*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE,
JULY 20, 1895.
The
Editorial Mill.
Our
Motto: “Socialism in our time.”
The Shops Early Closing Bill, the second reading of
which was carried on the voices in the Queensland Assembly last week,
may be regarded as the first attempt at anything approaching
progressive social legislation made by the present Government. It is
admittedly not a very brilliant attempt, nor yet is it a very
satisfactory one. It is as much, if not more, than might have been
expected from the representatives of Boodlewraith. Still,
unsatisfactory as it is in many important particulars, it is
exceedingly valuable in so far as it illustrates the encouraging
results of persistent and and systematic organisation initiated and
carried on by the Shop Assistants' Early Closing Associations. It is
valuable, too, as showing to the despondently inclined individuals in
the Labour movement that through the medium of industrial unionism it
is possible to carry on effective political education, and to force
Labour reforms to the front in spite of the most powerful opposition
from the Tories of this Tory-ridden colony.
*
* *
The Government's Speech read at the opening of the
present session, in addition to this measure, also promised a
Factories and Workshops Bill and a Lien on Wages Bill, which indicate
that the Boodlewraith are yielding some to the storm of public
opinion and to the increasing intelligence of the community on
matters affecting their well-being. In commenting thus upon the
proposal now before Parliament there is no intention on the part of
the WORKER to depreciate the value or to lessen the practical
importance of the action of the Government because we happen to
believe they are influenced by other than absolutely sincere motives.
As this is the last session prior to an appeal to the country it is
quite reasonable to infer that the fear of the general elections has
been the lever which has moved it in a progressive direction. It is
well if this is so, because it is only by a process of educating the
public mind that the people can ever expect to compel the
Conservative element to move onward.
* * *
Another pleasing feature arising out of the introduction
of the Bill is the conversion of so many of the leading retail
business men in Brisbane to a belief in the necessity of the
compulsory method of early closing as against that of moral suasion.
These gentlemen were most pronounced in their expressions at Monday
night's public meeting in favour of compelling, by legal enactment,
all shops to close at 6 o’clock. Moral suasion, it was explicitly
pointed out, had been tried for the last fifteen years and had proved
a signal failure. The opinions of J. R. Dickson and Kingsbury to the
country, notwithstanding.
* * *
Regarding the bill itself, it is defective in some most
important respects, but after the pronouncements made at Monday's
meeting, by both employers and employed, the Government can scarcely
refuse to remedy them. One of the most serious evils in connection
with late shopping is that it tends to destroy the health and vigour
of our young people. Medical testimony goes to show that working in
close, stuffy, ill-ventilated workshops under the glare of numerous
gas-jets has this effect on both men and women. The bill in its
present form, permits a continuance of this serious evil by leaving
it optional with shopkeepers to keep their houses open until 10
o'clock on Saturday nights so long as they give their hands one half
holiday during the week. In addition to the evil results of this
practice, the provision will lead to much confusion and jealousy
amongst the retailers themselves, and in all probability will prove
the bill to be ultimately inoperative. What is now asked for by the
shop assistants and agreed to by a large proportion of their
employers is that the establishments should be compelled to close at
6 p.m. Every night in the week. The point should be conceded if the
legislation is to have a fair trial.
* * *
The WORKER congratulates the Early Closing Associations
on the small measure of success which has attended their long -
continued efforts, and if they pursue the advocacy of their claims
with the same amount of energy in the future as they have done in the
past then a greater measure of success must be the result.
___________________
As in other lands, there is in Queensland to-day a class
which has it in its power to say to the toiling masses; “You shall
not work excepting at our dictation,” - a dominant class,
purse-proud and arrogant, and which is the product of a system of
industry wherein there is no place for friendly concord. The people
pride themselves on their freedom, their liberty of speech and
action, but beneath the surface there is discernible the same old
contest which has been going on elsewhere for ages. Green, the
historian, describing the troubles which agitated our forefathers
seven hundred years ago, said: “It is this struggle, to use the
technical terms of the time, of the 'greater folk' against the
'lesser folk,' or of the 'commune,' the general mass of the
inhabitants, against the 'prudhommes,' or 'wiser' few, which brought
about, as it passed from the regulation of trade to the general
government of the town, the great civic revolution of the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries. On the continent, and especially along the
Rhine, the struggle was as fierce as the supremacy of the older
burghers had been reduced to almost serfage, and the merchant of
Brussels might box at his will the ears of 'the man without heart or
honour who lives by his toil.'”
* * *
The above is not an exaggerated picture of the state of
affairs in the industrial world to-day, and yet people, full of class
prejudice, wonder at the industrial strife which is but the
inevitable result of the continuation of a system of production
without regulation or sympathy. It is silly to say that industrial
strife is manufactured by agitators. If the conditions which engender
the strife did not exist, neither would the agitator, and if strikes
are to be abolished so also must the unemployed. While the unemployed
are with us, the dominant employing class will take advantage of
their presence to force unfair conditions, and good workmen into
seeking wild justice by means of strikes.
* * *
Let us take an example. At present there is a master
baker in South Brisbane who, because there are a large number of men
looking for work, insists that the carters whom he employs shall sign
an agreement containing the following clauses: “ . . . . . . In
the event of the said – absenting himself without leave (except
through personal sickness or through severe illness of one of the
members of his own family, when he is to forthwith advise the said -
), or being found under the influence of liquor whilst on duty, or
wilfully neglecting or refusing to carry out the directions of the
said -----, he shall be liable to dismissal without notice and to
forfeit all wages then due.” “ The said ------ further
covenants and agrees that he will not, during the term of his
services and for a period of one year from the termination of the
said agreement, either directly or indirectly disclose or divulge
the secrets of or relating to the bakery or business of the said
------ or the names of his customers, or solicit or endeavour to
obtain either on behalf of himself or any other person or persons,
company, or corporation, the custom of or serve or cause to be
served with bread any of the persons within a radius of five miles
from the bakehouse of the said ------- , or ask or induce or directly
or indirectly any of the said persons to withdraw their custom from
the said -------.” For each and every breach of any one of the
conditions of the last preceding paragraph hereof the said -------
covenant and agrees to pay the said -------- the sum of ten (10)
pounds sterling, to be recovered as and by way of liquidated
damages and not as a penalty.”
* * *
In this agreement the employer insists that he alone
shall be the judge; that he shall keep back the workman's wages; and
that from his decision there is no appeal. Not only this, but after
the workman is discharged from his services the employer claims the
right for twelve months to dictate to him how he shall obtain his
living. This is what is understood by the dominant class to mean
“freedom of contract.” The master gets all the freedom, the man
gets all the contract. Could slavery go much further than this? Or
can any reasonable person say that the conditions which beget
industrial turmoil are not contained in such an atrocious document?
* * *
Later on, perhaps, when the unfortunate men, who now
through sheer necessity are compelled to sign this insolent
agreement, combine against its one-sided terms and endeavour by means
of strikes to free themselves from its bondage, the sacred rights of
property and the Red Spectre will be trotted out for service by the
dominant class, and few persons, if any, will think of placing the
blame of the trouble on the proper shoulders, or attempting to trace
back the real cause of the industrial turmoil. Men versed in the law
may say that the agreement referred to would not hold good in court,
but most persons know that for wage-earners engaged in an industrial
dispute it is almost impossible to obtain justice there. The longest
purse generally carries the day. The law is for the wealthy and not
the moneyless man.
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