THE
BATTLE OF ARMAGEDDON
<PAGE
385>
STUDY
VIII
THE
CRIES OF THE REAPERS
The Conservative Element of Society--Peasants, Farmers--New
Conditions in Christendom--Agrarian Agitation--Its Causes--Gold
and Silver Standards are Factors--The Scripture Prediction Fulfilling--
These Things Related to the Battle of The Great Day.
"Neither
their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the
day of the Lord's wrath." `Zeph. 1:18`
THE thoughtful student of history, while following our
theme and noting the truthfulness of the facts presented and the
reasonableness of the conclusions drawn, may still feel uncertain
as to the outcome. He may say to himself, "The writer forgets
that there is in the civilized as well as in the semi-civilized
countries a large, a predominating social element which is extremely
conservative, and has always constituted the backbone of society--the
farmers." But not so: we have not forgotten this fact, and
we recognize its importance. Looking back, we see that Europe
would frequently have been thrown into the convulsions of revolution
had it not been for this very conservative element. We see that
the revolutions in France were chiefly instituted and carried
on by the working class of the larger cities and that the element
which finally brought rest and peace was the conservative peasant-farmer.
The reasons for this condition of things are not difficult to
find. (1) The farmer's life contains less of excitement and social
friction. (2) His mind is less drawn to the advantages of wealth,
and
<PAGE 386> his ambition for wealth and luxury
lies comparatively dormant. (3) He is more or less attached to
the soil, and learns to depend on it alone, trusting to nature's
rewards in return for labor. (4) The measure of education and
consequent mental awakening and activity amongst farmers has always
heretofore been quite limited. As a result of all these conditions,
the farming class of the civilized world has long been pointed
to as an example of frugal prosperity and contentment.
But
the last thirty years have witnessed a wonderful change in the
affairs of farmers--in many respects a very advantageous change.
The farmers of the United States, Canada, Great Britain and Ireland
have always been on a different footing from the farmers of the
remainder of the world. They are neither serfs nor peasants, nor
ignorant, nor dull, but intelligent, even when not educated. Then
the Civil War in the United States had the effect of drawing together
representatives from every part of the country and immigrants
from all parts of the world, and it furnished a certain kind of
education--knowledge of things and affairs. It lifted the ideas
of farmers more completely than ever out of the rut of centuries,
and brought them into contact and sympathy with the sentiments
and ambitions which move city life. As a result the old log schoolhouse
no longer satisfied the ambitions of the country boy and girl,
and with the increase of higher schools and colleges and seminaries
came also the increase of literature (especially newspapers),
which has been a remarkable factor in the development of the people
of the United States--foreign-born as well as native-born citizens.
The result here has been that to agriculture has been applied
much of the system and tact which belong to city business life,
together with a multitude of inventions which have tended to decrease
the drudgery of the farmer and to vastly increase the product
of his land. As a
<PAGE 387> result of these conditions not
only has the country population vastly increased, but the city
population has kept pace with it, and yet, beyond supplying food
for our own ninety millions, we are able to distribute to the
remainder of the world nearly eight hundred million dollars worth
of farm products annually--about eight-tenths of our total exports.
This until the last twenty-five years has meant great prosperity
to American farmers; and with all this prosperity came to the
farmer a share in life's comforts and in the general desire for
wealth and luxury, and consequently a measure of dissatisfaction
with his conditions which, nevertheless, are far superior in many
respects to those of farmers in other parts of the world.
Meantime,
the Franco-Prussian war exercised a somewhat similar influence
upon the peoples of France and Germany--to a much less extent,
however--and their awakening has come in a different manner. The
animosity between France, the conquered, and Germany, the conqueror,
which has prevailed since their war, has induced both countries,
and indirectly induced Italy, Austria and Russia, to establish
a military training system which lays hold upon every young man
of those countries and compels his instruction in military tactics
and discipline, and incidentally his contact with numbers of his
fellows. All this furnishes a most beneficial education; besides,
in the barracks certain hours are devoted to book-studies. While
the maintenance of these standing armies has seemed to be a terrible
crime against the peoples of these various nations, removing from
the channels of domestic activity one to three years in the life
of each male member of society, it has nevertheless, we believe,
proved a wonderful influence for enlightenment; and the nations
mentioned are awakened, energized and ambitioned as they never
were before. And, of course, in proportion as education has come
in, and a
<PAGE 388> measure of contact with the conveniences
and comforts and luxuries of city life and wealth, proportionately
a measure of discontent has sprung up--a feeling that others are
prospering better than they, and that they must be on the lookout
for a favorable opportunity to better their conditions-- a laxity
in morals has also been engendered.
Meantime,
the shackles of ignorance and superstition along religious lines
have also been giving way, although, the influence of Papacy and
the Greek Church is still very great. And while it is only half
believed that the priest, bishop and pope have power to consign
to purgatory, or to eternal torment, or to admit to heaven, yet
their power is still to a great extent feared, reverenced.
On the whole, however, a great change has come over all classes
from the religious point of view. The tendency amongst Protestants
has, like a pendulum, swung to the opposite extreme, so that,
although forms of godliness and piety are still observed, much
of the true reverence has departed from the Protestant masses.
The so-called "higher criticism" and theories of evolution
have practically destroyed reverence for the Word of God. And
these theories blending now with oriental Theosophy are making
shipwreck of the true Christian faith of hundreds of thousands,
both in Europe and America.
