" lisr-'Wf rwR-r t The Commoner APRIL, 1916 39 ' V-1 wBa Who Are the Cowards? By Thomas H. Green From Advocate of Peace A somewhat distinguished friend of mine, for whoso judgment and versatility I have an equal respect, called the present condition of things in the United States "an American epidemic of Prussianism." "Preparedness" certainly was one watchword of the Hohenzollern mad ness, and "frightfuluess" has been its logical aftermath. The transplanting into American soil of all this militarist insanity, with its inevitable and always char acteristic cowardice, despite the aw ful warning from across the sea, threatens to become a tragedy. "Cowardice," you say "Militar ism a breeder of cowardice?" Absolutely yes! The most stupendous and ridicu lous cowards iu the United States today are not, as we are taunted with being, the Peace people not even the "white crow" of the Shooter's shouting sarcasm, the "peace-at-any-price-man" if there is such a thing. Our most pathetic coward is the expert extremist in this campaign for military preparedness. He is afraid of everybody. He trembles and turns pale at every thing. Day and night he lives iu an atmosphere of abject terror. Somebody is always going to do something. Out of the fog of his weird and grotesque delusions, like the "deteckative" in the melodrama, our American alarmist is always ap pearing with mysterious mien, and bis 'VhisfKand .".shush" his "ohs" and his "ahs" would exhaust a double font of type. Nothing is too absurd to be ab sorbed in his tearful pessimism. Out of airy nothing he can concoct vast disaster. Germany will surely invade the United States, because our Atlantic seacoast is defenseless, and our enormous wealth lies at the mercy of the Kaiser. Damned if we .do, and damned if we don't, any one of the belligerent nations it matters not to him which one offended by our past proceedings is. going, so soon as ace is made, to rush pellmell across the ocean and proceed to sub due, conquer, enslave, devastate, ex haust, bankrupt, and otherwise un kindly entreat the unprotected and helpless United States of America! As if one coast were not enough omit a our lachrymal glands and arouse spasams of dread, he paints Turid pictures of vast troops of Jap anese landing unresisted on our Pa fln nnaa anrl rnverinir it from Bel- lingham to San Diego with a solid mass of veteran warriors marching eastward, conquering, devouring, overwhelming. After Europe has been bled white in this most horrible tragedy in the world's history her men slaughtered and maimed by millions; money, credit almost life itself exhausted and gone, he pictures the staggering, half starved breathless victor gathering up his fragments and sailing away for America to win and bear away rich loot of 'gold when ten times our gold might be had in half the time, without the spilling of a drop of blood, 'by the restoration nf frrfpiiiture. commerce and trade. Never for a moment does 'he think it possible that out of this deluge ot blood, this tempest of ilame, Europe mayj,come, weak-;unto death, buton more-sane, ,? " lit au Sanity doe"svnotappeal to -themM. itary expert; sanity and his hystoria are mutually exclusive. "Hist! don't you know there are goblins behind very tree? Ghosts gibber and squeak where it's dark, and you mustn't go near a lamp post for fear of being shot!" "You are not safe anywhere these awful times." "B-r-r-r-! mercy, what was that?" "If they had only listened to me, and we had an army, so that everyone could have a bodyguard!" "Yes, I know the sun is shining, but who wants to think of pleasant things?" "Let us wiggle and writhe and all bo uncomfortable together!" You are not a real patriotic Amer ican unless your skin is pimpled into goose ilesh and your blood pressure touches two hundred. Any man who sleeps without a pis tol under his pillow is a traitor, and he who goes to rest without looking under the bed for a Gqrman or a Jap is worse he is a cowardly peace man! "Ha! what is coming?" "A Japanese laundryman, you say? Poor fool! don't you know that very likely lie has dynamite in that most mysterious looking bundle?" "Don't you know that the Japanese Fruit Growers' Association is really the 147 Gth Regiment of Reserve Cavalry, and that they have their horses and equipment hidden in what look like innocent strawberry patch es?" "Don't you know that it has been Indisputably proven that the St. Louis Deutches Liederkranz is really a brigade of the Lanstrum, kept here to take St. Louis when the German army lands, and that they sing that way to drown the noise of the Forty men who are always shooting at tar gets in secret practice?" "Oh, dear! I just know something is going to happen." The normal sane mind hates and detests cowardice. " Turi ane It becomes sometimes a disease to be extirpated either by psycho pathic treatment or often by a sound flogging. It's a contemptible thing in an in dividual but a thousand times more in a great nation, if it should borrow consternation from its brave defend ers and cringe and tremble before an entirely theoretical and conjectural foe. But there is always danger of an epidemic when infection is estab lished. The contagion of Fear is like a prairie fire once it is started, it sweeps, and leaps, and becomes re sistless. And over all the land this organ ized effort to create a panic of ap prehension is gaining tremendous headway. We are on the edge of an epoch of gigantic expenditure and stupendous expansion along naval and military lines. Since the demise of the loved and lamented "River and Harbor bill" there has been no pork barrel for the faithful. A couple of billion dollars, my countrymen, is a tremendous ap peal to "patriotism." It won't do to joppose the country's defense in this ''hour of peril." To do so would be to brand oneself a traitor. r0 ' To venture, even reasonable objec tion would beto nut oneself, how- ever sane his! objections might be, under suspicion of being a foreign For those or-ns who oppose this procedure asasejniustlfied And dangerous,-jthereJs;put one thinsMef t t to do, and that Is by voico and act and influence to try to see to it that if tho people's money must be spent, the people shall at least have some