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1637 lines
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1637 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
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SABOTAGE
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THE CONSCIOUS WITHDRAWAL OF THE WORKERS' INDUSTRIAL EFFICIENCY
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ELIZABETH GURLEY FLYNN
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PRICE TEN CENTS
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OCTOBER, 1916
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I. W. W. PUBLISHING BUREAU
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CLEVELAND, O., U. S. A.
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[since withdrawn as official union literature]
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Its Necessity In The Class War
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General Forms of Sabotage
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Short Pay, Less Work, "Ca Canny"
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Interfering With Quality of Goods
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Boyd's Advice to Silk Mill Slaves
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"Dynamiting" Silk
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Non-Adulteration and Over-Adulteration
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Interfering With Service. "Open Mouth" Sabotage
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Following The "Book of Rules"
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Putting The Machine on Strike
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"Print The Truth or You Don't Print at All"
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"Used Sabotage, But Didn't Know What You Called It"
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Sabotage and "Moral Fiber"
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Limiting The Over-Supply of Slaves
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Sabotage a War Measure
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The interest in sabotage in the United States has developed lately on account of
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the case of Frederick Sumner Boyd in the state of New Jersey as an aftermath of
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the Paterson strike. Before his arrest and conviction for advocating sabotage,
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little or nothing was known of this particular form of labor tactic in the
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United States. Now there has developed a two-fold necessity to advocate it: not
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only to explain what it means to the worker in his fight for better conditions,
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but also to justify our fellow-worker Boyd in everything that he said. So I am
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desirous primarily to explain sabotage, to explain it in this two-fold
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significance, first as to its utility and second as to its legality.
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Its Necessity In The Class War
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I am not going to attempt to justify sabotage on any moral ground. If the
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workers consider that sabotage is necessary, that in itself makes sabotage
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moral. Its necessity is its excuse for existence. And for us to discuss the
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morality of sabotage would be as absurd as to discuss the morality of the strike
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or the morality of the class struggle itself. In order to understand sabotage or
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to accept it at all it is necessary to accept the concept of class struggle. If
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you believe that between the workers on the one side and their employers on the
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other there is peace, there is harmony such as exists between brothers, and that
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consequently whatever strikes and lockouts occur are simply family squabbles; if
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you believe that a point can be reached whereby the employer can get enough and
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the worker can get enough, a point of amicable adjustment of industrial warfare
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and economic distribution, then there is no justification and no explanation of
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sabotage intelligible to you. Sabotage is one weapon in the arsenal of labor to
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fight its side of the class struggle. Labor realizes, as it becomes more
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intelligent, that it must have power in order to accomplish anything; that
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neither appeals for sympathy nor abstract rights will make for better
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conditions. For instance, take an industrial establishment such as a silk mill,
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where men and women and little children work ten hours a day for an average wage
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of between six and seven dollars a week. Could any one of them, or a committee
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representing the whole, hope to induce the employer to give better conditions by
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appealing to his sympathy, by telling him of the misery, the hardship and the
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poverty of their lives; or could they do it by appealing to his sense of
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justice? Suppose that an individual working man or woman went to an employer and
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said, "I make, in my capacity as wage worker in this factory, so many dollars'
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worth of wealth every day and justice demands that you give me at least half."
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The employer would probably have him removed to the nearest lunatic asylum. He
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would consider him too dangerous a criminal to let loose on the community! It is
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neither sympathy nor justice that makes an appeal to the employer. But it is
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power. If a committee can go to the employer with this ultimatum: "We represent
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all the men and women in this shop. They are organized in a union as you are
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organized in a manufacturers' association. They have met and formulated in that
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union a demand for better hours and wages and they are not going to work one day
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longer unless they get it. In other words, they have withdrawn their power as
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wealth producers from your plant and they are going to coerce you by this
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withdrawal of their power; into granting their demands," that sort of ultimatum
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served upon an employer usually meets with an entirely different response; and
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if the union is strongly enough organized and they are able to make good their
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threat they usually accomplish what tears and pleadings never could have
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accomplished.
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We believe that the class struggle existing in society is expressed in the
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economic power of the master on the one side and the growing economic power of
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the workers on the other side meeting in open battle now and again, but meeting
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in continual daily conflict over which shall have the larger share of labor's
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product and the ultimate ownership of the means of life. The employer wants long
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hours, the intelligent workingman wants short hours. The employer is not
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concerned with the sanitary conditions in the mill, he is concerned only with
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keeping the cost of production at a minimum; the intelligent workingman is
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concerned, cost or no cost, with having ventilation, sanitation and lighting
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that will be conducive to his physical welfare. Sabotage is to this class
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struggle what the guerrilla warfare is to the battle. The strike is the open
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battle of the class struggle, sabotage is the guerrilla warfare, the day-by-day
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warfare between two opposing classes.
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General Forms of Sabotage
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Sabotage was adopted by the General Federation of Labor of France in 1897 as a
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recognized weapon in their method of conducting fights on their employers. But
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sabotage as an instinctive defense existed long before it was ever officially
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recognized by any labor organization. Sabotage means primarily: the withdrawal
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of efficiency. Sabotage means either to slacken up and interfere with the
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quantity, or to botch in your skill and interfere with the quality, of
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capitalist production or to give poor service. Sabotage is not physical
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violence, sabotage is an internal, industrial process. It is something that is
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fought out within the four walls of the shop. And these three forms of sabotage
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-- to affect the quality, the quantity and the service are aimed at affecting
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the profit of the employer. Sabotage is a means of striking at the employer's
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profit for the purpose of forcing him into granting certain conditions, even as
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workingmen strike for the same purpose of coercing him. It is simply another
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form of coercion.