All
of these influences, it should be observed, have already for some
years been tending toward a change in the attitude of the class
heretofore known as "the conservative yeomanry of Christendom."
And now, just at a critical juncture, we behold some mighty influence
which gradually yet assiduously has been at work, and is now at
work, undermining the prosperity of this conservative class. For
the past twenty years farmers of the various civilized nations
have been finding it more and more difficult to gain a competency
or a share in the comforts and luxuries of life. True,
<PAGE 389> the prices of their products have
recently gone somewhat upward. But this is more than offset by
the cost of improved machinery, etc., they hoping, nevertheless,
that the increase of production would more than compensate; and
hoping also that, somehow or other, prices would by and by maintain
a proper equilibrium instead of fluctuating to their continued
disadvantages.
While
the American farmer has been beset with these conditions, his
European brother was faring even worse; because his conditions
were less favorable: (1) To start with, he had oftener a rented
farm, and a smaller one comparatively. (2) He had not the same
facilities for obtaining improved machinery. For these reasons
the European farmer has not been at all able to offset each fall
in price of wheat by a larger production in quantity; and he has
suffered proportionately more than his American brother, except
as he turned his attention to the sugar beet.
Philosophers,
statesmen and scientists have been giving the subject some consideration,
and very generally have hastily come to the conclusion that every
fall in price of wheat is wholly the result of "overproduction."
Believing that they have found the true answer, they drop the
matter there. But some, more careful, have studied the question
out, and examined statistics, and find that it is not true
that the granaries of the world are being stored with vast supplies
of wheat for the needs of coming years. They find on the contrary
that comparatively little wheat is carried from year to year,
and that practically the world is producing no more wheat than
is being consumed.
Mr.
Robt. Lindblom, a member of the Chicago Board of Trade, made a
study of the subject, and in a communication to the Agricultural
Department of the United States Government, dated Dec. 26, 1895,
said:
<PAGE 390>
"The
aggregate production of wheat, in the principal wheat growing
countries, has not increased; for while it is true that some of
the wheat countries show an occasional increase, it is
equally true that other countries show a corresponding decrease.
In order to be absolutely impartial, let us take the last crop
from which we have complete returns, namely that of 1893.
"As
regards foreign crops, I use the figures furnished by the special
foreign correspondent of the Board of Trade and compiled by the
secretary of the Chicago Board of Trade, and in regard to exports
and domestic crops I use the figures of your department. I am
compelled to omit the comparison as regards Austro-Hungary, because
I have not in my possession the figures for 1893, but outside
of this I beg to submit to you a statement showing the production
of wheat in all the principal countries for 1893, as compared
with 1883:
1893 1883
England......................
53,000,000 76,000,000
France.......................277,000,000
286,000,000
Russia.......................252,000,000
273,000,000
United
States................396,000,000 421,000,000
Germany......................116,000,000
94,000,000
Italy........................119,000,000
128,000,000
India........................266,000,000
287,000,000
------------- -------------
Total.............1,479,000,000 1,565,000,000
"From
the above it will be seen that in 1893 the principal wheat growing
countries in the world produced 86,000,000 bu. less than ten years
before, while, according to your figures, the production in Argentina
has increased only 60,000,000 bu. during the same time. In 1871
Great Britain produced over 116,000,000 bu. of wheat; and in two
years preceding and succeeding that year the crop was 105,000,000
bu., or an average for the three years of 109,000,000 bu., while
this year the crop is slightly over 48,000,000 bu., according
to the figures furnished by the special foreign correspondent
of the Board of Trade, residing in London.
"If
it were true that the United States were being supplanted <PAGE
391> by competing wheat growers, then it would
follow as a matter of logical inference that the exports from
this country to Europe would show a decrease; but previous to
and including 1890 the average exports were 119,000,000 bu., while
in 1891 they were 225,000,000 bu., in 1982, 191,000,000 bu., in
1893, 193,000,000 bu., and in 1894, 164,000,000 bu., so it does
not seem to be a fact that we have been holding our wheat while
other countries have been disposing of theirs. The facts are against
the assertion, and if anything else were needed to prove it, your
Department furnishes the information that stocks in farmers' hands
last March were small. I have to statistics as regards the crop
of Australia, about which so much was said a few years ago, but
I have the exports from that country in 1893 as 13,500,000 bu.,
while ten years before that they were 23,800,000 bu., and in 1894
and 1895 Australia was importing wheat from America. "I have
said nothing about the increased consumption which, in the last
decade, in England amounts to 18,000,000 bu., and in this country
during the same period the increase is not less than 50,000,000
bu., and there has been an increase in every country, except France,
sufficient to more than absorb any increased production throughout
the world." Whatever the cause of these depressions in the
price of wheat (and we might remark that within the past three
years the temporary advance is probably because the farmer finding
the PRICE of wheat relatively lower than that of other cereals
put in larger crops of oats, corn, rye, etc.), the fact is that
farmers have almost had the very life crushed out of them, both
