登陆注册
15469600000016

第16章 CHAPTER II SURVIVALS OF MILITARISM IN CIVIL GOVERN

To illustrate from a personal experience: Some years ago a famous New York reformer came to Chicago to tell us of his phenomenal success, his trenchant methods of dealing with the city "gambling- hells," as he chose to call them. He proceeded to describe the criminals of lower New York in terms and phrases which struck at least one of his auditors as sheer blasphemy against our common human nature. I thought of the criminals whom I knew, of the gambler for whom each Saturday I regularly collected his weekly wage of $24.00, keeping $18.00 for his wife and children and giving him $6.00 on Monday morning. His despairing statement, "the thing is growing on me, and I can never give it up," was certainly not the cry of a man living in hell, but of him who, through much tribulation had at least kept the loyal intention. I remembered the three girls who had come to me with a paltry sum of money collected from the pawn and sale of their tawdry finery in order that one of their number might be spared a death in the almshouse and that she might have the wretched comfort during the closing weeks of her life of knowing that, although she was an outcast, she was not a pauper. I recalled the first mur-( 59)-derer whom I had ever known, a young man who was singing his baby to sleep and stopped to lay it in its cradle before he rushed downstairs into his father's saloon to scatter the gang of boys who were teasing the old man by giving him English orders. The old man could not understand English and the boys were refusing to pay for the drinks they had consumed, but technically had not ordered.

For one short moment I saw the situation from the point of view of humbler people, who sin often through weakness and passion, but seldom through hardness of heart, and I felt that in a democratic community such sweeping condemnations and conclusions as the speaker was pouring forth could never be accounted for righteousness.

As the policeman who makes terms with vice, and almost inevitably slides into making gain from vice, merely represents the type of politician who is living off the weakness of his fellows, so the over- zealous reformer who exaggerates vice until the public is scared and awestruck, represents the type of politician who is living off the timidity of his fellows. With the lack of civic machinery for simple democratic expression, for a direct dealing with human nature as it is, we seem doomed to one type or the other -- corruptionists or anti-crime committees.

( 60) And one sort or the other we will continue to have so long as we distrust the very energy of existence, the craving for enjoyment, the pushing of vital forces, the very right of every citizen to be what he is without pretense or assumption of virtue. Too often he does not really admire these virtues, but he imagines them somewhere as a standard adopted by the virtuous whom he does not know. That old Frankenstein, the ideal man of the eighteenth century, is still haunting us, although he never existed save in the brain of the doctrinaire.

This dramatic and feverish triumph of the selfseeker, see-sawing with that of the interested reformer, does more than anything else, perhaps, to keep the American citizen away from the ideals of genuine evolutionary democracy. Whereas repressive government, from the nature of the case, has to do with the wicked who are happily always in a minority in the community, a normal democratic government would naturally have to do with the great majority of the population in their normal relations to each other.

After all, the so-called "slum politician" ventures his success upon an appeal to human sentiment and generosity. This venture often results in an alliance between the popular politician and the humblest citizens, quite as naturally as the re-( 61)-former who stands for honest business administration usually becomes allied with the type of business man whose chief concern it is to guard his treasure and to prevent a rise in taxation. The community is again insensibly divided into two camps, the repressed, who is dimly conscious that he has no adequate outlet for his normal life and the repressive, represented by the cautious, careful citizen holding fast to his own, once more the conqueror and his humble people.

ENDNOTES "The Spirit of Modern Philosophy," Josiah Royce, page 275. The American City, Dr. Delos F. Wilcox, page 200.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天帝追妻:娘子太逆天

    天帝追妻:娘子太逆天

    恰逢相识九玄天,情窦初开桃花林。为君宁入幽冥界,血海骨山不会俱。剑随身舞凡间界,几世轮回能相聚?若是雄鸳思雌鸳,只愿与君长驻天!
  • 许卿不负:纨绔小医妃

    许卿不负:纨绔小医妃

    她百里花葭做人的原则就是“见美男不泡,逆天行道;见美男就泡,替天行道。”天真浪漫从不是她的性格。“人不犯我,我不犯人。人若犯我,我逼疯那人!”无故穿越异世,照样活的风生水起,多彩多姿。说她天生废材?身份低贱?没事,她会慢慢证明给他们看,天才是怎样炼成的。“精致的五官,犯罪的开端。”君爅漓就是她犯罪的开端。为他,甘之如饴;为她,倾尽所有。只愿卿心似我心,绝不负相思意。若不死别,绝不分离。且看她与他笑看天下,盛世风华。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 我是零森浩

