<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_136" id= "Page_136"></SPAN>VII</h2>
<h2>THE TARIFF—"PROTECTION," OR SPECIAL PRIVILEGE?</h2>
<p>Every business question, in this country, comes back, sooner or
later, to the question of the tariff. You cannot escape from it, no
matter in which direction you go. The tariff is situated in
relation to other questions like Boston Common in the old
arrangement of that interesting city. I remember seeing once, in
<i>Life</i>, a picture of a man standing at the door of one of the
railway stations in Boston and inquiring of a Bostonian the way to
the Common. "Take any of these streets," was the reply, "in either
direction." Now, as the Common was related to the winding streets
of Boston, so the tariff question is related to the economic
questions of our day. Take any direction and you will sooner or
later get to the Common. And, in discussing the <SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN>tariff you may start at the centre and go in any
direction you please.</p>
<p>Let us illustrate by standing at the centre, the Common itself.
As far back as 1828, when they knew nothing about "practical
politics" as compared with what we know now, a tariff bill was
passed which was called the "Tariff of Abominations," because it
had no beginning nor end nor plan. It had no traceable pattern in
it. It was as if the demands of everybody in the United States had
all been thrown indiscriminately into one basket and that basket
presented as a piece of legislation. It had been a general scramble
and everybody who scrambled hard enough had been taken care of in
the schedules resulting. It was an abominable thing to the
thoughtful men of that day, because no man guided it, shaped it, or
tried to make an equitable system out of it. That was bad enough,
but at least everybody had an open door through which to scramble
for his advantage. It was a go-as-you-please, free-for-all
struggle, and anybody who could get to Washington and say he
represented an impor<SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN>tant
business interest could be heard by the Committee on Ways and
Means.</p>
<p>We have a very different state of affairs now. The Committee on
Ways and Means and the Finance Committee of the Senate in these
sophisticated days have come to discriminate by long experience
among the persons whose counsel they are to take in respect of
tariff legislation. There has been substituted for the unschooled
body of citizens that used to clamor at the doors of the Finance
Committee and the Committee on Ways and Means, one of the most
interesting and able bodies of expert lobbyists that has ever been
developed in the experience of any country,—men who know so
much about the matters they are talking of that you cannot put your
knowledge into competition with theirs. They so overwhelm you with
their familiarity with detail that you cannot discover wherein
their scheme lies. They suggest the change of an innocent fraction
in a particular schedule and explain it to you so plausibly that
you cannot see that it means millions of dollars additional from
the consumers of this country.<SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN>
They propose, for example, to put the carbon for electric lights in
two-foot pieces instead of one-foot pieces,—and you do not
see where you are getting sold, because you are not an expert. If
you will get some expert to go through the schedules of the present
Payne-Aldrich tariff, you will find a "nigger" concealed in almost
every woodpile,—some little word, some little clause, some
unsuspected item, that draws thousands of dollars out of the
pockets of the consumer and yet does not seem to mean anything in
particular. They have calculated the whole thing beforehand; they
have analyzed the whole detail and consequence, each one in his
specialty. With the tariff specialist the average business man has
no possibility of competition. Instead of the old scramble, which
was bad enough, we get the present expert control of the tariff
schedules. Thus the relation between business and government
becomes, not a matter of the exposure of all the sensitive parts of
the government to all the active parts of the people, but the
special impression upon them<SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN>
of a particular organized force in the business world.</p>
<p>Furthermore, every expedient and device of secrecy is brought
into use to keep the public unaware of the arguments of the high
protectionists, and ignorant of the facts which refute them; and
uninformed of the intentions of the framers of the proposed
legislation. It is notorious, even, that many members of the
Finance Committee of the Senate did not know the significance of
the tariff schedules which were reported in the present tariff bill
to the Senate, and that members of the Senate who asked Mr. Aldrich
direct questions were refused the information they sought;
sometimes, I dare say, because he could not give it, and sometimes,
I venture to say, because disclosure of the information would have
embarrassed the passage of the measure. There were essential
papers, moreover, which could not be got at.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Take that very interesting matter, that will-o'-the-wisp, known
as "the cost of production." It is hard for any man who has ever
studied<SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN> economics at all to
restrain a cynical smile when he is told that an intelligent group
of his fellow-citizens are looking for "the cost of production" as
a basis for tariff legislation. It is not the same in any one
factory for two years together. It is not the same in one industry
from one season to another. It is not the same in one country at
two different epochs. It is constantly eluding your grasp. It
nowhere exists, as a scientific, demonstrable fact. But, in order
to carry out the pretences of the "protective" program, it was
necessary to go through the motions of finding out what it was. I
am credibly informed that the government of the United States
requested several foreign governments, among others the government
of Germany, to supply it with as reliable figures as possible
concerning the cost of producing certain articles corresponding
with those produced in the United States. The German government put
the matter into the hands of certain of her manufacturers, who sent
in just as complete answers as they could procure from their books.