in Europe and America. Many American farmers who went into debt
for farm machinery, or who labor under a purchase-money mortgage
upon their farm and home, find it impossible to meet the payments
on these, even in years of fairly good crops. They are crying
out against the holders of mortgages, and also, and frequently
unjustly, against the rates charged by the railroads for <PAGE
392> transporting their crops. The European farmers
are appealing to their several governments for "protection"
against the importation of wheat from other countries, so that
they may maintain or raise their prices to cover a reasonable
cost of production; claiming, as all reasonable people would admit,
that fifty or sixty cents a bushel for wheat is below cost if
reasonable remuneration be allowed for the agriculturalist's time
and energy. This brings to notice a very striking prophecy respecting
the closing days of this Gospel age, as recorded by the Apostle
James. (`Jas. 5:1-9`) After calling our attention to the present
day and its wonderful heaping together of riches, and after stating
that these things are about to bring a great time of trouble,
the Apostle gives as the immediate cause of the trouble an unrest
in the hitherto conservative class of society--the farmers. He
seems to point out the condition of things precisely as can now
be seen by all careful observers, adding in explanation of the
matter--that it is the result of a fraud. He says: "Behold,
that reward which you ["rich men"] have fraudulently
withheld from those laborers who harvested your field cries out;
and the loud cries of the laborers have entered into the ears
of the Lord of armies." We have seen in the previous chapter
that mechanics and laboring men in cities are already suffering
to some extent, but that their real sufferings thus far are chiefly
fear of the very much worse conditions daily developing with the
increase of intelligence, machinery and population, under present
social conditions. The civilized farmer not only has all this
to contend against, but as we shall show he now is burdened by
a "fraud" which does not injure but rather benefits
his brother the mechanic. Looking at the facts of the case, we
cannot see it to be true that laborers in general, and farm-laborers
in particular, <PAGE
393> are defrauded out of their wages by employers
in these "last days" of this age. Indeed, on the contrary,
we find that laws are more strict than ever before in protecting
the wage-earner from loss. He can attach and sell his employer's
property, and, indeed, in most instances is given priority amongst
the creditors. We believe the prophecy to apply rather to farmers
in general, who are the world's food producers, "reapers";
and we should look for some general world-wide legislation which
would affect all these "reapers" everywhere alike. We
should expect to find such legislation secured by trickery or
deception, and we should expect to find such tricky legislation
or legalized "fraud" secured by and beneficial to the
world's rich men. Such a finding, and none other that we can think
of, would meet the requirements of this prophecy. We believe,
and shall endeavor to prove, that all these requirements of the
prophecy are met in the demonetization of silver. But let no one
think for a moment that we are urging or expecting the return
of silver to its former place as the principal money of the world!--much
less that we are urging that as a panacea for present and coming
troubles! Quite to the contrary, we are firmly convinced from
James' prophecy that silver will not be restored to its monetary
power. But we do wish to show the fulfilling of this prophecy,
and to have all who will benefit by the light which it throws
upon the present and approaching troubles of the world. The demonetization
of silver by Christendom is of advantage to certain classes and
of disadvantage to other certain classes in "Christendom."
It is of disadvantage to the growers of wheat, rice and cotton,
because they must sell these products of their energy in competition
with the products of countries doing business on a silver basis,
and hence practically they sell for depreciated silver; while
their land, implements, clothing, labor and the <PAGE
394> interest on mortgages on their property are
all payable in enhanced gold. If they receive pay in silver and
pay out the same sum in gold they lose just one half--when gold
is double the value of silver. In 1873, before silver was demonetized
by the nations of Christendom, a silver dollar was worth two cents
more than a gold dollar, while today, in consequence of that legislation,
it requires two silver dollars to equal a gold dollar (in actual
value, outside the nation creating and using them at a fixed valuation
like bank notes). This change may be stated as an appreciation
or doubling of the value of a gold dollar; or as a depreciation
or dividing of the value of a silver dollar, according as the
speaker or writer may prefer--the fact is the same. The value
of a bushel of wheat in 1872 was in silver $1.51 per bushel, in
gold $1.54 in 1878 was in silver 1.34 per bushel, in gold 1.19
in 1894 was in silver 1.24 per bushel, in gold .61 It thus appears
that wheat during those years fell but little in countries which
still recognize silver--the fall in value was in gold, in Christendom.
England, the chief wheat purchaser, buys where she can get most
wheat for her money. By turning a gold dollar into two silver
ones she can purchase twice as much wheat in India as before silver
was demonetized. Thus the gold-price of wheat was driven down.
The rice and cotton growers of the United States suffer similarly
for the same reasons. Rice and cotton are produced by silver standard
countries, and can be bought by gold standard countries on that
basis--one-half the former price. Incidentally the producers of
other farm crops shared the trouble, for wheat, cotton and rice
growers, after trying in vain to make up for their declining PRICES
by increased crops, finally turned in despair to other crops which
did not decline so much, and were depressed by overproduction.
