New York he had tea with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> and
-Mrs. Kirkwood, and there was a further full and
-frank discussion.</p>
-
-<p>“You, of course, know what you are doing,”
-Colonel Roosevelt said. “Many people do not like
-my ideas and probably many of your subscribers
-will be perfectly furious at The Star for printing my
-editorials.”</p>
-
-<p>Both <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> and Mrs. Kirkwood assured him full
-consideration had been given to that phase, and
-while it was possible he and The Star might not
-always agree, that fact would not stand in the way
-of the arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>So the agreement was there entered into. Colonel
-Roosevelt suggested that as 1920 was a presidential
-year the connection be for two years or until October,
-1919, to which <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> and Mrs. Kirkwood assented.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxx">[xxx]</span></p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt said he never pretended to be
-much of a business man, but a formal contract was
-the usual thing; he had one with The Metropolitan.
-Anyhow he would gladly sign it. He was asked if he
-desired a contract and answered he did not.</p>
-
-<p>“You understand and we do&mdash;” said <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting for the sentence to be finished,
-Colonel Roosevelt said quickly, “That’s all I want
-to know. Let’s don’t bother with a contract.”</p>
-
-<p>And on that basis the Colonel wrote for The Star
-until his death.</p>
-
-<p>Early in September I was delegated to go to New
-York, as Managing Editor of The Star, to discuss
-with the Colonel the details of his work for the paper.
-I met him at a hotel in Fifty-Seventh Street where he
-went on the days he came in from Oyster Bay. Mrs.
-Roosevelt was with him. Roosevelt was in high
-spirits, which was no uncommon thing. I recall
-vividly my introduction to Mrs. Roosevelt.</p>
-
-<p>“Edith,” he said, leading me into the room where
-Mrs. Roosevelt was, “<em>here is my new boss</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t say it, but the thought came to me that
-I would prefer the task of “bossing” a tornado.</p>
-
-<p>The talk that followed was that The Star had no
-desire to guide what he wrote; that it desired him to
-write whatever was in him, and it would print it.
-The Colonel said that was exactly what he wanted;
-he could do nothing else. We discussed the distribution
-over the country of his writings, which he
-left entirely to The Star, with the request that they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxi">[xxxi]</span>
-be not offered to certain newspapers which had long
-shown a spirit of personal animosity to him and of
-habitual hostility toward his principles, a suggestion
-which was wholly agreeable to The Star. He asked
-about the length and frequency of the articles he
-was to write. It was agreed that an editorial of
-around five hundred words was ideal, and at the
-start there would be two contributions a week.
-Later they were more frequent. The Colonel said he
-would probably find it difficult to keep down to five
-hundred words, but he recognized the limitations of
-newspaper space and would do his best.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” he said, “if I get too highbrow, don’t
-hesitate to tell me. I’m no tender flower; I can
-stand criticism.”</p>
-
-<p>His secretary had come into the room to receive
-dictation from accumulated correspondence. I arose
-to go. “Stay with us,” the Colonel said, “until I
-finish this; you are a member of the family now.”</p>
-
-<p>Short, crisp sentences came from him as he dictated,
-each with the animation of a face-to-face
-conversation with the writers of the letters.</p>
-
-<p>It was arranged that the Colonel was to take up
-his duties the first of October, and a few days after
-this meeting announcement was made the country
-over that Theodore Roosevelt was to write for The
-Kansas City Star. Immediately applications for the
-right to print the articles poured in from newspapers
-throughout the country.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt came West in September on a
-speaking tour which included Kansas City. So he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxii">[xxxii]</span>
-came into the office of The Star on the morning of
-September 22, 1917, and went to a desk which had
-been assigned him, with the remark, “The cub reporter
-will now begin work.” He was fond of that
-designation and often in conversation referred to
-himself as “The Star’s cub reporter.” With pencil
-he wrote out on newspaper copy-paper, with much
-scratching and interlining, the editorial, “Blood,
-Iron, and Gold,” which appeared the following day.
-His first editorial, however, was, a short time before,
-written on suggestion of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood, a brief piece
-on the death of <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> W. S. Fitzsimons, of Kansas
-City, who was killed by a bomb in an airplane attack
-on a hospital in France&mdash;the first American officer
-to fall in the war.</p>
-
-<p>The same day Colonel Roosevelt wrote another
-editorial for later publication. He was good nature
-itself that Saturday morning in the office, joked and
-chatted with members of the staff, and seemed to be
-enjoying the novelty of his new connection.</p>
-
-<p>The following Sunday there was a luncheon of The
-Star family at the home of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> and Mrs. Kirkwood,
-at which the “new cub reporter” made himself
-thoroughly at home. Editors, reporters, and men
-of the mechanical and circulation departments were
-there and had luncheon with the Colonel. He
-mingled with all and took delight in chatting with
-them of their work. During the afternoon he made
-an informal talk to “the family” out on the lawn,
-in which he commended the spirit of working together
-shown in the expression “The Star family.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxiii">[xxxiii]</span>
-He spoke, too, of his long acquaintance with the
-aims and purposes of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson which were the
-aims and purposes of The Star, and said, as he had
-said before, that The Star was one of two daily
-newspapers with which he would be proud of a
-connection.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangement was that Colonel Roosevelt was
-to telegraph his editorials to The Star from Oyster
-Bay or wherever he was when he wrote them. They
-were put in type in The Star office and sent out from
-there for simultaneous publication in a selected list
-of about fifty newspapers. These included the best-known
-newspapers in the country and represented
-every section. The service was without charge beyond
-telegraph tolls, it being The Star’s wish to give
-the widest diffusion possible to Colonel Roosevelt’s
-ideas on the conduct of the war through the best
-channel in each city.</p>
-
-<p>Frequently there were suggestions from The Star
-to the Colonel. Always he was gracious in his treatment
-of those suggestions, invariably writing along
-the lines indicated and often amplifying and bettering
-them. On the other hand&mdash;except in two instances&mdash;the
-Colonel’s editorials were printed just
-as they were written, and if any change in copy were
-considered advisable it was made only after he had
-been consulted by wire and had approved it.</p>
-
-<p>From the start the country was much interested
-in the expressions from the Colonel. The newspapers
-which received them printed them faithfully
-and conspicuously. However, the service had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxiv">[xxxiv]</span>
-in operation not more than a fortnight before there
-came rumbles of disapproval and doubt, almost
-altogether from newspapers published south of
-Mason and Dixon’s Line.</p>
-
-<p>One of the early editorials, entitled “Sam Weller
-and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Snodgrass,” presented Uncle Sam, “eight
-months after Germany went to war with us, and we
-severed relations with Germany as the first move in
-our sixty days’ stern foremost drift into, not going
-to, war,” as the boastful <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Snodgrass, still taking
-off his coat and announcing in a loud voice what he
-was about to do. This drew from the mayor of
-Abilene, Texas, the following letter to The Star-Telegram,
-of Fort Worth, Texas, which was publishing
-the Roosevelt articles:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Abilene, Texas</span>, October 3, 1917. Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
-Fort Worth, Tex. The Roosevelt article appearing in
-your paper of this date is nothing short of the expression of
-the thoughts of a seditious conspirator who should be shot
-dead, and, the Editor-in-Chief of your paper should be tarred
-and feathered for publishing it, and your paper should be
-excluded from the mails of the United States. You may
-publish this if you wish, and stop my paper.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">E. N. Kirby</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
-Mayor of Abilene<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Fort Worth Star-Telegram promptly published
-Mayor Kirby’s letter, under the caption “The
-Retort Courteous,” adding the following:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Editor-in-Chief presents his compliments to the
-Mayor of Abilene and begs to say that should he conclude
-personally to conduct a tar and feather expedition in our
-direction, he will experience no great difficulty in locating the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxv">[xxxv]</span>
-said Editor-in-Chief. Meanwhile we can assure him that his
-reception will not be lacking in hospitality or warmth.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The mayor of Abilene and the editor did not meet.
-Later, in an editorial devoted to apologists for the
-delay in making war who were saying, “Why cry
-over spilt milk?” Colonel Roosevelt referred to the
-incident, saying:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Recently the mayor of Abilene, Texas, expressed his disapproval
-of my pointing out that we, as a Nation, had wholly
-failed to prepare, by saying that I was “a seditious conspirator
-who ought to be shot dead,” and that the editor of the
-newspaper publishing the article “should be tarred and
-feathered.” Although differing in method of expression, this
-slight homicidal bleat of the gentle-souled (and doubtless
-entirely harmless) mayor of Abilene, Texas, is exactly similar
-in thought to the utterances of all these sheeplike creatures
-who raise quavering or incoherent protests against every
-honest and patriotic man who points out the damage done by
-our failure to prepare.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>When the “cub reporter” came to take on his
-“new job,” he learned for the first time of the conditions
-at Camp Funston, in Kansas, the big national
-army training camp of the Middle West, to which
-his old friend, Major-General Leonard Wood, had
-been assigned. The drafted men were assembled
-there from the farms and towns of the Middle West
-before adequate provision had been made for their
-care or their training. They were trained with
-wooden cannon, and broomsticks served in place of
-rifles. Colonel Roosevelt wrote an editorial entitled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxvi">[xxxvi]</span>
-“Broomstick Preparedness,” which touched mildly
-on the conditions at Funston. The expression
-“Broomstick Preparedness” caught popular fancy
-as typifying the Administration’s delay in many aspects
-of war preparation. It stuck in the public
-mind. It was widely used by newspapers and by
-speakers who thought the Government was not
-showing sufficient speed. An editorial, “Broomstick
-Apologists,” followed, directed at people who answered
-criticism of delay by making excuses for
-delay.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning Colonel Roosevelt had in the
-main devoted his articles to speeding up the preparations
-for making war. The boosting of Liberty bonds
-and the various war drives, the pacifists and hyphenated
-enemies on our own soil, were not overlooked by
-any means, but the thing that seared his soul was
-the lack of speed in making ready for actual warfare.
-When his connection with The Star began, we had
-been officially at war nearly six months, and how
-little the Government had accomplished toward
-equipping for actual warfare was continuously held
-up in his articles.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt used the method, followed by
-newspaper writers who earnestly seek to achieve
-results, of pounding continually on a few things,
-dressing each article in different language, but keeping
-to the front all the time the central idea, presenting
-the same thoughts in article after article, but
-striving in each so to change the presentation that
-the ideas would finally enter the reader’s mind and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxvii">[xxxvii]</span>
-stir him to action. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Nelson used this method in
-the conduct of The Star. For many years, beginning
-with its first publication, The Star advocated parks
-and boulevards for Kansas City. It hammered away
-on the subject in nearly every issue. It took almost
-twenty years to do it, but at the end a splendid system
-of parks and boulevards stands as a monument
-to The Star’s persistence.</p>
-
-<p>Article after article Colonel Roosevelt devoted to
-the slow speed in war-making until there was finally
-a response in Washington. It heard from public
-opinion. War-making was speeded up, although at
-the best and in the end there were many, many
-deficiencies in our war machine.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt’s criticisms of the Administration
-were not widely popular. The Star never had
-any idea they would be popular, but it believed they
-were right and for the real good of the country. As
-he had foreseen when the connection was made,
-“Many of your subscribers will be perfectly furious
-at The Star for printing my editorials.” They were.
-They wrote to The Star to denounce the Colonel for
-writing the articles and The Star for printing them.
-In popular discussion in the Middle West forms of
-disapproval ranged from “He should stand by the
-President” to “He should be stood before a stone
-wall and shot.” Generally the user of the latter
-phrase added “at sunrise.” That was an expression
-often heard. It was used by political orators with
-effect. Colonel Roosevelt knew full well of the feeling
-in the West and South toward his articles. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxviii">[xxxviii]</span>
-wrote once asking what effect the storm was having
-on The Star. Never a word from him to show he
-cared one whit about himself. He knew he was doing
-the right thing for the country; he went ahead.</p>
-
-<p>The frank truth is, there was a strong and active
-pacifist element in the territory in which The Star
-circulated. It had not been for preparedness. It had
-voted for President Wilson in 1916 largely “because
-he kept us out of war.” Undeniably that idea was
-popular. A candidate for governor in a neighboring
-state, running on the Republican ticket, had made a
-campaign identical with the Democratic slogan and
-had carried the state, which at the same time gave
-its vote to the Democratic presidential candidate.
-But once we were in war the people of this section
-responded nobly; they went to the limit, but for a
-long time after we were in war they did not approve
-the prodding-up of Washington. The hostility toward
-the Roosevelt articles in the South was more
-pronounced. At the beginning of the service ten
-Southern newspapers were taking it. Their statements
-about discontinuance ran from “We find
-further publication inadvisable in our territory” to
-an apology to their readers for ever having allowed
-the Roosevelt articles to enter their columns.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt was not without defenders;
-many of them thought and said he was rendering
-the greatest service to the country in all his career.
-But in the excited state of mind in the spring of 1918,
-when the Germans were driving toward Paris, it required
-courage to defend the articles. Many, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxix">[xxxix]</span>
-spoke out boldly; others did not. Party lines
-were not followed strictly. Republicans were not so
-bitter as men of the President’s party. “We must
-stand by the President” had a popular appeal
-regardless of whether the Government was functioning
-efficiently or not. The view was widely held that
-it was unpatriotic to criticize the President. Frequently
-it was charged that Colonel Roosevelt’s
-purposes were political, not patriotic. The articles
-were often decried as pro-German propaganda and
-The Star was branded as pro-German for publishing
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In April, 1918, when this feeling was at its height,
-when the people in Kansas City’s territory were in a
-highly inflamed state of feeling toward criticism of
-the Government, Colonel Roosevelt sent a ringing
-editorial, “Freedom Stands with her Back to the
-Wall,” which The Star did not consider it advisable
-to publish. It had no doubt of the entire righteousness
-of the criticism passed on the officials at Washington,
-for the fruition of their slowness was shown
-in the poor showing America was making in these
-critical days, but it could see no good to come from
-the publication: in its opinion the article would only
-further inflame Colonel Roosevelt’s enemies and
-irritate his friends. Colonel Roosevelt was informed
-of the office opinion of this article as he was on a
-later article (“How Not to Adjourn Politics,” June
-25) which was not published. He acquiesced in the
-decision, saying that he could readily conceive of
-local conditions which made their publication ill-advised.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xl">[xl]</span>
-He asked that they be telegraphed to two
-other newspapers, which was done. The Star was
-willing to go as far as it could go without, in its
-judgment, lessening the effectiveness of the articles
-in accomplishing the speeding-up of the war, but it
-would not go beyond this point.</p>
-
-<p>In July, when criticism had caused the removal of
-many inefficients at Washington and when American
-troops were beginning to reach France, The
-Star was barred from the Public Library at Fulton,
-Missouri, an intensely Democratic town in Central
-Missouri, “for disloyalty to the present Administration.”
-The notice read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: By order from the library board of the Public
-Library I am advised to have you discontinue our subscription
-to The Daily Star and The Times. Disloyalty to the
-present Administration is the reason given for the action
-taken.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-Yours sincerely&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
-<span class="allsmcap">FRANCES F. WATSON</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
-Librarian<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Answering this editorially, The Star said that
-throughout the war it had taken the course of calling
-attention to the mistakes of the Government rather
-than remaining silent on its mistakes; that it did not
-believe in saying the country was doing finely when
-it was not; that it believed in exposing inefficiency
-and rooting it out. It directed attention to results
-already accomplished by criticism in bringing into
-the war preparations men like Schwab, Goethals,
-Stettinius, March, Baruch, and others, adding:
-“The Star is proud to belong to the little group of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xli">[xli]</span>
-constructive critics, including preëminently Colonel
-Roosevelt, who worked to get wrong conditions
-changed and to contribute to the present result,
-which to-day is the salvation of the cause we fight
-for. For it to have done anything else would have
-been faithlessness to its trust.”</p>
-
-<p>When at last the stirring-up of the Administration
-had borne fruit and American troops were in France
-and on the way in considerable, though disappointing,
-numbers, Colonel Roosevelt slowed down his
-bombardment of the Washington authorities. His
-campaign had produced results. He was right in
-doing all he could to speed up war preparations, and
-he stood his ground in the face of widespread censure
-in the way he always did. Hostile newspapers had
-demanded that the Postmaster-General suppress the
-circulation of the Roosevelt articles; indeed, a post-office
-inspector had visited Kansas City with the
-idea of denying The Star admission to the mails,
-but the Administration made no further move in
-this direction.</p>
-
-<p>Even when the turning of the tide had set in,
-Roosevelt’s demand was for men, more men, and
-then more men for France. He would have in all
-six or seven million men in training, and four million
-American soldiers in France in the spring of
-1919. In the first article he sent after the news of
-Quentin’s death, he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Now and always afterwards we of this country will walk
-with our heads high because of the men who face death and
-wounds, and so many of whom have given their lives for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlii">[xlii]</span>
-this nation and for the great ideals of humanity across the
-sea. But we must not let our pride and our admiration
-evaporate in mere pride, in mere admiration of what others
-have done. We must put the whole strength of this nation
-back of the fighting men at the front. We owe it to them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Later on the good effect of Colonel Roosevelt’s
-criticism was widely recognized. The Nation, one
-of the Colonel’s bitterest opponents, in general a
-strong supporter of the Administration, said of his
-editorials: “It is largely to him that we owe our
-ability to discuss peace terms and to criticize at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Summing up the effect of Colonel Roosevelt’s campaign
-to speed up our part in the war, The Star said
-editorially:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There were periods of intolerance when neither <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roosevelt
-nor The Star was under any illusions as to the reception
-that would be given frank criticism. But it was essential that
-such criticism be made in order to correct evils that were
-really threatening the outcome of the war....</p>
-
-<p>The selective draft was the big achievement of the Administration
-in 1917. But having prepared this, the Government
-proceeded in most leisurely fashion, apparently not getting
-the slightest comprehension of the danger to the Allied cause
-resulting from Russia’s collapse.</p>
-
-<p>The War Department continued to be run, as it had been
-in the past, by amiable old gentlemen who were wholly unfit
-for the task. Although airplanes had become an essential
-feature of modern warfare, it was not until weeks after war
-had been declared that the department sent a commission to
-Europe to learn what a military airplane was. Rifles are usually
-regarded as a part of the military equipment of troops.
-But it was two months after the declaration of war before
-the War Department decided what type of rifle to make. An
-army of millions of men was certain to need uniforms, but
-the easy-going quartermaster-general turned down the offer
-of the wool manufacturers’ association for the entire output<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xliii">[xliii]</span>
-of the country and the result was that the soldiers went into
-the winter without warm clothing or overcoats. As for artillery,
-the incapacity was complete.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile we sent a small expeditionary force to France,
-and in the autumn began sending troops across in a leisurely
-way, at the rate of ten thousand a week.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly, late in March, with the German army
-driving straight on Paris and the Allied defenses giving way,
-under the appeal of Lloyd George we suddenly woke to the
-fact that we had been playing with the war. From that time
-on we acted as if we had a man’s job, and we got into the line
-just in time to save the situation.</p>
-
-<p>All through the fall and winter of last year what <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Roosevelt and the other outspoken critics were trying to do
-was to arouse the country and the Administration to the
-magnitude of the task and to the danger from delay. They
-succeeded only partly. But they did succeed to the extent of
-forcing the removal of incompetent departmental chiefs, and
-the substitution of efficient men who were able to handle
-the emergency when the Administration finally discovered
-that the emergency existed.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back over the events of the last eighteen months,
-we believe no fair-minded American can fail to perceive the
-patriotic service done by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roosevelt and other critics,
-who were seeking to awaken the Government from a lethargy
-that just missed proving fatal to the Allied cause.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>VI</h3>
-
-<p>Colonel Roosevelt’s last visit to his desk in the
-editorial rooms of The Star was early in October,
-1918. It struck those who had been associated with
-him that he was not quite as fit as usual. I asked
-him if it were true the physicians had placed him on
-a diet. He said it was, but, to be frank, he had not
-given much heed to their recommendations. In a
-discussion at his desk with men of the editorial force<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xliv">[xliv]</span>
-a recent article about Roosevelt by George Creel
-came up. “I must admit,” said Colonel Roosevelt,
-laughing, “he took a rather jaundiced view of me.”</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Kirkwood was away in the army, but Mrs.
-Kirkwood was in Kansas City and the Colonel
-stayed at their home during his visit. At this time a
-subject was brought up which had been talked over
-along in the summer&mdash;a visit from him to the battle
-front to write at first hand of the American forces.
-Newspapers which were receiving the service and
-others which had heard of the suggestion were eager
-for Roosevelt articles from France, but from the
-first the Colonel had demurred and now said a final
-“No.” His reason was that he could not go as a
-private citizen, as he had been denied permission
-to go as a soldier; it would not only be unbecoming
-for a former president of the United States to go in
-any newspaper capacity, but how to treat him would
-be an embarrassing question to France.</p>
-
-<p>The tide had turned toward the Allies, and the
-country was certain the defeat of the enemy was
-a question of a short time. Colonel Roosevelt’s
-articles turned to a discussion of the kind of peace
-there should be and examinations of the President’s
-“Fourteen Points” and his notes to Austria. On
-November 11&mdash;the day the armistice was signed&mdash;it
-was considered necessary for Colonel Roosevelt to
-go to a hospital in New York. From his hospital
-room he telegraphed that day an editorial joining
-in the general rejoicing over peace and appraising
-tersely our part in the war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlv">[xlv]</span></p>
-
-<p>A few days later there came an editorial prompted
-by a letter from a woman friend in California.
-Visiting this friend was another woman whose son
-had died of influenza in the navy. That mother had
-said she had given her boy proudly to her country,
-“but if only he could have died with a gun in his
-hand&mdash;a little glory for him and a thought for me
-that my sacrifice had not been useless.” The California
-friend had written: “There must be other
-mothers who feel they have laid their sacrifices on
-cold altars. You have written much that will comfort
-the mothers whose sons have paid with their
-bodies in battle. Isn’t there something you can say
-to comfort these other mothers?”</p>
-
-<p>The letter touched Colonel Roosevelt deeply. “I
-felt a real pang when I received this letter,” he
-wrote, “because the thought suggested had been in
-my mind and yet I had failed to express it.” The
-editorial, “Sacrifices on Cold Altars,” which he
-wrote in response, gave consolation from the heart.
-It made it clear that all who had given their lives in
-the country’s service, whether in action or from disease,
-stood on “an exact level of service and sacrifice
-and honor and glory.” It concluded:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The mother or wife whose son or husband has died, whether
-in battle or by fever or in the accident inevitable in hurriedly
-preparing a modern army for war, must never feel that the
-sacrifice has been laid on “a cold altar.” There is no gradation
-of honor among these gallant men and no essential gradation
-of service. They all died that we might live; our debt is to
-all of them, and we can pay it even personally only by striving
-so to live as to bring a little nearer the day when justice and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlvi">[xlvi]</span>
-mercy shall rule in our own homes and among the nations of
-the world.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>From his entrance to the hospital until his departure
-on Christmas day, the editorials were less frequent.
-The Peace Conference, the Congressional
-elections, and the League of Nations were uppermost
-in public thought, and on these subjects the Colonel
-wrote several editorials. Both Colonel Roosevelt
-and The Star were anxious to find some means to
-lessen the chance of war through international organization.
-Both feared, from President Wilson’s addresses,
-that he had in view some grandiose plan that
-would be impractical. In December a member of
-The Star’s staff visited the Colonel in Roosevelt
-Hospital, New York. At that time he had written
-one or two editorials discussing the subject in a
-tentative way. He was asked if he did not think he
-could say something more positive.</p>
-
-<p>“I doubt it,” he said. “I feel there is so little that
-really can be done by any form of treaty to prevent
-war that it would be disappointing for me to point
-it out. Any treaty adopted under the influence of
-war emotions would be like the good resolutions
-adopted at a mass meeting. We have an anti-vice
-crusade. Everybody is aroused. The movement
-culminates in a big meeting and we adopt resolutions
-abolishing vice. But vice isn’t abolished that
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>Correspondence on the subject followed, and December
-28, 1918, he wrote this letter to the member
-of the staff who had been talking with him:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlvii">[xlvii]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In substance, or, as our friends the diplomats say, in
-principle, I am in hearty accord with you. But do you really
-think we ought to guarantee to stand with France and Italy
-in all future continental wars? It’s a pretty big guarantee
-and I don’t know whether it would be made good. Indeed, I
-don’t know whether it ought to be made good. I am most
-heartily with France and England now, but I certainly would
-not have been with France fifty years ago or with England
-sixty years ago, and our clear duty to antagonize Germany
-has slowly become apparent during the last thirty or forty
-years. Remember that you are freer to write unsigned editorials
-than I am when I use my signature. If you propose a
-little more than can be carried out, no harm comes, but if I
-do so it may hamper me for years. However, I will do my
-best to write you such an article as you suggest: and then
-probably one on what I regard as infinitely more important,
-namely, our business to prepare for our own self-defense.</p>
-
-<p>As for Wilson having with him the bulk of the people who
-are taken in by this name [The League of Nations], I attach
-less importance to this than you do. He is a conscienceless
-rhetorician and he will always get the well-meaning, foolish
-creatures who are misled by names. At present anything
-he says about the World League is in the domain of empty
-and windy eloquence. The important point will be reached
-when he has to make definite the thing for which he stands.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The article written in response to the promise in
-this letter was Colonel Roosevelt’s last contribution
-to The Star. It was dictated at his home at Oyster
-Bay, January 3, which was Friday. His secretary
-expected to take it to him for correction the following
-Monday. Instead an early call on the telephone that
-morning told of his passing away in his sleep.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Ralph Stout</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ROOSEVELT">ROOSEVELT
-IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img002">
- <img src="images/002.jpg" class="w5" alt="Three dots in a triangle" /></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="fitz">DR. FITZSIMONS’S DEATH<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 17, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The first name on the casualty list of the American
-army in France is that of <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> William T. Fitzsimons,
-of Kansas City, killed in a German air raid on our
-hospitals. <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Fitzsimons had already served for
-some time in a French hospital. As soon as this Nation
-went to war he volunteered for service abroad.</p>
-
-<p>There is sometimes a symbolic significance in the
-first death in a war. It is so in this case. To the
-mother he leaves, the personal grief must in some
-degree be relieved by the pride in the fine and gallant
-life which has been crowned by the great sacrifice.
-We, his fellow countrymen, share this pride and
-sympathize with this sorrow. But his death should
-cause us more than pride or sorrow; for in striking
-fashion it illustrates the two lessons this war should
-especially teach us&mdash;German brutality and American
-unpreparedness.</p>
-
-<p>The first lesson is the horror of Germany’s calculated
-brutality. As part of her deliberate policy of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-frightfulness she has carried on a systematic campaign
-of murder against hospitals and hospital ships.
-The first American in our army to die was killed in
-one of these typical raids. We should feel stern
-indignation against Germany for the brutality of
-which this was merely one among innumerable instances.
-But we should feel even sterner indignation
-towards&mdash;and fathomless contempt for&mdash;the base
-or unthinking folly of those Americans who aid and
-abet the authors of such foul wickedness; and these
-include all men and women who in any way apologize
-for or uphold Germany, who assail any of our
-allies, who oppose our taking active part in the war,
-or who desire an inconclusive peace.</p>
-
-<p>The second lesson is our unpreparedness. We are
-in the eighth month since Germany went to war
-against us; and we are still only at the receiving
-end of the game. We have not in France a single
-man on the fighting line. The first American killed
-was a doctor. No German soldier is yet in jeopardy
-from anything we have done.</p>
-
-<p>The military work we are now doing is work of
-preparation. It should have been done just three
-years ago. Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in
-time.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Although Colonel Roosevelt did not begin his regular contributions
-to The Star until October 1, the death of <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> W. T. Fitzsimons,
-of Kansas City, moved him to send this article.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BLOOD_IRON_AND_GOLD">BLOOD, IRON, AND GOLD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 23, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Bismarck announced that his policy for Germany
-was one of blood and iron. The men who now guide,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-and for some decades have guided, German international
-policy have added gold as the third weapon
-in Germany’s armory.</p>
-<p class="center p0 p2"><span class="figcenter" id="img003">
- <img src="images/003.jpg" class="w50" alt="A PAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT OF ONE OF ROOSEVELT’S EDITORIALS" />
-</span></p>
-<p class="center p0 caption">A PAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT OF ONE OF ROOSEVELT’S EDITORIALS<br /></p>
-
-
-<p>To a policy based on callous disregard of death and
-suffering, and the brutal use of force, they have
-added the habitual and extensive employment of
-corruption as a means for weakening their foes and
-bending other nations to their service.</p>
-
-<p>The Administration at Washington recently made
-public the proof that Ambassador Bernstorff, on
-behalf of the German Government, was, up to the
-very last moment of his stay, engaged in efforts to
-bribe with German money American organizations
-or individuals who could be used to further Germany’s
-purpose by protesting against war, demanding
-peace at any price, opposing the measures
-necessary for war, denouncing the Allied nations,
-praising unpreparedness, or by some other of the
-methods habitual with pro-German Senators, Congressmen,
-editors, heads of peace societies and the
-like.</p>
-
-<p>No well-informed man was surprised at the revelation.
-Every reasonably well-informed man, who has
-known about matters at Washington, has known
-that for nearly three years German money and governmental
-power has been used for the corruption of
-American newspapers and pacifist organizations and
-for the pay of German, and the bribery of native,
-scoundrels to wreck our industries with dynamite
-and in all ways debauch our political life. The Government,
-from the highest official down, knew all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-these facts over two years ago. The New York
-World published the names of some of the editors
-and other individuals who had received money, and
-the amounts received. The Austrian Ambassador,
-Dumba, and two of the German attachés, Boy-Ed
-and Von Papen, were dismissed for inspiring and
-countenancing the intrigues. It was absolutely impossible
-that what they did was not ordered and
-supervised by Bernstorff, under the direction of the
-Berlin Government. It was deeply to our discredit
-that we did not then show the courage and manliness
-to break at once with Germany, instead of hiding
-our heads in the sand so as to avoid seeing the guilt
-of the German Government, and punishing the
-minor instruments of wrongdoing who, under no conceivable
-circumstances, would or could have acted
-save as their superiors bade them act. Germany has
-hitherto been able to do but little against us with
-blood and iron; gold has been her weapon, and her
-agents have been the foes of our own household.</p>
-
-<p>Every man in this country who is now playing the
-pro-German game should be made to feel that he
-must overcome a presumption of guilty motive.
-There are misguided pro-Germans who are uninfluenced
-by corrupt motives, just as there were in
-the Civil War copperheads who were merely misguided
-and not conscious wrongdoers. But these
-men are in mighty unpleasant company!</p>
-
-<p>The pacifist, the man who wishes a peace without
-victory, the supporter of Senator La Follette or
-Senator Stone, the man who in any way now aids<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Germany, may be honest; but he stands cheek by
-jowl with hired traitors, and he is serving the cause
-of the malignant and unscrupulous enemies of his
-country.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_GHOST_DANCE_OF_THE_SHADOW">THE GHOST DANCE OF THE SHADOW
-HUNS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 1, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Ten days ago a ghost dance was held in St. Paul
-under the auspices of the Non-Partisan League, with
-Senator La Follette as the star performer. We have
-the authority of the German Kaiser for the use of the
-word Hun in a descriptive sense, as representing the
-ideal to which he wished his soldiers in their actions
-to approximate. It is therefore fair to use the word
-descriptively as a substitute for the German in this
-war. It is also fair to use it descriptively of the
-German sympathizer in this country, of the man who
-aids and abets Germany by condoning the German
-offenses against us, by seeking to raise class division
-in this country, with, of course, the attendant benefit
-to Germany; by screaming against the war, or in
-favor of an inconclusive peace; or by belittling or
-sneering at or declaring inopportune the effort to
-arouse the spirit of Americanism. The Americans
-who thus serve Germany deserve the title of Shadow
-Huns.</p>
-
-<p>It was to me a matter of sincere regret to have the
-Non-Partisan League play the part it did at St. Paul<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-in connection with the meeting which Senator La
-Follette addressed. They held what was in effect a
-disloyalty day festival. When the Non-Partisan
-League movement was first started, I was inclined
-to hail it, because I am exceedingly anxious to do
-everything in my power to grapple with and remedy
-every injustice or wrong or mere failure to give ample
-opportunity to the farmer. With most of the
-avowed objects and with some of the methods of the
-Non-Partisan League I was in entire sympathy, although
-there were certain things it did which I felt
-should be condemned, and certain ways of achieving
-its objects which I believed to be mischievous. But
-when the League, on the disloyalty day in question,
-ranged itself on the side of the allies of Germany and
-the enemies of this country, it became necessary for
-every loyal American severely to condemn it. Morally,
-although doubtless not legally, it thereby came
-perilously near ranging itself beside the I.W.W., the
-German-American Alliance, and the German Socialist
-party machine in America.</p>
-
-<p>When I spoke in Minneapolis three men spoke
-from the same platform with me. One was that fine
-and loyal American, Governor Burnquist, of Swedish
-ancestry. One was a blacksmith, born in Sweden,
-a former member of the Socialist party, who left the
-party within the last six months when he became
-convinced that it was the tool or ally of German
-autocracy. The third was another working-man, of
-German birth.</p>
-
-<p>At the meeting in Wisconsin I was on the platform<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-with the Mayor of Racine, an American citizen of
-German birth. My companions throughout the trip
-were Judge Harry Olson, of Swedish parentage, and
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Otto Butz, of German parentage, both of whom
-represent that kind of Americanism to which we all
-must subscribe if we are to be good Americans.</p>
-
-<p>The Americanism of all these men is the Americanism
-I profess, and it is the exact antithesis of the
-attitude of the Shadow Huns, who, under the lead of
-native-born Americans like Messrs. La Follette and
-Townley, by their utterances, stir dissensions among
-our own people and weaken us in the prosecution of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>The two working-men of whom I speak, the man
-born in Sweden and the man born in Germany, spoke
-with rugged emphasis of their devotion to this
-country, and of their sense of the duty of every man
-fit to be called an American in this crisis. They
-emphasized the fact that Germany’s social system
-was based upon the duty of the average man to
-cringe before the insolence of his superiors and his
-right himself to behave with insolence to his inferiors.
-It is for this system of cringing abasement
-before the powerful, and of brutal insolence to the
-weak for which the Shadow Huns in this country
-stand when they directly or indirectly talk against
-our Government for going to war or talk against any
-step which it takes for the efficient waging of the
-war; and, above all, when they directly or indirectly
-apologize for or champion Germany.</p>
-
-<p>It is the duty of every American citizen fearlessly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-but truthfully, to criticize not only his Government
-but his people, for wrongdoing, or for failure to do
-what is right. It is his duty to obey the injunction
-of President Wilson by insisting upon pitiless publicity
-of inefficiency, of subordination of public to
-private considerations, or of any other form of governmental
-failure to perform duty. Such criticism
-is absolutely indispensable if we are to do our duty
-in this war, and if we are to adopt a permanent
-policy of preparedness which will make this Nation
-safe. But the men who oppose the war; who fail to
-support the Government in every measure which
-really tends to the efficient prosecution of the war;
-and above all who in any shape or way champion the
-cause and the actions of Germany, show themselves
-to be the Huns within our own gates and the allies
-of the men whom our sons and brothers are crossing
-the ocean to fight.</p>
-
-<p>I do not admire these Shadow Huns. But least
-of all do I admire those among them, whether
-Senators, Congressmen, or public officials of any
-other kind who, although on Uncle Sam’s pay-roll,
-nevertheless seek to stab Uncle Sam in the back.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SAM_WELLER_AND_MR_SNODGRASS">SAM WELLER AND MR. SNODGRASS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 2, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Readers of “Pickwick,” if such there still be, will
-recall the time when <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Pickwick was arrested and
-some of his followers resisted arrest. Sam Weller<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-made no boasts; but he spoiled the looks of various
-opponents. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Snodgrass began ostentatiously to
-take off his coat, announcing in a loud voice that he
-was going to begin. But he gave no further trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Over eight months have elapsed since Germany
-went to war with us, and we severed relations with
-Germany as the first move in our sixty days’ stern
-foremost drift into, not going to, war, but admitting
-that we were already at war. During those eight
-months we have paid the penalty for our criminally
-complete failure to prepare during the previous
-three years by not having yet to our credit one single
-piece of completed achievement. The Administration
-has unwisely striven to cover this past failure
-to prepare, and present failure to achieve, by occasional
-grandiloquent pronunciamentos as to the
-wonderful things we are going to do in the future;
-and usually the language used is designed to convince
-ignorant people that these things have already
-been done.</p>
-
-<p>One day it is announced that we have discovered
-an infallible remedy against submarine attacks; and
-the next day it is announced that the toll by submarines
-is heavier than during any previous month.
-We read that the British drive is successful, but stubbornly
-resisted; that some thousands of prisoners
-have been taken; and that the losses have been
-terribly heavy. We read at the same time that we
-are going to have an immense army of aircraft&mdash;some
-time next spring. And actually there is less
-boasting over the former statement than over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-latter! We read of the valor and suffering of the
-French in some heroic assault; and the Administration
-proudly announces that, after eight months, the
-drafted men are beginning to assemble in their camps&mdash;and
-omits to mention that they have neither guns
-nor uniforms, are short of blankets and sweaters.</p>
-
-<p>So far the Sam Wellers who have done things are
-our allies. Uncle Sam is still complacently engaged
-in taking off his coat, like <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Snodgrass. Under
-such circumstances it is unwise for him to announce
-overloudly what he is going to do when at last he
-begins. Let him wait until he has done it; and
-meanwhile bend all his energies to doing it, and doing
-it soon. Brag is a good dog. But Holdfast is a better.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BROOMSTICK_PREPAREDNESS">BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 4, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>At present we Americans have two prime duties.</p>
-
-<p>The first is to make the best of actual conditions;
-to prepare our army, navy, merchant marine, air
-service, munition plants, agriculture, food conservation,
-and everything else as speedily as possible,
-so as to fight this war to a completely victorious
-conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>The second is not to fool ourselves, but to face
-the fact of our complete and lamentable unpreparedness.
-And to inaugurate a policy of permanent preparedness
-which will prevent our ever again being
-caught in such a humiliating condition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span></p>
-
-<p>The men of the national guard and of the drafted
-army are of admirable type. I do not believe that
-any other great nation can produce quite their equals
-on such a scale as we can; the zeal, energy, and
-adaptable intelligence with which they are doing all
-they can in the various camps must be a matter of
-pride for all Americans. There is all the more reason
-why such first-class material should be given a first-class
-chance for speedy and efficient action. It has
-not been given that chance. The steps we as a nation
-are now taking ought to have been taken three years
-ago. Failure to take them then has meant broomstick
-preparedness now. Failure to take them as a
-permanent policy now means broomstick preparedness
-in some future vital crisis when we may not
-have allies willing and able to protect us while we
-slowly prepare to meet the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The Ordnance Bureau of the War Department
-admits that we have not rifles for our national army,
-but attempts to excuse matters by saying that it is
-of no consequence because we shall have rifles a few
-months hence when our men are ready to go abroad.
-The admission is correct. The excuse is not. Even
-for training, it is better to arm infantrymen each
-with the weapon he is to use rather than to give each
-man a broomstick or to give every four men an
-antiquated rifle which cannot be used in service, and
-most of our artillery regiments at present either have
-no guns or wooden guns or, in rather rare cases, old-style
-guns which cannot be matched against any
-present-day artillery. Moreover, and this is the vital<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-point, we now have the time to prepare only because
-the English and French fleets and armies protect us.
-Eight months have passed since Germany openly
-went to war with us. As yet we have not rifles for
-our infantry. As yet we have not guns for our artillery.
-It will be at least a year after we were dragged
-into the war before our army will have received the
-weapons with which we are to wage the war.</p>
-
-<p>This is broomstick preparedness, and there is not
-the slightest use in trying to justify or excuse broomstick
-preparedness.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_BONDHOLDERS_AND_THE_PEOPLE">THE BONDHOLDERS AND THE PEOPLE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 7, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Not many years ago one of the favorite cries of
-those who wished to exploit for their own advantage
-the often justifiable popular unrest and discontent
-was that “the people were oppressed in the interest
-of the bondholders.” The more ardent souls of this
-type wished to repudiate the national debt, to “wipe
-it out as with a sponge,” in order to remove the
-“oppression.” The bondholders were always held up
-as greedy creatures who had obtained an unfair
-advantage of the people as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>Well, the Liberty Loan now offers the chance to
-make the people and the bondholders interchangeable
-terms. The bonds are issued in such a way that
-the farmer and the wage-worker have exactly the
-same chance as the banker to purchase and hold as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-many or as few as they wish. No matter how small a
-man’s means, he can get some part of a bond if he
-wishes. The Government and the big financiers are
-doing all they can to make the sale as widely distributed
-as possible. Some bankers are serving
-without pay in the effort to put all the facts before
-the people as a whole, and so make the loan in very
-truth a people’s loan. It rests with the people themselves
-to decide whether it shall be such.</p>
-
-<p>The Government must have the money. It is a
-patriotic duty to purchase the bonds. And they offer
-an absolutely safe investment. The money invested
-is invested on the best security in the world&mdash;that
-of the United States; of the American Nation itself.
-The money cannot be lost unless the United States
-is destroyed, and in that case we would all of us be
-smashed anyhow, so that it would not make any
-difference. The people can, if they choose, now
-make themselves the bondholders. If they do not so
-choose, and if they force Wall Street to become the
-largest purchaser of the bonds, which must be bought
-somehow, then they will have no right in the future
-to grumble about the bondholders as a special class.
-We can now, all of us, join that class if we wish.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FACTORIES_OF_GOOD_CITIZENSHIP">FACTORIES OF GOOD CITIZENSHIP</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 10, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The training camps for the drafted men of the national
-army are huge factories for turning out first-class
-American citizens. Not only are they fitting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-our people for war; they are fitting them for the
-work of peace. They are making patriotism, love of
-country, devotion to the flag, and a sense of duty to
-others living facts, instead of unreal phrases. The
-public schools are laboratories of Americanism for
-our children; the training camps are laboratories of
-Americanism for our young men.</p>
-
-<p>I have just seen a party of drafted men from the
-East Side of New York City start for Camp Upton
-with a band playing, an American flag flying. And
-two of their number in front, one dressed as Uncle
-Sam, and the other as the Kaiser, dragged along in
-manacles. There is no fifty-fifty Americanism in
-men with such spirit. A captain at this camp, a
-Plattsburg man, told me that his company of East
-Side New Yorkers showed all the intelligence and the
-zealous desire to learn which the fine young college
-graduates at Plattsburg have shown. Another captain
-told me that one of his men, a young Jew, had
-come to him and said that at first the East Siders had
-hated coming, not knowing what was ahead of them,
-but that now they felt that they were in a University
-of American Citizenship. A surgeon in the camp
-told me that men also, proved physically lacking after
-a week’s trial, were in most cases bitterly chagrined
-at being sent away. A colonel from a Southern camp
-has reported that already his country boys from the
-remote farms are straightening and broadening morally,
-mentally, and physically, and that the improvement
-is really incalculable. From every camp we
-hear of the eagerness with which the men are doing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-their duty, of their resourcefulness and of the real
-patriotism which is being rapidly learned. All this
-means not merely good soldiers in war, but good
-citizens in peace; it means an immense growth in
-the spirit of Americanism.</p>
-
-<p>The young men are learning to be efficient, alert,
-self-respectful and respectful of others; they are
-learning to scorn laziness, slackness, and cowardice.
-All are serving on a precise equality of privilege and
-of duty and are judged each only on his merits. The
-sons of the foreign-born learn that they are exactly
-as good Americans as any one else, and when they
-return to their home their families will learn it, too.</p>
-
-<p>Let all good Americans insist that now, without
-delay, we make this state of affairs our permanent
-national policy by law. We have built the camp, we
-have encountered the failures to provide army uniforms
-and blankets and all the other exasperating
-delays which are inevitable when a nation like ours
-has foolishly trusted to broomstick preparedness.
-We shall avoid all these things for the future if we
-continue these camps, as permanent features of the
-life of all our young men, and change the selective
-draft unto a system of universal obligatory military
-training for all our young men of nineteen and
-twenty, it being understood that they are not to
-go to war until they are twenty-one. We are now
-suffering, and the whole world is now suffering, from
-the effects of our broomstick preparedness. Let us
-do away with broomstick preparedness for the future
-and substitute real preparedness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="PILLAR-OF-SALT_CITIZENSHIP">PILLAR-OF-SALT CITIZENSHIP</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 12, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>When Lot’s wife was journeying to safety, she could
-not resist looking back to the land she had left and
-was thereupon turned to a pillar of salt. The men
-from the Old World who, instead of adopting an
-attitude of hearty and exclusive loyalty to their
-land, try also to look backward to their old countries,
-become pillars-of-salt citizens, who are not merely
-useless, but mischievous members of our commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>The dispatches of the German Government, just
-published by the State Department, give us an
-illuminating glimpse, not only of German methods
-and of German conduct towards this country, but
-also of certain phases of our own citizenship. The
-German Government proposed to use this country
-as a basis of operations for wrecking the Canadian
-railway. It also proposed to use and pay its agents
-and certain of our citizens for “sabotage in every
-kind of American factory for supplying munitions of
-war,” and for “a vigorous campaign to secure a
-majority in both houses favorable to Germany.”
-The German staff, in issuing these directions and in
-naming certain American citizens as tools for the
-treacherous work, insisted that the embassy should
-not be compromised and that “similar precautions
-must be taken in regard to Irish pro-German
-propaganda.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span></p>
-
-<p>Good citizens who have been misled by false
-counsel must now clearly see that the campaign of
-dynamite against our industries, with the attendant
-wreckage and murder, was a deliberate act of secret
-war by the German Government; that the attempt
-by Americans to secure an embargo on sending munitions
-to the Allies was an effort to aid Germany in
-thus making war on the United States; that the
-Irish pro-German movement in this country was
-financed and guided from Germany, and that our
-citizens, whether of foreign or native birth, whether
-of native American or German or Irish origin, who
-took part in pushing these movements, were doing
-substantially the same kind of work that Benedict
-Arnold once tried to do.</p>
-
-<p>Some of them were doubtless paid, others were
-doubtless not paid, but the paid and the unpaid
-alike were serving Germany against the United
-States. These matters are now all of public record.
-The excuse of ignorance can no longer avail any one.
