NOTES:
The concept of a New World Order is not a
"conspiracy theory." It was published and promoted by H.G.
Wells, a writer and publicist for British imperialists, in 1928.
Why did he write this?
Who was Wells working for?
Is there a hidden agenda behind
the "polite" proposal by Wells?
Is this an introduction of ideas
that serve to allow change to
some future agenda?
The Open Conspiracy is an
early expose on the New
World Order. A concept that
also appears on the U.S.
Dollar bill during the 1930s.
Parts of this concept sound
very good, but good is always
used by those who deceive.
Keep that in mind.
Back
to Prepare.htm
|
The Open Conspiracy
H.G. Wells -
1930 publication (40,000 words)
http://www.inlex.org/stories/wells/opencons.html
I - The
Present Crisis In Human Affairs
The
world is undergoing immense changes. Never before have the conditions of
life changed so swiftly and enormously as they have changed for mankind
in the last fifty years. We have been carried along - with no means of
measuring the increasing swiftness in the succession of events. We are
only now beginning to realize the force and strength of the storm of
change that has come upon us.
These changes have not come upon our world from
without. No meteorite from outer space has struck our planet; there have
been no overwhelming outbreaks of volcanic violence or strange epidemic
diseases; the sun has not flared up to excessive heat or suddenly
shrunken to plunge us into Arctic winter. The changes have come through
men themselves. Quite a small number of people, heedless of the ultimate
consequence of what they did, one man here and a group there, have made
discoveries and produced and adopted inventions that have changed all
the condition, of social life.
We are now just beginning to realize the nature
of these changes, to find words and phrases for them and put them down.
First they began to happen, and then we began to see that they were
happening. And now we are beginning to see how these changes are
connected together and to get the measure of their consequences. We are
getting our minds so clear about them that soon we shall be able to
demonstrate them and explain them to our children in our schools. We do
not do so at present. We do not give our children a chance of
discovering that they live in a world of universal change.
What are the broad lines upon which these
alterations of condition are proceeding?
It will be most convenient to deal with them in
the order in which they came to be realized and seen clearly, rather
than by the order in which they came about or by their logical order.
They are more or less interdependent changes; they overlap and interact.
It was only in the beginning of the twentieth
century that people began to realize the real significance of that
aspect of our changing conditions to which the phrase “the
abolition of distance” has been applied. For a whole century
before that there had been a continual increase in the speed and safety
of travel and transport and the ease and swiftness with which messages
could be transmitted, but this increase had not seemed to be a matter of
primary importance. Various results of railway, steamship, and telegraph
became manifest; towns grew larger, spreading into the countryside, once
inaccessible lands became areas of rapid settlement and cultivation,
industrial centres began to live on imported food, news from remote
parts lost its time-lag and tended to become contemporary, but no one
hailed these things as being more than “improvements” in existing
conditions. They are not observed to be the beginnings of a profound
revolution in the life of mankind. The attention of young people was not
drawn to them; no attempt was made, or considered necessary, to adapt
political and social institutions to this creeping enlargement of scale.
Until the closing years of the nineteenth
century there was no recognition of the real state of affairs. Then a
few observant people began, in a rather tentative, commentary sort of
way, to call attention to what was happening. They did not seem to be
moved by the idea that something had to be done about it; they merely
remarked, brightly and intelligently, that it was going on. And then
they went on to the realization that this “abolition of distance”
was only one aspect of much more far-reaching advances.
Men were travelling about so much faster and
flashing their communications instantly about the world because a
progressive conquest of force and substance was going on. Improved
transport was only one of a number of portentous consequences of that
conquest; the first to be conspicuous and set men thinking; but not
perhaps the first in importance. It dawned upon them that in the last
hundred years there had been a stupendous progress in obtaining and
utilizing mechanical power, a vast increase in the efficiency of
mechanism, and associated with that an enormous increase in the
substances available for man's purposes, from vulcanized rubber to the
modern steels, and from petroleum and margarine to tungsten and
aluminium. At first the general intelligence was disposed to regard
these things as lucky “finds,” happy chance discoveries. It was not
apprehended that the shower of finds was systematic and continuous.
Popular writers told about these things but they told of them at first
as “Wonders” - “Wonders” like the Pyramids, the Colossus of
Rhodes, and the
Great Wall of China
. Few realized how much more they were than any “Wonders.” The
“Seven Wonders of the World” left men free to go on living, toiling,
marrying, and dying as they had been accustomed to for immemorial ages.
If the “Seven Wonders” had vanished or been multiplied three score
it would not have changed the lives of any large proportion of human
beings. But these new powers and substances were modifying and
transforming - unobtrusively, surely, and relentlessly - very particular
of the normal life of mankind.
They increased the amount of production and the
methods of production. They made possible “Big-Business,” to drive
the small producer and the small distributor out of the market. They
swept away factories and evoked new ones. They changed the face of the
fields. They brought into the normal life, thing by thing and day by
day, electric light and heating, bright cities at night, better
aeration, new types of clothing, a fresh cleanliness. They changed a
world where there had never been enough into a world of potential
plenty, into a world of excessive plenty. It dawned upon their minds
after their realization of the “abolition of distance” that shortage
of supplier had also been abolished and that irksome toil was no longer
necessary to produce everything material that man might require. It is
only in the last dozen years that this broader and profounder fact has
come through to the intelligence of any considerable number of people.
Most of them have still to carry their realization a step farther and
see how complete is the revolution in the character of the daily life
these things involve.
But there are still other changes outside this
vast advance in the pace and power of material life. The biological
sciences have undergone a corresponding extension. Medical art has
attained a new level of efficiency, so that in all the modernizing
societies of the world the average life is prolonged, and there is, in
spite of a great fall in the birth rate, a steady, alarming increase in
the world's population. The proportion of adults alive is greater than
it has ever been before. Fewer and fewer human beings die young This has
changed the social atmosphere about us. The tragedy of lives cut short
and ended prematurely is passing out of general experience. Health
becomes prevalent. The continual toothaches, headaches, rheumatism,
neuralgias, coughs, colds, indigestions that made up so large a part of
the briefer lives of our grandfathers and grandmothers fade out of
experience. We may all live now, we discover, without any great burthen
of fear, wholesomely and abundantly, for as long as the desire to live
is in us.
But we do not do so. All this possible freedom
of movement, this power and abundance, remains for most of us no more
than possibility. There is a sense of profound instability about these
achievements of our race. Even those who enjoy, enjoy without security,
and for the great multitude of mankind there is neither ease, plenty,
nor freedom. Hard tasks, insufficiency, and unending money worries are
still the ordinary stuff of life. Over everything human hangs the threat
of such war as man has never known before, were armed and reinforced by
all the powers and discoveries of modern science.
When we demand why the achievement of
power turns to distress and danger in our hands, we get some very
unsatisfactory replies. The favourite platitude of the politician
excusing himself for the futilities of his business, is that “moral
progress has not kept pace with material advance.” That seems to
satisfy him completely, but it can satisfy no other intelligent person.
He says “moral.” He leaves that word unexplained. Apparently he
wants to shift the responsibility to our religious teachers. At the most
he has made but the vaguest gesture towards a reply. And yet, when we
consider it, charitably and sympathetically, there does seem to be a
germ of reality in that phrase of his.
What does moral mean? Mores means
manners and customs. Morality is the conduct of life. It is what we do
with our social lives. It is how we deal with ourselves in relation to
our fellow creatures. And there does seem to be a much greater discord
now than there was (say) a couple of hundred years ago between the
prevailing ideas of how to carry on life and the opportunities a and
dangers of the time. We are coming to see more and more plainly that
certain established traditions which have made up the frame of human
relationships for ages are not merely no longer as convenient as they
were, but are positively injurious and dangerous. And yet at present we
do not know how to shake off these traditions, these habits of social
behaviour which rule us. Still less are we able to state, and still less
bring into operation, the new conceptions of conduct and obligation that
must replace them.
For example, the general
government of human affairs has hitherto been distributed among a number
of sovereign states - there are about seventy of them now - and until
recently that was a quite tolerable system of frame-works into which a
general way of living could be fitted. The standard of living may not
have been as high as our present standards, but the social stability and
assurance were greater. The young were trained to be loyal,
law-regarding, patriotic, and a defined system of crimes and
misdemeanours with properly associated pains, penalties, and
repressions, kept the social body together. Everyone was taught a
history glorifying his own state, and patriotism was chief among the
Virtues. Now, with great rapidity, there has been that “abolition of
distance,” and everyone has become next-door neighbour to everyone
else. States once separate, social and economic systems formerly remote
from one another, now jostle each other exasperatingly. Commerce under
the new conditions is perpetually breaking nationalist bounds and making
militant raids upon the economic life of other countries. This
exacerbates patriotism in which we have all been trained and with which
we are all, with scarcely an exception, saturated. And meanwhile war,
which was once a comparative slow bickering upon a front, has become war
in three dimensions; it gets at the “non-combatant” almost as
searchingly as at the combatant, and has acquired weapons of a
stupendous cruelty and destructiveness. At present there exists no
solution to this paradoxical situation. We are continually being urged
by our training and traditions to antagonisms and conflicts that will
impoverish, starve, and destroy both our antagonists and ourselves. We
are all trained to distrust and hate foreigners, salute our flag,
stiffen up in a wooden obedient way at our national anthem, and prepare
to follow the little fellows in spurs and feathers who pose as the heads
of our states into the most horrible common destruction. Our
political and economic ideas of living are out of date, and we find
great difficulty in adjusting them and reconstructing them to meet the
huge and strenuous demands of the new times. That is really what our
gramophone politicians have in mind - in the vague way in which they
have anything in mind - when they put on that well-worn record about
moral progress not having kept pace with material inventions.
Socially and politically we want a
revised system of ideas about conduct, a view of social and political
life brought up to date. We are not doing the effective thing with our
lives, we are drifting, we are being hoodwinked and bamboozled and
misled by those who trade upon the old traditions. It is preposterous
that we should still be followed about and pestered by war, taxed for
war preparations, and threatened bodily and in our liberties by this
unnecessary and exaggerated and distorted survival of the disunited
world of the pre-scientific era. And it is not simply that our political
way of living is now no better than an inherited defect and
malformation, but that our everyday life, our eating and drinking and
clothing and housing and going about, is also cramped, thwarted, and
impoverished, because we do not know how to set about shaking off the
old ways and fitting the general life to our new opportunities. The
strain takes the form of increased unemployment and a dislocation of
spending power. We do not know whether to spend or save. Great swarms of
us find ourselves unaccountably thrown out of work. Unjustly,
irrationally. Colossal business reconstructions are made to increase
production and accumulate profits, and meanwhile the customers with
purchasing power dwindle in numbers and fade away. The economic machine
creaks and makes every sign of stopping - and its stopping means
universal want and starvation. It must not stop. There must be a
reconstruction, a change-over. But what sort of a change-over?
Though none of us are yet clear as to the
precise way in which this great change-over is to be effected, there is
a world-wide feeling now that change-over or a vast catastrophe is
before us. Increasing multitudes participate in that uneasy sense of
insecure transition. In the course of one lifetime mankind has passed
from a state of affairs that seems to us now to have been slow, dull,
ill-provided, and limited, but at least picturesque and tranquil-minded,
to a new phase of excitement, provocation, menace, urgency, and actual
or potential distresses. Our lives are part of one another. We cannot
get away from it. We are items in a social mass. What are we to do with
our lives?
II - The
Idea Of The Open Conspiracy
I am a writer upon
social and political matters. Essentially I am a very ordinary,
undistinguished person. I have a mediocre brain, a very average brain,
and the way in which my mind reacts to these problems is therefore very
much the way in which most brains will react to them. But because it is
my business to write and think about these questions, because on that
account I am able to give more time and attention to them than most
people, I am able to get rather ahead of my equals and to write articles
and books just a little before the ideas I experience become plain to
scores of thousands, and then to hundreds of thousands, and at last to
millions of other people. And so it happened that a few years ago (round
about 1927) I became very anxious to clear up and give form to a knot of
suggestions that seemed to me to have in them the solution of this
riddle of adapting our lives to the immense new possibilities and the
immense new dangers that confront mankind.
It seemed to me that all over the world
intelligent people were waking up to the indignity and absurdity of
being endangered, restrained, and impoverished, by a mere uncritical
adhesion to traditional governments, traditional ideas of economic life,
and traditional forms of behaviour, and that these awaking intelligent
people must constitute first a protest and then a creative resistance to
the inertia that was stifling and threatening us. These people I
imagined would say first, “We are drifting; we are doing nothing worth
while with our lives. Our lives are dull and stupid and not good
enough.”
Then they would say, “What are we to do with
our lives?”
And then, “Let us get together with other
people of our sort and make over the world into a great
world-civilization that will enable us to realize the promises and avoid
the dangers of this new time.”
It seemed to me that as, one after another, we
woke up, that is what we should be saying. It amounted to a protest,
first mental and then practical, it amounted to a sort of unpremeditated
and unorganized conspiracy, against the fragmentary and insufficient
governments and the wide-spread greed, appropriation, clumsiness, and
waste that are now going on. But unlike conspiracies in general this
widening protest and conspiracy against established things would, by its
very nature, go on in the daylight, and it would be willing to accept
participation and help from every quarter. It would, in fact, become an
“Open Conspiracy,” a necessary, naturally evolved conspiracy, to
adjust our dislocated world.
I made various attempts to develop this
idea. I published a little book called The Open Conspiracy as
early as 1928, into which I put what I had in my mind at that time. It
was an unsatisfactory little book even when I published it, not quite
plain enough and not quite confident enough, and evidently unsure of its
readers. I could not find out how to do it better at the time, and it
seemed in its way to say something of living and current interest, and
so I published it - but I arranged things so that I could withdraw it in
a year or so. That I did, and this present book is a largely rewritten
version, much clearer and more explicit. Since that first publication we
have all got forward surprisingly. Events have hustled thought along and
have been hustled along by thought. The idea of reorganizing the affairs
of the world on quite a big scale, which was “Utopian,” and so
forth, in 1926 and 1927, and still “bold” in 1928, has now spread
about the world until nearly everybody has it. It has broken out all
over the place, thanks largely to the mental stimulation of the Russian
Five Year Plan. Hundreds of thousands of people everywhere are now
thinking upon the lines foreshadowed by my Open Conspiracy, not because
they had ever heard of the book or phrase, but because that was the way
thought was going.
The first Open Conspiracy conveyed
the general idea of a world reconstructed, but it was very vague about
the particular way in which this or that individual life could be lived
in relation to that general idea. It gave a general answer to the
question, “What are we to do with our lives?” It said, “Help to
make over the
New World
amidst the confusions of the Old.” But when the question was asked,
“What am I to do with my life?” the reply was much less
satisfactory.
The intervening years of thought and
experience make it possible, now, to bring this general idea of a
reconstructive effort, an attempt to build up a new world within the
dangers and disharmonies of our present state, into a much closer and
more explicit relation to the individual “Open Conspirator.” We can
present the thing in a better light and handle it with a surer touch.
III -
We Have To Clear And Clean Up Our Minds
Now, one thing is fairly
plain to most of us who are waking up to the need of living our lives in
a new way and of making over the state, which is the framework of our
lives, to meet the new demands upon it, and that is, that we have to put
our own minds in order. Why have we only awakened now to the crisis in
human affairs. The changes in progress have been going on with a steady
acceleration for a couple of centuries. Clearly we must all have been
very unobservant, our knowledge as it came to us must have been very
badly arranged in our minds, and our way of dealing with it must have
been cloudy and muddled, or else we should surely have awakened long ago
to the immense necessities that now challenge us. And if that is so, if
it has taken decades to rouse us, then quite probably we are not yet
completely awake. Even now we may not have realized the job before us in
its completeness. We may still have much to get plain in our minds, and
we certainly have much more to learn. One primary and permanent duty
therefore is to go on with our thinking and to think as well as we can
about the way in which we think and about the ways in which we get and
use knowledge.
Fundamentally the Open Conspiracy must be an
intellectual rebirth.
Human thought is still very much confused by
the imperfection of the words and other symbols it employs and the
consequences of this confused thinking are much more serious and
extensive than is commonly realized. We still see the world through a
mist of words; it is only the things immediately about us that are plain
fact. Through symbols, and especially through words, man has raised
himself above the level of the ape and come to a considerable mastery
over his universe. But every step in his mental ascent has involved
entanglement with these symbols and words he was using; they were at
once helpful and very dangerous and misleading. A great part of our
affairs, social, political, intellectual, is in a perplexing and
dangerous state to-day because of our loose, uncritical, slovenly use of
words.
All through the later Middle Ages there
were great disputes among the schoolmen about the use of words and
symbols. There is a queer disposition in the human mind to think that
symbols and words and logical deductions are truer than actual
experiences, and these great controversies were due to the struggle of
the human intelligence against that disposition. On the one side were
the Realists, who were so called because they believed, in effect, that
names were more real than facts, and on the other side were the
Nominalists, who from the first were pervaded by a suspicion about names
and words generally; who thought there might be some sort of catch in
verbal processes, and who gradually worked their way towards
verification by experiment which is the fundamental thing about
experimental science - experimental science which has given our human
world all these immense powers and possibilities that tempt and threaten
it to-day. These controversies of the schoolmen were of the utmost
importance to mankind. The modern world could not begin to come into
existence until the human mind had broken away from the narrow-minded
verbalist way of thinking which the Realists followed.
But all through my education I never had this
matter explained to me. The University of London intimated that I was a
soundly educated young man by giving me a degree in first-class honours
and the liberty to acquire and wear an elegant gown and hood, and the
London College of Preceptors gave me and the world its highest
assurances that I was fit to educate and train the minds of my fellow
creatures, and yet I had still to discover that a Realist was not a
novelist who put rather too highly flavoured sex appeal into his books,
and a Nominalist, nothing in particular. But it had crept into my mind
as I learnt about individuality in my biological work and about logic
and psychology in my preparation as the perfect preceptor, that
something very important and essential was being left out and that I
wasn't at all as well equipped as my diplomas presently said I was, and
in the next few years I found the time to clean up this matter pretty
thoroughly. I made no marvellous discoveries, everything I found out was
known already; nevertheless, I had to find Out some of this stuff for
myself quite over again, as though it had never been done; so
inaccessible was any complete account of human thinking to an ordinary
man who wanted to get his mind into proper working condition. And this
was not that I had missed some recondite, precious refinements of
philosophy; it was that my fundamental thinking, at the very root of my
political and social conduct, was wrong. I was in a human community, and
that community, and I with it, was thinking of phantoms and fantasies as
though they were real and living things, was in a reverie of
unrealities, was blind, slovenly, hypnotized, base and ineffective,
blundering about in an extremely beautiful and an extremely dangerous
world.
I set myself to re-educate myself, and
after the practice of writers wrote it in various trial pamphlets,
essays, and books. There is no need to refer to these books here. The
gist of the matter is set out in three compilations, to which I shall
refer again almost immediately. They are The Outline of History
(Ch. XXI, § 6, and Ch. XXXIII, § 6), The Science of Life (Book
VIII, on Thought and Behaviour) and The Work, Wealth, and Happiness
of Mankind (Ch. II, § § 1-4). In the last, it is shown quite
plainly how man has had to struggle for the mastery of his mind, has
discovered only after great controversies the proper and effective use
of his intellectual tools, and has had to learn to avoid certain
widespread traps and pitfalls before he could achieve his present
mastery over matter. Thinking clearly and effectively does not come by
nature. Hunting the truth is an art. We blunder naturally into a
thousand misleading generalizations and false processes. Yet there is
hardly any intelligent mental training done in the schools of the world
to-day. We have to learn this art, if we are to practise it at all. Our
schoolteachers have had no proper training themselves, they miseducate
by example and precept, and so it is that our press and current
discussions are more like an impromptu riot of crippled and deaf and
blind minds than an intelligent interchange of ideas. What bosh one
reads! What rash and impudent assumptions! What imbecile inferences!
But re-educating oneself, getting one's mind
into health and exercising it and training it to think properly, is only
the beginning of the task before the awakening Open Conspirator. He has
Dot only to think clearly, but he has to see that his mind is equipped
with the proper general ideas to form a true framework for his everyday
judgments and decisions.
It was the Great War first brought home to me
how ignorant I was, and how ill-finished and untidy my mind, about the
most important things of life. That disastrous waste of life, material
and happiness, since it was practically world wide, was manifestly the
outcome of the processes that constitute the bulk of history, and yet I
found I did not know - and nobody else seemed to know - history in such
a fashion as to be able to explain how the Great War came about or what
ought to come out of it. “Versailles,” we all seem to be agreed
nowadays, was silly, but how could Versailles be anything else than what
it was in view of the imperfect, lopsided, historical knowledge and the
consequent suspicion, emotion, and prejudice of those who assembled
there. They did not know any better than the rest of us what the war
was, and so how could they know what the peace ought to be? I perceived
that I was in the same case with everyone else, and I set myself first
of all for my own guidance to make a summary if all history and get some
sort of map to more serviceable conclusions about the political state of
mankind. This summary I made was The Outline of History, a
shameless compilation and arrangement of the main facts of the world
story, written without a touch of art or elegance, written indeed in a
considerable hurry and excitement, and its sale, which is now in the
third million, showed how much I had in common with a great dispersed
crowd of ordinary people, all wanting to know, all disgusted with the
patriotic, litigious twaddling gossipy stuff given them as history by
their schoolmasters and schoolmistresses which had led them into the
disaster of the war.
The Outline of History is not a whole
history of life. Its main theme is the growth of human
intercommunication and human communities and their rulers and conflicts,
the story of how and why the myriads of little tribal systems of ten
thousand years ago have fought and coalesced into the sixty- or
seventy-odd governments of to-day and are now straining and labouring in
the grip of forces that must presently accomplish their final unison.
And even as I completed The Outline, I realized that there
remained outside its scope wider and more fundamental, and closer, more
immediate fields of knowledge which I still had to get in order for my
own practical ends and the ends of like-minded people who wanted to use
their lives effectively, if my existence was to escape futility.
I realized that I did not know enough about the
life in my body and its relations to the world of life and matter
outside it to come to proper decisions about a number of urgent matters
- from race conflicts, birth control, and my private life, to the public
control of health and the conservation of natural resources. And also, I
found, I was astonishingly ignorant about the everyday business of life,
the how and why of the miner who provided the coal to cook my dinner,
and the banker who took my money in return for a cheque-book, and the
shopkeeper from whom I bought things, and the policeman who kept the
streets in order for me. Yet I was voting for laws affecting my
relations with these people, paying them directly or indirectly, airing
my ignorant opinions about them, and generally contributing by my
behaviour to sustain and affect their lives.