Incidentally <PAGE
395> also small stores are suffering, and ultimately
all classes must feel the farmer's burden to some extent. But
what classes benefit by the demonetization of silver? Several:
(1) Specially and most, the bankers, money lenders, mortgage owners;
because every dollar of their wealth now is worth double what
it was worth before; worth double in the sense that it will purchase
twice as much of the necessities and luxuries of life. (2) All
persons of fixed incomes, such as Congressmen, Legislators, Judges,
clerks and all workingmen who receive wages are benefited for
similar reasons. Whether they get ten dollars per week or per
day or per hour, the ten dollars will buy TWICE as much cotton,
wool, wheat, etc., and consequently nearly TWICE as much of the
products of these. When the silver question was sprung upon the
people of the United States by the farmers, who first found the
cause of their trouble, it for a time looked as thought it would
sweep the country in the 1896 elections. But as each individual
looked out for his own interests in the question, the wealthy
class, the office-holding class, the clerking class and the workingmen
began to see that their bread was buttered on the gold side; storekeepers
and well-to-do farmers conservatively doubted their own judgments
and followed the lead of their bankers--contrary to their own
interests; and silver was defeated in the nation to whose interests
it was most vital--the only nation which, by reason of the character
and amounts of her exports and imports, could have turned the
scales and restored silver to its former value as money. But now
the case is hopeless: silver will not be restored to the place
lost in 1873. It is now a question of pure selfishness, and while
farmers as a class are more numerous <PAGE
396> than any other, they do not constitute a
majority, and nearly all others are selfishly interested on the
other side of the question. Poor farmers! poor reapers of the
fields! Your cries of the past few years are relieved a little
for a time, due to an artificial raise in prices--a little respite
to be followed soon by greater pressure than ever and by louder
and louder cries from the reapers of Christendom. Thus is the
patience and conservatism of the most patient and conservative
class of society being undermined and destroyed as a further preparation
for the great time of trouble, the great day of vengeance. But
how did the demonetization of silver come about? Who could be
interested in having such a catastrophe befall the world? We answer:
Financiers took the lead. It is "their business" so
to manage and work money as a farmer works his farm--to bring
to themselves, or their syndicates and institutions, the largest
possible increment. English financiers lead the world--they have
been at the business longer, and have given it greater study.
"Everything is fair in war" is an adage, and the financiers
and statesmen of England who seem to have gotten awake fifty years
before the remainder of the world in respect to such matters,
seem to think that commercial warfare is the order of the day
and far more profitable to the victors than the slave trade of
the past and the expeditions for pillage. The British early realized
that, having a comparatively small domain, their greatest prosperity
must lie in the direction of manufacturing and financiering, not
only for themselves, but so far as permitted for the remainder
of the world. Her public men have carefully pursued this plan,
and being able to manufacture cheaper at the time than the remainder
of the world they adopted the policy most favorable to their own
interest--free trade--and have urged it as a policy upon the civilized
world ever since. The conditions <PAGE
397> have for a long time made Great Britain
not only the workshop of the world, but also its commercial, money
and banking center. Nearly a century ago shrewd British financiers
saw that since they were not an agricultural people their interests
would be favored by depressing the prices of agricultural products,
which they were obliged to purchase from outside nations. They
saw also that silver was the money of the world and had been so
from the earliest dawn of history; therefore, if they could effect
a change in their standard of money so that they would do business
on a gold basis while the remainder of the world used silver,
they might be able to change the relative values of the two metals
in their own favor. Consequently Great Britain demonetized silver
as early as 1816. Had she succeeded in hindering manufactures
in other countries, as she sought to do, and thus (by reason of
having immense plants and facilities and experienced workmen)
been able to manufacture cotton and woolen cloth and machinery
at lower PRICES than the remainder of the world, unequipped, could
produce them, she would have succeeded in separating her money
from that of the remainder of the world, and ultimately have greatly
advantaged herself. But in neither of these respects did she entirely
succeed: France, and the United States in particular, and later
Germany, established protective duties and thus fostered mechanical
industries within their borders, and have gradually become able
to supply not only the majority of their own necessities, but
able also to compete with Great Britain for the trade of the world--India,
China, Spain, Portugal, South America, Russia--all of which countries,
as we have seen, in turn, are seeking to follow the same course
and to develop manufactures of their own; nevertheless, Great
Britain still has the lead as the manufacturer and trader of the
world. Neither did she succeed <PAGE
398> in the separation of gold and silver, so
long recognized as unitedly the money of the world. Indeed, while
the relationship between the two metals had for years been about
sixteen parts of silver to one of gold in value, the tendency
rather was for silver to appreciate and gold to depreciate relatively--because
silver was the money of the world chiefly in use, and favored
above gold by the people, except in Great Britain. It is not surprising,
therefore, that, as shown by statistics, a silver dollar commanded
a premium of over two cents above a gold dollar in 1872. Realizing
that by themselves they could control neither gold nor manufactures,
British financiers sought cooperation with the United States and
with Europe, hoping that by their combined effort gold and silver
would be separated in values, and gold thus caused to enhance
in value. By a combination of the civilized nations to demonetize
silver as a standard money, the effect would be: (1) Silver would
become merely a merchantable commodity in civilized countries,
and hence be cheaper than gold, whose standard (established) would
rise proportionately as silver would decrease in value. This would
enable the civilized countries to purchase what they wished of
cotton, wheat, rubber and other raw materials from the uncivilized
nations with a debased money, silver, and thus get them cheaper--at
half price--while compelling the poor heathen to pay for all luxuries,
machinery, etc., bought from civilized nations, double prices;
because the heathen's silver dollar had been demonetized and degraded
to half a dollar by the legislation of his civilized brethren
of Christendom, under the guidance of "Shylocks," otherwise
known as financiers. This use of civilized brains to get the advantage
of the heathen is justified as "strictly business";
but was it justice, or was it fraud, from the divine standpoint?
It surely was not doing to the heathen neighbor as they would
have the heathen do to them. <PAGE
399> (2) Although this would let in all the civilized
nations on the same footing with Great Britain as respects the
outside trade, yet she hoped that, having the lead of the others,
she would always be able to hold the larger share of foreign trade.
