Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL)

 - Class of 1915

Page 32 of 96

 

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 32 of 96
Page 32 of 96



Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 31
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Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

Emerson School HOY SCOTT: — “Being good is a lonesome job.”

Page 31 text:

©ration IIEN one begins to think of what human mind and energy have accomplished, he is really astonished. The endless cycle of scientific knowledge, the rapidity of production, the train which rushes by like a hurricane, the submarine that glides like a whale, the incomparable aeroplane, the wireless and telephone messages from sea to sea seem, as yet, miracles to us. These things have reduced the earth to an ant hill. But in spite of all these developments there is an evil which is incessantly striking against the props of human welfare and causing it to fall into the depth of misery. The human mind, superior as it is, is such an excellent conductor of falsity that whenever one calculates its current he has to use zero, or less, as resistance. To the human mind nothing appeals so much as flattery. The biological law — against each enemy of an organism there is some means of protection peculiar to the organism, or a physical external one; for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction — seems to be true in ease of man also, for were it not so no existence would be possible. The remedy for this weakness of man — the liability of being deceived — is very cheap and obtainable anywhere at any time. Here it is: do your own thin king and reasoning; never let someone else to do these for you. For as long as people blindly accept another’s policy and mechanically follow it. there will be no peaceful life and equal opportunity for each. When people begin to do their own thinking and reasoning, then they will meet the iron necessity of putting into practice the long-spoken-of and never-obeyed phrases : “all men are created equal “all men have the same wants, therefore all men have the same interests.” As soon as they realize this there will come harmony, peace and love among them and this world will become what it ought to be. A boy remarked to another that hot bread with butter was very good and said in reply to an inquiry, he had never tasted it. but his father had heard some one say so. Now is there sufficient proof to believe the statement of the boy? Of course there is no proof whatever. Such is the case with Socialism at the present time. Society may be divided into two classes: the capitalist class and the working class. The structure of society is of bene- fit to the former and of disadvantage to the latter. Just imagine what would you observe during a strike. Take for example the Colorado trouble, one of the best examples. You see on one side thousands of working men striking because their wages are too low to keep them in normal condition, while on the other side you notice a millionaire from St. Louis, another from Chicago, a third one from England, etc., not even as many individuals as there are thousands of working men, refusing to let the working men have their bread, which they have so dearly produced. Further on. you witness that the army, the press, the police, the court, the law. often religion, etc., take the side of the capitalist to help him oppress the working people. This is what is called class struggle, a consequence of the two extreme classes now in existence, with opposite interests. There are many more intermediate classes, but they are disappearing and uniting with the former two (ninety-nine per cent go to the working class). Because the capitalist class is only one-thousandth as large as the working class, do not be deluded that we have no classes. Socialism is hot merely a political party. It is a new, inevitable form of society caused by the continuous perfection of the means of production. It is as different from the present society as the present is from the past. Socialism represents a uniform force acting against two unequal resistances: the capitalist class and the working class. Logically its effect upon these two classes must be different, as, in fact, it is — favorable for the working class and unfavorable for the capitalist. The DORA REIMERS: — “She will, if she will.



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capitalists are the most influential, and wishing to dominate the working people, denounce Socialism. They say it is a pessimistic idea; it is nonsense; it is impossible; and to make it sound Still worse in the ears of the working people they add that the Socialists want to divide everything that they can get hold of. If there be any sane person who lives by the sweat of his brow and believes in these false criticisms he is utterly deceived, because Socialism means just the opposite. It is based upon the following scientific and historical facts: From the relics and traces which we find in different places we conclude that primitive society of man was not much different from that of a herd of monkeys or other animals. One may readily conceive this from reading about the savages in South Africa or Australia. Before these people had any means of production to which they could have applied the labor power of their captives they devoured every human they captured. This is known as Cannibalistic Era. Upon the invention of certain tools of production the owners of tools, instead of eating up their captives, began to put them in positions to produce and then took possession of their products. Soon the primitive herd of savages came to be an organized society, consisting of masters and slaves. We call this the slave era . It reached its climax before the Fall of the Roman Republic. When Christianity appeared and its followers began to preach brotherhood and love and when the owners of the means of production began to realize that free labor is more productive and less expensive than slave labor, certain changes in society took place. Slavery w as restricted to the black race ; other slaves became serfs. This change brought about the Feudal system, consisting of landlords owning everything and their vassals owning merely sheer labor power. These vassals could make their living only by entire submission of their lives to the landlords. Later on when the means of production were further improved it became necessary for the laborers to be free so that they might be able to go wherever their labor power was needed, without any expense to the owners of the tools. Emanicpa- tion of labor took place. This marked the beginning of the Capitalistic Era, in which we are now Living. The capitalist system consists, as stated before, of a handful of men who have control of the means of production and the natural resources as well as of the political power, while on the other hand the working class, which is in the very great majority everywhere, ow n nothing except that which cannot be taken away from a person — hands and brains — by means of which they make their living. At the beginning of this decade these two classes represented the tw r o sides of a balance. At that time the difference between the two sides was not very great, so the living of the working people was quite bearable. By the gain of one class and the loss of ' the other, in the course of the time, the equilibrium was destroyed and now the living of the working people is in the lower balance of the scale. This means that the wheel of evolution is again ready to make a complete revolution. As in the former evolutionary revolutions there wore people who attempted to stop revolutions and became victims of ignorance ; at the present there are such people also, who. at least, ought to be grateful to the Socialists because the latter warn of this danger. Revolution does not necessarily mean bloodshed or tumult. Revolution means to the human society as much as molting to the locust or the cell division of the ameoba. When all the people recognize their own interests, in the full meaning of the word, and begin to follow it, the Social Revolution will prove a Rennaissance to them. The chief characteristic of the capitalist system is this: the people are divided into nations, governed by bodies, called “national” governments. In reality these “national” governments are committees controlled almost entirely by the capitalists, resting upon the ignorance of the working people, to serve the interest of the capitalist class. These “national” governments have organized large armies from the members of the working class that they may better perform their predetermined func- tions. The purpose of these armies is chiefly not to defend some fatherland as w r e are told, but to protect old markets, capture ESTHER SCOTT: — “With a heart that ' s ever kind. '

Suggestions in the Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) collection:

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Granite City High School - Warrior Yearbook (Granite City, IL) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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