thing adequate to show for their money. Havo they heretofore? They havo not. During tho past decade (1905 1914) there was appropriated for and spent by tho war department $1,533,018,782. With this trifle of monoy wo reached on Juno 30, 1914, an army of 4,883 ofllcers and 92,877 enlisted men, including tho Philip pine) scouts. During tho same decade there was appropriated and spent by tho navy department $1,218,202,202. On Juno 30, 1914, wo had in tho navy 3,711 ofllcers and 52,667 men, and wo had of all sorts and kinds, including tugs, fuel ships, and con verted yachts, 336 vessels, of which 10 only wore first-lino battleships. During tho same time Germany had built a navy second in tho world, or ganized and maintained a naval per sonnel four times as large, and had spent $500,000,000 less in doing it. Let the mad dance begin if it must, but let tho peoplo write this on the palms of their congressmen: "For every dollar spent, a dollar's worth in return!" As to any real danger, any tangible cause or excuso for us having 48 first-lino battleships, and a doubled or trebled standing array, thero are two things to say: Tho first one Is, that if it bo really true that this great removed, almost isolated, nation is really compelled by pressure of valid danger to de fend herself against attack, remem bering that wo havo no old sores to break afresh, no vulgar old-world Jealousies to inspire, no vaunting ambition to egg us on that "what we ask wo ask not for America alone, but equally for humanity" if in spite of all this tho world has really become so rabid, so bereft of moral sense, as to make merely our wealth so great an object of pirato greed and gross, grasping avarice as to compel us to hedge us round with fleets and armies to insure mere safety then let us and let tho world tako leave of all our loud and rau cous boasting about culture, civiliza tion, and Christian faith. Our lofty maxims are base illu sions our civilization a veneer so thin that, scratch it ever so little, and you find tho primitlvo beast that man has been slnco tho beginning our proudly bannered faith and moral excellence tho pathetic out growth of a lie. If this bo really true, then let us take leave of all our pretense, all our pride, all our high-sounding phrase and philosophy. Let us con fess that civilization has failed, that Christianity has failed that logic and law havo no abiding place in life that the sword Is the sceptre of tho world and tht force Is king. But the other thing to bo said is that all this is not true. The great world conflict has been thrust upon the world by tho con serving and the teaching of this very philosophy, evil as sin and false as hell. Jealousy, ambition, commer cial rivalry, revenge the worst and lowest passions in human souls have festered and rotted into a mad insanity. Who began, and why nation after nation caught in tho wild orgle of slaughter have been swept into, the conflict that has turned Europe into a seething cauldron of foul fiends, is not germane to our present thought. Our danger lies in yielding to this pestilence of tear., and following the same path that leads down to the gates of death. Preparedness for wJiat?y 'Preparedness for defense".-is the new shibboleth and that means simply preparedness for war. Had wo been "adequately and efil ciently prepared," does any ono prc sumo that any human power could havo kept us thus far from partici- pancy in this awful conflict? Listen! By the time this war Is ended, whero will there be men or money to raako war for long genera tions to come? Long beforo any na tion of Europo could summon strength, couruge to say nothing of tho consent of a bereaved, maimed, and outraged people to even raise the question of an armed conflict with us, the ships we aro now to build will havo rusted on tho junk pilo of national waste, and tho men who are to fill our ranks of an en larged and ambitious army will bo doddering pantaloons hobbling on the edgo of the grave. Of course, tho most ardent advo cate of tho presen preparedness program does not defend any notion of America becoming an aggressivo military power. Our naval expansion and our big array increase arc "for defense" and to put us in a position to become tho world's peacemaker. It sounds well; only tho warring na tions over yonder, and all sensible men everywhere, know that battle ships and armies have always, as in tho midsummer of 1914, been tho easy dynamics of beginning hostili ties. America today is a tremendous anchor for peace. America, amply armed, particularly with an aggres sive, not to say aggravating, admin istration, would simply be another piece of tinder for the conflagration. Suppose that in six months or a year the belligerents of Europe aro brought face to faco with peace or utter ruin. Suppose that the grim necessity of rehabilitation leads to a proposition for partial disarmament at least a check in the mad race of military and naval rivalry, Theq. thero flashes into view America en gaged with feverish activity In build ing battleships and recruiting armies, ti What would Europo do? Disarm? Reduce? Not while the richest na tion in the world is arming herself. Preparedness means what it meant in Europe in 1914: it means eventual war. Let America bo brave enough to be lieve that the world will turn sane again that law and order and Jus tice will again take up the rule of the nations and that the one chance that the United States has of leading tho world to peace is by preparing for peace and not' for war. A GHASTLY EXAMPLE The "preparedness" program boosted by jingo big business is probably the most ghastly example of the lengths to which human greed and avarice and love of money will lead men, in the history of the world, for it would without a thought crucify the Jiope of democracy in or der to make and safeguard Its dollar-schemes, its swollen possessions now and its trade conquests and for eign commercial "spheres of influ ence" of the future. Oklahoma Farmer. Don't Wear A Truss hUmRUtMiii Rett ttsss that chile and pinch. . A Hurt' tlUto-rm are different from the truss, beta U medicine applicator made self-adhesive to prevent slipping. 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