We do not ignore the law of supply and demand as respects wheat:
we admit its bearing, but have shown that as yet the world has
no oversupply. We have seen, indeed, from Mr. Lindblom's statistics
that the wheat supply is not even keeping pace with the increase
of the world's population. We notice, further, that while the
year 1892 was noted as the one which produced the largest wheat
harvest in the world's history, the average price of wheat in
New York City for that year was 90 cents per bushel; and that
with smaller crops since the price steadily declined, until the
artificial advance of the past few years. The spurt in prices
may be due to certain phenomenal conditions prevailing throughout
the world. The wheat crop of Russia, Argentine Republic, Austria,
Hungary and other countries, may be considerably below the average,
while India, which usually has a large surplus of wheat for export,
may have a famine affecting 35,000,000 of its population, requiring
American wheat to help make up its deficiency. Such a condition
of things in previous years--say in 1892 even, with the largest
crop the world ever knew, would have put the price of wheat to
probably $1.30 per bushel (for an ounce of silver was still worth
87 cents in gold in 1892), while under the monetary conditions
prevailing in 1873 the world's price of wheat would in 1896 have
advanced to what it sold for in India--about $1.90 per bushel
(silver). Furthermore, in considering this subject, we must take
note of the fact that, while the price of wheat materially fell
during the past thirty years for some cause (which we have seen
was not due to overproduction), the prices of some other articles
have fallen comparatively little. For instance, <PAGE
400>
compare the year 1878 with the year 1894 as being average years.
The
following quotations represent the average PRICES for those years
in New York City:1878
1894
Rye,
per bushel...........................$ .65 $ .68
Oats,
per bushel.......................... .33 .37
Corn,
per bushel.......................... .52 .51
Kentucky
Leaf Tobacco, per pound.......... .07 .095
Fresh
Beef, wholesale..................... .0525 .055
Fresh
Pork, wholesale..................... .0425 .055
Hay,
per ton.............................. 7.25 8.50
Compare
with these the three items of wheat, cotton and silver, which
were specially affected, and affected alike, and evidently by
the same cause--the demonetization of silver by Christendom. 1878
1894
Cotton,
per pound.........................$ .11 $ .07
Wheat,
per bushel......................... 1.20 .61
Silver,
per ounce......................... 1.15 .635
But,
some one suggests, may not the demonetization of silver have been
forced upon the nations of Christendom by the law of supply and
demand? Is not its fall in value due to its becoming too plentiful,
and not to any scheme to enhance the value of gold money? No,
we answer; although the yield of gold and silver of late has been
great, the growth of general business and population has been
proportionately far greater. All the gold and silver of the world,
if coined into money, would be quite insufficient for the world's
business, and would require notes, clearing house certificates,
etc. It is the money-lender that is interested in having a legal
tender money scarce, so that he may always have a good demand
for it, and be able to lend it at a good rate of interest and
demand double
<PAGE 401> security. In 1896 all the world's
gold, coined and uncoined, was figured at less than sixty hundred
million dollars ($6,000,000,000), while the public and private
debts of the United States were estimated at more than three times
this sum. Russia had been trying for years before 1873 to return
from a debased paper money to a silver standard, and as she could
not get silver enough she is still on a paper basis. We mention
these matters to show that the fall of silver was premeditated;
that it was caused, not by the law of supply and demand (it was
more in demand than gold in 1872, and brought a premium over gold),
but by legislation.
But
is it conceivable that the representatives of the people of all
the nations of "Christendom" entered into a conspiracy
against the heathen and against their own farmers? No: the facts
do not bear out such a conclusion; but rather indicate that the
money power (which we shall term "Shylock") engineered
the scheme so as to deceive legislators as to the results to be
expected. We have the testimony of Prince Bismarck, and of many
United States' Congressmen, to this effect. Thus, "by
fraud," the thin wedge of legislation was inserted between
the two halves of the world's money, with the effect of depreciating
silver and doubling the value of gold; and now, when the evil
is discerned, statesmen stand aghast at the extent of the rupture,
and realize that the restoration of silver to its former place
would work hardship and loss to the creditor class in offset
to the injury and loss already experienced by the debtor class
by the debasement of silver. Besides, "Shylock" having
obtained an advantage so valuable (doubling the value of
all his possessions and incomes), would permit society to go into
convulsions of panic or revolution rather than lose this grip
upon the financial lifeblood of humanity. "Shylock"
has the power to enforce his demands. He controls the numerous
class of borrowers
<PAGE 402> who are supplicants at his bank-counters:
he controls the national governments, all of which are borrowers,
and he controls the press, by which the public is encouraged to
trust "Shylock's" honor and benevolence and to fear
his anger and power. In addition, a very large and influential
class of salaried officials and clerks and skilled workmen find
that their interests are in accord with "Shylock's"
policy; and if not his supporters, they are lukewarm or cool in
their opposition to his policy, and inclined to say little or
nothing against it.
Among
the many testimonies respecting the deception and fraud practiced,
the following few will suffice:
SENATOR
THURMAN said:
"When
the bill was pending in the Senate we thought it was simply a
bill to reform the mint, regulate coinage and fix up one thing
and another, and there is not a single man in the Senate, I think,
unless a member of the committee from which the bill came, who
had the slightest idea that it was even a squint toward demonetization."
Congressional Record, volume 7, part 2, Forty-fifth Congress,
second session, PAGE 1,064.