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There are many forms of interfering with efficiency, interfering with quality
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and the quantity of production: from varying motives -- there is the employer's
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sabotage as well as the worker's sabotage. Employers interfere with the quality
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of production, they interfere with the quantity of production, they interfere
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with the supply as well as with the kind of goods for the purpose of increasing
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their profit. But this form of sabotage, capitalist sabotage, is antisocial, for
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the reason that it is aimed at the good of the few at the expense of the many,
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whereas working-class sabotage is distinctly social, it is aimed at the benefit
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of the many, at the expense of the few.
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Working-class sabotage is aimed directly at "the boss" and at his profits, in
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the belief that that is the solar plexus of the employer, that is his heart, his
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religion, his sentiment, his patriotism. Everything is centered in his pocket
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book, and if you strike that you are striking at the most vulnerable point in
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his entire moral and economic system.
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Short Pay, Less Work, "Ca Canny"
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Sabotage, as it aims at the quantity, is a very old thing, called by the Scotch
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"ca canny." All intelligent workers have tried it at some time or other when
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they have been compelled to work too hard and too long. The Scotch dockers had a
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strike in 1889 and their strike was lost, but when they went back to work they
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sent a circular to every docker in Scotland and in this circular they embodied
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their conclusions, their experience from the bitter defeat. It was to this
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effect, "The employers like the scabs, they have always praised their work, they
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have said how much superior they were to us, they have paid them twice as much
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as they have ever paid us; now let us go back to the docks determined that since
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those are the kind of workers they like and that is the kind of work they
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endorse we will do the same thing. We will let the kegs of wine go over the
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docks as the scabs did. We will have great boxes of fragile articles drop in the
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midst of the pier as the scabs did. We will do the work just as clumsily, as,
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slowly, as destructively, as the scabs did. And we will see how long our
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employers can stand that kind of work." It was very few months until through
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this system of sabotage they had won everything they had fought for and not been
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able to win through the strike. This was the first open announcement of sabotage
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in an English-speaking country.
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I have heard of my grandfather telling how an old fellow came to work on the
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railroad and the boss said, "Well, what can you do?"
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"I can do 'most anything," said he -- a big husky fellow.
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"Well," said the boss, "can you handle a pick and a shovel?"
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"Oh, sure. How much do you pay on this job?"
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"A dollar a day."
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"Is that all? Well, -- all right. I need the job pretty bad. I guess I will take
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it." So he took his pick and went leisurely to work. Soon the boss came along
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and said:
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"Say, can't you work any faster than that?"
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"Sure I can."
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"Well, why don't you?"
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"This is my dollar-a-day clip."
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"Well," said the boss, "let's see what the $1.25-a-day clip looks like."
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That went a little better. Then the boss said, "Let's see what the $1.50-a-day
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clip looks like." The man showed him. "That was fine," said the boss, "well,
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maybe we will call it $1.50 a day." The man volunteered the information that his
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$2-a-day clip was "a hummer". So, through this instinctive sort of sabotage this
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poor obscure workingman on a railroad in Maine was able to gain for himself an
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advance from $1 to $2 a day. We read of the gangs of Italian workingmen, when
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the boss cuts their pay -- you know, usually they have an Irish or American boss
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and he likes to make a couple of dollars a day on the side for himself, so he
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cuts the pay of the men once in a while without consulting the contractor and
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pockets the difference. One boss cut them 25 cents a day. The next day he came
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on the work, to find that the amount of dirt that was being removed had lessened
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considerably. He asked a few questions: "What's the matter?"
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"Me no understan' English" -- none of them wished to talk.
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Well, he exhausted the day going around trying to find one person who could
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speak and tell him what was wrong. Finally he found one man, who said, "Well,
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you see, boss, you cutta da pay, we cutta da shob."
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That was the same form of sabotage -- to lessen the quantity of production in
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proportion to the amount of pay received. There was an Indian preacher who went
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to college and eked out an existence on the side by preaching. Somebody said to
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him, "John, how much do you get paid?"
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"Oh, only get paid $200 a year."
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"Well, that's damn poor pay, John."
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"Well," he said, "Damn poor preach!"
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That, too, is an illustration of the form of sabotage that I am now describing
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to you, the "ca canny" form of sabotage, the "go easy" slogan, the "slacken up,
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don't work so hard" species, and it is a reversal of the motto of the American
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Federation of Labor, that most "safe, sane and conservative" organization of
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labor in America. They believe in "a fair day's wage for a fair day's work."
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Sabotage is an unfair day's work for an unfair day's wage. It is an attempt on
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the part of the worker to limit his production in proportion to his
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remuneration. That is one form of sabotage.
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Interfering With Quality of Goods
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The second form of sabotage is to deliberately interfere with the quality of the
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goods. And in this we learn many lessons from our employers, even as we learn
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how to limit the quantity. You know that every year in the western part of this
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United States there are fruits and grains produced that never find a market;
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bananas and oranges rot on the ground, whole skiffs of fruits are dumped into
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the ocean. Not because people do not need these foods and couldn't make good use
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of them in the big cities of the east, but because the employing class prefer to
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destroy a large percentage of the production in order to keep the price up in
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cities like New York, Chicago, Baltimore and Boston. If they sent all the
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bananas that they produce into the eastern part of the United States we would be
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buying bananas at probably three for a cent. But by destroying a large quantity,
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they are able to keep the price up to two for 5c. And this applies to potatoes,
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apples, and very many other staple articles required by the majority of people.
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Yet if the worker attempts to apply the same principle, the same theory, the
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same tactic as his employer we are confronted with all sorts of finespun moral
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objections.
