|
We desire
industrial peace. We want our people
to have an abiding confidence in
government. But no readjustment
made under reactionary auspices
will carry with it the confidence
of the country. If we were asked
to name in these trying days the
first essential overshadowing every
other consideration, the response
would be -- confidence in government.
It would be nothing less than a
calamity if the next administration
were elected under corrupt auspices.
There is
unrest in the country. Our people
have passed through a trying experience.
The European war, before it engulfed
us, aroused every racial throb in
a nation of composite citizenship.
The conflict in which we participated
carried anxieties into every community,
and thousands upon thousands of
homes were touched by tragedy. The
inconveniences incident to the war
have been disquieting. The failure
of the Republican Congress to repeal
annoying taxes is added to our troubles.
The natural
impulse is to forget the past, to
develop new interests, to create
a [refreshened] and refreshing atmosphere
in life. We want to forget war,
and to be free from the troubling
thought of its possibility in the
future. We want the dawn and the
dews of a new morning. We want happiness
in the land -- the feeling that
the square deal among men in government
is not to be interfered with by
a purchased preference. We want
a change from the Old World of yesterday,
where international intrigue made
the people mere pawns on the chessboard
of war. We want a change from the
old industrial world, where the
man who toiled was assured a full
dinner pail as his only lot and
portion.
But how are
we to make the change? Which way
shall we go? We stand at the forks
of the road and must choose which
way to follow. One leads to a higher
citizenship, a freer expression
of the individual and a fuller life
for all. The other leads to reaction,
the rule of the few over the many,
and the restriction of the average
man's chances to grow upward. Cunning
devices, backed by unlimited prodigal
expenditures, will be used to confuse
and to lure. But I have an abiding
faith that the pitfalls will be
avoided and the right road chosen.
The leaders
opposed to democracy promise to
put the country back to normal.
This can only mean the so-called
normal of former reactionary administrations,
the outstanding feature of which
was a pittance for farm produce
and a small wage for a long day
of toil. My vision does not turn
backwards to the normal desires
of the senatorial oligarchy, but
to a future in which all shall have
a normal opportunity to cultivate
a higher stature amidst better environments
than that of the past. Our view
is toward the sunrise with its progress
and its eternal promise of better
things. The opposition stands in
the skyline of the setting sun looking
backwards, backwards to the old
days of reaction.
|