-Henceforth the citizens of German or Irish birth
-who take part in such activities as those of most of
-the German-American alliances and the like, are at
-best standing in the position of pillar-of-salt citizenship;
-at worst they, and above all their native
-American associates, who now indulge in pacifist
-movements or demand a peace without overwhelming
-victory or ask for a referendum on the war, or
-in any other way serve the brutal and conscienceless
-ambition of Germany, stand unpleasantly near
-the lonely eminence occupied by Benedict Arnold.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BROOMSTICK_APOLOGISTS">BROOMSTICK APOLOGISTS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 14, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The chief of the Ordnance Bureau of the army, in
-commenting on the shortage of rifles, has said that
-it is of no consequence, because “every soldier will
-be supplied a rifle when he starts for France.”</p>
-
-<p>Of course he will, otherwise he cannot start. One
-of the leading papers of New York backs up the
-statement by saying that the “drilling in the camps
-without rifles is ended now” and that “General
-Crozier delayed the work so as to get rifles with the
-same ammunition our allies are using.”</p>
-
-<p>Neither statement is correct. The last is the reverse
-of truth. On October 2 in one camp there were
-still only one hundred rifles for twenty thousand
-men and other camps were scarcely better off, and
-the delay in getting rifles during the last eight
-months has been due primarily to the refusal of the
-Ordnance Department to get rifles using the ammunition
-of our allies.</p>
-
-<p>If during the two years preceding our entry into
-the war the Government factories had been run full
-speed, we would have had over two million of
-Springfield rifles instead of under one million. Our
-shortage was due solely to our policy of dawdle. Our
-factories produced a mere dribble of rifles and no big
-field guns until the inevitable happened.</p>
-
-<p>War came. Having no rifles of our own for the
-new army, the War Department decided to adopt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-the English rifle, the Enfield, which was being built
-in this country at the rate of nearly nine thousand
-a day in private plants, and by speeding them up the
-number could have been immediately increased
-to fourteen thousand a day. But the authorities
-insisted that the Enfields should be changed to take
-our ammunition, and that certain parts should be
-standardized and made interchangeable. As regards
-this excuse, it is sufficient to point out that in the
-first place it was a very grave error, while making
-the parts of our Enfields interchangeable, at the
-same time to make their ammunition not interchangeable
-with that of the British Enfields, for the
-number of Springfields on hand was negligible compared
-to the millions of rifles we would ultimately
-need, and in the second place the delay even for this
-purpose was wholly inexcusable. The German submarine
-note came on January 31. An alert War Department
-would have had its rifle programme minutely
-mapped out within two weeks. The delay in
-furnishing final specifications to the factories was
-such that they could not begin on the complete rifle
-until the latter part of August. Six months is a
-“perfectly endurable delay” only if we are content
-to accept the speed standards in war of Tiglath-Pileser
-and Pharaoh Necho. The United States must
-learn to adopt the war speed standards of the Twentieth
-Century, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span>, instead of those of the Seventh
-Century, <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p>If in April we had been ready to proceed with the
-Enfield rifle, we would now have about two million<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-of the new rifles instead of about one-fiftieth of that
-number. General Crozier says that we have only
-had to wait “two or three months&mdash;a perfectly endurable
-delay.” Surely if there is anything this war
-teaches it is the vital importance of time. Two or
-three months’ waiting in order to get a rifle which
-does not carry the ammunition of our allies represents
-not merely an undesirable delay but grave
-unwisdom.</p>
-
-<p>General Crowder handled the draft to perfection
-because he appreciated that the difference between
-sending a telegram at 5 or at 4:45 might be of momentous
-consequence. General Crozier has bungled
-the rifle situation because of the attitude which
-makes him regard two or three months as “a perfectly
-endurable delay.”</p>
-
-<p>For two years and a half before entering the war
-we relied upon broomstick preparedness. For the
-first eight months of the war we have followed the
-same policy as regards the vital matter of rifles for
-our troops.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIBERTY_LOAN_AND_THE">THE LIBERTY LOAN AND THE
-PRO-GERMANS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 16, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Victor Berger, the Socialist leader of Milwaukee,
-is reported in the press as sneering at the
-Liberty bonds, berating the Administration for, as
-he says, appointing thirty-three wealthy capitalists
-on the National Council of Defense, and in effect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-seeming to persuade his hearers that they ought, at
-this crisis of foreign war, to be hostile to those of
-their countrymen who are “capitalists” instead of
-the Kaiser.</p>
-
-<p>This is natural. The Socialist party machine in
-this country is run by Germans. Socialists, who
-were sincerely desirous of social betterment and who
-were sincere in this hatred of tyranny and wrongdoing,
-have left the Socialist party. Those who remain
-in it have turned it into a mere tool of the
-brutal militaristic autocracy which now threatens
-the world. These men are completely dominated by
-the Germans, and German Socialists in America
-have shown in this crisis that they are Germans
-first, Socialists a long way second, and not Americans
-at all. In fact, they are venomously hostile
-to the country in which they dwell and claim citizenship,
-and are eagerly ready to sacrifice Socialism
-itself to the interests of the Germany of the Hohenzollerns.
-They stand well to the front among the
-Shadow Huns who, within our gates, are the allies of
-the Huns without our gates.</p>
-
-<p>While in Wisconsin I was told that the German-American
-Alliance, in its efforts to persuade American
-citizens to betray their citizenship in the interests
-of Germany, had relatively as many adherents
-among the Socialists as among the two great parties.</p>
-
-<p>When the Socialists under such leadership oppose
-or sneer at the Liberty Loan, it is proof positive that
-all patriotic citizens should buy Liberty bonds up to
-the limit of their ability. The Socialists attack the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-Liberty Loan in order to hurt America and help
-Germany. The domination of “American capitalism”
-is a mere blind to obscure the service they are
-trying to render to the capitalists and militarists of
-Germany.</p>
-
-<p>For the composition of the National Council of
-Defense, I am sorry that more labor men and farmers
-are not on it, but I wish they could be put on in addition
-to, not as substitutes for, the men of means who
-are on it, for these men of means, taken as a whole,
-have at much cost to themselves rendered devoted
-and invaluable service to the Nation. Their absence
-would be a general calamity to America and a great
-aid to Germany, and all true lovers of America
-should recognize this fact. I know some of these
-men personally, and those whom I know have sacrificed
-time, effort, and money in order to be of help to
-the Nation at this juncture. In fact, I have never
-known more devoted public service than that they
-rendered at this crisis.</p>
-
-<p>It is unpatriotic at this time to attack good Americans
-because they have capital and are trying to
-make this capital of service in the war. Capital is
-necessary to business and industry, and in this war
-industrial efficiency is almost as necessary as military
-skill. The factories at home are almost as important
-as the armies in the field. Wise war taxation of
-capital and profits is eminently necessary, but it
-must not go to an extent that will interfere with production
-and the forward movement of business, or
-widespread calamity would result.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span></p>
-
-<p>We are a great Nation, engaged in a stupendous
-war. Let us use dollars as we use the loaded shells,
-and each can do its best work only under the leadership
-of the ablest man: the business man in one case,
-the military man in the other. By all means let the
-people be masters of the capital of the country at
-the present time. The surest way to do this is for
-the people themselves to buy the Liberty bonds
-and not leave them to Wall Street. They are the
-one absolutely safe investment, both for men of
-small means and men of large means.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_DIFFICULT_QUESTION_TO_ANSWER">A DIFFICULT QUESTION TO ANSWER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 18, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A correspondent in Pueblo, Colorado, writes me
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By what logic are we “at peace” with Austria, when she
-is furnishing troops or artillery to Germany to fight and kill
-our soldiers on the western front? The same question might
-apply to Turkey. Remember, too, that we are furnishing
-money and supplies to Italy, our ally, in her struggle with
-Austria. The Western folks are looking to you to answer
-hard questions of this sort for us which we don’t understand.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Neither I nor any one else can satisfactorily answer
-the question. A limited liability war in which
-we fight Germany ourselves and pay money to Italy
-and Russia to enable them to fight Austria and
-Turkey, with whom we are at peace, savors of sharp
-practice and not of statesmanship. It is a good rule<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-either to stay out of war or to go into it, but not to
-try to do both things at once.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, this matter squarely tests our sincerity
-when we announced that we went to war to make
-the world safe for democracy. The phrase must have
-been used in a somewhat oratorical fashion, anyhow,
-because we have ourselves within the last year or
-two made the world entirely unsafe for democracy
-in the two small and weak republics of Haiti and
-San Domingo. Therefore, the phrase must have
-meant that we intended to make the world safe for
-well-behaved nations, great or small, to enjoy their
-liberty and govern themselves as they wished. If it
-did not mean this, the phrase was much worse than
-an empty flourish, for it was deliberately deceitful.
-If it did mean this, then we are recreant to our
-promise unless we at once go to war with Austria and
-Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>Both these nations are racial conglomerates, in
-which one or two nationalities tyrannize over other
-subject nationalities. The world will not and cannot
-be safe for democracy until the Armenians, the
-Syrian Christians, and the Arabs are freed from
-Turkish tyranny, and until the Poles, Bohemians,
-and Southern Slavs, now under the Austrian yoke,
-are made into separate, independent nations, and
-until the Italians of Southwest Austria are restored
-to Italy and the Rumanians of Eastern Hungary to
-Rumania.</p>
-
-<p>Unless we propose in good faith to carry out this
-programme, we have been guilty of a rhetorical sham<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-when we pledged ourselves to make the world safe
-for democracy. The United States must not make
-promises which it has no intention of performing.
-We are breaking this promise and incidentally are
-acting absurdly every day that we continue at
-nominal peace with Germany’s fellow tyrants and
-subject allies, Austria and Turkey.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="NOW_HELP_THE_LIBERTY_LOAN">NOW HELP THE LIBERTY LOAN</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 20, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The concrete services to the United States which
-every decent American not fortunate enough to be a
-soldier can now render, is to buy as many Liberty
-bonds as he can afford.</p>
-
-<p>The Treasury Department has set forth in the
-public press the facts about the campaign which the
-pro-Germans in the United States are waging
-against the Liberty Loan. The campaign is being
-waged by trying to prevent banks from handling
-the Liberty Loan, and by the publication in certain
-newspapers of articles tending to discourage people
-from investing in the bonds. Senator La Follette’s
-speeches, which are to the same effect, are also being
-circulated with a view to check popular subscriptions.
-Senator La Follette, by the way, represents
-exactly the type which tries to prevent the people
-from owning the bonds and, nevertheless, will in
-the future probably rail at the purchasers of the
-bonds as having, somehow or other, obtained an
-improper and excessive profit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span></p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as the enemies of the Liberty Loan are
-of this type, all patriotic Americans should strain
-every nerve to make the sale a success. Moreover,
-this happens to be one of those rare cases where the
-performance of a patriotic duty is a first-class financial
-investment. The patriot is rendering a great
-service to the Nation while he is also making a
-capital investment for himself. If the people do
-not take the bonds, they will be taken by the big
-capitalists. The people have the first call, and while
-it is desirable in the interest of everybody to make
-this a people’s loan, it is more desirable from the
-standpoint of the people themselves. The investment
-is absolutely safe. The men and women who
-fail to take advantage of it are not standing by the
-country and they are not standing by their own
-interests. Every man, from the day laborer to the
-bank president, should, according to his means,
-invest in the Liberty bonds.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_THE">A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE
-TRAINING CAMPS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 21, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Playgrounds and Recreation Association of
-America has undertaken a capital work in pushing
-the War Camp Community Committee, of which
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> John N. Willys, of Toledo, is chairman. The
-War Camp Committee work for Missouri, Kansas,
-Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, and Colorado has made
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> I. R. Kirkwood chairman, and has begun an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-active drive to get the three-quarter of a million
-dollars allotted to this district out of the total of
-four million to be raised in the country.</p>
-
-<p>The movement should receive the heartiest backing.
-It represents much more even than the very
-important work of providing amusements for the
-hundreds of thousands of enlisted men in the various
-camps, for it also has to deal with the moral and
-sanitary surroundings, not only in camps, but in
-the neighboring towns and cities. In former wars
-the number of men incapacitated by diseases contracted
-in the camps often surpassed the number incapacitated
-by the sickness due to the hardships and
-exposure at the front. This was because of lax supervision
-of the neighborhood moral and sanitary conditions,
-and also from failure to instruct the soldiers
-that it is a shameful and unsoldierly thing to expose
-themselves to disease due to indulgence in vice.</p>
-
-<p>The committee is working not only in the interests
-of national morality and decency. It is also working
-in the interest of military efficiency, for it will save
-scores of thousands of soldiers from being shamefully
-incapacitated before reaching the front, and the
-gain to the Nation from the economical as well as
-the moral standpoint, after the war, will be very
-great.</p>
-
-<p>The work of the committee will be carried on
-outside the camps in the adjacent communities
-acting in coöperation with churches, clubs, and organizations
-of public-spirited men and women. It
-will be wholly different from the work inside the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-camps, which is done by the Y.M.C.A., the Knights
-of Columbus, the Y.M.H.A., and similar bodies.
-In many places the local authorities already have
-done much work along the lines sketched by the
-national committee, and wherever this is the case,
-the national committee will surely aid the local
-bodies.</p>
-
-<p>All good and patriotic men and women should
-heartily back this work to keep Uncle Sam’s soldiers
-clean, decent, and self-respecting; to make them
-better citizens and more formidable fighting men.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_PASSING_OF_THE_CRIPPLE">THE PASSING OF THE CRIPPLE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 23, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>If men are alert, resolute, and energetic, they can
-usually secure some compensation from any calamity.
-This dreadful war, attended by the killing
-and crippling of men on a scale hitherto unknown,
-has brought as a compensation a determined move
-to do away with the cripple; that is, to cease the
-mere effort to keep a crippled man alive and, instead,
-to endeavor by reconstructive surgery to restore him
-to himself and to the community as an economic
-asset.</p>
-
-<p>Surgeon-General Gorgas and his associates have
-worked out, and are ready practically to test, an organized
-system under which any seemingly crippled
-man is to be kept under the guidance of the medical
-branch of the army until either the usefulness of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-damaged part has been restored or else until he has
-been trained in other ways so as to enable him
-measurably to overcome the handicap. In almost
-every case something will be done to make the
-cripple less of a burden to himself and others, and
-in most cases, the army medical service confidently
-believes, the cripple will once more become a useful
-and therefore a happy citizen. In all our special
-hospitals that are now being planned, the curative
-workshop is part of the plant. The effort is to be
-not only for the physical development and physical
-reëducation of the wounded part, but also for any
-intellectual training necessary to produce new forms
-of effective ability which will offset any loss in
-physical ability. The aim is not merely to save the
-life of, and then turn loose, a crippled pensioner
-who can be little but a burden on the community;
-it is to take care of the wounded man until the very
-best of which he is capable has been developed, so
-that when once more in the outside world he will
-be a real asset to the Nation. This is a fine thing for
-the Nation, and is of incalculable consequence from
-the standpoint of the self-respect and happiness of
-the man.</p>
-
-<p>This represents the complete reversal of the old
-point of view, which was that the cripple was turned
-loose with a pension for less than what if sound in
-body he would have earned, and a burden on
-the community. The purpose of Surgeon-General
-Gorgas and his associates is that the Government
-shall stand behind the man and invest money in him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-so as to develop all his latent resources, fitting him
-to make good as a citizen and expecting him thus to
-make good. There will be, where necessary, a money
-compensation for the injury, but the great compensation
-will be the return to useful life of the man
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>The far-reaching effect of such a policy is evident.
-The purpose is to insist that every man, no matter
-how maimed, shall be made of further use in the
-world. If once the army acts on this theory, the
-great industries will follow suit. The cripple, in
-the sense of being a helpless or useless cripple, will
-largely be eliminated, and out of this war will have
-come another step in the slow march of mankind
-towards a better and more just life.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_PEACE_OF_COMPLETE_VICTORY">THE PEACE OF COMPLETE VICTORY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 23, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is stated in a press report from Washington that
-the Allies wish the United States to stop sending
-men abroad and use its ships for food and munitions
-instead, but that the Administration will not agree
-to the plan, and furthermore that the Administration
-is determined that there shall be no peace until Germany
-is completely beaten. If the report is correct,
-the Administration is absolutely right on both points.</p>
-
-<p>As to the first point, we can well understand, in
-view of the steady U-boat campaign, how greatly
-the Allies desire food and munitions, and we regret<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-with bitter shame the folly of our Government in
-dawdling and delaying for six vital months after the
-German note of January 31 last before seriously
-beginning the work of building big, swift cargo boats.
-But this cannot alter the fact that for the sake of
-our honor and our future world usefulness we must
-ourselves fight and not merely hire others to fight
-for us. If we do not follow this course, our children’s
-heads will be bowed with humiliation. With proper
-energy we could already have had some hundreds
-of thousands of men in the firing line, and we should
-send our troops over as rapidly as possible, with the
-purpose to put at least two million men against the
-German lines next year, an entirely possible programme
-if the Government will lend its energies
-with a single mind to the task.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the second point, every decent citizen
-should make the pacifist and the home Hun realize
-that agitation for a premature peace, for a peace
-without victory, is seditious. Shame on every man,
-and above all on every public servant and every
-leader of public opinion, who endeavors to weaken
-the determination of America to see the war through
-and at all costs secure an overwhelming triumph for
-the principles for which we contend. If Germany is
-left unbeaten, the Western Hemisphere will stand in
-cowering dread of an assault by Germany’s ruthless
-and barbarous autocracy. The liberties of the free
-peoples of the world are at stake.</p>
-
-<p>We must now fight with all our might on European
-soil beside our allies or else fear the day when we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-will have to fight without allies beside our burning
-homes. While this war lasts, the cause of our allies
-is our cause, their defeat would be our defeat, and
-whoever assails them or defends Germany is a traitor
-to the United States. There must be no negotiated
-peace. Belgium is entitled to an enormous indemnity
-and France to annexation of Alsace and
-Lorraine. By her marine murders and her shore
-raids and her utter treachery and abominable
-cruelty, Germany has made herself the outlaw
-among nations, and with her we should negotiate
-only through the mouths of our cannon. All who
-now advocate a negotiated peace with her are seeking
-to betray civilization in the interest of brute force
-and international outrage. The United States owes
-her entrance into this war almost as much to the
-American pacifist as to the German militarist, and
-now the former is meanly eager once more to serve
-the latter by securing an unjust peace. Let every
-brave and patriotic American spurn the base counsels
-of the pro-Germans and pacifists, and insist that
-this country, at whatever cost, fight steadfastly until
-the war closes with Germany’s complete overthrow.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FIGHTING_WORK_FOR_THE_MAN_OF">FIGHTING WORK FOR THE MAN OF
-FIGHTING AGE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 25, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Y.M.C.A. is one of the most powerful agencies
-for good in our military camps here at home and with
-our armies abroad. It would be a veritable calamity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-not to have it do this work. The women and the
-elderly men who have gone abroad under present
-conditions are rendering a patriotic service of high
-value, but every young man of fighting age who has
-gone abroad for the Y.M.C.A. at this time is a positive
-damage to the work and should be instantly
-sent home. It is an ignoble thing for an able-bodied
-man to be in such a position of bodily safety where
-his example must naturally excite contempt and resentment
-among the men who, unlike him, are risking
-their lives and have left their families for the sake
-of a great ideal. Of course, no man of draft age
-should be sent over, but this is not enough. The
-draft represents merely the minimum performance
-of duty. No man of age to permit his entering the
-army abroad or at home should be sent over. If any
-such man is not in the army, it should be either because
-he has been turned down by the army authorities
-for physical reasons or because his work at home
-either for his family or for the Government imperatively
-demands his presence here. If he is able to go
-abroad at all, he should go abroad in the army. The
-fact that he is abroad for the Y.M.C.A. is proof
-positive that he has no business to be there.</p>
-
-<p>An officer in high command in France recently
-wrote home a letter, which I have seen, describing
-the experiences of the junior officers of his command
-with some of the young able-bodied Y.M.C.A. representatives.
-He began by an emphatic testimony to
-the admirable work the Y.M.C.A. had done and to
-its great importance, and by an emphatic statement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-that it had a thoroughly bad effect on the enlisted
-men to see a young man of their own age engaged in
-such work. He then illustrated its effect on the
-young officers with whom these Y.M.C.A. men
-messed, writing:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Two young Y.M.C.A. men have been at two of the battalion
-messes. They are of the age whose presence here is an
-annoyance to the army because they seem to have been exempted
-from the draft. They have obtained bullet-proof jobs
-and their presence here is a bad example to all the young men
-in the army. Last night at one mess the officers were so disgusted
-with the Y.M.C.A., who was actually wearing a uniform
-with an officer’s belt on, that they began to chaff him,
-telling him that they were married men and were entitled to
-play safety first themselves and thought they would apply for
-jobs in the Salvation Army. The Y.M.C.A. had to stand for
-this because he was the only unmarried man there, and it is
-said that his mother persuaded him that he owed her a duty
-not to go in a dangerous place. He evidently feels his duty
-keenly. The other young fellow from the Y.M.C.A. was a
-real man and he left the soft job and has enlisted as a private.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Y.M.C.A. is so very useful an organization
-that it is profoundly to be regretted that it should in
-any way damage its usefulness. Its work with the
-armies abroad should be done exclusively by women
-and elderly men. No able-bodied man under forty-five
-should represent the Y.M.C.A. in the war zone
-or with the army camps.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WISE_WOMEN_AND_FOOLISH_WOMEN">WISE WOMEN AND FOOLISH WOMEN</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 27, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There are wise and foolish women just as there are
-wise and foolish men, and in any great crisis the welfare<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-of this country depends upon the extent to
-which the wise and patriotic men and the wise and
-patriotic women can offset or overcome the folly of
-the foolish.</p>
-
-<p>The woman who bravely and cheerfully sends her
-men to battle when the country calls takes her place
-high on the national honor roll. She stands beside
-the mothers and wives of the men of ’76 and of the
-men who wore the blue and the gray in the Civil
-War. Where would this country now be if Washington’s
-mother had not raised her boy to be a
-soldier for the right?</p>
-
-<p>But the women who do not raise their boys to be
-soldiers when the country needs them are unfit to
-live in this republic. The women who at this time
-try to dissuade their husbands or sons who are of
-military age from entering the army or navy are
-thoroughly unworthy citizens. The kind of affection
-which shows itself by refusing to allow the boy to
-face hard work when it is his duty to do so, the
-mother who brings up her boy to be a worthless
-idler, because she is too fond of him to see him suffer
-the discomfort of hard work, and the mother who
-desires her boy to play the coward or the shirk, in
-time of war, are not merely foolish; they are poor
-citizens. They are the real enemies of their sons, for
-there can be no more dangerous enemy than the
-human being, man or woman, who teaches another
-human being to lose his soul in order to save his
-body. The wise mother is the best of all good citizens
-and the foolish mother stands almost at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-other end of the scale. I wish every mother in the
-land could read Theodosia Garrison’s poem, recently
-sent out by that stirring body of patriots, the Vigilantes.
-It describes the youth of twenty years, eager
-to play a manly part while his mother seeks to hold
-him from the post of danger and duty, and two of
-the verses run:</p>
-
-<p class="poetry p0">
-Mother of his twenty years, who holds against his will<br />
-The eager heart, the quick blood, and bids them to be still,<br />
-What of the young untrammeled soul you seek to blunt and kill?<br />
-<br />
-You would save the body stainless and complete,<br />
-Fetters on the hands of it, shackles on the feet;<br />
-And in the crippling of them make soul and body meet.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WHY_CRY_OVER_SPILT_MILK">WHY CRY OVER SPILT MILK?</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 28, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Nice, short-sighted persons, when the evil effects of
-our folly in failing to prepare are pointed out, sometimes
-ask, “Why cry over spilt milk?” The answer
-is that we wish to be sure that we do not spill it
-again, and, unfortunately, the nice persons who bleat
-against any one who points out our shortcomings in
-preparedness or who excuse and champion those
-responsible for this unpreparedness, are doing all
-they can to invite future disaster for the Nation.</p>
-
-<p>The bleat assumes different expressions in different
-localities. Recently the Mayor of Abilene,
-Texas, expressed his disapproval of my pointing out
-that we, as a Nation, had wholly failed to prepare,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-by saying that I was “a seditious conspirator who
-ought to be shot dead,” and that the editor of the
-newspaper publishing the article “should be tarred
-and feathered.” Although differing in method of expression,
-this slightly homicidal bleat of the gentle-souled
-(and doubtless entirely harmless) Mayor of
-Abilene, Texas, is exactly similar in thought to the
-utterances of all these sheeplike creatures who raise
-quavering or incoherent protests against every
-honest and patriotic man who points out the damage
-done by our failure to prepare.</p>
-
-<p>These persons cannot deny one fact I state. Nine
-months have passed since, on January 31, Germany
-sent us a note which was practically a declaration of
-war. We have only just put troops in the trenches;
-many of the troops of our draft army training at
-home have until recently only had broomsticks, and
-now only have one old Spanish War rifle for every
-eight soldiers; most of the artillery regiments in
-these camps either have no guns or wooden guns.
-After nine months we are still wholly unable to defend
-ourselves or to render efficient military aid to
-our allies, and we owe safety from invasion only to
-the protection of the fleets and armies of the war-worn
-and weary nations to whose help we nominally
-came. No man can truthfully deny these statements,
-no man can seriously regard this situation as satisfactory.
-To try to cover up the truth by bluster and
-brag and downright falsehoods may possibly deceive
-ourselves, but will deceive no one else, whether
-friend or foe. Is such foolish deceit worth while?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time. We
-were not wise in time. Let us learn from our past
-folly future wisdom. Our first duty is to win this
-war, and therefore the Shadow Hun within our gates
-is our worst internal foe. Our next and equally important
-duty is to prepare against disaster in the
-future, and therefore our next worst internal foe is
-the sheeplike creature who invites national disaster
-for the future by bleating against the telling of the
-truth in the present.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SAVE_THE_FOODSTUFF">SAVE THE FOODSTUFF</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 30, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hoover has been appointed as the man to lead
-us of this Nation in the vitally important matter of
-producing and saving as much food as we possibly
-can in order that we can send abroad the largest
-possible amount for the use of our suffering allies
-and for the use of our own gallant soldiers. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Hoover’s preëminent services in Belgium pointed
-him out as of all the men in this country the man
-most fit for the very position to which he has been
-appointed. Let us give him our most hearty and
-loyal support.</p>
-
-<p>In this great and terrible war the slaughter, starvation,
-and exhaustion are on a scale never before
-known. They are nation-wide. Therefore every individual
-of every nation engaged must do his full
-part or else must be held to have failed in his duty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-The man of fighting age must fight. The man with
-especial business capacity or mechanical skill must
-produce arms or equipment or ammunition. And
-every man, woman, or child must help produce food
-if possible, and in any event must help economize it.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hoover has asked us during this week to devote
-ourselves to getting all our people voluntarily
-to pledge themselves to certain forms of food economy,&mdash;which
-are of great consequence from the
-standpoint of sending abroad the foodstuffs needed
-by our Allies and by our own troops. There are certain
-foods which are easily transported which are
-nourishing and which are peculiarly suited for the
-use both of our allies and of our troops in the field.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hoover’s plan is that we shall all of us voluntarily
-limit along strict lines our consumption of
-these food products and replace them by other foods
-which are not suitable for sending abroad, and that
-we shall rigidly avoid waste. Full particulars are
-given in the pamphlets sent out by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hoover
-from his Washington Bureau of Food Conservation.</p>
-
-<p>What <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hoover asks entails not the slightest
-real hardship on any of us. It merely requires each
-of us to exercise a little self-control and perhaps to
-make some trivial sacrifice of personal preference
-in what we eat. Surely this is a very, very small
-service to be rendered by us stay-at-homes in support
-of our sons and brothers who have gone or are
-going to risk their lives in battle for us and mankind.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="ON_THE_FIRING_LINE">ON THE FIRING LINE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 31, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Our men are now actually on the firing line, and
-while, of course, they are as yet there primarily for
-purposes of instruction, nevertheless, they are there.
-They are at times under fire. They are at any moment
-liable to death in upholding the honor of their
-country, of your country, my reader, and of mine.</p>
-
-<p>General Pershing’s original division under his
-direction and the direction of his lieutenants, such
-as Major-General Sibert, Brigadier-General Duncan,
-and their associates, has evidently been trained to a
-high point of efficiency. The accounts show that the
-infantry effected their entrance to the trenches with
-the precision of veterans. Evidently the artillery
-is being handled with similar efficiency. Apparently,
-from the account, our artillerymen are using French
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>All Americans must feel a glow of pride as he reads
-of the soldierly manner in which our American
-troops have made their entry into the fire zone.
-But we must not confine ourselves merely to feeling
-pride in our fellow countrymen who are at the front
-risking their lives in doing their duty on behalf of
-all of us. We must back them up. We must support
-the Government in every movement taken efficiently
-to put the strength of this Nation behind our
-soldiers, and we must vigilantly insist upon the efficiency
-including the speed absolutely indispensable.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-We must support the Liberty Loans, conserve food,
-cheerfully pay taxes, and tolerate neither improper
-profit-making out of the war by capitalists or
-strikers,&mdash;nor slackness and malingering which interferes
-with our military efficiency by laboring men.
-Every American civilian should now do his work
-with the same sense of duty as is shown by the
-soldiers in the field.</p>
-
-<p>And now let good patriots keep in mind that the
-Huns within our gates from this time on are the
-allies of the Huns who are actually doing battle
-against our soldiers at the front. The men who
-directly or indirectly advise people not to take Liberty
-bonds, the men who clamor for an early peace,
-an inconclusive or negotiated peace, the men who
-condone the offenses of Germany directly or indirectly,
-the men who say we have not ample cause
-for war against Germany, the men who attack our
-allies or seek to breed dissension between them and
-us, are each and every one to a greater or less degree
-acting as friends of Germany and therefore as
-enemies of the United States. Every patriotic
-American should now clearly understand what is
-really implied in the attitude taken during the last
-nine months by the Stones and La Follettes, the
-Hearsts and Hillquits. These men are out of place
-in America. It is sincerely to be regretted that they
-cannot be put where they belong&mdash;under the
-Hohenzollerns.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="NINE_TENTHS_OF_WISDOM_IS_BEING">NINE TENTHS OF WISDOM IS BEING
-WISE IN TIME</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 1, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A few days ago I expressed in The Star the regret
-and uneasiness felt by all men with knowledge of
-international matters at the failure of this country to
-declare war on Austria and Turkey. Various Administration,
-and, of course, the leading pro-German,
-newspapers took exception to this statement
-and announced that the procedure advocated would
-be unwise or improper. Since then the great defeat
-of the Italian army by the Germans and Austrians
-has occurred, and among the Italians there has been
-much bitter criticism of our failure to help them, although
-we have now for many months been at war,
-at least in theory, with Germany.</p>
-
-<p>A leading Administration newspaper of high
-standing, the Brooklyn Eagle, accurately states the
-case as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Italy’s defeat is shocking and alarming. Only its unexpectedness
-excuses the failure of Italy’s allies, including ourselves,
-to meet it. This Government cannot evade responsibility if
-Italy is lost, for we have been up to the present, quite as
-indifferent as the rest of the Entente to Italy’s fate. Italy
-suffers and is endangered by our own negative attitude. We
-have loaned her money, but we are not at war with Austria,
-and we have failed to give Italy such whole-hearted support
-as her critical position demands. No time should be lost in
-reversing this policy. Italy is fighting our battles as well as
-her own. She is a valuable ally; her cause is just. No effort
-should be spared to save her. There is no time to compromise
-or equivocate. Our own soldiers in Europe will have to pay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-in blood for every hour’s delay in throwing all possible help
-to Italy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is the exact truth. I call attention to the
-fact that it is from a strong supporter of the Administration
-and that it takes the view I have for months
-been taking, and which various well-meaning but
-sheeplike creatures have bleated against on the
-ground that it implies criticism of the Administration.
-I was merely advocating before the event the
-course, which, after the event, all will agree ought
-to have been followed. It is in this matter precisely
-as it was in regard to our building ships to meet the
-terrible U-boat menace. We should, with the utmost
-energy and speed, have begun to build them within
-a week, within a day, of the German note of January
-31. Instead of this we dawdled and wrangled for
-six months before seriously beginning. In the one
-case as in the other foolish creatures did immense
-harm by protesting against pointing out our blunders
-on the ground that we must not speak of spilt milk,
-whereas, of course, we can only stop future spilling
-by showing where it has been spilt in the past.</p>
-
-<p>Nine tenths of wisdom is being wise in time, is the
-lesson as taught afresh by the Italian disaster and the
-shortage of cargo ships. Let us at last profit by it.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WE_ARE_IN_THIS_WAR_TO_THE_FINISH">WE ARE IN THIS WAR TO THE FINISH</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 2, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The disaster to our Italian ally should make every
-American worth calling such awake to the real needs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-of the hour and should arouse in him the inflexible
-purpose to see that this war is fought through to a
-victorious conclusion, no matter how long it takes,
-no matter what the expense and loss may be.</p>
-
-<p>Our first troops are now actually in the trenches;
-American infantry and American artillerymen are
-under fire; blood has been shed. Our sons and
-brothers have begun the trench life of wearing
-fatigue, of cold, of inconceivable hardship and exposure
-and of cruel danger. A few women at home
-suffer as much. Otherwise, no civilians outside the
-regions conquered by the Germans can begin to realize
-the terrible strain to which constantly increasing
-numbers of our soldiers will be exposed as additional
-divisions are trained for and put into the actual
-fighting.</p>
-
-<p>We who stay at home must back up those men in
-every way. We must stand by and energetically
-support every effort of the Government to add to
-their efficiency and to back them up, including the
-sending over of constantly increasing numbers of
-soldiers to the aid of the men already there. We
-must back up the loans and taxes necessary in order
-to supply them with arms, munitions, equipment,
-food, hospitals. We must hold to the strictest accountability
-before the bar of public opinion any
-Government official responsible for needless delay,
-or for shortage in shipping, clothing, or material, or
-for deficient ammunition, or faulty gas-masks, or for
-any other shortage which exposes our men at the
-front to needless danger and hardship. We must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-make their effort and their suffering avail by highly
-resolving that the whole power of this Nation, and
-all its resources in men and in wealth, shall be used
-to bring the peace of complete and overwhelming
-triumph over Germany and over Germany’s subject
-allies, Austria and Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, every brave and patriotic American owes
-it to the men at the front to make the lash of scorn
-felt by the Hearsts and La Follettes and by all others
-like them. These men have given or now give aid
-and comfort to Germany, and therefore show themselves
-enemies to the soldiers in the American uniform
-by opposing the war, or by asking for an inconclusive
-peace, or by assailing the allies of the
-United States, or by condoning or keeping silent
-concerning the hideous atrocities which have made
-the Prussianized empire of the Hohenzollerns the
-arch enemy of every liberty-loving and self-respecting
-civilized nation on the face of the globe.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SINISTER_ALLIES">SINISTER ALLIES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 3, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There are well-meaning, but not overwise, persons
-who bleat against any sincere and truthful effort to
-make us more efficient in this war by protesting
-against grave shortcomings. These worthy persons
-should realize that they are acting against the interest
-of the United States and in the interest of
-Germany. If they doubt this, they have only to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-ponder the fact that in their attitude they stand
-beside such sinister allies as German papers like
-the New York Staats Zeitung and Illinois Staats
-Zeitung and the various papers of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hearst.</p>
-
-<p>These papers have opposed our going to war, or
-have assailed our allies, or have condoned or passed
-over in silence the brutal infamy of Germany. They
-have opposed the Government in its actions against
-Germany. In so doing they have been the enemies of
-America. And they have been no less the enemies of
-America when they have eagerly defended the Government
-from criticism for shortcomings which impair
-our efficiency and therefore tell in favor of
-Germany. Exactly as they once opposed preparedness,
-or excused the murderous sinking of the Lusitania,
-or protested against our going to war, so they
-now zealously exhibit a sham loyalty of the most
-hurtful kind by denouncing honest and truthful men
-because they tell the truth.</p>
-
-<p>In order really to serve this country, it is necessary
-to point out the dreadful damage done by our
-failure to prepare; of the evil effect of trying to train
-our troops with broomsticks and wooden guns; the
-worse than folly of failing to declare war on Austria
-and Turkey, and the harm done by the delays, including
-the dawdling for six months before we began
-the vitally necessary work of shipbuilding. To
-cover up such shortcomings deceives no one but
-ourselves. Germany knows all about them. We help
-her to find out by our failure to treat her spies with
-drastic severity. And the men who suffer know all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-about them; the artillerymen with only a wooden
-cannon, or the sentry in a cotton uniform on a cold
-night stands in no need of enlightenment on the
-subject. When these pro-German papers with loud
-professions of loyalty protest against telling our
-people the truth about such matters, they are merely
-serving Germany against the United States.</p>
-
-<p>Loyalty to the Nation demands that we subscribe
-to the Liberty Loans; that we practice food conservation;
-that we ardently support sending our
-soldiers abroad until we have millions of men on the
-firing line; that we stand for universal obligatory
-military training and service; that we heartily uphold
-our allies and condemn as traitors to America
-all who attack them; that we insist on prosecuting
-the war to complete victory and condemn as false to
-this country all who seek an inconclusive peace.
-Loyalty to the Nation no less demands that we make
-our people understand the lasting harm done by our
-failure to prepare during the two and a half years
-before the war broke out and the grave damage now
-caused by needless delay, by irresolution, by the appointment
-or retention of inefficient men, and by any
-and all types of half-heartedness in waging the war.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_NEW_YORK_MAYORALTY_ELECTION">THE NEW YORK MAYORALTY ELECTION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 8, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The triumph of Tammany in New York City and
-the large Socialist vote have in some quarters been
-hailed as showing that New York City is for peace<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-at any price and that it is against the Administration.
-Neither statement is warranted by the
-facts.</p>
-
-<p>The Socialist vote was about one-fifth of the total
-vote. It included most of those who wished the war
-stopped at once, this number being made up of professional
-pacifists, of red flag Anarchists, and of poor,
-ignorant people who pathetically believed that a
-Socialist mayor would somehow bring peace at once.
-But it also included its professional Socialists and
-poor, ignorant people who did not think of the war,
-but who pathetically believed that a Socialist mayor
-would somehow give them five-cent milk. The
-voters in New York City who wish immediate peace
-without any regard to national honor, or to what
-future horrors such a peace would bring, are certainly
-less than a fifth of the whole.</p>
-
-<p>The vote was not anti-Administration. A far
-larger proportion of the supporters of the Administration
-voted for <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hylan than for <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Mitchel,
-and officially the Administration was neutral between
-the two. A goodly number of pro-Germans
-supported <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hylan, but he was also supported by
-a large number of entirely loyal men, and he himself,
-unlike the Socialist candidate, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hillquit, was
-avowedly for America against Germany, and for the
-prosecution of the war. The election in actual fact
-turned directly on local issues. New York occasionally
-witnesses an occasional insurrection of virtue,
-but the city has never in fifty years given a good
-administration a second term. The insurrection of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-virtue at one election is followed by a Tammany
-revival at the next.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the election in New York City was
-not heartening to patriotic persons, but right next
-door, in the Connecticut congressional district which
-includes Bridgeport, a contest for a vacant congressional
-seat resulted in a way that speaks well for
-the Republic. The Republican candidate, Schuyler
-Merritt, a man of high probity and capacity, with
-a forward look in international affairs, came out in
-bold and straightforward fashion, saying he would
-support the President in all measures for the efficient
-prosecution of the war until victory came, that
-he would do all he could to prevent our again falling
-into the condition of shameful unpreparedness we
-had for three years occupied, and that he was for
-universal obligatory military training for our young
-men. He won by a majority much greater than that
-which his predecessor received at the time of the
-presidential election last year.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="GERMAN_HATRED_OF_AMERICA">GERMAN HATRED OF AMERICA</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 13, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There have recently been published various books
-by Americans who, during the Great War, have
-officially represented this country in Germany and
-in Belgium, when the Germans conquered it. Ambassador
-Gerard is one writer. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Gibson, secretary
-of our legation at Brussels, is another. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-Curtis Roth, until recently vice-consul at Plauen,
-Saxony, is a third. Their testimony is of profound
-significance because of their official position and
-personal standing.</p>
-
-<p>Two facts leap to the eye from their writings.
-The first is that the German people have stood
-practically united behind their Government in upholding
-and insisting upon the systematic infliction
-of hideous brutality upon their foes. With deliberate
-purpose the German Government has carried on a
-war of horror, a war of obscene cruelty, of wholesale
-slaughter, of foul treachery and bestiality, a war in
-which civilians, including women, children, nurses,
-doctors, and priests, as well as wounded soldiers,
-have been murdered wholesale. The German people
-have enthusiastically supported and approved their
-acts. Our war is as much with the German people as
-with their Government, and we should regard with
-loathing all Americans, whether men or women, who
-any way attempt to justify or defend Germany’s
-action. The Americans who so act are traitors to
-their country and to humanity at large.</p>
-
-<p>The second fact is the extreme malevolence of
-hatred with which Germany regards America, a
-hatred which blossomed into full growth before we
-went to war, and which was immensely aggravated
-because of the contempt inspired by our tame submission
-to outrage for over two years. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roth’s
-testimony is peculiarly interesting. He shows that
-the Berlin Government actively stimulated the campaign
-of hatred and revenge against America, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-the German people eagerly accepted the view that
-Americans were cowardly, avaricious, and effeminate,
-and that in Germany it was constantly announced
-that, sooner or later, there would be a day of
-reckoning when America would have to pay a huge
-indemnity or suffer the fate of Belgium.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roth shows that the German people think
-exactly as their leaders think. They now hate and
-despise us Americans as they hate others of their
-foes. Says <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Roth:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>They are resolved to make our country drink to the dregs
-out of the bitter cup of humiliation. Nothing do they find
-more despicable than our talk about peace, which they attribute
-to cowardice and flabbiness. They look on the American
-pacifist as a weakling, as a God-given tool in the hands
-of German interest.... The Germans, if possible, feel more
-bitterly towards Americans of German extraction than towards
-Americans of other lines of descent.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Germany has definitely decided on America’s ruin.
-She has definitely decided that there must be
-an intense anti-American spirit in both Government
-and people. She may bide her time, and she
-will doubtless try to separate us from our allies,
-but her purpose towards us is both relentless and
-ruthless.</p>
-
-<p>If we are true to ourselves, if we prepare our armed
-strength and keep it prepared, if we show farsightedness
-and valor of soul, we can be sternly indifferent
-to this foul and evil hatred. But we must keep
-steadily in mind that Germany respects nothing
-whatever except courage and prepared strength
-and that the pacifists and pro-Germans, the Huns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-within our gates, the Hearsts and the La Follettes,
-are playing the game of our German foes, and if
-they have their way will bring shame and disaster
-to our land.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="START_THE_SYSTEM_OF_UNIVERSAL">START THE SYSTEM OF UNIVERSAL
-MILITARY TRAINING AT ONCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 17, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Lieutenant-General S. B. M. Young, U.S.A.,
-retired, gave long, faithful, and efficient service to
-this country, from the beginning of the Civil War, for
-nearly half a century. But he never has rendered
-greater service than by his steady insistence upon
-the immediate introduction by law in this country
-of the system of obligatory universal military training
-as our permanent policy. This should be done
-at once; and all the young men from nineteen to
-twenty-one should be called out as soon as there are
-means of training them. They need not fight until
-they are twenty-one. But they are least needed as
-economic assets; they are most needed as military
-assets; and it is cruelty to them not to train them in
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>The selective draft was far better than nothing.
-But let us never forget that it represented doing imperfectly
-after the event that which ought to have
-been done thoroughly long before the event. We
-have been at war three quarters of a year, and the
-drafted men, admirable material though they are,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-are only just beginning to be trained and as yet are
-not even armed and properly clothed. We are trying
-to train our soldiers to perform the duties of soldiers
-after the war has begun; and we can attempt the
-experiment at all only because the English and
-French protect us from our enemies while we make
-it. Hereafter let us train the man to perform the
-tasks of a soldier before he is called to be a soldier in
-war. Only thus can we be just both to him and to
-the country.</p>
-
-<p>The present economic disturbance in the Nation
-was inevitable, in view of our failure at the outset
-of the Great War to introduce the system of universal,
-obligatory military training; and this failure is
-also responsible for the fact that our national army,
-nine months after our entry into the war, has only
-begun training, instead of being already trained.
-Let us now at least provide for the future. The
-amendment to the law above outlined, as advocated
-by the National Association for Universal Military
-Training, of which General Young is president,
-would add nearly two million men to our army,
-would cause the minimum of interference with our
-economic life, and would not necessitate any additional
-expense for training quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The men thus trained will be immensely benefited
-from the standpoint of their success in civil life; for
-universal training would be of immense economic
-benefit to the Nation. As Cardinal Gibbons has
-well said, “The legislation proposed will benefit
-youths from nineteen to twenty-one years, morally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-as well as physically, and help to prepare them for
-their work in peace as well as for the sterner needs
-of war.”</p>
-
-<p>This is the only democratic system. General
-Young himself rose from being an enlisted man in
-the ranks to being the lieutenant-general of the army
-of the United States. Under universal training let
-all candidates for West Point and all other candidates
-for commissions be chosen with absolute fairness
-from among the men who have served a year in
-the field with the colors. And in the navy let all
-candidates for Annapolis be chosen from enlisted
-men of the navy who have served at least a year as
-such and who are still serving.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_FIFTY-FIFTY_WAR_ATTITUDE">A FIFTY-FIFTY WAR ATTITUDE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 20, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The attitude of the United States at this moment
-toward Germany’s three vassal allies, Austria,
-Turkey, and Bulgaria, is a fifty-fifty attitude between
-peace and war. It is not honest war, neither
-is it honest neutrality. It is the attitude of the backwoodsman,
-who, seeing a black animal in his pasture
-at dusk and not knowing whether it was a bear
-or a calf, fired so as to hit it if it was a bear and
-miss it if it was a calf. Such marksmanship is never
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>Bulgaria is now simply the tool of Germany and
-Turkey. I was formerly a stanch champion of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-Bulgaria, and would be again if she returned to her
-senses. But she now serves the devil, and shame be
-upon us if we do not treat her accordingly. No one
-can doubt that the Bulgarian Legation is an agency
-for German spies in this country. The Administration
-has published reports showing that for over a
-year, previous to our entry into the war, the German
-Embassy was the center of the spies and dynamiters
-with whom Germany was already waging war
-against us. These papers show that Germany’s
-allies are her mere tools and that Germany is withheld
-by no scruple from the commission of every
-conceivable treacherous intrigue and brutal outrage
-against us. Under these conditions it is a grave
-offense against our allies not to declare war on all of
-Germany’s allies.</p>
-
-<p>Turkey has been and is the tool of Germany, but
-Germany has permitted her on her own account to
-perpetrate massacres on the Armenian and Syrian
-Christians which renders it little short of an infamy
-now to remain at peace with her. It is hypocritical
-to express sympathy with the Armenians and appoint
-messages to be read in the churches about
-them and yet refuse to do the only thing that will
-permanently help them which is to declare war on
-Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>With Austria our present relations are less definable
-than our relations with any other power. No
-one can truthfully say exactly whether our attitude
-is one of peace or war. We have not declared war on
-Austria and yet we are furnishing money, coal, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-munitions to Italy in order to enable her to fight
-Austria. If we really are at peace with Austria, we
-are flagrantly violating our duty as a neutral and
-we ought to be condemned in any international
-court. But if we are really at war, then we are
-committing the cardinal crime of hitting soft. If
-we had gone to war with Austria when we broke
-with Germany and had acted with proper energy,
-the disaster to Cadorna would probably not have
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p>We are now taking part in the general council of
-our allies. The only way in which to make our part
-in the war thoroughly effective and our leadership
-felt to the utmost is whole-heartedly to throw ourself
-into the war on the side of all our allies and
-against all their and our enemies.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_GERMANIZED_SOCIALISTS_AND">THE GERMANIZED SOCIALISTS AND
-PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 26, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The American Socialist party at the present time
-is a thoroughly Germanized annex of the Prussianized
-militaristic and capitalistic autocracy of the
-Hohenzollerns. Honest social reformers have left it.
-No patriotic American ought longer to stay in it.
-It is purely an aid to the capitalist and militarist
-Hohenzollern party of Germany. It is a bitter
-enemy of the United States and a traitor to the
-cause of liberty throughout the world. Its leaders<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-are the supporters of an alien autocracy and are
-seeking to secure a peace which would immensely
-benefit this Prussian autocracy. They stand beside
-the Bolsheviki, whose antics have made Russia at
-this moment a by-word, both of derision and hope to
-every believer in despotism and every opponent of
-liberty throughout the world.</p>
-
-<p>Any man who feels that there is the slightest
-exaggeration in the above statements would do well
-to read the articles in which the New York Tribune
-has recently set forth the connection of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> William
-Bayard Hale with the pro-German propaganda in
-this country, with the Hearst papers and with the
-Socialist campaign in New York on behalf of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Hillquit and a peace satisfactory to Germany.
-These articles should be published in permanent
-form and circulated as a tract among all decent
-Americans who still believe that the Germanized
-Socialist party in America to-day is anything except
-the foe of America, the foe of democratic liberty
-throughout the world, and the tool and ally of the
-autocrats, the capitalists, and the brutal and unscrupulous
-military chiefs of the Prussianized Germany
-of the Hohenzollerns.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly as the reactionary is in the end the worst
-foe of order; exactly as the conscienceless and
-greedy man of wealth is in the end the worst foe of
-property and of honest and duty-performing holders
-of property, so the Anarchist and the wild Socialist,
-whose doctrines when applied necessarily lead to
-Anarchy and the I.W.W., and the crack-brained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-professional pacifists inevitably themselves are the
-worst enemies of freedom, of true democracy, and
-of righteousness. It is natural that in this terrible
-and melancholy world crisis these men should have
-struck hands with the sordid tools of German intrigue
-in this country. The masters of Germany find
-all these men, whatever their nominal differences,
-united in the evil bond of a common subserviency to
-German purposes. The German rulers, who at home
-trample on the Socialists and dragoon the labor
-organizations and bully the leader of democratic
-thought, cynically profit by aiding in other countries
-the men who in the name of social reform seek to
-overthrow orderly liberty and thereby show themselves
-the sinister allies of tyranny and despotism.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="MOBILIZE_OUR_MAN_POWER">MOBILIZE OUR MAN POWER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 1, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It has been announced from Washington that, in
-view of the shortage of labor on the farms, there will
-be an effort in Congress to permit the importation
-for temporary use on the farms of Chinese coolies.
