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I
am persuaded that there is absolutely no limit in the absurdities that can, by government
action, come to be generally believed. Give me an adequate army, with power to provide it
with more pay and better food than falls to the lot of the average man, and I will
undertake, within thirty years, to make the majority of the population believe that two
and two are three, that water freezes when it gets hot and boils when it gets cold, or any
other nonsense that might seem to serve the interest of the State. Of course, even when
these beliefs had been generated, people would not put the kettle in the refrigerator when
they wanted it to boil. That cold makes water boil would be a Sunday truth, sacred and
mystical, to be professed in awed tones, but not to be acted on in daily life. What would
happen would be that any verbal denial of the mystic doctrine would be made illegal, and
obstinate heretics would be 'frozen' at the stake. No person who did not enthusiastically
accept the official doctrine would be allowed to teach or to have any position of power.
Only the very highest officials, in their cups, would whisper to each other what rubbish
it all is; then they would laugh and drink again. (U.E.p94/5) There are some desires which, though very powerful,
have not, as a rule, any great political importance. Most men at some period of their
lives desire to marry, but as a rule they can satisfy this desire without having to take
any political action. There are, of course, exceptions; the rape of the Sabine women is a
case in point (N.P.A.S.)
When the British Government very unwisely
allowed the Kaiser to be present at a naval review at Spithead, the thought which arose in
his mind was not the one which we had intended. What he thought was: 'I must have a navy
as good as Grand mama's. And from this thought have sprung all our subsequent troubles.
The world would be a happier place if acquisitiveness were always stronger than rivalry.
But in fact, a great many men will cheerfully face impoverishment if they can thereby
secure complete ruin for their rivals Hence the present level of the income tax. (N.P.A.S.)
If politics is to become scientific, and if
the event is not to be constantly surprising, it is imperative that our political thinking
should penetrate more deeply into the springs of human action. What is the influence of
hunger upon slogans? How does their effectiveness fluctuate with the number of calories in
your diet? If one man offers you democracy and another offers you a bag of grain, at what
stage of starvation will you prefer the grain to the vote? (N.P.A.S.)
One of the troubles about vanity is that it
grows with what it feeds on. The more you are talked about, the more you will wish to be
talked about. The condemned murderer, I am told-I have had no personal experience- who is
allowed to see the account of his trial in the Press is indignant if he finds a newspaper
which has reported it inadequately. And the more he finds about himself in other
newspapers, the more indignant he will be with the one whose reports are meager.
Politicians and literary men are in the same case. And the more famous they become, the
more, difficult the press cutting agency finds it to satisfy them. It is scarcely possible
to exaggerate the influence of vanity throughout the range of human life from the child of
three to the potentate at whose frown the world trembles. Mankind have even committed the
impiety of attributing similar desires to the Deity, whom they imagine avid for continual
praise. (N.P.A.S.)
Most political leaders acquire their
position by causing large numbers of people to believe that these leaders are actuated by
altruistic desires. It is well understood that such a belief is more readily accepted
under the influence of excitement. Brass bands, mob oratory, lynching, and war are stages
in the development of the excitement I suppose the advocates of unreason think that there
is a better chance of profitably deceiving the populace if they keep it in a state of
effervescence. Perhaps it is my dislike of this sort of process which leads people to say
that I am unduly rational. (H.S.E.P.preface,p10)
The increase of organization has brought
into existence new positions of power. Every body has to have executive officials, in
whom, at any moment, its power is concentrated. It is true that officials are usually
subject to control, but the control may be slow and distant. From the young lady who sells
stamps in a post office all the way up to the Prime Minister, every official is invested,
for the time being, with some part of the power of the State. You can complain of the
young lady if her manners are bad, and you can vote against the Prime Minister at the next
election if you disapprove of his policy. But both the young lady and the Prime Minister
can have a very considerable run for their money before (if ever) your discontent has any
effect. This increase in the power of officials is a constant source of irritation to
everybody else. In most countries they are much less polite than in England; the police,
especially in America for instance, seem to think you must be a rare exception if you are
not a criminal. This tyranny of officials is one of the worst results of increasing
organization, and one against which it is of the utmost importance to find safeguards if a
scientific society is not to be intolerable to all but an insolent aristocracy of
Jacks-in-office. (I.S.S.p489)
Politics is largely governed by sententious
platitudes which are devoid of truth. One of the most widespread popular maxims is, 'Human
nature cannot be changed.' No one can say whether this is true or not without first
defining 'human nature.' But as used it is certainly false. When Mr. A utters the maxim,
with an air of portentous and conclusive wisdom, what he means is that all men everywhere
will always continue to behave as they do in his own home town. A little anthropology will
d - dispel this belief. Among the Tibetans, one wife has many husbands, because men are
too poor to support a whole wife; yet family life, according to travelers, is no more
unhappy than elsewhere. The practice of lending one's wife to a guest is very common among
uncivilized tribes. The Australian aborigines, at puberty, undergo a very painful
operation which, throughout the rest of their lives, greatly diminishes sexual potency.