The information reached our gov<SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN>ernment during the course of the debate on the
Payne-Aldrich Bill and was transmitted,—for the bill by that
time had reached the Senate,—to the Finance Committee of the
Senate. But I am told,—and I have no reason to doubt
it,—that it never came out of the pigeonholes of the
committee. I don't know, and that committee doesn't know, what the
information it contained was. When Mr. Aldrich was asked about it,
he first said it was not an official report from the German
government. Afterward he intimated that it was an impudent attempt
on the part of the German government to interfere with tariff
legislation in the United States. But he never said what the cost
of production disclosed by it was. If he had, it is more than
likely that some of the schedules would have been shown to be
entirely unjustifiable.</p>
<p>Such instances show you just where the centre of gravity
is,—and it is a matter of gravity indeed, for it is a very
grave matter! It lay during the last Congress in the one person who
was the accomplished intermediary be<SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN>tween the expert lobbyists and the legislation of
Congress. I am not saying this in derogation of the character of
Mr. Aldrich. It is no concern of mine what kind of man Mr. Aldrich
is; now, particularly, when he has retired from public life, is it
a matter of indifference. The point is that he, because of his long
experience, his long handling of these delicate and private
matters, was the usual and natural instrument by which the Congress
of the United States informed itself, not as to the wishes of the
people of the United States or of the rank and file of business men
of the country, but as to the needs and arguments of the experts
who came to arrange matters with the committees.</p>
<p>The moral of the whole matter is this: The business of the
United States is not as a whole in contact with the government of
the United States. So soon as it is, the matters which now give
you, and justly give you, cause for uneasiness will disappear. Just
so soon as the business of this country has general, free, welcome
access to the councils of Congress, all the<SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN> friction between business and politics will
disappear.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The tariff question is not the question that it was fifteen or
twenty or thirty years ago. It used to be said by the advocates of
the tariff that it made no difference even if there were a great
wall separating us from the commerce of the world, because inside
the United States there was so enormous an area of absolute free
trade that competition within the country kept prices down to a
normal level; that so long as one state could compete with all the
others in the United States, and all the others compete with it,
there would be only that kind of advantage gained which is gained
by superior brain, superior economy, the better plant, the better
administration; all of the things that have made America supreme,
and kept prices in America down, because American genius was
competing with American genius. I must add that so long as that was
true, there was much to be said in defence of the protective
tariff.</p>
<p>But the point now is that the protective tariff<SPAN name=
"Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN> has been taken advantage of by some
men to destroy domestic competition, to combine all existing rivals
within our free-trade area, and to make it impossible for new men
to come into the field. Under the high tariff there has been formed
a network of factories which in their connection dominate the
market of the United States and establish their own prices.
Whereas, therefore, it was once arguable that the high tariff did
not create the high cost of living, it is now no longer arguable
that these combinations do not,—not by reason of the tariff,
but by reason of their combination under the tariff,—settle
what prices shall be paid; settle how much the product shall be;
and settle, moreover, what shall be the market for labor.</p>
<p>The "protective" policy, as we hear it proclaimed to-day, bears
no relation to the original doctrine enunciated by Webster and
Clay. The "infant industries," which those statesmen desired to
encourage, have grown up and grown gray, but they have always had
new arguments for special favors. Their demands have gone far
beyond what they dared ask for in the days<SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN> of Mr. Blaine and Mr. McKinley, though both those
apostles of "protection" were, before they died, ready to confess
that the time had even then come to call a halt on the claims of
the subsidized industries. William McKinley, before he died, showed
symptoms of adjustment to the new age such as his successors have
not exhibited. You remember what the utterances of Mr. McKinley's
last month were with regard to the policy with which his name is
particularly identified; I mean the policy of "protection." You
remember how he joined in opinion with what Mr. Blaine before him
had said—namely, that we had devoted the country to a policy
which, too rigidly persisted in, was proving a policy of
restriction; and that we must look forward to a time that ought to
come very soon when we should enter into reciprocal relations of
trade with all the countries of the world. This was another way of
saying that we must substitute elasticity for rigidity; that we
must substitute trade for closed ports. McKinley saw what his
successors did not see. He saw that we had made for ourselves a
strait-jacket.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN>When I reflect upon the
"protective" policy of this country, and observe that it is the
later aspects and the later uses of that policy which have built up
trusts and monopoly in the United States, I make this contrast in
my thought: Mr. McKinley had already uttered his protest against
what he foresaw; his successor saw what McKinley had only foreseen,
but he took no action. His successor saw those very special
privileges, which Mr. McKinley himself began to suspect, used by
the men who had obtained them to build up a monopoly for
themselves, making freedom of enterprise in this country more and
more difficult. I am one of those who have the utmost confidence
that Mr. McKinley would not have sanctioned the later developments
of the policy with which his name stands identified.</p>
<p>What is the present tariff policy of the protectionists? It is
not the ancient protective policy to which I would give all due
credit, but an entirely new doctrine. I ask anybody who is
interested in the history of high "protective" tariffs to compare
the latest platforms of the<SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN>
two "protective" tariff parties with the old doctrine. Men have
been struck, students of this matter, by an entirely new departure.