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Boyd's Advice to Silk Mill Slaves
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So it is with the quality. Take the case of Frederic Sumner Boyd, in which we
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should all be deeply interested because it is evident Frederic Sumner Boyd is to
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be made "the goat" by the authorities in New Jersey. That is to say, they want
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blood, they want one victim. If they can't get anybody else they are determined
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they are going to get Boyd, in order to serve a two-fold purpose to cow the
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workers of Paterson, as they believe they can, and to put this thing, sabotage,
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into the statutes, to make it an illegal thing to advocate or to practice. Boyd
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said this: "If you go back to work and you find scabs working alongside of you,
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you should put a little bit of vinegar on the reed of the loom in order to
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prevent its operation." They have arrested him under the statute forbidding the
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advocacy of the destruction of property. He advised the dyers to go into the dye
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houses and to use certain chemicals in the dyeing of the silk that would tend to
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make that silk unweavable. That sounded very terrible in the newspapers and very
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terrible in the court of law. But what neither the newspapers nor the courts of
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law have taken any cognizance of is that these chemicals are being used already
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in the dyeing of the silk. It is not a new thing that Boyd is advocating, it is
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something that is being practiced in every dye house in the city of Paterson
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already, but it is being practiced for the employer and not for the worker.
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"Dynamiting" Silk
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Let me give you a specific illustration of what I mean. Seventy-five years ago
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when silk was woven into cloth the silk skein was taken in the pure, dyed and
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woven, and when that piece of silk was made it would last for 50 years. Your
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grandmother could wear it as a wedding dress. Your mother could wear it as a
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wedding dress. And then you, if you, woman reader, were fortunate enough to have
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a chance to get married, could wear it as a wedding dress also. But the silk
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that you buy today is not dyed in the pure and woven into a strong and durable
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product. One pound of silk goes into the dye house and usually as many as three
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to fifteen pounds come out. That is to say, along with the dyeing there is an
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extraneous and an unnecessary process of what is very picturesquely called
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"dynamiting." They weight the silk. They have solutions of tin, solutions of
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zinc, solutions of lead. If you will read the journals of the Silk Association
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of America you will find in there advice to master dyers as to which salts are
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the most appropriate for weighting purposes. You will read advertisements --
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possibly you saw it reprinted in "The Masses" for December, 1913 -- of silk
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mills, Ashley & Bailey's in Paterson, for instance, advertised by an auctioneer
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as having a plant for weighting, for dynamiting silk par excellence. And so when
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you buy a nice piece of silk today and have a dress made for festive occasions,
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you hang it away in the wardrobe and when you take it out it is cracked down the
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pleats and along the waist and arms. And you believe that you have been terribly
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cheated by a clerk. What is actually wrong is that you have paid for silk where
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you have received old tin cans and zinc and lead and things of that sort. You
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have a dress that is garnished with silk, seasoned with silk, but a dress that
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is adulterated to the point where, if it was adulterated just the slightest
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degree more, it would fall to pieces entirely.
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Now, what Frederic Sumner Boyd advocated to the silk workers was in effect this:
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"You do for yourselves what you are already doing for your employers. Put these
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same things into the silk for yourself and your own purposes as you are putting
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in for the employer's purposes." And I can't imagine -- even in a court of law
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-- where they can find the fine thread of deviation -- where the master dyers'
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sabotage is legal and the worker's sabotage illegal, where the consist of
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identically the same thing and where the silk remains intact. The silk is there.
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The loom is there. There is no property destroyed by the process. The one thing
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that is eliminated is the efficiency of the worker to cover up this adulteration
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of the silk, to carry it just to the point where it will weave and not be
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detected. That efficiency is withdrawn. The veil is torn from off production in
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the silk-dyeing houses and silk mills and the worker simply says, "Here, I will
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take my hands off and I will show you what it is. I will show you how rotten,
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how absolutely unusable the silk actually is that they are passing off on the
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public at two and three dollars a yard."
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Non-Adulteration and Over-Adulteration
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Now, Boyd's form of sabotage was not the most dangerous form of sabotage at
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that. If the judges had any imagination they would know that Boyd's form of
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sabotage was pretty mild compared with this: Suppose that he had said to the
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dyers in Paterson, to a sufficient number of them that they could do it as a
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whole, so that it would affect every dye house in Paterson: "Instead of
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introducing these chemicals for adulteration, don't introduce them at all. Take
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the lead, the zinc, and the tin and throw it down the sewer and weave the silk,
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beautiful, pure, durable silk, just as it is. Dye it pound for pound, hundred
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pound for hundred pound." The employers would have been more hurt by that form
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of sabotage than by what Boyd advocated. And they would probably have wanted him
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put in jail for life instead of for seven years. In other words, to advocate
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non-adulteration is a lot more dangerous to capitalist interests than to
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advocate adulteration. And non-adulteration is the highest form of sabotage in
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an establishment like the dye houses of Paterson, bakeries, confectioners, meat
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packing houses, restaurants, etc.
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Interfering with quality, or durability, or the utility of a product, might be
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illustrated as follows: Suppose a milkman comes to your house every day and
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delivers a quart of milk and this quart of milk is half water and they put some
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chalk in it and some glue to thicken it. Then a milk driver goes on that round
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who belongs to a union. The union strikes. And they don't win any better
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conditions. Then they turn on the water faucet and they let it run so that the
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mixture is four-fifths water and one-fifth milk. You will send the "milk" back
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and make a complaint. At the same time that you are making that complaint and
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refusing to use the milk, hundreds and thousands of others will do the same
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thing, and through striking at the interests of the consumer once they are able
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to effect better conditions for thgemselves and also they are able to compel the
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employers to give the pure product. That form of sabotage is distinctly
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beneficial to the consumer. Any exposure of adulteration, any over-adulteration
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that makes the product unconsumable is a lot more beneficial to the consumer
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than to have it tinctured and doctored so that you can use it but so that it is
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destructive to your physical condition at the same time.