Infanticide, which might seem contrary to human nature, was almost universal before the
rise of Christianity, and is recommended by Plato to prevent over-population. Private
property is not recognized among some savage tribes. Even among highly civilized people,
economic considerations will override what is called 'human nature.' (U.E.p121/2)
The conscientious Radical is faced with
great difficulties. He knows that he can increase his popularity by being false to his
creed, and appealing to hatreds that have nothing to do with the reforms in which he
believes. For example: a community that suffers from Japanese competition can easily be
made indignant about bad labor conditions in Japan, and the unfair price-cutting that they
render possible. But if the speaker goes on to say that it is Japanese employers who
should be opposed, not Japanese employees, he will lose a large part of the sympathy of
his audience. The Radical's only ultimate protection against demagogic appeals to
misguided hatreds lies in education: he must convince intellectually a sufficient number
of people to form the nucleus of a propagandist army This is undoubtedly a difficult task,
while the whole force of the State and the plutocracy is devoted to the fostering of
unreason. But it is perhaps not so hopeless a task as many are now inclined to believe and
in any case it cannot be shirked, since the appeal to unreasoning emotion can always be
better done by charlatans. (C.S.p15, Mar 1936)
I cannot be content with a brief moment of
riotous living followed by destitution, and however clever the scientists may be, there
are some things that they cannot be expected to achieve. When they have used up all the
easily available sources of energy that nature has scattered carelessly over the surface
of our planet, they will have to resort to more laborious processes, and these will
involve a gradual lowering of the standard of living. Modern industrialists are like men
who have come for the first time upon fertile virgin land, and can live for a little while
in great comfort with only a modicum of labor. It would be irrational to hope that the
present heyday of industrialism will not develop far beyond its present level, but sooner
or later, owing to the exhaustion of raw material, its capacity to supply human needs will
diminish, not suddenly, but gradually. This could, of course, be prevented if men
exercised any restraint or foresight in their present frenzied exploitation. Perhaps
before it is too late they will learn to do so. (N.H.C.W.p37)
How long will it be before the accessible
oil in the world is exhausted? Will all the arable land be turned into dustbowls as it has
been in large parts of the United States? Will the population increase to the point where
men again, like their remote ancestors, have no leisure to think of anything but the food
supply? Such questions are not to be decided by general philosophical reflections.