So with the aid and direction of two very
competent biologists I set to work to get out as plain and clear a
statement as possible of what was known about the sources and nature of
life and the relation of species to individuals and to other species,
and the processes of consciousness and thought. This I published as The
Science of Life. And while this was going on I set myself to the
task of making a review of all human activities in relation to each
other, the work of people and the needs of people, cultivation,
manufacture, trade, direction, government, and all. This was the most
difficult part of this attempt to get a rational account of the modern
world, and it called for the help and counsel of a great variety of
people. I had to ask and find some general answer to the question,
“What are the nineteen hundred-odd million human beings who are alive
to-day doing, and how and why are they doing it?” It was, in fact, an
outline of economic, social, and political science, but since, after The
Outline of History, the word “outline” has been a good deal
cheapened by various enterprising publishers, I have called it, The
Work, Wealth, and Happiness of Mankind.
Now, I find, by getting these three correlated
compilations into existence, I have at last, in however rough a fashion,
brought together a complete system of ideas upon which an Open
Conspirator can go. Before anyone could hope to get on to anything like
a practical working directive answer to “What are we to do with our
lives?” it was necessary to know what our lives were - The Science
of Life; what had led up to their present pattern - The Outline
of History; and this third book, to tell what we were actually doing
and supposed to be doing with our working lives, day by day, at the
present time. By the time I was through with these books I felt I had
really something sound and comprehensive to go upon, an “ideology,”
as people say, on which it was possible to think of building a new world
without fundamental surprises, and, moreover, that I had got my mind
stripped down and cleaned of many illusions and bad habits, so that it
could handle life with an assurance it had never known before.
There is nothing marvellous about these
compilations of mine. Any steady writer of average intelligence with the
same will and the same resources, who could devote about nine or ten
years to the task and get the Proper sort of help, could have made them.
It can be done, it is no doubt being done, all over again by other
people, for themselves and perhaps for others, much more beautifully and
adequately. But to get that amount of vision and knowledge, to achieve
that general arrangement and understanding, was a necessary condition
that had to be satisfied before any answer to the question, “What are
we to do with our lives?” could even be attempted, and before one
could become in any effective way an Open Conspirator.
There is nothing indispensable even now, I
repeat, about these three particular books. I know about them and refer
to them because I put them together myself and so they are handy for me
to explain myself. But most of what they contain can be extracted from
any good encyclopædia. Any number of people have made similar outlines
of history for themselves, have read widely, grasped the leading
principles of biology and grappled with the current literature of
business science and do not in the least need my particular summary. So
far as history and biology are concerned there are parallel books, that
are as good and serviceable. Van Loon's books for example. Yet even for
highly-educated people these summaries may be useful in bringing things
known with different degrees of thoroughness, into a general scheme.
They correlate, and they fill up gaps. Between them they cover the
ground; and in some fashion that ground has to be covered before the
mind of a modern citizen is prepared to tackle the problems that
confront it. Otherwise he is an incapable citizen, he does not know
where he is and where the world is, and if he is rich or influential he
may be a very dangerous citizen indeed. Presently there will be far
better compilations to meet this need, or perhaps the gist of all the
three divisions of knowledge, concentrated and made more lucid and
attractive, may be available as the intellectual frame of modern
education throughout the world, as a “General Account of Life” that
should be given to everyone.
But certainly no one can possibly set about
living properly and satisfactorily unless he knows what he is, where he
is, and how he stands to the people and things about him.
IV
- The Revolution In Education
Some sort of reckoning
therefore between people awakened to the new world that dawns about us
and the schools, colleges, and machinery of formal education is overdue.
As a body the educated are getting nothing like that Account of Life
which is needed to direct our conduct in this modern world.
It is the crowning absurdity in the world
to-day that these institutions should go through a solemn parade of
preparing the new generation for life and that then, afterwards, a
minority of their victims, finding this preparation has left them almost
totally unprepared, should have of their own accord to struggle out of
our world heap of starved and distorted minds to some sort of real
education. The world cannot be run by such a minority of escaped and
re-educated minds alone, with all the rest of the heap against them. Our
necessities demand the intelligence and services of everyone who can be
trained to give them. The new world demands new schools, therefore, to
give everyone a sound and thorough mental training and equip everyone
with clear ideas about history, about life, and about political and
economic relationships instead of the rubbishy head-content at present
prevalent. The old-world teachers and schools have to be reformed or
replaced. A vigorous educational reform movement arises as a natural and
necessary expression of the awakening Open Conspirator. A revolution in
education is the most imperative and fundamental part of the adaptation
of life to its new conditions.
These various compendia of knowledge
constituting a Modern Account of Life, on which we have laid stress in
the previous section, these supplements to teaching, which are now
produced and read outside the established formal educational world and
in the teeth of its manifest hostility) arise because of the
backwardness of that world, and as that world yields slowly but surely
to the pressure of the new spirit, so they will permeate and replace its
text-books and disappear as a separate class of book. The education
these new dangerous times in which we are now living demands, must start
right, from the beginning and there must be nothing to replace and
nothing to relearn in it. Before we can talk politics, finance,
business, or morals, we must see that we have got the right mental
habits and the right foundation of realized facts. There is nothing much
to be done with our lives until we have seen to that.
V
- Religion In The
New World
“Yes,” objects a
reader, “but does not our religion tell us what we are to do with our
lives?”
We have to bring religion, as its
fundamental matter, into this discussion. From our present point of
view, religion is that central essential part of education which
determines conduct. Religion certainly should tell us what to do with
our lives. But in the vast stir and occasions of modern life, so much of
what we call religion remains irrelevant or dumb. Religion does not seem
to “join on” to the main parts of the general problem of living. It
has lost touch.
Let us try and bring this problem of the
Open Conspiracy to meet and make the new world, into relation with the
traditions of religion. The clear-minded Open Conspirator who has got
his modern ideology, his lucidly arranged account of the universe in
order, is obliged to believe that only by giving his life to the great
processes of social reconstruction, and shaping his conduct with
reference to that, can he do well with his life. But that merely
launches him into the most subtle and unending of struggles, the
struggle against the incessant gravitation of our interests to
ourselves. He has to live the broad life and escape from the close
narrow life. We all try to attain the dignity and happiness of
magnanimity and escape from the tormenting urgencies of personal desire.
In the past that struggle has generally assumed the form of a religious
struggle. Religion is the antagonist of self.
In their completeness, in the life that was
professionally religious, religions have always demanded great
subordinations of self. Therein lay their creative force. They demanded
devotion and gave reasons for that demand. They disentangled the will
from the egotistical preoccupations, often very completely. There is no
such thing as a self-contained religion, a private religious solo.
Certain forms of Protestantism and some mystical types come near to
making religion secluded duet between the individual and his divinity,
but here that may be regarded as a perversion of the religious impulse.
Just as the normal sexual complex excites and stirs the individual out
of his egotism to serve the ends of the race, so the normal religious
process takes the individual out of his egotism for the service of the
community. It is not a bargain, a “social contract,” between the
individual and the community; it is a subordination of both the existing
individual and the existing community in relation to something, a
divinity, a divine order, a standard, a righteousness, more important
than either. What is called in the phraseology of certain religions
“conviction of sin” and “the flight from the City of
Destruction
” are familiar instances of this reference of the self-centred
individual and the current social life to something far better than
either the one or the other.
This is the third element in the religious
relationship, a hope, a promise, an objective which turns the convert
not only from himself but from the “world,” as it is, towards better
things. First comes self disregard then service, and then this
reconstructive creative urgency.
For the finer sort of mind this aspect of
religion seems always to have been its primary attraction. One has to
remember that there is a real will for religion scattered throughout
mankind - a real desire to get away from self. Religion has never
pursued its distinctive votaries; they have come to meet it. The desire
to give oneself to greater ends than the everyday life affords, and to
give oneself freely, is clearly dominant in that minority, and traceable
in an incalculable proportion of the majority.
But hitherto religion has never been presented simply
as a devotion to a universal cause. The devotion has always been in it,
but it has been complicated by other considerations. The leaders in
every great religious movement have considered it necessary that it
should explain itself in the form of history and a cosmogony. It has
been felt necessary to say Why? and To what end? Every
religion therefore has had to adopt the physical conceptions, and
usually also to assume many of the moral and social values, current at
the time of its formation. It could not transcend the philosophical
phrases and attitudes that seemed then to supply the natural frame for a
faith, nor draw upon anything beyond the store of scientific knowledge
of its time. In this lurked the seeds of the ultimate decay and
supersession of every successive religion.
But as the idea of continual change, going
farther and farther from existing realities and never returning to them,
is a new one, as nobody until very recently has grasped the fact that
the knowledge of to day is the ignorance of to-morrow, each fresh
development of religion in the world so far has been proclaimed in
perfect good faith as the culminating and final truth.
This finality of statement has considerable
immediate practical value. The suggestion of the possibility of further
restatement is an unsettling suggestion; it undermines conviction and
breaks the ranks of the believers, because there are enormous variations
in the capacities of men to recognize the same spirit under a changing
shape. These variations cause endless difficulties to-day. While some
intelligences can recognize the same God under a variety of names and
symbols without any severe strain, others cannot even detect the most
contrasted Gods one from the other provided they wear the same mask and
title It appears a perfectly natural and reasonable thing to many minds
to restate religion now in terms of biological and psychological
necessity, while to others any variation whatever in the phrasing of the
faith seems to be nothing less than atheistical misrepresentations of
the most damnable kind. For these latter God a God still anthropomorphic
enough to have a will and purpose to display preferences and reciprocate
emotions, to be indeed in person, must be retained until the end of
time. For others, God can be thought of as a Great First Cause, as
impersonal and inhuman as atomic structure.
It is because of the historical and
philosophical commitments they have undertaken, and because of
concessions made to common human weaknesses in regard to such once
apparently minor but now vital moral issues as property, mental
activity, and public veracity - rather than of any inadequacy in their
adaptation to psychological needs - that the present wide discredit of
organized religions has come about. They no longer seem even roughly
truthful upon issues of fact, and they give no imperatives over large
fields of conduct in which perplexity is prevalent. People will say,
“I could be perfectly happy leading the life of a Catholic devotee if
only I could believe.” But most of the framework of religious
explanation upon which that life is sustained is too old-fashioned and
too irrelevant to admit of that thoroughness of belief which is
necessary for the devotion of intelligent people.
Great ingenuity has been shown by modern
writers and thinkers in the adaptation of venerated religious
expressions to new ideas. Peccavi. [Usu. translated 'I have
sinned' - RW] Have I not written of the creative will in humanity as
“God the Invisible King” and presented it in the figure of a
youthful and adventurous finite god?
The word “God” is in most minds so
associated with the concept of religion that it is abandoned only with
the greatest reluctance. The word remains, though the idea is
continually attenuated. Respect for Him demands that He should have no
limitations. He is pushed farther and farther from actuality, therefore,
and His definition becomes increasingly a bundle of negations, until at
last, in His rôle of The Absolute, He becomes an entirely negative
expression. While we can speak of good, say some, can speak of God. God
is the possibility of goodness, the good side of things. If phrases in
which the name of God is used are to be abandoned, they argue, religion
will be left speechless before many occasions.
Certainly there is something beyond the
individual that is and the world that is; on that we have already
insisted as a characteristic of all religions; that persuasion is the
essence of faith and the key to courage. But whether that is to be
considered, even after the most strenuous exercises in personification,
as a greater person or a comprehensive person, is another matter.
Personality is the last vestige of anthropomorphism. The modern urge to
a precise veracity is against such concessions to traditional
expression.
On the other hand there is in many fine
religious minds a desire amounting almost to a necessity for an object
of devotion so individualized as to be capable at least of a receptive
consciousness even if no definite response is conceded. One type of mind
can accept a reality in itself which another must project and dramatize
before it can comprehend it and react to it. The human soul is an
intricate thing which will not endure elucidation when that passes
beyond a certain degree of harshness and roughness. The human spirit has
learnt love, devotion, obedience and humility in relation to other
personalities, and with difficulty it takes the final step to a
transcendent subordination, from which the last shred of personality has
stripped.
In matters not immediately material, language
has to work by metaphors, and though every metaphor carries its own
peculiar risks of confusion, we cannot do without them. Great
intellectual tolerance is necessary, therefore - a cultivated
disposition to translate and retranslate from one metaphysical or
emotional idiom to another - if there is not to be a deplorable wastage
of moral force in our world. Just now I wrote Peccavi because I
had written God the Invisible King, but after all I do not think it was
so much a sin to use that phrase, God the Invisible King, as an error in
expression. If there is no sympathetic personal leader outside us, there
is at least in us the attitude we should adopt towards a sympathetic
personal leader.
Three profound differences between the new
mental dispositions of the present time and those of preceding ages have
to be realized if current developments of the religious impulse are to
be seen in their correct relationship to the religious life of the past.
There has been a great advance in the analysis of psychic processes and
the courage with which men have probed into the origins of human thought
and feeling. Following upon the biological advances that have made us
recognize fish and amphibian in the bodily structure of man, have come
these parallel developments in which we see elemental fear and lust and
self-love moulded, modified, and exalted, under the stress of social
progress, into intricate human motives. Our conception of sin and our
treatment of sin have been profoundly modified by this analysis. Our
former sins are seen as ignorances, inadequacies and bad habits, and the
moral conflict is robbed of three-fourths of its ego-centred
melodramatic quality. We are no longer moved to be less wicked; we are
moved to organize our conditioned reflexes and lead a life less
fragmentary and silly.
Secondly, the conception of individuality has
been influenced and relaxed by biological thought, so that we do not
think so readily of the individual contra mundum as our fathers
did. We begin to realize that we are egotists by misapprehension. Nature
cheats the self to serve the purposes of the species by filling it with
wants that war against its private interests. As our eyes are opened to
these things, we see ourselves as beings greater or less than the
definitive self. Man's soul is no longer his own. It is, he discovers,
part of a greater being which lived before he was born and will survive
him. The idea of a survival of the definite individual with all the
accidents and idiosyncrasies of his temporal nature upon him dissolves
to nothing in this new view of immortality.
The third of the main contrasts between modern
and former thought which have rendered the general shapes of established
religion old-fashioned and unserviceable is a reorientation of current
ideas about time. The powerful disposition of the human mind to explain
everything as the inevitable unfolding of a past event which, so to
speak, sweeps the future helplessly before it, has been checked by a
mass of subtle criticisms. The conception of progress as a broadening
and increasing purpose, a conception which is taking hold of the human
imagination more and more firmly, turns religious life towards the
future. We think no longer of submission to the irrevocable decrees of
absolute dominion, but of participation in an adventure on behalf of a
power that gains strength and establishes itself. The history of our
world, which has been unfolded to us by science, runs counter to all the
histories on which religions have been based. There was no Creation in
the past, we begin to realize, but eternally there is creation; there
was no Fall to account for the conflict of good and evil, but a stormy
ascent. Life as we know it is a mere beginning.
It seems unavoidable that if religion is to
develop unifying and directive power in the present confusion of human
affairs it must adapt itself to this forward-looking,
individuality-analyzing turn of mind; it must divest itself of its
sacred histories, its gross preoccupations, its posthumous prolongation
of personal ends. The desire for service, for subordination, for
permanent effect, for an escape from the distressful pettiness and
mortality of the individual life, is the undying element in every
religious system.
The time has come to strip religion right down
to that, to strip it for greater tasks than it has ever faced before.
The histories and symbols that served our fathers encumber and divide
us. Sacraments and rituals harbour disputes and waste our scanty
emotions. The explanation of why things are is an unnecessary effort
in religion. The essential fact in religion is the desire for
religion and not how it came about. If you do not want religion, no
persuasions, no convictions about your place in the universe can give it
to you. The first sentence in the modern creed must be, not “I
believe,” but “I give myself.”
To what? And how? To these questions we
will now address ourselves.
VI
- Modern Religion Is Objective
To give oneself
religiously is a continuing operation expressed in a series of acts. It
can be nothing else. You cannot dedicate yourself and then go away to
live just as you have lived before. It is a poor travesty of religion
that does not produce an essential change in the life which embraces it.
But in the established and older religions of our race, this change of
conduct has involved much self-abasement merely to the God or Gods, or
much self-mortification merely with a view to the moral perfecting of
self. Christian devotion, for example, in these early stages, before the
hermit life gave place to organized monastic life, did not to any extent
direct itself to service except the spiritual service of other human
beings. But as Christianity became a definite social organizing force,
it took on a great series of healing, comforting, helping, and
educational activities.
The modern tendency has been and is all in the
direction of minimizing what one might call self-centred devotion and
self-subjugation, and of expanding and developing external service. The
idea of inner perfectibility dwindles with the diminishing importance
attached to individuality. We cease to think of mortifying or exalting
or perfecting ourselves and seek to lose ourselves in a greater life. We
think less and less of “conquering” self and more and more of
escaping from self. If we attempt to perfect ourselves in any respect it
is only as a soldier sharpens and polishes an essential weapon.
Our quickened apprehension of continuing
change, our broader and fuller vision of the history of life, disabuse
our minds of many limitations set to the imaginations of our
predecessors. Much that they saw as fixed and determinate, we see as
transitory and controllable. They saw life fixed in its species and
subjected to irrevocable laws. We see life struggling insecurely but
with a gathering successfulness for freedom and power against
restriction and death. We see life coming at last to our tragic and
hopeful human level. Unprecedented possibilities, mighty problems, we
realize, confront mankind to-day. They frame our existences. The
practical aspect, the material form, the embodiment of the modernized
religious impulse is the direction of the whole life to the solution of
these problems and the realization of their possibilities. The
alternative before man now is either magnificence of spirit and
magnificence of achievement, or disaster.
The modern religious life, like all forms of
religious life, must needs have its own subtle and deep inner
activities, its meditations, its self-confrontations, its phases of
stress and search and appeal, its serene and prayerful moods, but these
inward aspects do not come into the scope of this present inquiry, which
is concerned entirely with the outward shape, the direction, and the
organization of modern religious effort, with the question of what,
given religious devotion, we have to do and how that has to be done.
Now, in the new and greater universe to which
we are awakening, its immense possibilities furnish an entirely new
frame and setting for the moral life. In the fixed and limited outlook
of the past, practical good works took the form mainly of palliative
measures against evils that were conceived of as incurable; the
religious community nursed the sick, fed the hungry, provided sanctuary
for the fugitive, pleaded with the powerful for mercy. It did not dream
of preventing sickness, famine, or tyranny. Other-worldliness was its
ready refuge from the invincible evil and confusion of the existing
scheme of things.
But it is possible now to imagine an order in
human affairs from which these evils have been largely or entirely
eliminated. More and more people are coming to realize that such an
order is a material possibility. And with the realization that this is a
material possibility, we can no longer be content with a field of
“good deeds” and right action restricted to palliative and
consolatory activities. Such things are merely “first aid.” The
religious mind grows bolder than it has ever been before. It pushes
through the curtain it once imagined was a barrier. It apprehends its
larger obligations. The way in which our activities conduce to the
realization of that conceivable better order in human affairs, becomes
the new criterion of conduct. Other-worldliness has become unnecessary.
The realization of this possible better order
brings us at once to certain definite lines of conduct. We have to make
an end to war, and to make an end to war we must be cosmopolitan in our
politics. It is impossible for any clear-headed person to suppose that
the ever more destructive stupidities of war can be eliminated from
human affairs until some common political control dominates the earth,
and unless certain pressures due to the growth of population, due to the
enlarging scope of economic operations or due to conflicting standards
and traditions of life, are disposed of.
To avoid the positive evils of war and to
attain the new levels of prosperity and power that now come into view,
an effective world control, not merely of armed force, but of the
production and main movements of staple commodities and the drift and
expansion of population is required. It is absurd to dream of peace and
world-wide progress without that much control. These things assured the
abilities and energies of a greatly increased proportion of human beings
could be diverted to the happy activities of scientific research and
creative work, with an ever-increasing release and enlargement of human
possibility. On the political side it is plain that our lives must be
given to the advancement of that union.
Such a forward stride in human life, the first
stride in a mighty continuing advance, an advance to which no limit
appears, is now not simply materially possible. It is urgent. The
opportunity is plain before mankind. It is the alternative to social
decay. But there is no certainty, no material necessity, that it should
ever be taken. It will not be taken by mankind inadvertently. It can
only be taken through such an organization of will and energy to take it
as this world has never seen before.
These are the new imperatives that unfold
themselves before the more alert minds of our generation. They will
presently become the general mental background, as the modern
interpretations of the history of life and of the material and mental
possibilities about us establish themselves. Evil political, social, and
economic usages and arrangements may seem obdurate and huge, but they
are neither permanent nor uncontrollable. They can be controlled,
however, only by an effort more powerful and determined than the
instincts and inertias that sustain them. Religion, modern and
disillusioned, has for its outward task to set itself to the control and
direction of political, social, and economic life. If it does not do
that, then it is no more than a drug for easing discomfort, “the opium
of the peoples.”
Can religion, or can it not, synthesize the
needed effort to lift mankind out of our present disorders, dangers,
baseness, frustrations, and futilities to a phase of relative security,
accumulating knowledge, systematic and continuing growth in power and
the widespread, deep happiness of hopeful and increasing life?
Our answer here is that the religious spirit,
in the light of modern knowledge, can do this thing, and our subject now
is to enquire what are the necessary opening stages in the synthesis of
that effort. We write, from this point onward, for those who believe
that it can, and who do already grasp the implications of world history
and contemporary scientific achievement.
VII
- What Mankind Has To Do
Before we can consider
the forms and methods of attacking this inevitable task of
reconstruction it will be well to draw the main lines and to attempt
some measure of the magnitude of that task. What are the new forms that
it is thus proposed to impose upon human life, and how are they to be
evolved from or imposed upon the current forms? And against what passive
and active resistances has this to be done?
There can be no pause for replacement in
the affairs of life. Day must follow day, and the common activities
continue. The new world as a going concern must arise out of the old as
a going concern.
Now the most comprehensive conception of
this new world is of one politically, socially, and economically
unified. Within that frame fall all the other ideas of our progressive
ambition. To this end we set our faces and seek to direct our lives.
Many there are at present who apprehend it as a possibility but do not dare,
it seems, to desire it, because of the enormous difficulties that
intervene, and because they see as yet no intimations of a way through
or round these difficulties. They do not see a way of escape from the
patchwork of governments that grips them and divides mankind. The great
majority of human beings have still to see the human adventure as one
whole; they are obsessed by the air of permanence and finality in
established things; they accept current reality as ultimate reality. As
the saying goes, they take the world as they find it.