-I do not believe the effort will be successful, and if it
-were successful it would be one of the greatest
-calamities that could befall the American people.</p>
-
-<p>Never under any condition should this Nation
-look at an immigrant as primarily a labor unit. He
-should always be looked at primarily as a future
-citizen and the father of other citizens who are to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-live in this land as fellows with our children and our
-children’s children. Our immigration laws, permanent
-or temporary, should always be constructed
-with this fact in view. No temporary advantages
-from the importation of Chinese coolies would offset
-the far-reaching ultimate damage it would cause.</p>
-
-<p>Neither ought we to approve the plan, sometimes
-set forth by zealous and high-minded men, to get
-the Government to open up vast tracts of land and
-farm it with wage labor. This is a proposal to substitute
-a wage-earning agricultural proletariat for a
-farming population which owns the land it tills. It
-is a move in exactly the wrong direction. We ought
-by law to do everything possible to put a stop to the
-growth of an absentee landlord class and of huge
-estates worked by tenant farmers. Methods identical
-with or similar to those advocated by me, in my
-recent book, “The Foes of Our Own Household,”
-point the way to the proper permanent solution of
-the question.</p>
-
-<p>As a war measure, rather than adopt either of the
-proposals above enumerated, let us deal boldly with
-the situation created by the existence of such vast
-numbers of men in good physical condition, who are
-not being utilized. The best war asset and labor
-asset in this country is the mass of young men from
-eighteen to twenty-one. This draft law explicitly
-and unjustifiably excepts this class, although in the
-Civil War most of the soldiers entered the army
-when they were under twenty-one. Let us proclaim
-as our policy that while this war lasts no man shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-be excused from doing the full duty which the Nation
-finds it necessary to demand from him. Make all
-the young men from eighteen to twenty-one immediately
-liable to service, permit no exceptions for
-any men, no matter how wealthy, who are not already
-in the army. Use as many of the men thus
-taken as are necessary to fill the camps when the
-present drafted men of the national army leave
-them. Use all the others, and use these men, too,
-until the camps are ready for them, as labor which
-the Nation shall mobilize for farm work or any other
-work which it is imperative to do, and mobilize all
-the alien labor now in the country in similar fashion.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_LANSDOWNE_LETTER">THE LANSDOWNE LETTER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 2, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Lord Lansdowne’s proposal is for a peace of defeat
-for the Allies and of victory for Germany. Such a
-peace would leave oppressed peoples under the yoke
-of Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria. Such a peace
-would leave the liberty-loving nations of mankind
-at the ultimate mercy of the triumphant militarism
-and capitalism of the German autocracy.</p>
-
-<p>It merely makes such a peace worse to try to hide
-the shame of the defeat behind the empty pretense
-of forging a league of nations, including Germany, to
-secure future peace. Such a peace would mean that
-Germany saw her unspeakable brutality and treachery
-crowned by essential triumph and therefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-would put a premium upon her repeating the brutality
-and treachery at the earliest convenient moment.
-It is mere hypocrisy to promise to put a stop
-to wrongdoing in the future unless we are willing to
-undergo the labor and peril necessary to stop wrongdoing
-in the present. In our own country nothing
-but harm was done by the worthy persons who, a
-couple of years ago, formed a league to enforce peace
-in the future, while at the same time they nervously
-declared that they would have nothing to do with
-enforcing peace by stopping international wrong in
-the present. Lord Lansdowne’s proposal to hide the
-admission of present defeat behind the camouflage
-of pretended international peace agreements for the
-future is unworthy of his distinguished services and
-reputation.</p>
-
-<p>Our people ought never to forget that Germany
-respects nothing but strength and the readiness and
-ability to use it. Germany has made a fetish of able
-brutality. She regards with utter derision the pacifists
-and pro-Germans in this country. She will use
-them as her tools and pay them when necessary, but
-if through this aid she was able to conquer this
-country after previously separating us from our
-allies, she would with utter indifference break these
-tools and throw them on the scrap-heap with the
-rest of the American people.</p>
-
-<p>There is but one safe course to follow, and that is
-to fight this war through to victory at no matter
-what cost. This Nation should declare war on
-Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria, this week. Let us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-definitely announce that our aims include restoring
-and indemnifying Belgium, giving back Alsace and
-Lorraine to France, creating a Poland which shall
-include all the Poles and a greater Bohemia and a
-great Jugo-Slav commonwealth and restoring Rumanian
-Hungary to Rumania, and Italian Austria
-to Italy, and driving the Turk from Europe and
-freeing Armenia and Syria and Arabia. After
-victory let us join in any arrangement to increase
-the likelihood of future international peace, but let
-us treat this as an addition to, and never as a substitute
-for, the preparedness which is the only sure
-guarantee against either war or measureless disaster.
-Therefore let us at once introduce as our permanent
-national policy the system of universal obligatory
-military training of all our young men.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_PRESIDENTS_MESSAGE">THE PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 5, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The President has in admirable language set forth
-the firm resolve of the American people that the war
-shall be fought through to the end until it is crowned
-by the peace of complete victory. He states unequivocally
-that our task is to win the war, that
-nothing shall turn us aside from it until it is accomplished,
-and that every power and resource we
-possess will be used to achieve this purpose. He
-states that there shall be no peace until the war is
-won. He says that this peace must deliver, not only
-Belgium and Northern France, but the peoples of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-Austria-Hungary, of the Balkan Peninsula, and of
-Turkey in Europe and Asia from “the impudent
-and alien dominion of the Prussian military and
-commercial autocracy.” He emphatically states
-that we have no purpose to wrong the German
-people or subject them to oppression, but merely to
-prevent others from being oppressed by them. He
-states that if Germany persists in adherence to her
-present rulers and their policies, it will be impossible,
-even after the war, to treat her as other nations are
-treated, but that, although we intend to right the
-wrongs inflicted by Germany on other nations, we
-have no intention to inflict similar wrongs on Germany
-in return. He says that the mind of the
-Russian people has been poisoned by the rulers of
-Germany, exactly as the latter have poisoned the
-minds of their own people.</p>
-
-<p>To all of this the heart of the American people
-will answer a devout amen. The message is a
-solemn pledge on behalf of this Nation that we shall
-use every energy we possess to win the war, and that
-we shall accept no peace not based on the complete
-overthrow of Germany. The American people must
-now devote themselves with grim resolution and
-whole-hearted purpose to the effective translation
-of this pledge into action, for, of course, the sole value
-of such a promise lies in the manner in which it is
-actually made good. The people must back the
-Government in every step to carry into effect this
-pledge and must tolerate no failure in any official
-charged with the duty of carrying it into effect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>I shall shortly discuss the proposals of the President
-in reference to Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria.
-But in this editorial I wish merely, as one among the
-countless Americans to whom the honor and welfare
-and high ideals of America are dear, to say amen to
-the President’s expressed purpose to wage this war
-through to the end with all our strength and to
-accept no peace save that of complete victory.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FOUR_BITES_OF_A_CHERRY">FOUR BITES OF A CHERRY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 7, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In his recent message to Congress President Wilson
-stated that in order “to push our great war of
-freedom and justice to its righteous conclusion we
-must clear away with a thorough hand all impediments
-to success,” and added, “The very embarrassing
-obstacle that stands in our way is that we are at
-war with Germany, but not with her allies.” He
-recommended that we declare war on Austria, and
-added, “The same logic would lead also to a declaration
-of war against Turkey and Bulgaria.” But
-inferentially and for reasons not apparent he advised
-against such action.</p>
-
-<p>The President is entirely right in stating that our
-failure hitherto to declare war on the allies of Germany
-has been a very embarrassing obstacle to our
-success, and he is entirely right in advising a declaration
-of war against Austria. Incidentally I
-wish to point out that this is precisely what I insisted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-upon in these columns two months ago, and what I
-had elsewhere advocated six months ago, and it is
-worth while remembering that the Administration
-papers then assailed me for urging the course which,
-although there has not been the slightest change in
-the situation, the President now urges.</p>
-
-<p>There was no justification whatever for failure to
-declare war on Austria when we declared war on
-Germany, and there is now no justification for failure
-to declare war on Bulgaria and Turkey when we
-declare war on Austria. There is no use in making
-four bites of a cherry. There is no use in going to war
-a little, but not much. The President has sent a
-message pledging support to Rumania, but it is
-worse than an empty form to send such a message
-unless we forthwith declare war on Bulgaria. The
-President has appointed a Sunday for the special
-expression of sympathy with Armenia, but such
-expression of sympathy is utterly meaningless unless
-we go to war with Turkey. The Austro-Hungarian
-and Turkish empires must be broken up if we intend
-to make the world even moderately safe for democracy.
-There must be a revived Poland, taking in all
-the Poles of Austria, Prussia, and Russia; a greater
-Bohemia, taking in Moravia and the Slovaks; a
-great Jugo-Slav commonwealth, including Serbia,
-Croatia, Bosnia, and Herzegovina, while the Rumanians
-in Hungary should become part of Rumania
-and the Italians in Austria part of Italy. The Turk
-must be driven from Europe and Christian and Arab
-freed. Only in this manner can we do justice to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-subject peoples tyrannized over by the Germans,
-Magyars, and Turks. Only in this way can we remove
-the menace of German aggression, which has
-become a haunting nightmare for all civilizations,
-especially in the case of small, well-behaved, liberty-loving
-peoples.</p>
-
-<p>By declaring war on Germany’s allies we do not
-commit ourselves to asking anything that is not
-just for our own allies. But by failing to declare war
-on Germany’s allies we are ourselves guilty of injustice
-to our own allies.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_RED_CROSS_CHRISTMAS">THE RED CROSS CHRISTMAS
-MEMBERSHIP DRIVE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 12, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Next week, the week before Christmas, the Red
-Cross wishes to add ten million new members to the
-five million members it already possesses. Last June
-the Red Cross War Council asked the people of the
-United States to raise one hundred millions of
-dollars for Red Cross work, and the people responded
-by raising one hundred and nineteen millions. The
-purpose now is to increase threefold its membership.</p>
-
-<p>This is the people’s war. All people should, so far
-as possible, share the burden and the glory. The
-whole fighting manhood of the Nation, without any
-exception save in the interest of the Nation, should
-be trained to arms and made ready for the front.
-The Liberty Loans should be taken by every one so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-that the bondholders of the Nation may be the
-people of the Nation, and now this Red Cross membership
-campaign is one more Nation-wide effort to
-bring home to all our people their obligations to
-this country and to suffering humanity.</p>
-
-<p>We must realize that every single individual in
-this country is derelict to his duty unless according
-to his capacity he does his part in helping organize
-for the war. Individual effort alone will not avail
-and Germany’s strength has come from her keen
-realization of this fact. We must have an organized
-Nation, both at the front and at home. There can
-be no organization without discipline, and the Red
-Cross is one of the great agencies through which we
-can make progress toward such self-discipline.</p>
-
-<p>The Red Cross does not ask for the new members
-primarily because of the money they bring. The
-money will do great good, for the need is pressing;
-but even more important than the money will be the
-effect if on Christmas morning the Red Cross can flash
-around the world the news that ten million more
-Americans have joined its ranks and thereby put
-themselves unqualifiedly behind our army and navy.</p>
-
-<p>The Red Cross has done an extraordinary work
-abroad and is doing an extraordinary work at home.
-Abroad it is in every way supplementing the army
-and navy medical corps in Europe and is accumulating
-enormous hospital supplies for the use of our
-soldiers and sailors. It has sent over a million dollars
-in money and stores to Italy. It is giving both
-military and civilian relief in France. It is supplying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-over thirty-five hundred French military hospitals
-and two thousand French civil hospitals with surgical
-dressings, drugs, and supplies. It is helping to
-care for half a million tuberculosis victims and restore
-a million and a half French refugees to normal
-life. At home it is helping to care for the dependent
-families of our soldiers and sailors. It has organized
-fifty-seven army and navy base hospitals, over a
-dozen of which have already been sent to France.
-Its useful activities in different lines are well-nigh
-innumerable.</p>
-
-<p>This is the work the Red Cross has done and is
-doing for America and the world. Now let all
-Americans in their turn stand by the Red Cross and
-help in its Christmas membership drive.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BEING_BRAYED_IN_A_MORTAR">BEING BRAYED IN A MORTAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 18, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>President Wilson speaks in military matters
-through his Secretary of War. The sole importance
-of the Secretary of War’s report comes from its
-being the official declaration of the President. I
-discuss it as such.</p>
-
-<p>According to the reports in the New York World,
-the Secretary of War states that “he does not favor
-universal military training as a permanent policy.”
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s secretary, therefore, takes what is in
-effect the position of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Bryan, which was picturesquely
-phrased as being that a million men can at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-need spring to arms overnight. The Administration’s
-attitude is less picturesquely expressed, but it
-is precisely as futile and as unspeakably mischievous
-from a standpoint of permanent national interest.
-Moreover, it is taken at the very time when the disastrous
-effect of the Administration’s policy of complete
-unpreparedness is being shown by the admissions
-of General Crozier on the first day of the congressional
-investigation. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker’s report, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Bryan’s theory, and the things already shown by the
-congressional investigation dovetail into one another.
-They stand in the relation of cause and effect.
-The Administration now officially and complacently
-announces that the policy which at this very moment
-has proved disastrous is to be persevered in for the
-future, therefore assumes complete responsibility for
-every blunder and delay, and for all the misconduct,
-and announces that these blunders and delays and
-all this misconduct have taught us nothing, and that
-we are to amble onward in the same futile path until
-disaster overtakes. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s Administration
-officially declares that we shall persist in our own
-folly until we are brayed in the mortar of dreadful
-calamity.</p>
-
-<p>If the Administration frankly and manfully acknowledged
-its evil errors in the past and championed
-a policy which would prevent the repetition
-of these errors in the future, I would think only of
-the future and not of the past, but now it is necessary
-to emphasize the past in order to avoid disaster in
-the future.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span></p>
-
-<p>We are in the eleventh month since Germany
-went to war with us. We have not yet built an aeroplane
-fit to match the speedy battle planes of our
-foes. We have not built a heavy field gun; on the
-contrary, we have had to draw on burdened friends
-to give us artillery. In the training camps of the
-national army the artillery regiments still have about
-ten wooden guns for every old field piece, and they
-have none of the modern guns they are to use in the
-war. There are rifles only for every third or fourth
-man. Until ten months had elapsed there was no
-target practice save for a few specially selected
-units. The troops still have only wooden machine
-guns and the trench mortars they themselves
-improvise.</p>
-
-<p>Until ten months had elapsed they lacked even
-the necessary warm clothing. They have endured
-entirely needless suffering and hardship. Our troops
-in France have received thousands of coffins, but
-an insufficient number of shoes. At this moment
-not more than one tenth of our soldiers, taken altogether,
-are fit to go to battle. Nine tenths of our
-gallant and fine-spirited men are still without the
-training, arms, and equipment that would permit
-them to meet any trained foes. After ten months
-of war and the expenditure of huge sums of money,
-we are still absolutely unable to defend ourselves and
-owe our own safety only to the fleets and armies of
-our war-worn allies.</p>
-
-<p>This condition is due solely and entirely to the
-policy of unpreparedness to which the Administration<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-adhered for two and one half years when even
-the blind ought to have read the lesson of the great
-war. The Administration now announces that we
-are not to alter this policy and that we are to continue
-the do-nothing policy of refusing to help. If
-the American people follow the lead thus given them,
-they will be guilty of criminal folly.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="RENDERING_A_GREAT_PUBLIC_SERVICE">RENDERING A GREAT PUBLIC SERVICE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 20, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Chamberlain has rendered a public service
-by presenting the bill to provide universal obligatory
-military training for all the young men of
-the Nation. Senator Wadsworth has rendered a
-public service by pushing the senatorial investigation
-of our lamentable military unpreparedness. Congressman
-Medill McCormick has rendered a public
-service by showing that we have heavily burdened
-our war-worn ally, France, by demanding from her the
-guns which it was inexcusable in us not previously
-to have built.</p>
-
-<p>These three services all hang together. Senator
-Chamberlain’s proposal is to supplant selective conscription
-after war has begun by universal service,
-which would probably mean the avoidance of war
-altogether. It was grave misfortune that at the
-outset of this war we did not call for a million volunteers
-and at the same time put all the young men
-between nineteen and twenty-two into the training<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-camps. There has been some very gross favoritism
-in granting exemption and, moreover, the men between
-twenty-two and thirty-one include a high
-percentage of married men and of others who ought
-not to go to war at present. This unwise, wasteful,
-and inefficient system should not be patched up.
-The Nation sorely needs, both as a war measure and
-as a permanent policy, the immediate introduction
-of universal military training and service for all our
-young men as proposed above.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Wadsworth and Representative McCormick
-are in straightforward fashion showing
-the inevitable results of the policy of unpreparedness
-which we have followed for three and a half years,
-and which the Administration, through Secretary
-Baker, now actually advocates as our permanent
-policy. Senator Wadsworth has shown, beyond possibility
-of anything except willful misrepresentation,
-that he has no partisan purpose whatever and that
-the investigation is designed solely to rouse the
-Government and the public to greater efforts in
-speeding up the war. The Committee on Military
-Affairs of the Senate is showing no partisanship.
-They realize that we cannot win the war merely by
-announcing programmes. They realize that we have
-a long road to travel and that we have made a slow
-start. They wish to help the Administration, and
-in order to do this it is imperative to tell the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the fault for the present situation is due
-to the shortcomings of individuals during the last
-ten months, but the major part is due to our failure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-as a Nation to embark on the policy of preparedness
-three and a half years ago. Nine tenths of wisdom
-is being wise in time. Now our people must brace
-themselves to face unpleasant truths. There is not
-the slightest reason for discouragement. If we
-choose, we can, through our governmental representatives,
-quickly remedy the defects and then
-exert with decisive effect our tremendous latent
-powers. But we need to know the truth and then to
-act with instant and resolute efficiency and with
-single-minded patriotism.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_BETRAYAL_OF_DEMOCRACY">A BETRAYAL OF DEMOCRACY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 21, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>President Wilson has announced that we are in
-this war to make the world safe for democracy.
-Either this declaration was worse than empty rhetoric
-or we are in honor bound to make it good. Indeed,
-to prove false to it now is to be guilty of
-peculiarly offensive hypocrisy.</p>
-
-<p>The only way to make the world safe for democracy
-is to free the people over whom Turkey and
-Austria tyrannize. Every day’s delay in declaring war
-on Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria has represented
-and now represents a betrayal of democracy and of
-our allies. It is hypocritical to send an encouraging
-message to Rumania and not to declare war on
-Bulgaria. It is hypocritical to shed crocodile tears
-over Armenia and not to declare war on Turkey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>When President Wilson says, “We do not wish in
-any way to rearrange the Austria-Hungarian Empire;
-it is no affair of ours what they do,” he is
-engaged in the betrayal of democracy, and if his
-present words are to be taken seriously, then his
-declaration about making the world safe for democracy
-was false and empty rhetoric. Either one
-statement or the other must be unsparingly condemned
-by all honest men. In view of the last
-statement there is small wonder that the Austrian
-Foreign Minister says that “it is to our interest to
-nail down” the statement in question, because it
-abandons the proposal, or, as the Austrian minister
-phrases it, “the catch phrase,” to allow all small
-states to determine their own destinies. No wonder
-that the leading Vienna paper contemptuously
-states that President Wilson wishes to act as an
-“European peace intermediary,” being one of the
-leaders who “apparently consider a warlike noise
-the best overture to a peace conference.”</p>
-
-<p>There is also no wonder that the Czech Slovaks
-feel with intense bitterness about this betrayal. One
-of their papers in this country describes how loyally
-they have supported America and the Allies, and
-describes the dreadful butcheries and persecutions
-of their men, women, and children in Bohemia, and
-then asks whether it can be true that America now
-really proposes to keep them “under the merciless
-tyranny of the Huns.”</p>
-
-<p>This is precisely what President Wilson proposes
-when he says that it is no affair of ours to rearrange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, or, in other words,
-no affair of ours to free the Czechs, Slovaks, Jugo-Slavs,
-Italians, and Rumanians, who, together with
-the Poles, make up the majority of the Austro-Hungarian
-Empire and who are ground down by
-tyranny of the Germans and the Magyars.</p>
-
-<p>The President’s proposal represents three separate
-betrayals.</p>
-
-<p>It is the betrayal of the Slavs of Austria, to whose
-cause our allies have pledged themselves and who
-form a democratic population oppressed by a militaristic
-autocracy.</p>
-
-<p>It is the betrayal of democracy, because we abandon
-the majority who are our friends into the hands
-of a minority, who despise and hate us.</p>
-
-<p>It is the betrayal of the free people everywhere to
-Germany, for Germany is now a world menace,
-chiefly because Austria and Turkey are her subject
-allies, and President Wilson’s proposal is to leave
-them undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>A peace without a change of frontiers and without
-indemnification for brutal wrongdoing, a peace
-which does not create an independent and united
-Poland and a greater Bohemia and Jugo-Slovak
-commonwealth, as well as a greater Italy and a
-greater Rumania, and which does not free and
-indemnify Belgium, would leave every perilous
-problem of Europe unsolved. It would be timid and
-calamitous folly to refuse to touch the disputed
-questions which, if left unanswered, are absolutely
-certain to invite a future war.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BROOMSTICK_PREPAREDNESS_A">BROOMSTICK PREPAREDNESS&mdash;A
-STUDY IN CAUSE AND EFFECT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 27, 1917</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is earnestly to be hoped that the congressional
-investigation into the fruits of our military unpreparedness
-will keep two objects clearly in mind.
-First, the aim must be to speed up the work of
-efficient war preparation by doing away with all
-the present practices that are wrong. Second, the
-aim should be to make evident to all our people that
-our present shameful shortcomings are due to failure
-to prepare in advance and that never again ought we
-to allow our governmental leaders to put us in such
-a humiliating and unworthy position.</p>
-
-<p>It will be quite impossible to get at all the facts of
-our unpreparedness. Most officers will be very reluctant
-to testify to the whole truth. They know
-that they will suffer if they do so, because they have
-seen the punishment inflicted by the Administration
-on Major-General Wood for the sole reason that he
-dared to tell the truth about our shortcomings, and
-dared to advocate preparedness in advance. For
-this reason I am not at liberty to quote the generals,
-colonels, captains, and lieutenants of the artillery,
-infantry, medical corps, and quartermaster corps
-who have told me of their troubles with unheated
-hospitals, insufficient drugs, summer underclothes in
-winter weather, lack of overcoats, of shoes, of rifles,
-of ammunition, of cannon. But in the camps I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-visited I saw some things so evident that no harm
-can come to any officer from my speaking of them.</p>
-
-<p>Last fall I saw thousands of men drilling with
-broomsticks. I have such a broomstick now before
-me. Last fall I saw thousands of men drilling with
-rudely whittled wooden guns. I have one such before
-me now. I saw them drilling with wooden machine
-guns as late as the beginning of December. I saw
-barrels mounted on sticks, on which zealous captains
-were endeavoring to teach their men how to ride a
-horse. I saw in the national army camps in Illinois
-and Ohio scores of wooden cannon. Doubtless any
-man can see them now if he goes there.</p>
-
-<p>The excellent officers in the camps are as rapidly
-as possible remedying these deficiencies. I hope and
-believe that by spring they will all be remedied. But
-let our people not forget that for one year after
-Germany went to war with us we were wholly unable
-to defend ourselves and owed our safety only to the
-English and French ships and armies.</p>
-
-<p>The cause was our refusal to prepare in advance.
-President Wilson’s message of December, 1914, in
-which he ridiculed those who advocated preparedness,
-was part of the cause. His presidential campaign
-on the “He kept us out of war” issue was part
-of the cause. We paid the price later with broomstick
-rifles, logwood cannon, soldiers without shoes,
-and epidemics of pneumonia in the camps. We are
-paying the price now. We pay the price in the
-doubled cost of necessary war supplies. We pay the
-price in shortage of coal and congested transportation.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-The refusal to prepare and the price we now
-pay because of the refusal stand in the relation of
-cause and effect.</p>
-
-<p>I do not dwell on these facts to blame anybody. I
-dwell on them in order to wake our people to the
-necessity of learning the lesson they teach. Our next
-and permanent duty is to introduce the policy of
-universal obligatory military training for all our
-young men before they are twenty-one.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="OUR_DUTY_FOR_THE_NEW_YEAR">OUR DUTY FOR THE NEW YEAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 1, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In the papers there recently appeared a brief statement
-made by an unnamed young American major
-to his troops in the trenches in France. He said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We have reached the top in training. If you need anything,
-come and tell me and I will get it for you if I can. If
-I do not get it, I do not want to hear about it again, for it
-means that I cannot get it. We will have three meals a day
-if we can get them. If we have to miss one meal, we will not
-be badly off, and if we miss two or three, it will not be much
-worse. We are expected to work from midnight of one day
-to midnight of the next day. If there is any chance to sleep
-between, all right. It will also be all right if there is no
-chance. Let everybody pitch in. While mud and water must
-be fought, it may be much worse. The hopes of the Nation
-are fixed on each man.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ideal of duty thus set before our soldiers, before
-the Americans who at this time risk most and
-suffer most, is substantially the ideal of duty toward
-which all of the rest of us here in America should, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-our turn, likewise strive. We must brace ourselves
-for effort and for endurance through a hard and
-dangerous year. High of heart and with unfaltering
-soul, we must do our part in the grim work of toiling
-and fighting to bring a little nearer the day when
-there shall be orderly liberty throughout the world
-and when justice and mercy and brotherly love shall
-obtain between man and man and among all the
-nations of mankind. We must show our faith by
-our works. We must prove our truth by our endeavor.
-We must scorn the baseness which uses
-high-sounding speech to cloak ignoble action and
-which seems to betray suffering right with the Judas
-kiss of the treacherous peace.</p>
-
-<p>During the year that is opening we at home will
-suffer discomfort and privation and wearing anxiety.
-What of it? What we at home endure will be as
-nothing compared to that which is faced by the sons
-and brothers, by the husbands and fathers at the
-front, and what the fighting men of to-day face and
-bear will be no harder than what was faced and
-borne by Washington’s troops at Valley Forge and
-Trenton and by the soldiers of Grant and Lee when
-they wrestled in the Wilderness. We inherit as free
-men this fair and mighty land only because our
-fathers and forefathers had iron in their blood. We
-can leave our heritage undiminished to those who
-come after us only if we in our turn show a resolute
-and rugged manliness in the dark days of trial that
-have come upon us.</p>
-
-<p>Let us all individually and collectively do our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-whole duty with brave hearts. Let us pay our taxes,
-subscribe to the government loans, work at our
-several tasks with all our strength, support all the
-agencies which take care of our troops, and accept
-the stinting in fuel or food as part of the price we
-pay. Let our prime care be the welfare and warlike
-efficiency of the men at the front and in the training
-camps. Let us hold to sharp account every public
-servant who in any way comes short of his duty in
-this respect. But let us also insist that the soldiers at
-the front and in the camps treat every shortcoming
-merely as an obstacle to be overcome or remedied
-or offset by their own energy and courage and
-resourcefulness. The one absolute essential for our
-people is to insist that this war be seen through at
-no matter what cost until it is crowned with the
-peace of overwhelming victory for the right.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="TELL_THE_TRUTH_AND_SPEED_UP">TELL THE TRUTH AND SPEED UP
-THE WAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 4, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Any man who at this time leaves undone anything
-to increase our fighting efficiency is a foe of America
-and a friend of Germany. The man who objects to
-fearless exposure and criticism of the governmental
-shortcomings which must be exposed if they are to
-be corrected is a foe to America and a friend to
-Germany, and in addition shows that he possesses a
-thoroughly servile mind. The critic whose criticism<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-is not constructive, or who treats shortcomings as
-causes for being disheartened about the war instead
-of as an incentive to strive for the greater efficiency
-in waging the war and in preparing for the future, is
-a foe to America and a friend to every present or
-future foe of America.</p>
-
-<p>When the Administration stands against universal
-military training and talks with vague looseness of
-future paper guarantees against war, it renders it
-imperatively necessary to bring home to our people
-the tremendous damage done by our lamentable
-folly in refusing to prepare since August, 1914. It is
-a betrayal of our country to protest against telling
-the truth for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>This is the twelfth month since Germany in effect
-declared war on us and we broke relations with
-Germany. We have developed our military strength
-so slowly that as yet we would be wholly unable to
-defend ourselves if we were not protected by the
-fleets and armies of our allies. No modern armies
-can fight without training in modern war methods
-and without modern field guns, auto rifles and airplanes.
-As yet we only have either cannon borrowed
-from the hard-pressed French or else wooden cannon.
-We have no auto rifles. Our airplanes are still unfit
-to fight modern war planes.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriotic Education Society of Washington
-has done capital constructive work in truthfully
-telling our needs. It has fearlessly shown our dreadful
-shortage in shipbuilding and the deceitful wording
-of government announcements designed to conceal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-this shortage. It has shown the vital need of
-our, at this late time, bending every energy to
-building ships by working three eight-hour shifts a
-day in order to put our soldiers and supplies at the
-front at the earliest possible moment. The building
-of transport ships was the central feature of the
-problem we faced on January 31 a year ago. It was
-not only a misfortune, but a crime, to neglect it, as
-for nine months afterward it was neglected. The
-newspapers have just printed the statement that
-Colonel House’s committee reports that it is of the
-utmost importance to get our troops quickly to the
-front. Of course it is. Every man of broad vision
-has known this for a year. If there had been more
-fearless truth-telling during the year there would
-have been much less governmental delay and
-inefficiency.</p>
-
-<p>Tell the truth and speed up the war. Tell the
-truth only for constructive purposes and only with
-the unalterable determination to exert every particle
-of our strength at the earliest possible moment, so
-as to win peace by overwhelming victory.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_COST_OF_UNPREPAREDNESS">THE COST OF UNPREPAREDNESS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 6, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Chamberlain, in order to minimize the
-chance of future war and to insure us against disaster,
-if in future war should unhappily come, has
-introduced a bill for universal military training of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-our young men under the age of twenty-one. The
-Administration declares against universal training
-and therefore for a continuance of the policy of unpreparedness,
-the fruits of which we are enjoying.
-Some of these fruits are as follows:</p>
-
-<p>According to the statement of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Fitzgerald, the
-chairman of the Committee on Appropriations of
-the House, Congress appropriated during the last
-year $18,880,000,000 and provided authorization for
-which cash must be supplied before next July of
-$2,510,000,000, making our year’s war expenses a
-grand total of $21,390,000,000. This equals the
-entire sum Great Britain expended during the first
-three years of the war. It is over twenty times as
-great as for any previous year in our history, except
-the year that saw the close of the Civil War, and
-it is seventeen times as great as that. The appropriations
-for the year are twenty-two times as great as
-the total interest-bearing debt of the United States
-one year ago. They come within four billion dollars
-of the total expenditures of the United States Government
-from 1776 to 1917. They equal the expenditure
-of twenty dollars a minute for every minute
-since the birth of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Had we started to prepare in time, one half of
-this cost would have been saved. The tremendous
-pressure coming suddenly caused an immense increase
-in expenditures, even aside from the futile
-waste, extravagance, and misdirection. Had we gone
-into the war when the Lusitania was sunk, we would
-have saved a third of the sum, for we have provided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-to loan our allies about seven billions. Our delay in
-going to war and, above all, delay in preparing, have
-resulted in a huge increase in the money chest and
-in the length of the war and in the terrible total of
-avoidable human suffering.</p>
-
-<p>The lack of preparedness is responsible for the
-sickness among our soldiers. Take as an example
-the ravages of pneumonia in the training camps.
-The men in the training camps are physically of
-exceptional type and are in the prime of life. Their
-death-rate ought not normally to be more than a
-small fraction of that in New York City, where the
-total population includes the very young, the very
-old, the weak and sick, the badly nurtured. The
-population of New York City is 4,800,000. The
-population of the thirty camps is about six hundred
-thousand. In the two weeks of last December the
-death-rate in the city from pneumonia was one to
-every 16,500 people. In the camps it was one to
-2800. Therefore, the specially selected men of the
-camps suffered from a death-rate six times as great
-as in the heterogeneous city population. And of
-every three men attacked, one died.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless administrative blundering during the
-last year is largely responsible for this showing.
-But the prime cause is the failure to prepare in
-advance. Our first duty at the moment is to speed
-up the war. Our second duty is to secure real
-preparedness as outlined in Senator Chamberlain’s
-bill.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="COOPERATION_AND_CONTROL">COÖPERATION AND CONTROL</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 8, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The assumption of control by the Government over
-the railroads was certainly necessary. Exactly how
-far it will go is not evident. At present what
-has been done is merely to introduce government
-supervision and control over railroads which are required
-to combine their operations in flat defiance Of
-the Sherman Law. In other words, the Government
-has wisely abandoned the effort to enforce competition
-among the railroads and has introduced the
-principle of control over corporative organizations.</p>
-
-<p>The Attorney-General has just announced that he
-will, for the time being, abandon the suits under the
-Sherman Law to break up the harvester and steel
-corporations, because it is not wise to do so during
-the war. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Culbertson, the able expert on the
-government tariff board, has announced that the
-Sherman Law is mischievous in international trade.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Francis Heney, than whom in all the country
-there is no more determined and efficient enemy of
-wrongdoing corporations, has stated that the Sherman
-Law, the so-called Anti-Trust Law, is mischievous
-in our domestic business and should be
-repealed. In other words, under the strain of the
-war the Sherman Law has completely broken down
-and the Government is not merely conniving at,
-but encouraging, its violation by many different
-corporations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Sherman Law, or so-called Anti-Trust Law, is
-just as mischievous in peace as in war. It represents
-an effort to meet a great evil in the wrong way. As
-long as corporations claimed complete immunity
-from government control, the first necessity was to
-establish the right of the Government to control
-them. This right and power of the Government was
-established by the Northern Securities suit, which
-prevented all the railroads of the country from being
-united under one corporation which defied government
-control. The suits against the Standard Oil
-and Tobacco trusts followed. The Supreme Court
-decreed that the trusts had been guilty of grave
-misconduct and should be dissolved, but not a
-particle of good followed their dissolution. It is
-evident that the Sherman Law, or so-called Anti-Trust
-Law, in no way meets the evils of the industrial
-world. To try to break up corporations because
-they are big and efficient is either ineffective or
-mischievous. What is needed is to exercise government
-control over them, so as to encourage their
-efficiency and prosperity, but to insure that the efficiency
-is used in the public interest and that the
-prosperity is properly passed around.</p>
-
-<p>Merely to repeal the Sherman Law without
-putting anything in its place would do harm. It
-should at once be amended or superseded by a law
-which would in some shape permit and require
-the issuing of licenses by the Federal Government
-to corporations doing an interstate or international
-business. Corporations which did not take out such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-licenses or comply with the rules of the Government’s
-administrative board would be subject to the
-Sherman Law. The others would be under government
-control and would be encouraged to coöperate
-and in every way to become prosperous and efficient,
-the Government guaranteeing by its supervision
-that the corporations’ prosperity and efficiency were
-in the public interest.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_ARTEMUS_WARD_THEORY_OF_WAR">THE ARTEMUS WARD THEORY OF WAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The great American humorist, Artemus Ward,
-whose writings gave such delight to Abraham Lincoln,
-once remarked that he was willing to sacrifice
-all his wife’s relatives on the altar of the country.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ward was not in President Lincoln’s Cabinet.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker is in President Wilson’s Cabinet. He
-takes substantially the same ground that Artemus
-Ward took, although possibly with a more unconscious
-humor. He has just uttered a heroic sentiment
-expressing his pleased acquiescence in the
-sacrifice of France and England’s armies for the
-defense of the common cause.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday of last week, discussing the likelihood
-that the Germans, relieved from anxiety of
-Russia, would make a tremendous assault on the
-western front, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker said: “The impending
-German offensive will possibly be their greatest
-assault. The French and British armies can be relied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-upon to withstand the shock.” <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker is President
-Wilson’s Secretary of War. He holds at this
-time the most important office in our Government.
-He thus announces to our allies and the world that
-in the twelfth month after Germany went to war
-with us, America, the richest country of the world
-with a population of one hundred million people,
-after being at war nearly a year and after such warning
-as never a nation had before, is wholly unable to
-send any effective assistance to repel the greatest
-assault of the war, and that the only military measure
-which can be taken is to express through <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Baker the belief that the British and French armies
-can be relied upon to do alone the duty which we
-ought to share with them.</p>
-
-<p>This statement of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker absolves us from all
-necessity of commenting on his ingenuous defense
-of a system of preparedness which leaves our small
-army at the front with no artillery except what we
-get from the French and our army at home with
-batteries made out of telegraph poles and logwood.
-It is not necessary to discuss the exact amount of
-pride we should as a Nation take in the fact that
-as a Nation after eleven months of war we are
-proudly emerging from the broomstick rifle stage
-preparedness into the telegraph pole stage preparedness.
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Baker’s statement sums up the situation
-exactly. We have been at war nearly a year, and
-when the Germans make their greatest assault our
-preparedness is only such as to warrant our expressing
-belief that our allies can win without our help.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span></p>
-
-<p>The New York Times, a supporter of the Administration,
-comments truthfully on the situation:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Nine months after entering the war not only are we giving
-our allies no effective military aid, but all our bustle and stir
-doesn’t hide the fact that, through incompetence and lack of
-organization and system, we are far behind in our preparations
-to supply rifles, ammunition, machine guns, airships,
-uniforms, clothing for the troops we shall some time have at
-the front. Our backwardness is naturally disquieting to our
-allies. If one million American soldiers, or half that number,
-fully equipped, had stood on the soil of France, Lloyd George
-would have made no speech to British working-men restating
-after a fashion the war aims of the Allies. There would have
-been no occasion, nor demand for a speech telling the labor
-unions what the troops of Britain are fighting for.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The pacifists and the agencies of German intrigue
-would not be working for a peace in the interests of
-the capitalistic and militaristic autonomy of Germany.
-As the Times well says, the man who now
-works for such a peace while Germany is unconquered
-“is the most heartless of militarists or enemy
-of the world’s peace and freedom.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_FRUITS_OF_WATCHFUL_WAITING">THE FRUITS OF WATCHFUL WAITING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 18, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>We have been at war nearly one year. We have
-failed to do any damage to Germany, but we have
-done a great deal of damage to ourselves. Recently
-the President’s Secretary of War announced that the
-war was three thousand miles away and so he had
-not prepared to meet it. Incidentally the feats of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-German submarine off Newport in the fall of 1916
-showed that if it had not been for the Allied fleets
-and armies the war would then have been on our own
-shores. But at the moment it is three thousand
-miles away, and yet this Nation is suffering the
-kind of grave economic derangement that we would
-suffer if a hostile army was on our own shores. We
-have accomplished very little. We have suffered
-very much. Both the failure in accomplishment and
-the amount of avoidable suffering are due to the
-resolute refusal of our Government to prepare in
-advance and to its fatuous persistence in the policy
-of watchful waiting.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless part of the present trouble in connection
-with coal is due to unwisdom in the price-fixing
-of bituminous coal. Doubtless part of it is due to the
-railway congestion, which in its turn is due to the
-complete lack of system and consequent chaos due
-to suddenly imposing on well-meaning, stodgy government
-officials of average capacity the duty of
-dealing in a tremendous hurry with a situation of
-unprecedented size, complexity, and importance,
-but the temporary causes are all secondary to the
-great cause of complete failure to prepare in advance.</p>
-
-<p>Our economic unpreparedness is just as complete
-as our military unpreparedness and is one of the
-chief factors therein. We are now paying bitterly for
-the fact that two and three years ago it was deemed
-politically wise to shape our governmental policy
-along the lines of “Watchful waiting” and “He
-kept us out of war.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span></p>
-
-<p>If three years ago we had begun in good faith and
-earnestly to prepare, and if, when the Lusitania was
-sunk, we had acted as precisely as we did act with no
-more provocation in February, last, this war would
-now have been over. An immense amount of bloodshed
-would have been spared and the danger of
-German militarism would have been forever averted.
-In such case we would have greatly developed the
-trained administrators and the coherent system
-necessary to deal wisely with the economic no less
-than the military features of a great war. Our refusal
-to prepare in advance and our fatuous acceptance
-of rhetorical platitudes as a substitute for
-preparations have resulted in our present military
-impotence and profound and far-reaching economic
-derangement. The profound business distrust, the
-unrest of labor, the coal famine, the congestion of
-traffic, and the shutting down of industries at the
-time when it is most important that production
-should be speeded to the highest point, all are due
-primarily to the refusal to face facts during the first
-two years and a half of the World War and the seething
-welter of inefficiency and confusion in which the
-policy of watchful waiting finally plunged us. Nine
-tenths of wisdom is being wise in time. All far-sighted
-patriots most earnestly hope that this
-Nation will learn the bitter lesson and that never
-again will we be caught so shamefully unprepared,
-spiritually, economically, and from the military
-standpoint as has been the case in the year that is
-now passing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="TELL_THE_TRUTH">TELL THE TRUTH</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 21, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Nearly a year has passed since, on February 3, by
-formally breaking relations with Germany, we reluctantly
-admitted that she had gone to war with us.
-During that year it has been incessantly insisted that
-it was unpatriotic under any consideration to tell
-an unpleasant truth or to point out a governmental
-shortcoming. The result has not been happy.</p>
-
-<p>The famous war correspondent, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Caspar
-Whitney, has returned from the front so that he
-might avoid our fatuous and sinister censorship,
-and tell our people the truth about our army in
-France. He shows that this army, which, Secretary
-Baker had just assured our people, was admirably
-equipped, in reality had no cannon or machine guns
-except those it had borrowed from the hard-pressed
-French; that there was a lamentable shortage of
-shoes; that the motor cars were poor; that we had
-no airplanes. From another source it appeared that
-many thousand coffins had been sent over. Our troops
-had no shoes, but they had plenty of coffins. Their
-ammunition was defective, and they had neither cannon
-nor auto rifles; but they had plenty of coffins.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time the death of gallant Major
-Gardner from pneumonia called sharp attention to
-the evil health conditions in most of our home training
-camps, and the Senate investigating committee
-showed a really appalling slackness and inefficiency in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-the management of the War Department under <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Baker. There is no particular reason to blame <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Baker; he did not appoint himself; he did not seek the
-office. Logwood cannon and wooden auto rifles are
-mostly incidental features of the inevitable outcome.</p>
-
-<p>All this was done in the face of repeated and explicit
-warnings from the best authority. Major-General
-Leonard Wood told the military committee
-of the Senate and of the House in detail about our
-shortcomings two years ago, and again one year ago.
-The Administration not only refused to remedy
-these shortcomings, but has spitefully punished
-General Wood ever since.</p>
-
-<p>Criticism should be both truthful and constructive.
-I have told not the whole truth, but the minimum
-truth absolutely necessary in order that we
-may, before it is too late, speed up the war, and in
-order that we may insist on the passage of the
-Chamberlain Bill, so that never again may we be
-caught utterly and shamefully unprepared. Let us
-insist that the truth be told. The truth only harms
-weaklings. The American people wish the truth,
-and can stand the truth.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="JUSTIFICATION_OF_CONSTRUCTIVE">JUSTIFICATION OF CONSTRUCTIVE
-CRITICISM</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 28, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Chamberlain and his excellent committee
-have already seen the justification of their investigation.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-They have forced the appointment of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Stettinius, a trained and capable expert, as head of
-the war supplies purchasing department. The fact
-that the appointment is made in order to obviate
-the need of following Senator Chamberlain’s more
-thoroughgoing programme does not alter the fact
-that it represents a certain advance and that this
-advance is primarily due to the investigation by
-Senator Chamberlain’s committee. It is a striking
-tribute to the necessity for and the good results of
-that investigation.</p>
-
-<p>The investigation has been wholly non-partisan.
-It has been conducted with an eye single to the needs
-of the army and of our country. Senator Chamberlain
-is a Democrat, just as Secretary Baker is a
-Democrat. The committee has fearlessly exposed
-very grave abuses and shortcomings and has taken
-constructive action to remedy them. Secretary
-Baker’s testimony shows that, to use the language of
-Senator Chamberlain, the President has been misled
-as to the facts. His statements as to the satisfactory
-condition of things in the camps are not in accord
-with the facts. It is, of course, exceedingly difficult
-to get testimony from army officers because they
-have vividly before their eyes the signal punishment
-inflicted by the Administration on General Wood for
-fearlessly telling the truth, and those of us who have
-examined conditions and know how bad they are
-cannot give our authorities in many cases because
-we will not expose good officers to punishment in
-order to save ourselves from contradiction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span></p>
-
-<p>But certain vitally important facts are easily
-attainable. At the very time that Secretary Baker
-was testifying that the army had enough rifles, the
-governor of Mississippi in the public press on January
-17 stated that he had been helpless to prevent
-the burning alive of a negro because the home guards
-had no rifles and because “there are over five hundred
-national guardsmen at Camp Jackson, but
-they are equally helpless because they have no
-rifles.” Many deficiencies can be covered up or their
-existence denied, but some cannot thus be concealed.
-Any one can see the wooden cannon and wooden
-machine guns in the training camps, every one knows
-that our army at the front has French cannon and
-French machine guns. Will not Secretary Baker
-state frankly when our own cannon and machine
-guns will be ready? After one year of war we have
-none. Must we wait another year before getting
-them? Caspar Whitney, a responsible man, has
-stated lamentable shortcomings of our army at the
-front. Will not the Secretary advise us what steps
-he has taken to investigate this statement and
-remedy the shortcomings?</p>
-
-<p>The appointment of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Stettinius is a good thing,
-but it does not represent even a half step toward
-bringing order out of the administrative chaos at
-Washington. Drastic action is needed to secure a
-plan providing for coördination, responsibility and
-efficiency, and above all, for securing the right men
-to administer the plan.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SECRETARY_BAKERS_GENERAL_DENIAL">SECRETARY BAKER’S GENERAL DENIAL</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">February 2, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Secretary Baker’s denial of any serious shortcomings
-in the administration of the War Department
-comes under several heads. Part of it is
-prophecy, which we all hope will turn out to be
-justified. Part of it is explanation or denials of facts,
-as to which it is easy to get first-hand information.
-With this part I shall deal in my next editorial.
-Part of it relates to allegations as to which it is almost
-impossible to get first-hand information except
-from officers whose names cannot be quoted, because
-this would probably entail punishment upon them.
-It is with this part that I now deal.</p>
-
-<p>General Wood two years ago, before the congressional
-committee, and again one year ago, before the
-congressional committee, set forth in detail our unpreparedness.
-Every fact he stated has proved to
-be true and to be but a small part of the truth. Yet
-he has been singled out for punishment because of
-thus having told Congress the truth, and this although
-we and our allies are now paying dearly for
-our failure to act on the truth which he thus told.
-Under such conditions it is impossible to make public
-the names of the officers and enlisted men through
-whom we occasionally learn of abuses. Nevertheless,
-it is imperative to try to correct the abuses. If
-the Administration had not punished General Wood
-for telling the truth, the complaints would be at once<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-laid before the department and the wrongs remedied.
-Under existing conditions it is imperative to call public
-attention to them.</p>
-
-<p>A major-general informed me in October that he
-had one hundred rifles for twenty thousand men, and
-most strongly felt that these men should not have
-been brought to the camp until the hospitals,
-barracks, heating arrangements, clothes, and arms
-were ready for them. Another major-general told
-me, in explanation of the shortage of supplies abroad,
-that one shipload of big coast defense guns had to be
-returned because when they reached France it was
-discovered that there were no carriages for them.
-Hundreds of officers and non-commissioned officers
-have told me of lack of overcoats, of winter under-clothing,
-of heavy socks. One quartermaster, being
-unable otherwise to get woolen gloves for the men in
-cold weather, finally got them from the Red Cross
-and was officially reprimanded for so doing. Two
-officers informed me that when in France there was
-a shortage of shoes. They were told it was due to a
-shipment of coffins, one being told that they were
-not regular coffins, but boxes containing grave-clothes.