Communists think that there will be plenty of oil; if there are no capitalists. Some
religious people think that there will be plenty of food if we trust in Providence. Such
ideas are superficial, even when they are called scientific, as they are by the
Communists. (N.H.C.W.p33/4)
We all know that the price of food goes up,
but most of us attribute this to the wickedness of the Government. If we live under a
progressive Government, it makes us reactionary; if we live under a reactionary
Government, it turns us into Socialists. Both these reactions are superficial and
frivolous. All Governments, whatever their political complexion, are at present
willy-nilly in the grip of natural forces which can only be dealt with by a degree of
intelligence of which mankind hitherto has shown little evidence. (N.H.C.W.p38/9)
I do not think any reasonable person can
doubt that in India, China and Japan, if the knowledge of birth control existed, the
birth-rate would fall very rapidly. In Africa the process might take longer, but there
also it could be fairly easily achieved if Negro doctors, trained in the West, were given
the funds to establish medical clinics in which every kind of medical information would be
given. I do not suppose that America would contribute to this beneficent work, because if
either party favored it, that party would lose the Catholic vote in New York State, and
therefore the Presidency. This obviously would be a greater disaster than the
extermination of the human race by atomic war. (N.H.C.W.p144)
Some opponents of Communism are attempting
to produce an ideology for the Atlantic Powers, and for this purpose they have invented
what they call 'Western Values.' These are supposed to consist of toleration, respect for
individual liberty, and brotherly love. I am afraid this view is grossly unhistorical. If
we compare Europe with other continents, it is marked out as the persecuting continent.
Persecution only ceased after long and bitter experience of its futility; it continued as
long as either Protestants or Catholics had any hope of exterminating the opposite party.
The European record in this respect is far blacker than that of the Mohammedans, the
Indians or the Chinese. No, if the West can claim superiority in anything, it is not in
moral values but in science and scientific technique. (N.H.C.W.p118/9)
Everything done by European administrators
to improve the lot of Africans is, at present, totally and utterly futile because of the
growth of population. The Africans, not unnaturally, though now mistakenly, attribute
their destitution to their exploitation by the white man. If they achieve freedom suddenly
before they have men trained in administration and a habit of responsibility, such
civilization as white men have brought to Africa will quickly disappear. It is no use for
doctrinaire liberals to deny this; there is a standing proof in the island of Haiti. (N.H.C.W.p13)
If two hitherto rival football teams, under
the influence of brotherly love, decided to co-operate in placing the football first
beyond one goal and then beyond the other, no one's happiness would be increased. There is
no reason why the zest derived from competition should be confined to athletics. Emulation
between teams or localities or organizations can be a useful incentive. But if competition
is not to become ruthless and harmful, the penalty for failure must not be disaster, as in
war, or starvation, as in unregulated economic competition, but only loss of glory.
Football would not be a desirable sport if defeated teams were put to death or left to
starve. (A.I.p72)
In a shipwreck the crew obey orders without
the need of reasoning with themselves, because they have a common purpose which is not
remote, and the means to its realization are not difficult to understand. But if the
Captain were obliged, like the Government, to explain the principles of currency in order
to prove his commands wise, the ship would sink before his lecture was finished. (A.I.p68)
The savage, in spite of his membership of a
small community, lived a life in which his initiative was not too much hampered by the
community. The things that he wanted to do, usually hunting and war, were also the things
that his neighbors wanted to do, and if he felt an inclination to become a medicine man he
only had to ingratiate himself with some individual already eminent in that profession,
and so, in due course, to succeed to his powers of magic. If he was a man of exceptional
talent, he might invent some improvement in weapons, or a new skill in hunting. These
would not put him into any opposition to the community, but, on the contrary, would be