But here we are writing for the modern-minded,
and for them it is impossible to think of the world as secure and
satisfactory until there exists a single world commonweal, preventing
war and controlling those moral, biological, and economic forces and
wastages that would otherwise lead to wars. And controlling them in the
sense that science and man's realization and control of his powers and
possibilities continually increase.
Let us make clear what sort of government we
are trying to substitute for the patchwork of to-day. It will be a new
sort of direction with a new psychology. The method of direction of such
a world commonweal is not likely to imitate the methods of existing
sovereign states. It will be something new and altogether different.
This point is not yet generally realized. It is
too often assumed that the world commonweal will be, as it were, just
the one heir and survivor of existing states, and that it will be a sort
of megatherium of the same form and anatomy as its predecessors.
But a little reflection will show that this is
a mistake. Existing states are primarily militant states, and a world
state cannot be militant. There will be little need for president or
king to lead the marshalled hosts of humanity, for where there is no war
there is no need of any leader to lead hosts anywhere, and in a polyglot
world a parliament of mankind or any sort of council that meets and
talks is an inconceivable instrument of government. The voice will cease
to be a suitable vehicle. World government, like scientific process,
will be conducted by statement, criticism, and publication that will be
capable of efficient translation.
The fundamental organization of contemporary
states is plainly still military, and that is exactly what a world
organization cannot be. Flags, uniforms, national anthems, patriotism
sedulously cultivated in church and school, the brag, blare, and bluster
of our competing sovereignties, belong to the phase of development the
Open Conspiracy will supersede. We have to get clear of that clutter.
The reasonable desire of all of us is that we should have the collective
affairs of the world managed by suitably equipped groups of the most
interested, intelligent, and devoted people, and that their activities
should be subjected to a free, open, watchful criticism, restrained from
making spasmodic interruptions but powerful enough to modify or
supersede without haste or delay whatever is weakening or unsatisfactory
in the general direction.
A number of readers will be disposed to say
that this is a very vague, undefined, and complicated conception of
world government. But indeed it is a simplification. Not only are the
present governments of the world a fragmentary competitive confusion,
but none of them is as simple as it appears. They seem to be simple
because they have formal heads and definite forms, councils, voting
assemblies, and so forth, for arriving at decisions. But the formal
heads, the kings, presidents, and so forth, are really not the directive
heads. They are merely the figure heads. They do not decide. They merely
make gestures of potent and dignified acquiescence when decisions are
put to them. They are complicating shams. Nor do the councils and
assemblies really decide. They record, often very imperfectly and
exasperatingly, the accumulating purpose of outer forces. These outer
really directive forces are no doubt very intricate in their operation;
they depend finally on religious and educational forms and upon waves of
gregarious feeling, but it does not in the least simplify the process of
collective human activity to pretend that it is simple and to set up
symbols and dummies in the guise of rulers and dictators to embody that
pretence. To recognize the incurable intricacy of collective action is a
mental simplification; to remain satisfied with the pretensions of
existing governmental institutions, and to bring in all the problems of
their procedure and interaction is to complicate the question.
The present rudimentary development of
collective psychology obliges us to be vague and provisional about the
way in which the collective mind may best define its will for the
purpose of administrative action. We may know that a thing is possible
and still be unable to do it as yet, just as we knew that aviation was
possible in 1900. Some method of decision there must certainly be and a
definite administrative machinery. But it may turn out to be a much
slighter, less elaborate organization than a consideration of existing
methods might lead us to imagine. It may never become one single
interlocking administrative system. We may have systems of world control
rather than a single world state. The practical regulations,
enforcements, and officials needed to keep the world in good health, for
example may be only very loosely related to the system of controls that
will maintain its communications in a state of efficiency. Enforcement
and legal decisions, as we know them now, may be found to be enormously
and needlessly cumbrous by our descendants. As the reasonableness of a
thing is made plain, the need for its enforcement is diminished, and the
necessity for litigation disappears.
The Open Conspiracy, the world movement for the
supercession or enlargement or fusion of existing political, economic,
and social institutions must necessarily, as it grows, draw closer and
closer to questions of practical control. It is likely in its growth to
incorporate many active public servants and many industrial and
financial leaders and directors. It may assimilate great masses of
intelligent workers. As its activities spread it will work out a whole
system of special methods of co-operation. As it grows, and by growing,
it will learn the business of general direction and how to develop its
critical function. A lucid, dispassionate, and immanent criticism is the
primary necessity, the living spirit of a world civilization. The Open
Conspiracy is essentially such a criticism, and the carrying out of such
a criticism into working reality is the task of the Open Conspiracy. It
will by its very nature be aiming not so much to set up a world
direction, as to become itself a world direction, and the educational
and militant forms of its opening phase will evoke, step by step, as
experience is gained and power and responsibility acquired, forms of
administration and research and correlation.
The differences in nature and function
between the world controls of the future and the state governments of
the present age which we have just pointed out favours a hope that the
Open Conspiracy may come to its own in many cases rather by the fading
out of these state governments through the inhibition and paralysis of
their destructive militant and competitive activities than by a direct
conflict to overthrow them. As new world controls develop, it becomes
the supreme business of the Open Conspiracy to keep them world wide and
impartial, to save them by an incessant critical educational and
propagandist activity from entanglement with the old traditional
rivalries and feuds of states and nations. It is quite possible that
such world controls should be able to develop independently, but it is
highly probable, on the other hand, that they will continue to be
entangled as they are to-day, and that they will need to be disengaged
with a struggle. We repeat, the new directive organizations of men's
affairs will not be of the same nature as old-fashioned governments.
They will be in their nature biological, financial, and generally
economic, and the old governments were primarily nothing of the sort.
Their directive force will be (1) an effective criticism having the
quality of science, and (2) the growing will in men to have things
right. The directive force of the older governments was the uncriticized
fantasies and wilfulness of an individual, a class, a tribe, or a
majority.
The modernization of the religious
impulse leads us straight to this effort for the establishment of the
world state as a duty, and the close consideration of the necessary
organization of that effort will bring the reader to the conclusion that
a movement aiming at the establishment of a world directorate, however
restricted that movement may be at first in numbers and power, must
either contemplate the prospect of itself developing into a world
directorate, and by the digestion and assimilation of superseded factors
into an entire modern world community, or admit from the outset the
futility, the spare-time amateurishness, of its gestures.
VIII
- Broad Characteristics Of A Scientific World Commonweal
Continuing our
examination of the practical task before the modern mind, we may next
note the main lines of contemporary aspiration within this comprehensive
outline of a world commonweal. Any sort of unification of human affairs
will not serve the ends we seek. We aim at a particular sort of
unification; a world Caesar is hardly better from the progressive
viewpoint than world chaos; the unity we seek must mean a world-wide
liberation of thought, experiment and creative effort.
A successful Open Conspiracy merely to seize
governments and wield and retain world power would be at best only the
empty frame of success. It might be the exact reverse of success.
Release from the threat of war and from the waste of international
economic conflicts is a poor release if it demands as its price the loss
of all other liberties.
It is because we desire a unification of human
direction, not simply for the sake of unity, but as a means of release
to happiness and power, that it is necessary, at any cost - in delay, in
loss of effective force, in strategic or tactical disadvantage - that
the light of free, abundant criticism should play upon that direction
and upon the movements and unifying organizations leading to the
establishment of that unifying direction.
Man is an imperfect animal and never quite
trustworthy in the dark. Neither morally nor intellectually is he safe
from lapses. Most of us who are past our first youth know how little we
can trust ourselves and glad to have our activities checked and guarded
by a sense of helpful inspection. It is for this reason that a movement
to realize the conceivable better state of the world must deny itself
the advantages of secret methods and tactical insincerities. It must
leave that to its adversaries. We must declare our end plainly from the
outset and risk no misunderstandings of our procedure.
The Open Conspiracy against the traditional and
now cramping and dangerous institutions of the world must be an Open
Conspiracy and cannot remain righteous otherwise. It is lost if it goes
underground. Every step to world unity must be taken in the daylight
with the understanding sympathy of as many people as possible, or the
sort of unity that will be won will be found to be scarcely worth the
winning. The essential task would have to be recommenced again within
the mere frame of unity thus attained.
This candid attempt to take possession of the
whole world, this Open Conspiracy of ours, must be made in the name of
and for the sake of science and creative activity. Its aim is to release
science and creative activity and every stage in the struggle must be
watched and criticized, lest there be any sacrifice of these ends to the
exigencies of conflict.
The security of creative progress and creative
activity implies a competent regulation of the economic life in the
collective interest. There must be food, shelter and leisure for all.
The fundamental needs of the animal life must be assured before human
life can have free play. Man does not live by bread alone; he eats that
he may learn and adventure creatively, but unless he eats he cannot
adventure. His life is primarily economic, as a house is primarily a
foundation, and economic justice and efficiency must underlie all other
activities; but to judge human society and organize political and social
activities entirely on economic grounds is to forget the objectives of
life's campaign in a preoccupation with supply.
It is true that man, like the animal world in
general from which he has risen, is the creature of a struggle for
sustenance, but unlike the animals, man can resort to methods of escape
from that competitive pressure upon the means of subsistence, which has
been the lot of every other animal species. He can restrain the increase
in his numbers, and he seems capable of still quite undefined expansions
of his productivity per head of population. He can escape therefore from
the struggle for subsistence altogether with a surplus of energy such as
no other kind of animal species has ever possessed. Intelligent control
of population is a possibility which puts man outside competitive
processes that have hitherto ruled the modification of species, and he
can be released from these processes in no other way.
There is a clear hope that, later, directed
breeding will come within his scope, but that goes beyond his present
range of practical achievement, and we need not discuss it further here.
Suffice it for us here that the world community of our desires, the
organized world community conducting and ensuring its own progress,
requires a deliberate collective control of population as a primary
condition.
There is no strong instinctive desire for
multitudinous offspring, as such, in the feminine make-up. The
reproductive impulses operate indirectly. Nature ensures a pressure of
population through passions and instincts that, given sufficient
knowledge, intelligence, and freedom on the part of women, can be
satisfactorily gratified and tranquillized, if need be, without the
production of numerous children. Very slight adjustments in social and
economic arrangements will, in a world of clear available knowledge and
straightforward practice in these matters, supply sufficient inducement
or discouragement to affect the general birth rate or the birth rate of
specific types as the directive sense of the community may consider
desirable. So long as the majority of human beings are begotten
involuntarily in lust and ignorance so long does man remain like any
other animal under the moulding pressure of competition for subsistence.
Social and political processes change entirely in their character when
we recognize the possibility and practicability of this fundamental
revolution in human biology.
In a world so relieved, the production of
staple necessities presents a series of problems altogether less
distressful than those of the present scramble for possessions and
self-indulgence on the part of the successful, and for work and a bare
living on the part of the masses. With the increase of population
unrestrained, there was, as the end of the economic process, no
practical alternative to a multitudinous equality at the level of bare
subsistence, except through such an inequality of economic arrangements
as allowed a minority to maintain a higher standard of life by
withholding whatever surplus of production it could grasp, from
consumption in mere proletarian breeding. In the past and at present,
what is called the capitalist system, that is to say the unsystematic
exploitation of production by private owners under the protection of the
law, has, on the whole, in spite of much waste and conflict, worked
beneficially by checking that gravitation to a universal low-grade
consumption which would have been the inevitable outcome of a socialism
oblivious of biological processes. With effective restraint upon the
increase of population, however, entirely new possibilities open out
before mankind.
The besetting vice of economic science,
orthodox and unorthodox alike, has been the vice of beginning in the
air, with current practice and current convictions, with questions of
wages, prices, values, and possession, when the profounder issues of
human association are really not to be found at all on these levels. The
primary issues of human association are biological and psychological,
and the essentials of economics are problems in applied physics and
chemistry. The first thing we should examine is what we want to do with
natural resources, and the next, how to get men to do what has to be
done as pleasurably and effectively as possible. Then we should have a
standard by which to judge the methods of to-day.
But the academic economists, and still more so
Marx and his followers, refuse to deal with these fundamentals, and,
with a stupid pose of sound practical wisdom, insist on opening up their
case with an uncritical acceptance of the common antagonism of employers
and employed and a long rigmarole about profits and wages. Ownership and
expropriated labour are only one set of many possible sets of economic
method.
The economists, however, will attend seriously
only to the current set; the rest they ignore; and the Marxists, with
their uncontrollable disposition to use nicknames in the place of
judgments, condemn all others as “Utopian” - a word as final in its
dismissal from the minds of the elect as that other pet counter in the
Communist substitute for thought, “Bourgeois.” If they can persuade
themselves that an idea or a statement is “Utopian” or
“Bourgeois,” it does not seem to matter in the least to them whether
it is right or wrong. It is disposed of. Just as in genteeler circles
anything is disposed of that can be labelled “atheistical”,
“subversive” or “disloyal.”
If a century and a half ago the world had
submitted its problems of transport to the economists, they would have
put aside, with as little wasted breath and ink as possible, all talk
about railways, motorcars, steamships, and aeroplanes, and, with a fine
sense of extravagance rebuked, set themselves to long neuralgic
dissertations, disputations, and treatises upon highroads and the
methods of connecting them, turnpike gates, canals, influence of lock
fees on bargemen, tidal landing places, anchorages, surplus carrying
capacity, carriers, caravans, hand-barrows, and the pedestrianariat.
There would have been a rapid and easy differentiation in feeling and
requirements between the horse-owning minority and the walking majority;
the wrongs of the latter would have tortured the mind of every
philosopher who could not ride, and been minimized by every philosopher
who could; and there would have been a broad rift between the
narrow-footpath school, the no-footpath school, and the school which
would look forward to a time when every horse would have to be led along
one universal footpath under the dictatorship of the pedestrianariat.
All with the profoundest gravity and dignity. These things, footpaths
and roads and canals with their traffic, were “real,” and
“Utopian” projects for getting along at thirty or forty miles an
hour or more uphill and against wind and tide, let alone the still more
incredible suggestion of air transport, would have been smiled and
sneered out of court. Life went about on its with a certain assistance
from wheels, or floated, rowed and was blown about on water; so it had
been - and so it would always be.
The psychology of economic co-operation is
still only dawning, and so the economists and the doctrinaire socialists
have had the freest range for pedantry and authoritative pomp. For a
hundred years they have argued and argued about “rent,” about
“surplus value,” and so on, and have produced a literature ten
thousand times as bulky, dreary, and foolish as the worst outpourings of
the mediaeval schoolmen.
But as soon as this time-honoured
preoccupation with the allotment of the shares of originators,
organizers, workers, owners of material, credit dealers, and tax
collectors in the total product, ceases to be dealt with as the primary
question in economics; as soon as we liberate our minds from a
preoccupation which from the outset necessarily makes that science a
squabble rather than a science, and begin our attack upon the subject
with a survey of the machinery and other productive material required in
order that the staple needs of mankind should be satisfied, if we go on
from that to consider the way in which all this material and machinery
can be worked and the product distributed with the least labour and the
greatest possible satisfaction, we shift our treatment of economic
questions towards standards by which all current methods of
exploitation, employment, and finance can be judged rather than wrangled
over. We can dismiss the question of the claims of this sort of
participant or that, for later and subordinate consideration, and view
each variety of human assistance in the general effort entirely from the
standpoint of what makes that assistance least onerous and most
effective.
The germs of such really scientific economics
exist already in the study of industrial organization and industrial
psychology. As the science of industrial psychology in particular
develops, we shall find all this discussion of ownership, profit, wages,
finance, and accumulation, which has been treated hitherto as the
primary issues of economics, falling into place under the larger enquiry
of what conventions in these matters, what system of money and what
conceptions of property, yield the greatest stimulus and the least
friction in that world-wide system of co-operation which must constitute
the general economic basis to the activities of a unified mankind.
Manifestly the supreme direction of the complex
of human economic activities in such a world must centre upon a bureau
of information and advice, which will take account of all the resources
of the planet, estimate current needs, apportion productive activities
and control distribution. The topographical and geological surveys of
modern civilized communities, their government maps, their periodic
issue of agricultural and industrial statistics, are the first crude and
unco-ordinated beginnings of such an economic world intelligence. In the
propaganda work of David Lubin, a pioneer whom mankind must not forget,
and in his International Institute of Agriculture in
Rome
, there were the beginnings of an impartial review month by month and
year by year of world production, world needs and world transport. Such
a great central organization of economic science would necessarily
produce direction; it would indicate what had best be done here, there,
and everywhere, solve general tangles, examine, approve and initiate
fresh methods and arrange the transitional process from old to new. It
would not be an organization of will, imposing its will upon a reluctant
or recalcitrant race; it would be a direction, just as a map is a
direction.
A map imposes no will on anyone, breaks no one
in to its “policy.” And yet we obey our maps.
The will to have the map full, accurate, and up
to date, and the determination to have its indications respected, would
have to pervade the whole community. To nourish and sustain that will
must be the task not of any particular social or economic division of
the community, but of the whole body of right-minded people in that
community. The organization and preservation of that power of will is
the primary undertaking, therefore, of a world revolution aiming at
universal peace, welfare and happy activity. And through that will it
will produce as the central organ the brain of the modern community, a
great encyclopædic organization, kept constantly up to date and giving
approximate estimates and directions for all the material activities of
mankind.
The older and still prevalent conception of
government is bullying, is the breaking-in and subjugation of the
“subject,” to the God, or king, or lords of the community.
Will-bending, the overcoming of the recalcitrant junior and inferior,
was an essential process in the establishment of primitive societies,
and its tradition still rules our education and law. No doubt there must
be a necessary accommodation of the normal human will to every form of
society; no man is innately virtuous; but compulsion and restraint are
the friction of the social machine and, other things being equal, the
less compulsive social arrangements are, the more willingly, naturally,
and easily they are accepted, the less wasteful of moral effort and the
happier that community will be. The ideal state, other things being
equal, is the state with the fewest possible number of will fights and
will suppressions. This must be a primary consideration in arranging the
economic, biological, and mental organization of the world community at
which we aim.
We have advanced the opinion that the control
of population pressure is practicable without any violent conflict with
“human nature,” that given a proper atmosphere of knowledge and
intention, there need be far less suppression of will in relation to
production than prevails to-day. In the same way, it is possible that
the general economic life of mankind may be made universally
satisfactory that there may be an abundance out of all comparison
greater than the existing supply of things necessary for human
well-being, freedom, and activity, with not merely not more, but
infinitely less subjugation and enslavement than now occurs. Man is
still but half born out of the blind struggle for existence, and his
nature still partakes of the infinite wastefulness of his mother Nature.
He has still to learn how to price the commodities he covets in terms of
human life. He is indeed only beginning to realize that there is
anything to be learnt in that matter. He wastes will and human
possibility extravagantly in his current economic methods.
We know nowadays that the nineteenth century
expended a great wealth of intelligence upon a barren controversy
between Individualism and Socialism. They were treated as mutually
exclusive alternatives, instead of being questions of degree. Human
society has been is and always must be an intricate system of
adjustments between unconditional liberty and the disciplines and
subordinations of co-operative enterprise. Affairs do not move simply
from a more individualist to a more socialist state or vice versa; there
may be a release of individual initiative going on here and
standardization or restraint increasing there. Personal property never
can be socially guaranteed as the extremer individualists desired, nor
can it be “abolished” as the extremer socialists proposed. Property
is not robbery, as Proudhon asserted; it is the protection of things
against promiscuous and mainly wasteful use. Property is not necessarily
personal. In some cases property may restrict or forbid a use of things
that could be generally advantageous, and it may be and is frequently
unfair in its assignment of initiative, but the remedy for that is not
an abolition but a revision of property. In the concrete it is a form
necessary for liberty of action upon material, while abstracted as
money, which is a liquidated generalized form of property; it is a
ticket for individual liberty of movement and individual choice of
reward.
The economic history of mankind is a history of
the operation of the idea of property; it relates the conflict of the
unlimited acquisitiveness of egoistic individuals against the resentment
of the disinherited and unsuccessful and the far less effective
consciousness of a general welfare. Money grew out of a system of
abstracting conventions and has been subjected to a great variety of
restrictions, monopolizations, and regulations. It has never been an
altogether logical device, and it has permitted the most extensive and
complex developments of credit, debt, and dispossession. All these
developments have brought with them characteristic forms of misuse and
corruption. The story is intricate, and the tangle of relationships, of
dependence, of pressure, of interception, of misdirected services,
crippling embarrassments, and crushing obligations in which we live
to-day admits of no such simple and general solutions as many exponents
of socialism, for example, seem to consider possible.
But the thought and investigations of the
past century or so have made it clear that a classification of property,
according to the nature of the rights exercisable and according to the
range of ownership involved, must be the basis of any system of social
justice in the future.
Certain things, the ocean, the air, rare wild
animals, must be the collective property of all mankind and cannot be
altogether safe until they are so regarded, and until some concrete body
exists to exercise these proprietary rights. Whatever collective control
exists must protect these universal properties, the sea from derelicts,
the strange shy things of the wild from extermination by the hunter and
the foolish collector. The extinction of many beautiful creatures is one
of the penalties our world is paying for its sluggishness in developing
a collective common rule. And there are many staple things and general
needs that now also demand a unified control in the common interest. The
raw material of the earth should be for all, not to be monopolized by
any acquisitive individual or acquisitive sovereign state, and not to be
withheld from exploitation for the general benefit of any chance claims
to territorial priority of this or that backward or bargaining person or
tribe.
In the past, most of these universal concerns
have had to be left to the competitive enterprise of profit-seeking
individuals because there were as yet no collectivities organized to the
pitch of ability needed to develop and control these concerns, but
surely nobody in his senses believes that the supply and distribution of
staple commodities about the earth by irresponsible persons and
companies working entirely for monetary gain is the best possible method
from the point of view of the race as a whole. The land of the earth,
all utilizable natural products, have fallen very largely under the
rules and usages of personal property because in the past that was the
only recognized and practicable form of administrative proprietorship.
The development both of extensive proprietary companies and of
government departments with economic functions has been a matter of the
last few centuries, the development, that is to say, of communal, more
or less impersonal ownership, and it is only through these developments
that the idea of organized collectivity of proprietorship has become
credible.
Even in quite modern state enterprises there is
a tendency to recall the rôle of the vigilant, jealous, and primitive
personal proprietor in the fiction of ownership by His Majesty the King.
In
Great Britain
, for example, Georgius Rex is still dimly supposed to hover over the
Postmaster General of his Post Office, approve, disapprove, and call him
to account. But the Postal Union of the world which steers a registered
letter from
Chile
to
Norway
or from
Ireland
to
Pekin
is almost completely divorced from the convention of an individual
owner. It works; it is criticized without awe or malice. Except for the
stealing and steaming of letters practised by the political police of
various countries, it works fairly well. And the only force behind it to
keep it working well is the conscious common sense of mankind.