The new doctrine of the protectionist is that the tariff should
represent the difference between the cost of production in America
and the cost of production in other countries, <i>plus</i> a
reasonable profit to those who are engaged in industry. This is the
new part of the protective doctrine: "<i>plus</i> a reasonable
profit." It openly guarantees profit to the men who come and ask
favors of Congress. The old idea of a protective tariff was
designed to keep American industries alive and, therefore, keep
American labor employed. But the favors of protection have become
so permanent that this is what has happened: Men, seeing that they
need not fear foreign competition, have drawn together in great
combinations. These combinations include factories (if it is a
combination of factories) of all grades: old factories and new
factories, factories with antiquated machinery and factories with
brand-new machinery; factories that are economically and factories
that are not economically admin<SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN>istered; factories that have been long in the
family, which have been allowed to run down, and factories with all
the new modern inventions. As soon as the combination is effected
the less efficient factories are generally put out of operation.
But the stock issued in payment for them has to pay dividends. And
the United States government guarantees profit on investment in
factories that have gone out of business. As soon as these
combinations see prices falling they reduce the hours of labor,
they reduce production, they reduce wages, they throw men out of
employment,—in order to do what? In order to keep the prices
up in spite of their lack of efficiency.</p>
<p>There may have been a time when the tariff did not raise prices,
but that time is past; the tariff is now taken advantage of by the
great combinations in such a way as to give them control of prices.
These things do not happen by chance. It does not happen by chance
that prices are and have been rising faster here than in any other
country. That river that divides us from Canada divides us from
much cheaper<SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN> living,
notwithstanding that the Canadian Parliament levies duties on
importations.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>But "Ah!" exclaim those who do not understand what is going on;
"you will ruin the country with your free trade!" Who said free
trade? Who proposed free trade? You can't have free trade in the
United States, because the government of the United States is of
necessity, with our present division of the field of taxation
between the federal and state governments, supported in large part
by the duties collected at the ports. I should like to ask some
gentlemen if very much is collected in the way of duties at the
ports under the particular tariff schedules under which they
operate. Some of the duties are practically prohibitive, and there
is no tariff to be got from them.</p>
<p>When you buy an imported article, you pay a part of the price to
the Federal government in the form of customs duty. But, as a rule,
what you buy is, not the imported article, but a domestic article,
the price of which the manufacturer has been able to raise to a
point equal<SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN> to, or higher
than, the price of the foreign article <i>plus the duty</i>. But
who gets the tariff tax in this case? The government? Oh, no; not
at all. The manufacturer. The American manufacturer, who says that
while he can't sell goods as low as the foreign manufacturer, all
good Americans ought to buy of him and pay him a tax on every
article for the privilege. Perhaps we ought. The original idea was
that, when he was just starting and needed support, we ought to buy
of him, even if we had to pay a higher price, till he could get on
his feet. Now it is said that we ought to buy of him and pay him a
price 15 to 120 per cent. higher than we need pay the foreign
manufacturer, even if he is a six-foot, bearded "infant," because
the cost of production is necessarily higher here than anywhere
else. I don't know why it should be. The American workingman used
to be able to do so much more and better work than the foreigner
that that more than compensated for his higher wages and made him a
good bargain at any wage.</p>
<p>Of course, if we are going to agree to give any<SPAN name=
"Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN> fellow-citizen who takes a notion to
go into some business or other for which the country is not
especially adapted,—if we are going to give him a bonus on
every article he produces big enough to make up for the handicap he
labors under because of some natural reason or other,—why, we
may indeed gloriously diversify our industries, but we shall beggar
ourselves. On this principle, we shall have in Connecticut, or
Michigan, or somewhere else, miles of hothouses in which thousands
of happy American workingmen, with full dinner-pails, will be