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Interfering with quality means, can be instanced in the hotel and restaurant
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kitchens. I remember during the hotel workers strike they used to tell us about
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the great cauldrons of soup that stood there month in and month out without ever
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being cleaned, that were covered with verdigris and with various other forms of
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animal growth, and that very many times into this soup would fall a mouse or a
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rat and he would be fished out and thrown aside and the soup would be used just
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the same. Now, can anyone say that if the workers in those restaurants, as a
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means of striking at their employers, would take half a pound of salt and throw
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it into that soup cauldron, you as a diner, or consumer, wouldn't be a lot
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better off? It would be far better to have that soup made unfit for consumption
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that to have it left in a state where it can be consumed but where it is
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continually poisonous to a greater or less degree. Destroying the utility of the
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goods sometimes means a distinct benefit to the person who might otherwise use
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the goods.
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Interfering With Service. "Open Mouth" Sabotage
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But that form of sabotage is not the final form of sabotage. Service can be
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destroyed as well as quality. And this is accomplished in Europe by what is
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known as "the open mouth sabotage." In the hotel and restaurant industry, for
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instance -- I wonder if this judge who sentenced Boyd to seven years in state's
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prison, would believe in this form of sabotage or not? Suppose he went into a
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restaurant and ordered a lobster salad, and he said to the spic and span waiter
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standing behind the chair, "Is the lobster salad good?" "Oh, yes, sir," said the
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waiter. "It is the very best in the city." That would be acting the good wage
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slave and looking out for the employer's interest. But if the waiter should say,
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"No, sir, it's rotten lobster salad. It's made from the pieces that have been
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gathered together here for the last six weeks," that would be the waiter who
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believed in sabotage, that would be the waiter who had no interest in his boss'
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profits, the waiter who didn't give a continental whether the boss sold lobster
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salad or not. And the judge would probably believe in sabotage in that
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particular instance. The waiters in the city of New York were only about 5,000
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strong. Of these, about a thousand were militant, were the kind that could be
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depended on in a strike. And yet that little strike made more sensation in New
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York City than 200,000 garment workers who were out at the same time. They
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didn't win very much for themselves, because of their small numbers, but they
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did win a good deal in demonstrating their power to the employer to hurt his
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business. For instance, they drew up affidavits and they told about every hotel
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and restaurant in New York, the kitchen and the pantry conditions. They told
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about how the butter on the little butter plates was sent back to the kitchen
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and somebody with their fingers picked out cigar ashes and the cigarette butts
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and the matches and threw the butter back into the general supply. They told how
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the napkins that had been on the table, used possibly by a man who had
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consumption or syphillis, were used to wipe the dishes in the pantry. They told
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stories that would make your stomach sick and your hair almost turn white, of
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conditions in the Waldorf, the Astor, the Belmont, all the great restaurants and
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hotels in New York. And I found that that was one of the most effective ways of
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reaching the public, because the "dear public" are never reached through
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sympathy. I was taken by a lady up to a West Side aristocratic club of women who
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had nothing else to do, so they organized this club. You know -- the
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white-gloved aristocracy! And I was asked to talk about the hotel workers'
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strike. I knew that wasn't what they wanted at all. They just wanted to look at
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what kind of person a "labor agitator" was. But I saw a chance for publicity for
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the strikers. I told them about the long hours in the hot kitchens; about
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steaming, smoking ranges. I told them about the overwork and the underpay of the
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waiters and how these waiters had to depend upon the generosity or the
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drunkenness of some patron to give them a big tip; all that sort of thing. And
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they were stony-faced. It affected them as much as an arrow would Gibraltar. And
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then I started to tell them about what the waiters and the cooks had told me of
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the kitchen conditions and I saw a look of frozen horror on their faces
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immediately. They were interested when I began to talk about something that
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affected their own stomachs, where I never could have reached them through any
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appeal for humanitarian purposes. Immediately they began to draw up resolutions
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and to cancel engagements at these big hotels and decided that their clubs must
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not meet there again. They caused quite a commotion around some of the big
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hotels in New York. When the workers went back to work after learning that this
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was a way of getting at the boss via the public stomach they did not hesitate at
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sabotage in the kitchens. If any of you have ever got soup that was not fit to
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eat, that was too salty or peppery, maybe there were some boys in the kitchen
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that wanted shorter hours, and that was one way they notified the boss. In the
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Hotel McAlpin the head waiter called the men up before him after the strike was
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over and lost and said, "Boys, you can have what you want, we will give you the
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hours, we will give you the wages, we will give you everything, but, for God's
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sake, stop this sabotage business in the kitchen!" In other words, what they had
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not been able to win through the strike they were able to win by striking at the
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taste of the public, by making the food non-consumable and therefore compelling
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the boss to take cognizance of their efficiency and their power in the kitchen.
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Following The "Book of Rules"
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Interfering with service may be done in another way. It may be done, strange to
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say, sometimes by abiding by the rules, living up to the law absolutely.