SENATOR
CONKLING in the Senate, on March 30, 1876, during the remarks
of Senator Bogy on the bill (S. 263) To Amend the Laws Relating
to Legal Tender of Silver Coin, in surprise inquired:
"Will
the Senator allow me to ask him or some other Senator a question?
Is it true that there is now by law no American dollar? And, if
so, is it true that the effect of this bill is to make half-dollars
and quarter-dollars the only silver coin which can be used as
a legal tender?"
SENATOR
ALLISON, on February 15, 1878, said:
"But
when the secret history of this bill of 1873 comes to be told,
it will disclose the fact that the House of Representatives intended
to coin both gold and silver, and intended to place both metals
upon the French relation, instead of on our own, which was the
true scientific position with reference
<PAGE 403> to this subject in 1873, but that
the bill afterward was doctored."
Hon.
WILLIAM D. KELLEY, who had charge of the bill, in a speech made
in the House of Representatives, March 9, 1878, said:
"In
connection with the charge that I advocated the bill which demonetized
the standard silver dollar I say that, though the chairman of
the committee on coinage, I was ignorant of the fact that it would
demonetize the silver dollar from our system of coins, as were
those distinguished Senators, Messrs. Blaine and Voorhees, who
were then members of the House, and each of whom a few days since
interrogated the other: 'Did you know it was dropped when the
bill passed?' 'No,' said Mr. Blaine, 'did you?' 'No,' said Mr.
Voorhees, 'I do not think that there were three members in the
house that knew it.'"
Again,
on May 10, 1879, Mr. KELLEY said:
"All
I can say is that the committee on coinage, weights and measures,
who reported the original bill, were faithful and able, and scanned
the provisions closely; that as their organ I reported it; that
it contained provision for both the standard silver dollar and
the trade dollar. Never having heard until a long time after its
enactment into law of the substitution in the Senate of the section
which dropped the standard dollar, I profess to know nothing of
its history; but I am prepared to say that in all the legislation
of this country there is no mystery equal to the demonetization
of the standard silver dollar of the United States. I have never
found a man who could tell just how it came about or why."
SENATOR
BECK, in a speech before the Senate, January 10, 1878, said:
"It
(the bill demonetizing silver) never was understood by either
House of Congress. I say that with full knowledge of facts. No
newspaper reporter--and they are the most vigilant men I ever
saw in obtaining information--discovered that it had been done."
<PAGE 404>
Did
space permit we could quote similar forceful language from many
others. The very title of the bill was misleading; it was called:
"An Act Revising the Laws Relative to the Mint, Assay Officers
and Coinage of the United States"; and the demonetization
of silver was hidden by (1) the provision of section 14, that
a gold dollar should thenceforth "be the unit of value";
and (2) by section 15, which defines and specifies the silver
coins, but entirely omits to mention the "standard"
silver dollar. The Act of June 22, 1874, finished the killing
of the "standard" silver dollar without so much as naming
it, by simply providing that no other coins except those mentioned
in the Act of 1873 should be minted. And President U. S. Grant,
whose signature made the act a law, it is said, did not know of
its character, and so declared four years after, when the effect
began to be apparent. Indeed, few but the long-headed "financiers"
took much notice of specie, as the nation had not yet resumed
specie payments and this was supposed to be a helpful preparatory
step in that direction.
Mr.
MURAT HALSTEAD, editor of the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette,
was one of the able men of his day. The following from his pen
under date of October 24, 1877, is quoted from the New York Journal:
"This,
the British gold policy, was the work of experts only. Evasion
was essential to success in it, and possibly because coin was
not in circulation, and, being out of public view, it could be
tampered with without attracting attention. The monometallic system
of the great creditor nation was thus imposed upon the great debtor
nation without debate."
The
following words are publicly credited to the late Col. R. G. INGERSOLL:
"I
do ask for the remonetization of silver. Silver was demonetized
by fraud. It was an imposition upon every solvent man, a fraud
upon every honest debtor in the United
<PAGE 405> States. It assassinates labor.
It was done in the interest of avarice and greed, and should be
undone by honest men."
That
the effect would be what it is was foretold by numerous statesmen
upon the floors of Congress as soon as the true situation was
realized--1877 to 1880. Some were blind to the issue, and some
were quieted by self-interest, and some relied upon the advice
of "financiers," but others spoke valiantly against
the wrong.
The
late Hon. JAMES G. BLAINE said in a speech before the United States'
Senate (1880):
"I
believe the struggle now going on in this country and in other
countries for a single gold standard would, if successful, produce
widespread disaster in and throughout the commercial world. The
destruction of silver as money, and the establishment of gold
as the sole unit of value, must have a ruinous effect on all forms
of property except those investments which yield a fixed return
in money. These would be enormously enhanced in value, and
would gain a disproportionate and unfair advantage over every
other species of property. If, as the most reliable statistics
affirm, there are nearly $7,000,000,000 of coin or bullion in
the world, very equally divided between gold and silver, it is
impossible to strike silver out of existence as money without
results that will prove distressing to millions, and utterly disastrous
to tens of thousands. I believe gold and silver coin to be the
money of the constitution; indeed, the money of the American people
anterior to the constitution, which the great organic law recognized
as quite independent of its own existence. No power was conferred
on Congress to declare either metal should not be money; Congress
has, therefore, in my judgment, no power to demonetize either.
If, therefore, silver has been demonetized, I am in favor of remonetizing
it. If its coinage has been prohibited, I am in favor of ordering
it to be resumed. I am in favor of having it enlarged."