But when we have stipulated for the
replacement of individual private ownership by more highly organized
forms of collective ownership, subject to free criticism and responsible
to the whole republic of mankind, in the general control of sea and
land, in the getting, preparation, and distribution of staple products
and in transport, we have really named all the possible generalizations
of concrete ownership that the most socialistic of contemporaries will
be disposed to demand. And if we add to that the necessary maintenance
of a money system by a central world authority upon a basis that will
make money keep faith with the worker who earns it, and represent from
first to last for him the value in staple commodities he was given to
understand it was to have, and if we conceive credit adequately
controlled in the general interest by a socialized world banking
organization, we shall have defined the entire realm from which
individual property and unrestricted individual enterprise have been
excluded. Beyond that, the science of social psychology will probably
assure us that the best work will be done for the world by individuals
free to exploit their abilities as they wish. If the individual
landowner or mineral-owner disappears altogether from the world, he will
probably be replaced over large areas by tenants with considerable
security of tenure, by householders and by licensees under collective
proprietors. It will be the practice, the recognized best course, to
allow the cultivator to profit as fully as possible by his own
individual productivity and to leave the householder to fashion his
house and garden after his own desire.
Such in the very broadest terms is the
character of the world commonweal towards which the modern imagination
is moving, so far as its direction and economic life are concerned. The
organization of collective bodies capable of exercising these wider
proprietorships, which cannot be properly used in the common interest by
uncorrelated individual owners, is the positive practical problem before
the intelligent portion of mankind to-day. The nature of such collective
bodies is still a series of open questions, even upon such points as
whether they will be elected bodies or groups deriving their authority
from other sanctions. Their scope and methods of operation, their
relations to one another and to the central bureau of intelligence,
remain also to be defined. But before we conclude this essay we may be
able to find precisions for at least the beginning of such definition.
Nineteenth-century socialism in its various
forms, including the highly indurated formulae of communism, has been a
series of projects for the establishment of such collective controls,
for the most part very sketchy projects from which the necessary factor
of a sound psychological analysis was almost completely wanting.
Primarily movements of protest and revolt against the blazing injustices
arising out of the selfishly individualistic exploitation of the new and
more productive technical and financial methods of the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, they have been apt to go beyond the limits of
reasonable socialization in their demands and to minimize absurdly the
difficulties and dangers of collective control. Indignation and
impatience were their ruling moods, and if they constructed little they
exposed much. We are better able to measure the magnitude of the task
before us because of the clearances and lessons achieved by these
pioneer movements.
IX
- No Stable Utopia Is Now Conceivable
This unified world
towards which the Open Conspiracy would direct its activities cannot be
pictured for the reader as any static and stereotyped spectacle of
happiness. Indeed, one may doubt if such a thing as happiness is
possible without steadily changing conditions involving continually
enlarging and exhilarating opportunities. Mankind, released from the
pressure of population, the waste of warfare and the private
monopolization of the sources of wealth, will face the universe with a
great and increasing surplus of will and energy. Change and novelty will
be the order of life; each day will differ from its predecessor in its
great amplitude of interest. Life which was once routine, endurance, and
mischance will become adventure and discovery. It will no longer be
“the old, old story.”
We have still barely emerged from among
the animals in their struggle for existence. We live only in the early
dawn of human self-consciousness and in the first awakening of the
spirit of mastery. We believe that the persistent exploration of our
outward and inward worlds by scientific and artistic endeavour will lead
to developments of power and activity upon which at present we can set
no limits nor give any certain form.
Our antagonists are confusion of mind,
want of courage, want of curiosity and want of imagination, indolence,
and spendthrift egotism. These are the enemies against which the Open
Conspiracy arrays itself; these are the jailers of human freedom and
achievement.
X
- The Open Conspiracy Is Not To Be Thought Of As A Single Organization;
It Is A Conception Of Life Out Of Which Efforts, Organizations, And New
Orientations Will Arise
This open and declared
intention of establishing a world order out
of the present patchwork of particularist governments, of effacing the
militarist conceptions that have hitherto given governments their
typical form, and of removing credit and the broad fundamental processes
of economic life out of reach of private profit-seeking and individual
monopolization, which is the substance of this Open Conspiracy to which
the modern religious mind must necessarily address its practical
activities, cannot fail to arouse enormous opposition. It is not a
creative effort in a clear field; it is a creative effort that can
hardly stir without attacking established things. It is the repudiation
of drift, of “leaving things alone.” It criticizes everything in
human life from the top to the bottom and finds everything not good
enough. It strikes at the universal human desire to feel that things are
“all right.”
One might conclude, and it would be a hasty,
unsound conclusion, that the only people to whom we could look for
sympathy and any passionate energy in forwarding the revolutionary
change would be the unhappy, the discontented, the dispossessed,
and the defeated in life's struggle. This idea lies at the root of the
class-war dogmas of the Marxists, and it rests on an entirely crude
conception of human nature. The successful minority is supposed to have
no effective motive but a desire to retain and intensify its advantages.
A quite imaginary solidarity to that end is attributed to it, a
preposterous, base class activity. On the other hand, the unsuccessful
mass - “proletariat” - is supposed to be capable of a clear
apprehension of its disadvantages, and the more it is impoverished and
embittered, the clearer-minded it becomes, and the nearer draws its
uprising, its constructive “dictatorship,” and the Millennium.
No doubt a considerable amount of truth is to
be found in this theory of the Marxist revolution. Human beings, like
other animals, are disposed to remain where their circumstances are
tolerable and to want change when they are uncomfortable, and so a great
proportion of the people who are “well off” want little or no change
in present conditions, particularly those who are too dull to be bored
by an unprogressive life, while a great proportion of those who actually
feel the inconveniences of straitened means and population pressure, do.
But much vaster masses of the rank and file of humanity are accustomed
to inferiority and dispossession, they do not feel these things to the
extent even of desiring change, or even if they do feel their
disadvantages, they still fear change more than they dislike their
disadvantages. Moreover, those who are sufficiently distressed to
realize that “something ought to be done about it” are much more
disposed to childish and threatening demands upon heaven and the
government for redress and vindictive and punitive action against the
envied fortunate with whom they happen to be in immediate contact, than
to any reaction towards such complex, tentative, disciplined
constructive work as alone can better the lot of mankind. In practice
Marxism is found to work out in a ready resort to malignantly
destructive activities, and to be so uncreative as to be practically
impotent in the face of material difficulties. In Russia, where - in and
about the urban centres, at least - Marxism has been put to the test,
the doctrine of the Workers' Republic remains as a unifying cant, a test
of orthodoxy of as little practical significance there as the communism
of Jesus and communion with Christ in Christendom, while beneath this
creed a small oligarchy which has attained power by its profession does
its obstinate best, much hampered by the suspicion and hostility of the
Western financiers and politicians, to carry on a series of interesting
and varyingly successful experiments in the socialization of economic
life. Here we have no scope to discuss the N.E.P. and the Five Year
Plan. They are dealt with in The Work, Wealth, and Happiness of
Mankind. Neither was properly Communist. The Five Year Plan is
carried out as an autocratic state capitalism. Each year shows more and
more clearly that Marxism and Communism are divagations from the path of
human progress and that the line of advance must follow a course more
intricate and less flattering to the common impulses of our nature.
The one main strand of truth in the theory of
social development woven by Marx and Engels is that successful,
comfortable people are disposed to dislike, obstruct and even resist
actively any substantial changes in the current patchwork of
arrangements, however great the ultimate dangers of that patchwork may
be or the privations and sufferings of other people involved in it. The
one main strand of error in that theory is the facile assumption that
the people at a disadvantage will be stirred to anything more than
chaotic and destructive expressions of resentment. If now we reject the
error and accept the truth, we lose the delusive comfort of belief in
that magic giant, the Proletariat, who will dictate, arrange, restore,
and create, but we clear the way for the recognition of an élite of
intelligent, creative-minded people scattered through the whole
community, and for a study of the method of making this creative element
effective in human affairs against the massive oppositions of
selfishness and unimaginative self-protective conservatism.
Now, certain classes of people such as thugs
and burglars seem to be harmful to society without a redeeming point
about them, and others, such as racecourse bookmakers, seem to provide
the minimum of distraction and entertainment with a maximum of mischief.
Wilful idlers are a mere burthen on the community. Other social classes
again, professional soldiers, for example, have a certain traditional
honourableness which disguises the essentially parasitic relationship of
their services to the developing modern community. Armies and armaments
are cancers produced by the malignant development of the patriotic virus
under modern conditions of exaggeration and mass suggestion. But since
there are armies prepared to act coercively in the world to-day, it is
necessary that the Open Conspiracy should develop within itself the
competence to resist military coercion and combat and destroy armies
that stand in the way of its emergence. Possibly the first two types
here instanced may be condemned as classes and excluded as classes from
any participation in the organized effort to recast the world, but quite
obviously the soldier cannot. The world commonweal will need its own
scientific methods of protection so long as there are people running
about the planet with flags and uniforms and weapons, offering violence
to their fellow men and interfering with the free movements of
commodities in the name of national sovereignty.
And when we come to the general functioning
classes, landowners, industrial organizers, bankers, and so forth, who
control the present system, such as it is, it should be still plainer
that it is very largely from the ranks of these classes, and from their
stores of experience and traditions of method, that the directive forces
of the new order must emerge. The Open Conspiracy can have nothing to do
with the heresy that the path of human progress lies through an
extensive class war.
Let us consider, for example, how the
Open Conspiracy stands to such a complex of activities, usages,
accumulations, advantages as constitutes the banking world. There are no
doubt many bankers and many practices m banking which make for personal
or group advantage to the general detriment. They forestall, monopolize,
constrain, and extort, and so increase their riches. And another large
part of that banking world follows routine and established usage; it is
carrying on and keeping things going, and it is neither inimical nor
conducive to the development of a progressive world organization of
finance. But there remains a residuum of original and intelligent people
in banking or associated with banking or mentally interested in banking,
who do realize that banking plays a very important, interesting part in
the world's affairs, who are curious about their own intricate function
and disposed towards a scientific investigation of its origins,
conditions, and future possibilities. Such types move naturally towards
the Open Conspiracy. Their enquiries carry them inevitably outside the
bankers' habitual field to an examination of the nature, drift, and
destiny of the entire economic process.
Now the theme of the preceding paragraph might
be repeated with variations through a score of paragraphs in which
appropriate modifications would adapt it to the industrial organizer,
the merchant and organizer of transport, the advertiser, the retail
distributor, the agriculturalist, the engineer, the builder, the
economic chemist, and a number of other types functional in the
contemporary community. In all we should distinguish firstly a base and
harmful section, then a mediocre section following established usage,
and lastly, an active, progressive section to whom we turn naturally for
developments leading towards the progressive world commonweal of our
desires. And our analysis might penetrate further than separation into
types of individuals. In nearly every individual instance we should find
a mixed composition, a human being of fluctuating moods and confused
purposes, sometimes base, sometimes drifting with the tide and sometimes
alert and intellectually and morally quickened. The Open Conspiracy must
be content to take a fraction of a man, as it appeals to fractions of
many classes, if it cannot get him altogether.
This idea of drawing together a proportion of
all or nearly all the functional classes in contemporary communities in
order to weave the beginnings of a world community out of their
selection is a fairly obvious one - and yet it has still to win
practical recognition. Man is a morbidly gregarious and partisan
creature; he is deep in his immediate struggles and stands by his own
kind because in so doing he defends himself; the industrialist is best
equipped to criticize his fellow industrialist, but he finds the root of
all evil in the banker; the wages worker shifts the blame for all social
wrongs on the “employing class.” There is an element of exasperation
in most economic and social reactions, and there is hardly a reforming
or revolutionary movement in history which is not essentially an
indiscriminate attack of one functioning class or type upon another, on
the assumption that the attacked class is entirely to blame for the
clash and that the attacking class is self-sufficient in the commonweal
and can dispense with its annoying collaborator. A considerable element
of justice usually enters into such recriminations. But the Open
Conspiracy cannot avail itself of these class animosities for its
driving force. It can have, therefore, no uniform method of approach.
For each class it has a conception of modification and development, and
each class it approaches therefore at a distinctive angle. Some classes,
no doubt, it would supersede altogether; others - the scientific
investigator, for example - it must regard as almost wholly good and
seek only to multiply and empower, but it can no more adopt the
prejudices and extravagances of any particular class as its basis than
it can adopt the claims of any existing state or empire.
When it is clearly understood that the binding
links of the Open Conspiracy we have in mind are certain broad general
ideas, and that - except perhaps in the case of scientific workers - we
have no current set of attitudes of mind and habits of activity which we
can turn over directly and unmodified to the service of the conspiracy,
we are in a position to realize that the movement we contemplate must
from the outset be diversified in its traditions and elements and
various in its methods. It must fight upon several fronts and with many
sorts of equipment. It will have a common spirit, but it is quite
conceivable that between many of its contributory factors there may be
very wide gaps in understanding and sympathy. It is no sort of simple
organization.
XI
- Forces And Resistances In The Great Modern Communities Now Prevalent,
Which Are Antagonistic To The Open Conspiracy. The War With Tradition
We have now stated
broadly but plainly the idea of the world commonweal which is the
objective of the Open Conspiracy, and we have made a preliminary
examination of the composition of that movement, showing that it must be
necessarily not a class development, but a convergence of many different
sorts of people upon a common idea. Its opening task must be the
elaboration, exposition, and propaganda of this common idea, a steady
campaign to revolutionize education and establish a modern ideology in
men's minds and, arising out of this, the incomparably vaster task of
the realization of its ideas.
These are tasks not to be done in vacuo;
they have to be done in a dense world of crowding, incessant,
passionate, unco-ordinated activities, the world of market and
newspaper, seed-time and harvest, births, deaths, jails, hospitals,
riots, barracks and army manoeuvres, false prophets and royal
processions, games and shows, fire, storm, pestilence, earthquake, war.
Every day and every hour things will be happening to help or thwart,
stimulate or undermine, obstruct or defeat the creative effort to set up
the world commonweal.
Before we go on to discuss the selection and
organization of these heterogeneous and mainly religious impulses upon
which we rest our hopes of a greater life for mankind, before we plan
how these impulses may be got together into a system of co-ordinated
activities, it will be well to review the main antagonistic forces with
which, from its very inception, the Open Conspiracy will be - is now -
in conflict.
To begin with, we will consider these forces as
they present themselves in the highly developed Western European States
of to-day and in their American derivatives, derivatives which, in spite
of the fact that in most cases they have far outgrown their lands of
origin, still owe a large part of their social habits and political
conceptions to
Europe
. All these States touch upon the Atlantic or its contributory seas;
they have all grown to their present form since the discovery of
America
; they have a common tradition rooting in the ideas of Christendom and a
generic resemblance of method. Economically and socially they present
what is known in current parlance as the Capitalist system, but it will
relieve us of a considerable load of disputatious matter if we call them
here simply the “Atlantic” civilizations and communities.
The consideration of these Atlantic
civilizations in relation to the coming world civilization will suffice
for the present chapter. Afterwards we will consider the modification of
the forces antagonistic to the Open Conspiracy as they display
themselves beyond the formal confines of these now dominant states in
the world's affairs, in the social systems weakened and injured by their
expansion, and among such less highly organized communities as still
survive from man's savage and barbaric past.
The Open Conspiracy is not necessarily
antagonistic to any existing government. The Open Conspiracy is a
creative, organizing movement and not an anarchistic one. It does not
want to destroy existing controls and forms of human association, but
either to supersede or amalgamate them into a common world directorate.
If constitutions, parliaments, and kings can be dealt with as
provisional institutions, trustees for the coming of age of the world
commonweal, and in so far as they are conducted in that spirit, the Open
Conspiracy makes no attack upon them.
But most governments will not set about their
business as in any way provisional they and their supporters insist upon
a reverence and obedience which repudiate any possibility of
supersession. What should be an instrument becomes a divinity. In nearly
every country of the world there is, in deference to the pretended
necessities of a possible war, a vast degrading and dangerous
cultivation of loyalty and mechanical subservience to flags, uniforms,
presidents, and kings. A president or king who does his appointed work
well and righteously is entitled to as much subservience as a bricklayer
who does his work well and righteously and to no more, but instead there
is a sustained endeavour to give him the privileges of an idol above
criticism or reproach, and the organized worship of flags has become -
with changed conditions of intercourse and warfare - an entirely evil
misdirection of the gregarious impulses of our race. Emotion and
sentimentality are evoked in the cause of disciplines and co-operations
that could quite easily be sustained and that are better sustained by
rational conviction.
The Open Conspiracy is necessarily opposed to
all such implacable loyalties, and still more so to the aggressive
assertion and propaganda of such loyalties. When these things take the
form of suppressing reasonable criticism and forbidding even the
suggestion of other forms of government, they become plainly antagonists
to any comprehensive project for human welfare. They become manifestly,
from the wider point of view, seditious, and loyalty to “king and
country” passes into plain treason to mankind. Almost everywhere, at
present, educational institutions organize barriers in the path of
progress, and there are only the feeblest attempts at any counter
education that will break up these barriers. There is little or no
effort to restrain the aggressive nationalist when he waves his flag
against the welfare of our race, or to protect the children of the world
from the infection of his enthusiasms. And this last is as true now of
the American system as it is of any
European
State
.
In the great mass of the modern community there
is little more than a favourable acquiescence in patriotic ideas and in
the worship of patriotic symbols, and that is based largely on such
training. These things are not necessary things for the generality of
to-day. A change of mental direction would be possible for the majority
of people now without any violent disorganization of their intimate
lives or any serious social or economic readjustments for them. Mental
infection in such cases could be countered by mental sanitation. A
majority of people in Europe, and a still larger majority in the
United States
and the other
American
Republics
, could become citizens of the world without any serious hindrance to
their present occupations, and with an incalculably vast increase of
their present security.
But there remains a net of special classes in
every community, from kings to custom-house officers, far more deeply
involved in patriotism because it is their trade and their source of
honour, and prepared in consequence with an instinctive resistance to
any reorientation of ideas towards a broader outlook. In the case of
such people no mental sanitation is possible without dangerous and
alarming changes in their way of living. For the majority of these
patriots by metier, the Open Conspiracy unlocks the gates leading
from a fussy paradise of eminence, respect, and privilege, - and motions
them towards an austere wilderness which does not present even the
faintest promise of a congenial, distinguished life for them. Nearly
everything in human nature will dispose them to turn away from these
gates which open towards the world peace, to bang-to and lock them again
if they can, and to grow thickets as speedily as possible to conceal
them and get them forgotten. The suggestion of being trustees in a
transition will seem to most of such people only the camouflage of an
ultimate degradation.
From such classes of patriots by metier,
it is manifest that the Open Conspiracy can expect only opposition. It
may detach individuals from them, but only by depriving them of their
essential class loyalties and characteristics. The class as a class will
remain none the less antagonistic. About royal courts and presidential
residences, in diplomatic, consular, military, and naval circles, and
wherever people wear titles and uniforms and enjoy pride and precedences
based on existing political institutions, there will be the completest
general inability to grasp the need for the Open Conspiracy. These
people and their womankind, their friends and connections, their
servants and dependents, are fortified by time-honoured traditions of
social usage, of sentiment and romantic prestige. They will insist that
they are reality and Cosmopolis a dream. Only individuals of exceptional
liveliness, rare intellectual power, and innate moral force can be
expected to break away from the anti-progressive habits such class
conditions impose upon them.
This tangle of traditions and loyalties, of
interested trades and professions, of privileged classes and official
patriots, this complex of human beings embodying very easy and natural
and time-honoured ideas of eternal national separation and unending
international and class conflict, is the main objective of the Open
Conspiracy in its opening phase. This tangle must be disentangled as the
Open Conspiracy advances, and until it is largely disentangled and
cleared up that Open Conspiracy cannot become anything very much more
than a desire and a project.
This tangle of “necessary patriots,” as one
may call them, is different in its nature, less intricate and extensive
proportionally in the
United States
and the States of Latin America, than it is in the old European
communities, but it is none the less virulent in its action on that
account. It is only recently that military and naval services have
become important factors in American social life, and the really
vitalizing contact of the interested patriot and the State has hitherto
centred mainly upon the custom house and the concession. Instead of a
mellow and romantic loyalty to “king and country” the American
thinks simply of
America
and his flag.
The American exaggeration of patriotism began
as a resistance to exploitation from overseas. Even when political and
fiscal freedom were won, there was a long phase of industrial and
financial dependence. The American's habits of mind, in spite of his
recent realization of the enormous power and relative prosperity of the
United States
and of the expanding possibilities of their Spanish and
Portuguese-speaking neighbours, are still largely self-protective
against a now imaginary European peril. For the first three quarters of
the nineteenth century the people of the American continent, and
particularly the people of the
United States
, felt the industrial and financial ascendancy of
Great Britain
and had a reasonable fear of European attacks upon their continent. A
growing tide of immigrants of uncertain sympathy threatened their
dearest habits. Flag worship was imposed primarily as a repudiation of
Europe
. Europe no longer looms over
America
with overpowering intimations, American industries no longer have any
practical justification for protection, American finance would be
happier without it, but the patriotic interests are so established now
that they go on and will go on. No American statesman who ventures to be
cosmopolitan in his utterance and outlook is likely to escape altogether
from the raucous attentions of the patriotic journalist.
We have said that the complex of classes in any
country interested in the current method of government is sustained by
traditions and impelled by its nature and conditions to protect itself
against exploratory criticism. It is therefore unable to escape from the
forms of competitive and militant nationalism in which it was evolved.
It cannot, without grave danger of enfeeblement, change any such innate
form. So that while parallel complexes of patriotic classes are found in
greater or less intricacy grouped about the flags and governments of
most existing states, these complexes are by their nature obliged to
remain separate, nationalist, and mutually antagonistic. You cannot
expect a world union of soldiers or diplomatists. Their existence and
nature depend upon the idea that national separation is real and
incurable, and that war, in the long run, is unavoidable. Their
conceptions of loyalty involve an antagonism to all foreigners, even to
foreigners of exactly the same types as themselves, and make for a
continual campaign of annoyances, suspicions, and precautions - together
with a general propaganda, affecting all other classes, of the necessity
of an international antagonism - that creeps persistently towards war.
But while the methods of provoking war employed
by the patriotic classes are traditional, modern science has made a new
and enormously more powerful thing of warfare and, as the Great War
showed, even the most conservative generals on both sides are unable to
prevent the gigantic interventions of the mechanician and the chemist.
