VIEWS FROM THE WATCH TOWER
THE DELUSION OF MILITARISM
THE NATIONS CALLED AGAINST THEIR WILL TO THE BATTLE OF
THE GREAT DAY OF GOD ALMIGHTY!
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"THE FUTURE historian of the first decade of the twentieth century will be puzzled. He will find that the world at the opening of the century was in an extraordinarily belligerent mood, and that the mood was well-nigh universal, dominating the New World as well as the Old, the Orient no less than the Occident. He will find that preparations for war, especially among nations which confessed allegiance to the Prince of Peace, were carried forward with tremendous energy and enthusiasm, and that the air was filled with prophetic voices, picturing national calamities and predicting bloody and world-embracing conflicts. 'We would have healed Babylon, but she is not healed.'
"In his investigations he will find that the world's royal counselors and leading statesmen were also, without exception, wholeheartedly devoted to the cause of conciliation. He will read with admiration the speeches of Prince Bulow, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Mr. H. H. Asquith, Mr. John Hay, and Mr. Elihu Root, and will be compelled to confess that the three leading nations of our Western world never in the entire course of their history had statesmen more pacific than these in temper, or more eloquent in their advocacy of the cause of international good will. A galaxy of peace-loving statesmen under a sky black with the thunder-clouds of war, this is certain to bewilder our historian.
"His perplexity will become no less when he considers the incontrovertible proofs that never since time began were the masses of men so peaceably inclined as in just this turbulent and war-rumor-tormented twentieth century. He will find that science and commerce and religion had cooperated in bringing the nations together; that the wage-earners in all the European countries had begun to speak of one another as brothers, and that the growing spirit of fraternity and cooperation had expressed itself in such organizations as the Interparliamentary Union, with a membership of twenty-five hundred legislators and statesmen, and various other societies and leagues of scholars and merchants and lawyers and jurists. He will find delegations paying friendly visits to neighboring countries, and will read, dumbfounded, what the English and German papers were saying about invasions, and the need of increased armaments, at the very time that twenty thousand Germans in Berlin were applauding to the echo the friendly greetings of a company of English visitors. And he will be still more nonplussed when he reads that, while ten thousand boys and girls in Tokio were singing loving greetings to our naval officers, there were men in the United States rushing from city to city urging the people to prepare for an American-Japanese war. It will seem inexplicable to our historian that when peace and arbitration and conciliation societies were multiplying in every land, and when men seemed to hate war with an abhorrence never known in any preceding era, there should be a deluge of war-talk flowing like an infernal tide across the world.
"His bewilderment, however, will reach its climax when he discovers that it was after the establishment of an international court that all the nations voted to increase their armaments. Everybody conceded that it was better to settle international disputes by reason rather than by force, but as soon as the legal machinery was created, by means of which the swords could be dispensed with, there was a fresh fury to perfect at once all the instruments of destruction. After each new peace conference there was a fresh cry for more guns. Our historian will read with gladness the records of the Hague Conference and of the laying of the foundation of a periodic Congress of Nations, and of a permanent High Court. He will note the neutralization of Switzerland, Belgium and Norway; the compact entered into by the countries bordering on the North Sea, to respect one another's territorial rights forever; the agreement of the same sort solemnly ratified by all the countries bordering on the Baltic; the signing of more than sixty arbitration treaties twelve of these by the Senate of the United States; the creation of an International Bureau of American Republics, embracing twenty-one nations; the establishment of a Central American High Court; the elaboration and perfection of legal instruments looking toward the parliament of man, the federation of the world.
"He will note also that while these splendid achievements
of the peace spirit were finding a habitation and
a name, the nations were thrilled as never before by
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dismal forebodings, and the world was darkened by
whispers of death and destruction. While the Palace of
Peace at The Hague was building, nations hailed the
advent of the airship as a glorious invention, because of
the service it could render to the cause of war. This
unprecedented growth of peace sentiment, accompanied
by a constant increase of jealousy and suspicion, of fear
and panic, among the nations of the earth, will set our
historian to work to ascertain the meaning of this strange
phenomenon, the most singular perhaps to be met with
in the entire history of the world.