The
late SENATOR VANCE said later:
"The
power of money and its allies throughout the world have entered
into this conspiracy to perpetrate the greatest
<PAGE 406> crime of this or any other age,
to overthrow one-half of the world's money and thereby double
their own wealth by enhancing the value of the other half which
is in their hands. The money changers are polluting the temple
of our liberties."
The
United States' Government despatched official letters to its representatives
in foreign countries, requesting reports on monetary affairs.
The report of Mr. Currie, Minister to Belgium, widely published,
is a remarkable showing, in harmony with the experiences of the
people of the United States. He reports the following reply to
his questions given by the Hon. Alfonse Allard, Belgian Director
of Finance:
"Since
1873 a crisis, consisting in a fall in all prices, exists continually,
nor does it appear possible to arrest its progress. This fall
in prices, reacting on wages, is now evolving a social and industrial
crisis.
"You
ask me why we returned in 1873 to monometallism, limping though
it be. I can conceive no other reason, unless that it was to please
a certain class of financiers who profited thereby--a class supported
by theories invented and defended at that time by some political
economists, notably by members of the Institute of France.
"You
ask what influence these monetary measures have had in Belgium
on industry and wages? Money, which was already scarce in 1873,
has become still scarcer, and that fall in prices which was predicted
has taken place. The average fall in the price of all the products
of labor is 50 per cent since 1873--that of cereals over 65 per
cent. Industry is no longer remunerative, agriculture is ruined,
and everybody is clamoring for protection by duties, while our
ruined citizens think of war. Such is the sad condition of Europe."
In
a letter to the National Republican League (June 11, 1891), Senator
J. D. CAMERON said:
"The
single gold standard seems to us to be working ruin with a violence
that nothing can stand. If this influence is to continue for the
future at the rate of its action during the
<PAGE 407> twenty years since the gold standard
took possession of the world, some generation, not very remote,
will see in the broad continent of America only a half-dozen overgrown
cities keeping guard over a mass of capital and lending it out
to a population of dependent laborers on the mortgage of their
growing crops and unfinished handiwork. Such sights have been
common enough in the world's history, but against it we all rebel.
Rich and poor alike; Republicans, Democrats, Populists; labor
and capital; churches and colleges--all alike, and all in solid
good faith, shrink from such a future as this."
English
financiers know very well why the farmers of the world, and especially
the farmers of the United States and Canada, who export wheat,
are suffering; and they sometimes confess that it is their own
selfishness. For instance, we quote from the editorial columns
of the Financial News (London), April 30, 1894, as follows:
"We
have frequent diplomatic differences with the United States; but,
as a rule, there is seldom associated with these any sense of
animus between the peoples of the two countries, and squabbles
pass over and are forgotten. But now we are encouraging the growth
of a feeling that, on a question which affects the prosperity
of millions of individual Americans, this country is inclined
to entertain views unfriendly to the States. We know, of course,
that the unfriendliness is accidental, and that our monetary policy
is controlled by purely selfish considerations--so purely selfish
that we do not mind seeing India suffering from our action much
more than America does...
"Senator
Cameron points a plain moral when he remarks that if the United
States would venture to cut herself adrift from Europe and take
outright to silver, she would have all America and Asia at her
back, and would command the markets of both continents. 'The barrier
of gold would be more fatal than any barrier of a custom house.
The bond of silver would be stronger than any bond of free trade.'
There can be no doubt about it, that if the United States were
to adopt a silver basis tomorrow, British trade
<PAGE 408> would be ruined before the year
is out. Every American industry would be protected, not only at
home, but in every other market. Of course, the States would suffer
to a certain extent through having to pay her obligations abroad
in gold; but the loss on exchange under this head would be a mere
drop in the bucket compared with the profits to be reaped from
the markets of South America and Asia, to say nothing of Europe.
The marvel is that the United States has not long ago seized the
opportunity, and but for the belief that the way of England is
necessarily the way to commercial success and prosperity, undoubtedly
it would have been done long ago. Now, Americans are awakening
to the fact that, 'so long as they narrow their ambition to becoming
a larger England' they cannot beat us. It has been a piece of
good luck for us that it has never before occurred to the Americans
to scoop us out of the world's markets by going on a silver basis,
and it might serve us right if, irritated by the contemptuous
apathy of our government to the gravity of the silver problem,
the Americans retaliate by freezing out gold. It could easily
be done...There have not been wanting, of late, indications of
growing irritation with this country for its dog-in-the-manger
attitude towards a question (the silver question) that is convulsing
two continents, and gravely compromising the future of the poorer
states in Europe."
That
the farmers' cry, that reward for toil is kept back by fraud,
is general to all gold-standard countries--to all Christendom--we
quote as follows:
Under
date September 22, 1896, the New York World published a
lengthy cable message, signed by leading agricultural men of Europe,
met as an International Agricultural Congress, at Budapest, Hungary,
addressed to the then Presidential candidate W. J. Bryan. It said:
"We
wish you success in your struggle against the domination of the
creditor class, which during the past twenty-three years has secured
both in Europe and America, monetary legislation destructive
of the prosperity of your farmers and others ...We believe
that, failing such restoration (of silver to
<PAGE 409> money privileges), the gold premium
throughout all Asia and South America will continue to rob the
farmer (of America and Europe) of all rewards for his toil, and
that your election may avert from Europe serious agrarian and
social troubles now pending."