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Sometimes the law is almost as inconvenient a thing for the capitalist as for a
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labor agitator. For instance, on every railroad they have a book of rules, a
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nice little book that they give to every employee, and in that book of rules it
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tells how the engineer and the fireman must examine every part of the engine
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before they take it out of the round house. It tells how the brakeman should go
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the length and the width of the train and examine every bit of machinery to be
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sure it's in good shape. It tells how the stationmaster should do this and the
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telegraph operator that, and so forth, and it all sounds very nice in the little
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book. But now take the book of rules and compare it with the timetable and you
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will realize how absolutely impossible the whole thing is. What is it written
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for? An accident happens. An engineer who has been working 36 hours does not see
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a signal on the track, and many people are killed. The coroner's jury meets to
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fix the responsibility. And upon whom is it fixed? This poor engineer who didn't
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abide by the book of rules! He is the man upon whom the responsibility falls.
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The company wipe their hands and say, "We are not responsible. Our employee was
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negligent. Here are our rules." And through this book of rules they are able to
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fix the responsibility of every accident on some poor devil like that engineer,
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who said the other day, after a frightful accident, when he was arrested, "Yes,
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but if I didn't get the train in at a certain time I might have lost my job
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under the new management on the New Haven road." That book rules exists in
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Europe as well. In one station in France there was an accident and the station
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master was held responsible. The station masters were organized in the
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Railwaymen's Union. And they went to the union and asked for some action. The
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union said, "The best thing for you men to do is to go back on the job and obey
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that book of rules letter for letter. If that is the only reason why accidents
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happen we will have no accidents hereafter." So they went back and when a man
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came up to the ticket office and asked for a ticket to such-and-such a place,
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the charge being so much, and would hand in more than the amount, he would be
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told, "Can't give you any change. It says in the book of rules a passenger must
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have the exact fare." This was the first one. Well, after a lot of fuss they
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chased around and got the exact change, were given their tickets and got aboard
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the train. Then when the train was supposedly ready to start the engineer
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climbed down, the fireman followed and they began to examine every bolt and
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piece of mechanism on the engine. The brakeman got off and began to examine
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everything he was supposed to examine. The passengers grew very restless. The
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train stood there about an hour and a half. They proceeded to leave the train.
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They were met at the door by an employee who said, "No, it's against the rules
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for you to leaev the train once you get into it, until you arrive at your
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destination." And within three days the railroad system of France was so
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completely demoralized that they had to exonerate this particular station
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master, and the absurdity of the book of rules had been so demonstated to the
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public that they had to make over their system of operation before the public
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would trust themselves to the railroad any further.
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This book of rules has been tried not only for the purpose of exoneration; it
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has been tried for the purpose of strikes. Where men fail in the open battle
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they go back and with this system they win. Railroad men can sabotage for others
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as well as for themselves. In a case like the miners of Colorado where we read
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there that militiamen were sent in against the miners. We know that they are
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sent against the miners because the first act of the militia was to disarm the
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|
miners and leave the mine guards, the thugs, in possession of their arms. Ludlow
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|
followed! The good judge O'Brien went into Calumet, Mich., and said to the
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miners -- and the president of the union, Mr. Moyer, sits at the table as
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chairman while he said it -- "Boys, give up your guns. It is better for you to
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be shot than it is to shoot anybody." Now, sabotage is not violence, but that
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does not mean that I am deprecating all forms of violence. I believe for
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|
instance in the case of Michigan, in the case of Colorado, in the case of
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Roosevelt, N. J., the miners should have held onto their guns, exercised their
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"constitutional right" to bear arms, and, militia or no militia, absolutely
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|
refused to gfive them up until they saw the guns of the thugs and the guns of
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the mine guards on the other side of the road first. And even then it might be a
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|
good precaution to hold on to them in case of danger! Well, when this militia
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|
was being sent from Denver up into the mining district one little train crew did
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what has never been done in America before; something that caused a thrill to go
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|
through the humblest toiler. If I could have worked for twenty years just to see
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|
one little torch of hope like that, I believe it worth while. The train was full
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|
of soldiers. The engineer, the fireman, all the train crew stepped out of the
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train and they said, "We are not going to run this train to carry soldiers in
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|
|
against our brother strikers." So they deserted the train, but it was then
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|
operated by a Baldwin detective and a deputy sheriff. Can you say that wasn't a
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|
case where sabotage was absolutely necessary?
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Putting The Machine on Strike
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Suppose that when the engineer had gone on strike he had taken a vital part of
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the engine on strike with him, without which it would have been impossible for
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|
anyone to run that engine. Then there might have been a different story.
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|
Railroad men have a mighty power in refusing to transport soldiers,
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|
strike-breakers and ammunition for soldiers and strike-breakers into strike
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|
districts. They did it in Italy. The soldiers went on the train. The train
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|
guards refused to run the trains. The soldiers thought they could run the train
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|
themselves. They started and the first signal they came to was "Danger." They
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|
went along very slowly and cautiously, and the next signal was at "Danger." And
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|
they found before they had gone very far that some of the switches had been
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|
turned and they were run off on to a siding in the woods somewhere. Laboriously
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|
they got back onto the main track. They came to a drawbridge and the bridge was
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|
turned open. They had to go across in boats and abandon the train. That meant
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|
walking the rest of the way. By the time they got into strike district the
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|
strike was over. Soldiers who have had to walk aren't so full of vim and vigor
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|
and so anxious to shoot "dagoes" down when they get into a strike district as
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when they ride in a train manned by union men.
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The railroad men have mighty power in refusing to run these trains and putting
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|
them in such a condition that they can't be run by others. However, to
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|
anticipate a question that is going to be asked about the possible disregard for
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|
|
human life, remember that when they put all the signals at danger there is very
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|
little risk for human life, because the train usually has to stop dead still.
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|
Where they take a vital part of the engine away the train does not run at all.
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|
So human life is not in danger. They make it a practice to strike such a vital
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|
blow that the service is paralyzed thereafter.