The winding up of the age and the destruction of
"It will not take him long to discover that the fountains
from which there flowed these dark and swollen
streams of war rumor were all located within the military
and naval encampments. It was the experts of the
army and navy who were always shivering at some new
peril, and painting sombre pictures of what would happen
in case new regiments were not added to the army and
additional battleships were not voted for the fleet. It was
Lord Roberts, for instance, who discovered how easily
England could be overrun by a German army; and it
was General Kuropatkin who had discernment to see
that the Russo-Japanese war was certain to break out
again. The historian will note that the magazine essays
on "Perils" were written for the most part by military
experts, and that the newspaper scare-articles were the
productions of young men who believed what the military
experts had told them. Many naval officers, active
and retired, could not make an after-dinner speech without
casting over their hearers the shadow of some impending
conflict.
A HEATHEN PRINCIPLE SATAN'S DELUSION AS AN
"It was in this way that legislative bodies came to
think that possibly the country was really in danger;
and looking round for a ground on which to justify new
expenditures for war material, they seized upon an
ancient pagan maxim--furnished by the military experts
--'If you wish peace, prepare for war.' The old adage,
once enthroned, worked with the energy of a god. The
love of war had largely passed away. The illusion which
for ages it had created in the minds of millions had lost
its spell. Men had come to see that war is butchery,
savagery, murder, hell. They believed in reason. Peace
was seen to be the one supreme blessing for the world,
but to preserve the peace it was necessary to prepare
for war. This lay at the centre of the policy of the
twentieth century. No guns were asked for to kill men
with--guns were mounted as safeguards of the peace.
No battleships were launched to fight with--they were
preservers of the peace. Colossal armies and gigantic
navies were exhibited as a nation's ornaments--beautiful
tokens of its love of peace. And following thus the
Angel of Peace, the nations increased their armaments
until they spent upon them over two billions of dollars
every year, and had amassed national debts aggregating
thirty-five billions. The expenditure crushed the poorest
of the nations and crippled the richest of them, but the
burden was gladly borne because it was a sacrifice for
the cause of peace. It was a pathetic and thrilling testimony
of the human heart's hatred of war and longing
for peace, when the nations became willing to bankrupt
themselves in the effort to keep from fighting.
THE NATION'S BLINDLY SEEKING PEACE BY THE
"But at this point our historian will begin to ask
whether there might have been any relation between
the multiplication of the instruments of slaughter and
the constant rise of the tide of war talk and war feeling.
He will probably suspect that the mere presence
of the shining apparatus of death may have kindled in
men's hearts feelings of jealousy and distrust, and
created panics which even Hague Conferences and peaceful-minded
rulers and counselors could not possibly allay.
When he finds that it was only men who lived all their
life with guns who were haunted by horrible visions and
kept dreaming hideous dreams, and that the larger the
armament the more was a nation harassed by fears of
invasion and possible annihilation, he will propound to
himself these questions: Was it all a great delusion in
the last day, the notion that vast military and naval
establishments are a safeguard of the peace?
"Was it a form of national lunacy, this frenzied out-pouring
of national treasure for the engines of destruction?
Was it an hallucination, this feverish conviction
that only by guns can a nation's dignity be symbolized,
and her place in the world's life and action be honorably
maintained?
"These are questions which our descendants are certain
to ponder, and why should not we face them now? If
this preparing for war in order to keep the peace is
indeed a delusion, the sooner we find it out the better,
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for it is the costliest of all obsessions by which humanity
has ever been swayed and mastered. There are multiplying
developments which are leading thoughtful observers
to suspect that this pre-Christian maxim is a piece of
antiquated wisdom, and that the desire to establish peace
in our modern world by multiplying and brandishing the
instruments of war is a product of mental aberration.