So that a situation is brought about in which the militarist element is
unable to fight without the support of the modern industrial
organization and the acquiescence of the great mass of people. We are
confronted therefore at the present time with the paradoxical situation
that a patriotic tradition sustains in power and authority warlike
classes who are quite incapable of carrying on war. The other classes to
which they must go for support when the disaster of war is actually
achieved are classes developed under peace conditions, which not only
have no positive advantage in war, but must, as a whole, suffer great
dislocation, discomfort, destruction, and distress from war. It is of
primary importance therefore, to the formally dominant classes that
these new social masses and powers should remain under the sway of the
old social, sentimental, and romantic traditions, and equally important
is it to the Open Conspiracy that they should be released.
Here we bring into consideration another great
complex of persons, interests, traditions - the world of education, the
various religious organizations, and, beyond these, the ramifying,
indeterminate world of newspapers and other periodicals, books, the
drama, art, and all the instruments of presentation and suggestion that
mould opinion and direct action. The sum of the operations of this
complex will be either to sustain or to demolish the old nationalist
militant ascendancy. Its easiest immediate course is to accept it.
Educational organizations on that account are now largely a conservative
force in the community; they are in most cases directly controlled by
authority and bound officially as well as practically to respect current
fears and prejudices. It evokes fewer difficulties for them if they
limit and mould rather than release the young. The schoolmaster tends,
therefore, to accept and standardize and stereotype, even in the living,
progressive fields of science and philosophy. Even there he is a brake
on the forward movement. It is clear that the Open Conspiracy must
either continually disturb and revivify him or else frankly antagonize
him. Universities also struggle between the honourable past on which
their prestige rests, and the need of adaptation to a world of enquiry,
experiment, and change. It is an open question whether these particular
organizations of intellectual prestige are of any real value in the
living world. A modern world planned de novo would probably
produce nothing like a contemporary university. Modern research, one may
argue, would be stimulated rather than injured by complete detachment
from the lingering mediaevalism of such institutions, their entanglement
with adolescent education, and their ancient and contagious conceptions
of precedence and honour.
Ordinary religious organizations, again, exist
for self-preservation and are prone to follow rather than direct the
currents of popular thought. They are kept alive, indeed, by revivalism
and new departures which at the outlet they are apt to resist, as the
Catholic Church, for instance, resisted the Franciscan awakening, but
their formal disposition is conservative. They say to religious
development, thus far and no farther.
Here, in school, college, and church, are
activities of thought and instruction which, generally speaking, drag
upon the wheels of progress, but which need not necessarily do so. A
schoolmaster may be original, stimulating, and creative, and if he is
fortunate and a good fighter he may even achieve considerable worldly
success; university teachers and investigators may strike out upon new
lines and yet escape destruction by the older dons. Universities compete
against other universities at home and abroad and cannot altogether
yield to the forces of dullness and subservience. They must maintain a
certain difference from vulgar opinion and a certain repute of
intellectual virility.
As we pass from the more organized to the less
organized intellectual activities, we find conservative influence
declining in importance, and a freer play for the creative drive.
Freshness is a primary condition of journalistic, literary, and artistic
success, and orthodoxy has nothing new to say or do. But the desire for
freshness may be satisfied all too readily by merely extravagant,
superficial, and incoherent inventions.
The influence of this old traditional
nationalist social and political hierarchy which blocks the way to the
new world is not, however, exerted exclusively through its control over
schools and universities. Nor is that indeed its more powerful activity.
Would that it were There is also a direct, less defined contact of the
old order with the nascent powers, that plays a far more effective part
in delaying the development of the modern world commonweal. Necessarily
the old order has determined the established way of life, which is, at
its best, large, comfortable, amusing, respected. It possesses all the
entrances and exits and all the controls of the established daily round.
It is able to exact, and it does exact, almost without design, many
conformities. There can be no very ample social life, therefore, for
those who are conspicuously dissentient. Again the old order has a
complete provision for the growth, welfare, and advancement of its
children. It controls the founts of honour and self-respect; it provides
a mapped-out world of behaviour. The new initiatives make their
appearance here and there in the form of isolated individuals, here an
inventor, there a bold organizer or a vigorous thinker. Apart from his
specific work the innovating type finds that he must fall in with
established things or his womenfolk will be ostracized, and he will be
distressed by a sense of isolation even in the midst of successful
activities. The more intensely he innovates in particular, the more
likely is he to be too busy to seek out kindred souls and organize a new
social life in general. The new things and ideas, even when they arise
abundantly, arise scattered and unorganized, and the old order takes
them in its net.
America
for example - both on its Latin and on its English-speaking side - is in
many ways a triumph of the old order over the new.
Men like Winwood Reade thought that the
New World
would be indeed a new world. They idealized its apparent
emancipations. But as the more successful of the toiling farmers and
traders of republican
America
rose one by one to affluence, leisure, and freedom, it was far more easy
for them to adopt the polished and prepared social patterns and usages
of
Europe
than to work out a new civilization in accordance with their
equalitarian professions. Yet there remains a gap in their adapted
“Society.” Henry James, that acute observer of subtle social
flavours, has pointed out the peculiar headlessness of social
life in
America
because of the absence of court functions to “go on” to and justify
the assembling and dressing. The social life has imitated the
preparation for the Court without any political justification. In
Europe
the assimilation of the wealthy European industrialist and financier by
the old order has been parallel and naturally more logically complete.
He really has found a court to “go on” to. His social scheme was
still undecapitated until kingdoms began to change into republics after
1917.
In this way the complex of classes vitally
involved in the old militant nationalist order is mightily reinforced by
much larger masses of imitative and annexed and more or less assimilated
rich and active people. The great industrialist has married the daughter
of the marquis and has a couple of sons in the Guards and a daughter who
is a princess. The money of the American Leeds, fleeing from the social
futility of its land of origin, helped bolster up a mischievous monarchy
in
Greece
. The functional and private lives of the new men are thus at war with
one another. The real interests of the great industrialist or financier
lie in cosmopolitan organization and the material development of the
world commonweal, but his womenfolk pin flags all over him, and his sons
are prepared to sacrifice themselves and all his business creations for
the sake of trite splendours and Ruritanian romance.
But just so far as the great business organizer
is capable and creative, so far is he likely to realize and resent the
price in frustration that the old order obliges him to pay for
amusement, social interest, and domestic peace and comfort. The Open
Conspiracy threatens him with no effacement; it may even appear with an
air of release. If he had women who were interested in his business
affairs instead of women who had to be amused, and if he realized in
time the practical, intellectual, and moral kidnap of sons and daughters
by the old order that goes on, he might pass quite easily from
acquiescence to antagonism. But in this respect he cannot a
single-handed. This is a social and not an individual operation. The
Open Conspiracy, it is clear, must include in its activities a great
fight for the souls of economically-functional people. It must carve out
a Society of its own from Society. Only by the creation of a new and
better social life can it resist the many advantages and attractions of
the old.
This constant gravitation back to traditional
uses on the part of what might become new social types applies not
merely to big people but to such small people as are really functional
in the modern economic scheme. The have no social life adapted to their
new economic relationships, and they forced back upon the methods of
behaviour established for what were roughly their analogues in the old
order of things. The various sorts of managers and foremen in big modern
concerns, for example, carry on ways of living they have taken
ready-made from the stewards, tradesmen, tenantry, and upper servants of
an aristocratic territorial system. They release themselves and are
released almost in spite of themselves, slowly, generation by
generation, from habits of social subservience that are no longer
necessary nor convenient in the social process, acquire an official
pride in themselves and take on new conceptions of responsible loyalty
to a scheme. And they find themselves under suggestions of class
aloofness and superiority to the general mass of less cardinal workers,
that are often unjustifiable under new conditions. Machinery and
scientific organization have been and still are revolutionizing
productive activity by the progressive elimination of the unskilled
worker, the hack, the mere toiler. But the social organization of the
modern community and the mutual deportment of the associated workers
left over after this elimination are still haunted by the tradition of
the lord, the middle-class tenant, and the servile hind. The development
of self-respect and mutual respect among the mass of modern functional
workers is clearly an intimate concern of the Open Conspiracy.
A vast amount of moral force has been wasted in
the past hundred years by the antagonism of “Labour” to
“Capital,” as though this were the primary issue in human affairs.
But this never was the primary issue, and it is steadily receding from
its former importance. The ancient civilizations did actually rest upon
a broad basis of slavery and serfdom. Human muscle was a main source of
energy-ranking with sun, wind, and flood. But invention and discovery
have so changed the conditions under which power is directed and
utilized that muscle becomes economically secondary and inessential. We
no longer want hewers of wood and drawers of water, carriers and pick
and spade men. We no longer want that breeding swarm of hefty sweaty
bodies without which the former civilizations could not have endured. We
want watchful and understanding guardians and drivers of complex
delicate machines, which can be mishandled and brutalized and spoilt all
too easily. The less disposed these masters of our machines are to
inordinate multiplication, the more room and food in the world for their
ampler lives. Even to the lowest level of a fully-mechanicalized
civilization it is required that the human element should be select. In
the modern world, crowds are a survival, and they will presently be an
anachronism, and crowd psychology therefore cannot supply the basis of a
new order. It is just because labour is becoming more intelligent,
responsible, and individually efficient that it is becoming more audible
and impatient in social affairs.
It is just because it is no longer mere gang
labour, and is becoming more and more intelligent co-operation in
detail, that it now resents being treated as a serf, housed like a serf,
fed like a serf, and herded like a serf, and its pride and thoughts and
feelings disregarded. Labour is in revolt because as a matter of fact it
is, in the ancient and exact sense of the word, ceasing to be labour at
all.
The more progressive elements of the directive
classes recognize this, but, as we have shown, there are formidable
forces still tending to maintain the old social attitudes when arrogance
became the ruler and the common man accepted his servile status. A
continual resistance is offered by large sections of the prosperous and
advantaged to the larger claims of the modernized worker, and in
response the rising and differentiating workers develop an angry
antagonism to these directive classes which allow themselves to be
controlled by their conservative and reactionary elements. Moreover, the
increasing relative intelligence of the labour masses, the unprecedented
imaginative stimulation they experience, the continually more widespread
realization of the available freedoms and comforts and indulgences that
might be and are not shared by all in a modern state, develop a
recalcitrance where once there was little but fatalistic acquiescence.
An objection to direction and obligation, always mutely present in the
toiling multitude since the economic life of man began, becomes
articulate and active. It is the taste of freedom that makes labour
desire to be free. This series of frictions is a quite inevitable aspect
of social reorganization, but it does not constitute a primary
antagonism in the process.
The class war was invented by the classes; it
is a natural tradition of the upper strata of the old order. It was so
universally understood that there was no need to state it. It is
implicit in nearly all the literature of the world before the nineteenth
century - except the Bible, the Koran, and other sequelae. The “class
war” of the Marxist is merely a poor snobbish imitation, a tu
quoque, a pathetic, stupid, indignant reversal of and retort to the
old arrogance, a pathetic upward arrogance.
These conflicts cut across rather than oppose
or help the progressive development to which the Open Conspiracy devotes
itself. Labour, awakened, enquiring, and indignant, is not necessarily
progressive; if the ordinary undistinguished worker is no longer to be
driven as a beast of burthen, he has - which also goes against the grain
- to be educated to as high a level of co-operative efficiency as
possible. He has to work better, even if he works for much shorter hours
and under better conditions, and his work must be subordinated work
still; he cannot become en masse sole owner and master of a scheme of
things he did not make and is incapable of directing. Yet this is the
ambition implicit in an exclusively “Labour” movement. Either the
Labour revolutionary hopes to cadge the services of exceptional people
without acknowledgment or return on sentimental grounds, or he really
believes that anyone is as capable as anyone else - if not more so. The
worker at a low level may be flattered by dreams of
“class-conscious” mass dominion from which all sense of inferiority
is banished, but they will remain dreams. The deep instinctive jealousy
of the commonplace individual for outstanding quality and novel
initiative may be organized and turned to sabotage and destruction,
masquerading as and aspiring to be a new social order, but that will be
a blind alley and not the road of progress. Our hope for the human
future does not lie in crowd psychology and the indiscriminating rule of
universal democracy.
The Open Conspiracy can have little use
for mere resentments as a driving force towards its ends; it starts with
a proposal not to exalt the labour class but to abolish it, its
sustaining purpose is to throw drudges out of employment and eliminate
the inept - and it is far more likely to incur suspicion and distrust in
the lower ranks of the developing industrial order of to-day than to win
support there. There, just as everywhere else in the changing social
complexes of our time, it can appeal only to the exceptionally
understanding individual who can without personal humiliation consider
his present activities and relationships as provisional and who can,
without taking offence, endure a searching criticising of his present
quality and mode of living.
XII
- The Resistances Of The Less Industrialized Peoples To The Drive Of The
Open Conspiracy
So far, in our
accounting of the powers, institutions, dispositions, types, and classes
which will be naturally opposed to the Open Conspiracy, we have surveyed
only such territory in the domain of the future world commonweal as is
represented by the complex, progressive, highly-industrialized
communities, based on a preceding landlord-soldier, tenant,
town-merchant, and tradesman system, of the Atlantic type. These
communities have developed farthest in the direction of
mechanicalization, and they are so much more efficient and powerful that
they now dominate the rest of the world.
India
,
China
,
Russia
, Africa present mélanges of social systems, thrown together,
outpaced, overstrained, shattered, invaded, exploited, and more or less
subjugated by the finance, machinery, and political aggressions of the
Atlantic, Baltic, and
Mediterranean
civilization. In many ways they have an air of assimilating themselves
to that civilization, evolving modern types and classes, and abandoning
much of their distinctive traditions. But 'bat they take from the West
is mainly the new developments, the material achievements, rather than
the social and political achievements, that, empowered by modern
inventions, have won their to world predominance. They may imitate
European nationalism to 8 certain extent; for them it becomes a
convenient form of self-assertion against the pressure of a realized
practical social and political inferiority; but the degree to which they
will or can take over the social assumptions and habits of the
long-established European-American hierarchy is probably very
restricted. Their nationalism will remain largely indigenous; the social
traditions in which they will try to make the new material forces
subservient will be traditions of an Oriental life widely different from
the original life of
Europe
. They will have their own resistances to the Open Conspiracy,
therefore, but they will be different resistances from those we have
hitherto considered. The automobile and the wireless set, the harvester
and steel construction building, will come to the jungle rajah and the
head hunter, the Brahmin and the Indian peasant, with a parallel and yet
dissimilar message to the one they brought the British landowner or the
corn and cattle farmers of the Argentine and the
Middle West
. Also they may be expected to evoke dissimilar reactions. To a number
of the finer, more energetic minds of these overshadow communities which
have lagged more or less ill the material advances t which this present
ascendancy of western Europe and America is due, the Open Conspiracy may
come with an effect of immense invitation At one step they may go from
the sinking vessel of their antiquated order, across their present
conquerors, into a brotherhood of world rulers They may turn to the
problem of saving and adapting all that is rich and distinctive of their
inheritance to the common ends of the race. But to the less vigorous
intelligences of this outer world, the new project of the Open
Conspiracy will seem no better than a new form of Western envelopment
and they will fight a mighty liberation as though it were a further
enslavement to the European tradition. They will watch the Open
Conspiracy for any signs of conscious superiority and racial disregard.
Necessarily they will recognize it as a product of Western mentality and
they may well be tempted to regard it as an elaboration and organization
of current dispositions rather than the evolution of a new phase which
will make no discrimination at last between the effete traditions of
either East or West. Their suspicions will be sustained and developed by
the clumsy and muddle-headed political and economic aggressions of the
contemporary political and business systems, such as they are, of the
West, now in progress. Behind that cloud of aggression Western thought
has necessarily advanced upon them. It could have got to their attention
in no other way.
Partly these resistances and criticisms of the
decadent communities outside the Atlantic capitalist system will be
aimed, not at the developing methods of the coming world community, but
at the European traditions and restrictions that have imposed themselves
upon these methods, and so far the clash of the East and West may be
found to subserve the aims of the Open Conspiracy. In the conflict of
old traditions and in the consequent deadlocks lies much hope for the
direct acceptance of the groups of ideas centring upon the Open
Conspiracy One of the most interesting areas of humanity in this respect
is the great system of communities under the sway or influence of Soviet
Russia.
Russia
has never been completely incorporated with the European system; she
became a just passable imitation of a western European monarchy in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and talked at last of
constitutions and parliaments - but the reality of that vast empire
remained an Asiatic despotism, and the European mask was altogether
smashed by the successive revolutions of 1917. The ensuing system is a
government presiding over an enormous extent of peasants and herdsmen,
by a disciplined association professing the faith and dogmas of Marx, as
interpreted and qualified by Lenin and Stalin.
In many ways this government is a novelty
of extraordinary interest. It labours against enormous difficulties
within itself and without. Flung amazingly into a position of tremendous
power, its intellectual flexibility is greatly restricted by the urgent
militant necessity for mental unanimity and a consequent repression of
criticism. It finds itself separated, intellectually and morally, by an
enormous gap from the illiterate millions over which it rules. More open
perhaps to scientific and creative conceptions than any other
government, and certainly more willing to experiment and innovate, its
enterprise is starved by the economic depletion of the country in the
Great War and by the technical and industrial backwardness of the
population upon which it must draw for its personnel. Moreover, it
struggles within itself between concepts of a modern scientific social
organization and a vague anarchistic dream in which the “State” is
to disappear, and an emancipated proletariat, breeding and expectorating
freely, fills the vistas of time forevermore. The tradition of long
years of hopeless opposition has tainted the world policy of the Marxist
cult with a mischievous and irritating quality that focuses upon it the
animosity of every government in the dominant Atlantic system. Marxism
never had any but the vaguest fancies about the relation of one nation
to another, and the new Russian government, for all its cosmopolitan
phrases, is more and more plainly the heir to the obsessions of Tsarist
Imperialism, using the Communist party, as other countries have used
Christian missionaries, to maintain a propagandist government to forward
its schemes. Nevertheless, the Soviet government has maintained itself
for more than twelve years, and it seems far more likely to evolve than
to persist. It is quite possible that it will evolve towards the
conceptions of the Open Conspiracy, and in that case
Russia
may witness once again a conflict between new ideas and Old Believers.
So far the Communist party in
Moscow
has maintained a considerable propaganda of ideas in the rest of the
world and especially across its western frontier. Many of these ideas
are now trite and stale. The time may be not far distant when the tide
of propaganda will flow in the reverse direction. It has pleased the
vanity of the Communist party to imagine itself conducting a propaganda
of world revolution. Its fate may be to develop upon lines that will
make its more intelligent elements easily assimilable to the Open
Conspiracy for a world revolution. The Open Conspiracy as it spreads and
grows may find a less encumbered field for trying out the economic
developments implicit in its conceptions in
Russia
and
Siberia
than anywhere else in the world.
However severely the guiding themes and
practical methods of the present Soviet government in
Russia
may be criticized, the fact remains that it has cleared out of its way
many of the main obstructive elements that we find still vigorous in the
more highly-organized communities in the West. It has liberated vast
areas from the kindred superstitions of monarchy and the need for a
private proprietary control of great economic interests. And it has
presented both
China
and
India
with the exciting spectacle of a social and political system capable of
throwing off many of the most characteristic features of triumphant
Westernism, and yet holding its own. In the days when Japan faced up to
modern necessities there were no models for imitation that were not
communities of the Atlantic type pervaded by the methods of private
capitalism, and in consequence the Japanese reconstituted their affairs
on a distinctly European plan, adopting a Parliament and bringing their
monarchy, social hierarchy, and business and financial methods into a
general conformity with that model. It is extremely doubtful whether any
other Asiatic community will now set itself to a parallel imitation, and
it will be thanks largely to the Russian revolution that this breakaway
from Europeanization has occurred.
But it does not follow that such a
breakaway will necessarily lead more directly to the Open Conspiracy. If
we have to face a less highly organized system of interests and
prejudices in
Russia
and
China
, we have to deal with a vastly wider ignorance and a vastly more
formidable animalism.
Russia
is a land of tens of millions of peasants ruled over by a little band of
the intelligentsia who can be counted only by tens of thousands. It is
only these few score thousands who are accessible to ideas of world
construction, and the only hope of bringing the Russian system into
active participation in the world conspiracy is through that small
minority and through its educational repercussion on the myriads below.
As we go eastward from European Russia the proportion of soundly
prepared intelligence to which we can appeal for understanding and
participation diminishes to an even more dismaying fraction. Eliminate
that fraction, and one is left face to face with inchoate barbarism
incapable of social and political organization above the level of the
war boss and the brigand leader.
Russia
itself is still by no means secure against a degenerative process in
that direction, and the hope of
China
struggling out of it without some forcible directive interventions is a
hope to which constructive liberalism clings with very little assurance.
We turn back therefore from
Russia
,
China
and the communities of
Central Asia
to the Atlantic world. It is in that world alone that sufficient range
and amplitude of thought and discussion are possible for the adequate
development of the Open Conspiracy. In these communities it must begin
and for a long time its main activities will need to be sustained from
these necessary centres of diffusion. It will develop amidst incessant
mental Strife, and through that strife it will remain alive. It is no
small part of the practical weakness of present-day communism that it
attempts to centre its intellectual life and its directive activities in
Moscow
and so cuts itself off from the free and open discussions of the Western
world. Marxism lost the world when it went to
Moscow
and took over the traditions of Tsarism as Christianity lost the world
when it went to
Rome
and took over the traditions of Caesar. Entrenched in Moscow from
searching criticism, the Marxist ideology may become more and more
dogmatic and unprogressive, repeating its sacred credo and issuing its
disregarded orders to the proletariat of the world, and so stay
ineffectively crystallized until the rising tide of the Open Conspiracy
submerges, dissolves it afresh, and incorporates whatever it finds
assimilable.
India
, like
Japan
, is cut off from the main body of Asiatic affairs. But while
Japan
has become a formally Westernized nationality in the comity of such
nations,
India
remains a world in itself. In that one peninsula nearly every type of
community is to be found, from the tribe of jungle savages, through a
great diversity of barbaric and mediaeval principalities, to the child
and women - sweating factories and the vigorous modern commercialism of
Bombay
. Over it all the British imperialism prevails, a constraining and
restraining influence, keeping the peace, checking epidemics, increasing
the food supply by irrigation and the like, and making little or no
effort to evoke responses to modern ideas.
