登陆注册
19093700000052

第52章 EXERCISE OF THE LABOUR-POWER POSSESSED BY THE WORK

Then he has to pay house-rent, and very much heavier rent in proportion to his earnings than well-to-do people have. He has also to pay the commission of the middle-men who distribute the goods which he has made, in a way so wasteful that now all thinking people cry out against it, though they are quite helpless against it in our present society. Finally, he has often to pay an extra tax in the shape of a contribution to a benefit society or trades' union, which is really a tax on the precariousness of his employment caused by the gambling of his masters in the market. In short, besides the profit or the result of unpaid labour which he yields to his immediate master he has to give back a large part of his wages to the class of which his master is a part.

The privilege of the possessing class therefore consists in their living on this tribute, they themselves either not working or working unproductively--i.e., living on the labour of others; no otherwise than as the master of ancient days lived on the labour of his slave, or as the baron lived on the labour of his serf. If the capital of the rich man consists of land, he is able to force a tenant to improve his land for him and pay him tribute in the form of rack-

rent; and at the end of the transaction has his land again, generally improved, so that he can begin again and go on for ever, he and his heirs, doing nothing, a mere burden on the community for ever, while others are working for him. If he has houses on his land he has rent for them also, often receiving the value of the building many times over, and in the end house and land once more. Not seldom a piece of barren ground or swamp, worth nothing in itself, becomes a source of huge fortune to him from the development of a town or a district, and he pockets the results of the labour of thousands upon thousands of men, and calls it his property: or the earth beneath the surface is found to be rich in coal or minerals, and again he must be paid vast sums for allowing others to labour them into marketable wares, to which labour he contributes nothing.

Or again, if his capital consists of cash, he goes into the labour market and buys the labour-power of men, women and children, and uses it for the production of wares which shall bring him in a profit, buying it of course at the lowest price that he can, availing himself of their necessities to keep their livelihood down to the lowest point which they will bear: which indeed he MUST do, or he himself will be overcome in the war with his fellow-capitalists. Neither in this case does he do any useful work, and he need not do any semblance of it, since he may buy the brain-power of managers at a somewhat higher rate than he buys the hand-power of the ordinary workman. But even when he does seem to be doing something, and receives the pompous title of "organizer of labour," he is not really organizing LABOUR, but the battle with his immediate enemies, the other capitalists, who are in the same line of business with himself.

Furthermore, though it is true, as I have said, that the working-

class are the only producers, yet only a part of them are allowed to produce usefully; for the men of the non-producing classes having often much more wealth than they can USE are forced to WASTE it in mere luxuries and follies, that on the one hand harm themselves, and on the other withdraw a very large part of the workers from useful work, thereby compelling those who do produce usefully to work the harder and more grievously: in short, the essential accompaniment of the system is waste.

How could it be otherwise, since it is a system of war? I have mentioned incidentally that all the employers of labour are at war with each other, and you will probably see that, according to my account of the relations between the two great classes, they also are at war. Each can only gain at the others' loss: the employing class is forced to make the most of its privilege, the possession of the means for the exercise of labour, and whatever it gets to itself can only be got at the expense of the working-class; and that class in its turn can only raise its standard of livelihood at the expense of the possessing class; it is FORCED to yield as little tribute to it as it can help; there is therefore constant war always going on between these two classes, whether they are conscious of it or not.

To recapitulate: In our modern society there are two classes, a useful and a useless class; the useless class is called the upper, the useful the lower class. The useless or upper class, having the monopoly of all the means of the production of wealth save the power of labour, can and does compel the useful or lower class to work for its own disadvantage, and for the advantage of the upper class; nor will the latter allow the useful class to work on any other terms.

This arrangement necessarily means an increasing contest, first of the classes one against the other, and next of the individuals of each class among themselves.

Most thinking people admit the truth of what I have just stated, but many of them believe that the system, though obviously unjust and wasteful, is necessary (though perhaps they cannot give their reasons for their belief), and so they can see nothing for it but palliating the worst evils of the system: but, since the various palliatives in fashion at one time or another have failed each in its turn, I call upon them, firstly, to consider whether the system itself might not be changed, and secondly, to look round and note the signs of approaching change.