raising bananas,—to be sold at a quarter apiece. Some foolish
person, a benighted Democrat like as not, might timidly suggest
that bananas were a greater public blessing when they came from
Jamaica and were three for a nickel, but what patriotic citizen
would listen for a moment to the criticisms of a person without any
conception of the beauty and glory of the great American banana
industry, without realization of the proud significance of the fact
that Old Glory floats over the biggest banana hothouses in the
world!</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN>But that is a matter on one
side. What I am trying to point out to you now is that this
"protective" tariff, so-called, has become a means of fostering the
growth of particular groups of industry at the expense of the
economic vitality of the rest of the country. What the people now
propose is a very practical thing indeed: They propose to unearth
these special privileges and to cut them out of the tariff. They
propose not to leave a single concealed private advantage in the
statutes concerning the duties that can possibly be eradicated
without affecting the part of the business that is sound and
legitimate and which we all wish to see promoted.</p>
<p>Some men talk as if the tariff-reformers, as if the Democrats,
weren't part of the United States. I met a lady the other day, not
an elderly lady, who said to me with pride: "Why, I have been a
Democrat ever since they hunted them with dogs." And you would
really suppose, to hear some men talk, that Democrats were outlaws
and did not share the life of the United States. Why, Democrats
constitute <SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></SPAN>nearly one half the
voters of this country. They are engaged in all sorts of
enterprises, big and little. There isn't a walk of life or a kind
of occupation in which you won't find them; and, as a Philadelphia
paper very wittily said the other day, they can't commit economic
murder without committing economic suicide. Do you suppose,
therefore, that half of the population of the United States is
going about to destroy the very foundations of our economic life by
simply running amuck amidst the schedules of the tariff? Some of
the schedules are so tough that they wouldn't be hurt, if it did.
But that isn't the program, and anybody who says that it is simply
doesn't understand the situation at all. All that the
tariff-reformers claim is this: that the partnership ought to be
bigger than it is. Just because there are so many of them, they
know how many are outside. And let me tell you, just as many
Republicans are outside. The only thing I have against my
protectionist fellow-citizens is that they have allowed themselves
to be imposed upon so many years. Think of saying that the
"protective"<SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN> tariff is for the
benefit of the workingman, in the presence of all those facts that
have just been disclosed in Lawrence, Mass., where the worst
schedule of all—"Schedule K"—operates to keep men on
wages on which they cannot live. Why, the audacity, the impudence,
of the claim is what strikes one; and in face of the fact that the
workingmen of this country who are in unprotected industries are
better paid than those who are in "protected" industries; at any
rate, in the conspicuous industries! The Steel schedule, I dare
say, is rather satisfactory to those who manufacture steel, but is
it satisfactory to those who make the steel with their own tired
hands? Don't you know that there are mills in which men are made to
work seven days in the week for twelve hours a day, and in the
three hundred and sixty-five weary days of the year can't make
enough to pay their bills? And this in one of the giants among our
industries, one of the undertakings which have thriven to gigantic
size upon this very system.</p>
<p>Ah, the whole mass of the fraud is falling <SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN>away, and men are beginning to see disclosed
little groups of persons maintaining a control over the dominant
party and through the dominant party over the government, in their
own interest, and not in the interest of the people of the United
States!</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Let me repeat: There cannot be free trade in the United States
so long as the established fiscal policy of the federal government
is maintained. The federal government has chosen throughout all the
generations that have preceded us to maintain itself chiefly on
indirect instead of direct taxation. I dare say we shall never see
a time when it can alter that policy in any substantial degree; and
there is no Democrat of thoughtfulness that I have met who
contemplates a program of free trade.</p>
<p>But what we intend to do, what the House of Representatives has
been attempting to do and will attempt to do again, and succeed in
doing, is to weed this garden that we have been cultivating.