Britain
in
India
is no propagandist of modern ferments: all those are left the other side
of
Suez
. In
India
the Briton is a ruler as firm and self-assured and uncreative as the
Roman. The old religious and social traditions, the complex customs,
castes, tabus, and exclusions of a strangely-mixed but unamalgamated
community, though a little discredited by this foreign predominance,
still hold men's minds. They have been, so to speak, pickled in the
preservative of the British raj.
The Open Conspiracy has to invade the
Indian complex in conflict with the prejudices of both ruler and
governed. It has to hope for individual breaches in the dull Romanism of
the administration: here a genuine educationist, here a creative civil
servant, here an official touched by the distant stir of the living
homeland; and it has to try to bring these types into a co-operative
relationship with a fine native scholar here or an active-minded prince
or landowner or industrialist there. As the old methods of passenger
transport are superseded by flying, it will be more and more difficult
to keep the stir of the living homeland out of either the consciousness
of the official hierarchy or the knowledge of the recalcitrant
“native.”
Very similar to Indian conditions is the
state of affairs in the foreign possessions of
France
, the same administrative obstacles to the Open Conspiracy above, and
below the same resentful subordination, cut off from the mental
invigoration of responsibility. Within these areas of restraint, India
and its lesser, simpler parallels in North Africa, Syria and the Far
East, there goes on a rapid increase of low-grade population, undersized
physically and mentally, and retarding the mechanical development of
civilization by its standing offer of cheap labour to the unscrupulous
entrepreneur, and possible feeble insurrectionary material to the
unscrupulous political adventurer. It is impossible to estimate how
slowly or how rapidly the knowledge and ideas that have checked the rate
of increase of all the Atlantic populations may be diffused through
these less alert communities.
We must complete our survey of the
resistances against which the Open Conspiracy has to work by a few words
about the Negro world and the regions of forest and jungle in which
barbaric and even savage human life still escapes the infection of
civilization. It seems inevitable that the development of modern means
of communication and the conquest of tropical diseases should end in
giving access everywhere to modern administration and to economic
methods, and everywhere the incorporation of the former wilderness in
the modern economic process means the destruction of the material basis,
the free hunting, the free access to the soil, of such barbaric and
savage communities as still precariously survive. The dusky peoples, who
were formerly the lords of these still imperfectly assimilate areas, are
becoming exploited workers, slaves, serfs, hut-tax payers, labourers to
a caste of white immigrants. The spirit of the plantation broods over
all these lands. The Negro in
America
differs only from his subjugated brother in
South Africa
or Kenya Colony in the fact that he also, like his white master, is an
immigrant. The situation in Africa and
America
adjusts itself therefore towards parallel conditions, the chief
variation being in the relative proportions of the two races and the
details of the methods by which black labour is made to serve white
ends.
In these black and white communities
which are establishing themselves in all those parts of the earth where
once the black was native, or in which a sub-tropical climate is
favourable to his existence at a low level of social development, there
is - and there is bound to be for many years to come - much racial
tension. The steady advance of birth-control may mitigate the biological
factors of this tension later on, and a general amelioration of manners
and conduct may efface that disposition to persecute dissimilar types,
which man shares with many other gregarious animals. But meanwhile this
tension increases and a vast multitude of lives is strained to tragic
issues.
To exaggerate the dangers and evils of
miscegenation is a weakness of our time. Man interbreeds with all his
varieties and yet deludes himself that there are races of outstanding
purity, the “Nordic,” the “Semitic,” and so forth. These are
phantoms of the imagination. The reality is more intricate, less
dramatic, and grips less easily upon the mind; the phantoms grip only
too well and incite to terrible suppressions. Changes in the number of
half-breeds and in the proportion of white and coloured are changes of a
temporary nature that may become controllable and rectifiable in a few
generations. But until this level of civilization is reached, until the
colour of a man's skin or the kinks in a woman's hair cease to have the
value of shibboleths that involve educational, professional, and social
extinction or survival, a black and white community is bound to be
continually preoccupied by a standing feud too intimate and persuasive
to permit of any long views of the world's destiny.
We come to the conclusion therefore that
it is from the more vigorous, varied, and less severely obsessed centres
of the Atlantic civilizations in the temperate zone, with their abundant
facilities for publication and discussion, their traditions of mental
liberty and their immense variety of interacting free types, that the
main beginnings of the Open Conspiracy must develop. For the rest of the
world, its propaganda, finding but poor nourishment in the local
conditions, may retain a missionary quality for many years.
XIII
- Resistances And Antagonistic Forces In Our Conscious And Unconscious
Selves
WE have dealt in the
preceding two chapters with great classes and assemblages of human
beings as, in the mass, likely to be more or less antagonistic to the
Open Conspiracy, and it has been difficult in those chapters to avoid
the implication that “we,” some sort of circle round the writer,
were aloof from these obstructive and hostile multitudes, and ourselves
entirely identified with the Open Conspiracy. But neither are these
multitudes so definitely against, nor those who are with us so entirely
for, the Open Conspiracy to establish a world community as the writer,
in his desire for clearness and contrast and with an all too human
disposition perhaps towards plain ego-centred combative issues, has been
led to represent. There is no “we,” and there can be no “we,” in
possession of the Open Conspiracy.
The Open Conspiracy is in partial
possession of us, and we attempt to serve it. But the
Open Conspiracy is a natural and necessary development of contemporary
thought arising here, there, and everywhere. There are doubts and
sympathies that weigh on the side of the Open Conspiracy in nearly
everyone, and not one of us but retains many impulses, habits, and ideas
in conflict with our general devotion, checking and limiting our
service.
Let us therefore in this chapter cease to
discuss classes and types and consider general mental tendencies and
reactions which move through all humanity.
In our opening chapters we pointed out
that religion is not universally distributed throughout human society.
And of no one does it seem to have complete possession. It seizes upon
some of us and exalts us for one hour now and then, for a day now and
then; it may leave its afterglow upon our conduct for some time; it may
establish restraints and habitual dispositions ; sometimes it dominates
us with but brief intermissions through long spells, and then we can be
saints and martyrs. In all our religious phases there appears a desire
to hold the phase, to subdue the rest of our life to the
standards and exigencies of that phase. Our quickened intelligence sets
itself to a general analysis of our conduct and to the problem of
establishing controls over our unilluminated intervals.
And when the religious elements in the
mind set themselves to such self-analysis, and attempt to order and
unify the whole being upon this basis of the service and advancement of
the race, they discover first a great series of indifferent moods,
wherein the resistance to thought and word for the Open Conspiracy is
merely passive and in the nature of inertia. There is a whole class of
states of mind which may be brought together under the head of “everydayism.”
The dinner bell and the playing fields, the cinema and the newspaper,
the week-end visit and the factory siren, a host of such expectant
things calls to a vast majority of people in our modern world to stop
thinking and get busy with the interest in hand, and so on to the next,
without a thought for the general frame and drama in which these
momentary and personal incidents are set. We are driven along these
marked and established routes and turned this way or that by the
accidents of upbringing, of rivalries and loves, of chance encounters
and vivid experiences, and it is rarely for many of us, and never for
some, that the phases of broad reflection and self-questioning arise.
For many people the religious life now, as in the past, has been a quite
desperate effort to withdraw sufficient attention and energy from the
flood of events to get some sort of grasp, and keep whatever grip is
won, upon the relations of the self to the whole. Far more recoil in
terror from such a possibility and would struggle strenuously against
solitude in the desert, solitude under the stars, solitude in a silent
room or indeed any occasion for comprehensive thought.
But the instinct and purpose of the
religious type is to keep hold upon the comprehensive drama, and at the
heart of all the great religions of the world we find a parallel
disposition to escape in some manner from the aimless drive and
compulsion of accident and everyday. Escape is attempted either by
withdrawal from the presence of crowding circumstance into a mystical
contemplation and austere retirement, or - what is more difficult and
desperate and reasonable - by imposing the mighty standards of enduring
issues upon the whole mass of transitory problems which constitute the
actual business of life. We have already noted how the modern mind turns
from retreat as a recognizable method of religion, and faces squarely up
to the second alternative. The tumult of life has to be met and
conquered. Aim must prevail over the aimless. Remaining in normal life
we must yet keep our wills and thoughts aloof from normal life and fixed
upon creative processes. However busied we may be, however challenged,
we must yet save something of our best mental activity for
self-examination and keep ourselves alert against the endless
treacheries within that would trip us back into everydayism and
disconnected responses to the stimuli of life.
Religions in the past, though they have
been apt to give a preference to the renunciation of things mundane,
have sought by a considerable variety of expedients to preserve the
faith of those whom chance or duty still kept in normal contact with the
world. It would provide material for an interesting study to enquire how
its organizations to do this have worked in the past and how far they
may be imitated and paralleled in the progressive life of the future.
All the wide-reaching religions which came into existence in the five
centuries before and the five centuries after Christ have made great use
of periodic meetings for mutual reassurance, of sacred books, creeds,
fundamental heart-searchings, of confession, prayer, sacraments, seasons
of withdrawal, meditation, fasting, and prayer. Do these methods mark a
phase in the world's development, or are they still to be considered
available?
This points to a very difficult tangle of
psychological problems. The writer in his earlier draft of this book
wrote that the modern religious individual leads, spiritually speaking,
a life of extreme wasteful and dangerous isolation. He still feels that
is true, but he realizes that the invention of corrective devices is not
within his range. He cannot picture a secular Mass nor congregations
singing hymns about the Open Conspiracy. Perhaps the modern soul in
trouble will resort to the psychoanalysts instead of the confessional;
in which case we need to pray for better psychoanalysts.
Can the modern mind work in societies?
May the daily paper be slowly usurping the functions of morning prayer,
a daily mental reminder of large things, with more vividness and, at
present, lower standards? One of the most distressful facts of the
spread of education in the nineteenth century was the unscrupulous
exploitation of the new reading public by a group of trash-dealers who
grew rich and mighty in the process. Is the popular publisher and
newspaper proprietor always to remain a trash-dealer ? Or are we to see,
in the future, publications taking at times some or all of the influence
of revivalist movements, and particular newspapers rising to the task of
sustaining a common faith in a gathering section of the public?
The modern temple in which we shall go to
meditate may be a museum; the modern religious house and its religious
life may be a research organization. The Open Conspirator must see to it
that the museums show their meaning plain. There may be not only
literature presently, but even plays, shows, and music, to subserve new
ideas instead of trading upon tradition.
It is plain that to read and be moved by
great ideas and to form good resolutions with no subsequent reminders
and moral stocktaking is no enough to keep people in the way of the Open
Conspiracy. The relapse to everydayism is too easy. The contemporary
Open Conspirator may forget, and he has nothing to remind him; he may
relapse, and he w hear no reproach to warn him of his relapse. Nowhere
has he recorded vow. “Everyday” has endless ways of justifying the
return of the believer to sceptical casualness. It is easy to persuade
oneself that one is taking life or oneself “too seriously.” The mind
is very self-protective; has a disposition to abandon too great or too
far-reaching an effort and return to things indisputably within its
scope. We have an instinctive preference for thinking things are “all
right”; we economize anxiety; defend the delusions that we can work
with, even though we half realize they are no more that' delusions. We
resent the warning voice, the critical question that robs our activities
of assurance. Our everyday moods not only the antagonists of our
religious moods, but they resent all outward appeals to our religious
moods, and they welcome every help against religious appeals. We pass
very readily from the merely defensive to the defensive aggressive, and
from refusing to hear the word that might stir our consciences to a
vigorous effort to suppress its utterance.
Churches, religious organizations, try to
keep the revivifying phase and usage where it may strike upon the waning
or slumbering faith of the convert, but modern religion as yet has no
such organized rebinders. {sic-RW} They cannot be improvised. Crude
attempts to supply the needed corrective of conduct may do less good
than harm. Each one of us for himself must do what he can to keep his
high resolve in mind and protect himself from the snare of his own moods
of fatigue or inadvertency.
But these passive and active defences of
current things which operate in and through ourselves, and find such
ready sympathy and assistance in the world about us, these massive
resistance systems, are only the beginning of our tale of the forces
antagonistic to the Open Conspiracy that lurk in our complexities.
Men are creatures with other faults quite
beyond and outside our common disposition to be stupid, indolent,
habitual, and defensive. Not only have we active creative impulses, but
also acutely destructive ones. Man is a jealous animal. In youth and
adolescence egotism is extravagant. It is natural for it to be
extravagant, then, and there is no help for it. A great number of us at
that stage would rather not see a beautiful or wonderful thing come into
existence then have it come into existence disregarding us. Something of
that jealous malice, that self-assertive ruthlessness, remains in all of
us throughout life. At his worst man can be an exceedingly combative,
malignant, mischievous and cruel animal. None of us are altogether above
the possibility of such phases. When we consider the oppositions to the
Open Conspiracy that operate in the normal personality, we appreciate
the soundness of the catechism which instructs us to renounce not only
the trivial world and the heavy flesh, but the active and militant
devil.
To make is a long and wearisome business,
with many arrests and disappointments, but to break gives an instant
thrill. We all know something of the delight of the Bang. It is
well for the Open Conspirator to ask himself at times how far he is in
love with the dream of a world in order, and how far he is driven by
hatred of institutions that bore or humiliate him. He may be no more
than a revengeful incendiary in the mask of a constructive worker. How
safe is he, then, from the reaction to some fresh humiliation? The Open
Conspiracy which is now his refuge and vindication may presently fail to
give him the compensation he has sought, may offer him no better than a
minor röle, may display Irritating and incomprehensible preferences.
And for a great number of things in overt antagonism to the great aim of
the Open Conspiracy, he will still find within himself not simply
acquiescence but sympathy and a genuine if inconsistent admiration.
There they are, waiting for his phase of disappointment. Back he may go
to the old loves with a new animus against the greater scheme. He may be
glad to be quit of prigs and humbugs, and back among the good fellowship
of nothing in particular.
Man has pranced a soldier in reality and
fancy for so many generations that few of us can altogether release our
imaginations from the brilliant pretensions of flags, empire,
patriotism, and aggression. Business men, especially in
America
, seem to feel a sort of glory in calling even the underselling and
overadvertising of rival enterprises “fighting.” Pill vendors and
public departments can have their “wars,” their heroisms, their
desperate mischiefs, and so get that Napoleonic feeling. The world and
our reveries are full of the sentimentalities, the false glories and
loyalties of the old combative traditions, trailing after them, as they
do, so much worth and virtue in a dulled and stupefied condition. It is
difficult to resist the fine gravity, the high self-respect, the
examples of honour and good style in small things, that the military and
naval services can present to us, for all that they are now no more than
noxious parasites upon the nascent world commonweal. In
France
not a word may be said against the army; in
England
, against the navy. There will be many Open Conspirators at first who
will scarcely dare to say that word even to themselves.
But all these obsolete values and
attitudes with which our minds are cumbered must be cleared out if the
new faith is to have free play. We have to clear them out not only from
our own minds but from the minds of others who are to become our
associates. The finer and more picturesque these obsolescent loyalties,
obsolescent standards of honour, obsolescent religious associations, may
seem to us, the more thoroughly must we seek to release our minds and
the minds of those about us from them and cut off all thought of a
return.
We cannot compromise with these vestiges
of the ancient order and be faithful servants of the new. Whatever we
retain of them will come back to life and grow again. It is no good to
operate for cancer unless the whole growth is removed. Leave a crown
about and presently you will find it being worn by someone resolved to
be a king. Keep the name and image of a god without a distinct museum
label and sooner or later you will discover a worshipper on his knees to
it and be lucky not to find a human sacrifice upon the altar. Wave a
flag and it will wrap about you. Of yourself even more than of the
community is this true; these can be no half measures. You have not yet
completed your escape to the Open Conspiracy from the cities of the
plain while it is still possible for you to take a single backward
glance.
XIV
- The Open Conspiracy Begins As A Movement Of Discussion, Explanation,
And Propaganda
A new and happier world,
a world community, is awakening, within the body of the old order, to
the possibility of its emergence. Our phrase, “the Open Conspiracy”
is merely a name for that awakening. To begin with, the Open Conspiracy
is necessarily a group of ideas.
It is a system of modern ideas which has
been growing together in the last quarter of the century, and
particularly since the war. It is the reaction of a rapidly progressing
biological conception of life and of enlarged historical realizations
upon the needs and urgencies of the times. In this book we are
attempting to define this system and to give it this provisional name.
Essentially at first it is a dissemination of this new ideology that
must occur. The statement must be tried over and spread before a
widening circle of people.
Since the idea of the Open Conspiracy
rests upon and arises out of a synthesis of historical, biological, and
sociological realizations, we may look for these realizations already in
the case of people with sound knowledge in these fields; such people
will be prepared for acquiescence without any explanatory work; there is
nothing to set out to them beyond the suggestion that it is time they
became actively conscious of where they stand. They constitute already
the Open Conspiracy in an unorganized solution, and they will not so
much adhere as admit to themselves and others their state of mind. They
will say, “We knew all that.” Directly we pass beyond that
comparatively restricted world, however, we find that we have to deal
with partial knowledge, with distorted views, or with blank ignorance,
and that a revision and extension of historical and biological ideas and
a Considerable elucidation of economic misconceptions have to be
undertaken. Such people have to be brought up to date with their
information.
I have told already how I have schemed
out a group of writings to embody the necessary ideas of the new time in
a form adapted to the current reading public; I have made a sort of
provisional “Bible,” so to speak, for some factors at least in the
Open Conspiracy. It is an early sketch. As the current reading public
changes, all this work will become obsolescent so far as its present
form and method go. But not so far as its substantial method goes. That
I believe will remain.
Ultimately this developing mass of
biological, historical, and economic information and suggestion must be
incorporated in general education if the Open Conspiracy is to come to
its own. At present this propaganda has to go on among adolescents and
adults because of the backwardness and political conservatism of
existing educational organizations. Most real modern education now is
done in spite of the schools and to correct the misconceptions
established by the schools. But what will begin as adult propaganda must
pass into a kultur-kampf to win our educational machinery from
reaction and the conservation of outworn ideas and attitudes to the
cause of world reconstruction. The Open Conspiracy itself can never be
imprisoned and fixed in the form of an organization, but everywhere Open
Conspirators should be organizing themselves for educational reform.
And also within the influence of this
comprehensive project there will be all sorts of groupings for study and
progressive activity. One can presuppose the formation of groups of
friends, of family groups, of students and employees or other sorts of
people, meeting and conversing frequently in the course of their normal
occupations, who will exchange views and find themselves in agreement
upon this idea of a constructive change of the world as the guiding form
of human activities.
Fundamentally important issues upon which
unanimity must be achieved from the outset are:
Firstly, the entirely provisional nature of
all existing governments, and the entirely provisional nature,
therefore, of all loyalties associated therewith;
Secondly, the supreme importance
of population control in human biology and
the possibility it affords us of a release from the pressure of the
struggle for existence on ourselves; and
Thirdly, the urgent necessity of protective
resistance against the present traditional drift towards war.
People who do not grasp the vital significance of these test issues do
not really begin to understand the Open Conspiracy. Groups coming into
agreement upon these matters, and upon their general interpretation of
history, will be in a position to seek adherents, enlarge themselves,
and attempt to establish communication and co-operation with kindred
groups for common ends. They can take up a variety of activities to
develop a sense and habit of combined action and feel their way to
greater enterprises.
We have seen already that the Open
Conspiracy must be heterogeneous in origin. Its initial groupings and
associations will be of no uniform pattern. They will be of a very
different size, average age, social experience, and influence. Their
particular activities will be determined by the things. Their diverse
qualities and influences will express themselves by diverse attempts at
organization, each effective in its own sphere. A group or movement of
students may find itself capable of little more than self-education and
personal propaganda; a handful of middle-class people in small town may
find its small resources fully engaged at first in such things as, for
example, seeing that desirable literature is available for sale or in
local public library, protecting books and news vendors from
suppression, or influencing local teachers. Most parents of school
children can press for the teaching of universal history and sound
biology and protest against the inculcation of aggressive patriotism.
There is much scope for the single individual in this direction. On the
other hand, a group of ampler experience and resources may undertake the
printing, publication, and distribution of literature, and exercise
considerable influence upon public opinion in turning education in the
right direction. The
League of Nations
movement, the Birth Control movement,
and most radical and socialist societies, are fields into which Open
Conspirators may go to find adherents more than half prepared for their
wider outlook. The Open Conspiracy is a fuller and ampler movement into
which these incomplete activities must necessarily merge as its idea
takes possession of men's imaginations.
From the outset, the Open Conspiracy will
set its face against militarism. There is a plain present need for the
organization now, before war comes again, of an open and explicit
refusal to serve in any war - or at most to serve in war, directly or
indirectly, only after the issue has been fully and fairly submitted to
arbitration. The time for a conscientious objection to war service is
manifestly before and not after the onset of war. People who have by
their silence acquiesced in a belligerent foreign policy right up to the
onset of war, have little to complain of if they are then compelled to
serve. And a refusal to participate with one's country in warfare is a
preposterously incomplete gesture unless it is rounded off by the
deliberate advocacy of a world pax, a world economic control, and a restrained
population, such as the idea of the Open Conspiracy embodies.
The putting upon record of its members'
reservation of themselves from any or all of the military obligations
that may be thrust upon the country by military and diplomatic effort,
might very conceivably be the first considerable overt act of many Open
Conspiracy groups. It would supply the practical incentive to bring many
of them together in the first place. It would necessitate the creation
of regional or national ad hoc committees for the establishment
of a collective legal and political defensive for this dissent from
current militant nationalism. It would bring the Open Conspiracy very
early out of the province of discussion into the field of practical
conflict. It would from the outset invest it with a very necessary
quality of present applicability.
The anticipatory repudiation of military
service, so far as this last may be imposed by existing governments in
their factitious international rivalries, need not necessarily involve a
denial of the need of military action on behalf of the world commonweal
for the suppression of nationalist brigandage, nor need it prevent the
military training of Open Conspirators. It is simply the practical form
of assertion that the normal militant diplomacy and warfare of the
present time are offences against civilization, processes in the nature
of brigandage, sedition, and civil war, and that serious men cannot be
expected to play anything but a röle of disapproval, non-participation,
or active prevention towards them. Our loyalty to our current
government, we would intimate, is subject to its sane and adult
behaviour.
These educational and propagandist groups
drawing together into an organized resistance to militarism and to the
excessive control of individuals by the makeshift governments of to-day,
constitute at most only the earliest and more elementary grade of the
Open Conspiracy, and we will presently go on to consider the more
specialized and constructive forms its effort must evoke. Before doing
so, however, we may say a little more about the structure and method of
these possible initiatory groupings.