Certainly there are indications pointing in this direction.
The world's brain may possibly have become unbalanced
by a bacillus carried in the folds of a heathen adage.
The most virulent and devastating disease now raging on
the earth is militarism.
"The militarist of our day betrays certain symptoms
with which the student of pathology is not altogether
unfamiliar. There are demon suggestions which obtain
so firm a grip upon the mind that it is difficult to banish
them. For example, a man who has the impression that
he is being tracked by a vindictive and relentless foe is
not going to sit down and quietly listen to an argument
the aim of which is to prove that no such enemy exists
and that the sounds which have caused the panic are the
footfalls of an approaching friend.
THE APPROACH OF JESUS AND HIS KINGDOM
"The militarist will listen to no man who attempts to
prove that his 'perils' are creations of the brain. Indeed,
he is exceedingly impatient under contradiction; and,
here again, he is like all victims of hallucinations. To
deny his assumptions or to question his conclusions, is
to him both blasphemy and treason, a sort of profanity
and imbecility worthy of contempt and scorn. He alone
stands on foundations which cannot be shaken, and other
men, not possessing his inside information, or technical
training for dealing with such questions, are living in a
fool's paradise. The ferocity with which he attacks all
who dare oppose him is the fury of a man whose brain is
abnormally excited.
THE NATIONS DRUNKEN
"Recklessness of consequences is a trait which physicians
usually look for in certain types of mental disorder,
and here again the militarist presents the symptoms of
a man who is sick. What cares he for consequences?
The naval experts of Germany are dragging the German
Empire ever deeper into debt, unabashed by the ominous
mutterings of a coming storm. The naval experts of
England go right on launching Dreadnoughts, while the
number of British paupers grows larger with the years,
and all British problems become increasingly baffling and
alarming. The naval experts of Russia plan for a new
billion-dollar navy, notwithstanding Russia's national debt
is four and one-quarter billion dollars, and to pay her
current expenses she is compelled to borrow seventy-five
million dollars every year. With millions of her people
on the verge of starvation, and beggars swarming through
the streets of her cities and round the stations of her
railways, the naval experts go on asking new appropriations
for guns.
"The terror of a patient who is suffering from mental
derangement is often pathetic. Surround him with granite
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walls, ten in number, and every wall ten feet thick, and
he will still insist that he is unprotected. So it is with
the militarist. No nation has ever yet voted appropriations
sufficient to quiet his uneasy heart. England's formula
of naval strength has for some time been: The
British navy in capital ships must equal the next two
strongest navies, plus ten per cent. But notwithstanding
the British navy is today in battleships and cruisers and
torpedo boats almost equal to the next three strongest
navies, never has England's security been so precarious,
according to her greatest military experts, as today. It
has been discovered at the eleventh hour that her mighty
navy is no safeguard at all, unless backed up by a citizen
army of at least a million men.
"It was once the aim to protect England against probably
combinations against her. The ambition now is to protect
her against all possible combinations. In the words of a
high authority in the British army, she must protect herself
not only against the dangers she has any reason to
expect, but also against those which nobody expects.
TIME OF REVOLUTION AND TROUBLE
"Like many another fever, militarism grows by what
it feeds on, and unless checked by heroic measures is
certain to burn the patient up. Men in a delirium seldom
have a sense of humor. The world is fearfully grim to
them, and life a solemn and tragic thing. They express
absurdities with a sober face, and make ridiculous assertions
without a smile. It may be that the militarists are
in a sort of delirium. At any rate, they publish articles
entitled, "Armies the Real Promoters of Peace," without
laughing aloud at the grotesqueness of what they are
doing.
Bereft of reason are the nations by Satan's ingenious
and terrible final beclouding of the minds of men.