Because, if we have been laying at the roots of our industrial
enterprises this <SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN>fertilization
of protection, if we have been stimulating it by this policy, we
have found that the stimulation was not equal in respect of all the
growths in the garden, and that there are some growths, which every
man can distinguish with the naked eye, which have so overtopped
the rest, which have so thrown the rest into destroying shadow,
that it is impossible for the industries of the United States as a
whole to prosper under their blighting shade. In other words, we
have found out that this that professes to be a process of
protection has become a process of favoritism, and that the
favorites of this policy have flourished at the expense of all the
rest. And now we are going into this garden and weed it. We are
going into this garden and give the little plants air and light in
which to grow. We are going to pull up every root that has so
spread itself as to draw the nutriment of the soil from the other
roots. We are going in there to see to it that the fertilization of
intelligence, of invention, of origination, is once more applied to
a set of industries now threatening to be stagnant, be<SPAN name=
"Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN>cause threatening to be too much
concentrated. The policy of freeing the country from the
restrictive tariff will so variegate and multiply the undertakings
in the country that there will be a wider market and a greater
competition for labor; it will let the sun shine through the clouds
again as once it shone on the free, independent, unpatronized
intelligence and energy of a great people.</p>
<p>One of the counts of the indictment against the so-called
"protective" tariff is that it has robbed Americans of their
independence, resourcefulness, and self-reliance. Our industry has
grown invertebrate, cowardly, dependent on government aid. When I
hear the argument of some of the biggest business men in this
country, that if you took the "protection" of the tariff off they
would be overcome by the competition of the world, I ask where and
when it happened that the boasted genius of America became afraid
to go out into the open and compete with the world? Are we
children, are we wards, are we still such puerile infants that we
have to be fed out of a bottle? Isn't <SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></SPAN>it true that we know how to make steel in America
better than anybody else in the world? Yet they say, "For Heaven's
sake don't expose us to the chill of prices coming from any other
quarter of the globe." Mind you, we can compete with those prices.
Steel is sold abroad, steel made in America is sold abroad in many
of its forms, much cheaper than it is sold in America. It is so
hard for people to get that into their heads!</p>
<p>We set up a kindergarten in New York. We called it the Chamber
of Horrors. We exhibited there a great many things manufactured in
the United States, with the prices at which they were sold in the
United States, and the prices at which they were sold outside of
the United States, marked on them. If you tell a woman that she can
buy a sewing machine for eighteen dollars in Mexico that she has to
pay thirty dollars for in the United States, she will not heed it
or she will forget it unless you take her and show her the machine
with the price marked on it. My very distinguished friend, Senator
Gore, of Oklahoma, made this interesting pro<SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN>posal: that we should pass a law that every piece of
goods sold in the United States should have on it a label bearing
the price at which it sells under the tariff and the price at which
it would sell if there were no tariff, and then the Senator
suggests that we have a very easy solution for the tariff question.
He does not want to oblige that great body of our fellow-citizens
who have a conscientious belief in "protection" to turn away from
it. He proposes that everybody who believes in the "protective"
tariff should pay it and the rest of us should not; if they want to
subscribe, it is open to them to subscribe.</p>
<p>As for the rest of us, the time is coming when we shall not have
to subscribe. The people of this land have made up their minds to
cut all privilege and patronage out of our fiscal legislation,
particularly out of that part of it which affects the tariff. We
have come to recognize in the tariff as it is now constructed, not
a system of protection, but a system of favoritism, of privilege,
too often granted secretly and by subterfuge, instead of openly and
<SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN>frankly and legitimately, and
we have determined to put an end to the whole bad business, not by
hasty and drastic changes, but by the adoption of an entirely new
principle,—by the reformation of the whole purpose of
legislation of that kind. We mean that our tariff legislation
henceforth shall have as its object, not private profit, but the
general public development and benefit. We shall make our fiscal
laws, not like those who dole out favors, but like those who serve
a nation. We are going to begin with those particular items where
we find special privilege intrenched. We know what those items are;
these gentlemen have been kind enough to point them out themselves.
What we are interested in first of all with regard to the tariff is
getting the grip of special interests off the throat of Congress.
We do not propose that special interests shall any longer camp in
the rooms of the Committee on Ways and Means of the House and the
Finance Committee of the Senate. We mean that those shall be places
where the people of the United States shall come and be
represented, in order <SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN>that
everything may be done in the general interest, and not in the
interest of particular groups of persons who already dominate the
industries and the industrial development of this country. Because
no matter how wise these gentlemen may be, no matter how patriotic,
no matter how singularly they may be gifted with the power to
divine the right courses of business, there isn't any group of men
in the United States or in any other country who are wise enough to
have the destinies of a great people put into their hands as
trustees. We mean that business in this land shall be released,
emancipated.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />