State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about State of the Union Address.

State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about State of the Union Address.

The principle that they would instill into government if they succeed in seizing power is well shown by the principles which many of them have instilled into their own affairs:  autocracy toward labor, toward stockholders, toward consumers, toward public sentiment.  Autocrats in smaller things, they seek autocracy in bigger things.  “By their fruits ye shall know them.”

If these gentlemen believe, as they say they believe, that the measures adopted by this Congress and its predecessor, and carried out by this Administration, have hindered rather than promoted recovery, let them be consistent.  Let them propose to this Congress the complete repeal of these measures.  The way is open to such a proposal.

Let action be positive and not negative.  The way is open in the Congress of the United States for an expression of opinion by yeas and nays.  Shall we say that values are restored and that the Congress will, therefore, repeal the laws under which we have been bringing them back?  Shall we say that because national income has grown with rising prosperity, we shall repeal existing taxes and thereby put off the day of approaching a balanced budget and of starting to reduce the national debt?  Shall we abandon the reasonable support and regulation of banking?  Shall we restore the dollar to its former gold content?

Shall we say to the farmer, “The prices for your products are in part restored.  Now go and hoe your own row?”

Shall we say to the home owners, “We have reduced your rates of interest.  We have no further concern with how you keep your home or what you pay for your money.  That is your affair?”

Shall we say to the several millions of unemployed citizens who face the very problem of existence, of getting enough to eat, “We will withdraw from giving you work.  We will turn you back to the charity of your communities and those men of selfish power who tell you that perhaps they will employ you if the Government leaves them strictly alone?”

Shall we say to the needy unemployed, “Your problem is a local one except that perhaps the Federal Government, as an act of mere generosity, will be willing to pay to your city or to your county a few grudging dollars to help maintain your soup kitchens?”

Shall we say to the children who have worked all day in the factories, “Child labor is a local issue and so are your starvation wages; something to be solved or left unsolved by the jurisdiction of forty-eight States?”

Shall we say to the laborer, “Your right to organize, your relations with your employer have nothing to do with the public interest; if your employer will not even meet with you to discuss your problems and his, that is none of our affair?”

Shall we say to the unemployed and the aged, “Social security lies not within the province of the Federal Government; you must seek relief elsewhere?”

Shall we say to the men and women who live in conditions of squalor in country and in city, “The health and the happiness of you and your children are no concern of ours?”

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State of the Union Address from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.