Since they are bound to be different and
miscellaneous in form, size, quality, and ability, any early attempts to
organize them into common general action or even into regular common
gatherings are to be deprecated. There should be many types of groups.
Collective action had better for a time - perhaps for a long time - be
undertaken not through the merging of groups but through the formation
of ad hoc associations for definitely specialized ends, all
making for the new world civilization. Open Conspirators will come into
these associations to make a contribution very much as people come into
limited liability companies, that is to say with a subscription and not
with their whole capital. A comprehensive organization attempting from
the first to cover all activities would necessarily rest upon and
promote one prevalent pattern of activity and hamper or estrange the
more original and interesting forms. It would develop a premature
orthodoxy, it would cease almost at once to be creative, and it would
begin to form a crust of tradition. It would become anchylosed. With the
dreadful examples of Christianity and Communism before us, we must
insist that the idea of the Open Conspiracy ever becoming a single
organization must be dismissed from the mind. It is a movement, yes, a
system of purposes, but its end is a free and living, if unified, world.
At the utmost seven broad principles may
be stated as defining the Open Conspiracy and holding it together. And
it is possible even of these, one, the seventh, may be, if not too
restrictive, at least unnecessary. To the writer it seems unavoidable
because it is so intimately associated with that continual dying out of
tradition upon which our hopes for an unencumbered and expanding human
future rest.
(1) The complete assertion, practical as
well as theoretical, of the provisional nature of existing governments
and of our acquiescence in them;
(2) The resolve to minimize by all
available means the conflicts of these governments, their militant use
of individuals and property, and their interferences with the
establishment of a world economic system;
(3) The determination to replace
private, local or national ownership of at least credit, transport, and
staple production by a responsible world
directorate serving the common ends of the race;
(4) The practical recognition of the
necessity for world biological controls,
for example, of population and disease;
(5) The support of a minimum standard
of individual freedom and welfare in the world; and
(6) The supreme duty of subordinating
the personal career to the creation of a world directorate
capable of these tasks and to the general advancement of human
knowledge, capacity, and power;
(7) The admission therewith that our
immortality is conditional and lies in the race and not
in our individual selves.
XV
- Early Constructive Work Of The Open Conspiracy
In such terms we may
sketch the practicable and possible opening phase of the Open
Conspiracy.
We do not present it as a movement
initiated by any individual or radiating from any particular centre. In
this book we are not starting something; we are describing and
participating in something which has started. It arises naturally and
necessarily from the present increase of knowledge and the broadening
outlook of many minds throughout the world, and gradually it becomes
conscious of itself. It is reasonable therefore to anticipate its
appearance all over the world in sporadic mutually independent groupings
and movements, and to recognize not only that they will be extremely
various, but that many of them will trail with them racial and regional
habits and characteristics which will only be shaken off as its
cosmopolitan character becomes imperatively evident.
The passage from the partial
anticipations of the Open Conspiracy that already abound everywhere to
its complete and completely self-conscious statement may be made by
almost imperceptible degrees. To-day it may seem no more than a
visionary idea; to-morrow it may be realized as a world-wide force of
opinion and will. People will pass with no great inconsistency from
saying that the Open Conspiracy is impossible to saying that it has
always been plain and clear to them, that to this fashion they have
shaped their lives as long as they can remember.
In its opening phase, in the day of small
things, quite minor accidents may help or delay the clear definition and
popularization of its main ideas. The changing pattern of public events
may disperse or concentrate attention upon it, or it may win the early
adherence of men of exceptional resources, energy, or ability. It is
impossible to foretell the speed of its advance. Its development may be
slower or faster, direct or devious, but the logic of accumulating
realizations thrusts it forward, will persist in thrusting it on, and
sooner or later it will be discovered, conscious and potent, the working
religion of most sane and energetic people.
Meanwhile our supreme virtues must be
faith and persistence.
So far we have considered only two of the
main activities of the Open Conspiracy, the one being its propaganda of
confidence in the possible world commonweal, and the other its immediate
practical attempt to systematize resistance
to militant and competitive imperialism and nationalism. But such things
are merely its groundwork undertakings; they do no more than clear
the site and make the atmosphere possible for its organized
constructive efforts.
Directly we turn to that, we turn to
questions of special knowledge, special effort, and special
organization.
Let us consider first the general
advancement of science, the protection and support of scientific
research, and the diffusion of scientific knowledge. These things fall
within the normal scheme of duty for the members of the Open Conspiracy.
The world of science and experiment is the region of origin of nearly
all the great initiatives that characterize our times; the Open
Conspiracy owes its inspiration, its existence, its form and direction
entirely to the changes of condition these initiatives have brought
about, and yet a large number of scientific workers live outside the
sphere of sympathy in which we may expect the Open Conspiracy to
materialize, and collectively their political and social influence upon
the community is extraordinarily small. Having regard to the immensity
of its contributions and the incalculable value of its promise to the
modern community, science - research, that is, and the diffusion of
scientific knowledge - is extraordinarily neglected, starved, and
threatened by hostile interference. This is largely because scientific
work has no strong unifying organization and cannot in itself develop
such an organization.
Science is a hard mistress, and the first
condition of successful scientific work is that the scientific man
should stick to his research. The world of science is therefore in
itself, at its core, a miscellany of specialists, often very ungracious
specialists, and, rather than offer him help and co-operation, it calls
for understanding, tolerance, and service from the man of general
intelligence and wider purpose. The company of
scientific men is less like a host of guiding angels than like a swarm
of marvellous bees - endowed with stings - which must be hived and
cherished and multiplied by the Open Conspiracy.
But so soon as we have the Open
Conspiracy at work, putting its plainly and offering its developing
ideas and activities to those most preciously preoccupied men, then
reasonably, when it involves no special trouble for them, when it is the
line of least resistance for them, they may be expected to fall in with
its convenient and helpful aims and find in it what they have hitherto
lacked, a common system of political and social concepts to hold them
together.
When that stage is reached, we shall be
saved such spectacles of intellectual prostitution as the last Great War
offered, when men of science were herded blinking from their
laboratories to curse one another upon nationalist lines, and when after
the war stupid and wicked barriers were set up to the free communication
of knowledge by the exclusion of scientific men of this or that
nationality from international scientific gatherings. The Open
Conspiracy must help the man of science to realize, what at present he
fails most astonishingly to realize, that he belongs to a greater comity
than any king or president represents to-day, and so prepare him for
better behaviour in the next season of trial.
The formation of groups in, and not only
in, but about and in relation to, the scientific world, which will add
to those first main activities of the Open Conspiracy, propaganda and
pacificism, a special attention to the needs of scientific work, may be
enlarged upon with advantage here, because it will illustrate quite
typically the idea of a special work carried on in relation to a general
activity, which is the subject of this section.
The Open Conspiracy extends its
invitation to all sorts and conditions of men, but the service of
scientific progress is for those only who are specially equipped or who
are sufficiently interested to equip themselves. For scientific work
there is first of all a great need of endowment and the setting up of
laboratories, observatories, experimental stations, and the like, in all
parts of the world. Numbers of men and women capable of scientific work
never achieve it for want of the stimulus of opportunity afforded by
endowment. Few contrive to create their own opportunities. The essential
man of science is very rarely an able collector or administrator of
money, and anyhow, the detailed work of organization is a grave call
upon his special mental energy. But many men capable of a broad and
intelligent appreciation of scientific work, but not capable of the
peculiar intensities of research, have the gift of extracting money from
private and public sources, and it is for them to use that gift modestly
and generously in providing the framework for those more especially
endowed.
And there is already a steadily
increasing need for the proper storage and indexing of scientific
results, and every fresh worker enhances it. Quite a considerable amount
of scientific work goes fruitless or is needlessly repeated because of
the growing volume of publication, and men make discoveries in the field
of reality only to lose them again in the lumber room of record. Here is
a second line of activity to which the Open Conspirator with a
scientific bias may direct his attention.
A third line is the liaison work between
the man of science and the common intelligent man; the promotion of
publications which will either state the substance, implications and
consequences of new work in the vulgar tongue, or, if that is
impossible, train the general run of people to the new idioms and
technicalities which need to be incorporated with the vulgar tongue if
it is still to serve its ends as a means of intellectual intercourse.
Through special ad hoc
organizations, societies for the promotion of Research, for Research
Defence, for World Indexing, for the translation of Scientific Papers,
for the Diffusion of New Knowledge, the surplus energies of a great
number of Open Conspirators can be directed to entirely creative ends
and a new world system of scientific work built up, within which such
dear old institutions as the Royal Society of London, the various
European Academies of Science and the like, now overgrown and
inadequate, can maintain their venerable pride in themselves, their
mellowing prestige, and their distinguished exclusiveness, without their
present privilege of inflicting cramping slights and restrictions upon
the more abundant scientific activities of to-day.
So in relation to science - and here the
word is being used in its narrower accepted meaning for what is often
spoken of as pure science, the search for physical and biological
realities, uncomplicated by moral, social, and “practical”
considerations - we evoke a conception of the Open Conspiracy as
producing groups of socially associated individuals, who engage
primarily in the general basic activities of the Conspiracy and adhere
to and promote the seven broad principles summarized at the end of
Chapter Fourteen, but who work also with the larger part of their
energies, through international and cosmopolitan societies and in a
multitude of special ways, for the establishment of an enduring and
progressive world organization of pure research. They will have come to
this special work because their distinctive gifts, their inclinations,
their positions and opportunities have indicated it as theirs.
Now a very parallel system of Open
Conspiracy groups is conceivable, in relation to business and industrial
life. It would necessarily be a vastly bulkier and more heterogeneous
system of groups, but otherwise the analogy is complete. Here we imagine
those people whose gifts, inclinations, positions and opportunities as
directors, workers, or associates give them an exceptional insight into
and influence in the processes of producing and distributing
commodities, can also be drawn together into groups within the Open
Conspiracy. But these groups will be concerned with the huge and more
complicated problems of the processes by which even now the small
isolated individual adventures in production and trading that
constituted the economic life of former civilizations, are giving place
to larger, better instructed, better planned industrial organizations,
whose operations and combinations become at last world wide.
The amalgamations and combinations, the
substitution of large-scale business for multitudes of small-scale
businesses, which are going on now, go on with all the cruelty and
disregards of a natural process. If a man is to profit and survive,
these unconscious blunderings - which now stagger towards but which may
never attain world organization - much be watched, controlled, mastered,
and directed. As uncertainty diminishes, the quality of adventure and
the amount of waste diminish also, and large speculative profits are no
longer possible or justifiable. The transition from speculative
adventure to organized foresight in the common interest, in the whole
world of economic life, is the substantial task of the Open Conspiracy.
And it is these specially interested and equipped groups, and not the
movement as a whole, which may best begin the attack upon these
fundamental readjustments.
The various Socialist movements of the
nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries had this in common, that they
sought to replace the “private owner” in most or all economic
interests by some vaguely apprehended “public owner.” This,
following the democratic disposition of the times, was commonly
conceived of as an elected body, a municipality, the parliamentary state
or what not. There were municipal socialists, “nationalizing”
socialists, imperial socialists. In the mystic teachings of the Marxist,
the collective owner was to be “the dictatorship of the
proletariat.” Production for profit was denounced. The contemporary
mind realizes the evils of production for profit and of the
indiscriminate scrambling of private ownership more fully than ever
before, but it has a completer realization and a certain accumulation of
experience in the difficulties of organizing that larger ownership we
desire. Private ownership may not be altogether evil as a provisional
stage, even if it has no more in its favour than the ability to
transcend political boundaries.
Moreover - and here again the democratic
prepossessions of the nineteenth century come in - the Socialist
movements sought to make every single adherent a reformer and a
propagandist of economic methods. In order to do so, it was necessary to
simplify economic processes to the crudity of nursery toys, and the
intricate interplay of will and desire in enterprise, normal employment,
and direction, in questions of ownership, wages, credit, and money, was
reduced to a childish fable of surplus value wickedly appropriated. The
Open Conspiracy is not so much a socialism as a more comprehensive
offspring which has eaten and assimilated whatever was digestible of its
socialist forbears. It turns to biology for guidance towards the
regulation of quantity and a controlled distribution of the human
population of the world, and it judges all the subsidiary aspects of
property and pay by the criterion of most efficient production and
distribution in relation to the indications thus obtained.
These economic groups, then, of the Open
Conspiracy, which may come indeed to be a large part of the Open
Conspiracy, will be working in that vast task of economic reconstruction
- which from the point of view of the older socialism was the sole task
before mankind. They will be conducting experiments and observing
processes according to their opportunities. Through ad hoc
societies and journals they will be comparing and examining their
methods and preparing reports and clear information for the movement at
large. The whole question of money and monetary methods in our modern
communities, so extraordinarily disregarded in socialist literature,
will be examined under the assumption that money is the token of the
community's obligation, direct or indirect, to an individual, and credit
its permission to deal freely with material.
The whole psychology of industry and
industrial relationship needs to be revised and restated in terms of the
collective efficiency and welfare of mankind. And just as far as can be
contrived, the counsel and the confidences of those who now direct great
industrial and financial operations will be invoked. The first special
task of a banker, or a bank clerk for that matter, who joins the Open
Conspiracy, will be to answer the questions: “What is a bank?”
“What are you going to do about it ?” “What have we to do about
it?” The first questions to a manufacturer will be: “What are you
making and why?” and “What are you and we to do about it?” Instead
of the crude proposals to “expropriate” and “take over by the
State” of the primitive socialism, the Open Conspiracy will build up
an encyclopædic conception of the modern economic complex as a
labyrinthine pseudo-system progressively eliminating waste and working
its way along multitudinous channels towards unity, towards clarity of
purpose and method, towards abundant productivity and efficient social
service.
Let us come back now for a paragraph or
so to the ordinary adherent to the Open Conspiracy, the adherent
considered not in relation to his special aptitudes and services, but in
relation to the movement as a whole and to those special constructive
organizations outside his own field. It will be his duty to keep his
mind in touch with the progressing concepts of the scientific work so
far as he is able and with the larger issues of the economic
reconstruction that is afoot, to take his cues from the special groups
and organizations engaged upon that work, and to help where he finds his
opportunity and when there is a call upon him. But no adherent of the
Open Conspiracy can remain merely and completely an ordinary adherent.
There can be no pawns in the game of the Open Conspiracy, no “cannon
fodder” in its war. A special activity, quite as much as a general
understanding, is demanded from everyone who looks creatively towards
the future of mankind.
We have instanced first the fine and
distinctive world organization of pure science, and then the huge
massive movement towards co-operating unity of aim in the economic life,
until at last the production and distribution of staple necessities is
apprehended as one world business, and we have suggested that this
latter movement may gradually pervade and incorporate a very great bulk
of human activities. But besides this fine current and this great
torrent of evolving activities and relationships there are also a very
considerable variety of other great functions in the community towards
which Open Conspiracy groups must direct their organizing enquiries and
suggestions in their common intention of ultimately assimilating all the
confused processes of to-day into a world community.
For example, there must be a series of
groups in close touch at one end with biological science and at the
other with the complex of economic activity, who will be concerned
specially with the practical administration of the biological interests
of the race, from food plants and industrial products to pestilences and
population. And another series of groups will gather together attention
and energy to focus them upon the educational process. We have already
pointed out that there is a strong disposition towards conservatism in
normal educational institutions. They preserve traditions rather than
develop them. They are likely to set up a considerable resistance to the
reconstruction of the world outlook upon the threefold basis defined in
Chapter Fourteen. This resistance must be attacked by special societies,
by the establishment of competing schools, by help and promotion for
enlightened teachers, and, wherever the attack is incompletely
successful, it must be supplemented by the energetic diffusion of
educational literature for adults, upon modern lines. The forces of the
entire movement may be mobilized in a variety of ways to bring pressure
upon reactionary schools and institutions.
A set of activities correlated with most
of the directly creative ones will lie through existing political and
administrative bodies. The political work of the Open Conspiracy must be
conducted upon two levels and by entirely different methods. Its main
political idea, its political strategy, is to weaken, efface,
incorporate, or supersede existing governments. But there is also a
tactical diversion of administrative powers and resources to economic
and educational arrangements of a modern type. Because a country or a
district is inconvenient as a division and destined to ultimate
absorption in some more comprehensive and economical system of
government, that is no reason why its administration should not be
brought meanwhile into working co-operation with the development of the
Open Conspiracy. Free Trade nationalism in power is better than high
tariff nationalism, and pacificist party liberalism better than
aggressive party patriotism.
This evokes the anticipation of another series
of groups, a group in every possible political division, whose task it
will be to organize the whole strength of the Open Conspiracy in that
division as an effective voting or agitating force. In many divisions
this might soon become a sufficiently considerable block to affect the
attitudes and pledges of the national politicians. The organization of
these political groups into provincial or national conferences and
systems would follow hard upon their appearance. In their programmes
they would be guided by meetings and discussions with the specifically
economic, educational, biological, scientific and cultural groups, but
they would also form their own special research bodies to work out the
incessant problems of transition between the old type of locally centred
administrations and a developing world system of political controls.
In the preceding chapter we sketched the
first practicable first phase of the Open Conspiracy as the propaganda
of a group of interlocking ideas, a propaganda associated with
pacificist action. In the present chapter we have given a scheme of
branching and amplifying development. In this scheme. this scheme of the
second phase, we conceive of the Open Conspiracy as consisting of a
great multitude and variety of overlapping groups, but now all organized
for collective political, social, and educational as well as
propagandist action. They will recognize each other much more clearly
than they did at first, and they will have acquired a common name.
The groups, however, almost all of them,
will still have specific work also. Some will be organizing a sounder
setting for scientific progress, some exploring new social and
educational possibilities, many concentrated upon this or that phase in
the reorganization of the world's economic life, and so forth. The
individual Open Conspirator may belong to one or more groups and in
addition to the ad hoc societies and organizations which the
movement will sustain, often in co-operation with partially sympathetic
people still outside its ranks.
The character of the Open Conspiracy will
now be plainly displayed. It will have become a great world movement as
wide-spread and evident as socialism or communism. It will have taken
the place of these movements very largely. It will be more than they
were, it will be frankly a world religion. This large, loose
assimilatory mass of movements, groups, and societies will be definitely
and obviously attempting to swallow up the entire population of the
world and become the new human community.
XVI
- Existing And Developing Movements Which Are Contributory To The Open
Conspiracy And Which Must Develop A Common Consciousness. The Parable Of
Provinder
Island
A suggestion has already
been made in an earlier chapter of this essay which may perhaps be
expanded here a little more. It is that there already exist in the world
a considerable number of movements in industry, in political life, in
social matters, in education, which point in the same direction as the
Open Conspiracy and are inspired by the same spirit. It will be
interesting to discuss how far some of these movements may not become
confluent with others and by a mere process of logical completion
identify themselves consciously with the Open Conspiracy in its
entirety.
Consider, for example, the movement for a
scientific study and control of population pressure, known popularly as
the Birth Control movement. By itself, assuming existing political and
economic conditions, this movement lays itself open to the charge of
being no better than a scheme of “race suicide.” If a population in
some area of high civilization attempts to restrict increase, organize
its economic life upon methods of maximum individual productivity, and
impose order and beauty upon its entire territory, that region will
become irresistibly attractive to any adjacent festering mass of
low-grade, highly reproductive population. The cheap humanity of the one
community will make a constant attack upon the other, affording facile
servility, prostitutes, toilers, hand labour. Tariffs against sweated
products, restriction of immigration, tensions leading at last to a war
of defensive massacre are inevitable. The conquest of an illiterate,
hungry, and incontinent multitude may be almost as disastrous as defeat
for the selecter race. Indeed, one finds that in discussion the
propagandists of Birth Control admit that their project must be
universal or dysgenic. But yet quite a number of them do not follow up
these admissions to their logical consequences, produce the lines and
continue the curves until the complete form of the Open Conspiracy
appears. It will be the business of the early Open Conspiracy
propagandists to make them do so, and to install groups and
representatives at every possible point of vantage in this movement.
And similarly the now very numerous
associations for world peace halt in alarm on the edge of their own
implications. World Peace remains a vast aspiration until there is some
substitute for the present competition of states for markets and raw
material, and some restraint upon population pressure. League of Nations
Societies and all forms of pacificist organization are either futile or
insincere until they come into line with the complementary propositions
of the Open Conspiracy.
The various Socialist movements again are
partial projects professing at present to be self-sufficient schemes.
Most of them involve a pretence that national and political forces are
intangible phantoms, and that the primary issue of population pressure
can be ignored. They produce one woolly scheme after another for
transferring the property in this, that, or the other economic plant and
interest from bodies of shareholders and company promoters to gangs of
politicians or syndicates of workers - to be steered to efficiency, it
would seem, by pillars of cloud by day and pillars of fire by night. The
communist party has trained a whole generation of disciples to believe
that the overthrow of a vaguely apprehended “Capitalism” is the
simple solution of all human difficulties. No movement ever succeeded so
completely in substituting phrases for thought. In
Moscow
communism has trampled “Capitalism” underfoot for ten eventful
years, and still finds all the problems of social and political
construction before it.
But as soon as the Socialist or Communist
can be got to realize that his repudiation of private monopolization is
not a complete programme but just a preliminary principle, he is ripe
for the ampler concepts of the modern outlook. The Open Conspiracy is
the natural inheritor of socialist and communist enthusiasms; it may be
in control of
Moscow
before it is in control of
New York
.
The Open Conspiracy may achieve the more
or less complete amalgamation of all the radical impulses in the
Atlantic community of to-day. But its scope is not confined to the
variety of sympathetic movements which are brought to mind by that loose
word radical. In the past fifty years or so, while Socialists and
Communists have been denouncing the current processes of economic life
in the same invariable phrases and with the same undiscriminating
animosity, these processes have been undergoing the profoundest and most
interesting changes. While socialist thought has recited its phrases,
with witty rather than substantial variations, a thousand times as many
clever people have been busy upon industrial, mercantile and financial
processes. The Socialist still reiterates that this greater body of
intelligence has been merely seeking private gain, which has just as
much truth in it as is necessary to make it an intoxicating lie.
Everywhere competitive businesses have been giving way to amalgamated
enterprises, marching towards monopoly, and personally owned businesses
to organizations so large as to acquire more and more the character of
publicly responsible bodies. In theory in
Great Britain
, banks are privately owned, and railway transport is privately owned,
and they are run entirely for profit - in practice their profit making
is austerely restrained and their proceedings are all the more sensitive
to public welfare because they are outside the direct control of party
politicians.