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With freight of course they do different things. In the strike of the railroad
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|
workers in France they transported the freight in such a way that a great
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|
trainload of fine fresh fruit could be run off into a siding in one of the
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|
poorest districts of France. It was left to decay. But it never reached the
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|
|
point of either decay or destruction. It was usually taken care of by the poor
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|
people of that district. Something that was supposed to be sent in a rush from
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|
Paris to Havre was sent to Marseilles. And so within a very short time the whole
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|
|
system was so clogged and demoralized that they had to say to the railroad
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|
|
workers, "You are the only efficient ones. Come back. Take your demands. But run
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|
|
our railroads."
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"Print The Truth or You Don't Print at All"
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|
Now, what is true of the railroad workers is also true of the newspaper workers.
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|
Of course one can hardly imagine any more conservative element to deal with than
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|
|
the railroad workers and the newspaper workers. Sometimes you will read a story
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|
|
in the paper that is so palpably false, a story about strikers that planted
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|
|
dynamite in Lawrence for instance (and it came out in a Boston paper before the
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|
|
dynamite was found), a story of how the Erie trains were "dynamited" by strikers
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|
|
in Paterson; but do you realize that the man who writes that story, the man who
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|
|
pays for that story, the owners and editors are not the ones that put the story
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|
|
into actual print? It is put in print by printers, compositors, typesetters, men
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|
|
who belong to the working class and are members of unions. During the Swedish
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|
|
general strike these workers who belonged to the unions and were operating the
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|
|
papers rebelled against printing lies against their fellow strikers. They sent
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|
|
an ultimatum to the newspaper managers: "Either you print the truth or you'll
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|
|
print no papers at all." The newspaper owners decided they would rather print no
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|
|
paper at all than tell the truth. Most of them would probably so decide in this
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|
|
country, too. The men went on strike and the paper came out a little bit of a
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|
|
sheet, two by four, until eventually they realized that the printers had them by
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|
|
the throat, that they could not print any papers without the printers. They sent
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|
|
for them to come back and told them, "So much of the paper will belong to the
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|
|
strikers and they can print what they please in it."
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|
|
But other printers have accomplished the same results by sabotage. In Copenhagen
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|
|
once there was a peace conference and a circus going on at the same time. The
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|
|
printers asked for more wages and they didn't get them. They were very sore.
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|
|
Bitterness in the heart is a very good stimulus for sabotage. So they said, "All
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|
|
right, we will stay right at work, boys, but we will do some funny business with
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|
|
this paper, so they won't want to print it tomorrow under the same
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|
|
circumstances." They took the peace conference, where some high and mighty
|
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|
|
person was going to make an address on international peace and they put that
|
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|
|
man's speech in the circus news; they reported the lion and the monkey as making
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|
|
speeches in the peace conference and the Honorable Mr. So-and-so doing trapeze
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|
|
acts in the circus. There was great consternation and indignation in the city.
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|
|
Advertisers, the peace conference, the circus protested. The circus would not
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|
|
pay their bill for advertising. It cost the paper as much, eventually, as the
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|
|
increased wages would have cost them, so that they came to the men figuratively
|
|
|
|
on their bended knees and asked them, "Please be good and we will give you
|
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|
|
whatever you ask." That is the power of interfering with industrial efficiency
|
|
|
|
by bad service. It is not the inefficiency of a poor workman, but the deliberate
|
|
|
|
withdrawal of efficiency by a competent worker.
|
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|
|
"Used Sabotage, But Didn't Know What You Called It"
|
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|
|
Sabotage is for the workingman an absolute necessity. Therefore it is almost
|
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|
|
useless to argue about its effectiveness. When men do a thing instinctively
|
|
|
|
continually, year after year and generation after generation, it means that that
|
|
|
|
weapon has some value to them. When the Boyd speech was made in Paterson,
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immediately some of the socialists rushed to the newspapers to protest. They
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called the attention of the authorities to the fact that the speech was made.
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The secretary of the socialist party and the organizer of the socialist party
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repudiated Boyd. That precipitated the discussion into the strike committee as
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to whether speeches on sabotage were to be permitted. We had tried to instill
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into the strikers the idea that any kind of speech was to be permitted; that a
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socialist or a minister or a priest, a union, organizer, an A. F. of L. man, a
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politician, an I. W. W. man, an anarchist, anybody should have the platform. And
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we tried to make the strikers realize. "You have sufficient intelligence to
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select for yourselves. If you haven't got that, then no censorship over your
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meetings is going to do you any good." So they had a rather tolerant spirit and
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they were not inclined to accept this socialist denunciation of sabotage right
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off the reel. They had an executive session and threshed it out and this is what
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occurred.
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One worker said, "I never heard of this thing called sabotage before Mr. Boyd
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spoke about it on the platform. I know once in a while when I want a half-day
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off and they won't give it to me I slip the belt off the machine so it won't run
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and I get my half day. I don't know whether you call that sabotage, but that's
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what I do."
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Another said, "I was in the strike of the dyers eleven years ago and we lost. We
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went back to work and we had these scabs that had broken our strike working side
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by side with us. We were pretty sore. So whenever they were supposed to be
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mixing green we saw to it that they put in red, or when they were supposed to be
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mixing blue we saw to it that they put in green. And soon they realized that
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scabbing was a very unprofitable business. And the next strike we had, they
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lined up with us. I don't know whether you call that sabotage, but it works."
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As we went down the line, one member of the executive committee after another
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admitted they had used this thing but they "didn't know that was what you called
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it!" And so in the end democrats, republicans, socialists, all I. W. W.'s in the
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committee voted that speeches on sabotage were to be permitted, because it was
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ridiculous not to say on the platform what they were already doing in the shop.
