v-fGlgyt' The Commoner S I VOL. 17, NO. 3 ;lo, i- w r b ll fr to represent them anywhere. And I believo that, if wo will act this example to tho world, tho people across tho sea who havo been dragged into warg about which they tfcro not consulted, who havo simply been told to meet on tho firing lino because someono has ordered war, will find in our examplo an inspiration and they Will learn from what wo do, how to protect themselves from ambitious monarchs, from greedy mer chants and from tho excitement df representa tives who act without deliberation. Tho President has also suggested that peace to bo onduring should include the freedom of tho seas. That is not so strange a thing as some suppose. 'Why, oven duelists, when duelling was in flower, had consideration enough for tho publio to retire to Bomo qtfiot placo whero they .could shoot each other Without disturbing tho general public. OCEANS GOD'S HIGHWAYS Why should wo not regard tho oceans as God's highways, and toll nations at war- that, when they want to shoot at each other, . they must got off tho seas and fight somewhero else? Theso aro somo plain, simple, reasonable prop ositions which we present to the world in tho hope that tho world will recognizo, their force and I am glad oh, I am more than glad I am happy that tho President sent this message to tho world beforo this new situation arose. I havo read in tho morning papers, and 'in tho evening papers, how impossible it was for us to avoid very dangerous situations, and how likely it was that wo wero going to get into trouble, and then I turned back to the language of tho Presidents message and I found solace and comfort and assurance. If wo can ask tho mations at war to forget tho hatreds aroused by the killing of six mil lions of people, and come together and confer on terms of peace rif we can ask them to stop in .their excitement and reason together who will say that this nation should rush into war? What a spectacle we would present asking them, to bo patient and forbearing while their hearts bleed for. their relatives in the grave, and then not bo able to be patient" and forbear ing ourselves with these questions.' And re member that those nations are stirred to ani mosity by tho fact that the enemy nation is try ing its best to injure them, aye, the nations are in a death grapple, each one trying to take the other's life. v Not an injury that has come to us has been intended against us. Every injury that we. havo suffered has been incidental to an injury that was intended against someone else. And none of theso parties, not one of them, has been our enemy or has wanted to injure us. It . -would be bad enough to go to war with a na tion that hated us and wanted war with us. God forbid that we shall ever compel any na tion to go to war with us if it is not an enem and does not want war. Whenever we aro asked to enter upon a course it is the part of wisdom to count the cost thereof, to count what wo have to gain and what we have to loBe. It is also the part of wisdom to count our obligations to tho world. This is the greatest of the neutral nations. It is tho one to which the world is looking to act asmediator when the time for mediation comes. -But if we go into this war, no matter what the cause or excuse or pretext, the moment we go into this war we step down from that high po sition of the world's greatest neutral nation and turn over to some othOiv nation an oppor tunity tlat never came before to any nation since timo began. And more than that, we are the next of kin to all the nations that are at war. They are Ijlood of our blood; they are bone of our bone, and not a soldier boy falls on any battlefield over yonder but what the wail of sorrow in his home finds an echo at somo American fireside, and these people coming to us from all tho lands have a right to expect that we will re main tho friend of all. Some nation must lift the world out of the black night of war into the light of that day when peace can be made enduring by being built on love and brotherhood, and ours is tho nation to perform the task. ' Yes, and more glorious' than any pagfc of his tory that has yet been written will be that page that will record our nation's claim to the prom ise made tb the peacemaker. Our nation is less hampered by precedent than the nations ot the Old World, and we are the greatest of the Christian nations, spending more money every year to carry the Bible to those who know it not than any other nation living or that has lived, and tho world looks to us to lead the way from tho bloodstained precedents of the past out into tho larger and brighter future. I believe that God, in His providence, has reserved for this nation the lifting of the moral code that is now used between man and man up to the level of nations. That is what we can do, but we can not do it if we go into this war. x Wo- used to have dueling in this country, and when it was supported by public sentiment men had to fight duels. Because of public sentiment they would bo called cowards if they declined, and in that time a great man like Alexander Hamilton fought a duel and fell. The last thing he did1, before he went out to that fatal field was to write but a protest against the entire system, of dueling, and he left the protest to posterity, while he left his body upon tho field. t Why? Because he thought that, as for himself, it was necessary to conform4 to tho custom in order .to be useful in crises that he thought he saw ap proaching. What was the duelist's standard of honor? It was this: I a man Tiad a wife and she needed him, he had no right to think of his wife; if he had children and they needed him, lie' had no right to think of his children, and no matter how .much his country needed him, he had no right to think of his country. If a man received a challenge to fight a duel ho could not reply: "I would be glad to accommodate you but my wife needs me," or MMy children need me," or "My country needs me." No, he only -had a right to think' of one thing that he must kill somebody or be killed by somebody. It took moral courage to lead, the crusade that has re sulted in the change, but we have it today, and and in every state in the union there is a law against dueling and it is supported by public sentiment. Fifty years ago a grdat statesman of Georgia received a challenge from another great states man of