welcomed. The modern man lives a very different life. If he sings in the street he will be
thought to be drunk and if he dances a policeman will reprove him for impeding the
traffic. (A.I.p60)
Two great religions- Buddhism and
Christianity- have sought to extend to the whole human race the cooperative feeling that
is spontaneous towards fellow tribesmen. They have preached the brotherhood of man,
showing by the use of the word 'brotherhood' that they are attempting to extend beyond its
natural bounds an emotional attitude which, in its origin, is biological. If we are all
children of God, then we are all one family. But in practice those who in theory adopted
this creed have always felt that those who did not adopt it were not children of God but
children of Satan, and the old mechanism of hatred of those outside the tribe has
returned, giving added vigor to the creed, but in a direction which diverted it from its
original purpose. Religion, morality, economic self- interest, the mere pursuit of
biological survival, all supply to our intelligence unanswerable arguments in favor of
worldwide co-operation, but the old instincts that have come down to us from our tribal
ancestors rise up in indignation, feeling that life would lose its savor if there were no
one to hate, that anyone who could love such a scoundrel as So-and-so would be a worm,
that struggle is the law of life, and that in a world where we all loved one another there
would be nothing to live for. (A.I.p19/20)
Before the war (World War I) one of the
objections commonly urged against votes for women was that women would tend to be
pacifists. During the war they gave a large-scale refutation of this charge, and the vote
was given to them for their share in the bloody work. (M.M.p67)
There are many points of view from which
the life of man may be considered. There are those who think of him primarily in cultural
terms as being capable of lofty art and sublime speculation and discovery of the hidden
secrets of nature. There are those who think of him as one of those kinds of animals that
are capable of government, though in this respect he is completely outshone by ants and
bees. There are those who think of him as the master of war; these include all the men in
all countries who decide upon the adornment of public squares, where it is an invariable
rule obeyed by all right-thinking public authorities that the most delectable object to be
seen by the passers-by is a man on horseback, who is commemorated for his skill in
homicide. (N.H.C.W.p41)
Organizations are of two kinds, those which
aim at getting something done, and those which aim at preventing something from being
done. The Post Office is an example of the first kind; a fire brigade is an example of the
second kind. Neither of these arouses much controversy, because no one objects to letters
being carried, and incendiaries dare not avow a desire to see buildings burnt down. But
when what is to be prevented is something done by human beings, not by Nature, the matter
is otherwise. The armed forces of one's own nation exist- so each nation asserts- to prevent aggression by other nations. But the armed forces of other
nations exist- or so many people believe to promote
aggression. If you say anything against the armed forces of your own country, you are a
traitor, wishing to see your fatherland ground under the heel of a brutal conqueror. If,
on the other hand, you defend a potential enemy State for thinking armed forces necessary
to its safety, you malign your own country, whose unalterable devotion to peace only
perverse malice could lead you to question. I heard all this said about Germany by a
thoroughly virtuous German lady in 1936, in the course of a panegyric on Hitler. (I.S.S.p54/5)
I do not pretend that birth control is the
only way in which population can be kept from increasing. There are others, which, one
must suppose, opponents of birth control would prefer. War . . . has hitherto been
disappointing in this respect, but perhaps bacteriological war may prove more effective.
If a Black Death could be spread throughout the world once in every generation survivors
could procreate freely without making the world too full. There would be nothing in this
to offend the consciences of the devout or to restrain the ambitions of nationalists. The
state of affairs might be somewhat unpleasant, but what of that? Really high-minded people
are indifferent to happiness, especially other people's. (I.S.S.)
In superstitious moments I am tempted to
believe in the myth of the Tower of Babel, and to suppose that in our own day a similar
but greater impiety is about to be visited by a more tragic and terrible punishment.