-The newspaper correspondents repeatedly
-have told of the shortage of shoes, one recent statement
-being that a shipment of clay pigeons, not
-coffins, was sent over, while <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Caspar Whitney
-recites that the surplusage was a large shipment of
-hospital cots. At any rate, the shortage of shoes is
-unquestioned, whether their places were taken by
-coffins, clay pigeons, or hospital cots. A leading<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-New York business man has just written me of the
-complete lack of hospital and medical facilities in
-one camp. The superintendent of a Bible teachers’
-training school writes that his son volunteered,
-leaving a wife and two little children; that his pay
-was over a month in arrears, and that at Christmas
-time he wrote as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We have not yet received our November pay. At this
-time of the year the boys don’t want it for themselves; they
-want to send some little thing home to their mothers or wives
-or sweethearts, and in lots of cases to their children, to whom
-just a little something from daddy means so much. Yet even
-that little pleasure is denied us. Can you not bring this to the
-attention of the people who are supporting this Government?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have received many hundreds such appeals. To
-give the names of the writers would insure their
-punishment. To pay no heed to their appeals means
-that the abuses go unremedied. Doubtless an occasional
-informant is in error in his statement. But
-Senator Chamberlain’s speech and the testimony
-taken before his committee prove that the important
-statements I have made during the last few months
-as to the shortcomings in our army have been more
-than warranted by the facts.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="LET_GEORGE_SPEED_UP_THE_WAR">LET GEORGE SPEED UP THE WAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">February 3, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In my last editorial I spoke of the things of which
-Secretary Baker explicitly or implicitly denies the
-existence, in justifying the Administration for the
-military delay and shortcomings that have marked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-our entry into war. But as to the major facts there
-is no room for denial. As to these Secretary Baker
-falls back on the comfortable doctrine that all our
-shortcomings are of no consequence because they
-are made good anyhow by the efforts of our allies&mdash;who,
-by the way, with preposterous silliness, are
-in official circles merely termed our associates.
-Secretary Baker explains that, although our forces
-in France have no field artillery or auto rifles, this
-is of no consequence because the French love to give
-us artillery and auto rifles. He explains that the
-greatest German offensive movement of the war is
-about to take place, an offensive movement which,
-if successful, means that we have lost the war, and
-he adds that we can trust England and France to
-repel this offensive. This is a naked statement that
-we are to let George do it. We are to announce that
-after being at war just a year our delays have been
-so great that we are almost negligible in the military
-sense and that we must trust to our allies to speed up
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>This verifies the prediction of von Hindenburg
-and von Tirpitz that it would take us eighteen
-months to become a real factor in the war. Americans
-laughed at this statement, but the ruthless and
-brutal and intelligent Germans were right and our
-own soft sentimentalities were their efficient allies.
-We are in the position of letting George speed up
-the war. Are the citizens of a proud and high-spirited
-Nation to be content with such a position?</p>
-
-<p>Our major shortcomings can neither be concealed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-nor denied. In October I personally saw thousands
-of infantrymen drilling with sticks. In December, I
-still saw artillerymen with sticks instead of rifles. A
-month ago most of the cannon in the national army
-camps, which I saw, were made of logs or of sections
-of telegraph poles and all the machine guns I saw
-were wooden dummies. The daily press has repeatedly
-published photos of these wooden rifles,
-cannon, and machine guns. Secretary Baker cannot
-deny this nor can he deny that in modern war an
-army without artillery is helpless. We are now
-getting a small number of machine guns. We are
-turning some heavy coast guns into field artillery,
-but as yet gallant General Pershing and his gallant
-men in France have to trust to the French for artillery
-and machine guns and war planes, and, thanks
-to our dawdling and indecision, we have an utterly
-insufficient number of cargo ships.</p>
-
-<p>We have been at war for a year. In April Congress
-stated that Germany had already committed repeated
-acts of war against us and that our own declaration
-of war was formal. It was then too late
-to undo the criminal mischief caused by our refusal
-to prepare during the preceding two and a half
-years, but we aggravated the damage immensely by
-our delays and follies. If we had exercised reasonable
-energy we would in six months have achieved
-more than we have actually achieved in a year. The
-least we can do now is to speed up the war ourselves.
-Let us insist that this be the end toward which with
-all our energy we now strive.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="LET_UNCLE_SAM_GET_INTO_THE_GAME">LET UNCLE SAM GET INTO THE GAME</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">February 5, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>No one can tell how long this war will last. It may
-last three years more, and we should prepare accordingly.
-But it may close this year, and it is unpardonable
-of us not to act with such speed as to make our
-help available in substantial form at once. Uncle
-Sam must not be put in the position of the sub, who
-only gets into the game just before the whistle
-blows. Above all, he must not so act as to rouse
-suspicion that this attitude is due to deliberate
-shirking on his part.</p>
-
-<p>The prime aid in getting Uncle Sam into the game
-has come from the men who, in order to achieve this
-object, have truthfully set forth the unpleasant facts
-about our delay, military inefficiency, and total unpreparedness.
-The critics of these men have been
-either unwise or insincere. The most fatuous form
-of objection to such truth-telling is the assertion that
-it tends to prolong the war. It is the only thing that
-will shorten the war. Suppression of the truth as the
-habitual governmental policy has been successful in
-preventing our people from realizing our mistakes
-and even more successful in preventing their remedy.</p>
-
-<p>An excellent example of this policy of falsehood is
-furnished in a letter from a news agency offering to
-various newspapers cartoons assailing me because I
-had “criticized our unpreparedness and urged an
-immediate movement toward universal obligatory
-military training,” the cartoonist saying that I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-said that I had seen artillerymen drilling with
-“wooden guns made from pieces of telegraph poles.”
-The writer admitted this, but stated that “these
-wooden imitations were as efficient for the purposes
-of learning as the real guns.” I suppose that this
-particular Champion of military inefficiency would
-believe that a rifle team could train for a championship
-match with dummy rifles of wood.</p>
-
-<p>Every important criticism made of our military
-unpreparedness and inefficiency during the past six
-months, and indeed during the preceding three years,
-has been proved true and in no case has there been
-correction of the abuse until it was exposed. General
-Pershing has just written home a scathing indictment
-of the military shortcomings of our higher
-officers abroad. This is after we have been at war a
-year, and it is directly due to the character of both
-the civilian and the military control that has been
-exercised from the swivel chairs of the War Department
-during this year.</p>
-
-<p>Our duty is solely to the country and to every
-official high or low precisely to the extent to which
-he loyally, disinterestedly, and efficiently serves the
-country. Let us get behind the United States. Let
-us think only of our patriotic duty. I care not a rap
-for politics at such a time as this. I supported Senator
-Chamberlain, my political and to some extent
-my personal opponent in the past, because on the
-great issue now up he served the country. I supported
-General Crowder, of whose politics I know
-nothing and care less, because he served the country.
-Stand behind America.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CONSERVATION_IS_IMPORTANT_AND">CONSERVATION IS IMPORTANT AND
-PRODUCTION IS MORE IMPORTANT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">February 15, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is very important that we should conserve many
-things, but especially food. It is, however, very
-much more important that we shall produce the
-food in order to conserve it. The governmental
-attitude toward production during the past year
-has been, at points, very unwise. There has not
-only been failure to encourage producing the one
-thing vitally necessary to this Nation at this time,
-but there has been at times, by unwise price-fixing,
-a direct discouragement of producing.</p>
-
-<p>We have suffered severely during this winter because
-of this attitude in the matter of coal production.
-One of the factors in producing the misery and
-discomfort, especially among people of limited means
-during the severe weather of the last few months,
-was the improperly low price rate established last
-summer, and the uncertain and contradictory attitude
-of the Government on the question of coal
-production.</p>
-
-<p>But important though all production is, the production
-of food, the production which we owe to the
-farmer, is the most important of all. This country
-needs more food. Its allies need more food. Only
-the farmer can give the food. It is nonsense to
-expect him to produce it unless he can make his
-livelihood by so doing. The farmer is thoroughly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-patriotic; he stands ready now as he has stood
-ready in every crisis of the Nation, pledged to do his
-full duty, and a little more than his duty. But he
-makes his livelihood by producing what is essential
-to the livelihood of the rest of us. He cannot produce
-unless he makes his livelihood. Not a step should
-be taken that interferes with his welfare, save after
-such wise and cautious inquiry as to make us certain
-that the step is necessary.</p>
-
-<p>We should do whatever is necessary to help the
-farmer produce the maximum of food at this time.
-Moreover, every step we take should be conditioned
-upon securing the farmer’s permanent well-being.
-The city man is often utterly ignorant of the work
-and of the needs of the man who lives in the open
-country. The working-man and the business man
-who growl about one another are a little apt to join
-in growling about the farmer. The city Socialist is
-more utterly ignorant of the farmer than any other
-human being. Last fall the Socialist campaign in
-New York had for one of its battle cries the announcement
-that they intended to make the farmer
-give them five-cent milk. Apparently the detail
-that the farmer had to feed the cows and take care
-of them struck them as unworthy of notice.</p>
-
-<p>The farmer must have labor. But there must be
-no importation of Chinese or any other cheap labor,
-whether permanent or temporary. The emergency
-need of farm labor for planting and harvesting can
-be met at this time just as the need for the national
-army was met. The farmer must have first-class<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-prices for his products. No price-fixing at his expense
-must be gone into without the clearest necessity
-being shown, and above all there must be no
-repetition of the folly that marked the dealing with
-the fuel situation last summer. The farmer must
-have what capital he needs at a rate of interest not
-excessive, in order to plant and reap his crop this
-year. The aid can be given to groups of farmers who
-underwrite one another, so to speak, and, of course,
-if he can be given it by private means, so much the
-better. If that is impossible, then the Government
-should act. We should profit by the admirable
-California example to see that the help is given only
-to the man who is a real farmer and can really make
-use of it, but that it is extended in such a way as to
-be of genuine and material benefit.</p>
-
-<p>This is the immediate need, and let us treat meeting
-this need as the opening wedge of a policy designed
-to prevent the growth of tenant farms at the
-expense of the farm owner who tills his own soil,
-and designed also to put a premium upon the permanent
-prosperity of the small farmer as compared
-with the big landowner.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_PEOPLES_WAR">THE PEOPLE’S WAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">February 26, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is not agreeable to keep insisting on the need of
-doing better than we have done. It is not agreeable
-to keep pointing out our shortcomings, but to do so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-is the only way of remedying them and of securing
-better action in the future.</p>
-
-<p>The people, some of them well-meaning, some of
-them anything but well-meaning, who denounce
-criticism and who object to telling the minimum of
-truth necessary to correct our faults, are the efficient
-allies of Germany and the foes of the United States.
-Actual events have shown that fatuous complacency
-on the part of our officials has resulted in inefficiency
-and delay which would have meant overwhelming
-disaster to this Nation if we had not been protected
-by the fleets and armies of England and France.</p>
-
-<p>For the first eleven months of this war the inefficiency
-at vital points in our Government, notably in
-the matter of shipping and in the management of
-the War Department, was worse than anything
-Russia herself has ever seen. Nearly thirteen months
-have now passed since Germany went to war with us
-and we broke relations with Germany and afterwards
-timidly and helplessly drifted stern foremost
-into what we styled a “formal” state of war. The
-Russo-Japanese War likewise began before there
-was any formal declaration of war. It only lasted
-sixteen months. We have been accustomed to hold
-out Russia’s action during that sixteen months as a
-miracle of inefficiency, but she showed herself far
-less inefficient than we have shown ourselves during
-the thirteen months that have just passed, and, of
-course, there was nothing in her conduct quite as
-bad as our criminal folly in utterly failing in any
-shape or way to prepare during the two and a half<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-previous years. There is just one difference between
-the two cases. Russia did not have England and
-France to protect her from the effects of her folly.
-That we have been at liberty to indulge in our folly
-with impunity is due only to the fact that England
-and France have protected us with the blood of their
-bravest, while we have refused to prepare and then
-delayed and blundered and fatuously boasted after
-the war came on. Every pro-German, of course,
-heartily applauds these blunders and delays and
-bitterly objects to their being pointed out, but every
-American with a particle of patriotism in him, every
-American proud of his country, should learn the
-bitter lesson and should resolve that never again
-will we permit our great Nation to be put in such an
-ignoble position.</p>
-
-<p>Our worst failure, of course, has been our failure
-to grapple with the shipping problem. But there
-have been many such failures. One was the failure
-to equip Pershing’s army. I do not believe a more
-gallant little army than Pershing’s was ever sent
-abroad, but without abundant artillery, machine
-guns, and airplanes a modern army is as helpless as
-if its men were armed only with stone-headed axes.
-Pershing’s army has only the field artillery, machine
-guns, and airplanes that the French have given it,
-and this, although since our troops landed last June,
-a longer time has elapsed than covered the whole
-Franco-Prussian War. As regards the field artillery,
-the fault is due to the blind refusal of the Government
-to prepare in advance to build the guns. As<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-regards the machine guns and auto rifles, the fault
-is due to our Government’s refusal during the last
-thirteen months to utilize the Lewis gun.</p>
-
-<p>Steps have been taken to remedy some of the
-worst of these evils in the War Department. They
-have been taken only and purely because of public
-criticism of them and because of the fearless exposure
-of inefficiency of Senator Chamberlain and his
-colleagues of the Senate investigating committee.
-Until this committee began its labor, the War Department
-had striven to conceal and had refused
-to remedy its inefficiency, blundering, and delay.
-There has been some improvement, and this improvement
-is due solely to the Senate committee.</p>
-
-<p>This is the people’s war. It is not the President’s
-war any more than it is Congress’s war. It is America’s
-war. We are in honor bound in conducting it
-to stand by every official who does well and against
-every official who fails to do well. Any other attitude
-is a servile attitude. Congress on the whole has
-done well. Until Congress finally asserted itself
-the executive branch of the Government did very
-badly. If Congress follows the lead outlined in the
-Chamberlain Bill, it will continue to do well; if it
-follows the lead outlined in Senator Overman’s
-Bill, it will condone the inefficiency of the past and
-put a premium upon inefficiency in the future.
-Congress must not shirk its duty to the people. Let
-the machinery of the Government be modernized
-and above all let this machinery be manned by men
-of distinguished and demonstrated ability who will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-make the governmental conduct efficient instead of
-grossly inefficient, as it was during the first year of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>Let us quit being content with feeble mediocrity.
-Let us demand really first-class efficiency in both
-preparation and performance. That is the only way
-to do what we must do and see this war through to
-a triumphant conclusion.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_FRUITS_OF_FIFTY-FIFTY_LOYALTY">THE FRUITS OF FIFTY-FIFTY LOYALTY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 2, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A captain in the regular army of the United States
-has just been justly sentenced to twenty-five years’
-imprisonment for trying to combine loyalty to this
-country with loyalty to Germany. He was born here
-of German parents. In Germany, for such an offense,
-he would have been instantly shot or hung.
-And in Germany organizations and newspapers
-responsible for causing such action would be instantly
-suppressed and their organizers and editors
-heavily punished.</p>
-
-<p>The unfortunate army officer in question is paying
-the penalty for heeding such organizations as the
-German-American Alliance. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Gustavus Ohlinger
-has put before Congress facts concerning the past
-actions and activities of this organization which
-warrant and require its instant suppression. Its
-leaders have sometimes been men who practiced a
-fifty-fifty loyalty between this country and Germany<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-and sometimes men all of whose loyalty was for
-Germany and all whose enmity was for the nationality,
-ideals, and language of the American people.
-It is an outrage that such an organization should
-be permitted longer to exist. Congress should act
-against it at once and the Department of Justice
-should abandon its slack attitude toward German
-spies and should so act as to convince our enemies
-that Uncle Sam is not a timid and soft-headed fool,
-and that hereafter German spies, dynamiters, and
-murderers who ply their trade here will do so at the
-risk of their necks.</p>
-
-<p>Teaching German in the public schools should be
-prohibited. German language newspapers should
-have a time limit act, after which it should not be
-lawful to publish them save in English. A few of
-their newspapers have a most honorable past and
-are doing excellent work in the present. A number
-of English language newspapers have preached moral
-treason to the American people, often covering it by
-zeal in denouncing all honest and truthful men who
-point out the delays and inefficiencies in government,
-actions which make those responsible for
-them enemies of the American people and aids to
-Germany; but moral treason in English is at least
-open, whereas in a foreign language it is hidden.
-Moral treason is not necessarily legal treason, but
-it may be as dangerous, and from senators to school
-teachers, all public servants who deal in it should
-promptly be removed from office.</p>
-
-<p>The organizations, newspapers, and public servants<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-who thus betray the honor of America in the
-interest of Germany wrong all their fellow citizens.
-But above all they cruelly wrong those loyal Americans,
-the great majority of our citizens who are in
-whole or in part of German blood. The loyal majority
-should lend their utmost energies to securing the
-condign and summary punishment of the disloyal
-minority of Americans of German blood who are a
-disgrace and a menace to this country. Gustavus
-Ohlinger is an admirable example of the Americans
-in whole or in part of German blood who is an
-American and nothing else. All good Americans,
-and especially all good Americans of German blood,
-should actively and heartily back him. There is no
-room in this country for fifty-fifty Americanism.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="QUIT_TALKING_PEACE">QUIT TALKING PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 5, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The experience of Trotzky, Lenine, and the other
-Bolshevist leaders in their peace negotiations with
-Germany ought to be illuminating to our own people.
-Germany encouraged them to enter peace negotiations,
-spoke fairly to them, got them committed to
-the abandonment of their allies, used them to demoralize
-Russia and make it impossible for her to
-organize effective resistance, and then threw them
-over, instantly invaded their land, and now holds a
-part of Russia.</p>
-
-<p>Let our people take warning and insist that all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-peace talk cease forthwith. Germany is the enemy
-of humanity generally and in a special sense is the
-enemy of the United States. She has introduced
-into warfare horrors which not another civilized
-nation would have dreamed of using. Her conduct
-toward Belgium stands out on the high peak of infamy.
-She has murdered innocent women and
-children wholesale on the high seas and hundreds of
-Americans have thus been slain. She has organized
-murder, rape, robbery, and devastation on a gigantic
-scale in every conquered territory. Our own sons
-and brothers are at this moment facing death by the
-awful torture of the poison gas because Germany has
-invented methods of warfare more cruel than those
-of the Dark Ages. Peace on equal terms with such
-a foe would mean black shame in the present and the
-certainty of renewed and wholesale war in the future.</p>
-
-<p>To talk peace means to puzzle the ignorant and
-to weaken the will of even the stout-hearted. It is
-hailed with evil joy by all the men in this country
-who have opposed war and have wished us to submit
-tamely to German brutality. When there comes
-from Washington an announcement about peace
-terms which the pacifists and pro-Germans are able
-to interpret as favorable to their views, the Hearst
-papers gleefully champion it as undoing the effect of
-previous declarations that we are in this war to the
-end, and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hillquit, the New York mayoralty candidate
-of the Germanized Socialists and the pacifists,
-expresses his hearty approval and says that the
-President has now taken his (<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Hillquit’s) position.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us quit talking peace with a foe who, if we
-entered into peace negotiations, would, according to
-his ability, trick us as he has already tricked the
-Bolsheviki of Russia. Let us not put ourselves on
-the moral and intellectual level of Trotzky and
-Lenine. Every peace utterance pleases the Germans,
-renders our allies uneasy, strengthens the pacifists,
-the pro-Germans, and the various seditious elements
-in our own country, and bewilders, disheartens, and
-weakens our honest citizens.</p>
-
-<p>The time when words about peace were useful
-passed a very long time ago. Let us now merely
-announce that we are in this war to fight until Germany
-is beaten to her knees. Then let us bend our
-entire energy to building ships and more ships at the
-greatest possible speed and putting a couple of
-million men on the firing line at the earliest possible
-moment. That is the effective way to bring a just
-and lasting peace.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_WORST_ENEMIES_OF_CERTAIN">THE WORST ENEMIES OF CERTAIN
-LOYAL AMERICANS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 10, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The army and navy of the United States in the
-training camps, on the high seas, and at the battle
-front, are at this moment proving themselves the
-most potent agencies of Americanism that our
-country contains. All good Americans should feel a
-peculiar pride in the fine and gallant loyalty with
-which the great majority of the Americans of German<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-descent have come forward to do their part to
-win this war against the brutal and merciless tyranny
-of the Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns.
-As regards able-bodied men, this service
-must be rendered in the army, for in war-time no
-other form of activity can be accepted as a substitute
-for the fighting work of the fighting man.</p>
-
-<p>I continually meet officers from the front. A captain
-recently out of the trenches called on me the
-other day. His father and mother were born in
-Germany. He himself, after going through a small
-American college, had spent three years at Heidelberg.
-He mentioned that one of his lieutenants was
-born in Norway, and that another was of Irish
-parentage, and then continued by saying that already
-his brief experience of the war had given him
-a horror of the Germany of to-day, had convinced
-him that our only safety lay in the complete Americanization
-of all our people and therefore in the insistence
-that English should be the only language of
-this country and the only language taught in any
-primary school, and that he regarded such organizations
-as the German-American Alliance as guilty of
-moral treason to America as the worst and most
-dangerous foes of good Americans of German blood,
-and as richly deserving to be promptly suppressed
-and punished.</p>
-
-<p>An officer from our destroyer squadron across the
-seas informed me that our destroyers had accounted
-for nearly a score of submarines; that about a
-quarter of their crews were, as indicated by their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-names, of German descent, but straight-out Americans
-and nothing else; that his own best gun-pointer
-was named Fritz Heinz; and that their keenest indignation
-was reserved for the German officials in Germany
-and the German-American Alliance in America
-whose actions tended to make a wall between them
-and their fellow Americans and who inflicted the
-most cruel wrong possible upon them by exciting
-among other Americans an indiscriminate distrust
-and anger toward all men of German origin.</p>
-
-<p>These men were absolutely right. We speak in the
-name of all good Americans and on behalf of Fritz
-and Adolph and Gustav exactly as on behalf of Bill
-and Harry and Edward, when we demand the
-prompt suppression of the German-American Alliance
-and of all similar organizations. The German
-blood is exactly as good as any other blood, but exactly
-as, under the corroding influence of slavery,
-masses of Americans of the best blood once became
-the enemies of the Union and of humanity, so under
-the debasing and brutalizing influence of the <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">kultur</i>
-of the last fifty years, Germany has become the cruel
-and treacherous enemy of the United States and of
-all the other liberty-loving nations of mankind.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="GIRD_UP_OUR_LOINS">GIRD UP OUR LOINS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 16, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Bible warns us to gird up our loins if we wish to
-win a race. Most certainly we cannot expect to do
-well in the present struggle unless we bend every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-energy to the task and exercise all our forethought
-in instant preparation.</p>
-
-<p>Russia’s betrayal of the Allied cause under the
-foolish and iniquitous lead of the Bolsheviki has been
-a betrayal of the United States and of the cause of
-liberty and democracy and justice throughout the
-world. Above all, it has been a betrayal of Russia
-herself, and it has, of course, absolved us of every
-obligation to her. Our duty is to stand by England
-and France and Belgium and Serbia, who have stood
-by us. Russia has ruined herself in Germany’s interest,
-and has immensely increased the peril for the
-rest of us. This simply means that we ought to re-double
-our effort. We should be building the cargo
-ships in three eight-hour shift days and should treat
-work on them as being equivalent to work in the
-army. We should speed to the utmost the work on
-the cannon and flying machines so that our army
-may cease having to rely on the French for artillery
-and airplanes. The army should copy the wisdom
-of the navy in regard to the Lewis auto rifle and
-should use this weapon to the utmost limit now, even
-although it prove wise later to supersede it with the
-Browning weapon.</p>
-
-<p>We ought at once to introduce obligatory universal
-military training for our young men between
-nineteen and twenty-one. They would not be sent
-to war until they were twenty-one. This would be
-the most effective step in preparing to get ready an
-army of five million men. Such an army would be
-relatively no larger than the four hundred thousand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-men which gallant Canada, to her eternal honor, has
-already raised. Let us begin now to prepare ourselves
-for a three years’ war.</p>
-
-<p>If we had prepared as we ought to have done during
-the two and a half years before we at last reluctantly
-faced our duty and went to war, we would
-have put a couple of million of fighting men into
-Europe last June. Russia would never have broken,
-and in all probability the war would have ended at
-once with almost no fighting. There is no use in
-crying over the enormous quantities of milk we have
-already spilled, unless it becomes necessary in order
-to prevent us from continuing to spill it in the
-present and future. Failure to prepare as above outlined
-may cause us as much trouble in the future as
-our past failure to prepare has already caused us.
-General Pershing’s gallant little army has already
-made the entire United States its debtor. But it is
-not as yet as important a military factor as the army
-of Belgium or of Portugal or of Serbia. Let us back
-it up and equip it and reënforce it to the utmost of
-our strength. Let us quit talking peace and bend
-all our energies to winning the war, and thereby
-winning the only kind of peace that will be safe,
-honorable, and lasting.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BOLSHEVIKI_AT_HOME_AND_ABROAD">BOLSHEVIKI AT HOME AND ABROAD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 19, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The answer of the Bolsheviki to the President’s
-message was an example of mean and studied impertinence.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-There was no gratitude, no apology for
-their betrayal of America and of the cause of liberty,
-and no expression of hostility to their German
-masters, but there was a gratuitous and insulting
-expression for a class war in America against what
-the Bolsheviki with ignorant folly speak of as
-capitalism. A couple of days afterward the Bolshevist
-authorities definitely concluded with Germany
-their peace of ignominy and treachery.</p>
-
-<p>There is now no possible reason for our Government
-to draw the sharp distinction they have drawn
-between the Bolsheviki abroad and the Bolsheviki
-at home. The Government is prosecuting Victor
-Berger and has suppressed the paper of Max Eastman.
-But Berger and Eastman are essentially the
-same as Lenine and Trotzky. All four have played
-Germany’s game; all four have been the enemies of
-the cause of the United States and of liberty. The
-utter ruin which the Bolsheviki have brought on
-Russia offers an illuminating example of the destruction
-which would befall the United States if it ever
-submitted to the leadership of men like Messrs.
-Hillquit, Townley, Haywood, and Berger.</p>
-
-<p>We have had many evil capitalists in the United
-States, but on the whole the worst capitalists could
-not do the permanent damage to the farmers and
-working-men in America which these foreign and
-native Bolsheviki would do if they had the power.
-Our people should keep steadily in mind that the
-Russian Bolsheviki have not attacked the big Russian
-capitalists who were in alliance with the autocracy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-of the Romanoffs and they have been the tools,
-paid or unpaid, of the German militarists and capitalists.
-They have spent their energies in attacking
-the revolutionists who overthrew the Romanoffs and
-in persecuting the peasants who have become small
-farmers and the working-men who are skilled mechanics
-and the small shopkeepers. They hate and
-envy those thrifty and self-respecting workers who
-in this country make up the great majority of our
-people and who are our most typical and characteristic
-Americans.</p>
-
-<p>The Bolsheviki have concluded a peace with
-Germany which includes handing back to the Turks,
-or, in other words, plunging back into brutal savagery,
-a district in Asia in which there are multitudes
-of Armenians and other Christians. Our Government
-has been derelict in its duty to the Armenians,
-to the Christians of Syria and to the Jews of Palestine,
-by its failure to declare war on Turkey. It is a
-grave error to coddle the Bolsheviki and support
-them in any way against our allies unless we are
-also willing fearlessly to condemn their betrayal of
-us and of the Allied cause, and unless we are ready
-to war to the end against both Germany and Turkey
-in order to rescue from tyranny and to give independence
-to the unfortunate people whom the Bolsheviki
-have abandoned to a cruel fate.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_FRUITS_OF_OUR_DELAY">THE FRUITS OF OUR DELAY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 26, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The shameful betrayal of the Allies’ cause by the
-Russian Bolshevists and the delay and incompetence
-of the American Government have given the Germans
-a free hand for their drive against the British
-army. England is at this moment fighting our
-battles just as much as she is fighting her own, yet,
-although three years have passed since the Lusitania
-was sunk and a year since Congress declared that we
-had “formally” entered the war, America is still
-merely an onlooker.</p>
-
-<p>We owe this ignoble position to the folly and the
-procrastination of our Government and its inveterate
-tendency to substitute rhetoric for action. We
-have a gallant little army across the ocean, but it is
-smaller than the Belgian army. We are not holding
-a greater extent of the battle front than the army of
-little Portugal. We have at the front no airplanes
-or field artillery and very few machine guns except
-those we have gotten from the French. Even the
-clothes of our troops are mainly obtained from the
-English. Yet we are the richest nation and one of the
-most populous nations on the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Our Government is responsible for our dreadful
-shortcomings, but the responsibility is shared by all
-the foolish creatures who have willfully blinded
-themselves to these shortcomings and have clamored
-against the faithful public servants, like Senator<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-Chamberlain, who laid bare the shortcomings for the
-purpose of remedying them. The truly patriotic men
-in this crisis have been the men who have fearlessly
-told the truth in order to speed up the war. The
-other men who have decried the truth-telling as
-“crying over spilt milk” have been profoundly unpatriotic.
-It was the failure to point out how much
-milk had been spilt which was primarily responsible
-for the failure to stop further spilling of milk.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of the terrible battle which our English
-allies are now waging, and in view of the fact that
-for three years and a half we have owed our safety to
-the British fleet and to the French spirit typified by
-Premier Clemenceau, let the American people now
-demand that the Government recognize the need of
-instant and efficient action. Let our Government
-quit flirting with the Bolshevists at home and
-abroad. Let it declare war on Turkey at once. Let
-it acknowledge its dreadful failures and delays and
-henceforth act with all possible speed. Let it manfully
-endeavor to make our weight felt in the war
-this year. Let it stop boasting about the future and
-begin to act in the present.</p>
-
-<p>Let the Government use common sense. It has
-talked magnificently about having twenty thousand
-airplanes ready in June, but it has not one American
-war plane at the front to-day. Let it quit boasting
-and act. Let it push the shipping programme by
-night and day. Let it give France and England the
-men they so sorely need.</p>
-
-<p>Our Government has delayed until the Allies have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-been brought to the brink of destruction. Let it act
-at once lest the chance for action pass completely by.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="HOW_THE_HUN_EARNS_HIS_TITLE">HOW THE HUN EARNS HIS TITLE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">March 31, 1918</span></p>
-
-<h4>THE CURSE OF THE SYSTEM</h4>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By D. Thomas Curtin</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>I</h5>
-
-<p>A scene in Schabatz, when the Austro-Hungarians attempted
-to flank Belgrade in early August, 1914, has seared itself into
-my memory. I was in the shambles of an overgrown village.
-The blood of both armies flowed in the streets and the wine
-from broken casks and bottles flowed in the cellars, soldiers
-walking in it up to their knees.</p>
-
-<p>The street was deserted save for an <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Unteroffizier</i> who was
-passing. An old woman, bent and shriveled, her white locks
-escaping the yellow sash around her head, tottered from a
-whitewashed mixture of mud and thatch, saw the enemy
-soldier, started back, thought better of it, and sank to her
-knees while she extended her bony arms for mercy. He drew
-his saber&mdash;still a relic of war. “A little despicable stage
-play and magnanimous pardon,” I thought. I was mistaken.
-The saber whistled and slashed the outstretched arms, the
-woman’s shriek cut me like saws and knives, and I turned
-away bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>I came face to face with the man a few minutes later. He
-was not drunk. Nor did he look like a wild man from the hills.
-He was a Viennese, the kind of man I had seen on scores of
-occasions lolling in a café, mild and gentle as a kitten. He
-looked mild and gentle now.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you do it?” I had to ask.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a pig-dog Serb, an enemy of my country. I
-did my duty.” And he said it in a manner which showed him
-satisfied in his conscience that he had done what was right.</p>
-
-<p>I realize now that I had had my first war-time example of
-the German system of education. The code is that anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-done in the name of the Fatherland is correct. A man can be
-educated in such a manner that he will wipe out “crawling
-verminous pests of his country” with as little compunction
-as a farmer would rid his field of potato bugs.</p>
-
-
-<h5>II</h5>
-
-<p>On Thanksgiving Day, 1914, I visited the American
-Hospital in Munich, a military hospital supported by contributions
-from the United States. While talking with three
-men in one room I was actually saying to myself that such as
-these could not be guilty of atrocities, when one of them told
-me a story which forced me to change my mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I was a member of a relief company marching in the
-Vosges,” he said. “As we were about to halt for lunch, we
-came upon a French priest in a wood who was judged quickly
-to be a spy by our officers. These turned him over to us and
-we had great amusement after we had finished eating. I laugh
-still whenever I think of it. We tied a rope around his neck
-and threw it over a limb of a tree. Some comrades pulled
-and up went the priest while the rest of us stood around and
-jabbed him with our bayonets. ‘Higher, higher!’ we shouted.
-And then we had a jumping contest to see which could thrust
-his bayonet highest.”</p>
-
-<p>The man told me the story because he thought it funny
-and his eyes danced with happy recollections as he told it.</p>
-
-
-<h4>NO GUNS</h4>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>General Pétain, commander, French army, said: “Send guns; so that
-some of us may be alive to fight by your side, when at last America is ready.”</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="poetry p0">
-What! in France and no guns!<br />
-Have I sent forth my sons<br />
-With proud boasts of great deeds&mdash;<br />
-And fallen down at plain needs?<br />
-Who proclaimed to the world<br />
-With my banners unfurled<br />
-The dread foe will succumb,<br />
-I, America, come!<br />
-<br />
-In France, and no guns!<br />
-And I’ve sent forth my sons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span><br />
-With those wolves of the Huns at their throats,<br />
-While the Kaiser and Hindenburg gloat,<br />
-And France, stricken France,<br />
-Fills the breach, while my lance<br />
-I sent flaming with pride<br />
-Hangs behind, not beside!<br />
-<br />
-In France! and no guns,<br />
-Empty hands, and my sons<br />
-Who would tear out their hearts for my fame,<br />
-Are held up to derision and shame,<br />
-Because statesmen so small<br />
-Hew out roads to a wall<br />
-While the fire bells of death<br />
-Crash souls out, and breath!<br />
-<br />
-In France, and no guns!<br />
-Why, you’re worse than the Huns,<br />
-You men who are shaming my honor<br />
-When the stress of the Nation’s upon her.<br />
-With your quibbles and greed<br />
-Can the trampled be freed?<br />
-Oh, my heart’s sick with scorn,<br />
-I, America, suborned.<br />
-<br />
-In France, and no guns!<br />
-Let’s forever be done<br />
-With our boasts and our brags, and succumb<br />
-To the scorning before which we’re dumb.<br />
-When at last France is free<br />
-And her glory acclaimed<br />
-Let none look at me,<br />
-At America, shamed.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-Henrietta Keith, Minneapolis<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">We live such sheltered lives here, three thousand
-miles away from the war, that most of us don’t even
-yet realize what Germany has done and has stood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-for in this war and what a terrible menace she is to
-us and to all civilization. The other day I met a very
-able writer and observer who at the outbreak of the
-Great War spent many months with the German and
-Austrian armies and then lived in Germany until it
-became impossible for a self-respecting American
-longer to stay there. He is <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> D. Thomas Curtin.
-His father was born in Ireland. He is himself a
-Catholic. I mention these facts merely because they
-refute the cheap and vicious falsehoods so often promulgated
-by the pro-Germans to the effect that the
-accounts of the German atrocities are due to English
-propaganda.</p>
-
-<p>I ask all good Americans, whatever their creed,
-and I especially ask American women, to read these
-two straightforward statements by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Curtin, the
-account of the killing by torture of the priest who
-fell into the hands of the German soldiers and the
-account of the fearful brutality of an Austrian German
-to a poor old woman. These were not isolated
-cases of brutality. They were both part of the policy
-of deliberate horror, which <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Curtin speaks of as
-“the system.” All in America who have played the
-game of Germany, from Hearst and the Germanized
-Socialists and the German-American Alliance at one
-end of the line to foolish pacifist preachers at the
-other end of the line, have been, according to their
-power, working to bring about the day when we
-here in this country would see our own women and
-helpless non-combatant men and our own children
-exposed to such hideous wrongs and torture as is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-described by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Curtin. I very seriously ask our
-people to read what <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Curtin says and to ponder
-the full meaning of the facts he sets forth.</p>
-
-<p>In the next place, I ask them to read the poem&mdash;and
-it is a real poem, not merely verse&mdash;of Mrs.
-Keith, a Minneapolis woman, called “No Guns.”
-Well-meaning, foolish people, and some people who
-in ordinary relations of life are not foolish, are fond
-of telling us not to point out the defects in the army,
-because this encourages Germany, and because anyhow
-it is a case of spilt milk, and there is no use of
-crying over spilt milk. The answer is twofold. In
-the first place, Germany knows all our shortcomings.
-Inasmuch as we have wickedly refused to go to war
-with Turkey and Bulgaria, we have left open avenues
-by which it is absolutely certain that Germany
-gets full knowledge of everything she wishes to know
-about this country. It is only our own people who
-are kept in ignorance. In the next place, as regards
-the spilt-milk proposition, the trouble is that we
-have kept on spilling the milk and that only by
-pointing out that it has been spilled is it possible to
-solder the milk cans and stop further spilling. Until
-Senator Chamberlain and his committee boldly and
-truthfully pointed out the evil caused by the delays
-and shortcomings of the War Department, the Administration
-made not the slightest effort to remedy
-them. Some of the more salient of these shortcomings
-have been remedied, and this fact is primarily
-due to the courage and patriotism of these public
-servants, Senator Chamberlain and his committee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span></p>
-
-<p>If fourteen months ago our people had been willing
-to demand the truth and to listen to those who told
-the truth, we would at this moment have four times
-the force we now have in France; and we would have
-guns and airplanes, and auto rifles of our own make
-with it; and we would have had plenty of ships to
-carry our men across and to give them food and
-munitions. The reason why our fighting army at the
-front in France is no larger, and the reason why we
-have had to get the necessary field guns, airplanes,
-and auto rifles for that army from the French, is because
-we, as a people, were not willing to insist upon
-knowing the truth. It is precisely because certain
-men are now telling the truth that there is reason to
-hope that gradually the milk spilling will be stopped;
-that gradually we shall get the guns, the airplanes,
-and auto rifles for our men, and above all the ships
-that are vitally necessary. I ask the mothers of this
-country whose sons are now in the army, or may go
-into the army, to read and ponder this poem by a
-woman, and to cast the weight of their great influence
-in favor of demanding that every ounce of
-energy we as a Nation possess be used to speed up
-the war, to relieve our allies of the burden of supplying
-us with weapons of war, and to see that the
-American troops abroad are furnished from this
-country with American-made weapons of the highest
-type.</p>
-
-<p>The don’t-cry-over-spilt-milk appeal represents
-unpardonable wrong to America and to civilization.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THANK_HEAVEN">THANK HEAVEN!</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 2, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>At last, thank Heaven, comes the news that our
-little American army at the front has been put absolutely
-at the disposal of the French and English
-military leaders for use of any kind in the gigantic
-and terrible battle now being waged. All Americans
-who are proud of the great name of America will
-humbly and reverently thank Heaven that at any
-rate the army we have at the front is not to remain in
-the position of an onlooker, but is to be put into the
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>The wanton and cruel bombardment of Paris,
-undertaken for no military reason and with its characteristic
-slaughter of women and children in a
-church, proves that the German barbarity is as deliberate
-and as infamous now as at the beginning of
-the war. The Allies in this battle are fighting for
-humanity and civilization. They are fighting the
-battle of the United States. Any man in the United
-States who at this time directly or indirectly expresses
-approval of or sympathy with Germany in
-this battle or in this war, should be arrested and
-either shot, hung, or imprisoned for life, according
-to the gravity of his offense.</p>
-
-<p>Thank Heaven that our sons and brothers are
-now to stand at Armageddon. Thank Heaven that
-American soldiers are now to fight in the great battle
-against the bestial foe of America and of mankind.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-Words count for little at this time and for nothing
-whatever except in so far as they are of help to the
-men of deeds who are at the front.</p>
-
-<p>It is these men at the front who are now making
-all Americans, born and unborn, forever their
-debtors. They are the men who have paid with
-their bodies for their soul’s desire. Let no one pity
-them, whatever their fate, for they have seen the
-mighty days and have risen level to the need of the
-mighty days. And let no one pity the wives and
-mothers and fathers whose husbands and lovers and
-sons now face death in battle for the mightiest of
-all high causes. Our hearts are wrung with sorrow
-and anxiety, but our heads are held aloft with pride.
-It is a terrible thing that our loved ones should face
-the great danger, but it would be a far more terrible
-thing if, whatever the danger, they were not treading
-the hard path of duty and honor.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="CITIZENS_OR_SUBJECTS">CITIZENS OR SUBJECTS?</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 6, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In a self-governing country the people are called
-citizens. Under a despotism or autocracy the people
-are called subjects. This is because in a free country
-the people are themselves sovereign, while in a despotic
-country the people are under a sovereign. In
-the United States the people are all citizens, including
-its President. The rest of them are fellow citizens
-of the President. In Germany the people are all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-subjects of the Kaiser. They are not his fellow citizens,
-they are his subjects. This is the essential
-difference between the United States and Germany,
-but the difference would vanish if we now submitted
-to the foolish or traitorous persons who endeavor to
-make it a crime to tell the truth about the Administration
-when the Administration is guilty of incompetence
-or other shortcomings. Such endeavor is
-itself a crime against the Nation. Those who take
-such an attitude are guilty of moral treason of a kind
-both abject and dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>Our loyalty is due entirely to the United States.
-It is due to the President only and exactly to the
-degree in which he efficiently serves the United
-States. It is our duty to support him when he serves
-the United States well. It is our duty to oppose him
-when he serves it badly. This is true about <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson
-now and it has been true about all our presidents
-in the past. It is our duty at all times to tell the
-truth about the President and about every one else,
-save in the cases where to tell the truth at the moment
-would benefit the public enemy. Since this
-war began, the suppression of the truth by and about
-the Administration has been habitual. In rare cases
-this has been disadvantageous to the enemy. In the
-vast majority of cases it has been advantageous to
-the enemy, detrimental to the American people, and
-useful to the Administration only from the political,
-not the patriotic, standpoint.</p>
-
-<p>The Senate Judiciary Committee has just recommended
-the passage of a law in which, among<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-many excellent propositions to put down disloyalty,
-there has been adroitly inserted a provision that any
-one who uses “contemptuous or slurring language
-about the President” shall be punished by imprisonment
-for a long term of years and by a fine of many
-thousand dollars. This proposed law is sheer treason
-to the United States. Under its terms Abraham
-Lincoln would have been sent to prison for what he
-repeatedly said of Presidents Polk, Pierce, and Buchanan.
-Under its terms President Wilson would be
-free to speak of Senator-elect Lenroot as he has
-spoken, but Senator Lenroot would not be free
-truthfully to answer President Wilson. It is a proposal
-to make Americans subjects instead of citizens.
-It is a proposal to put the President in the position
-of the Hohenzollerns and Romanoffs. Government
-by the people means that the people have the right
-to do their own thinking and to do their own speaking
-about their public servants. They must speak
-truthfully and they must not be disloyal to the
-country, and it is their highest duty by truthful
-criticism to make and keep the public servants loyal
-to the country.</p>
-
-<p>Any truthful criticism could and would be held
-by partisanship to be slurring or contemptuous. The
-Delaware House of Representatives has just shown
-this. It came within one vote of passing a resolution
-demanding that the Department of Justice proceed
-against me because, in my recent speeches in Maine,
-I “severely criticized the conduct of our National
-Government.” I defy any human being to point<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-out a statement in that speech which was not true
-and which was not patriotic, and yet the decent and
-patriotic members of the Delaware legislature were
-only able to secure a majority of one against the base
-and servile partisanship of those who upheld the
-resolution.</p>
-
-<p>I believe the proposed law is unconstitutional.
-If it is passed, I shall certainly give the Government
-the opportunity to test its constitutionality. For
-whenever the need arises I shall in the future speak
-truthfully of the President in praise or in blame,
-exactly as I have done in the past. When the President
-in the past uttered his statements about being
-too proud to fight and wishing peace without victory,
-and considering that we had no special grievance
-against Germany, I spoke of him as it was my high
-duty to speak. Therefore, I spoke of him truthfully
-and severely, and I cared nothing whether or not
-timid and unpatriotic and short-sighted men said
-that I spoke slurringly or contemptuously. In as far
-as the President in the future endeavors to wage this
-war efficiently and to secure the peace of overwhelming
-victory, I shall heartily support him. But if he
-wages it inefficiently or if he should now champion a
-peace without victory, or say that we had no grievance
-against Germany, I would speak in criticism
-of him precisely as I have spoken in the past. I am
-an American and a free man. My loyalty is due to
-the United States, and therefore it is due to the President,
-the Senators, the Congressmen, and all other
-public servants only and to the degree in which they
-loyally and efficiently serve the United States.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WOMEN_AND_THE_WAR">WOMEN AND THE WAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 12, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A Kansas woman has just written me in part as
-follows: “I have given my all, my two sons, gladly
-and proudly, as volunteers to my country, for they
-enlisted last August. But my heart grows sick at
-the confusion and blunders and apathy. I thank The
-Star for printing that poem of the Minnesota
-mother. It appeals to all of us mothers who stay at
-home and pray and work as we can.”</p>
-
-<p>I think more continually of such mothers of
-soldiers as this Kansas woman, than I do even of the
-soldiers themselves. They have high and gallant
-souls. They are the spiritual heirs of the mothers
-and wives of Washington’s Continentals and of the
-mothers and wives of the soldiers of Grant and Lee.
-I am proud beyond measure that I am their fellow
-countryman. In everything that I do or say, I seek
-to make and to keep this land a land in which their
-daughters can dwell in honorable safety and to make
-our common citizenship such that both their sons
-and daughters shall hold their heads high because
-they are Americans.</p>
-
-<p>But exactly as I revere such women, so I condemn
-the women whose short-sightedness or frivolous love
-of ease and vapid pleasure or whose timid fear of
-danger and labor makes them fit companions for
-those unworthy men whose lives represent merely
-the shirking of duty. The mother who, by perpetual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-complaint and lamentation about unavoidable hardships
-and risks, seeks to weaken the heart of her
-soldier son stands no higher than the money-getting
-or ease-loving man who dodges the draft. The
-woman who cares so little for the honor of America
-and the interests of civilization as now to wish a
-peace without victory is no better than the men in
-uniform who seek soft positions of safety among the
-slickers and slackers.</p>
-
-<p>The things that are best worth having in life must
-be paid for whether by forethought or by toil or by
-downright facing of danger. This is true in peace.
-It is even more true in war. It is just as true of
-women as of men.</p>
-
-<p>All wise and good women and all wise and good
-men abhor war. Washington and Lincoln abhorred
-war. But no man or woman is either wise or good
-unless he or she abhors some things even more than
-war, exactly as Washington and Lincoln abhorred
-them. We are none of us fit to be free men in a republic
-if we are not willing to fight when the Republic
-is wronged as Germany has wronged this
-country. We are none of us entitled to say that we
-love mankind if we are not willing to do battle
-against the Turk and the German in order to right
-such wrongs as have been perpetrated on Belgium
-and Armenia. And we deserve to be brayed in a
-mortar if we are ever again guilty of such folly as
-that of which we have been guilty by our foolish
-failure to prepare our strength in efficient fashion
-during the last three and a half years.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span></p>
-
-<p>The women of this country who love their husbands
-and sons should realize now that only by
-thorough preparedness in advance can war be
-avoided, if possible, or successfully waged if it has to
-come. Recently men in high position whose own
-bodies are safe have stated that they are glad that
-we were not prepared in advance to do our duty
-when this war came. These men have purchased
-their own safety and advantage by the blood of our
-sons at the front. Let the women who do not wish
-to see their men go up against the cannon see that
-hereafter all our sons are well trained in advance.
-If America’s strength is fully prepared in advance,
-she will in all probability never have to go to war
-and will be a potent factor in preserving the peace
-of justice throughout the world, and the first step
-in securing such a peace is to devote all our energies
-to speeding up the war until it is ended by the complete
-triumph of our allies and ourselves.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="TO_MY_FELLOW_AMERICANS_OF">TO MY FELLOW AMERICANS OF
-GERMAN BLOOD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 16, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Hermann Hagedorn, an American whose father
-and mother were born in Germany, an American of
-the best and bravest and most loyal type, has just
-written a little book called “Where Do You Stand?