that state. Had a challenge passed be tween two such men a hundred years ago instead of fifty, it is not likely that it would have been declined; but fifty years ago the sentiment was changing, and so instead of accepting, the chal lenge this man sent an answer that has found a place in history. He said: "No, I have a fam ily to take care of and I have a soul to save, and as you have neither we would not fight on equal terms." No nation has challenged us and' I do not think any nation will, but if in a moment of excite ment one of these mad men in Europe should challenge us, I believe it Hvould be the part of wisdom to answer in the spirit of the answer of the Georgia stateman and say: "No, we have the welfare of one hundred millions of people to guard and we have priceless ideals to pre serve, and we will not get down- and wallow with you in the mire of human blood to con form to a false standard of honor." If civilization is to advance, the day must come when a nation will feel no more obligated to acceipy a challenge to war than an American citizeftnow feels obligated to accept a challenge to fight a duel, and if that time must come sometime, why not now? If some nation, must lead the way, why not our nation? A CRIME AGAINST NATION I can not speak for you; I speak only for myself; but I believe that to go into this war would be a crime against our nation and the world. I have faith not only in our President's desire to keep us out of war, but in his ability to do so as expressed in these resolutions. Wo can lessen the chances of war by keep ing American citizens off belligerent ships and off American and neutral ships carrying con traband, especially arms and ammunition. If. diplomacy fails we can resortHo the treaty plan, embodied in thirty treaties and endorsed Dy thrqe-quarters of the world. If we come to a time when there is a dispute with any nation, I care not what nation it is. or on what side the nation fights, if we come to a time when wo have a dispute that can not be settled by peaceful means and wo are driven to thO alter native of either going into this war, or postpon ing final settlement until after this war is over I believe it will be the part of wisdom to post pone final settlement until this war is over Why? . First, because it is not fair to expei nations fighting in a death struggle to deal ,i. us calmly and with deliberation.6 if was a time since man oegan to write the hiatnS of his fellowmen, when a nation was justiHed aye, compelled to be patient and to exeS Christian forbearance, that time is now I our nation is the nation. ' and , And then, too, if we postpone settlement tho .chances are many to one that when tho war i over we can settle all disputes without resort to war. The trouble is not that they do not want to settle withus, but it is fear of tho effect tho settlement may have on the war, and that fear will be removed when the war is over But, more than that, if I knew that wo could not avoid war, if I knew, (what no .nan can know) that postponement would not prevent war. if I had to choose between going into this war and having a war of our own after this war is over, I would rather wait and have a war of our own than go Into this war. THIS IS NOT OUR WAR Why? First, because it would enable us to play the part of a neutral nation and to help bring this war to an end before we started our own; and, second, it would be OUR war if wo waited and we would ' have something to say about whento commence, when to get through and the terms of the 'treaty. But if we go into this war THIS is not OUll war; this is every body's war, and they did not consult us about starting and they have not paid much attention to us about conducting it, and if we went in we would have to go in on one side or the other, and it would be determined not by our choice, but by whichever side we happened to have our trouble with when we went to war. And we would have to stay in until they came out, and while they were fighting for the things that they were fighting for, and Goa forbid that we shall ever entanglo "ourselves in the quarrels of the Old World. If any nation ever attacks this nation, I do not care what nation it is, I believe we ought to fight untilNthe last man is dead, but I am not willing that one single mother's son shall be carried across an ocean three thousand miles wide to march under the banner of any Euro pean monarch, or die on European soil, in the settlement of European quarrels. If anybody tells you that it may become necessary to go into this war to preserve our .honor let me answer him that there is no honor that we can preserve or secure by going into this war that is comparable with tho honor which we can achieve If we can but persuade those nations to turn like prodigal sons from the husks on which they havo fed. If wo can but lift them out of the bloody mire in which they fight and help them to build a permanent peace on a foundation that will endure. That, my friends, is the greatest glory that this na tion can achieve. If some say that wo should now mingle our standards with the standards of Europe! answer that I would not exchange the moral prestige of this republic for tho mar tial .glory of all the empires that have risen and fallen since timo began. . In his address to congress on December 8, 19J.4, President Wilson said: "What is meant by being prepared for war? Is it meant that we are not ready, upon brief notice, to put a nation in the field a nation of men trained 10 arms? Of course ve are not ready to do tnai, and we shall never be in time of peace so long as we retain our present political principles ana institutions." This is worth recalling now tnai the President is being misrepresented by w Militarists of this country as a man filling overthrow what he has said are the pouuw , principles and institutions of the country. Strange', isn't it, that men.who were clamor ing a little while ago- for ariembargo on .w shipment of munitions from this country Europe on the ground that this would soot stop the war are clamoring now againsi l who would have this government put ; bargo on the shipment of our boys to to be devoured by tho god of war. The headline over a long article in &ds The Commoner's exchanges reads: n About Mexico," ' One of the distress M. -abjmt the dailies1 is their tendency toTct,oD. 'ing so much space in their column to w r". "V