Perhaps- so I sometimes allow myself to fancy- God does not intend us to understand the
mechanism by which He regulates the material universe. Perhaps the nuclear physicists have
come so near to the ultimate secrets that He thinks it time to bring their activities to a
stop. And what simpler method could He devise than to let them carry their ingenuity to
the point where they exterminate the human race? If I could think that deer and squirrels,
nightingales and larks, would survive, I might view this catastrophe with some equanimity,
since man has not shown himself worthy to be the lord of creation. But it is to be feared
that the dreadful alchemy of the atomic bomb will destroy all forms of life equally, and
that the earth will remain forever a dead clod senselessly whirling round a futile sun. I
do not know the immediate precipitating cause of this interesting occurrence. Perhaps it
will be a dispute about Persian oil, perhaps a disagreement as to Chinese trade, perhaps a
quarrel between Jews and Mohammedans for the control of Palestine. Any patriotic person
can see that these issues are of such importance as to make the extermination of mankind
preferable to cowardly conciliation. (U.E.p173/4)
Men, quite ordinary men, will compel
children to look on while their mothers are raped. In pursuit of political aims men will
submit their opponents to long years of unspeakable anguish. We know what the Nazis did to
Jews at Auschwitz. In mass cruelty, the expulsions of Germans ordered by the Russians fall
not very far short of the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis. And how about our noble
selves; We would not do such deeds. Oh no! But we enjoy our juicy steaks and our hot rolls
while German children die of hunger because our governments dare not face our indignation
if they asked us to forgo some part of our pleasures. If there were a Last Judgment as
Christians believe, how do you think our excuses would sound before that final tribunal? (U.E.p175)
Stalin could neither understand nor respect
the point of view which led Churchill to allow himself to be peaceably dispossessed as a
result of a popular vote. I am a firm believer in democratic representative government as
the best form for those who have the tolerance and self-restraint that is required to make
it workable. But its advocates make a mistake if they suppose that it can be at once
introduced into countries where the average citizen has hitherto lacked all training in
the give-and-take that it requires. In a Balkan country, not so many years ago, a party
which had been beaten by a narrow margin in a general election retrieved its fortunes by
shooting a sufficient number of the representatives of the other side to give it a
majority. People in the West thought this characteristic of the Balkans, forgetting that
Cromwell and Robespierre had acted likewise. (U.E.p180/1)
The American legislators who made the
immigration laws consider the Nordics superior to Slavs or Latins or any other white men.
But the Nazis, under the stress of war, were led to the conclusion that there are hardly
any true Nordics outside Germany; the Norwegians, except Quisling and his few followers,
had been corrupted by intermixture with Finns and Lapps and such. Thus politics are a clue
to descent. The biologically pure Nordics love Hitler, and if you did not love Hitler,
that was proof of tainted blood. (U.E.p117)
Very little remains of institutions and
ways of life that when I was a child appeared as indestructible as granite. I grew up in
an atmosphere impregnated with tradition. My parents died before I can remember, and l was
brought up by my grandparents.... I was taught a kind of theoretic republicanism which was
prepared to tolerate a monarch so long as he recognized that he was an employee of the
people and subject to dismissal if he proved unsatisfactory. My grandfather, who was no
respecter of persons, used to explain this point of view to Queen Victoria, and she was
not altogether sympathetic. She did, however, give him the house in Richmond Park in which
I spent all my youth. I imbibed certain political principles and expectations, and have on
the whole retained the former in spite of being compelled to reject the latter. There was
to be ordered progress throughout the world, no revolutions, a gradual cessation of war,
and an extension of parliamentary government to all those unfortunate regions which did
not yet enjoy it. My grandmother used to laugh about a conversation she had had with the
Russian Ambassador She said to him, 'Perhaps some day you will have a parliament in
Russia,' and he replied, 'God forbid, my dear Lady John.' The Russian Ambassador of today
might give the same answer if he changed the first word. (P.F.M.p7/8)
Neither misery nor folly seems to me any
part of the inevitable lot of man. And I am convinced that intelligence, patience, and
eloquence can, sooner or later, lead the human race out of its self-imposed tortures
provided it does not exterminate itself meanwhile. On the basis of this belief, I have had
always a certain degree of optimism, although, as I have grown older, the optimism has
grown more sober and the happy issue more distant. But I remain completely incapable of
agreeing with those who accept fatalistically the view that man is born to trouble. The
causes of unhappiness in the past and in the present are not difficult to ascertain. There
have been poverty, pestilence, and famine, which were due to man's inadequate mastery of
nature. There have been wars, oppressions and tortures which have been due to men's
hostility to their fellow men. And there have been morbid miseries fostered by gloomy
creeds, which have led men into profound inner discords that made all outward prosperity
of no avail. All these are unnecessary. In regard to all of them, means are known by which
they can be overcome. In the modern world, if communities are unhappy, it is because they
choose to be so. Or to speak more precisely, because they have ignorances, habits,
beliefs, and passions, which are dearer to them than happiness or even life. I find many
men in our dangerous age who seem to be in love with misery and death, and who grow angry
when hopes are suggested to them. (P.F.M.p53/4)
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