-An Appeal to Americans of German Origin.” I wish
-it could be read by every individual of those to whom
-it is addressed, and by all other Americans also.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span></p>
-
-<p>I am, myself, partly of German blood, and I make
-my appeal as an American does, to and on behalf of
-all other Americans who have German blood in their
-veins. We have room in this country only for Americans
-who are Americans, and nothing else. They
-must be loyal to only one flag; they must speak one
-language; they must serve only American ideals. I
-mean literally what I say, that every man who bears
-even the smallest allegiance to any other country
-should be sent out of this country. The native
-American who, during this war, directly or indirectly,
-assails any of our allies, notably England,
-but also Japan, is a traitor to America and should be
-promptly imprisoned. The German-American, and
-especially the German-American editor, guilty of
-such conduct or of any exaltation of any German
-victory should be instantly interned and then sent
-back to Germany. The Sinn Feiner who attacks
-England should be immediately interned and then
-sent back to Ireland. The German-American Alliance
-and all similar organizations should immediately
-be broken up by Congress and by the state
-legislatures. Our people would do well to remember
-that even when such organizations keep quiet for
-the moment, they are certain to revive and to work
-against America with the utmost malignity when
-peace comes. The time to crush them is now. Foreign
-language newspapers should be required to follow
-the example of the New York Herald and begin
-the change, which is to convert their newspapers
-into English, the language of the United States.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span></p>
-
-<p>As for spies, preachers of sedition, men who practice
-sabotage, and all other such persons, the
-Government already has much power, but should
-be given any needed additional power to proceed
-against them, and this power should be used in
-drastic fashion, if necessary under martial law, and
-after a summary trial the guilty men should be shot.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the men of German blood, or of any
-other blood, who are not good Americans; but remember
-that it is also our highest duty from the
-standpoint of Americanism to stand by the good
-American of German blood, just exactly as we stand
-by any other American. We must refuse to permit
-any division along the lines of blood or ancestry. We
-must demand whole-hearted Americanism, and if a
-man gives this, we must treat him exactly on his
-merits, like any other American. In other words, we
-must give every man a square deal. Shoot the spy or
-the traitor, whether of native American, Irish, or
-German blood; whether a Protestant, Catholic, or
-Jew. Stand by the good American of any creed, no
-matter where he was born or whence his parents
-came.</p>
-
-<p>It is an outrage to discriminate against a good
-American in civil life because he is of German blood.
-It is an even worse outrage for the Government to
-permit such discrimination against him in the army
-or in any of the organizations working under government
-supervision. Let us insist on the immediate
-stopping of such discriminations, which cruelly
-wound good Americans and tend to drive them back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-into the ranks of the half-loyal. In return let good
-Americans of German blood band together and take
-the lead in organization action against all disloyal
-or half-loyal citizens of German blood and against
-all German language or English language newspapers
-which are not whole-heartedly loyal and against
-all such organizations as the German-American
-Alliance.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="AN_EXTRAORDINARY_ACHIEVEMENT">AN EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT
-IN HUMAN UPBUILDING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Major E. C. Simmons, of St. Louis, the manager of
-the Southwestern Division of the American Red
-Cross, has just returned from our army in France.
-He relates a really extraordinary achievement of the
-division of orthopædic surgery with the army under
-the direction of Surgeon-Major Joel E. Goldthwaite.</p>
-
-<p>All the divisions of troops sent across, of course,
-contain a number of men who show physical shortcomings
-under the strain of actual campaigning. In
-General Edwards’s division these men numbered in
-the neighborhood of fifteen per cent, not an unusual
-proportion in the history of past wars. <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Goldthwaite
-got permission to try his hand on the treatment
-of a body composed of somewhat over five
-hundred of them, and instantly began vigorous but
-careful work to build up all their physical defects.</p>
-
-<p>As his work for each man was finished, he was put<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-in one of four classes. Class A included those to
-whom the training gave such vigor that they were
-fit to go right to the front as battle units. Class B
-included those who could be made fit for hard physical
-labor back of the front, although not for the
-tremendous strain of the trenches. Class C included
-those fitted for clerical and similar duties. Class D
-included those whose physical condition would not
-be improved and who had to be sent home.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr> Goldthwaite was able to place over eighty per
-cent of the men in Class A, and all the remainder in
-either Class B or Class C. Not a man had to be sent
-home. Remember that the physical shortcomings of
-these men were all present before they entered the
-army and were not acquired in the army. The work
-done for them made them not only fit to be soldiers,
-but fit to be citizens. Moreover, it affected them
-morally exactly as much as physically. They had
-become utterly dispirited and downcast. After <abbr title="doctor">Dr.</abbr>
-Goldthwaite was through with them, they were all
-self-reliant, energetic Americans, vigorous, upstanding,
-and self-respecting, having lost all trace of
-either moral or physical crooked back and stooping
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>When we get universal obligatory military training
-for all our young men, this is what will happen
-everywhere and the benefit to our people will be
-incalculable. Such training will minimize the chance
-of our ever having to go to war and will render it
-certain that hereafter we shall always be able to defend
-ourselves instead of trusting to our allies to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-defend us. Moreover, it will do us even more good
-as regards the tasks of peace than as regards the
-tasks of war, for it will turn out every young man far
-better able to earn his living and far better fitted to
-be a good citizen.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FREEDOM_STANDS_WITH_HER_BACK">FREEDOM STANDS WITH HER BACK
-TO THE WALL</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 20, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>This is a terrible hour of trial and suffering and
-danger for our war-worn allies, who in France are
-battling for us no less than for themselves. If shame
-is even more dreadful than suffering, then it is a no
-less terrible hour for our own country. Our allies
-stand with their backs to the wall in the fight for
-freedom, and America looks on. The free nations
-stand at bay in the cause that is ours no less than
-theirs; and after over a year of war the army we
-have sent to their aid is smaller than that of poor
-heroic, ruined Belgium, is hardly more than a
-twentieth the size which gallant and impoverished
-Italy has in the field. And this great wealthy Nation
-of ours has not yet furnished to our own brave troops
-in the field any cannon or airplanes, and almost no
-machine guns, save those which we have obtained
-from hard-pressed France&mdash;and let our people
-remember that every gun thus made for us by hard-pressed
-France is a gun left unmade for hard-pressed
-Italy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span></p>
-
-<p>Our few gallant fighting men overseas have won
-high honor for themselves, and have made all other
-Americans forever their debtors; but it is a scandal
-and a reproach to this Nation that they are so few.
-If in this mighty battle our allies win, it will be due
-to no real aid of ours; and if they should fail, black
-infamy would be our portion because of the delay
-and the folly and the weakness and the cold, time-serving
-timidity of our Government, to which this
-failure would be primarily due. If those responsible
-for our failure, if those responsible for the refusal to
-prepare during the two and a half years in which we
-were vouchsafed such warning as never nation previously
-received, if those responsible for the sluggish
-feebleness with which we have acted since we helplessly
-drifted into the war&mdash;if these men now repented
-of the cruel wrong they have done this Nation
-and mankind, we could afford to wrap their
-past folly and evil-doing in the kindly mantle of
-oblivion. But they boast of their foolishness, they
-excuse and justify it, they announce that they feel
-pride and delight in contemplating it. Therefore,
-it is for us, the people, to bow our heads on this our
-penitential day; for we are laggards in the battle,
-we have let others fight in our quarrel, we have let
-others pay with their shattered bodies for the fire in
-their burning souls.</p>
-
-<p>The trumpets of the Lord sounded for Armageddon;
-but our hearts were not swift to answer nor
-our feet jubilant; coldly we watched others die that
-we might live. Our rulers were supple and adroit,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-but they were not mighty of soul. They have shown
-that they will not lead us, and will ever stand in
-front only if we force them forward. Therefore, the
-reason is all the greater why we, the American
-people, must search our own hearts and with unflinching
-will insist that from now on not a day, not
-an hour, shall be wasted until our giant but soft and
-lazy strength is hardened, until we ourselves take
-the burden from the shoulders of others, until we pay
-whatever price our past shortcomings demand, and
-with heads uplifted and spirit undaunted stride
-forward to the great goal of the peace of victorious
-right.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_ALL_AMERICANS">A SQUARE DEAL FOR ALL AMERICANS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">April 27, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There is no room in this country for the man who
-tries to be both an American and something else.
-There can be no such thing as a fifty-fifty loyalty
-between America and Germany. Either a man is
-whole-hearted in his support of America and her
-allies, and in his hostility to Germany and her allies,
-or he is not loyal to America at all. In such case he
-should be at once interned or sent out of the country.
-But if he is whole-hearted in his loyal support of
-America, then no matter what his birthplace or
-parentage he is entitled to stand on a full and exact
-equality with every other American.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore the obligation is twofold, and one side
-is just as important as the other. Every American<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-of German birth or parentage must act as an American
-and nothing else, and if he does not so act he
-should be treated as an alien enemy. But if he acts
-exactly as other good Americans act, then it is a
-shame and a disgrace not to treat him absolutely
-like these other good Americans. The immense
-majority of Americans who are in whole or in part of
-German blood are as stanch Americans as are to be
-found in the land. They are serving in our armies
-precisely as other Americans serve. They are exactly
-as fit as any other American to fill the highest
-positions anywhere in our armies or in civil life.
-Any discrimination against them, active or passive,
-military or political, social or industrial, is an intolerable
-outrage. Moreover, such a discrimination
-is itself profoundly anti-American in its effects, for
-it not only cruelly wounds brave and upright and
-loyal Americans, but tends to drive them back
-into segregation, away from the mass of American
-citizenship.</p>
-
-<p>America is a Nation and not a mosaic of nationalities.
-The various nationalities that come here are
-not to remain separate, but to blend into the one
-American nationality&mdash;the nationality of Washington
-and Lincoln, of Muhlenberg and Sheridan. Therefore,
-we must have but one language, the English
-language. Every immigrant who comes here should
-be required within five years to learn English or to
-leave the country, for hereafter every immigrant
-should be treated as a future fellow citizen and not
-merely as a labor unit. English should be the only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-language taught or used in the primary schools. We
-should provide by law so that after a reasonable
-interval every newspaper in this country should be
-published in English.</p>
-
-<p>A square deal for all Americans means relentless
-attack on all men in this country who are not
-straight-out Americans and nothing else. It just as
-emphatically means to stand by every good American
-of German blood exactly as much as by every
-other good American. In every loyalty organization
-a special effort should be made to see that in the
-leadership and in the ranks the Americans of German
-blood come in on precisely the same basis as every
-one else. And the straight-out Americans, in whole
-or in part of German blood, should themselves insist
-on this, not as a favor which they request, but as a
-right which they demand, a right predicated on their
-fervid and militant Americanism. I wish we could
-see such an organization formed, an uncompromisingly
-straight-out American organization, including
-Americans of all our different blood strains, but with
-as large a proportion of Americans in whole or in
-part of German blood as possible, and then let this
-organization take the lead in aggressively loyal
-Americanism, in the demand to fight this war with
-all speed and efficiency, until it is crowned by the
-peace of complete victory and in the purpose to
-make this peace mark the glorious rebirth, the purification
-and the giant growth of the American spirit&mdash;the
-spirit of an intense and unified American
-nationalism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span></p>
-
-<p>We Americans must be loyal first to our own
-Nation and to our own national ideals, and we must
-develop to the utmost the virile hardihood of body,
-mind, and soul without which there can be no real
-greatness. And our devotion to America shall in
-part show itself in the unswerving effort to make
-this great democratic Republic both strong for self-defense
-and strong for wise and brotherly help to
-other nations, to make it both the leader and the
-servant of all mankind.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_GERMAN_HORROR">THE GERMAN HORROR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">May 2, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Hague conferences laid down a number of rules
-which the signatory powers, including Germany,
-agreed to observe in order to mitigate the horrors of
-war. Germany has with equal cynicism and brutality
-violated every one of these rules. She has waged
-war as it was waged in the Dark Ages. She has
-shown revolting cruelty toward soldiers and especially
-toward non-combatants, including women and
-children.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a great cannon is bombarding
-Paris. Not a soldier has been killed by it; it has not
-in the smallest degree affected France’s military
-power, nor was it intended to do so. It was intended
-to terrorize the French civilian population by the
-destruction of churches, hospitals, and private buildings
-and the murder of women and children. On<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-Good Friday one of the shells wrecked a church and
-killed a number of the little choir boys and a number
-of women who were at prayer. Among the killed
-were three American women whom I knew, who
-were abroad working for our soldiers. An American
-friend who saw the horror writes me:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Evidently the Germans do not worry over the fact that
-their shells descend on women and children kneeling in prayer
-on a Good Friday, before the crucifix.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another American friend, a Red Cross woman,
-writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>One shell burst in a maternity hospital, killing a nurse, a
-young mother, and a little baby. Several other mothers and
-new-born babies were injured.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Zeppelins and airplanes are continually
-bombarding undefended English and French cities
-and have killed women and children by the hundreds.
-The submarines have waged war with callous
-mercilessness. Their crews have continually practiced
-torture on the prisoners they have taken.
-They leave women and children to drown. They
-shoot into the lifeboats. At this moment Americans
-are dying from the poison gas which the Germans,
-in contemptuous defiance of The Hague rules, have
-made an ordinary weapon of war. I have just been
-talking with an American soldier absolutely trustworthy,
-who himself saw the body of a Canadian
-whom the Germans had just crucified.</p>
-
-<p>Every violation of the laws of war has been
-practiced by Germany. By her outrages on humanity
-she has made herself an outlaw among nations,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-and unless she pays heavily for her crimes, the whole
-world will be in danger. It is Germany, and only
-Germany, who is responsible for the hideous atrocities
-that have marked this war, atrocities which all
-civilized men outside of Germany believed to have
-been eliminated forever from civilized warfare.
-Germany has habitually and as a matter of policy
-practiced the torture of men, the rape of women, and
-the killing of children.</p>
-
-<p>It was deeply to our discredit that during the
-shameful years of our neutrality we refused to protest
-against these hideous atrocities. Now at last
-this Nation has awakened and has gone to war
-against the enemy of America and of mankind. Let
-our people now keep steadily in mind just what kind
-of a foe we are fighting and just what kind of infamy
-that foe is habitually practicing. Then let us resolve
-that, come what may, we will fight this war through
-to a finish until the authors of this hideous infamy
-have paid in full and have been punished as they
-deserve. For in no other way can a peace worth
-having be obtained.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SEDITION_A_FREE_PRESS_AND">SEDITION, A FREE PRESS, AND
-PERSONAL RULE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">May 7, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The legislation now being enacted by Congress
-should deal drastically with sedition. It should also
-guarantee the right of the press and people to speak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-the truth freely of all their public servants, including
-the President, and to criticize them in the severest
-terms of truth whenever they come short in their
-public duty. Finally, Congress should grant the
-Executive the amplest powers to act as an executive
-and should hold him to stern accountability for
-failure so to act, but it should itself do the actual
-lawmaking and should clearly define the lines and
-limits of action and should retain and use the fullest
-powers of investigation into and supervision over
-such action. Sedition is a form of treason. It is an
-offense against the country, not against the President.
-At this time to oppose the draft or sending
-our armies to Europe, to uphold Germany, to attack
-our allies, to oppose raising the money necessary to
-carry on the war are at least forms of sedition, while
-to act as a German spy or to encourage German
-spies to use money or intrigue in the corrupt service
-of Germany, to tamper with our war manufactures
-and to encourage our soldiers to desert or to fail in
-their duty, and all similar actions are forms of undoubtedly
-illegal sedition. For some of these offenses
-death should be summarily inflicted. For all the
-punishment should be severe.</p>
-
-<p>The Administration has been gravely remiss in
-dealing with such acts.</p>
-
-<p>Free speech, exercised both individually and
-through a free press, is a necessity in any country
-where the people are themselves free. Our Government
-is the servant of the people, whereas in Germany
-it is the master of the people. This is because<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-the American people are free and the German are
-not free. The President is merely the most important
-among a large number of public servants.
-He should be supported or opposed exactly to the
-degree which is warranted by his good conduct or
-bad conduct, his efficiency or inefficiency in rendering
-loyal, able, and disinterested service to the Nation
-as a whole. Therefore it is absolutely necessary
-that there should be full liberty to tell the truth
-about his acts, and this means that it is exactly
-necessary to blame him when he does wrong as to
-praise him when he does right. Any other attitude
-in an American citizen is both base and servile. To
-announce that there must be no criticism of the
-President, or that we are to stand by the President,
-right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile,
-but is morally treasonable to the American public.
-Nothing but the truth should be spoken about him
-or any one else. But it is even more important to
-tell the truth, pleasant or unpleasant, about him
-than about any one else.</p>
-
-<p>During the last year the Administration has
-shown itself anxious to punish the newspapers which
-uphold the war, but which told the truth about the
-Administration’s failure to conduct the war efficiently,
-whereas it has failed to proceed against
-various powerful newspapers which opposed the war
-or attacked our allies or directly or indirectly aided
-Germany against this country, as these papers upheld
-the Administration and defended the inefficiency.
-Therefore, no additional power should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-given the Administration to deal with papers for
-criticizing the Administration. And, moreover, Congress
-should closely scrutinize the way the Postmaster-General
-and Attorney-General have already
-exercised discrimination between the papers they
-prosecuted and the papers they failed to prosecute.</p>
-
-<p>Congress should give the President full power for
-efficient executive action. It should not abrogate
-its own power. It should define how he is to reorganize
-the Administration. It should say how large an
-army we are to have and not leave the decision to
-the amiable Secretary of War, who has for two years
-shown such inefficiency. It should declare for an
-army of five million men and inform the Secretary
-that it would give him more the minute he asks for
-more.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_DANGERS_OF_A_PREMATURE_PEACE">THE DANGERS OF A PREMATURE PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">May 12, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>As now seems likely, if the great German drive fails,
-it is at least possible that, directly or indirectly, the
-Germans will then start a peace drive. In such case
-they will probably endeavor to make such seeming
-concessions as to put a premium upon pacifist agitation
-for peace in the free countries of the West
-against which they are fighting. To yield to such
-peace proposals would be fraught with the greatest
-danger to the Allies, and especially to our own
-country in the future.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us never forget that no promise Germany
-makes can be trusted. The <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">kultur</i> developed under
-the Hohenzollerns rests upon shameless treachery
-and duplicity no less than upon ruthless violence and
-barbarity.</p>
-
-<p>For example, there are strong indications that
-Germany may be prepared, if she now fails on the
-western front, to abandon all that for which she has
-fought on her western front, provided that in Middle
-Europe and in the East there is no interference with
-her. In other words, she would be prepared to give
-back Alsace and Lorraine to France, to give Italian
-Austria to Italy, to give Luxemburg to Belgium, and
-to let the Allies keep the colonies they have conquered,
-on condition that her dominance in Russia
-and in the Balkans, her dominance of the subject
-peoples of Austria through the Austrian Hapsburgs,
-and her dominance of Western Asia through her
-vassal state, Turkey, should be left undisturbed. To
-the average American, and probably to the average
-Englishman and Frenchman, there is much that is
-alluring in such a programme. It might be urged as a
-method of stopping the frightful slaughter of war,
-while securing every purpose for which the free
-peoples who still fight are fighting. Yet it would be
-infinitely better that this war were carried on to the
-point of exhaustion than that we yield to such terms.</p>
-
-<p>Such terms would mean the definite establishment
-of Germany’s military ascendancy on a scale never
-hitherto approached in the civilized world. It would
-mean that perhaps within a dozen years, certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-within the lifetime of the very men now fighting this
-war, this country and the other free countries would
-have to choose between bowing their necks to the
-German yoke or else going into another war under
-conditions far more disadvantageous to them.</p>
-
-<p>A premature and inconclusive peace now would
-spell ruin for the world, just as in 1864 a premature
-and inconclusive peace would have spelled ruin to
-the United States, and in the present instance the
-United States would share the ruin of the rest of the
-free peoples of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>On the face of it Germany would not become a
-giant empire. Just exactly as on the face of it at
-present Germany, Austria, Turkey, and Bulgaria
-call themselves simply four allied nations, standing
-on equal terms. But in reality those four powers are
-merely Germany and her three vassal states, whose
-military and economic and political powers are all
-disposed of by the Hohenzollerns. A peace such as
-that above outlined would leave these as really one
-huge empire. The population of these four countries,
-plus the populations of Russian regions recently
-annexed by Germany, is over two hundred millions.
-This population would be directed and dominated by
-the able, powerful, and utterly brutal and unscrupulous
-German governing class, which the very fact of
-the peace would put in the saddle, and the huge
-empire thus dominated and directed would become
-a greater menace to the free peoples than anything
-known for the last thousand years.</p>
-
-<p>Short-sighted people will say that this power<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-would only menace Asia, and therefore that we need
-feel no concern about it. There could be no error
-greater or more lamentable. Twenty years hence by
-mere mass and growth Germany would dominate
-the Western European powers that have now fought
-her. This would mean that the United States would
-be left as her victim.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, she would at once trample the
-Monroe Doctrine under foot, and treat tropical and
-south temperate America as her fields for exploitation,
-domination, and conquest. In the next place,
-she would surely trample this country under foot
-and bleed us white, doing to us on a gigantic scale
-what she has done to Belgium. If such a peace as is
-above described were at this time made, the United
-States could by no possibility escape the fate of
-Belgium and of the Russian territories taken by Germany
-unless we ourselves became a powerful militarist
-state with every democratic principle subordinated
-to the one necessity of turning this Nation
-into a huge armed camp&mdash;I do not mean an armed
-nation, as Switzerland is armed, and as I believe
-this country ought to be armed. I mean a nation
-whose sons, every one of them, would have to serve
-from three to five years in the army, and whose
-whole activities, external and internal, would be
-conditioned by the one fact of the necessity of making
-head, single-handed, against Germany.</p>
-
-<p>I very strongly believe that never again should
-we be caught unprepared as we have been caught
-unprepared this time. I believe that all our young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-men should be trained to arms as the Swiss are
-trained. But I would regard it as an unspeakable
-calamity for this Nation to have to turn its whole
-energies into the kind of exaggerated militarism
-which under such circumstances would alone avail
-for self-defense.</p>
-
-<p>The military power of Germany must be brought
-low. The subject nations of Austria, the Balkans,
-and Western Asia must be freed. We ought not to
-refrain an hour longer from going to war with
-Turkey and Bulgaria. They are part of Germany’s
-military strength. They represent some of the most
-cruel tyrannies over subject peoples for which Germany
-stands. It is idle for us to pretend sympathy
-with the Armenians unless we war on Turkey,
-which, with Germany’s assent, has well-nigh crushed
-the Armenians out of existence.</p>
-
-<p>When President Wilson stated that this war was
-waged to make democracy safe throughout the
-world, he properly and definitely committed the
-American people to the principles above enunciated,
-and for the American people to accept less than their
-President has thus announced that he would insist
-upon would be unworthy. The President has also
-said that “there is therefore but one response possible
-for us. Force&mdash;force to the utmost&mdash;force without
-stint or limit&mdash;the righteous and triumphant
-force which shall make right the law of the world
-and cast every selfish dominion down in the dust.”</p>
-
-<p>The American people must support President
-Wilson unflinchingly in the stand to which he is thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-committed and must resolutely refuse to accept any
-other position. We must guard against any slackening
-of effort. We must refuse to accept any premature
-peace or any peace other than the peace of
-overwhelming victory.</p>
-
-<p>We must secure such complete freedom for the
-peoples of Central Europe and Western Asia as will
-shatter forever the threat of German world domination.
-Our honorable obligations to our allies, our
-loyalty to our own national principles, the need to
-protect our American neighbors, the need to defend
-our own land and people, and our hopes for the peace
-and happiness of our children’s children all forbid us
-to accept an ignoble and inconclusive peace.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_WAR_SAVINGS_CAMPAIGN">THE WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">May 27, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Of course the primary factor in deciding this war is
-and will be the army. But there can be no great
-army in war to-day unless a great nation stands back
-of it. The most important of all our needs is immensely
-to strengthen the fighting line at the front.
-But it cannot be permanently strengthened unless
-the whole Nation is organized back of the front. We
-need increased production by all. We need thrift
-and the avoidance of extravagance and of waste of
-money upon non-essentials by all. We need the investment
-of our money in government securities by
-all of us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Government, through the War Savings campaign,
-offers the opportunity to every individual in
-the Nation to join in a great national movement to
-secure these ends. The Treasury Department proposes
-as a means to achieve these ends that all our
-people form themselves into Thrift clubs or War
-Savings societies. This is the people’s war. The
-responsibility for the Government rests on the people
-as a whole. The army is the people’s army. It can
-be supported only if the people invest in the securities
-of the Government. And this investment by the
-people should be as nearly universal as possible. All
-the men and the women and half the children of the
-land should be active members of Uncle Sam’s team.
-The War Savings campaign offers them the chance
-to be active members. This campaign means the
-encouragement of thrift and production. But it
-means much more than this. It also means to make
-our people realize their solidarity and mutual interdependence
-and to make them understand that the
-Government is really theirs. Therefore it is a movement
-for genuine Americanization of all our people.
-It is a movement to fuse all our different race stocks
-into one great unified nationality. It is emphatically
-a movement for nationalism and patriotism.</p>
-
-<p>Between thirty and forty millions of our people
-to-day own Liberty bonds or War Savings Stamps.
-All of us who come in this class have an increased
-sense of loyalty and responsibility to the Government.
-The Treasury Department has offered
-through the War Savings plan a great opportunity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-for the entire Nation to group itself into War Savings
-societies or Thrift clubs and thus be of immediate
-and direct service to the Government. Neither
-through government programme and traditions nor
-through the habits of the people were we in any way
-prepared for this struggle. We were a spendthrift
-Nation. One of the roads to national unity and
-national force in this war is through thrift, using
-the word to include both increased production in
-every field and also the conservation of those things
-which are so desperately needed for the winning of
-the war. The conscientious thrifty man to-day will
-conserve food as requested by the Food Administration.
-He will conserve fuel as requested by the Fuel
-Administration. And he will conserve to the best
-of his ability the labor and materials which the Government
-needs by not using his money for purchasing
-any of the non-essentials and thereby using up
-materials and labor needed by the Government. He
-will, by purchasing government securities, entrust
-the spending of his money to the Government in
-order to speed up the war and to secure the peace of
-overwhelming victory.</p>
-
-<p>Let all of us join in this movement. The success
-of the War Savings campaign means an immense
-addition to our war strength. It also means the first
-step in economic preparedness for what is to come
-after the war. We must never return to our haphazard
-spendthrift ways. Thrift should be made a
-national habit as part of our social and industrial
-readjustment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span></p>
-
-<p>We are just finishing our Red Cross campaign.
-Now let us put through the War Savings campaign.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="ANTI-BOLSHEVISM">ANTI-BOLSHEVISM</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 5, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>On the whole the worst fate that can befall any
-country is to fall into the hands of the Bolsheviki.
-Therefore, we should visit with heavy condemnation
-the Romanoffs of politics and industry who, by
-Bourbon-like inability to see or refusal to face the
-future, make ready the way for Bolshevism. Utter
-ruin will befall this country if it falls into the hands
-of Haywoods and Townleys and of the politicians
-who truckle to them, but the surest way to secure
-their temporary and disastrous triumph is to refuse
-to make every effort, in sane, good-tempered, resolute
-fashion, to deal with the problems which affect
-unfavorably the welfare of the farmer and the
-working-man.</p>
-
-<p>Mere stolid inaction, mere refusal to acknowledge
-the existence of trouble and duty to remedy it
-amounts to playing into the hands of the worst and
-most evil agitators. Such an attitude on the part of
-our political leaders is almost as bad as the failure to
-act with instant readiness and full strength against
-disorder or as the time-serving cowardice which bows
-to and flatters the leaders of disorder. What is
-needed is unhesitating and thoroughgoing condemnation
-of, and action against, the anarchists and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-inciters to sedition and to class envy and hatred, and
-at the same time genuine and radical effort to secure
-for the farmer and the working-man and for every
-one else the square deal in actual fact. Neither
-attitude is enough by itself; the two must go together
-if results of lasting worth are to be secured.</p>
-
-<p>The leaders in such movements as the I.W.W. include
-a large proportion of men whose activities are
-criminal, and who, as regards civilization and all
-that makes life worth living for decent, hard-working
-men and women, stand merely as human beasts of
-prey. But very many of these fellows are not bad
-men at all, but merely unfortunates who turn to
-an evil organization because no good organization
-offers them relief or concerns itself with their welfare.
-I am not speaking of theory; I am speaking of fact.
-I know of cases in connection with the forest service
-where government officials, by acting on behalf of
-maltreated crews of lumber companies and by seeing
-that they got justice and fair treatment, turned
-them into zealous, right-feeling, public-spirited
-citizens, who, for instance, worked hard and disinterestedly
-in putting out forest fires.</p>
-
-<p>It is idle to say that no governmental action is
-needed on behalf of farmers and wage-workers. Unquestionably
-such action will merely do harm unless
-at the same time the interests and permanent welfare
-of the business men of the country, great and small,
-are considered. But the action itself is necessary.
-It should be based on the theory that so far as possible
-the work of betterment, alike as regards farmers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-working-men, and business men, take the form of
-coöperation among themselves, with the maximum
-amount of individual and collective private effort,
-and the minimum necessary amount of governmental
-control and encouragement. It is not possible
-to state empirically in advance just how far this
-governmental control and encouragement shall go.
-This must be determined by actual experience in
-settling what is necessary in each individual set of
-cases. The best result will always come where the
-organization of private citizens is not limited to any
-one class, but include farmers, working-men, business
-men; just as is true of one such great organization
-in the State of Iowa; just as is true of a smaller
-but successful organization in and around the city
-of Springfield, Massachusetts; just as is preëminently
-true of many of the state councils of defense.
-There must be sincere purpose to push forward and
-remedy wrong; but there must likewise be firm
-refusal to submit to the leadership of either the criminal
-fringe or the lunatic fringe. Class hatred is a
-mighty poor substitute for American brotherhood.
-If we are wise we will proceed by evolution and not
-revolution. But Bourbon refusal to move forward
-at all merely invites revolution.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="GENERAL_WOOD">GENERAL WOOD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 15, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Hiram Johnson has rendered many notable
-services to the public, and among them is his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-recent speech concerning the cruel injustice with
-which Major-General Leonard Wood has been
-treated and the very grave damage thereby done the
-army and the Allied cause at this critical moment of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>General Wood’s entire offense consists in his having,
-before the war, continually advocated our doing
-things which now every one in his senses admits
-ought to have been done. Nine tenths of wisdom
-consists of being wise in time. General Wood was
-wise in time. Moreover, by twenty years of hard,
-practical work, he fitted himself to do peculiarly
-well in this very crisis. He was our senior general
-in rank, he was recognized by the best French and
-English military authorities as by experience trained
-to play an immediate and important part in the
-difficult and perilous joint work of the war. He had
-testified at length and with exhaustive professional
-knowledge before the congressional military committees,
-one year and two years prior to our entry
-into the war, pointing out all the military lacks,
-which experience has since shown to exist and which
-the War Department then denied existed. He is to
-be credited with the only piece of serious military
-preparedness in advance which is to our credit. In
-the service of 1915, in the teeth of indifference and
-hostility from his superiors, he created the Plattsburg
-officers’ reserve training camp, starting the
-system of training camps which has enabled us to
-officer our draft army.</p>
-
-<p>He is in splendid physical condition. Recently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-when in France he was severely wounded by a shell
-burst, and the surgeons reported his recovery as being
-more rapid than would have been the case with
-the average young man of robust bodily health and
-vigor. He has done excellent work in training his
-men at Camp Funston. He has been unwearied in
-looking after the health and welfare of his men. He
-has been rewarded by their loyal devotion; they
-have been profoundly grieved and moved by having
-him suddenly taken from them. The refusal to use
-his great ability and energy means a distinct subtraction
-from the sum total of our military efficiency, a
-distinct addition to the risk from disease and discomfort
-which some of our men at the front will have to
-incur, and a distinct benefit to the cause of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>No explanation has been given the American
-people for the action concerning him. Nothing has
-been made public which warrants our belief that this
-action was due either to professional or to patriotic
-considerations.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="HELP_RUSSIA_NOW">HELP RUSSIA NOW</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 20, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Russia has been thrown under the iron tyranny of
-German militarism and capitalism by the Bolshevists
-of the Lenine type. The Russian people are
-slowly awakening to this bitter truth. The far-sighted,
-the Russians of genuine patriotism, have
-long been awake, but the peasants, who are at heart<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-good, but who are ignorant and misled, are now
-awakening also. Plenty of them, especially among
-the Cossacks, are well aware that submission to
-Germany now means death for Russia. Plenty of
-them are eager to fight and know well that only by
-successful war on a grand scale can Russia now be
-saved and regenerated, but they must have help and
-the help must be given immediately or it may be too
-late, and America can best give the help.</p>
-
-<p>A Russian peasant woman who can hardly write
-her name is here to ask that the help be given immediately
-and that it be given in Siberia. She is a
-remarkable character in her strength, her simplicity,
-her direct straightforwardness, and her intense
-earnestness and entire disinterestedness. She was
-a major in the Russian army until the Russian army
-was betrayed and dissolved. Her peasant husband
-was killed in the ranks. She served in the ranks of
-a regiment of men. She commanded in a regiment of
-women. She has been wounded four times. She
-was born in Tomsk, Siberia. She is a peasant of the
-best class, in habits of thought and belief and life
-and sympathy. But she has a wide outlook. She
-knows that America will keep her word about Siberia,
-just as America kept her word about Cuba.
-She asks that for our own sake, just as much as for
-Russia’s sake, we now send an army to Siberia,
-entering through Vladivostok or Harbin, or through
-both. She asks us to announce that after the war is
-over we guarantee to return to Russia her country
-with the right for her people to decide for themselves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-how they are to be governed, and that in the
-war we fight with and for all the Russians who will
-fight against Germany for Russia, and that we fight
-to the death against the Germans and against all
-Russians who side with the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>Siberia is in chaos. Eastern Siberia has plenty
-of food and contains large elements of the population,
-especially Cossacks, who would promptly join
-with an Allied force which they believed would, in
-good faith, aid in the reconquest of Russia for the
-purpose of giving it back to the Russians themselves.
-West of Lake Baikal is a region dominated by a
-German army, some twenty thousand strong, composed
-of former German prisoners of war, who
-are organized under the name of the German Red
-Guards and who are the permanent adherents of
-German autocracy, but who help the cause of
-Russian anarchy in order to conquer Russia for the
-German autocracy. West of these again a stretch
-of country, which includes the passes of the Ural
-Mountains, is held by the splendid Czechs, who, by
-the way, must at the end of this war be rewarded by
-seeing an independent Czech-Slovak commonwealth
-established, just as there must also be a great Jugo-Slav
-commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>At once there should be in East Siberia an American
-army of say thirty thousand men with a Japanese
-army of the same size and a British imperial
-army of as nearly the same size as possible. If there
-was difficulty as to the command of the Allied forces,
-borrow some man of great reputation, Joffre, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-instance, from France. Let the woman major above
-spoken of and other Russian friends of the peasants
-and of a Russian republic go in advance to make
-clear that the Allied army comes only to restore
-Russia to the Russians. Let all Russians who join
-be paid by the United States on the same scale as
-our own troops, and if necessary let the United
-States guarantee the payment of the Japanese.
-Move against the German Red Guards as quickly
-as possible and then push instantly to join the heroic
-Czechs in the Urals. Let the railroads be organized
-back of the army by our best railroad men and let
-them carry immediately behind the army immense
-quantities of clothing, boots, and farm machinery.
-Siberia has food and it will furnish hundreds of
-thousands of soldiers who will rally around such an
-Allied army as a nucleus. Before this army reached
-the Urals, the Germans would have to prepare to
-meet it and their pressure on the Western front
-would thereby be relieved.</p>
-
-<p>Russia is at this moment lost, so that no change in
-Russia can make things worse for the Allies than
-they now are. We ought to have acted with energy
-and intelligence on her behalf a year ago. Let us at
-least act now, for no possible action can be worse
-than our inaction. She does not need talk and envoys
-to study the situation. She needs an army to
-serve as a nucleus around which she can create her
-own immense armies. The above plan is better than
-none. If our Government can devise a better, let
-them do so, but let us act at once.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="AN_AMERICAN_FOURTH_OF_JULY">AN AMERICAN FOURTH OF JULY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 23, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is announced that on the Fourth of July the
-celebration is to be by race groups&mdash;that is, by
-Scandinavians, Slavs, Germans, Italians, and so
-forth. In sport organizations it may be necessary to
-have such a kind of divided celebration in some
-places, but I most emphatically protest against such
-a type of celebration being general, and I doubt
-whether it is advisable to have it anywhere. On the
-contrary, I believe that we should make the Fourth
-of July a genuine Americanization day, and should
-use it to teach the prime lesson of Americanism,
-which is that there is no room in the country for the
-perpetuation of separate race groups or racial divisions;
-that we must all be Americans and nothing
-but Americans, and that therefore on the Fourth of
-July we should all get together simply as Americans
-and celebrate the day as such without regard to our
-several racial origins.</p>
-
-<p>At two thirds of the places where I have made
-speeches on Americanism (and these speeches have
-at least been free from any pussy-footing on Americanism),
-I have been introduced by straight
-Americans who were in whole or in part of German
-blood. At Milwaukee, for example, I was introduced
-by August Vogel, who has three sons already in the
-army and a fourth who will enter this summer. At
-Martinsville, Indiana, I was introduced by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-mayor, George F. Schmidt, who has two sons in the
-army. One of the sons, Wayne Schmidt, was the
-catcher of the University of Indiana baseball nine.
-He was in the same regiment with my two sons, Ted
-and Archie, and like Archie has been severely
-wounded. Mayor Schmidt writes me:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We are proud of Wayne and hope that his wounds will soon
-heal and that he may get back to his regiment and continue
-to serve his country. There is nothing fifty-fifty in this boy’s
-blood or any of his kin. His greatest ambition is to lead a
-company up the streets of Berlin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This speaks the true American!</p>
-
-<p>I also have German blood in my veins. We Vogels
-and Schmidts and Roosevelts intend to celebrate the
-Fourth of July with all our fellow Americans, without
-regard to whether they are of German, English
-or Irish, French, Scandinavian, Spanish, or Italian
-blood. Unless they are Americans and nothing else,
-they are out of place at a Fourth of July celebration,
-and if they are straight Americans, absolutely loyal
-to America, and resolutely bent on putting this war
-through until it is crowned by the peace of complete
-victory, then we are their brothers, their fellow
-Americans, and we decline to permit any lines of
-separation between us and them.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="HOW_NOT_TO_ADJOURN_POLITICS">HOW NOT TO ADJOURN POLITICS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 25, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In the current North American Review and its
-supplemental War Weekly there are two strong and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-deeply patriotic articles on the President’s recent
-announcement that politics is to be adjourned.
-When contrasted with the injection of politics by the
-President into the senatorial contests in Wisconsin
-and Michigan, never before in any great crisis in this
-country has there been such complete subordination
-of patriotism to politics as by this Administration
-during this war. Witness the activities of the organization
-under Messrs. Burleson and Creel and the
-working alliance between the Administration and
-the Hearst newspapers, while Vice-President Marshall
-and Secretary McAdoo give the signal for frank
-partisanship of an extreme type in their public
-speeches. The various activities are, of course, co-related
-and directed toward the same end.</p>
-
-<p>In Wisconsin the President interfered by a personal
-appeal for the Democratic senatorial candidate
-against the Republican. He based his appeal on
-certain alleged positions taken by the Republican
-candidate, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Lenroot, during the two years and a
-half preceding our entry into the war, which positions,
-he asserted, did not meet the “acid test” of
-patriotism. The President made the conduct of our
-public men during the two years and a half prior to
-the war the test by which they are to be judged, and
-where he himself applies this test to others he must
-himself be judged by it.</p>
-
-<p>His supporters make the plea that to call attention
-to the President’s record during these two and a half
-years is to cry over spilt milk. But the President’s
-attack on Lenroot was a square repudiation of this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-plea when it applied to anybody except himself. In
-reality the “acid test” of patriotism during these
-two and a half years is to be found in the use of
-phrases like “too proud to fight” and “peace without
-victory” and the refusal to act instead of merely
-talking after the sinking of the Lusitania; in the
-fatuous refusal to prepare and in the insistence on
-preserving an ignoble neutrality between right and
-wrong between those who were fighting to make the
-world safe for democracy and liberty and those who
-were fighting to overthrow both. Tried by the test
-of past conduct which the President applied to <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Lenroot, he is himself found wanting. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Lenroot
-spilled a teaspoonful of milk, but <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson spilled
-a bucketful and he must not call attention to the
-teaspoon and expect to escape having attention
-called to the bucket.</p>
-
-<p>The President has now personally requested <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Henry Ford to come forward as his personal candidate
-for the Senate in Michigan. This action cannot
-be reconciled either with the President’s statement
-that politics must be adjourned or with the reasons
-he alleged for opposing <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Lenroot. No man was
-a more intense pacifist, no man struggled harder
-against preparedness, no man was more eagerly
-hailed as an ally by the pro-Germans than <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford
-during the two and a half years before we did our
-duty and entered the war. He is not a Republican;
-he is not a Democrat. He supported <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson on
-the “he kept us out of war” issue. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson can
-only desire his election on grounds of personal politics,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-as <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson wishes as associates not strong
-men, but servants, and from the servants he demands
-servility even more than service. I have not
-the slightest political feeling when politics comes into
-hostile contact with patriotism and Americanism.
-There is no public servant whom during the past
-year I have supported more heartily than the Democratic
-Senator, Chamberlain. I oppose <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford,
-because in the great crisis I feel that his election
-would be a calamity from the standpoint of far-sighted
-and patriotic Americanism. I would oppose
-him if he had been nominated by the Republican
-Party. I oppose him in precisely the same spirit
-now that he has been nominated on personal grounds
-by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="HATS_OFF_TO_THE_INTERNATIONAL">HATS OFF TO THE INTERNATIONAL
-TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">June 27, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The published reports of the International Typographical
-Union, issued from Indianapolis, make a
-very remarkable showing and put that organization
-high on the honor roll of America for the Great War.</p>
-
-<p>Forty-one hundred journeymen members of the
-union and seven hundred apprentices are in the
-military and naval forces of the United States and
-Canada. Seventy-five members have already paid
-with their lives for their devotion to their country.
-The union has paid $22,000 mortuary benefits to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-the widows, orphans, and mothers of these men.
-The union, through its executive council, has invested
-$90,000 in the Liberty loans, and subordinate
-local unions and individual members have invested
-$3,000,000 in the Liberty loans.</p>
-
-<p>These are war-time activities. During the same
-period the International Typographical Union has
-continued all its ordinary benefit works. It has paid
-over $350,000 to fifteen hundred old-age pensioners,
-over $300,000 in mortuary benefits, and $170,000
-to the Union Printers’ Home at Colorado Springs.
-Every dollar has been paid by members of the organization
-in the form of regular dues and assessments.
-The union neither solicits nor accepts contributions
-to its benefit funds.</p>
-
-<p>During the same period the union has expended
-only $1200 for strike expenses. The union acts in
-thoroughgoing patriotic fashion on the conviction
-that there should be no strikes or lockouts during the
-war. Its officers regard themselves as volunteers in
-the army for the preservation of industrial peace, at
-least for the duration of the war, and I hope for long
-after the war. Such conduct offers a striking contrast
-to the action of certain corporations which during
-this war have refused to permit their employees
-to organize. Labor has as much right as capital to
-organize. It is tyranny to forbid the exercise of this
-right, just as it is tyranny to misuse the power acquired
-by organization. The people of the United
-States do not believe in tyranny and do believe in
-coöperation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span></p>
-
-<p>The International Typographical Union has
-offered an admirable example of Americanism and
-patriotism. Its attitude is typical of the attitude of
-organized labor generally. Hats off to the International
-Typographical Union! And hats off to the
-working-men and working-women of the United
-States!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_PERFORMANCE_OF_A_GREAT">THE PERFORMANCE OF A GREAT
-PUBLIC DUTY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">July 3, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is announced from Washington that the President
-has been converted to the need of universal military
-training of our young men, as a permanent policy.
-This is excellent. If this policy is forthwith incorporated
-into our laws, it will represent an immense
-national advance. In the first place, it will guarantee
-us against a repetition of the humiliating experiences
-of the last four years, when our helpless refusal to
-prepare invited Germany’s attack upon us and then
-forced us to rely entirely upon our allies to protect
-us from that attack while for over a year we slowly
-made ready to defend ourselves. In the next place,
-it will immeasurably increase the moral and physical
-efficiency of the young men who are trained and fit
-them both to do better for themselves and to perform
-in better fashion the tasks of American citizenship.
-Finally it is essential that the policy should be
-adopted now while we are at war and therefore while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-our people are awake to the needs of the situation.
-As soon as peace comes, there will be a revival of the
-sinister agitation of the pro-German or other anti-American
-leaders and of the silly clamor of the
-pacifists, all of whom will with brazen folly again
-reiterate that preparedness ends with war, and that,
-anyhow, all war can be averted by signing scraps of
-paper. The adoption at once of the policy of obligatory
-universal military training will be the performance
-of a great public duty.</p>
-
-<p>For three years the foremost advocates of this
-policy have pointed out that it can advantageously
-be combined with a certain amount of industrial
-training. It is earnestly to be hoped that this element
-of industrial training will be incorporated in
-the law. Of course, in such case the length of service
-with the colors in the field, aside from preliminary
-training in the higher school grades, ought to be a
-year, so as to avoid superficiality. Credit should be
-given the graduates of certain scholastic institutions
-or to individuals who speedily attain a high degree
-of proficiency, and for them the time of service could
-be shortened. All officers or other candidates for
-officers’ training schools would be chosen from
-among the best of the men who had gone through
-the training, without regard to anything except their
-fitness. This would represent the embodiment in
-our army of the democratic principle which insists
-upon an equal chance for all, equal justice for all, and
-the need for leadership, and therefore for special
-rewards for leadership. The industrial training<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-could be so shaped as to emphasize the need that
-hard workers who are efficient should become in a
-real sense partners in industry, and that insistence
-upon efficiency should be accompanied by a fair
-division of the rewards of efficiency, and by insistence
-that the work should be made healthful and
-interesting, so that its faithful performance would
-be a matter of pride and pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment our training camps are huge universities,
-huge laboratories of fine American citizenship.
-Let us make them permanent institutions.
-They develop both power of initiative and power of
-obedience. They inculcate self-reliance and self-respect.
-They also inculcate respect for others and
-readiness for discipline, which means readiness to
-use our collective power in such shape as to make us
-threefold more efficient than we have been. To make
-these camps permanent training schools for all our
-young men would mean the greatest boon this
-Nation could receive.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="REPEAL_THE_CHARTER_OF_THE">REPEAL THE CHARTER OF THE
-GERMAN-AMERICAN ALLIANCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">July 11, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The United States Senate has struck an effective
-blow against the Hun within our gates by unanimously
-voting to repeal the charter of the German-American
-Alliance. It is earnestly to be hoped that
-the House will at once follow suit with like unanimity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-The Alliance has been thoroughly mischievous
-in its activities. It has acted in the interest of Germany
-and against the interest of America. It has
-tried to perpetuate Germanism as a separate nationality
-with a separate language in the United States;
-it has attacked our allies; it has encouraged disloyalty;
-it was decorated by the Kaiser for its
-services to Germany. It has endeavored to prostitute
-our politics to German needs. I have personally
-had the honor of being specially singled out by it
-for attack. It received money from the Brewers’
-Association for the campaign against prohibition.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, when the campaign of German frightfulness
-is in full blast, when the Prussianized Germany
-of the Hohenzollerns is steadily adding to
-its list of literally unforgivable offenses against
-civilization, there is no room in this country for any
-organization, great or small, which either defends
-Germany or is lukewarm in the great crusade against
-her in which America will henceforth play a leading
-part. Germany has recently scored another victory
-for frightfulness by sinking a Canadian hospital ship
-without warning and drowning two hundred persons,
-including women nurses. The ship was a mercy
-vessel, not a warship, and was so distinctly marked
-that it was impossible to mistake it. The attack
-upon it was sheer murder. Yet the German people
-tolerate, applaud, and approve the action of the
-German Government in this continuous and methodically
-organized campaign of murder, rape, and
-outrage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span></p>
-
-<p>The most complete exposure of Germany’s infamous
-purpose in forcing this dreadful war upon
-the world is contained in the pamphlet written
-by the leading German steel magnate, Herr August
-Thyssen. This pamphlet has been translated into
-English, has been put into the official record by
-Senator Owen, of Oklahoma, has been printed in full
-in the San Francisco Argonaut and Baltimore Manufacturers’
-Record, and circulated in pamphlet form
-by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> J. G. Butler, <abbr title="junior">Jr.</abbr>, of Youngstown, Ohio. It
-is accessible to everybody. Herr Thyssen has no conception
-of the monstrous turpitude of the plan which
-he supported. His only complaint is that he and the
-other German financiers were fooled by the German
-Kaiser and the German Government, who promised
-them victory and failed to furnish it. He proves that
-German capitalism was just as responsible for the
-war as German militarism (which incidentally shows
-the peculiar infamy of the Russian Bolshevists and
-American Socialists and their allies in playing Germany’s
-game). He shows that Germany’s ruthless
-brutality was equaled by her sordid greed. He
-showed that the Hohenzollern Government, through
-the Emperor and the Chancellor, deliberately
-planned the war over a year and a half before it
-broke out, and at that time and on several occasions
-gathered the leading business men of Germany, informed
-them of the plans, and got their support by
-holding out the war as one of sheer plunder. The
-other nations were to be attacked simply in order
-to rob them naked. Herr Thyssen himself was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-promised thirty thousand acres in Australia. The
-Emperor particularly dwelt on the conquest of India,
-saying that the English allowed the vast Indian
-revenue to be used for and by the Indians themselves,
-but that Germany after her conquest would
-turn the whole “Golden Stream into the Fatherland.”