Now this transformation of business,
trading, and finance has been so multitudinous and so rapid as to be
still largely unconscious of itself. Intelligent men have gone from
combination to combination and extended their range, year by year,
without realizing how their activities were enlarging them to
conspicuousness and responsibility. Economic organization is even now
only discovering itself for what it is. It has accepted incompatible
existing institutions to its own great injury. It has been patriotic and
broken its shins against the tariff walls its patriotism has raised to
hamper its own movements it has been imperial and found itself taxed to
the limits of its endurance, “controlled” by antiquated military and
naval experts, and crippled altogether. The younger, more vigorous
intelligences in the great business directorates of to-day are beginning
to realize the uncompleted implications of their enterprise. A day will
come when the gentlemen who are trying to control the oil supplies of
the world without reference to anything else except as a subsidiary
factor in their game will be considered to be quaint characters. The
ends of Big Business must carry Big Business into the Open Conspiracy
just as surely as every other creative and broadly organizing movement
is carried.
Now I know that to all this urging
towards a unification of constructive effort, a great number of people
will be disposed to a reply which will, I hope, be less popular in the
future than it is at the present time. They will assume first an
expression of great sagacity, an elderly air. Then, smiling gently, they
will ask whether there is not something preposterously ambitious in
looking at the problem of life as one whole. Is it not wiser to
concentrate our forces on more practicable things, to attempt one
thing at a time, not to antagonize the whole order of established things
against our poor desires, to begin tentatively, to refrain from putting
too great a strain upon people, to trust to the growing common sense of
the world to adjust this or that line of progress to the general scheme
of things. Far better accomplish something definite here and there than
challenge a general failure. That is, they declare, how reformers and
creative things have gone on in the past; that is how they are going on
now; muddling forward in a mild and confused and partially successful
way. Why not trust them to go on like that? Let each man do his bit with
a complete disregard of the logical interlocking of progressive effort
to which I have been drawing attention.
Now I must confess that, popular as this
style of argument is, it gives me so tedious a feeling that rather than
argue against it in general terms I will resort to a parable. I will
relate the story of the pig on
Provinder
Island
.
There was, you must understand, only one
pig on
Provinder
Island
, and Heaven knows how it got there, whether it escaped and swam ashore
or was put ashore from some vessel suddenly converted to vegetarianism,
I cannot imagine. At first it was the only mammal there. But later on
three sailors and a very small but observant cabin boy were wrecked
there, and after subsisting for a time on shell fish and roots they
became aware of this pig. And simultaneously they became aware of a
nearly intolerable craving for bacon. The eldest of the three sailors
began to think of a ham he had met in his boyhood, a beautiful ham for
which his father had had the caving knife specially sharpened; the
second of the three sailors dreamed repeatedly of a roast loin of pork
he had eaten at his sister's wedding, and the third's mind ran on
chitterlings - I know not why. They sat about their meagre fire and
conferred and expatiated upon these things until their mouths watered
and the shell fish turned to water within them. What dreams came to the
cabin boy are unknown, for it was their custom to discourage his
confidences. But he sat apart brooding and was at last moved to speech.
“Let us hunt that old pig,” he said, “and kill it.”
Now it may have been because it was the
habit of these sailors to discourage the cabin boy and keep him in his
place, but anyhow, for whatever reason it was, all three sailors set
themselves with one accord to oppose that proposal.
“Who spoke of killing the pig?” said
the eldest sailor loudly, looking round to see if by any chance the pig
was within hearing. “Who spoke of killing the pig? You're the
sort of silly young devil who jumps at ideas and hasn't no sense of
difficulties. What I said was AM. All I want is just a Am to go
with my roots and sea salt. One Am. The Left Am. I don't want the right
one, and I don't propose to get it. I've got a sense of proportion and a
proper share of humour, and I know my limitations. I'm a sound,
clear-headed, practical man. Am is what I'm after, and if I can get
that, I'm prepared to say Quits and let the rest of the pig alone. Who's
for joining me in a Left Am Unt - a simple reasonable Left Am Unt - just
to get One Left Am?
Nobody answered him directly, but when
his voice died away, the next sailor in order of seniority took up the
tale. “That Boy,” he said, “will die of Swelled Ed, and I pity
him. My idea is to follow up the pig and get hold of a loin chop. Just
simply a loin chop. A loin chop is good enough for me. It's -- feasible.
Much more feasible than a great Am. Here we are, we've got no gun, we've
got no wood of a sort to make bows and arrows, we've got nothing but our
clasp knives, and that pig can run like Ell. It's ridiculous to think of
killing that pig. But if one didn't trouble him, if one kind of got into
his confidence and crept near him and just quietly and insidiously went
for his loin - just sort of as if one was tickling him-one might get a
loin chop almost before he knew of it.”
The third sailor sat crumpled up and
downcast with his lean fingers tangled in his shock of hair.
“Chitterlings,” he murmured, “chitterlings. I don't even want to
think of the pig.”
And the cabin boy pursued his own ideas
in silence, for he deemed it unwise to provoke his elders further.
On these lines it was the three sailors
set about the gratifying of their taste for pork, each in his own way,
separately and sanely and modestly. And each had his reward. The first
sailor, after weeks of patience, got within arm's length of the pig and
smacked that coveted left ham loud and good, and felt success was near.
The other two heard the smack and the grunt of dismay half a mile away.
But the pig, in d state of astonishment, carried the ham off out of
reach, there and then, and that was as close as the first sailor ever
got to his objective. The roast loin hunter did no better. He came upon
the pig asleep under a rock one day, and jumped upon the very loin he
desired, but the pig bit him deeply and septically, and displayed so
much resentment that the question of a chop was dropped forthwith and
never again broached between them. And thereafter the arm of the second
sailor was bandaged and swelled up and went from bad to worse. And as
for the third sailor, it is doubtful whether he even got wind of a
chitterling from the start to the finish of this parable. The cabin boy,
pursuing notions of his own, made a pitfall for the whole pig, but as
the others did not help him, and as he was an excessively small - though
shrewd - cabin boy, it was a feeble and insufficient pitfall, and all it
caught was the hunter of chitterlings, who was wandering distraught.
After which the hunter of chitterlings, became a hunter of cabin boys,
and the cabin boy's life, for all his shrewdness, was precarious and
unpleasant. He slept only in snatches and learned the full bitterness of
insight misunderstood.
When at last a ship came to Provinder
Island and took off the three men and the cabin boy, the pig was still
bacon intact and quite gay and cheerful, and all four castaways were in
a very emaciated condition because at that season of the year shell fish
were rare, and edible roots were hard to find, and the pig was very much
cleverer than they were in finding them and digging them up - let alone
digesting them.
From which parable it may be gathered
that a partial enterprise is not always wiser or more hopeful than a
comprehensive one.
And in the same manner, with myself in
the röle of that minute but observant cabin boy, I would sustain the
proposition that none of these movements of partial reconstruction has
the sound common sense quality its supporters suppose. All these
movements are worth while if they can be taken into the world-wide
movement; all in isolation are futile. They will be overlaid and lost in
the general drift. The policy of the whole hog is the best one, the
sanest one, the easiest, and the most hopeful. If sufficient men and
women of intelligence can realize that simple truth and give up their
lives to it, mankind may yet achieve a civilization and power and
fullness of life beyond our present dreams. If they do not, frustration
will triumph, and war, violence, and a drivelling waste of time and
strength and desire, more disgusting even than war, will be the lot of
our race down through the ages to its emaciated and miserable end.
For this little planet of ours is quite
off the course of any rescue ships, if the will in our species fails.
XVII
- The Creative Home, Social Group, And School: The Present Waste Of
Idealistic Will
Human society began with
the family. The natural history of gregariousness is a history of the
establishment of mutual toleration among human animals, so that a litter
or a herd keeps together instead of breaking up. It is in the family
group that the restraints, disciplines, and self-sacrifices which make
human society possible were worked out and our fundamental prejudices
established, and it is in the family group, enlarged perhaps in many
respects, and more and more responsive to collective social influences,
that our social life must be relearnt, generation after generation.
Now in each generation the Open
Conspiracy, until it can develop its own reproductive methods, must
remain a minority movement of intelligent converts. A unified
progressive world community demands its own type of home and training.
It needs to have its fundamental concepts firmly established in as many
minds as possible and to guard its children from the infection of the
old racial and national hatreds and jealousies, old superstitions and
bad mental habits, and base interpretations of life. From its outset the
Open Conspiracy will be setting itself to influence the existing
educational machinery, but for a long time it will find itself
confronted in school and college by powerful religious and political
authorities determined to set back the children at the point or even
behind the point from which their patents made their escape. At best,
the liberalism of the state-controlled schools will be a compromise.
Originally schools and colleges were transmitters of tradition and
conservative forces. So they remain in essence to this day.
Organized teaching has always aimed, and
will always tend to guide, train, and direct, the mind. The problem of
reconstructing education so as to make it a releasing instead of a
binding process has still to be solved. During the early phases of its
struggle, therefore, the Open Conspiracy will be obliged to adopt a
certain sectarianism of domestic and social life in the interests of its
children, to experiment in novel educational methods and educational
atmospheres, and it may even in many cases have to consider the grouping
of its families and the establishment of its own schools. In many modern
communities, the English-speaking states, for example, there is still
liberty to establish educational companies, running schools of a special
type. In every country where that right does not exist it has to be
fought for.
There lies a great work for various
groups of the Open Conspiracy. Successful schools would become
laboratories of educational methods and patterns for new state schools.
Necessarily for a time, but we may hope unconsciously, the Open
Conspiracy children will become a social élite; from their first
conscious moments they will begin to think and talk among clear-headed
people speaking distinctly and behaving frankly, and it will be a waste
and loss to put them back for the scholastic stage among their mentally
indistinct and morally muddled contemporaries. A phase when there will
be a special educational system for the Open Conspiracy seems,
therefore, to be indicated. Its children will learn to speak, draw,
think, compute lucidly and subtly, and into their vigorous minds they
will take the broad concepts of history, biology, and mechanical
progress, the basis of the new world, naturally and easily. Meanwhile,
those who grow up outside the advancing educational frontier of the Open
Conspiracy will never come under the full influence of its ideas, or
they will get hold of them only after a severe struggle against a mass
of misrepresentations and elaborately instilled prejudices. An
adolescent and adult educational campaign, to undo the fixations and
suggestions of the normal conservative and reactionary schools and
colleges, is and will long remain an important part of the work of the
Open Conspiracy.
Always, as long as I can remember, there
have been a dispute and invidious comparisons between the old and the
young. The young find the old prey upon and restrain them, and the old
find the young shallow, disappointing, and aimless in vivid contrast to
their revised memories of their own early days. The present time is one
in which these perennial accusations flower with exceptional vigour. But
there does seem to be some truth in the statement that the facilities to
live frivolously are greater now than they have ever been for old and
young alike. For example, in the great modern communities that emerge
now from Christendom, there is a widespread disposition to regard Sunday
as merely a holiday. But that was certainly not the original intention
of Sunday. As we have noted already in an earlier chapter, it was a day
dedicated to the greater issues of life. Now great multitudes of people
do not even pretend to set aside any time at all to the greater issues
of life. The greater issues are neglected altogether. The churches are
neglected, and nothing of a unifying or exalting sort takes their place.
What the contemporary senior tells his
junior to-day is perfectly correct. In his own youth, no serious impulse
of his went to waste. He was not distracted by a thousand gay but petty
temptations, and the local religious powers, whatever they happened to
be, seemed to believe in themselves more and made a more comprehensive
attack upon his conscience and imagination. Now the old faiths are
damaged and discredited, and the new and greater one, which is the Open
Conspiracy, takes shape only gradually. A decade or so ago, socialism
preached its confident hopes, and patriotism and imperial pride shared
its attraction for the ever grave and passionate will of emergent youth.
Now socialism and democracy are “under revision” and the flags that
once waved so bravely reek of poison gas, are stiff with blood and mud
and shameful with exposed dishonesties. Youth is what youth has always
been, eager for fine interpretations of life, capable of splendid
resolves. It has no natural disposition towards the shallow and confused
life. Its demand as ever is, “What am I to do with myself?” But it
comes up out of its childhood to-day into a world of ruthless exposures
and cynical pretensions. We are all a little ashamed of
“earnestness.” The past ten years have seen the shy and powerful
idealism of youth at a loss and dismayed and ashamed as perhaps it has
never been before. It is in the world still, but masked, hiding even
from itself in a whirl of small excitements and futile, defiant
depravities.
The old flags and
faiths have lost their magic for the intelligence of the young; they can
command it no more; it is in the mighty revolution to which the Open
Conspiracy directs itself that the youth of mankind must find its soul,
if ever it is to find its soul again.
XVIII
- Progressive Development Of The Activities Of The Open Conspiracy Into
A World Control And Commonweal: The Hazards Of The Attempt
We have now sketched out
in these Blue Prints the methods by which the confused radicalism and
constructive forces of the present time may, can, and probably will be
drawn together about a core of modernized religious feeling into one
great and multifarious creative effort. A way has been shown by which
this effort may be developed from a mere propagandist campaign and a
merely resistant protest against contemporary militarism into an
organized foreshadowing in research, publicity, and experiment in
educational, economic, and political reconstructions, of that Pax
Mundi which has become already the tantalised desire of great
multitudes throughout the world. These foreshadowings and
reconstructions will ignore and transcend the political boundaries of
to-day. They will continually become more substantial as project passes
into attempt and performance. In phase after phase and at point after
point, therefore, the Open Conspiracy will come to grips with the powers
that sustain these boundaries.
And it will not be merely topographical
boundaries that will be passed. The Open Conspiracy will also be
dissolving and repudiating many existing restrictions upon conduct and
many social prejudices. The Open Conspiracy proposes to end and shows
how an end may be put to that huge substratum of underdeveloped,
undereducated, subjugated, exploited, and frustrated lives upon which
such civilization as the world has known hitherto has rested, and upon
which most of our social systems still rest.
Whenever possible, the Open Conspiracy
will advance by illumination and persuasion. But it has to advance, and
even from the outset, where it is not allowed to illuminate and
persuade, it must fight. Its first fights will probably be for the right
to spread its system of ideas plainly and clearly throughout the world.
There is, I suppose, a
flavour of treason about the assumption that any established government
is provisional, and a quality of immorality in any criticism of accepted
moral standards. Still more is the proposal, made even in times of
peace, to resist war levies and conscription an offence against absolute
conceptions of loyalty. But the ampler wisdom of the modern Atlantic
communities, already touched by premonitions of change and futurity, has
continually enlarged the common liberties of thought for some
generations, and it is doubtful if there will be any serious resistance
to the dissemination of these views and the early organization of the
Open Conspiracy in any of the English-speaking communities or
throughout the British Empire, in the Scandinavian countries, or in such
liberal-minded countries as Holland, Switzerland, republican Germany or
France. France, in the hasty years after the war, submitted to some
repressive legislation against the discussion of
birth control or hostile criticism of the militarist attitude;
but such a check upon mental freedom is altogether contrary to the clear
and open quality of the French mind; in practice it has already been
effectively repudiated by such writers as Victor Margueritte, and it is
unlikely that there will be any effective suppression of the opening
phases of the Open Conspiracy in France.
This gives us a large portion of the
existing civilized world in which men's minds may be readjusted to the
idea that their existing governments are in the
position of trustees for the greater government of the coming age.
Throughout these communities it is conceivable that the structural lines
of the world community may be materialized and established with only
minor struggles, local boycotts, vigorous public controversies, normal
legislative obstruction, social pressure, and overt political
activities. Police, jail, expulsions, and so forth, let alone outlawry
and warfare, may scarcely be brought into this struggle upon the high
civilized level of the Atlantic communities. But where they are brought
in, the Open Conspiracy, to the best of its
ability and the full extent of its resources, must become a fighting
force and organize itself upon resistant lines.
Non-resistance, the restriction of
activities to moral suasion is no part of the programme of the Open
Conspiracy. In the face of unscrupulous opposition creative ideas must
become aggressive, must define their enemies and attack them. By its own
organizations or through the police and military strength of governments
amenable to its ideas, the movement is bound to find itself fighting for
open roads, open frontiers, freedom of speech, and the realities of
peace in regions of oppression. The Open
Conspiracy rests upon a disrespect for nationality, and there is
no reason why it should tolerate noxious or obstructive governments
because they hold their own in this or that patch of human territory. It
lies within the power of the Atlantic communities to
impose peace upon the world and secure unimpeded movement and
free speech from end to end of the earth. This is a fact on which the
Open Conspiracy must insist. The English-speaking states, France,
Germany, Holland, Switzerland, the Scandinavian countries, and Russia,
given only a not very extravagant frankness of understanding between
them, and a common disposition towards the ideas of the Open Conspiracy,
could cease to arm against each other and still exert enough strength to
impose disarmament and a respect for human freedom in every corner of
the planet. It is fantastic pedantry to wait for all the world to accede
before all the world is pacified and policed.
The most inconsistent factor in the
liberal and radical thought of to-day is its prejudice against the
interference of highly developed modern states in the affairs of less
stable and less advanced regions. This is denounced as
“imperialism,” and regarded as criminal. It may have assumed
grotesque and dangerous forms under the now decaying traditions of
national competition, but as the merger of the Atlantic states proceeds,
the possibility and necessity of bringing areas of misgovernment and
disorder under world control increase. A great war like the war of
1914-1918 may never happen again. The common sense of mankind may
suffice to avert that. But there is still much actual warfare before
mankind, on the frontiers everywhere, against brigands, against ancient
loyalties and traditions which will become at last no better than
excuses for brigandage and obstructive exaction.
All the weight of the Open Conspiracy will be on the side of the world
order and against that sort of local independence which holds back its
subject people from the citizenship of he world.
But in this broad prospect of
far-reaching political amalgamations under the impulses of the Open
Conspiracy lurk a thousand antagonisms and adverse chances, like the
unsuspected gulleys and ravines and thickets in a wide and distant
landscape. We know not what unexpected chasms may presently be
discovered. The Open Conspirator may realize that he is one of an
advancing and victorious force and still find himself outnumbered and
outfought in his own particular corner r of the battlefield. No one can
yet estimate the possible strength of reaction against world
unification; no one can foresee the extent of the divisions and
confusions that may arise among ourselves. The ideas in this book may
spread about without any serious resistance in most civilized countries,
but there are still governments under which the persistent expression of
such thoughts will be dealt with as crimes and bring men and women to
prison, torment, and death. Nevertheless, they must be expressed.
While the Open Conspiracy is no more than
a discussion it may spread unopposed because it is disregarded. As a
mainly passive resistance to militarism it may still be tolerable. But
as its knowledge and experience accumulate and its organization become
more effective and aggressive, as it begins to lay hands upon education,
upon social habits, upon business developments, as it proceeds to take
over the organization of the community, it will marshal not only its own
forces but its enemies. A complex of interests will find themselves
restrained and threatened by it, and it may easily evoke that most
dangerous of human mass feelings, fear. In ways quite unpredictable it
may raise a storm against itself beyond all our present imaginings. Our
conception of an almost bloodless domination of the Atlantic communities
may be merely the confident dream of a thinker whose thoughts have yet
to be squarely challenged.
We are not even sure of the common peace.
Across the path of mankind the storm of another Great War may break,
bringing with it for a time more brutal repressions and vaster injuries
even than its predecessor. The scaffoldings and work sheds of the Open
Conspiracy may fare violently in that tornado. The restoration of
progress may seem an almost hopeless struggle.
It is no part of modern religion to incur
needless hardship or go out of the way to seek martyrdom. If we can do
our work easily and happily, so it should be done. But the work is not
to be shirked because it cannot be done easily and happily. The vision
of a world at peace and liberated for an unending growth of knowledge
and power is worth every danger of the way. And since in this age of
confusion we must live imperfectly and anyhow die, we may as well
suffer, if need be, and die for a great end as for none. Never has the
translation of vision into realities been easy since the beginning of
human effort. The establishment of the world community will surely exact
a price - and who can tell what that price may be? - in toil, suffering,
and blood.
XIX
- Human Life In The Coming World Community
The new life that the
Open Conspiracy struggles to achieve through us for our race is first a
life of liberations.
The oppression of incessant toil can
surely be lifted from everyone, and the miseries due to a great
multitude of infections and disorders of nutrition and growth cease to
be a part of human experience. Few people are perfectly healthy nowadays
except for brief periods of happiness, but the elation of physical
well-being will some day be the common lot of mankind.
And not only from natural evils will man
be largely free. He will not be left with his soul tangled, haunted by
monstrous and irrational fears and a prey to malicious impulse. From his
birth he will breathe sweetness and generosity and use his mind and
hands cleanly and exactly. He will feel better, will better, think
better, see, taste, and hear better than men do now. His undersoul will
no longer be a mutinous cavern of ill-treated suppressions and of
impulses repressed without understanding. All these releases are plainly
possible for him. They pass out of his tormented desire now, they elude
and mock him, because chance, confusion, and squalor rule his life. All
the gifts of destiny are overlaid and lost to him. He must still suspect
and fear. Not one of us is yet as clear and free and happy within
himself as most men will some day be. Before mankind lies the prospect
not only of health but of magnanimity.
Within the peace
and freedom that the Open Conspiracy is winning for us, all these good
things that escape us now may be ensured. A graver humanity, stronger,
more lovely, longer lived, will learn and develop the ever enlarging
possibilities of its destiny. For the first time, the full beauty of
this world will be revealed to its unhurried eyes. Its thoughts
will be to our thoughts as the thoughts of a man to the troubled mental
experimenting of a child. And all the best of us will be living on in
that ampler life, as the child and the things it tried and learnt still
live in the man. When we were children, we could not think or feel as we
think and feel to-day, but to-day we can peer back and still recall
something of the ignorances and guesses and wild hopes of these nigh
forgotten years.
And so mankind, ourselves still living,
but dispersed and reconstructed again in the future, will recall with
affection and understanding the desperate wishes and troubled efforts of
our present state.
How far can we anticipate the habitations
and ways, the usages and adventures, the mighty employments, the ever
increasing knowledge and power of the days to come? No more than a child
with its scribbling paper and its box of bricks can picture or model the
undertakings of its adult years. Our battle is
with cruelties and frustrations, stupid, heavy and hateful things from
which we shall escape at last, less like victors conquering a world than
like sleepers awaking from a nightmare in the dawn. From any
dream, however dismal and horrible, one can escape by realizing that it
is a dream; by saying, “I will awake.”
The Open Conspiracy is the awaking of
mankind from a nightmare, an infantile nightmare, of the struggle for
existence and the inevitability of war. The light of day thrusts between
our eyelids, and the multitudinous sounds of morning clamour in our
ears. A time will come when men will sit with history before them or
with some old newspaper before them and ask incredulously, “Was there
ever such a world?”
THE
END
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