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And so my final justification of sabotage is its constant use by the worker. The
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position of speakers, organizers, lecturers, writers who are presumed to be
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interested in the labor movement, must be one of two. If you place yourself in a
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position outside of the working class and you presume to dictate to them from
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some "superior" intellectual plane, what they are to do, they will very soon get
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rid of you, for you will very soon demonstrate that you are of absolutely no use
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to them. I believe the mission of the intelligent propagandist is this: we are
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to see what the workers are doing, and then try to understand why they do it;
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not tell them it's right or it's wrong, but analyze the condition and see if
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possibly they do not best understand their need and if, out of the condition,
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there may not develop a theory that will be of general utility. Industrial
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unionism, sabotage are theories born of such facts and experiences. But for us
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to place ourselves in a position of censorship is to alienate ourselves entirely
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from sympathy and utility with the very people we are supposed to serve.
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Sabotage and "Moral Fiber"
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Sabotage is objected to on the ground that it destroys the moral fiber of the
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individual, whatever that is! The moral fibre of the workingman! Here is a poor
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workingman, works twelve hours a day seven days a week for two dollars a day in
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the steel mills of Pittsburg. For that man to use sabotage is going to destroy
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his moral fiber. Well, if it does, then moral fiber is the only thing he has
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left. In a stage of society where men produce a completed article, for instance
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if a shoemaker takes a piece of raw leather, cuts it, designs it, plans the
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shoes, makes every part of the shoes, turns out a finished product, that
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respresents to him what the piece of sculpturing represents to the artist, there
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is joy in handicraftsmanship, there is joy in labor. But can anyone believe that
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a shoe factory worker, one of a hundred men, each doing a small part of the
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complete whole, standing before a machine for instance and listening to this
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ticktack all day long -- that such a man has any joy in his work or any pride in
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the ultimate product? The silk worker for instance may make beautiful things,
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fine shimmering silk. When it is hung up in the window of Altman's or Macy's or
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Wanamaker's it looks beautiful. But the silk worker never gets a chance to use a
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single yard of it. And the producing of the beautiful thing instead of being a
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pleasure is instead a constant aggravation to the silk worker. They make a
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beautiful thing in the shop and then they come home to poverty, misery, and
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hardship. They wear a cotton dress while they are weaving the beautiful silk for
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some demi monde in New York to wear.
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I remember one night we had a meeting of 5,000 kiddies. (We had them there to
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discuss whether or not there should be a school strike. The teachers were not
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telling the truth about the strike and we decided that the children were either
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to hear the truth or it was better for them not to go to school at all.) I said,
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"Children, is there any of you here who have a silk dress in your family?
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Anybody's mother got a silk dress?" One little ragged urchin in front piped up,
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"Shure, me mudder's got a silk dress."
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I said, "Where did she get it?" -- perhaps a rather indelicate question, but a
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natural one.
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He said, "Me fadder spoiled the cloth and had to bring it home."
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The only time they get a silk dress is when they spoil the goods so that nobody
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else will use it; when the dress is so ruined that nobody else would want it.
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Then they can have it. The silk worker takes pride in his products! To talk to
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these people about being proud of their work is just as silly as to talk to the
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street cleaner about being proud of his work, or to tell the man that scrapes
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out the sewer to be proud of his work. If they made an article completely or if
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they made it all together under a democratic association and then they had the
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disposition of the silk -- they could wear some of it, they could make some of
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the beautiful salmon-colored and the delicate blues into a dress for themselves
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-- there would be pleasure in producing silk. But until you eliminate wage
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slavery and the exploitation of labor it is ridiculous to talk about destroying
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the moral fiber of the individual by telling him to destroy "his own product."
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Destroy his own product! He is destroying somebody else's enjoyment, somebody
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else's chance to use his product created in slavery. There is another argument
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to the effect that "If you use this thing called sabotage you are going to
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develop in yourself a spirit of histility, a spirit of antagonism to everybody
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else in society, you are going to become sneaking, you are going to become
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cowardly. It is an underhanded thing to do." But the individual who uses
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sabotage is not benefiting himself alone. If he were looking out for himself
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only he would never use sabotage. It would be much easier, much safer not to do
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it. When a man uses sabotage he is usually intending to benefit the whole; doing
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an individual thing but doing it for the benefit of himself and others together.
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And it requires courage. It requires individuality. It creates in that
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workingman some self-respect for and self-reliance upon himself as a producer. I
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contend that sabotage instead of being sneaking and cowardly is a courageous
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thing, is an open thing. The boss may not be notified about it through the
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papers, but he finds out about it very quickly, just the same. And the man or
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woman who employs it is demonstrating a courage that you may measure in this
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way: How many of the critics would do it? How many of you, if you were dependent
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on a job in a silk town like Paterson, would take your job in your hands and
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employ sabotage? If you were a machinist in a locomotive shop and had a good
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job, how many of you would risk it to employ sabotage? Consider that and then
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you have the right to call the man who uses it a coward -- if you can.