-There could be no finer tribute to England
-when compared with Germany than that which is
-thus furnished by the Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>In point of international morality the Germany
-of the Hohenzollerns has become the wild beast of
-the nations. Whoever directly or indirectly works
-for her or against our allies or who is merely lukewarm
-in the war is an enemy of this country, and an
-enemy of all mankind.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="EVERY_MAN_HAS_A_RIGHT_TO_ONE">EVERY MAN HAS A RIGHT TO ONE
-COUNTRY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">July 15, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Every man ought to love his country. If he does
-not love his country and is not eager to serve her, he
-is a worthless creature and should be contemptuously
-thrown out of the country when possible, and
-at any rate debarred from all rights of citizenship in
-the country. He is only entitled to one country. If
-he claims loyalty to two countries, he is necessarily
-a traitor to at least one country. If he claims to be
-loyal to both Germany and America, he is necessarily
-a traitor to America. No man can be a good American<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-now unless he is an enemy of Germany and Germany’s
-allies and a stanch supporter of America’s
-allies.</p>
-
-<p>But it is just as wicked and just as un-American
-to deny the loyal American, of whatever origin, the
-full benefit of his allegiance to one country as it is to
-permit the disloyal American to exercise a treacherous
-alternative allegiance to two countries. Every
-man has a right to one country. He has a right to
-love and serve that country and to feel that it is
-absolutely his country and that he has in it every
-right possessed by any one else. It is our duty to
-require the man of German blood who is an American
-citizen to give up all allegiance to Germany
-whole-heartedly and without on his part any mental
-reservation whatever. If he does this, it becomes no
-less our duty to give him the full rights of an American,
-including our loyal respect and friendship without
-on our part any mental reservation whatever.
-The duties are reciprocal, and from the standpoint
-of American patriotism one is as important as the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>There has been nothing finer in this war, nothing
-of better augury for the future of America, than the
-high courage and splendid loyalty shown by the
-American soldiers and sailors who are of German
-blood. Relatively to their number they have come
-forward as freely into the ranks of our fighting men
-as the Americans of any other stock, and all alike
-have shown the same soldierly efficiency, the same
-devoted patriotism, and, when the need arose, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-same heroism. The crew of the torpedo destroyer
-who face the submarine, and the airmen of the
-battle planes whose lives are in peril every hour, and
-the infantry stoggers and doughboys and marines
-who stand the killing and suffer the grueling hardship
-and misery of the line fighting, all alike number
-in their ranks relatively just as many Americans of
-German as of any other blood. Any one can see this
-who will look over the lists of casualties and the lists
-of men cited for deeds of high gallantry. The official
-reports of the German officers bear unintended
-testimony to the intense and patriotic Americanism
-of these men whom the Hohenzollern officials sneer
-at as “half Americans,” and who, even when taken
-prisoners, are admitted by the German army officers
-to “express without hesitation purely American
-sentiments.” In other words, the Pan-German
-propaganda on behalf of German <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">kultur</i> has broken
-down in America, and as a consequence there are no
-people in this country so hated in the Prussianized
-Germany of the Hohenzollerns as the Americans of
-German blood.</p>
-
-<p>The very worst enemies of these Americans have
-been the traitors and dupes of traitors who have been
-during the last few years the leaders of the German-American
-Alliance and of the newspapers in German
-or English who have backed up the Alliance and
-similar organizations. The dissolution by law of the
-Alliance and the gradual change of German newspapers
-into newspapers published in English will be
-of benefit to true Americans of German blood more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-than any other of our citizens. But the Americans
-of other blood must remember that the man who in
-good faith and without reservations gives up another
-country for this must in return receive exactly the
-same rights, not merely legal, but social and spiritual,
-that other Americans proudly possess. We of
-the United States belong to a new and separate
-nationality. We are all Americans and nothing else,
-and each, without regard to his birthplace, creed, or
-national origin, is entitled to exactly the same rights
-as all other Americans.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="MURDER_TREASON_AND_PARLOR">MURDER, TREASON, AND PARLOR
-ANARCHY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">July 18, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>One of the cheapest methods by which some well-meaning,
-silly people, and some sinister people who
-are not well-meaning, achieve a reputation for
-broad-minded liberality in matters relating to social
-reforms is to champion or excuse criminality on the
-ground that it is due to social conditions. The
-parlor anarchist or parlor Bolshevist is not an attractive
-person, and he may be mischievous when
-he joins the genuine anarchist, the “direct” man
-with the bomb, because selfish and unpatriotic
-politicians then find it advantageous to pander to
-both. This species of parlor anarchist appeals to
-emotional persons of superficial cultivation, whether
-writers, college men, sham economists, or sham religious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-and charitable workers, because it makes no
-demand either upon robust vigor of soul or thoroughness
-of mental process. At the moment it manifests
-itself in sympathy for the I.W.W. and for convicted
-dynamiters and murderers like Mooney.</p>
-
-<p>There are honest and ignorant working-men who
-join the I.W.W. because they are misled or because
-in some given locality industrial conditions really
-are intolerable. I have heard on good authority of
-logging camps, for instance, where the men joined
-the I.W.W. and practiced sabotage because they
-were treated tyrannically and foolishly and where
-good treatment turned them into good citizens.
-But I know far more numerous instances in which
-the leaders have simply been thugs and murderous
-malefactors whose criminality was not in the least
-due to social conditions, but to their own foul
-natures. By all means let us remedy the social
-conditions that are wrong, but let us shun, as we
-would shun the plague, that mawkish sentimentality
-of downright moral and physical cowardice which
-fears to call murder, treason, violence, arson, and
-rape by their right names and treat them as crimes
-to be punished with relentless severity.</p>
-
-<p>Actually there have been make-believe social
-reformers who have sought to excuse a brute who
-raped a little girl on the ground that social conditions
-made him what he was, and others who on
-similar grounds have protested against the condign
-punishment of men who burn haystacks, ruin machinery,
-dynamite peace parades, and, in the interest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-of German agents, destroy machinery in mines or
-munition factories. Any man who is misled in these
-matters can get full information by buying a pamphlet
-recently written by a former Socialist, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Everett Harri, called “The I.W.W. an Auxiliary of
-the German Espionage System.” The simple truth
-is that the men who lead and give the tone to the
-I.W.W. are more dangerous criminals than an equal
-number of white-slavers and black-handers, and to
-give aid and comfort to one set of enemies of the
-Nation is as bad as to give aid and comfort to the
-others.</p>
-
-<p>The ablest, most far-sighted, and most patriotic
-of the heads of organized labor are more opposed to
-the I.W.W. as it is at present handled than are any
-other persons in the Nation. In just the same way
-the farmers whose resentment of wrongdoing is
-keenest should repudiate the Non-Partisan League
-just as long as it submits to such leadership as that
-of most of the men who are at present at its head,
-and just so long as it stands for covert disloyalty, as
-it has recently done on so many different occasions
-in so many different places. I am well aware that
-great numbers of honest and loyal farmers of high
-character have joined the League, because they
-rightly think that many of the economic conditions
-now affecting the farmer imperatively call for
-remedy. There are any number of men like myself
-who will join with the farmers in any sane and patriotic
-movement to remedy these conditions, no
-matter how radical such a movement may be. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-we will join with no movement whose leaders are
-tainted with disloyalty, or who refuse to give to
-others the same square deal they demand for themselves,
-or who fail to insist that here in America the
-one organization to which we all of us owe a loyalty
-greater than is any other, greater than to any labor
-union or farmers’ league or business or professional
-body, is the union of the entire American people.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="BACK_UP_THE_FIGHTING_MEN">BACK UP THE FIGHTING MEN
-AT THE FRONT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">July 26, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There is no American worth calling such whose
-veins do not thrill with pride when he reads of what
-has been done by General Pershing and his gallant
-army in France. The soldiers over there who wear
-the American uniform have made all good Americans
-forever their debtors. Now and always afterward
-we of this country will walk with our heads high
-because of the men who face death and wounds, and
-so many of whom have given their lives fighting for
-this Nation and for the great ideals of humanity
-across the seas.</p>
-
-<p>But we must not let our pride and our admiration
-evaporate in mere pride, in mere admiration of what
-others have done. We must put the whole strength
-of this Nation back of the fighting men at the front.
-We owe it to them. We owe it at least as much to
-the gallant Allies, who for near four years fought the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-great battle that was our battle, no less than theirs.</p>
-
-<p>At last we have begun to come to their assistance,
-but let us solemnly realize that we came very late,
-and that it is a dreadful thing if we waste one hour
-that can now be saved, or weaken in the smallest
-degree any effort that can be made. The inability, or
-refusal, of Bolshevist Russia to do her part in the
-great war for liberty and democracy has cast a
-terrible added burden upon the Allies. On the
-eastern front this has meant the temporary Allied
-ruin and the freeing of the armies of the autocracy
-for action against the western peoples. England,
-France, and Belgium for four years and Italy for
-over three years have been fighting the battle of
-civilization. Their man power is terribly depleted.
-Thank Heaven, we have got some hundreds of
-thousands of soldiers across in time to be a real
-element in saving Paris. Our first duty, if we wish to
-win the war, is to save Paris. Temporarily, at least,
-and I hope permanently, we have done our part in
-this respect. But the least faltering, the least letting-up,
-or failure in pushing forward our preparations
-and our assistance, would be dangerous to the Allied
-cause and a wicked desertion of our allies.</p>
-
-<p>From now on America should make this peculiarly
-America’s war. From now on we should take the
-burden of the war upon our shoulders. We should
-move forward at once with all the force that there
-is in us. We should not allow the war to drag for so
-much as a day, and above all we should not permit
-our people to fall under the spell of pacifist dreams<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-or possible pacifist actions. There should not be intermission
-of so much as a week in sending our troops
-across the seas. This war won’t be won by food, or
-by money, or by savings, or by Thrift Stamps, or by
-the Red Cross, or by anything else, although all of
-these will help win the war. It will be won by the
-valor of the fighting men at the front, and this valor
-will fail unless our fighting men at the front are
-millions strong.</p>
-
-<p>Every week this summer and fall we should be
-putting fresh troops by scores of thousands across
-the ocean, and now, to-day, this week, we should
-provide for placing a larger army in the field next
-spring than Germany itself, or France and England
-combined. We are a more populous, a richer country
-than Germany, we have a larger population than
-Great Britain and France combined. These nations
-have fought for four years. We have only just begun
-to fight. Let us at once mobilize the whole man
-power of this country between the ages of nineteen
-and fifty or sixty. The draft should take in all men
-of nineteen, even if they were not sent abroad until
-they were twenty years old. Let us act at once.
-Perhaps we can beat the Germans this year if we
-keep pouring our troops over with the utmost speed.
-But let us take no chances. Let us proceed upon the
-assumption that Germany will fight next spring, and
-therefore let us act instantly so that by spring we
-will have in France an army of fighting men, exclusive
-of non-combatants and exclusive of home
-dépôts, which shall amount to four million armed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-soldiers at the very least. Let us fight beside the
-French, the British, the Italians, and be ready to
-fight instantly in the Balkan Peninsula and in Asia
-Minor against the Germans and all her vassal states.
-There must be no delay, not by so much as one hour,
-and no letting-up for one moment in the cause of
-our entire strength.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_AMERICANS_WHOM_WE_MOST">THE AMERICANS WHOM WE MOST
-DELIGHT TO HONOR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 1, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>At long intervals in the history of a nation there
-come great days when the picked sons of the Nation
-determine for generations to come that nation’s
-place in history. During the last few weeks our
-fighting men in France have rendered all the rest of
-us forever their debtors. They have won high honor
-for themselves and for their country. Our children’s
-children will owe them deep gratitude for what they
-have done. All Americans hold their heads higher
-because of their deeds.</p>
-
-<p>Their achievement has been won at the cost of
-perseverance in training and of resolution in facing
-unbelievable hardship and fatigue. It has also cost
-and will cost the death, the crippling, and the
-wounding of many scores of thousands of our best
-and bravest. We who stay behind in ease and comfort,
-who show our patriotism by economizing on
-sugar or wheat or beef instead of by living in our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-clothes until they rot off us in the trenches, or who
-pay money for taxes and bonds and Thrift Stamps
-instead of paying with our blood, owe an incalculable
-debt to the men at the front and to the mothers,
-wives, and little children of those who are killed at
-the front. We must pay this debt.</p>
-
-<p>The debt is due to our wonderful fighting men at
-the front individually, to our army collectively, and
-to this Nation as a whole. We must provide for the
-crippled men and for the widows and children of the
-dead. Nothing that we can do will lighten the bitter
-sorrow of those who have lost the men they loved;
-stern pride in the courage and gallant devotion of
-those who are dead is the only staff that will help to
-carry that burden for the living. But the material
-needs of the survivors must be met with ample
-generosity and yet in the only permanently effective
-fashion, by training those who need help to help
-themselves and achieve an ever-increasing self-respect
-and self-reliance.</p>
-
-<p>We must now help the army as a whole by straining
-every nerve without a day’s delay immensely to
-increase our strength, our numbers, and our resources
-at the front. We should provide now, and as
-a matter of fact we ought to have provided six
-months ago, for an army of six or seven million men,
-so that when next spring opens we may have at least
-four million fighting men at the front. We are more
-populous than Germany, or France and Great
-Britain combined, and we should provide so that
-two years after we entered the war our army shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-be as large as Germany’s or as the combined forces
-of our allies in France. We should speed to the limit
-the work of the ships, guns, and airplanes. At
-present our army is in France mainly because of the
-aid of British ships, and it is able to fight mainly
-because of the field cannon and even airplanes it
-has received from the French. The draft limit
-should be immensely increased and the exceptions
-immensely decreased.</p>
-
-<p>To stand by the army is to stand by the Nation,
-and therefore to stand by the Allies to whom our
-national faith is plighted. This war will be won by
-the fighting men at the front. All other work is
-merely auxiliary and is entirely subordinate to theirs.
-Let us provide for the army instantly, and let us
-provide for the Nation’s future permanently by at
-once introducing the policy of universal obligatory
-military training for all our young men.</p>
-
-<p>The fighting men at the front are the men most
-worthy of honor. Let every American lad hereafter
-be trained so that in time of need he can fill this
-most honorable of all positions.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SOUND_NATIONALISM_AND_SOUND">SOUND NATIONALISM AND SOUND
-INTERNATIONALISM</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 4, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The glorious victory of the Allies in the second
-battle of the Marne, a victory in which the hard-fighting
-soldiers of the American army have borne<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-so distinguished and honorable a part, may mean the
-failure of the German military offensive for this year.
-Therefore it may mean a renewal of the German
-peace offensive. No man can prophesy in these
-matters, but the Germans may continue the war for
-a long time; and therefore we should prepare to
-have in France an army of four million fighting men
-for the battle front next spring. But the Germans
-may try to make peace instead of continuing the war,
-and may seek to cover their retention of some of
-their ill-gotten substantial gains by nominal and
-theoretical support of some glittering proposal about
-a league of nations to end all war. They will thereby
-hope to keep part of their booty by appealing to
-what is vaguely called internationalism and getting
-the support not only of sentimentalists who do not
-like to look unpleasant facts in the face, but also of
-the good people who are appalled and puzzled and
-panic-struck by the horror Germany has brought on
-the world, and who, instead of bracing themselves
-to put down this horror by their own hardened
-strength and iron will, clutch at any quack remedy
-which false prophets hold out as offering a substitute
-for such action.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore it is well at this time for sober and
-resolute men and women to apply that excellent
-variety of wisdom colloquially known as “horse
-sense” to the problems of nationalism and internationalism.
-These problems will not be solved by
-rhetoric. Least of all will they be solved by competitive
-rhetoric. Masters of phrase-making may win<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-immense, although evanescent, applause by outvying
-one another in words that glitter, but these
-glittering words will not have one shred of lasting
-effect on the outcome except in so far as they may
-have a very mischievous effect if they persuade
-people to abandon the possible real good in the
-fantastic effort to achieve an impossible, unreal
-perfection. Let honest men and women remember
-that this kind of phrase-mongering does not represent
-idealism. The only idealism worth considering
-in the workaday business of this world is applied
-idealism. This is merely another way of saying that
-permanent good to humanity only comes from actually
-trying to reduce ideals to practice, and this
-means that the ideals must be substantially or at
-least measurably realizable.</p>
-
-<p>The professed internationalist usually sneers at
-nationalism, at patriotism, and at what we call
-Americanism. He bids us forswear our love of
-country in the name of love of the world at large.
-We nationalists answer that he has begun at the
-wrong end; we say that as the world now is, it is
-only the man who ardently loves his country first
-who in actual practice can help any other country at
-all. The internationalist bids us promise to abandon
-the idea of keeping America permanently ready to
-defend her rights by her strength, and to trust, instead,
-to scraps of paper, to written agreements by
-which all nations form a league, and agree to disarm
-and agree each to treat all other nations, big or little,
-on an exact equality. We nationalists answer that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-we are ready to join any league to enforce peace or
-similar organization which offers a likelihood of in
-some measure lessening the number and the area of
-future wars, but only on condition that in the first
-place we do not promise what will not or ought not
-to be performed, or be guilty of proclaiming a sham,
-and that in the second place we do not surrender
-our right and duty to prepare our own strength for
-our own defense instead of trusting to the above-mentioned
-scraps of paper. In justification we point
-to certain very obvious facts which ought to be
-patent to every man of common sense.</p>
-
-<p>Any such league of nations must, of course, include
-the nine nations which have the greatest
-military strength or it will be utterly impotent.
-These nine nations include Germany, Austria,
-Turkey, and Russia. The first three have abundantly
-shown during the last four years that no
-written or other promise of the most binding kind
-has even the slightest effect upon their actions. The
-fourth, Russia, under the lead and dominion of the
-Bolsheviki, has just been guilty of the grossest possible
-betrayal of her allies and of the small kindred
-Slavonic peoples and of world democracy. This
-betrayal was in the interest of a military and despotic
-autocracy and included the direct violation of
-Russia’s plighted faith. Under such conditions it is
-unnecessary to say that Russia’s signature to any
-future league to enforce peace will not be worth the
-paper on which it is written. Therefore the creation
-of any such league for the future will simply mean a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-pledge by the present Allies to make their alliance
-perpetual and all to go to war again whenever one
-of them is attacked. This may become necessary,
-but it certainly does not imply future disarmament.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all. The United States must come into
-court with clean hands. She must not pledge herself
-without reservation to the right of “self-determination”
-for each people while she has behaved
-toward Haiti and San Domingo as she is now behaving.
-It is not possible for me to say whether our
-action in these two cases has been right or wrong,
-because the Administration, with its usual horror of
-publicity, whether pitiless or otherwise, and its
-inveterate predilection for secret and furtive diplomacy,
-has kept most of the facts hidden. I believe
-that there was no possible excuse for such secret
-diplomacy in these cases and that the same course
-should have been followed as was followed in the
-case of the Panama revolution, where every fact
-was immediately laid without reservation before
-Congress. But even if I am wrong in my belief in
-the general principle of open diplomacy, and even if
-the Administration is right in its consistent policy
-of secret diplomacy as regards the mass of questions
-which I think ought to be made public, the fact
-remains that we have with armed force invaded,
-made war upon, and conquered the two small republics,
-have upset their governments, have denied
-them the right of self-determination, and have made
-democracy within their limits not merely unsafe but
-non-existent. As we have no published facts to go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-on, I cannot say whether their misconduct did or
-did not warrant such drastic action on our part, but
-on the assumption that the Administration acted
-properly, we are committed to the principle that
-some nations are not fit for self-determination, that
-democracy within their limits is a sham, and that
-their offenses against justice and right are such as to
-render interference by their more powerful and more
-civilized neighbors imperative. I do not doubt that
-this principle is true in some cases, whether or not it
-ought to be applied in these two particular cases. In
-any event, our continuing action in San Domingo and
-Haiti makes it hypocritical for us to lay down any universal
-rules about self-determination for all nations.</p>
-
-<p>Our action also shows how utterly futile it would
-be to try to treat a league to enforce peace as a substitute
-for training our own strength for our own defense.
-Let China be the witness of the truth of this
-statement. China has actually realized the ideal of
-the pacifists who insist that unpreparedness for war
-secures peace. The ideal of the internationalists is
-that patriotism and sense of nationalism are detrimental
-to humanity, and the ideal of the Socialists
-is that the capitalist régime is the only cause of
-popular misery. China is helpless to attack others or
-defend herself, her people have little sense of national
-unity and pride, and there are in China huge districts
-where there are no capitalists and where the
-misery of the people is greater than in any country of
-the Occident. China’s helplessness, instead of helping
-toward world peace, has been a positive encouragement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-to war and violence among her neighbors.
-Her future depends primarily, not on herself, but on
-what her neighbors choose to do. In spite of her size
-and her enormous population and resources, she is
-helpless to do good to others because she is powerless
-to prevent others from doing evil to her. Her
-agreement to a league of nations or to a league to
-enforce peace would be worthless, because she is
-unable to put strength back of justice either for
-herself or for any one else. The pacifists and internationalists
-if they had their way would turn the
-United States into the China of the Occident.</p>
-
-<p>Let us put our trust neither in rhetoric nor hypocrisy,
-whether conscious or unconscious. Let us be
-honest with ourselves. Let us look the truth in the
-face. Let us remember what Germany, Austria, and
-Turkey have actually done. Let us remember what
-Russia has suffered from Germany and the worse
-than folly with which she has behaved to every one
-else. Let us remember what has happened to China
-and what we have made happen to Haiti and San
-Domingo. Then let us trust for our salvation to a
-sound and intense American nationalism.</p>
-
-<p>The horse sense of the matter is that all agreements
-to further the cause of sound internationalism
-must be based on recognition of the fact that as the
-world is actually constituted our present prime need
-is this sound and intense American nationalism.
-The first essential of this sound nationalism is that
-the Nation shall trust to its own fully prepared
-strength for its own defense. So far as possible, its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-strength must also be used to secure justice for others
-and must never be used to wrong others. But unless
-we possess and prepare the strength, we can neither
-help ourselves nor others. Let us by all means go
-into any wise league or covenant among nations to
-abolish neutrality (for, of course, a league to enforce
-peace is merely another name for a league to abolish
-neutrality in every possible war). But let us first
-understand what we are promising, and count the
-cost and determine to keep our promises. Above all,
-let us treat any such agreement or covenant as a
-mere addition to, and never as a substitute for, the
-preparation in advance of our own armed power.
-Next time we behave with the ignoble folly we have
-shown during the last four years we may not find
-allies to do what France and England and Italy have
-done for us. They have protected us with their
-navies and armies, their blood and their treasure,
-while we first refused to do anything and then slowly
-and reluctantly began to harden and make ready
-our giant but soft and lazy strength.</p>
-
-<p>No proper scheme designed to secure peace without
-effort and safety without service and sacrifice
-will either make this country safe or enable it to do
-its international duty toward others.</p>
-
-<p>An American citizen, personally unknown to me,
-writes me that his three sons entered the army at
-the outbreak of the war, and that one of them, an
-aviator, was killed in battle at the front just two
-weeks before my own son was killed as he fought in
-the air. In his letter my correspondent adds:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Would that my country might learn and never forget that
-not only the winning of peace now, but the maintenance of
-peace at all times depends not fundamentally on treaties or
-leagues of nations, but on the readiness of citizens to fly to
-the aid of the wronged and to give their lives if need be that
-justice may be secured.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There speaks the true American spirit which holds
-fast alike to fearlessness and to wisdom, to gentleness
-and to iron resolution. There speaks the spirit
-of that fervent nationalism which would forbid
-America either to inflict or to endure wrong.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_MAN_WHO_PAYS_AND_THE_MAN">THE MAN WHO PAYS AND THE MAN
-WHO PROFITS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 9, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The men who do the fighting at the front and their
-mothers and wives back here are those who in this
-great and terrible crisis are paying&mdash;the blood of
-the men and the tears of the women, and with the
-suffering of men, women, and children&mdash;for our
-failure to prepare during the two and a half years
-before we entered the World War. For this failure to
-prepare, in spite of the most vivid warning ever
-given a Nation, the warning that befell the rest of
-the world during those two and a half years, the professed
-pacifists and the politicians who pandered to
-them are more responsible than any one else, except
-the pro-Germans. If, when the World War broke
-out, or at latest when the Lusitania was sunk, we had
-done our plain duty, we had then begun to build<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-ships, field cannon and airplanes, and to train men
-exactly as we have been doing during the last year
-and a quarter, except that we should have done the
-work on a larger scale with more efficiency and with
-much less waste and extravagance. Remember that
-failure to provide great numbers of cannon and airplanes
-means that the infantry has to pay for it with
-a huge increase of slaughter. All the guns and airplanes
-we left unbuilt during the first three years of
-the war has meant so much more bloodshed, so many
-more Americans killed and crippled, not to speak of
-the tremendous loss of life to our allies. Moreover,
-when men in small numbers are put into battle, when
-only a few hundred thousand are forced to suffer
-heavy loss in doing work which two or three million
-men could have accomplished speedily and thoroughly
-and with very little loss, the responsibility
-rests on those who prevented the preparation in
-advance. If we had built quantities of ships and
-trained large numbers of men in advance, the World
-War would have ended almost as soon as we entered,
-and an infinite amount of bloodshed would have been
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p>The best roll of our army overseas is the American
-roll of honor. These men have paid with their bodies
-for the safety of this Nation in the present and the
-future. They have died, and by their death have
-earned for the rest of us the right to hold our heads
-high with pride. But it is no less true that their
-blood has been shed, but their gallant lives have been
-spent because we did not prepare in advance. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-did not prepare because our people were misled. For
-this misleading of the people the professional profiteers
-share the responsibility with the pro-Germans,
-with sham sentimentalists, with the sordid,
-short-sighted materialists, and with all the politicians,
-publicists, and private citizens, rich or poor,
-whose vanity or folly or self-interest profited thereby.
-We ought not to remember this in any spirit of revenge,
-but most certainly, unless we are worse than
-foolish, we shall remember it and other warnings to
-teach us how to behave in the future, and as a very
-stern warning against again trusting to the leadership
-of the men thus responsible for the deaths of
-so many fine and fearless young Americans.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the men who are misled, and some of the
-men who misled them, have come frankly forward
-to admit their error. What is even more important,
-most of them have made the real atonement of deeds.
-They have, if young, themselves gone into the army,
-and if not young have sent their sons or permitted
-them to go into the army and fight in freedom’s belated
-battle. All these men are paying their share of
-the joint payment in blood of the Nation. They are
-to be heartily respected. They are not seeking to
-profit by the valor and blood of others.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the men who pay; now for the men
-who profit. Some of these men profit in money. If
-such profit is excessive it is iniquitous. But a proper
-money profit is absolutely necessary, for no business
-can be permanent without profit any more than a
-working-man can permanently work without wages.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-The unpardonable profit is that of the man, especially
-the rich man, who, having preached pacifism
-and unpreparedness, now, when war comes, sees
-brave men face a death which pacifism and unpreparedness
-have made infinitely more probable while
-he himself and his sons profit by these other men’s
-courage and sit at home in the ease and safety secured
-by the fact that these others face death. The
-worst profiteers in this country are the men and the
-sons of the men who decline to face the death which
-their own actions have made more probable for
-others.</p>
-
-<p>Unless in exceptional cases there is no need to
-discuss individuals in private life. But when a man
-seeks public office, it becomes a duty to discuss his
-record. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Henry Ford is a candidate for United
-States Senator in Michigan. No man in this country
-strove harder in the cause of pacifism and unpreparedness
-than he did during the vital two years and
-a half before this country went to War. He received
-the cordial applause of the peace-at-any-price people
-who were themselves, of course, efficiently playing
-the pro-German game. He is a multi-millionaire. If
-any of his kin are killed, their families are not
-merely guarded against poverty, but are sure of
-wealth. The son of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford ought to feel it absolutely
-obligatory on him to go to the war. There
-is not in this country any other man who ought to
-feel it more honorably necessary to pay with his
-body, if necessary, to atone with his life for the
-dreadful wrong done this country by the preachers of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-pacifism and unpreparedness during the two years
-and a half that preceded our entry into the war. Yet
-it is announced in the press that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s son has
-obtained exemption from military service and is
-employed in the money-making business of his
-wealthy father.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s proper place is on the mourner’s bench
-and not at the council board of the Nation.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="OUR_DEBT_TO_THE_BRITISH_EMPIRE">OUR DEBT TO THE BRITISH EMPIRE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 16, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Judge Ben Lindsey has recently written two or
-three striking pieces about what Great Britain has
-done and is doing in this war. Incidentally he points
-out how far ahead of us she now is in certain types
-of social legislation, such as that dealing with
-children. But the lesson he inculcates which is of
-most immediate concern is the giant part England
-has played in this war and the debt we owe to her
-because, in standing up for Belgium and France, she
-was really defending us during our days of folly when
-we followed the lead of our worst enemies, the pacifists
-and pro-Germans.</p>
-
-<p>The English pacifists are, if anything, even more
-silly than our own. They did their best to make
-England keep out of this war. If they had succeeded
-the British Empire would for a few years have trod
-the broad, smooth road of peaceful and greedy infamy
-and would then have tumbled into the bottomless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-pit of utter destruction. But in August, 1914,
-Great Britain and the gallant overseas commonwealths
-which share her empire chose the hard path
-of immediate danger, of ultimate safety, and of high
-heroism. Thereby they saved their own souls and
-the bodies of their children, and in so doing rendered
-an inestimable service to us.</p>
-
-<p>England has raised an immense army which has
-fought in Europe, Asia, and Africa. If it were not
-for this army even the highly trained valor of the
-French could not have averted German victory. At
-the same time the British fleet has kept the seas free
-for the food and coal and munitions needed for the
-Allied people and armies and has furnished the transports
-necessary to enable us to put under Pershing a
-force large enough to be of real consequence in the
-vitally important battle which has been raging for
-the last thirty days. If Great Britain had not been
-far-sighted enough to realize what her own welfare
-demanded when France was invaded, and if she had
-not been stirred to noble indignation by the Belgian
-horror, the whole civilized world would now have
-been cowering under the brutal dominion of Germany.
-If she had not controlled the seas, not an
-American battalion could have been sent to the aid
-of France as she struggled to save the soul of the
-world, and no help could have been given gallant
-Italy or any others of these Allied nations to whose
-stern fighting efficiency we owe it that this earth is
-still a place on which free men can live.</p>
-
-<p>We must stand by Great Britain precisely as we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-stand by our other allies&mdash;in the first place, by
-waging the war with all our strength, and in the
-next place by seeing that the peace is of a kind which
-justifies them for all the sacrifices they have made.</p>
-
-<p>One item in waging the war ought to be insistence
-that every American of fighting age who resides in
-the British Empire and every Englishman of fighting
-age who resides in the United States be invariably
-put in either the British or the American armies.
-One item in making peace ought to be insistence that
-Britain keep every colony she has conquered from
-Germany, both in the South Seas and in Africa.
-Germany has behaved abominably in Africa. The
-course Germany has followed in Africa has made her
-a menace of evil to the Boer and British Africanders,
-and to return to her the colonies which have been
-taken from her, whether in Africa or Asia, by
-Australia or Great Britain, or by France or Japan or
-Belgium, would be a crime against civilization.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_CANDIDACY_OF_HENRY_FORD">THE CANDIDACY OF HENRY FORD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 20, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Every loyal American citizen in Michigan should
-read the last two numbers of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> George Harvey’s
-War Weekly. In these numbers there are quotations
-from <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Henry Ford’s speeches made two years ago
-and again since we entered the war. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford has
-not questioned the accuracy of these quotations
-given by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Harvey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>Speaking of American flags over his own factory
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford said: “I don’t believe in the flag. When
-the war is over these flags shall come down never to
-go up again.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sedition Act, approved by President Wilson,
-inflicts a maximum punishment of twenty years in
-the penitentiary for any man who, while we are at
-war, utters “language intended to bring the flag
-of the United States into contempt or disrepute.”
-During the last year many poor and ignorant men
-have been convicted and sentenced for using language
-thus forbidden by law. In my view the fact
-that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford is an enormously wealthy man ought
-not to give him immunity from the law if he cannot
-show that he did not use the language quoted in the
-War Weekly. But whether or not amenable to the
-law, no patriotic American can afford to put in the
-Senate, perhaps to help negotiate the peace treaty, a
-man who announces that as soon as peace comes he
-wishes to haul down the American flag and never
-again to hoist it. To send such a man to the Senate
-professing such sentiments under existing conditions
-would give the enemy a wholly wrong idea of the
-pacifist sentiment in our country. There is nothing
-in the world which would now help Germany as
-much, or give her so much heart in her struggle for
-the overthrow of liberty and democracy as the belief
-that men professing such sentiments would have part
-in the peace negotiations on behalf of this country.</p>
-
-<p>Among the further utterances of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford (as
-given in the War Weekly) is one that he does “not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-believe in patriotism” and that he does not care any
-more for the United States “than for China or
-Hindustan.” The man who does not believe in
-patriotism is not fit to live in this country, still less
-to represent it in the Senate. If these words of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Ford mean anything, then <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford is unpatriotic
-and has no more right to sit in the United States
-Senate than a Hindu or a Chinaman. Unless <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Ford can show that he never uttered these words no
-man worthy to be called an American, and least of
-all any religious or patriotic man, can afford to
-support him for the Senate.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford has been given immensely valuable war
-contracts of the Government. No doubt he has executed
-them as well as the thousands of other contractors
-who now render service to the Government
-for pay. But no service he can thus render the
-Government can offset the frightful damage he did
-our people by the lavish use he made of his enormous
-wealth in a gigantic and profoundly anti-American
-propaganda against preparedness and against our
-performance of international duty during the two
-and a half years before we entered the war. This
-crusade against righteousness included the sending
-of the ridiculous “peace ship” to Europe. This
-particular manifestation was too absurd even to do
-harm, but so far as it had any effect at all it encouraged
-Germany to believe that we were as neutral
-between right and wrong as Pontius, and that as far
-as we were concerned she could safely proceed with
-wrongdoing because we held the scales of judgment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-even between the wrongdoer and his victim. The
-crusade also included an extraordinary series of
-advertisements issued long after the Lusitania was
-sunk, in which <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford violently opposed and denounced
-preparedness, advocated and approved the
-McLemore resolutions, and announced that it was
-our duty to keep out of war; and not merely himself
-kept silent about the wrongdoing of Germany, but
-assailed those who set forth this wrongdoing on the
-ground that they “had bred racial hatred by the
-printing of incendiary news stories and articles.”
-It may well be doubted whether this propaganda did
-not do more damage to the American people than
-the propaganda carried on at the same time by
-Ambassador Bernstorff.</p>
-
-<p>If we had seen our duty and had fully prepared
-during these two and a half years, either we would
-never have had to enter the war or we would have
-brought it to a close immediately after we entered it.
-The best and bravest of the young men of the Nation
-are now paying with their blood for our unpreparedness
-and therefore for the pacific propaganda quite
-as much as for the pro-German propaganda carried
-on in this country during the two and a half years
-before we entered the war. But wealthy <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s
-son is not among these men. He is of draft age. He
-applied for exemption. The local board refused his
-application. He applied to the President. The
-President did not act for two months. Then the
-revised draft regulations were promulgated, and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Ford was excepted under the deferred or exempted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-class which included a married man with a child,
-however wealthy that man might be. He has exercised
-his legal right. Very many thousands of young
-Americans, men of small means who are not sons of
-multi-millionaires, have declined to take advantage
-of this legal right. They have left their wives and
-babies to go to war for a great ideal, for love of
-country, for love of liberty and of civilization. But
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s son stays at home. These other young
-Americans face death and endure unspeakable hardships
-and misery and fatigue for the sake of America
-and have surrendered all hope of money-getting, of
-comfort and of safety. But young <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford, in ease
-and safety, is in the employ of his wealthy father.</p>
-
-<p>In private relations I understand that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford
-is an amiable man. But I am not dealing with him in
-his private relations. I am discussing him as a candidate
-for high office. We are bound truthfully to set
-forth what we believe will be the effect of his election,
-and therefore we are bound to say that it
-would be damaging to the United States and would
-be encouraging to Germany. No patriotic American
-should support <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SPEED_UP_THE_WORK_FOR_THE_ARMY">SPEED UP THE WORK FOR THE ARMY
-AND GIVE ALL WHO ENTER IT
-FAIR PLAY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">August 23, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Our Government must learn that needless delay is
-worse than a blunder. We are sending troops to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-Siberia. This is good, but it would have been ten
-times better to have sent them last spring when the
-need was precisely as evident as it is now. The Administration
-is now preparing to ask Congress to
-arrange for putting between three and four million
-men in France by next July. Six months ago our best
-military advisers and our most far-sighted civilian
-leaders were urging that we prepare to put five
-million men in France by next March. The delay
-has been absolutely needless and may be very harmful.
-When last spring the demand for five million
-men was being incessantly urged, President Wilson
-treated it as merely a case for competitive rhetoric,
-and asked, with dramatic effect, why we should
-limit the number at all. But he actually has limited
-it to a much smaller number at a much later date.
-Therefore let there at least be no further delay. And
-above all let us not be misled by the persons who say
-that Germany will make peace before next spring.
-Our business is to act on the assumption that we
-shall have to put forth our utmost effort next spring
-and not to take any unnecessary chances.</p>
-
-<p>The Government is now very properly proposing
-to enlarge the draft age limits to include all the men
-of fighting age, all the men of the ages which furnished
-the enormous majority of the soldiers of the
-Civil War. The number of men in the excepted
-classes should be greatly reduced. There are too
-many exceptions. It is earnestly to be hoped that
-the plan will include the institution of universal
-obligatory military training of all our young men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-of eighteen to twenty years old as a permanent
-policy.</p>
-
-<p>But we ought not to adopt the plan recently
-proposed for special advantages to be given by the
-Government to young men who go to college and
-take certain special courses with a view to becoming
-officers. This would amount to giving a special
-privilege to persons with money enough to send their
-boys to college in order to have them escape the
-draft and secure commissions. This is not fair. It
-means giving a privilege to money. There is no
-excuse for giving such a preference to young men of
-eighteen or nineteen at this time when we have been
-at war eighteen months. There is still need to give
-some of the older men a special chance to train. But
-there is no such need in the case of men under
-twenty-one.</p>
-
-<p>There was every reason of sound public policy at
-the outset of the war to take advantage of the forethought
-and self-denial of the young men who at the
-Plattsburg and similar camps had at their own expense
-prepared themselves before the war began, and
-when, owing to the failure of the Government to do
-its duty, they were the only men who did prepare.
-There has been good reason for similar camps for
-young men during the last eighteen months before
-our general training camps began to show their full
-results. But from now on every young officer should
-be chosen on his merits from the men who enter the
-army in the ranks. Only the men who show their
-fitness, by whatever tests are deemed necessary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-after service in the ranks, should be sent to officers’
-schools, and money should play no part whatever in
-the matter.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SENATOR_LODGES_NOBLE_SPEECH">SENATOR LODGE’S NOBLE SPEECH</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 1, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Lodge’s speech dealing with the principles
-for which we are fighting and setting forth in detailed
-outline the kind of peace which alone will mean the
-peace of victory was a really noble speech. Nothing
-is easier, and from the national standpoint as distinguished
-from the standpoint of personal benefit to
-the speaker, nothing is less useful than a speech of
-such glittering generalities that almost anybody can
-interpret it in almost any manner. Only a great
-statesman possesses the courage, the knowledge, and
-the power of expression to set forth in convincing
-fashion the detailed statement of the objects which
-must be attained if such a war as that in which we
-are engaged is to be crowned by a peace wholly
-worth the terrible cost of life and happiness caused
-by the war. This is the service which Senator Lodge
-has rendered to this Nation and to our allies.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time in our history the Senate has
-rendered services of exceptional magnitude to the
-Nation. Never in our history has it rendered greater
-service than during the last nine months. The greatest
-men who have ever sat in it, men such as Clay
-and Webster and Calhoun and Benton, did not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-stand forth in leadership more clearly than a dozen
-of the Senators who, during the last nine months,
-have fearlessly and disinterestedly borne the burden
-of speeding up the war and endeavoring to place our
-international relations on exactly the right lines.</p>
-
-<p>These leaders have in actual fact adjourned
-politics. They have considered only their patriotic
-duty in all matters concerning this war and our relations
-with our allies and our enemies. The most
-efficient service toward speeding up the war and
-enabling this Nation to do its duty that has been
-rendered by any civilian public servants of the
-Nation is the service rendered by Senator Chamberlain
-and the Senators, both Democrats and Republicans,
-who acted with him on the Military Affairs
-Committee in the investigation of the War Department
-last winter. Within the last fortnight a service
-of similar character has been rendered by Senator
-Thomas and his associates in both parties on the sub-committee
-which has at last put before the people
-the truth about the breakdown of our aircraft
-programme. The fact that this summer we have put
-masses of armed men into France is primarily due
-to Senator Chamberlain and the Senators of both
-parties who have acted with him. The fact that
-next summer we shall at last back up American
-troops with American airplanes will be due primarily
-to Senator Thomas and his associates.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="APPLIED_PATRIOTISM">APPLIED PATRIOTISM</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 8, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The official record of the Illinois branch of the
-United Mine Workers of America furnishes an instructive
-lesson in applied patriotism. The president
-of the branch is <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Frank Farrington. The
-United Mine Workers are affiliated with the American
-Federation of Labor.</p>
-
-<p>President Farrington’s circulars to the Illinois
-mine workers set forth the need and the justice of
-this war and the duty of patriotic Americans in the
-most straightforward and clear-cut fashion. He
-states that this is the war for liberty and humanity
-and for American rights, and that there rests “upon
-every American and upon every man who has partaken
-of America’s bounty the solemn obligation of
-loyally doing their part to win victory for the cause
-America represents.” He promises the mine workers
-that their rights shall be protected and secured, but
-insists that they shall lend every energy to increase
-the output of coal so as to help our army at the front,
-which, as he finely says, includes “sons of the rich
-and sons of the poor men who love life as one, but
-who prefer death to life without liberty and who
-have made common cause and entered the lists in
-answer to the Nation’s need.”</p>
-
-<p>The improper practices are specifically pointed
-out and condemned, such as shutting down mines in
-violation of agreement in order to force some desired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-condition, or making improper restrictions to curtail
-production. The appeal is solemnly made to, and on
-behalf of, the miners’ union that there must be full
-service to the Nation and no shirking of duty, and
-that no agreement into which the union enters shall
-be treated as a scrap of paper, but shall be in good
-faith fulfilled. President Farrington in his official
-circulars lays constantly increasing stress upon the
-seriousness of the obligation resting upon the miners
-to aid and sustain the Allied armies in their fight for
-the freedom of humanity by hard, steady work and
-by increasing the output of coal. He condemns with
-genuine loftiness of feeling and expression all who
-fail to give the utmost help to the men who at the
-front are doing so much and suffering so much.</p>
-
-<p>The Illinois mine workers number about ninety
-thousand members. They are divided into three
-hundred and twenty local unions. Of these I have
-figures from only one hundred and twenty. They
-have sent over four thousand men into the army and
-navy of the United States, have purchased over two
-million dollars’ worth of Liberty bonds, $700,000 of
-War Savings Stamps, and have contributed over
-$90,000 to the Red Cross and over $20,000 to other
-war funds.</p>
-
-<p>The Illinois mine workers have made a fine showing
-in applied patriotism.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="GOOD_LUCK_TO_THE_ANTI-BOLSHEVISTS">GOOD LUCK TO THE ANTI-BOLSHEVISTS
-OF KANSAS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 12, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The absolute prerequisite for successful self-government
-in any people is the power of self-restraint
-which refuses to follow either the wild-eyed extremists
-of radicalism or the dull-eyed extremists of
-reaction. Either set of extremists will wreck the
-Nation just as certainly as the other. The Nation
-capable of self-government must show the Abraham
-Lincoln quality of refusing to go with either. The
-dreadful fall which has befallen Russia is due to the
-fact that when her people cast off the tyranny of the
-autocracy, they did not have sufficient self-control
-and common sense to avoid rushing into the gulf of
-Bolshevist anarchy.</p>
-
-<p>In this country there are plenty of highbrow
-Bolsheviki who like to think of themselves as intellectuals,
-and who in parlors and at pink teas preach
-Bolshevism as a fad. They are fatuously ignorant
-that it may be a dangerous fad. Some of them
-are mere make-believe, sissy Bolsheviki, almost or
-quite harmless. Others are sincere and foolish fanatics,
-who mean well and who do not realize that
-their doctrines tend toward moral disintegration.
-But there are practical Bolsheviki in this country
-who are in no sense highbrows. The I.W.W. and the
-Non-Partisan League, just as long and so far as
-its members submit to the dominion of leaders like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Townley, represent the forces that under Lenine
-and Trotzky have brought ruin to Russia. If these
-organizations obtained power here, they would cast
-this country into the same abyss with Russia.</p>
-
-<p>The I.W.W. activities may have been officially set
-forth by the Chicago jury which found the I.W.W.
-leaders guilty of treasonable practices. These leaders
-protested that they were only trying to help “the
-wage slave of to-day,” and had not taken German
-money. But the jury found them guilty as charged.
-The American people, when fully awake and aroused,
-will tolerate neither treason nor anarchy. No
-Americans are more patriotic than the honest
-American labor men, and these above all had cause
-to rejoice in the verdict. Undoubtedly there are
-plenty of poor ignorant men who join the I.W.W.
-because they feel they do not receive justice. We
-should all of us actively unite in the effort to right
-any wrongs from which these men suffer. But we
-should set our faces like flint against such criminal
-leadership as that of the I.W.W.</p>
-
-<p>The Non-Partisan League endeavored to ally
-itself with the I.W.W. since we entered the war.
-When the League was started, I felt much sympathy
-with its avowed purposes. I hope for and shall welcome
-wisely radical action on behalf of the farmer.
-But only destruction to all of us can come from the
-venomous class hatred preached by the present
-leadership of the League. Some of its leaders have
-been convicted and imprisoned for treasonable
-activities. Some of the League’s representatives<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-have been actively pro-Germans. Some are Socialists
-or Socialist-Anarchists. For the first six months
-of the war and until it became too dangerous, they
-were openly against the war, against our allies, and
-for Germany. The only half-secret alliance between
-these leaders and certain high Democratic politicians
-is deeply discreditable to the latter. The victory of
-the League in its recent efforts to gain control of the
-Republican Party in Minnesota and Montana would
-have given immense strength to the pro-German and
-Bolshevist element throughout the country and its
-defeat was a matter of rejoicing to all right-minded
-and patriotic men.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Townley’s leadership in its moral purpose and
-national effect entitles him to rank with Messrs.