The
New York World, under date of September 24, 1896, published
the following words of Prince Bismarck to Herr von Kardorf, leader
of the Free Conservative Party in the German Reichstag:
"I
am too old to go to school over the currency issue, but I recognize
that, although I acted in 1873 on what I regarded as the best
advice, my action was too precipitate in view of the results which
have followed.
"The
one class that we cannot afford to estrange is the farming class.
If they are convinced, and they assure you they are convinced,
that agricultural depression is peculiar to these monetary changes,
our government must review its position."
The
present extreme depression of silver, and of all commodities sold
on a silver basis, came very gradually--for two reasons. (1) It
required time and manipulation to depress silver, a commodity
still in great demand by more than one-half the world's population.
(2) Silver mine owners and others directly interested, together
with statesmen who foresaw the coming evil, pressed their arguments
so forcibly in the United States' Congress that expedients were
resorted to, such as the Remonetization Act of 1878, and the Silver
Purchasing Act of 1890. But expedients were found impracticable.
Silver must either be a money with full, equal power with gold
as legal tender, or else it must be considered a merchantable
commodity like diamonds, wheat, etc., and be subject to fluctuations
according to supply and demand; and when in 1893 the last of these
expedients was repealed, silver at once dropped to one-half the
price of gold, and all the evils of its demonetization were felt
to their full in 1895, except as the consequent panic may be far-reaching,
progressive and enduring.
<PAGE 410>
Here,
then, are the facts:
(1)
The reapers of the world's harvests, the farmers of "Christendom,"
are in distress, notwithstanding modern machinery, and are crying
out loudly to fellow citizens and legislators for relief.
(These cries are stopped temporarily by the rise in the
price of wheat, caused probably by certain shortages in southeastern
Europe, in Russia, Australia and Argentina; but just as soon as
these conditions change, and the whole world has its average crops,
the price of wheat may follow the price of silver down to 43 cents--except
circumstances intervene to alter conditions--and the cries
of the reapers will ring out in greater desperation than ever.)
(2)
Legislators realize the difficulty and how it came about, and
declare that it came by fraud, by the deceptions of financiers,
the money-doctors.
(3)
Legislators who see that it would cost a panic, and probably a
revolution, to correct the resultant unfavorable conditions conclude
that, as the disease cannot be worse than such a remedy, they
would best do nothing so radical. Hence silver will never be restored--remonetized
16 to 1.
(4)
It is admitted on all hands that this "fraud"
is not only crushing and discouraging the farmers, but also that
it is angering and embittering this hitherto greatest conservative
element of society.
(5)
All the thinking people of the world are agreed that the laboring
and mechanical classes of Christendom are ripe for a revolution
which would sweep present social institutions with a besom of
destruction, and that, if the large and hitherto conservative
farming element were to join the ranks of the discontents and
revolutionists, the combination would be irresistible.
(6)
Evidences on every side are that a very few years will suffice
to bring about such an uprising.
<PAGE 411>
Whoever
will compare all these facts with James' prophecy must be impressed
with its accurate fulfilment, point by point, and should set it
down as another indubitable testimonial to the divine foreknowledge
of our day and its affairs, as preparations for the great time
of trouble which is to make ready a highway for Immanuel and his
glorious reign of peace on earth and good will toward men.
Let
us read James' prophecy (5:1-9) again:
"Come
now, you rich, weep and lament over those miseries of yours which
are approaching. Your securities have become worthless, and your
garments have become moth-eaten. Your gold and your silver have
become rusted; and the rust of them will be for a testimony against
you, and will consume your bodies like fire. You have heaped together
treasures for the last days. Behold! that reward which you have
fraudulently withheld from those laborers who harvested your fields,
cries out; and the loud cries of the reapers have entered the
ears of the Lord of armies! You have lived delicately, in self-indulgence,
upon the land and been wanton. You have nourished [fed] your hearts
in the day of [your] slaughter. You [your class] condemned, you
[your class] murdered the Just One [Christ], and he resisted you
not." [Can it be that the Lord wished us to notice that the
Jewish bankers and financiers, more than others, are prominent
in this fraud of keeping back the wages of the reapers? and is
there therefore special significance in the words, "You
killed, you murdered the Just One?"]
"Be
you patient, then, brethren, till the presence of the Lord [who
will adjust matters righteously--lifting up him that is poor and
him that hath no helper, and taking vengeance on all evildoers].
Behold the husbandman, anticipating the fruit of the earth, waits
patiently for it--until he shall receive both the early and the
later harvest. Be you also patient, establish your hearts, because
the presence of the Lord has approached. Add not to each
other's sorrows, brethren, that ye be not punished [also]; behold,
the Judge is standing at the doors."
<PAGE 412>
The Rule of Equity
"Hail to the Lord's Anointed,
Jehovah's blessed Son!
Hail, in the time appointed,
His reign on earth begun!
He comes to break oppression,
To set the captives free,
To take away transgression,
And rule in equity.
"He comes with succor speedy
To those who suffer wrong;
To help the poor and needy,
And bid the weak be strong;
To give them songs for sighing,
Their darkness turn to light,
Whose souls, condemned and dying,
Were precious in his sight.
"To him let praise unceasing
And daily vows ascend;
His kingdom, still increasing,
Shall be without an end:
The tide of time shall never
His covenant remove;
No, it shall stand forever,
A pledge that God is love."
THE
BATTLE OF ARMAGEDDON |