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Limiting The Over-Supply of Slaves
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It is my hope that the workers will not only "sabotage" the supply of products,
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but also the over-supply of producers. In Europe the syndicalists have carried
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on a propaganda that we are too cowardly to carry on in the United States as
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yet. It is against the law. Everything is "against the law," once it becomes
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large enough for the law to take cognizance that it is in the best interests of
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the working class. If sabotage is to be thrown aside because it is construed as
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against the law, how do we know that next year free speech may not have to be
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thrown aside? Or free assembly or free press? That a thing is against the law,
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does not mean necessarily that the thing is not good. Sometimes it means just
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the contrary: a mighty good thing for the working class to use against the
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capitalists. In Europe they are carrying on this sort of limitation of product:
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they are saying, "Not only will we limit the product in the factory, but we are
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going to limit the supply of producers. We are going to limit the supply of
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workers on the market." Men and women of the working class in France and Italy
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and even Germany today are saying, "We are not going to have ten, twelve and
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fourteen children for the army, the navy, the factory and the mine. We are going
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to have fewer children, with quality and not quantity accentuated as our ideal
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who can be better fed, better clothed, better equipped mentally and will become
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better fighters for the social revolution." Although it is not a strictly
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scientific definition I like to include this as indicative of the spirit that
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produces sabotage. It certainly is one of the most vital forms of class warfare
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there are, to strike at the roots of the capitalist system by limiting their
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supply of slaves and creating individuals who will be good soldiers on their own
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behalf.
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Sabotage a War Measure
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I have not given you are rigidly defined thesis on sabotage because sabotage is
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in the process of making. Sabotage itself is not clearly defined. Sabotage is as
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broad and changing as industry, as flexible as the imagination and passions of
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humanity. Every day workingmen and women are discovering new forms of sabotage,
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and the stronger their rebellious imagination is the more sabotage they are
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going to invent, the more sabotage they are going to develop. Sabotage is not,
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|
however, a permanent weapon. Sabotage is not going to be necessary, once a free
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society has been established. Sabotage is simply a war measure and it will go
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|
out of existence with the war, just as the strike, the lockout, the policeman,
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the machine gun, the judge with his injunction, and all the various weapons in
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the arsenals of capital and labor will go out of existence with the advent of a
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free society. "And then," someone may ask, "may not this instinct for sabotage
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have developed, too far, so that one body of workers will use sabotage against
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another; that the railroad workers, for instance, will refuse to work for the
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|
miners unless they get exorbitant returns for labor?" The difference is this:
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when you sabotage an employer you are sabotaging somebody upon whom you are not
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interdependent, you have no relationship with him as a member of society
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contributing to your wants in return for your contribution. The employer is
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|
somebody who depends absolutely on the workers. Whereas, the miner is one unit
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|
in as society where somebody else supplies the bread, somebody else the clothes,
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somebody else the shoes, and where he gives his product in exchange for someone
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else's; and it would be suicidal for him to assume a tyrannical, a monopolistic
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|
position, of demanding so much for his product that the others might cut him off
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from any other social relations and refuse to meet with any such bargain. In
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other words, the miner, the railroad worker, the baker is limited in using
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|
sabotage against his fellow workers because he is interdependent on his fellow
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workers, whereas he is not meterially interdependent on the employer for the
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means of subsistence.
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But the worker will not be swerved from his stern purpose by puerile objections.
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To him this is not an argument but a struggle for life. He knows freedom will
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come only when his class is willing and courageous enough to fight for it. He
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|
knows the risks, far better than we do. But his choice is between starvation in
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|
slavery and starvation in battle. Like a spent swimmer in the sea, who can sink
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|
easily and apathetically into eternal sleep, but who struggles on to grasp a
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stray spar, suffers but hopes in suffering -- so the worker makes his choice.
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His wife's worries and tears spur him forth to don his shining armor of
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|
industrial power; his child's starry eyes mirror the light of the ideal to him
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and strengthens his determination to strike the shackles from the wrists of toil
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|
before that child enters the arena of industrial life; his manhood demands some
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|
rebellion against daily humiliation and intolerable exploitation. To this
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worker, sabotage is a shining sword. It pierces the nerve centers of capitalism,
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|
stabs at its hearts and stomachs, tears at the vitals of its economic system. It
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is cutting a path to freedom, to ease in production and ease in consumption.
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Confident in his powers, he hurls his challenge into his master's teeth -- I am,
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I was and I will be --
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"I will be, and lead the nations on, the last of all your hosts to meet,
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Till on your necks, your heads, your crowns, I'll plant my strong, resistless
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feet.
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Avenger, Liberator, Judge, red battles on my pathway hurled,
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I stretch forth my almighty arm till it revivifies the world."
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PREAMBLE
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Industrial Workers of the World
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The working class and the employing class have nothing in common. The can be no
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peace so long as hunger and want are found among millions of the working people and
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|
the few, who make up the employing class, have all the good things of life.
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Between these two classes a struggle must go on until the workers of the world
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organize as a class, take possession of the earth and the machinery of production,
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and abolish the wage system.
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We find that the centering of the management of industries into fewer and fewer
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hands makes the trade unions unable to cope with the ever growing power of the
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|
employing class. The trade unions foster a state of affairs which allows one set of
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|
workers to be pitted against another set of workers in the same industry, thereby
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|
helping to defeat one another in wage wars. Moreover, the trade unions aid the
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employing class to mislead the workers into the belief that the working class have
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interests in common with their employers.
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These conditions can be changed and the interest of the working class upheld only
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|
by an organization formed in such a way that all its members in any one industry,
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|
or in all industries if necessary, cease work whenever a strike or lockout is on in
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|
any department thereof, thus making an injury to one an injury to all.
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Instead of the conservative motto, "A fair day's wage for a fair day's work," we
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|
must inscribe on our banner the revolutionary watchword, "Abolition of the wage
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system."
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It is the historic mission of the working class to do away with capitalism. The
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|
army of production must be organized, not only for the everyday struggle with
|
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|
capitalists, but also to carry on production when capitalism shall have been
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overthrown. By organizing industrially we are forming the structure of the new
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|
society within the shell of the old.
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