"The militarist is comic in his seriousness. He says
that if you want to keep the peace you must prepare for
war, and yet he knows that where men prepare for war
by carrying bowie knives, peace is a thing unheard of,
and that where every man is armed with a revolver, the
list of homicides is longest. He declares his belief in
kindly feelings and gentle manners, and proceeds at once
to prove that a nation ought to make itself look as ferocious
as possible. In order to induce nations to be gentlemen,
he would have them all imitate the habits of rowdies.
To many persons this seems ludicrous, to a militarist
it is no joke. He is a champion of peace, but he wants
to carry a gun. The man who paces up and down my
front pavement with a gun on his shoulder may have
peaceful sentiments, but he does not infuse peace into me.
It does not help matters for him to shout out every few
minutes, "I will not hurt you if you behave yourself," for
I do not know his standard of good behavior, and the
very sight of the gun keeps me in a state of chronic alarm.
But the militarist says that, for promoting harmonious
sentiments and peaceful emotions, there is nothing equal
to an abundance of well-constructed guns.
"A droll man indeed is the militarist. What matters it
what honeyed words the King of England and the German
Kaiser interchange, so long as each nation hears constantly
the launching by the other of a larger battleship?
And even though Prince Bulow may say to Mr. Asquith
a hundred times a week, "We mean no harm," and Mr.
Asquith may shout back, "We are your friends," so long
as London and Berlin are never beyond earshot of soldiers,
who are practicing how to shoot to kill, just so long will
England and Germany be flooded with the gossip of hatred,
and thrown into hysteria by rumors of invasion and
carnage.
THE WORLD GOING CRAZY
"Like many other diseases, militarism is contagious. One
nation can be infected by another until there is an epidemic
round the world. A parade of battleships can
kindle fires in the blood of even peaceful peoples, and increase
naval appropriations in a dozen lands. Is it possible,
some one asks, for a world to become insane? That
a community can become crazy was proved by Salem, in
the days of the witchcraft delusion; that a city can lose
its head was demonstrated by London, at the time of the
Gunpowder Plot; that a continent can become the victim
of an hallucination was shown when Europe lost its desire
to live, and waited for the end of the world in the year 1000.
Why should it be counted incredible that many nations,
bound together by steam and electricity, should fall under
the spell of a delusion, and should act for a season like a
man who has gone mad? But is it not true that the world
has gone mad? The masses of men are sensible; but at
present the nations are in the clutches of the militarists,
and no way of escape has yet been discovered. The deliverance
will come as soon as men begin to think and
examine the sophistries with which militarism has flooded
the world.
"Certain facts will surely, some day, burn themselves
into the consciousness of all thinking men. The expensiveness
of the armed peace is just beginning to catch the
eye of legislators. The extravagance of the militarists will
bring about their ruin. They cry for battleships at ten million
dollars each, and Parliament or Congress votes them.
But later on it is explained that battleships are worthless
without cruisers, cruisers are worthless without torpedo
boats, torpedo boats are worthless without torpedo-boat
destroyers, all these are worthless without colliers, ammunition
boats, hospital boats, repair boats; and these altogether
are worthless without deeper harbors, longer
docks, more spacious navy yards. And what are all these
worth without officers and men, upon whose education
millions of dollars have been lavished? When at last the
navy has been fairly launched, the officials of the army
come forward and demonstrate that a navy, after all, is
worthless unless it is supported by a colossal land force.
Thus are the governments led on, step by step, into a
treacherous morass, in which they are at first entangled,
and finally overwhelmed.
"All the great nations are today facing deficits, caused
in every case by the military and naval experts. Into what
a tangle the finances of Russia and Japan have been
brought by militarists is known to everybody. Germany
has, in a single generation, increased her national debt
from eighteen million dollars to more than one billion
dollars. The German Minister of Finance looks wildly
round in search of new sources of national income. Financial
experts confess that France is approaching the limit
of her sources of revenue. Her deficit is created by her
[R4414 : page 181]
army and navy. The British government is always seeking
for new devices by means of which to fill a depleted
treasury. Her Dreadnoughts keep her poor. Italy has for
years staggered on the verge of bankruptcy because she
carries an overgrown army on her back. Even our own
rich republic faces this year a deficit of over a hundred
million dollars, largely due to the one hundred and thirty
millions we are spending on our navy. Mr. Cortelyou has
called our attention to the fact that while in thirty years
we have increased our population by 85 per cent., and our
wealth by 185 per cent., we have increased our national
expenses by 400 per cent.