-Lenine and Trotzky, and the utterances of the
-League’s official organ, especially in its appeals to
-class hatred, puts the official representatives of the
-League squarely in the clan with the Bolshevist
-leaders who have done such evil in Russia.</p>
-
-<p>I have before me an official letter from the League
-written in January last refusing to coöperate in non-political
-work for the benefit of the farmers, saying,
-“This organization is a political one, the farmers
-being organized for the purpose of controlling legislation
-in their own interests.” In other words, the
-title, Non-Partisan, is a piece of pure hypocrisy, and
-its league is really partisan in the narrowest and
-worst sense. Americans should organize politically
-as Americans and not as bankers, or lawyers, or
-farmers, or wage-workers. To organize politically on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-the basis adopted by the League is thoroughly anti-American
-and unpatriotic, and if copied generally
-by our citizens, would mean the creation in this
-country of rival political parties based on cynically
-brutal class selfishness.</p>
-
-<p>I have no doubt that the rank and file of the
-members of the League are good, honest people who
-have been misled. I am certain that there has been
-much neglect of the rights of the farmers and that
-it is a high duty for this country to begin a constructive,
-practical agricultural policy. But no good
-American can support the League while it is dominated
-by its present leadership. The Kansans who
-have joined to fight the League because it represents
-Bolshevism are rendering a patriotic service to
-America.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_FOURTH_LIBERTY_LOAN">THE FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Government of the United States is asking us
-Americans, is asking us, the citizens of the United
-States, to subscribe to the Fourth Liberty Loan, a
-bigger loan than any yet issued. It is our duty to
-back up the Government by floating the loan. Moreover,
-the performance of this duty should be treated
-by us as a high privilege. It opens to us a fine opportunity
-to put our shoulders with all the strength we
-have into the great shove which is pushing the
-German barrier back across the Rhine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Liberty bonds are the best of all possible investments.
-Their security and their interest returns
-give them a peculiar position. Moreover, every one
-can invest in big or little amounts, exactly as his
-resources permit. All the people of this country can
-now become bondholders if they wish. Therefore,
-all investors in the bonds will get benefits, but what
-is vastly more important, they will give benefits.
-They will therefore render service to the country.</p>
-
-<p>We Americans are not, and must not permit
-ourselves to become, swayed by question of material
-gain in this war. We must think primarily of our
-duties. We must keep our minds fixed on what we
-owe to others, and what we owe to ourselves. We
-owe a service to humanity. Our sons and brothers
-at the front pay this service in blood. The rest of us
-must pay it in money.</p>
-
-<p>Commensurate with the great resources and unparalleled
-prosperity with which our Nation has been
-blessed, we owe all the more because for three years
-the debt accumulated, while other nations were bearing
-the burden for us. We thank God we have begun
-to pay. From every village and city of every state
-the best of our young men are streaming across the
-Atlantic to join the victorious army under Foch and
-Pershing. The men and women of America are keeping
-mill and shipyard and munition factory and mine
-busy to the limit, so that the troops may not fail
-nor the supplies on which they depend be lacking.</p>
-
-<p>All this is not one whit more than we ought to do;
-it is what we owe to the world and owe to ourselves.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-We are glad and proud to do it. Let us, as part payment
-of our great debt, subscribe and oversubscribe
-to the bonds of the Fourth Liberty Loan. This is
-a service which lies within the ability of the poorest
-of us. It is the duty and privilege of every right
-American. Every dollar put into Liberty loans is a
-dollar working for the downfall of the system of
-greed and treachery, of tyranny and callous brutality
-which has drenched the world in blood.</p>
-
-<p>Americans are not quitters. The Kaiser’s troops
-cannot stop our men at the front. Nothing must be
-permitted to stop the flow into the treasury of the
-money with which we back up these men. Sloth and
-easy living have no place in America now. We must
-give, give to the utmost. If putting our money at
-the disposal of the Government requires us to work
-harder and live more simply, we shall be the better
-for it. Let us buy these Liberty bonds to the utmost
-of our capacity and thereby show the men at the
-front that the people at home will back them to the
-limit.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FAIR_PLAY_AND_NO_POLITICS">FAIR PLAY AND NO POLITICS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 20, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A Democratic member of the Senate has introduced
-a resolution to investigate the primary campaign
-expenses of certain Republican candidates for the
-Senate, including Commander Truman Newberry,
-whose recent triumph over <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Henry Ford in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-Michigan Republican primaries was greeted with
-heartfelt thanks by every sincere and far-sighted
-American patriot.</p>
-
-<p>This Senate, which comes to an end on March 4
-next, has the same, and only the same right to investigate
-the election conduct of candidates for the
-Senate, which comes into existence on March 4
-that it has to investigate the campaign conduct of
-any other candidates for office.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, any such proposed investigation undertaken
-on the eve of an election is tainted with bad
-faith unless it is conducted with conspicuous fairness
-and impartiality and is undertaken at once so that it
-can be finished at least a month before the elections.
-Personally, I shall be glad if the election expenses or
-any other conduct of any of the candidates be investigated,
-provided that the investigation be undertaken
-at once and finished within the next fortnight,
-and provided that it be entirely impartial. Therefore,
-it must deal comprehensively with all serious
-charges affecting the desirability of candidates as
-governmental representatives of the American people
-at this time.</p>
-
-<p>If the men backing the proposal are acting in good
-faith they will investigate <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s record on the
-following points in order to determine his fitness to
-represent patriotic Americans at this time. They
-will find out how much money he spent on the peace
-ship, and on his lavishly expensive newspaper advertising
-campaign against preparedness, and against
-our standing up for Belgium’s rights, and against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-our taking action about Germany’s sinking the Lusitania
-and her other assaults on us, and in favor of
-the McLemore resolution. This was part of the
-great pacifist campaign of which another part, as our
-government investigations show, was financed by
-the German authorities themselves or by their affiliated
-societies in this country.</p>
-
-<p>The investigation should include <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s contributions
-in the last presidential campaign and the
-names of the candidates he supported, for his politics
-seem to have been purely personal and pacifist.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the investigation should include a full
-examination of the justification for <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford’s aiding
-and abetting his son Edsell in escaping draft and
-staying at home when the great majority of young
-Americans of his age are eagerly striving for places
-of honor and peril at the front. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Ford is an enormously
-wealthy man. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Newberry is not. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Newberry
-himself at once entered the military service
-of the United States. His two sons have wives
-and children, but they immediately entered the
-service, striving eagerly to get to the front. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Edsell
-Ford waited until he was drafted, then fought
-hard for an exemption, which the local board disallowed.
-He succeeded, however, in escaping service
-and is at home.</p>
-
-<p>Unless the investigation takes up these matters, it
-will be stamped with the stamp of unworthy and improper
-partisanship. The simple truth is that all
-patriotic Americans rejoice in the nomination and
-will rejoice in the election at this time of such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-Americans as <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Newberry in Michigan and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Medill McCormick in Illinois.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SPIES_AND_SLACKERS">SPIES AND SLACKERS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 24, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Mercy to the German spy or pacifist slacker in
-America is foul injustice to the American soldier in
-France and to his brother, who is preparing to go to
-France. Our Government has been altogether too
-weak in dealing with the pacifist slackers and so-called
-conscientious objectors. It has actually issued
-elaborate instructions for and to these creatures
-practically telling them how to escape doing the duty
-which all patriotic Americans are proudly eager to
-perform.</p>
-
-<p>There is not the slightest excuse for such weakness.
-No man has any right to remain in a free country like
-ours if he refuses, whether conscientiously or unconscientiously,
-to do the duties of peace and of war
-which are necessary if it is to be kept free. The true
-lovers of peace recognize their duty to fight for
-freedom. The Society of Friends has furnished the
-same large proportion of soldiers for this war that it
-did for the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p>It is all wrong to permit conscientious objectors to
-remain in camp or military posts or to go back to
-their homes. They should be treated in one of three
-ways: First, demand of them military service, except
-the actual use of weapons with intent to kill,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-and if they refuse to render this service treat them as
-criminals and imprison them at hard labor; second,
-put them in labor battalions and send them to
-France behind the lines, where association with
-soldiers might have a missionary effect on them and
-cause them to forget their present base creed and rise
-to worthy levels in an atmosphere of self-sacrifice
-and of service and struggle for great ideals; third, if
-both of the above procedures are regarded as too
-drastic, intern them with alien enemies and send
-them permanently out of the country as soon as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>As for the spies, there is no question as to the
-treatment needed. They should be shot or hung.
-They are public enemies and this is war-time and
-they should no more be dealt with by the civil law
-than the enemy armies should be so dealt with. The
-German spies and secret agents and dynamiters and
-murderers in this country are as much a part of
-Germany as the soldiers of von Hindenburg. Bismarck
-employed thirty thousand of them to disorganize
-Germany’s foes fifty years ago, and now
-Germany is employing them by the hundred thousand.
-They are as formidable as the visible German
-army. It was these German Spies, agents, and propagandists
-who, in 1917, disintegrated and destroyed
-Russia, and inflicted a crushing disaster on Italy,
-and conducted the most dangerous intrigue in
-France, and aided and abetted the British pacifists.</p>
-
-<p>In this country Senator Overman has estimated
-their number at four hundred thousand, and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-Flynn, the recently resigned chief of the secret service,
-has put them at a quarter of a million. Our
-official government reports have shown that in
-obedience to orders from the German Government
-they have carried on in all hostile and even neutral
-countries a systematic warfare by means of aiding
-pacifists’ movements, inciting strikes, fomenting disloyalty,
-and employing direct action dynamiters and
-murderers. They have received aid and coöperation,
-conscientiously and unconscientiously, by many
-evils in pacifist and Bolshevist societies and in
-organizations like the I.W.W. and Non-Partisan
-League.</p>
-
-<p>The activities of the German spies, agents, and
-sympathizers vary from mere disloyal utterances,
-which the Attorney-General of the United States has
-stated to be the cause of most of the disorder in the
-country, up to seeking to corrupt our soldiers and
-practicing sabotage in our munitions works and
-factories for war materials. All offenders of the latter
-type, wherever committed, can, under the existing
-law, be tried by court-martial and executed, and this
-is the proper course to follow. It was the course
-followed under Lincoln’s administration, which is
-one of the reasons why Lincoln’s administration
-differed so markedly from Buchanan’s.</p>
-
-<p>The former chief of the secret service says that
-there are a quarter of a million of these German spies
-and agents in this country. We have ample law to
-warrant these being punished with death by summary
-court-martial, under military law as military<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-enemies. We have been at war eighteen months, but
-not one Spy has thus been punished. This means
-grave remissness in the performance of our duty.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="QUIT_PLAYING_FAVORITES">QUIT PLAYING FAVORITES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">September 30, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is announced that the young men of eighteen or
-nineteen included in the draft will be sent free to
-college by the Government and will there be given
-the chance to earn commissions and escape service
-in the ranks.</p>
-
-<p>Either this represents sheer deception or it will
-mean gross favoritism. We now have plenty of
-young men who have been serving in the ranks for
-nearly eighteen months. Scores of thousands of
-these left college to go or had just finished high
-school when they went. All these boys, whether they
-have or have not been to college, are entitled to the
-first chance for commissions on equal terms with one
-another, except that preference should be given those
-who have been engaged in the fighting overseas.
-Almost all the second lieutenancies should now be
-filled in this manner by promotion from the ranks.
-To give to boys now about to enter college the preference
-over those who have actually served in the
-ranks, and especially over those who have actually
-faced death overseas, would be a cruel injustice.</p>
-
-<p>But the injustice would be equally great among
-the new recruits themselves. It is wholly illusory for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-the Government to say it will send to college all who
-wish to go. The average working-man or small
-farmer has not had money enough to educate his son
-so that the boy can now enter college without
-further training. Yet that boy may have in him the
-qualities of leadership which especially fit him for
-command. Such a working-man or farmer ought to
-wish, and does wish, that his son be tested on his
-merits by actual service in the ranks, alongside of all
-other boys, no favors being shown either him or
-them. For the Government at this time to send some
-of these boys to college and thus give them a start
-over the bulk of their fellows represents privilege
-given to money and is thoroughly unfair.</p>
-
-<p>For the two years before we entered the war the
-only important piece of preparedness was that of the
-men who at their own expense went to the Plattsburg
-training camp established by General Wood, and
-when Germany forced us into war it was imperatively
-necessary at once to establish many additional
-camps of this kind or we should have had no officers
-whatever for our army. It is still advisable to keep a
-few training camps for older men whose age and
-qualifications especially fit them for certain kinds of
-service. But it is not wise nor right for the Government
-now to put certain especially favored classes of
-boys of eighteen and nineteen into college with a
-view to giving them an advantage over their fellows.
-This is undemocratic. It is not fair to the other boys
-of their age who are not in the army. It is exceedingly
-unfair and unjust to the young men who are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-already enlisted in the army, and especially to those
-who have seen service overseas.</p>
-
-<p>From now on no young officer should be appointed
-saving after service in the ranks out of which he is
-chosen by fair test in comparison with his fellows as
-fit to enter an officers’ training camp. Moreover,
-there should be a resolute effort to give preference to
-the men who have served in the front in France, the
-very men who are now apt to be neglected.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WAR_AIMS_AND_PEACE_PROPOSALS">WAR AIMS AND PEACE PROPOSALS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 12, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Our war aim ought to be unconditional surrender of
-Germany and of her vassal allies, Austria and Turkey.
-We ought not to consider any peace proposals
-from Germany until this war aim has been accomplished
-by the victorious arms of our allies and
-ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of note that the Central Powers show
-a greedy eagerness to accept the so-called “fourteen
-points ”laid down by President Wilson. I earnestly
-hope that when the time for discussing peace proposals
-comes, we shall ourselves repudiate some of
-these fourteen points, and that we shall insist on
-having all of them put into plain and straightforward
-language before we assent to any of them. Let us
-remember that Congress shares with the President
-the right to make treaties and that the people are
-bound to insist that they, the people, are the ultimate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-arbiters and that their will in the peace treaty
-is followed by both the President and the Congress.</p>
-
-<p>For example, what does that one of the fourteen
-points referring to the freedom of the seas mean?
-If it means what Germany interprets it to mean,
-then every decent American ought to be against it.
-The kind of freedom of the seas upon which it is
-really vital to count is freedom from murder. International
-law at present condemns exactly the kind of
-murder which Germany practiced in the case of the
-Lusitania and in hundreds of other cases, and is still
-practicing. We ought to make her atone heavily for
-such conduct and explicitly renounce it before we
-ever discuss any other kind of freedom of the seas.</p>
-
-<p>Again, we ought to know just what the President
-means by freedom of commercial intercourse. If he
-means that he proposes to allow Germany to dump
-her manufactures on us without restriction, we ought
-to be against it. We ought to insist on keeping in our
-hands the complete right to handle our tariff as the
-vital interests of our own citizens, and especially our
-own working-men, demand.</p>
-
-<p>Again, what is meant by the league of nations?
-If it means that Germany, Austria, Turkey, and
-Russia, as at present constituted, are to have the
-say-so about America’s future destiny, we ought to
-be against it. They would treat any agreement with
-us as a scrap of paper wherever it suited their interests,
-and we ought to realize this fact. Moreover, we
-already belong to a <em>de facto</em> league of nations which
-is a going concern. Let us stand by our allies before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-entering into a league with our enemies. Therefore,
-let us at once declare war on Turkey. Any such
-league is of value only if all its members are willing
-to make war on the same offenders, and the culpable
-failure of our Government to make war on Turkey
-and Bulgaria makes it absurd and hypocritical for us
-to promise to enter such a league in the future until
-this failure is confessed and atoned for. And let us
-at once send Major-General Wood and fifty thousand
-men to aid the Czecho-Slovaks in Siberia and
-establish our front well to the west of the Ural
-Mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the talk of merely giving autonomy to the
-subject races of Austria amounts to betrayal of the
-Czecho-Slovaks, the Jugo-Slavs, the Italians, and
-the Rumanians. The first should be given their independence
-and the other three united to the nations
-with which they really belong. Moreover, it is a
-betrayal of civilization to leave the Turk in Europe
-and fail to free the Armenians and the other subject
-races of Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>Again, let us define what is meant by abolishing
-secret diplomacy. If it means that the Administration
-is to renounce the system of secret and furtive
-diplomacy which it now perseveres in concerning
-what has happened in Mexico, Haiti, and San
-Domingo, I heartily agree; but I do not see why it
-needs an international mandate before it tells our
-people the truth in these matters. Moreover, before
-it undertakes a fresh agreement, let it explain why
-for two years it kept secret from our people the full<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-knowledge it had of Germany’s conduct and attitude
-toward us, including all the matters set forth in
-Ambassador Gerard’s books. The American Nation
-has never seen such secret diplomacy practiced by
-its Government as it has seen during the last five
-years.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident, before these fourteen points are accepted
-as the basis for peace discussion, they should
-be stated in such straightforward language that we
-may understand what they mean. The prime necessities
-at present are simplicity of language and the
-squaring of deeds with words. The thing we do not
-need is adroit and supple rhetoric which can be interpreted
-to mean anything or nothing.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="PERMANENT_PREPAREDNESS_AND">PERMANENT PREPAREDNESS AND
-THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 15, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The vital military need of this country as regards its
-future international relations is the immediate adoption
-of the policy of permanent preparedness based
-on universal training. This is its prime duty from
-the standpoint of American nationalism and patriotism.
-Then, as an addition or supplement to, but
-under no conditions as substitute for, the policy of
-permanent preparedness, we can afford cautiously
-to enter into and try out the policy of a league of
-nations. There is no difficulty whatever in prattling
-cheerfully about such a league or in winning applause<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-by rhetoric concerning it prior to the effort to make
-it work in practice; but there will be much difficulty
-in making it work at all when any serious strain
-comes, and it will prove entirely unworkable if the
-effort is made to unload upon it, in the name of internationalism,
-duties which in the present state of the
-world will be efficiently performed by the free nations
-only if they perform them as national duties.</p>
-
-<p>In a recent adverse, but courteous and friendly
-article on my attitude in this matter which appeared
-in a great daily paper, the following language was
-used: “The colonel is letting himself be bothered,
-irritated, and sidetracked by fools. There is no way
-of preventing a fool from saying that he is in favor of
-the league of nations. The American people will be
-making up their minds about the league of nations
-and about permanent preparedness. They will be
-told by certain sorts of pacifists that if they accept
-the league they can safely reject preparedness. They
-will be told that the two ideas are opposites.”</p>
-
-<p>The “certain sort of pacifist” who has made this
-statement to the people of the United States is the
-President of the United States in the now famous
-“fourteen points” which he enunciated last January.
-He advocated as one part of his plan the league
-or association of nations, as he has elsewhere advocated
-it, and he advocated as another part of his
-plan “the guarantees that national armaments will
-be reduced to the lowest point consistent with domestic
-safety.” Unless this language was used with
-intent to deceive, domestic safety must mean merely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-freedom from riot, and the President’s proposal is
-that America’s national preparedness be limited to
-a police force to prevent domestic disorder. Therefore,
-the President has told the American people
-that if they accept the league they can safely reject
-preparedness.</p>
-
-<p>The President may change his mind, and I sincerely
-hope he will do so. Until he does so it is the
-duty of every sincere American patriot to lay far
-more emphasis on the onerous and indispensable
-duty of national preparedness than on the wholly
-untested scheme of a league of nations, which the
-President has presented as an alternative. I heartily
-favor true internationalism as an addition to, but
-never as substitute for, a fervid and intensely patriotic
-nationalism. I will gladly back any wise and
-honest effort to create a league of nations, but only
-on condition that it is treated as an addition to, and
-not as a substitute for, the full preparedness of our
-own strength for our own defense.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="HIGH-SOUNDING_PHRASES_OF">HIGH-SOUNDING PHRASES OF
-MUDDY MEANING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A keen observer of what is now happening in the
-world writes me that there is very grave danger that
-this country will be cheated out of the right kind of
-peace if our people remain fatuously content to
-accept high-sounding phrases of muddy meaning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-instead of clear-cut and truthful statements of just
-what we demand and just what we intend to do.</p>
-
-<p>The recent action of President Wilson in connection
-with Germany has shown the imperative need
-of our people informing themselves of his announced
-purpose and keeping track of what he does toward
-the achievement of this purpose. Therefore, we
-should insist upon the purpose being stated in understandable
-fashion and being adhered to after it has
-been stated. This isn’t the President’s war. It is
-the people’s war. The peace will not be a satisfactory
-peace unless it is the people’s peace. As a
-people we have no right to permit the President to
-commit us to that of which we do not approve or
-to that which, after honest effort, we are unable to
-understand.</p>
-
-<p>President Wilson’s first communication to the
-German Government, if words mean anything,
-meant an effort to treat on the basis of his so-called
-“fourteen points.” The German Government answered
-that it accepted these fourteen points and
-approved of them. This made them public property,
-and it behooves the Americans to examine them. I
-believe that such an examination will show the
-American people that their meaning is so muddy
-that we should insist upon their being clearly defined
-before we in any way accept them as ours. When the
-peace terms come to be reduced to action, we cannot
-afford to accept empty competitive rhetoric for
-straightforward plain dealing.</p>
-
-<p>As regards some of the points, either the meaning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-is so muddy as to be wholly incomprehensible or else
-the proposals are very treacherous. The fourth
-article, for example, proposes guarantees for the
-reduction of national armaments to the lowest point
-consistent with domestic safety. If this article
-means anything, it means that this Nation, for
-instance, is only to keep whatever armed forces are
-necessary to police the country in the event of
-domestic disturbance. Now, let our people face
-what this really implies. It is a proposal that we
-give up our navy, which, of course, cannot be used
-for such police purposes, and that we give up all of
-our army that could be used against a foreign foe.
-And according to point fourteen of his address to
-Congress of January 8 last, and according to point
-three in his speech of September 27 last, this lack of
-armament on our part is to be supplied by mutual
-guarantees of political independence and territorial
-integrity within the league of nations covering the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Now, such guarantees are precisely and exactly
-the scraps of paper to which the German Chancellor
-likened them when his Government tore up those
-affecting Belgium. The proposal of President Wilson
-is that this country shall put itself in the position of
-Belgium; shall trust to guarantees precisely such as
-those to which Belgium trusted four and one quarter
-years ago, and he also proposes, as far as his meaning
-can be made out at all, that the very powers that
-treated these guarantees as scraps of paper in the
-case of Belgium shall be among the powers to whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-guarantee we are to trust to the exclusion of all
-preparation for our own self-defense. All nations are
-to be asked to render themselves helpless with fatuous
-indifference to the obvious fact that every weak-minded
-nation which accepted and acted in the
-proposal would be at the mercy of every ruthless and
-efficient nation that chose to treat the proposal as a
-scrap of paper.</p>
-
-<p>I gravely doubt whether a more silly or more
-mischievous plan was ever seriously proposed by the
-ruler of a great nation. Yet, this is exactly the plan
-to which President Wilson, by his correspondence
-with Germany, has sought definitely to commit the
-United States. If his words do not mean exactly
-what is above set forth, then their meaning is so
-muddy that no two disinterested outsiders would be
-warranted in interpreting them the same way.</p>
-
-<p>There is small cause for wonder that Germany
-eagerly accepted and made her own President
-Wilson’s fourteen points to which he, without any
-warrant whatever, seemed to commit this Nation.
-Incidentally I may add that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson has at
-different times enunciated at least as many other
-points, some of them contradictory to the fourteen
-which he enumerated in January last. The outburst
-of popular indignation led by such men as Senators
-Lodge, Poindexter, and Thomas, which forced him
-to repudiate the negotiations which he had begun
-with Germany, should be supplemented by a resolute
-insistence upon the duty of the American public to
-inform itself as to what it wishes in the peace before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-the President, without authority, commits it to any
-peace proposal, and above all to peace proposals
-which may mean anything or nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Secretary McAdoo, with fine family loyalty, announced
-that the acceptance by Germany of the
-fourteen points would have meant Germany’s unconditional
-surrender. He might as well have said
-that the acceptance of disunion and the perpetuation
-of slavery in 1864 would have meant a surrender by
-the Confederate states. Not only Germany, but
-every pacifist and pro-German here at home, hailed
-the fourteen points as representing what they desired.
-I recently spoke to a body of loyal Americans
-of German descent on behalf of the Liberty Loan. A
-member of their organization who was not a straight
-American, but a hyphenated American, and who did
-not venture to do more than sign himself as “German-American,”
-wrote me that in view of my repudiation
-of President Wilson’s so-called fourteen
-points he could not, as a loyal German-American, do
-otherwise than condemn me. The individual himself
-is doubtless as unimportant as the anonymous
-letter writer usually is, but there is a real significance
-in his endorsement of President Wilson’s fourteen
-points in view of his calling himself so emphatically
-not a straight-out American, but a German-American.
-Evidently his loyalty is to Germanism and not
-to Americanism, and this German loyalty of his
-made him back the President’s fourteen points,
-which Germany had so gladly accepted.</p>
-
-<p>The American people should insist that these fourteen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-points and any other points are stated in clear-cut
-language, and that there be a full understanding
-of just what is meant by them and a full knowledge
-of how far the American people approve of them
-before any foreign power is permitted to think that
-they represent America’s position at the peace
-council.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="AN_AMERICAN_PEACE_VERSUS">AN AMERICAN PEACE <i>VERSUS</i>
-A RUBBER-STAMP PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 22, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In Wallace’s Farmer, a journal devoted to the interests
-of the farmer, and also to the interests of every
-good American citizen, but which has no concern
-with partisan politics, there is a strong editorial
-against our acceptance of a peace on the terms of the
-famous fourteen points laid down by President
-Wilson in his message of January last. It reads in
-part as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Of course, Germany would like to make peace on the terms
-laid down by President Wilson in his speech of January 8, for
-it would allow Germany to escape the just penalty of her
-crimes and restore her to her condition before the war.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the leading Socialist paper of
-New York enthusiastically champions the fourteen
-points, especially those demanding a league of nations,
-freedom of the seas according to the German
-party, and the removal of all economic barriers.
-This championship is natural, for the Socialists, like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-the I.W.W. of this country, who have been bitterly
-pro-German and anti-American, and like the worst
-Russian Bolsheviks, have steadily worked in Germany’s
-interests; and like all its professional internationalists
-they hate the liberty-loving nations so
-bitterly that they are eagerly working for peace satisfactory
-to the German autocracy. All such persons,
-so far as they are not merely silly, seek their own
-profit in the destruction of civilization, and they
-would hail an inconclusive peace, which would mean
-the triumph of militarism, rather than see the free
-nations triumphant over both militarism and anarchy.</p>
-
-<p>But in his last note to Austria, President Wilson
-himself flatly repudiates one of his fourteen points&mdash;that
-relating to autonomy for the Czecho-Slovaks
-and Jugo-Slavs under the Austro-Hungarian yoke.
-He announces that he has changed his position
-because facts have changed, but in reality the facts
-have not changed in even the smallest degree between
-January and October so far as these two
-nationalities are concerned. Many persons, including
-myself, had then been demanding for over a year
-this complete independence. Nothing whatever has
-changed in the situation except <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s mind,
-and obviously this has changed merely because the
-American people have gradually waked up and have
-forced him in this matter to take a course diametrically
-opposed to the one he had been advocating,
-precisely as a week ago an aroused and indignant
-public opinion forced him to absolutely reverse the
-course of negotiation on which he entered with Germany.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-The popular feeling would have been inarticulate
-and helpless if it had not received expression
-from various patriotic public servants and private
-citizens and from those fearless newspapers, which,
-at the risk of grave financial disaster, have ventured
-when the crisis was serious to defy the sinister efforts
-of the Administration to do away with the freedom
-of the press. Senators Lodge, Poindexter, and
-Thomas and Congressman Fess are examples of the
-public servants, and Professor Hobbs, of the University
-of Michigan, and Professor Thayer, of Harvard,
-are examples of private citizens who have
-well served the people of the United States in this
-crisis.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the entire cuckoo or rubber-stamp tribe
-of politicians tumbled over themselves in the effort
-to assure the President that no matter what somersault
-he turned they would flop with equal quickness,
-and that their responsibility was solely to him and
-not to the people of the United States or to the cause
-of right and of fearlessness and of honorable dealing.
-Senator Lewis, of Illinois, introduced a resolution
-stating that “the United States Senate approves
-whatever course may be taken by the President in
-dealing with the German Imperial Government and
-the Austrian Imperial Government and endorses
-and approves whatever methods he may employ.”
-Senator Lewis is, in private life, an amiable and
-kindly gentleman, but the above resolution is a
-somewhat abject announcement that in public life he
-aspires only to be a rubber stamp. If such position is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-proper, then there is no need of Senators or Congressmen,
-and our people should merely send written
-proxies to Washington and should otherwise copy
-the example of those big private corporations which
-are controlled by one man according to his own will
-and for his own benefit.</p>
-
-<p>I do not believe that the American people will
-accept a view which is both so abject and so profoundly
-unpatriotic. This is the war of the American
-people and the peace which concludes it should be
-the peace imposed by the American people. Therefore,
-they should send to Washington public servants
-who will be self-respecting Americans and not rubber
-stamps.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="UNCONDITIONAL_SURRENDER">UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 26, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>When the American people speak for unconditional
-surrender, it means that Germany must accept whatever
-terms the United States and its allies think
-necessary in order to right the dreadful wrongs that
-have been committed and to safeguard the world for
-at least a generation to come from another attempt
-by Germany to secure world dominion. Unconditional
-surrender is the reverse of a negotiated peace.
-The interchange of notes, which has been going on
-between our Government and the Governments of
-Germany and Austria during the last three weeks,
-means, of course, if persisted in, a negotiated peace.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-It is the abandonment of force and the substitution
-of negotiation. This fact should be clearly and truthfully
-stated by our leaders, so that the American
-people may decide with their eyes open which course
-they will follow.</p>
-
-<p>Those of us who believe in unconditional surrender
-regard Germany’s behavior during the last five years
-as having made her the outlaw among nations. In
-private life sensible men and women do not negotiate
-with an outlaw or grow sentimental about him, or
-ask for a peace with him on terms of equality if he
-will give up his booty. Still less do they propose to
-make a league with him for the future, and on the
-strength of this league to abolish the sheriff and take
-the constable. On the contrary, they expect the law
-officers to take him by force and to have him tried
-and punished. They do not punish him out of revenge,
-but because all intelligent persons know
-punishment to be necessary in order to stop certain
-kinds of criminals from wrongdoing and to save the
-community from such wrongdoing.</p>
-
-<p>We ought to treat Germany in precisely this
-manner. It is a sad and dreadful thing to have to
-face some months or a year or so of additional bloodshed,
-but it is a much worse thing to quit now and
-have the children now growing up obliged to do the
-job all over again, with ten times as much bloodshed
-and suffering, when their turn comes. The surest
-way to secure a peace as lasting as that which
-followed the downfall of Napoleon is to overthrow
-the Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-Napoleon was overthrown. If we enter into a league
-of peace with Germany and her vassal allies, we must
-expect them to treat the arrangement as a scrap of
-paper whenever it becomes to their interest to do so.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WHAT_ARE_THE_FOURTEEN_POINTS">WHAT ARE THE FOURTEEN POINTS?</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 30, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The European nations have been told that the
-fourteen points enumerated in President Wilson’s
-message of January last are to be the basis of peace.
-It is, therefore, possible that Americans may like to
-know what they are. It is even possible that they
-may like to guess what they mean, although I am
-not certain that such guessing is permitted by the
-Postmaster-General and the Attorney-General under
-the new theory of making democracy safe for all
-kinds of peoples abroad who have never heard of it
-by interpreting democracy at home as meaning that
-it is unlawful for the people to express any except
-favorable opinions of the way in which the public
-servants of the people transact the public business.</p>
-
-<p>The first point forbids “all private international
-understandings of any kind,” and says there must be
-“open covenants of peace, openly arrived at,” and
-announces that “diplomacy shall always proceed
-frankly in the public view.” The President has recently
-waged war on Haiti and San Domingo and
-rendered democracy within these two small former
-republics not merely unsafe, but non-existent. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-has kept all that he has done in the matter absolutely
-secret. If he means what he says, he will at once announce
-what open covenant of peace he has openly
-arrived at with these two little republics, which he
-has deprived of their right of self-determination. He
-will also announce what public international understanding,
-if any, he now has with these two republics,
-whose soil he is at present occupying with the armed
-forces of the United States and hundreds of whose
-citizens have been killed by these armed forces. If
-he has no such public understanding, he will tell us
-why, and whether he has any private international
-understanding, or whether he invaded and conquered
-them and deprived them of the right of self-determination
-without any attempt to reach any
-understanding, either private or public.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, he has just sent abroad on a diplomatic
-mission <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> House, of Texas. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> House is not
-in the public service of the Nation, but he is in
-the private service of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson. He is usually
-called Colonel House. In his official or semi-official
-biography, published in an ardently admiring New
-York paper, it is explained that he was once appointed
-colonel on a governor’s staff, but carried his
-dislike of military ostentation to the point of giving
-his uniform to a negro servant to wear on social
-occasions. This attitude of respect for the uniform
-makes the President feel that he is peculiarly fit to
-negotiate on behalf of our fighting men abroad for
-whom the uniform is sacred. Associated with him is
-an editor of the New York World, which paper has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-recently been busy in denouncing as foolish the
-demand made by so many Americans for unconditional
-surrender by Germany.</p>
-
-<p>I do not doubt that these two gentlemen possess
-charming social attributes and much private worth,
-but as they are sent over on a diplomatic mission,
-presumably vitally affecting the whole country, and
-as their instructions and purposes are shrouded in
-profound mystery, it seems permissible to ask President
-Wilson why in this particular instance diplomacy
-does not “proceed frankly in the public
-view”?</p>
-
-<p>This first one of the fourteen points offers such an
-illuminating opportunity to test promise as to the
-future by performance in the present that I have
-considered it at some length. The other thirteen
-points and the subsequent points laid down as
-further requirements for peace I shall briefly take up
-in another article.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FURTHER_CONSIDERATION_OF_THE">FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF THE
-FOURTEEN POINTS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 30, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The second in the fourteen points deals with freedom
-of the seas. It makes no distinction between freeing
-the seas from murder like that continually practiced
-by Germany and freeing them from blockade of
-contraband merchandise, which is the practice of a
-right universally enjoyed by belligerents, and at this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-moment practiced by the United States. Either this
-proposal is meaningless or it is a mischievous concession
-to Germany.</p>
-
-<p>The third point promises free trade among all the
-nations, unless the words are designedly used to
-conceal President Wilson’s true meaning. This
-would deny to our country the right to make a tariff
-to protect its citizens, and especially its working-men,
-against Germany or China or any other
-country. Apparently this is desired on the ground
-that the incidental domestic disaster to this country
-will prevent other countries from feeling hostile to
-us. The supposition is foolish. England practiced
-free trade and yet Germany hated England particularly,
-and Turkey practiced free trade without
-deserving or obtaining friendship from any one
-except those who desired to exploit her.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth point provides that this Nation, like
-every other, is to reduce its armaments to the lowest
-limit consistent with domestic safety. Either this is
-language deliberately used to deceive or else it means
-that we are to scrap our army and navy and prevent
-riot by means of a national constabulary, like the
-state constabulary of New York or Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p>Point five proposes that colonial claims shall all be
-treated on the same basis. Unless the language is
-deliberately used to deceive, this means that we are
-to restore to our brutal enemy the colonies taken by
-our allies while they were defending us from this
-enemy. The proposition is probably meaningless. If
-it is not, it is monstrous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span></p>
-
-<p>Point six deals with Russia. It probably means
-nothing, but if it means anything, it provides that
-America shall share on equal terms with other nations,
-including Germany, Austria, and Turkey, in
-giving Russia assistance. The whole proposition
-would not be particularly out of place in a college
-sophomore’s exercise in rhetoric.</p>
-
-<p>Point seven deals with Belgium and is entirely
-proper and commonplace.</p>
-
-<p>Point eight deals with Alsace-Lorraine and is
-couched in language which betrays <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s
-besetting sin&mdash;his inability to speak in a straightforward
-manner. He may mean that Alsace and
-Lorraine must be restored to France, in which case
-he is right. He may mean that a plebiscite must be
-held, in which case he is playing Germany’s evil
-game.</p>
-
-<p>Point nine deals with Italy, and is right.</p>
-
-<p>Point ten deals with the Austro-Hungarian Empire,
-and is so foolish that even President Wilson has
-since abandoned it.</p>
-
-<p>Point eleven proposes that we, together with other
-nations, including apparently Germany, Austria,
-and Hungary, shall guarantee justice in the Balkan
-Peninsula. As this would also guarantee our being
-from time to time engaged in war over matters in
-which we had no interest whatever, it is worth while
-inquiring whether President Wilson proposes that we
-wage these wars with the national constabulary to
-which he desired to reduce our armed forces.</p>
-
-<p>Point twelve proposes to perpetuate the infamy of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-Turkish rule in Europe, and as a sop to the conscience
-of humanity proposes to give the subject
-races autonomy, a slippery word which in a case like
-this is useful only for rhetorical purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Point thirteen proposes an independent Poland,
-which is right; and then proposes that we guarantee
-its integrity in the event of future war, which is
-preposterous unless we intend to become a military
-nation more fit for overseas warfare than Germany
-is at present.</p>
-
-<p>Point fourteen proposes a general association of
-nations to guarantee to great and small states alike
-political independence and territorial integrity. It
-is dishonorable to make this proposition so long as
-President Wilson continues to act as he is now acting
-in Haiti and San Domingo. In its essence <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Wilson’s proposition for a league of nations seems to
-be akin to the holy alliance of the nations of Europe
-a century ago, which worked such mischief that the
-Monroe Doctrine was called into being especially to
-combat it. If it is designed to do away with nationalism,
-it will work nothing but mischief. If it is
-devised in sane fashion as an addition to nationalism
-and as an addition to preparing our own strength for
-our own defense, it may do a small amount of good;
-but it will certainly accomplish nothing if more than
-a moderate amount is attempted and probably the
-best first step would be to make the existing league
-of the Allies a going concern.</p>
-
-<p>As to the supplementary points or proposals, the
-four advanced or laid down in February were sound<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-moral aphorisms of no value save as they may be
-defined in each particular case.</p>
-
-<p>But the supplementary five proposals set forth by
-President Wilson last September were, on the whole,
-mischievous and were capable of a construction that
-would make them ruinous in their essence. They set
-forth the doctrine that there must be no discrimination
-between our friends and our enemies and no
-special economic or political alliances among friendly
-nations, but uniform treatment of all the league of
-nations; the said league, therefore, to include Germany,
-Austria, Turkey, and Russia upon a footing of
-equality of our allies. Either the words used mean
-nothing or they mean that we are to enter a league
-in which we make-believe that our deadly enemies,
-stained with every kind of brutality and treachery,
-are as worthy of friendship as the Allies who have
-fought our battles for four years. No wonder that
-the proposal is enthusiastically applauded by Germany,
-Austria, and Turkey and by all our own pro-Germans
-and pacifists and Germanized Socialists
-and anti-American internationalists. It is the kind
-of proposition made by cold-blooded men who at
-least care nothing for the sufferings of others. It is
-eagerly championed by foolish and hysterical sentimentalists.
-It is accepted and used for sinister purposes
-by powerful and cynical wrongdoers. When
-the President was making this proposition and
-during the subsequent month Germany was committing
-inhuman murders of the people on the
-Ticonderoga and Leinster at sea, and on shore was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-committing every species of murder, rape, enslavement,
-plunder, and outrage as her armies withdrew
-from France and Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>President Wilson’s announcement was a notice to
-the malefactors that they would not be punished for
-the murders. Let us treat the league of nations only
-as an addition to, and not as a substitute for, thorough
-preparedness and intense nationalism on our
-part. Let none of the present international criminals
-be admitted until a sufficient number of years has
-passed to make us sure it has repented. Make conduct
-the test of admission to the league. In every
-crisis judge each nation by its conduct. Therefore,
-at the present time let us stand by our friends and
-against our enemies.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="FOURTEEN_SCRAPS_OF_PAPER">FOURTEEN SCRAPS OF PAPER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October 31, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In my article yesterday I discussed <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s
-fourteen peace points which had been accepted by
-Germany. After the article was sent in, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson
-explained one of the points by stating that it meant
-exactly the opposite of what it said. A New York
-paper has asked for the election of a Congress that
-shall see eye to eye with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson. But only a
-Congress of whirling dervishes could see eye to eye
-with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson for more than twenty-four hours at
-a time.</p>
-
-<p>When Germany broke her treaty with Belgium,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-the German Chancellor called it a scrap of paper.
-Any individual who proposes a treaty which plainly
-means one thing, and then, as soon as he finds it disagreeable
-to adhere to that obvious meaning, instantly
-interprets it as meaning exactly the opposite,
-is treating it as a scrap of paper. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s recent
-interpretation of what he meant in the point about
-economic barriers makes all the fourteen points
-scraps of paper unworthy of serious discussion by
-anybody, because no human being is supposed to say
-what any one of them means or to do more than
-guess whether to-morrow <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson will not interpret
-each and all of them in a sense exactly the
-opposite to their meaning.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s language in the point in question
-was that he intended the removal “of all economic
-barriers and the establishment of an equality of
-trade conditions among all the nations.” By no
-honest construction of language can this be held to
-mean anything except that this Nation, for example,
-could have no tariff of its own, but must live under
-exactly the same tariff, or no tariff, conditions with
-all other nations. But <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson now notifies a
-Democratic Senator that he did not mean any “restriction
-upon the free determination by any nation
-of its own economic policy.” If he meant this, why
-did he not say it? Why did he say the exact opposite?
-His first statement is wholly incompatible
-with the interpretation he now puts on it. If anybody
-in private life entered into a contract in such
-manner and then sought to repudiate it by interpreting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-it in such manner, there is not a court in Christendom
-that would not adjudge him guilty of having
-used language with deliberate intent to deceive.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all. In his new interpretation of what
-he did not originally mean, the President now says
-that he proposes to prevent any nation, including the
-United States, from using its tariff to discriminate in
-favor of friendly nations and against hostile nations.
-This is what he now says and what he now means,
-but, of course, to-morrow he may say that in this
-new interpretation he again meant exactly the opposite
-of what he says. However this may be for the
-future, President Wilson at this moment says, for
-instance, we ought to abandon reciprocity treaties;
-that we ought to refuse to make such treaties with
-our friends, such as Cuba and Brazil, and ought to
-punish these friends by treating them on an exact
-equality with our embittered and malevolent enemy,
-Germany. I hold this to be thoroughly mischievous
-doctrine.</p>
-
-<p>The great scientist, Huxley, who loved truth and
-abhorred falsehood, said that “the primary condition
-of honest literature is to leave the reader in no
-doubt as to the author’s meaning.” Evidently this
-primary condition is not fulfilled by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s
-fourteen points. They should now be treated as
-scraps of paper and put where they belong, in the
-scrap-basket.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_TURKS_SURRENDER">THE TURKS SURRENDER
-UNCONDITIONALLY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 3, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The British have beaten Turkey to her knees and
-she has surrendered unconditionally. America has
-no share in the honor of what has been done. President
-Wilson, although we were at war with Germany,
-has refused to aid our allies against Turkey
-and has preserved the same cold neutrality between
-the Armenians and their Turkish butchers that he
-formerly did between the Belgians and their German
-oppressors.</p>
-
-<p>Turkey had inflicted inhuman wrongs on the
-subject peoples and had infringed our own treaty
-rights, but President Wilson refused to go to war
-with her. Yet with our navy at the very outbreak
-of hostilities and then with a considerable and constantly
-growing army, if we had been willing we
-could have materially aided the British and French.
-In such event Constantinople would doubtless have
-been taken long ago. As it is, thanks to President
-Wilson, we Americans can only look on and rejoice
-that others did better than our rulers let us do. We
-have had no hand in the freeing of Palestine, Syria,
-and Armenia. Under the great law of service and
-sacrifice it is the British and French alone who have
-the moral right to determine the fate of Turkey.
-They, and especially the British, have poured out
-their blood freely, and now, after the victory has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-been gained, expenditure of ink on our part is of
-mighty small consequence in comparison. I earnestly
-hope that permanent justice will be done by
-expelling the Turk from Europe and making all
-Armenia independent. But we have lost the right to
-insist on these points.</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of the end came when, two or three
-weeks ago, Bulgaria was forced to surrender
-unconditionally. Here again, thanks to President
-Wilson, America had no part in the honor and credit
-of the vital triumph. Our Government was still
-neutral about Bulgaria, still too proud to fight either
-Turkey or Bulgaria, still hoping for peace without
-victory over them.</p>
-
-<p>Now Turkey has surrendered and Austria has
-broken up. In the case of Austria, after ten months’
-unpardonable delay, we did finally go to war, and we
-have a very small share in the great glory won by
-Italy and the other Allies.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest contest was on the western front, and
-here the hundreds of thousands of American troops
-engaged under Foch and Pershing have shown such
-extraordinary gallantry and efficiency that we are all
-forever their debtors. Nearly a month ago President
-Wilson entered into negotiations with Germany
-which, if continued along the line he started, might
-have caused disaster. Fortunately there was such an
-outburst of protest in the country that our allies took
-part and President Wilson himself took warning.
-President Wilson may still serve as a channel of
-communication. But General Foch will be the real<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-master of the situation. The men with guns and not
-the men with fountain pens will dictate the terms.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="PEACE">PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 12, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Four years and a quarter have passed since Germany,
-by the invasion of Belgium, began the World
-War and made it at the same time a war of cynical
-treachery and of bestiality and of inhuman wrongdoing.
-Almost from the beginning our governmental
-authorities were well informed of the organized
-brutality with which it was waged and of the fact
-that the Kaiser and the leading soldiers, politicians,
-and commercial magnates of Germany had deliberately
-plunged the world into war because they expected
-to profit by conquest, while the Socialist
-Party aided and abetted them in the hope of sharing
-some of the profit.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of us ordinary Americans were successfully
-hoodwinked because the facts were concealed
-from us. But gradually the truth leaked through to
-us. First we learned that the stories of the atrocities
-were true. Then, although not until much later, we
-found out that there was ample proof that Germany
-had brought on the war to gratify her greed for gold
-and her arrogant and conscienceless lust for world
-domination. Finally we were permitted to learn that
-Germany intended to strike us down as soon as she
-had made the free nations her victims. Now our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-troops have played a manful part, a part not only
-heroic and efficient, but also of decisive consequence
-in the final terrible struggle.</p>
-
-<p>It is not pleasant to think that the two first
-crushing blows in bringing about the end, the overthrow
-of Bulgaria and the overthrow of Turkey,
-were due in no way to us, but solely to our allies,
-England and France. We never made war on either
-offending nation; we remained neutral, and this exhibition
-of feeble diplomacy on our part made us
-onlookers instead of partakers of the triumph. But
-with Austria, after much hesitation and wabbling,
-we did finally go to war, and, although our part was
-very small, we have a modest right to share the
-general satisfaction over the victory. In the case of
-Germany, however, we played a really great part,
-and although until the very end we were unable to
-put on the fighting line any tanks or field guns or
-battle planes, and relatively only a small number of
-machine guns and bombing and observation planes,
-our soldiers themselves were probably on the average
-the finest troops who fought in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>And now the German imperial military and capitalistic
-authority has been beaten to its knees and
-forced to accept all the terms the Allies have imposed
-upon it. The able and wicked men who thought to
-wade through a sea of blood to world domination
-must now bow their heads before the outside peoples
-whom they have so cruelly wronged and face the
-sullen distrust and hostility of their own people,
-whom they misled by promising them a share in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-profits of successful guilt. Their doom has come
-upon them.</p>
-
-<p>A little over a month ago the Administration embarked
-upon a career of note-writing with Germany,
-which, if unchecked, might have meant a peace of
-practical profit to Germany. But the feeling of the
-American people, especially in the West, showed itself
-in such direct and straightforward fashion that
-this effort was soon abandoned. Moreover, at the
-recent election, the American people, with the issue
-squarely before them, declared that they were the
-masters of their public servants and not rubber
-stamps, and that this was the people’s war and not
-the war of any one man or any one party, and that
-loyalty to ourselves and our allies stood ahead of adherence
-to any man. Germany has been beaten
-down abroad and at home. The pro-Germans and
-the pacifists and the defeatists and the Germanized
-Socialists, and all the crew who stand for any form
-of either Bolshevism or Kaiserism, have been warned
-that they shall not betray this Nation.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="SACRIFICE_ON_COLD_ALTARS">SACRIFICE ON COLD ALTARS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 13, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>A friend, a California woman, writes me that there
-is staying with her a widow whose only son has been
-in the navy and has just died of influenza, and that
-the mother said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I gave my boy proudly to my country. I never held him
-back, even in my heart. But if only he had died with a gun<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-in his hand&mdash;a little glory for him and a thought for me that
-my sacrifice had not been useless.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>My correspondent continues:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There must be so many mothers who feel that they have
-laid their sacrifice on cold altars. You have written much
-that will comfort the mothers whose sons have paid with
-their bodies in battle. Isn’t there something you can say to
-help these other mothers?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I felt a real pang when I received this letter, because
-the thought suggested had been in my mind,
-and yet I had failed to express it. It had happened
-that my own sons and nephews and young cousins
-and their close friends were where death or wounds
-came to them on the field of action. For example, on
-the day I received this letter we also got news that
-the closest school and college and army friend of my
-son, Quentin, who was killed, had himself just been
-killed. He was a man who had been promoted for a
-series of hazardous and successful battles with German
-airmen. He was as gentle and clean and lovable
-as a girl, yet terrible in his battle, and no more high
-and fearless soul ever fronted death joyously in the
-high heavens. My mind had, because of facts like
-this, turned toward the deaths of the men on the
-firing line; and I regret that I did not make it evident
-as I meant to make it, and but for this oversight
-would have made it, that all who have given
-their lives or the lives dearest to them in this war
-stand on an exact level of service and sacrifice and
-honor and glory.</p>
-
-<p>The men who have died of pneumonia or fever in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-the hospitals, the men who have been killed in accidents
-on the airplane training fields are as much
-heroes as those who were killed at the front, and
-their shining souls shall hereafter light up all to a
-clearer and greater view of the duties of life. The
-war is over now. The time of frightful losses among
-the men at the front and of heartbreaking anxiety
-for their mothers and wives, their sisters and sweethearts
-at home has passed. No great triumph is ever
-won save by the payment of the necessary cost. All
-of us who have stayed at home and all the others who
-have returned safe will, as long as life shall last,
-think of the men who died as having purchased for
-us and for our children’s children, as long as this
-country shall last, a heritage so precious that even
-their precious blood was not too great a price to pay.
