*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
August 11, 1894
AN OPEN
LETTER TO THE WORKERS.
Fellow
Workers, Parliament is sitting again. For the next six months or more
we may expect to hear a lot pompous talk and to see the usual
consignment of legislation made in favour of wool, sugar, and gold,
but precious little in favour of you who produce it. There will be as
much twaddle over indulged in regarding the rights of capital, and a
lot of hard work will be done maintaining and securing these rights,
but at the end of the session your rights will still be where they
are to-day – in the air. When Parliament goes into recess again
none of you will be any better off than you are now. I tell you
straight; and if you want to know why, I can tell you also.
Since
ever this colony has been a colony you have been legislated for by
two parties, representing two classes – the owners of capital and
the owners of land.
Of
the population of the colony these classes do not number 20 per cent,
even including absentees. Until very recently you, who form the other
80 per cent, have not had one single representative in Parliament,
not one single direct voice in the making of the laws that bind you
hand foot and tongue. You have left the making of the law – the
most serious business on earth – to your masters, naturally enough
they have made them to suit themselves, and any fool knows that every
law made in their interest has been a law against yours. Again and
again you have sent them back to power to carry on the same old
pernicious jobbery, and still you wonder because your lot is bad.
Good heavens! You have allowed them to monopolise Parliament – the
great source of national power – and to apply all its force in the
enforcement of the “rights” of their classes; you have allowed
them to interpret what shall be these rights; which interpretation in
their devilish audacity they term laws.
You
have allowed them to fence themselves in politically until they have
fenced half of you out, until they had begun to forget almost about
your very existence as a political power; and when at last the shoe
begins to pinch, you make a slipshod kind of effort and send a
handful of men of your own class into Parliament whom they ridicule
and abuse, and whose mission they decline to take seriously even now.
You have been and are governed by nobody else but land owners and
capitalists and their representatives and sycophants since ever the
colony has been a colony. They have consisted of men of various
shades of opinion; they have divided themselves into various
factions, and have fought each other bitterly for the right to hold
the reins of power, but they could always be reckoned upon to join
hands and present a united front whenever their common interest were
in danger. They have called themselves Conservatives, Liberals,
Nationals, Democrats, and what not, but at best they have never been
anything else than what they still are – your masters; and they
never had any interest but their own under it all.
They
have entrenched themselves so securely that they have become a
tremendous organisation whose real strength none of you have any
conception of. Nothing but a tremendous force can ever hope to reckon
with the power your masters have obtained. They will never suffer
themselves to become disorganised, nor to renounce one iota what they
believe to be their rights without putting forth all their giant
powers of resistance – their police, their spies, their sycophants,
their newspapers, and their armies. Rather than yield up one jot of
the value they fitch from the product of your labour they will try to
pull the roof of the world down upon your heads. They are the
strongest force in all society – except one other – yourselves
united.
Aye,
even the Democrats, whom so many of you look hopefully and kindly
upon, belong to the same class. They only represent the more radical
of the members of the law and order party after all. They are
upholders of the constitution , with perhaps a few unimportant
trimmings, and the first plank in the constitutional platform is the
right of the capitalist to the fleecings of the labourer. They would
give you universal suffrage, payment of members, protection,
conciliation councils, Factory Acts, federation, Republicanises, and
so on. Well and if they were to capture Parliament and you were to
get all of them, where would you be! Just where you were before. Then
as now we would have poverty and luxury, millionaires and unemployed.
For none of these things would alter the relationship of the labourer
to the capitalist or prevent to any appreciable extent the robbery of
former by the latter. If anything they were to do would better your
condition a little it would be more harm than good in the long run.
It would only mean a prolongation of the old agony and nothing more.
Look
at America. It has Factory Acts, conciliation councils, universal
suffrage, payment of members, federation, Republicanism, and what
better is the worker of it all. None at all. Absolutely none. Outside
of your own party then there is not one particle of hope for you or
your children. It is the only party that recognises the right of the
labourer to the full product of his labour – the right of a man to
own all that he earns. This is the first principle of the Labour
movement. Whoever will not recognise it, in whatever way he disguises
his non-recognition of it, is your enemy prima facie. The
modern developments in the science of political economy prove beyond
all question that the filching from the labourer of the earnings of
his labour by the capitalist class is the great source of all social
evils. Whoever recognises this and will labour for its uprooting is
your friend. But none other. The Democrats won't. Ask them and see.
There is only one plank in the Labour platform. It is this: That
the Labourer is entitled to the full product of his labour. There
is only one system of society ever promulgated on this basis. Its
name is Socialism.
Yours fraternally,
John Smith.
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