    我是零森浩

    零森浩,原名叫林森浩,是一名高中生,在现实生活中是一名臭名昭著的大混蛋。美女、鲜花、艳遇不断,斗殴,欺负女同学,把妹。蒙上面具,是救人于水火的大英雄。除暴安良、破坏阴谋、禀持正义,守护和平。英雄与混蛋,谁才是真实的零森浩?
  • 堇年一玥

    堇年一玥

    为什么她重新见到这个人,会是这个样子,从来都不会是这个样子啊!夏雨恩,对,夏雨恩就是夏天下雨的时候出生,母亲难产,最后母女性命都保住了,所以有恩。
  • 灭世鬼才

    灭世鬼才

    二十三元年,霸王大陆,云龙帝国,白玉城内,高府之中突然传来婴儿哭泣之声。一世鬼才出生,必定引起电闪雷鸣,且看豪门唯一的血脉如何装逼,扮猪吃老虎。
  • 圣魂纪年

    圣魂纪年

    魂力,由灵魂偶然所引发的奇迹。而引发并且操纵这种奇迹的人们,被人们尊敬的称之为,魂师。魂师是生命的奇迹,是世界的宠儿,是无数普通人中,才会出现一个的稀有人类。无数魂师在圣魂大陆这片庞大的土地上,书写着属于他们的传奇。而这本书,记录的就是其中一个传奇。
  • 恶魔唯宠绝爱萝莉

    恶魔唯宠绝爱萝莉

    “唔,好热,难受”她热得扯着衣领,可她哪里知道,这样的话语,只会更让男人无法把持。他似水柔情的眼神却闪烁着如猛兽般的欲~望:“我想,要你”被最亲爱的人背叛,酒吧买醉,被送上床。那晚,居然奇迹般的没要了她,真让人怀疑是他亲戚不行了。
  • 医药卫生类中等职业教育改革发展研究

    医药卫生类中等职业教育改革发展研究

    《医药卫生类中等职业教育改革发展研究》包括历史与现状回顾、社会需求分析、改革发展思考三个部分,分别介绍,社会发展对医疗卫生人才需求分析、医疗卫生人才需求要求和对医疗卫生人才培养等方面来进行介绍我国医药卫生类中等职业教育改革发展研究。本书是在我国堪称首次全面系统论述我国医药卫生类中等职业教育。
  • 重生之爱妃不好惹

    重生之爱妃不好惹

    她,全球唯一一个至尊瞳术师,一朝穿越变成下等小国亦紫国的大将军府的废物兼草包的嫡系三小姐。废物?我让你知道什么是废物,废你筋脉,毁你丹田。翻手为云,覆手为雨,从此称霸天下!但谁能告诉我,躺我床上这妖孽混蛋是谁!“夫人,为夫已经暖好了床,快点来睡吧。”楚临倾看着床上那混蛋笑的欠揍的脸怒吼道:“滚!”
  • 都市邪医狂少

    都市邪医狂少

    拼专业?哥的医术世界驰名!搞艺术?世界级的艺术大师都要敬哥三分!想玩资本?哥的产业遍布全球!想打群架?哥是杀手中的帝王!什么?敢说哥故意装低调?哥身边这些美女难道是摆设吗?在杀手界,他是杀人无数的嗜血帝王,在情场上,他是万美瞩目的风流浪子,在商场上,他是笑傲商界的资本大鳄。浩宇,从战场回归都市,从此人生变得更加波澜壮阔……...美女纷至沓来,校花、警花、白领丽人、美女总裁、绝色明星,挤爆他的房子。一个个打扮的花枝招展,媚眼儿狂抛,声音儿娇嗲。浩宇艺高胆大,统统拿下!