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Text:
It is preeminently
the province of government to protect
the weak. The average citizen does
not lead the life of independence
that was his in former days under
a less complex order of society.
When a family tilled the soil and
produced its own support it was
independent. It may be infinitely
better off now, but it is evident
it needs a protection which before
was not required.
Let Massachusetts
continue to regard with the greatest
solicitude the well-being of her
people. By prescribed law, by authorized
publicity, by informed public opinion,
let her continue to strive to provide
that all conditions under which
her citizens live are worthy of
the highest faith of man. Healthful
housing, wholesome food, sanitary
working conditions, reasonable hours,
a fair wage for a fair day's work,
opportunity -- full and free, justice
-- speedy and impartial, and at
a cost within the reach of all,
are among the objects not only to
be sought, but made absolutely certain
and secure.
Government
is not, must not be, a cold, impersonal
machine, but a human and more human
agency: appealing to the reason,
satisfying the heart, full of mercy,
assisting the good, resisting the
wrong, delivering the weak from
any impositions of the powerful.
This is not paternalism. It is not
a servitude imposed from without,
but the freedom of a right to self-direction
from within.
Industry
must be humanized, not destroyed.
It must be the instrument not of
selfishness, but of service. Change
not the law, but the attitude of
the mind. Let our citizens look
not to the false prophet but to
the pilgrims. Let them fix their
eyes on Plymouth Rock as well as
Beacon Hill. The supreme choice
must be not to things that are seen,
but to things that are unseen.
Our government
belongs to the people. Our property
belongs to the people. It is distributed.
They own it. The taxes are paid
by the people. They bear the burden.
The benefits of government must
accrue to the people. Not to one
class, but to all classes, to all
the people. The functions, the power,
the sovereignty of the government,
must be kept where they have been
placed by the Constitution and laws
of the people. Not private will,
but that public will, which speaks
with a divine sanction, must prevail.
There are
strident voices, urging resistance
to law in the name of freedom. They
are not seeking freedom for themselves,
they have it. They are seeking to
enslave others. Their works are
evil. They know it. They must be
resisted. The evil they represent
must be overcome by the good others
represent. Their ideas, which are
wrong, for the most part imported,
must be supplanted by ideas which
are right. This can be done. The
meaning of America is a power which
cannot be overcome. Massachusetts
must lead in teaching it.
Prosecution
of the criminal and education of
the ignorant are the remedies. It
is fundamental that freedom is not
to be secured by disobedience to
law. Even the freedom of the slave
depended on the supremacy of the
Constitution. There is no mystery
about this. They who sin are the
servants of sin. They who break
the laws are the slaves of their
own kind. It is not for the advantage
of others that the citizen is abjured
to obey the laws, but for his own
advantage. That what he claims a
right to do to others, that must
he admit others have a right to
do to him. His obedience is his
own protection. He is not submitting
himself to the dictates of others,
but responding to the requirements
of his own nature.
Laws are
not manufactured. They are not imposed.
They are rules of action existing
from everlasting to everlasting.
He who resists them, resists himself.
He commits suicide. The nature of
man requires sovereignty. Government
must govern. To obey is life. To
disobey is death. Organized government
is the expression of the life of
the commonwealth. Into your hands
is entrusted the grave responsibility
of its protection and perpetuation.
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