Let us remember first that even savages live, though they have poor tools, no machinery, and no co-operation, in their work: but as soon as a man begins to use good tools and work with some kind of co-

同类推荐
  • 约翰王

    约翰王

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄箓九阳梵炁灯仪

    黄箓九阳梵炁灯仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 砚谱

    砚谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Wheels of Chance

    The Wheels of Chance

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说文殊师利行经

    佛说文殊师利行经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 趁一切还来得及,做一个快乐的自己

    趁一切还来得及,做一个快乐的自己

    人生在世,谁都希望自己活得幸福,幸福的人生是一次成功的旅行。拥有快乐的心情你就会感到生活的美好,也只有理解了快乐的真谛,才可能拥有真正的幸福人生。会享受人生的人,不会在意拥有多少财富,不会在意住房大小、薪水多少、职位高低,也不会在意成功或失败。
  • 佛说大护明大陀罗尼经

    佛说大护明大陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 瘟神boss总是在脸盲

    瘟神boss总是在脸盲

    林音是当红女星周云若的替声,她一直以为等机会成熟了,她这个小透明也能走上自己成为人生赢家的康庄大道。可是人生却在和瘟神大人相遇开始走上了急速下坡的道路。每次都被同一个男人当成不同的炮灰是什么体验?答案就是,她把他奉为高高在上的瘟神,他却把她当做路边种类不同的野花草芥踩踩踩!天啦噜,她一个做替声的容易么!怎么每次遇上这个男人都这么倒霉!#总是被当成炮灰肿么破##论和脸盲谈恋爱的可能性##和技术性##我家脸盲boss一本正经在卖蠢#
  • 赢在创业:草根巨富

    赢在创业:草根巨富

    如何从创业的N种模式中找到适合自己的一种?如何找到自己的创业板?如何学会巧借外力、善用时问、利用人脉?如何打造创业闭队?如何控制风险?褚建航编著的这本《草根巨富赢在创业》将为你一一道来。《草根巨富赢在创业》中选取的成功者们振奋人心的故事,定能引发您创业的激情与信心。
  • 天价婚约:墨少的绯闻甜妻

    天价婚约:墨少的绯闻甜妻

    在外面,他是一个手段阴险做事果断让人提起又畏惧的墨律堔,在家里,他是一个极致宠溺,将自己的女人宠上天的墨律堔。他的手指摩擦过她香肩上的蝴蝶胎记,唇瓣缓缓蠕动。“到底那一年发生了什么,让你忘记了我。”一张没有时间期限的婚约纸,可笑的父母之言竟让他找到了心心相念的她。传闻,墨家大少不缺女人,可他只对她温暖给她无尽的宠爱!而这个女人却身在福中不知福一心只想完成她的承诺而离开。“墨太太,你想往哪里逃?”“抱歉,我们的婚约已经过期了。”墨律堔低头邪佞一笑,轻挑眉毛。“哦,你忘记了合同的最后一点,我有权利继续续约吗?”
  • 敲爻歌

    敲爻歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 误闯异时代

    误闯异时代

    她们是国家的秘密武器,从小被秘密训练长大,接受的是的顶级训练,完成的都是顶级绝密任务。她冷漠,除了自己的姐妹什么都不关心,国家和她没关系,谁是主宰大陆的狂者,无所谓,他,亦是冷血无情,杀伐果断,然他为自己的百姓斗争,却也愿她能与自己并肩作战
  • 妖孽兵王

    妖孽兵王

    受当年战死兄弟所托,姜邪回到了夏武市只为守护某个人的安全,然而却因此卷入一场阴谋算计之中,穿插于都市生活,且看姜邪如何红尘炼心。
  • 网游之异界霸主

    网游之异界霸主

    一个身患绝症的女生网游老手玩最后一次游戏却不曾想,在这个看似是古风的游戏中,却似异界的游戏中收获到人生中最精彩的时光收获到最真挚的感情既然生命有限,为何不在游戏里玩出自己的精彩人生?各种精彩,各种离奇,请大家不要错过!!!
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?