-Whether they fell in battle or how they died matters
-not at all, and it matters not what they were doing
-as long as, high of soul, they were doing their duty
-with all the strength and fervor of their natures.</p>
-
-<p>The mother or the wife whose son or husband has
-died, whether in battle or by fever or in the accident
-inevitable in hurriedly preparing a modern army for
-war, must never feel that the sacrifice has been laid
-“on a cold altar.” There is no gradation of honor
-among these gallant men and no essential gradation
-of service. They all died that we might live; our
-debt is to all of them, and we can pay it even personally
-only by striving so to live as to bring a little
-nearer the day when justice and mercy shall rule in
-our own homes and among the nations of the world.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_RED_FLAG_AND_THE_HUN">THE RED FLAG AND THE HUN
-PEACE DRIVE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 14, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The war is won. A twofold duty is now incumbent
-on us. We must strive to make the peace one of
-justice and righteousness and to throw out such safeguards
-around it as will give us the greatest possible
-chance of permanency. Then we must turn to
-setting aright the affairs of our own household.
-But before we set ourselves to the performance of
-these two tasks we should thoroughly enlighten
-our enemies at home and abroad on one or two
-points.</p>
-
-<p>Let all anti-Americans stand aside. Let them
-understand that we are not merely against some
-enemies of the country&mdash;we are against all enemies
-of the country. This week in New York there was a
-red flag of Anarchy or Socialistic meeting which was
-the cause of a riot. It was perfectly natural that it
-should be the cause of a riot. The red flag is as much
-an enemy as the flag of the Hohenzollerns. The
-internationalist of the red flag or black flag type is an
-enemy to this Nation just exactly as much as Hindenburg
-or Ludendorff was an enemy only a week
-ago. He is an even more treacherous enemy and
-equally brutal. Congress should pass a law without
-waiting a day prohibiting the use of the red flag or
-the black flag or any other flag of the kind here in
-America. We have universal suffrage in America.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-The majority of our people can have what they
-wish in the way of industrial and political change, if
-they seriously desire it. There isn’t any excuse in
-this country for any paltering with revolutionary
-movements. A riot is riot, without reference to
-what the people rioting claim to be for. When a mob
-gets started, it always acts the same way, no matter
-what the theoretical cause of the outbreak may have
-been. A Bolshevist mob in New York in all essentials
-resembles the anti-draft mob of 1863, although
-the arguments of the parlor Bolsheviki of to-day
-would be totally different from those of the constitutional
-copperheads of fifty-five years ago.</p>
-
-<p>When the Romanoffs were overthrown the Russian
-people lacked self-control and they permitted
-the dominion of a Bolshevist gang, which has
-brought wholesale robbery, murder, and starvation
-in its trail. The overthrow of the Hohenzollerns in
-Germany has been accompanied by Bolshevist uprising
-in that country also. There is some excuse for
-excesses in a revolution against a despotism, but in
-this country there is no more excuse for Bolshevism
-in any form than there is for despotism itself. Any
-foreign-born man who parades with or backs up a
-red flag or black flag organization ought to be instantly
-deported to the country from which he came.
-Appropriate punishment should be devised for the
-even more guilty native-born.</p>
-
-<p>Our National Government should take the most
-vigorous action and have it understood that America
-is a bulwark of order no less than of liberty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-We must make it evident that we will stamp out
-Bolshevism within our borders just as quickly as
-Kaiserism.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, let us realize the nonsense of the pretense
-that the German people have not been behind
-the German Government. They were behind their
-Government with hearty enthusiasm until the Government
-was smashed by the military powers of
-General Foch. The effort now being made by the
-German Government to bring dissensions between
-the Allies by appealing to the United States against
-the Allies proper should be spurned by our Government.
-The French, English, Italians, and Belgians
-have been fighting side by side with our men under
-Foch. They have acted as comrades under Foch, and
-we could not have done anything if we had not acted
-as comrades like the rest. Now let’s play the game
-when the effort is made to divide us by the German
-peace drive.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Poindexter was entirely right in his proposed
-bill. The United States must make absolutely
-common cause with the Allies. We regret that the
-German and Russian people should suffer; the fault
-lies solely with the past or present governments. To
-the very minute of the closing of the war the hideous
-German brutalities continued unabated, and apparently
-the Turks are still slaughtering Armenians.
-We will do our best to help even our enemies now
-that they have been stricken down, but we will not
-do so at the cost of doing injustice to our friends.
-We will not permit Hun hypocrisy to succeed where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-Hun violence has failed. And we are equally uncompromising
-foes of Bolshevism and Kaiserism at
-home and abroad.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_LEAGUE_OF_NATIONS">THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There are so many prior things to do and so much
-uncertainty as to the form of agreement for permanently
-increasing the chances of peace that it is
-difficult to do more than make a general statement as
-to what is desirable and possibly feasible in the
-league of nations plan. It would certainly be folly
-to discuss it overmuch until some of the existing obstacles
-to peace are overcome. That such discussion
-may be not futile, but mischievous, has been vividly
-shown in the last six weeks. During the first week of
-October President Wilson and Germany agreed on
-the famous fourteen points of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s as a basis
-for peace. But this agreement amounted to nothing
-whatever except for a moment it gave Germany the
-hope that she could escape disaster by a negotiated
-peace. The emphatic protest of our own people
-caused this hope to vanish, and just five weeks later
-peace came, not on <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s fourteen points,
-but on General Foch’s twenty-odd points, which had
-all the directness, the straightforwardness, and the
-unequivocal clearness which the fourteen points
-strikingly lacked.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, it is well to begin considering now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-the things which we think can be done and the things
-that we think cannot be done in making a league of
-nations. In the first place, we ought to realize that
-the population of the world clearly understands that
-in this war they have been involved to a degree
-never hitherto known. In consequence the horror
-of the war is very real, and people are at least thinking
-of the need of coöperation with much greater
-fixity of purpose and of understanding than ever
-before. Of course, fundamentally war and peace
-are matters of the heart rather than of organization,
-and any declaration or peace league which represents
-the high-flown sentimentality of pacifists and doctrinaires
-will be worse than useless; but if, without
-in the smallest degree sacrificing our belief in a sound
-and intense national aim, we all join with the people
-of England, France, and Italy and with the people in
-smaller states who in practice show themselves able
-to steer equally clear of Bolshevism and of Kaiserism,
-we may be able to make a real and much-needed
-advance in the international organization. The
-United States cannot again completely withdraw
-into its shell. We need not mix in all European
-quarrels nor assume all spheres of interest everywhere
-to be ours, but we ought to join with the other
-civilized nations of the world in some scheme that
-in a time of great stress would offer a likelihood of
-obtaining just settlements that will avert war.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, in my judgment, the United States at
-the peace conference ought to be able to coöperate
-effectively with the British and French and Italian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-Governments to support a practical and effective
-plan which won’t attempt the impossible, but which
-will represent a real step forward.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the first essential would be to limit the
-league at the outset to the Allies, to the peoples with
-whom we have been operating and with whom we are
-certain we can coöperate in the future. Neither Turkey
-nor Austria need now be considered as regards
-such a league, and we should clearly understand that
-Bolshevist Russia is, and that Bolshevist Germany
-would be, as undesirable in such a league as the Germany
-and Russia of the Hohenzollerns and Romanoffs.
-Bolshevism is just as much an international
-menace as Kaiserism. Until Germany and Russia
-have proved by a course of conduct extending over
-years that they are capable of entering such a league
-in good faith, so that we can count upon their fulfilling
-their duties in it, it would be merely foolish to
-take them in.</p>
-
-<p>The league, therefore, would have to be based on
-the combination among the Allies of the present war&mdash;together
-with any peoples like the Czecho-Slovaks,
-who have shown that they are fully entitled to
-enter into such a league if they desire to do so. Each
-nation should absolutely reserve to itself its right to
-establish its own tariff and general economic policy,
-and absolutely ought to control such vital questions
-as immigration and citizenship and the form of
-government it prefers. Then it would probably be
-best for certain spheres of interest to be reserved to
-each nation or a group of nations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>The northernmost portion of South America and
-Mexico and Central America, all of them fronting
-on the Panama Canal, have a special interest to the
-United States, more interest than they can have for
-any European or Asiatic power. The general conduct
-of Eastern Asiatic policy bears a most close relationship
-to Japan. The same thing is true as regards
-other nations and certain of the peculiarly African
-and European questions. Everything outside of
-what is thus reserved, which affects any two members
-of the league or affects one member of the league
-and outsiders, should be decided by some species of
-court, and all the people of the league should guarantee
-to use their whole strength in enforcing the
-decision.</p>
-
-<p>This, of course, means that all the free peoples
-must keep reasonably prepared for defense and for
-helping well-behaved nations against the nations or
-hordes which represent despotism, barbarism, and
-anarchy. As far as the United States is concerned, I
-believe we should keep our navy to the highest possible
-point of efficiency and have it second in size to
-that of Great Britain alone, and we should then have
-universal obligatory military training for all our
-young men for a period of, say, nine months during
-some one year between the ages of nineteen and
-twenty-three inclusive. This would not represent
-militarism, but an antidote against militarism. It
-would not represent a great expense. On the contrary,
-it would mean to give to every citizen of our
-country an education which would fit him to do his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-work as a citizen as no other type of education
-could.</p>
-
-<p>There are some nations with which there would
-not be the slightest difficulty in going much further
-than this. The time has now come when it would be
-perfectly safe to enter into universal arbitration
-treaties with the British Empire, for example, reserving
-such rights only as Australia and Canada
-themselves would reserve inside the British Empire;
-but there are a number of outside peoples with
-whom it would not be safe to go much further than
-above outlined. If we only made this one kind of
-agreement, we could keep it, and we should make no
-agreement that we would not and could not keep.
-More essential than anything else is it for us to
-remember that in matters of this kind an ounce of
-practical performance is worth a ton of windy rhetorical
-promises.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="AN_AMERICAN_CONGRESS">AN AMERICAN CONGRESS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 18, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The election of a Republican Congress a fortnight
-ago was first and foremost a victory for straight
-Americanism. To the Republican Party it represents
-not so much a victory as an opportunity. To
-the American people, including not only Republicans
-and independents, but all patriotic Democrats who
-put loyalty to the Nation above servility to a political
-leader, the victory was primarily won for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-straight-out Americanism. A very important feature
-to remember is that this victory was won in the
-West. On the whole, the East also showed gains,
-but the greatest gains were in the West. The South,
-of course, and most unfortunately, never permits its
-political or patriotic convictions to alter the result at
-the ballot box.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Westerners, the strong, masterful, self-reliant
-men who won such exacting victories in Kansas,
-Minnesota, Colorado, Wyoming, and South
-Dakota, are just as opposed to what may be called
-Kaiserism in our political and industrial life as they
-are to Bolshevism. I firmly believe that this is true
-of the rank and file of the Republican Party everywhere.
-They haven’t the slightest patience with
-Townleyism in agricultural districts or I.W.W.-ism
-in labor circles. But resolutely they intend to shape
-our internal policy for the real substantial benefit of
-the average man, of the ninety per cent of our people
-who are farmers, working-men, small shopkeepers,
-doctors, and the like. They haven’t the slightest
-patience with the Bolshevist desire to establish
-proletariat class tyranny, which is just as odious as
-aristocratic class tyranny. They haven’t the slightest
-patience in persecution of, or failure generously to
-reward, the man who by nature or by training is a
-leader in industrial matters. They want to see farming,
-for instance, offer a chance to the man of ability
-to become a scientific farmer on a large scale. They
-wish to see the young business man whose leadership
-in manufactures or commerce is of incalculable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-worth to everybody receive in generous fashion the
-big reward to which he is entitled.</p>
-
-<p>But they wish to do all this as an incident to securing
-not only this right to, but a much better chance
-for, the average man. They wish the tenant farmer
-class to be made a diminishing instead of an increasing
-class so that tenant farming itself may not be a
-permanent status, but a step toward farm ownership
-by the hired man or the son of the small farm owner.
-They wish to see the working-man, and especially
-the working-man in such huge businesses as those
-connected with transportation, steel production,
-mining, and the like, become not a mere cog in an
-industrial machine, but a man whose self-respect and
-reasonable prosperity are guaranteed if the business
-succeeds, and he is entitled through representation
-on the directory to have his voice heard at the council
-board of the business, even although at first and
-until the ability to use power is slowly developed by
-the habit of using it, the control may have to do
-primarily with the things of which he has special
-knowledge and in which he has special interest.
-Moreover, there are plenty of great natural resources,
-such as water power, where small ownership
-cannot provide capital for the development, but
-where the outright ownership of the people should
-not be disposed of. The happy line must be struck
-between the all-pervading straight regimentation,
-which would be as deadening as paralysis, and the
-regimentation of mere individualism. The Government
-must exercise control in a spirit of justice to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-all concerned and with a stern readiness to check injustice
-by any of those concerned.</p>
-
-<p>The Republican leadership in Congress has on
-the whole been singularly patriotic and singularly
-free from the vice of mere partisanship during the
-lifetime of the present Congress. We can be certain
-that it will continue to be so in the new Congress.
-In the future as in the past the President can count
-on the hearty and ungrudging support of the Republican
-Party at every point where he is endeavoring
-efficiently and in good faith to serve the interests of
-the Nation. But he can also rest assured that the
-Republican Party will judge its duty by the standard
-of loyalty to the country and will scornfully refuse
-to adopt that extreme baseness of attitude, worthy
-only of slaves, which shrieks that we must stand
-by the Administration whether the Administration
-is right or wrong. Moreover, the Republican Party
-will certainly demand to have an accounting of some
-of the enormous sums of money that have been expended
-and will in due time doubtless demand to
-know what explanation there is of the Administration’s
-persistence in hidden and secret diplomacy in
-so many important matters. Every question will be
-approached from the standpoint of a generous desire,
-without any higgling or dealing on small points, to do
-whatever the Administration demands that is proper
-and to give it a full chance to declare, and perhaps
-develop, its policy; but the Republican Congress
-will understand how to show that it is not a rubber-stamp
-body, but an integral and self-respecting part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-of the American governmental system, wholly and
-solely responsible to the American people.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_FREEDOM_OF_THE_SEAS_AND_THE">THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS AND THE
-ENSLAVEMENT OF MANKIND</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 22, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The surest way to kill a great cause is to reduce it to
-a hard-and-fast formula and insist upon the application
-of the formula without regard to actual existing
-conditions.</p>
-
-<p>It is announced in the press that the President is
-going to the Peace Conference especially to insist,
-among other things, on that one of his fourteen
-points dealing with the so-called “freedom of the
-seas.” The President’s position in the matter is, of
-course, eagerly championed by Germany, as it has
-been Germany’s special position throughout the
-war. It is, of course, eagerly championed by the
-New York World, the Hearst papers, and all the
-rubber-stamp gentry. It is antagonized by England
-and France and by every anti-German in America
-who understands the situation.</p>
-
-<p>It is utterly impossible, in view of the immense
-rapidity of the change in modern war conditions, to
-formulate abstract policies about such matters as
-contraband and blockades. These policies must
-be actually tested in order to see how they work.
-Both England and the United States have reversed
-themselves in this matter on several different occasions.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-This is interesting as a matter of history, but
-from no other standpoint. If we are honorable and
-intelligent we will follow the course in this matter
-which, under existing conditions at this time, seems
-most likely to work justice in the immediate future.</p>
-
-<p>Germany’s position was that England had no
-right to blockade her so as to cut off her supplies
-from the outside world. President Wilson at the
-time accepted this view and talked a good deal about
-the freedom of the seas. Meanwhile Germany,
-through her submarines, began an unprecedented
-course of wholesale murder on the seas. President
-Wilson protested against this in language much more
-apologetic and tender than he had used in protesting
-against Great Britain blockading Germany in what
-was essentially the same manner in which we blockaded
-the South during the Civil War. He put the
-dollar above the man and incidentally above the
-women and the children. He protested more vigorously
-upon the interference with American goods
-than against the taking of American lives.</p>
-
-<p>Then we finally went to war with Germany ourselves.
-We instantly adopted toward Germany and
-toward neutrals like Holland exactly the position
-which President Wilson had been denouncing England
-for adopting toward Germany and toward us.
-Our action in this case was quite right, whereas our
-protest against England’s action had been entirely
-wrong.</p>
-
-<p>President Wilson now proposes to accept the German
-view and provide a system which, if it had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-in existence in 1914, would have meant the inevitable
-and rapid triumph of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>If this particular one of the proposed fourteen
-points had been in treaty form and had been lived
-up to in 1914, Germany would have had free access
-to the outside world. England’s fleet would not have
-enabled her to bring economic pressure to bear upon
-Germany and doubtless Germany would have won
-an overwhelming victory within a couple of years.
-Therefore <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s proposal is that now, when
-no human being can foretell whether Germany will
-feel chastened and morally changed, we shall take
-steps which will mean that if the war has to be fought
-over again, Germany’s triumph will have been secured
-in advance so far as we are able to secure it.
-All such conditions, all merely academic questions as
-to the attitude of America or of England before
-the outbreak of the Great War, are insignificant.
-Whatever our views prior to the Great War, we are
-fools, indeed, if we have not learned the lessons
-these last four and a half terrible years have taught.
-The freedom of the seas in the sense used by Germany
-and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson would have meant the enslavement
-of mankind to Germany. It would have
-meant that this country would at this time either
-be lying prostrate under the feet of German invaders
-or be purchasing peace by ransoms heavier than
-were paid by Belgium. No patriotic American has
-the right to stand quiet and see the President of the
-country, without any warrant from the country, try
-to bring upon us such outrageous potentiality and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-disaster as would be implied in the general international
-adoption of the so-called “freedom of the
-seas.” Such freedom of the seas means the enslavement
-of mankind.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="PRESIDENT_WILSON_AND_THE">PRESIDENT WILSON AND THE
-PEACE CONFERENCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">November 26, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>No public end of any kind will be served by President
-Wilson’s going with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Creel, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> House, and
-his other personal friends to the Peace Conference.
-Inasmuch as the circumstances of his going are so
-extraordinary, and as there is some possibility of
-mischief to this country as a result, there are certain
-facts which should be set forth so clearly that there
-can be no possibility of misunderstanding either by
-our own people, by our allies, or by our beaten enemies,
-or by <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson himself.</p>
-
-<p>Ten days before election <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson issued an
-appeal to the American people in which he frankly
-abandoned the position of President of the whole
-people; assumed the position, not merely of party
-leader, but of party dictator, and appealed to the
-voters as such. Most of <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s utterances on
-public questions have been susceptible to at least two
-conflicting interpretations. But on this question he
-made the issue absolutely clear. He asked that the
-people return a Democratic majority to both the
-Senate and the House of Representatives. He stated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-that the Republican leaders were pro-war, but that
-they were anti-Administration. His appeal was not
-merely against any Republican being elected, but
-against any Democrat who wished to retain his conscience
-in his own keeping. He declared himself
-explicitly against the pro-war Republicans. He declared
-explicitly for all pro-Administration Democrats,
-without any reference as to whether they were
-pro-war or anti-war. He said that if the people
-approved of his leadership and wished him to continue
-to be their “unembarrassed spokesman in
-affairs at home and abroad, they must return a
-Democratic majority to both the Senate and the
-House of Representatives.” He explicitly stated
-that on the other side of the water the return of a
-Republican majority to either House of Congress
-would be interpreted as a repudiation of his leadership,
-and informed his fellow countrymen that to
-elect a Democratic majority in Congress was the
-only way to sustain him, <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson.</p>
-
-<p>The issue was perfectly, clearly drawn. The
-Republican Party was pro-war and anti-Administration,
-the Democratic Party was officially pro-Administration
-without any mind or conscience of its
-own and pro-war or anti-war according to the way
-in which <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson changed his mind overnight or
-between dawn and sunset. The Americans refused to
-sustain <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson. They elected a heavily Republican
-House and to the surprise of every one carried a
-majority in the Senate. On <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s own say-so
-they repudiated his leadership. In no other free<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-country in the world to-day would <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson be in
-office. He would simply be a private citizen like the
-rest of us.</p>
-
-<p>Under these circumstances our allies and our
-enemies, and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson himself, should all understand
-that <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson has no authority whatever to
-speak for the American people at this time. His
-leadership has just been emphatically repudiated by
-them. The newly elected Congress comes far nearer
-than <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson to having a right to speak the purposes
-of the American people at this moment. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Wilson and his fourteen points and his four supplementary
-points and his five complementary points
-and all his utterances every which way have ceased
-to have any shadow of right to be accepted as expressive
-of the will of the American people. He is
-President of the United States, he is part of the
-treaty-making power, but he is only part. If he acts
-in good faith to the American people, he will not
-claim on the other side of the water any representative
-capacity in himself to speak for the American
-people. He will say frankly that his personal leadership
-has been repudiated and that he now has merely
-the divided official leadership which he shares with
-the Senate. If he will in good faith act in this way
-all good citizens in good faith will support him,
-just as they will support the Senate under similar
-circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>But there isn’t the slightest indication that he
-intends so to act. The most striking manifestation
-of his purpose is that he sent over <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Creel and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-sixteen of his employees who are officially announced
-as “the United States official press mission to the
-Peace Conference,” and, with more self-satisfaction,
-the committee announces, “to interpret the work of
-the Peace Conference by keeping up world-wide
-propaganda to disseminate American accomplishments
-and American ideals.” At the same time <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Burleson seized the cables after the war is over and
-when there can be no possible object except to control
-the news in the interest of President Wilson as
-<abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Burleson and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Creel see that interest. The
-action of the Creel “official press” would really
-seem more like an excessively bad joke if it weren’t
-so serious. But during the war the Administration,
-often incompetent to the verge of impudence in
-dealing with war problems and with the Hun within
-our gates, showed itself a past-master in bullying,
-browbeating, deceiving, and puzzling our own
-people. It is utterly impossible that the Creel “official
-press” and the Burleson-owned cables can have
-any other real purpose than to make the news sent
-out from the Peace Conference, both to ourselves,
-our allies, and our enemies, what they desire to have
-told from their own standpoint and nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>This is a very grave offense against our own
-people, but it may be a worse offense against both
-our allies and ourselves. America played in the closing
-months of the war a gallant part, but not in any
-way the leading part, and she played this part only
-by acting in strictest agreement with our allies and
-under the joint high command. She should take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-precisely the same attitude at the Peace Conference.
-We have lost in this war about two hundred and
-thirty-six thousand men killed and wounded. England
-and France have lost about seven million. Italy
-and Belgium and the other Allies have doubtless lost
-three million more. Of the terrible sacrifice which
-has enabled the Allies to win the victory, America
-has contributed just about two per cent. At the
-end, I personally believe that our intervention was
-decisive because the combatants were so equally
-matched and were so weakened by the terrible strain
-that our money and our enthusiasm and the million
-fighting men whom we got to the front, even although
-armed substantially with nothing but French
-field cannon, tanks, machine guns, and airplanes,
-was decisive in the scale. But we could render this
-decisive aid only because for four years the Allies, in
-keeping Germany from conquering their own countries,
-had incidentally kept her from conquering
-ours.</p>
-
-<p>It is our business to act with our allies and to show
-an undivided front with them against any move of
-our late enemies. I am no Utopian. I understand
-entirely that there can be shifting alliances, I understand
-entirely that twenty years hence or thirty
-years hence we don’t know what combination we
-may have to face, and for this reason I wish to see
-us preparing our own strength in advance and trust
-to nothing but our own strength for our own self-defense
-as our permanent policy. But in the present
-war we have won only by standing shoulder to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-shoulder with our allies and presenting an undivided
-front to the enemy. It is our business to show
-the same loyalty and good faith at the Peace Conference.
-Let it be clearly understood that the American
-people absolutely stand behind France, England,
-Italy, Belgium, and the other Allies at the Peace
-Conference, just as she has stood with them during
-the last eighteen months of war. Let every difference
-of opinion be settled among the Allies themselves
-and then let them impose their common will
-on the nations responsible for the hideous disaster
-which has almost wrecked mankind.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_LEAGUE_TO_ENFORCE_PEACE">THE LEAGUE TO ENFORCE PEACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 2, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Ex-Ambassador Harry White is a capital appointee
-for the Peace Commission. He is not a
-Republican, but an independent in politics who has
-worked as closely with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Cleveland and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Olney
-as with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> McKinley and <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Root.</p>
-
-<p>It is a good thing to have him on in view of the
-exceedingly loose talk about the League of Nations
-or League to Enforce Peace. Fortunately <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Taft
-has set forth the proposal for such a league under
-existing conditions with such wisdom in refusing to
-let adherence to the principle be clouded by insistence
-upon improper or unimportant methods of enforcement
-that we can speak of the League as a
-practical matter. I think that most of our people are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-in favor of the establishment of the principle of such
-a league under common-sense conditions which will
-not attempt too much and thereby expose the movement
-to the absolute certainty of ridicule and failure.
-There must be an honest effort to eliminate some of
-the causes that may produce future wars and to
-minimize the area of such wars.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Taft explicitly admits and insists that the
-League is to be a supplement to, and in no sense a
-substitute for, the duty of our Nation to prepare its
-own strength for its own defense. He also explicitly
-provides that, among the various peoples who would
-not be admitted to the League on an equality with
-the others, there shall be different spheres of interest
-assumed by the different powers who have entered
-into the League. For example, the affairs of hither
-Asia, the Balkan Peninsula, and of North Africa
-are of prime concern to the powers of Europe, and
-the United States should be under no covenant to
-go to war about matters in which its people have no
-concern and probably no intelligent interest. On
-the other hand, the Monroe Doctrine&mdash;at least for
-all America between the equator and the southern
-boundary of the United States&mdash;is a vital point of
-American policy, and must in no shape or way be
-interfered with. We do not interfere with existing
-conditions, but aside from these no European or
-Asiatic power is to have any say-so in the future
-of Mexico, Central America, and the lands whose
-coasts are washed by the Caribbean Sea. The
-Panama Canal must not be internationalized. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-our canal; we built it; we fortified it, and we will
-protect it, and we will not permit our enemies to
-use it in war. In time of peace all nations shall use
-it alike, but in time of war our interest at once becomes
-dominant.</p>
-
-<p>Most wisely <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Taft’s plan reserves for each
-nation certain matters of such vital national interest
-that they cannot be put before any international
-tribunal. This country must settle its own tariff and
-industrial policies, and the question of admitting
-immigrants to work or to citizenship, and all similar
-matters, the exercise of which was claimed as a right
-when in 1776 we became an independent Nation.
-We will not surrender our independence to a league
-of nations any more than to a single nation. Moreover,
-no international court must be entrusted with
-the decision of what is and what is not justiciable.</p>
-
-<p>In the articles of agreement the non-justiciable
-matters should be as sharply defined as possible,
-and until some better plan can be devised, the Nation
-itself must reserve to itself the right, as each
-case arises, to say what these matters are.</p>
-
-<p>But let us steadily remember that before dealing
-with schemes such as the League of Nations, which
-are necessarily more or less visionary, we must join
-in good faith with our allies in securing practical
-right and justice at the Peace Conference. We
-should treat as an enemy to this country every man
-who at this time seeks directly or indirectly to stir up
-dissension between us and England or France, or any
-other of our allies. Side by side we have fought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-against the hideous twin terrors of Bolshevism and
-Kaiserism and we must stand undivided at the
-Peace Conference. What the distant future may
-hold no man can say, and this is the very reason why
-I insist that America must prepare its own strength
-for its own defense. But our duty at the moment is
-clear. We have fought the war through beside the
-Allies and we must stand with them with hearty
-loyalty throughout the peace negotiations. There
-must be no division in the face of our enemies. At
-the very close of the war we played an honorable
-and probably decisive part, but we were enabled to
-do so only because for the four preceding years England
-and France and their associates in defending
-their own rights had also saved us from destruction.
-Our sacrifice is infinitesimal compared to theirs. We
-have had a quarter of a million men killed and
-wounded; England has had over three million,
-France nearly four million, and the other Allies
-during their time of warfare against the common foe
-suffered in proportion. Our loss has been no more
-than one or two per cent of the entire loss suffered by
-the Allied armies and navies.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate cause of bringing the war to an end
-was the forcing of unconditional surrender upon
-Bulgaria and Turkey, with whom we had shamefully
-refused to go to war at all. The English navy protected
-us exactly as it protected Britain. Under such
-circumstances it behooves us to remember that
-while we at the very end did our duty, yet that our
-comrades in arms for over four years performed incalculable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-feats and suffered incalculable losses and
-won the right of gratitude of all mankind. The
-American envoys must not sit at the peace table
-as umpires between the Allies and the conquered
-Central Powers, but as loyal brothers of the Allies, as
-loyal members of the league of free peoples, which
-has brought about peace by overthrowing Turkey,
-Bulgaria, and Austria, and beating Germany to her
-knees.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_MEN_WHOSE_LOT_HAS_BEEN">THE MEN WHOSE LOT HAS BEEN
-HARDEST</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 8, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>There recently died of pneumonia in France Major
-Willard Straight, of the American army. He was
-above the draft age, he was a man of large and many
-interests, he had a wife and three children. There
-was every excuse for him not to have gone to the
-front, but both he and his wife had in their souls that
-touch of heroism which makes it impossible for
-generous natures to see others pay with their bodies
-and not to wish to do so themselves. The one regret
-that Major Straight felt&mdash;and he felt it most
-bitterly&mdash;was that he had not been able in spite of
-all his efforts to get to the actual firing front. This
-failure was really a cause of great anguish of soul
-to him. In the same way I know of the four sons of
-an ex-Cabinet officer, all of whom instantly went into
-the army at the outbreak of the war. Two were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-at the fighting front, one was in the navy, and the
-other, because of the special excellence as an instructor,
-was kept here, and the gallant young fellow
-who left his wife and baby to enlist really feels as if
-the refusal of the War Department to permit him to
-go where he could be shot at had caused a blight in
-his life. I know three other men who, because of
-their excellence, were kept as instructors at one of
-our camps, whose feelings of regret are so bitter that
-they can hardly bear to look at their uniforms and
-the sight of wounded soldiers causes them agonies of
-thwarted longing.</p>
-
-<p>All this is most natural, and just what we should
-expect from high-minded, gallant fellows. But it is
-entirely unwarranted. I utterly abhor the swivel-chair
-slacker who got some safe job in order to avoid
-doing his duty at the front. But for the hundreds of
-thousands of young Americans in the ranks or with
-commissions who did everything they could to get
-in the firing lines, and who through no fault of
-theirs failed, I have precisely the same feeling that I
-have for the men who took part in the most dangerous
-work. General Leonard Wood, in his recent
-capital address, has taught the right lesson to these
-men. He was dismissing to their homes the men
-whom he had trained with his usual, extraordinary
-capacity to fit them for work overseas, and he dwelt
-to them upon the fact that the all-important point
-was that they should remember that it was not the
-position they achieved, but the eager readiness to do
-duty in whatever position they were given that really<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-counted. General Wood has himself been treated
-with the most cruel injustice in this war, yet he
-has rendered signal service in bringing before Congress
-our military needs, and, above all, in training
-scores of thousands of our best fighting men. When
-he was denied, from the very meanest motives, the
-chance to fill a distinguished position, instead of
-sulking he devoted all of his energy to doing the best
-he could in the positions to which he was assigned.
-In consequence he comes out of the war as one of
-those who most materially helped to win it. What is
-true of him in a big place is true of every other
-soldier, whether in a big or little place. The hardest
-task was for the men who were denied the chance of
-glory, and if they did this hard task well and served
-faithfully wherever they were assigned, they have
-exactly the same right for pride in their participation
-in the Great War as any of the gallant fellows
-who have come back maimed or crippled from the
-front. All alike have made the rest of us forever their
-debtors, and to all alike we pay the same meed of
-loyal admiration and respect.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_BRITISH_NAVY_THE_FRENCH">THE BRITISH NAVY, THE FRENCH
-ARMY, AND AMERICAN
-COMMON SENSE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 17, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The first essential in an alliance is loyalty. The
-first effort of an enemy to an alliance is to produce<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-disloyalty to one another among the Allies. To any
-man who knows anything of history these facts are
-of bromidic triteness. But the Administration, as
-usual, stands in urgent need of learning the elements
-of fair play and common sense.</p>
-
-<p>It was announced from the peace ship that President
-Wilson was going to work for the reduction of
-naval armaments and for a form of naval agreement
-which, if it had existed four years ago, would have
-meant Germany’s victory and the subjugation of not
-only Germany’s foes, but of all neutrals like ourselves.
-At the same time over here the representatives
-of the Administration are demanding a navy
-bigger than that of Great Britain. The only possible
-interpretation of these facts is that the Administration
-proposes to threaten Great Britain with having
-to get in a neck-and-neck competition with America
-to build the greatest navy in the world, and to do
-this as a bluff so as to make for Great Britain’s adherence
-to <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s exceedingly nebulous ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Under these conditions the American people
-should, with common sense, look at what their own
-needs are and at what the needs of their allies are.
-Sooner or later any programme will have to be tested
-by its results, and even if the United States started
-to emulate Great Britain’s navy, the enthusiasm to
-do so would vanish when it appeared that there was
-no earthly interest of ours to be served by the action.</p>
-
-<p>In winning the present war very many instrumentalities
-have been necessary. On the whole the
-four most important in their order have been: (1)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-the French army; (2) the British navy; (3) the
-British army; (4) the Italian army. Our own gallant
-army and navy did exceedingly well, but came in so
-late that the part they played, taking the four and a
-half years as a whole, does not entitle them to rank
-with the instrumentalities given above.</p>
-
-<p>Great Britain is an island, separated from the huge
-military commonwealths of Europe by very narrow
-seas, and separated from her own greatest colonies
-by all the greatest oceans. To her, supremacy in the
-navy is a matter of life and death. America ought
-to have a first-class navy, but if she did not have
-a ship she might yet secure herself from any invasion.
-But Great Britain’s empire would not last one
-week, and she could not make herself safe at home
-one week if her navy lost its supremacy. Incidentally
-to saving herself, the British navy has rendered
-incalculable service to us during the last four and
-one-half years, and for the last thirty years has been
-a shield to the United States. Great Britain is not a
-military power in the sense that any of the nations
-of continental Europe, or indeed of Asia, are military
-powers. She had almost as much difficulty in developing
-her army in this war as we had in developing
-our army. Her army is no more of a threat to other
-peoples than ours is. Therefore, we Americans find
-ourselves, as regards the British navy, in this position,
-that it is of vital consequence to Great Britain
-to have the greatest navy in the world; it is emphatically
-not of any consequence to us to have as big a
-navy as Great Britain, for we are not in the slightest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-danger from Great Britain, and under all ordinary
-circumstances the British navy can be counted upon
-as a help to the United States and never as a menace.
-Under such circumstances to set ourselves to work
-to build a navy in rivalry to Great Britain’s, and
-above all to do this as a political bluff, is worse than
-silly.</p>
-
-<p>Our own navy should be ample to protect our own
-coasts and to maintain the Monroe Doctrine. There
-are in Europe and Asia several great military commonwealths,
-each one of which will in all probability
-always possess a far more formidable army than
-ours, even though, as I earnestly hope, we adopt
-some development of universal military training on
-the lines of the Swiss system. Therefore, it is of the
-highest consequence that our navy should be second
-to that of Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>The analogy with the case of the French army is
-complete. If the French army had not been able to
-hold the German army and be the chief factor in
-the German military overthrow, the British navy
-could not have averted Germany’s complete victory.
-Great Britain is separated by the narrow seas from
-the military powers of continental Europe. We are
-separated from them by the width of the ocean.
-Under the circumstances, it is sheer impertinence for
-either American or English statesmen to tell France,
-or, for that matter Italy, what ought to be done in
-abolishing armaments or abandoning universal service
-or anything of the kind. The interest of France
-and Italy in the matter is vital. The interest of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-England and America is partly secondary. If we
-have well-thought-out arguments to put before the
-French, put them before them, but treat France as
-having the vital interest in the matter, and therefore
-the final say-so as far as we are concerned. And
-when France has determined what the needs of the
-future demand, so far as her military preparedness
-is concerned, and when Italy has made a similar determination,
-and our other allies likewise, back them
-up. It is not the business of America to tell Great
-Britain what she should do with her navy. It is not
-the business of either America or England to tell
-France what she should do with her army. The
-plain American common sense of the situation is that
-we should recognize our immense debt to the British
-navy and the French army, and stand by Britain in
-what she decides her vital needs demand so far as
-her navy is concerned, and stand by France in the
-position she takes as to what the situation demands
-so far as her army is concerned.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="LET_US_HAVE_STRAIGHTFORWARD">LET US HAVE STRAIGHTFORWARD
-SPEAKING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 24, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Senator Lodge in his admirable speech has given
-the reasons why at least five of the famous fourteen
-points should not be considered in the peace negotiations
-proper. But the special merit of Senator
-Lodge’s statement lies in the fact that it is straightforward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-and clear. There is no need of a key to find
-out what he means. The men who represent, or assume
-to represent, the United States at the Peace
-Conference, should be equally clear with our allies
-and our enemies and also with the American people.
-Above all things we need some straightforward
-statement as to just what is proposed and as to just
-why it is proposed.</p>
-
-<p>Take, for example, the very extraordinary conflict
-between that one of the fourteen points in which the
-Administration has demanded practically complete
-disarmament and the action of the Administration
-at the same moment demanding that we shall build
-the biggest navy in the world. Either one course or
-the other must necessarily be improper. In such a
-matter we especially need a straightforward statement
-of reasons and principles.</p>
-
-<p>The worst thing we could do would be to build a
-spite navy, a navy built not to meet our own needs,
-but to spite some one else. I am speaking purely as
-an American. No man in this country who is both
-intelligent or informed has the slightest fear that
-Great Britain will ever invade us or try to go to war
-with us. The British navy is not in the slightest
-degree a menace to us. I can go a little further than
-this. There is in Great Britain a large pacifist and
-defeatist party which behaves exactly like our own
-pacifists, pro-Germans, Germanized Socialists, defeatists,
-and Bolsheviki. If this party had its way
-and Great Britain abandoned its fleet, I should feel,
-so far from the United States being freed from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-necessity of building up a fleet, that it behooved us to
-build a much stronger one than is at present necessary.
-Our need is not as great as that of the vast
-scattered British Empire, for our domains are pretty
-much in a ring fence. We ought not to undertake the
-task of policing Europe, Asia, and Northern Africa.
-Neither ought we to permit any interference with
-the Monroe Doctrine or any attempt by Europe or
-Asia to police America. Mexico is our Balkan Peninsula.
-Some day we will have to deal with it. All
-the coasts and islands which in any way approach
-the Panama Canal must be dealt with by this Nation,
-and by this Nation alone, in accordance with
-the Monroe Doctrine. With this object in view our
-navy should be second to that of Great Britain and
-superior to that of any other power&mdash;and if Great
-Britain chooses to abolish its navy it would mean
-that we ought to build a larger navy than is now
-necessary.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="A_SQUARE_DEAL_FOR_THE_MEN">A SQUARE DEAL FOR THE MEN
-AT THE FRONT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">December 25, 1918</span></p>
-
-
-<p>We should show our respect for the men at the front
-by more than mere adulation. They are the Americans
-who have done most and suffered most for this
-country. It was announced in the press that in many
-cases they and the families they have left behind
-have not for months received their full pay. This is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-an outrage. All civil officials are paid. The Secretary
-of War is paid, and he ought not to touch a
-dollar of his salary and no high official should touch
-a dollar of his salary until the enlisted men and
-junior officers are paid every cent that is owing to
-them, and this payment should be prompt. There is
-literally no excuse for even so much as three days’
-delay in the payment.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, these men, at great cost to themselves
-in paying everything including, in fifty or sixty
-thousand cases, their lives, have gone to the front at
-a wage from one half to one fifth as great as that
-their companions who stayed behind have received
-during the same period. They enlisted to do a specific
-job. They made the sacrifice in order to do that
-job. We on our side should see that just as soon as
-the job is done the men are taken home, allowed to
-leave the army, and begin earning their livelihood
-and take care of the wives and children that the
-married ones among them have left behind.</p>
-
-<p>Recently in the public press there have appeared
-various artless and chatty statements from the
-State, War, and Navy departments that our men
-might be kept in Europe to do general police work
-and might not be brought back here until the
-summer of 1920. There are three types of soldiers on
-the other side. There are the Regular Army men,
-who have entered the Regular Army as a profession,
-and to whom it is a matter of indifference whether
-they stay in Europe, come back here, go to the
-Philippines, or do anything else. That is a small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-proportion of our force on the other side. The bulk
-are divided between volunteers, who enlisted in the
-National Guard or sometimes in the regular regiments
-to fight this war through, and the drafted men
-who were put into the army under a law designed to
-meet this war and this war only. Not one in ten of
-the volunteers would have dreamed of volunteering
-to do police work in European squabbles. Not ten
-Congressmen would have voted for the Draft Law
-if it was to force selective men to do police duty after
-the war was over. All these men went in to fight this
-war through to a finish and then to come home. It
-is not a square deal to follow any other course as
-regards them. The minute that peace comes every
-American soldier on the other side should be brought
-home as speedily as possible save, of course, the
-regulars who make the Regular Army their life profession,
-and any other man who chose to volunteer to
-go over, or who can with entire propriety be used for
-gathering up the loose ends. The American fighting
-man at the front has given this country a square deal
-during the war. Now let the country give him a
-square deal by letting him get out of the army and go
-to his home as soon as the war is finished. The Red
-Cross has done wonderful work in taking care of the
-dependents of these men pending settlement by the
-Government, but the Government should not be
-content to rely on any outside organization to make
-up its own shortcomings.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span></p>
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="THE_LEAGUE_OF_NATIONS2">THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">January 13, 1919</span></p>
-
-
-<p>It is, of course, a serious misfortune that our people
-are not getting a clear idea of what is happening on
-the other side. For the moment the point as to
-which we are foggy is the League of Nations. We all
-of us earnestly desire such a league, only we wish to
-be sure that it will help and not hinder the cause of
-world peace and justice. There is not a young man
-in this country who has fought, or an old man who
-has seen those dear to him fight, who does not wish
-to minimize the chance of future war. But there is
-not a man of sense who does not know that in any
-such movement if too much is attempted the result
-is either failure or worse than failure.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span></p>
-<p>The trouble with <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s utterances, so far
-as they are reported, and the utterances of acquiescence
-in them by European statesmen, is that
-they are still absolutely in the stage of rhetoric
-precisely like the “fourteen points.” Some of the
-fourteen points will probably have to be construed
-as having a mischievous significance, a smaller
-number might be construed as being harmless, and
-one or two even as beneficial, but nobody knows
-what <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson really means by them, and so all
-talk of adopting them as basis for a peace or a league
-is nonsense and, if the talker is intelligent, it is insincere
-nonsense to boot. So <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr> Wilson’s recent
-utterances give us absolutely no clue as to whether
-he really intends that at this moment we shall admit
-Germany, Russia,&mdash;with which, incidentally, we
-are still waging war,&mdash;Turkey, China, and Mexico
-into the League on full equality with ourselves. <abbr title="mister">Mr.</abbr>
-Taft has recently defined the purposes of the League
-and the limitations under which it would act, in a
-way that enables most of us to say we very heartily
-agree in principle with his theory and can, without
-doubt, come to an agreement on specific details.</p>
-
-<p>Would it not be well to begin with the League
-which we actually have in existence, the League of the
-Allies who have fought through this great war? Let
-us at the peace table see that real justice is done
-as among these Allies, and that while the sternest
-reparation is demanded from our foes for such
-horrors as those committed in Belgium, Northern
-France, Armenia, and the sinking of the Lusitania,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-nothing should be done in the spirit of mere vengeance.
-Then let us agree to extend the privileges of
-the League, as rapidly as their conduct warrants it,
-to other nations, doubtless discriminating between
-those who would have a guiding part in the League
-and the weak nations who would be entitled to the
-privileges of membership, but who would not be
-entitled to a guiding voice in the councils. Let each
-nation reserve to itself and for its own decision, and
-let it clearly set forth questions which are non-justiciable.
-Let nothing be done that will interfere
-with our preparing for our own defense by introducing
-a system of universal obligatory military training
-modeled on the Swiss plan.</p>
-
-<p>Finally make it perfectly clear that we do not
-intend to take a position of international Meddlesome
-Matty. The American people do not wish to
-go into an overseas war unless for a very great cause
-and where the issue is absolutely plain. Therefore,
-we do not wish to undertake the responsibility of
-sending our gallant young men to die in obscure
-fights in the Balkans or in Central Europe, or in a
-war we do not approve of. Moreover, the American
-people do not intend to give up the Monroe Doctrine.
-Let civilized Europe and Asia introduce some
-kind of police system in the weak and disorderly
-countries at their thresholds. But let the United
-States treat Mexico as our Balkan Peninsula and
-refuse to allow European or Asiatic powers to interfere
-on this continent in any way that implies permanent
-or semi-permanent possession. Every one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-our allies will with delight grant this request if
-President Wilson chooses to make it, and it will be a
-great misfortune if it is not made.</p>
-
-<p>I believe that such an effort made moderately and
-sanely, but sincerely and with utter scorn for words
-that are not made good by deeds, will be productive
-of real and lasting international good.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p4">THE END</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> This article on “The League of Nations” is the last contribution
-that Colonel Roosevelt prepared for The Star. It was dictated at his
-home in Oyster Bay, January 3, the Friday before his death. His
-secretary expected to take the typed copy to him for correction Monday.
-Instead she was called on the telephone early Monday morning
-and told of his death. A delay of several days naturally ensued, before
-the editorial reached the office of The Star.</p>
-
-<p>In view of the immense moment of the issues before the Peace
-Conference, The Star had asked Colonel Roosevelt to give his countrymen
-the benefit of his discussion of the possibilities of a League of
-Nations as a preventive of war. He consented, although, as he wrote,
-he expected to follow this editorial with one “on what I regard as
-infinitely more important, namely, our business to prepare for our
-own self-defense.” That article, however, was never written.</p>
-
-<p>This article, then, his final contribution to The Star, represents his
-matured judgment based on protracted discussion and correspondence.
-It is of peculiar importance as the last message of a man who, above
-every other American of his generation, combined high patriotism,
-practical sense, and a positive genius for international relations.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p0">THIS LARGE-PAPER EDITION CONSISTS OF THREE HUNDRED
-AND SEVENTY-FIVE NUMBERED COPIES, OF
-WHICH THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY ARE FOR SALE.
-THIS IS NUMBER....</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span></p>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center">The Riverside Press<br />
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS<br />
-U . S . A
-</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter transnote">
-<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Obvious errors in punctuation have been fixed.</p>
-
-<p>In the <a href="#CONTENTS">table of contents</a>, “The Landsdowne Letter” changed to “The Lansdowne Letter”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_49">Page 49</a>: “which his precedessor” changed to “which his predecessor”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_54">Page 54</a>: “seeking a black animal” changed to “seeing a black animal”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_136">Page 136</a>: “New York Herold” changed to “New York Herald”</p>
-
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROOSEVELT IN THE KANSAS CITY STAR ***</div>
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