U. S. DEBT
Largest in....................1865--$2,680,647,869.74
This year will probably exceed 1865, due to military
expenses. The nation's wealth is $116,000,000,000.
"It is within those thirty years that we have spent one
billion dollars on our navy. And the end is not yet. The
Secretary of the Navy has recently asked for twenty-seven
additional vessels for the coming year, four of which are
battleships at ten million dollars each, and he is frank to
say that these twenty-seven are only a fraction of the
vessels to be asked for later on. We have already, built or
building, thirty-one first-class battleships, our navy ranking
next to Great Britain, Germany standing third, France
fourth, and Japan fifth: but never has the naval lobby at
Washington been so voracious and so frantic for additional
safeguards of the peace as today.
"The militarists are peace-at-any-price men. They are
determined to have peace even at the risk of national
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bankruptcy. Everything good in Germany, Italy, Austria,
England and Russia is held back by the confiscation of the
proceeds of industry carried on for the support of the army
and navy. In the United States the development of our resources
is checked by this same fatal policy. We have
millions of acres of desert land to be irrigated, millions of
acres of swamp land to be drained, thousands of miles of
inland waterways to be improved, harbors to be deepened,
canals to be dug, and forests to be safeguarded, and yet
for all these works of cardinal importance we can afford
only a pittance. We have not sufficient money to pay
decent salaries to our United States judges, or to the men
who represent us abroad. We have pests, implacable and
terrible, like the gypsy moth, and plagues like tuberculosis,
for whose extermination millions of money are needed at
once.
"On every hand we are hampered and handicapped, because
we are spending two-thirds of our enormous revenues
on pensions for past wars, and on equipment for wars yet
to come. The militarists begrudge every dollar that does
not go into army or navy. They believe that all works of
internal improvement ought to be paid for by the selling
of bonds, even the purchase of sites for new post-offices
being made possible by mortgaging the future. They
never weary of talking of our enormous national wealth,
and laugh at the niggardly mortals who do not believe
in investing it in guns. Why should we not spend as great
a proportion of our wealth on military equipment as the
other nations of the world? This is their question, and
the merchants and farmers will answer it some day.
"This delusion threatens to become as mischievous as it
is expensive. Every increase in the American navy
strengthens the militarists in London, Berlin, and Tokio.
The difficulty of finding a reason for an American navy
increases the mischief. Why should the United States
have a colossal navy? No one outside the militarists can
answer. Because there is no ascertainable reason for this
un-American policy, the other American countries are becoming
frightened. Brazil has just laid down an extravagant
naval programme, for the proud Republic of the South
cannot consent to lie at the mercy of the haughty Republic
of the North. The new departure of Brazil has bewitched
Argentina from the vision which came to her before the
statue of Christ, which she erected high up amid the Andes,
and has fired her with a desire to rival in her battleships
her ambitious military neighbor. We first of all have
established militarism in the Western world, and are by our
example dragging weaker nations into foolish and suicidal
courses, checking indefinitely the development of two
continents.
"Our influence goes still further. It sets Australia blazing,
and shoves Japan into policies which she cannot afford.
But we cannot harm foreign nations without working lasting
injury on ourselves. The very battleships which recently
kindled the enthusiasm of children in South America,
Australia, and Japan, also stirred the hearts of American
boys and girls along our Atlantic and Pacific seaboards,
strengthening in them impulses and ideals of an
Old World which struggled and suffered before Jesus came.
It is children who receive the deepest impressions from
pageants and celebrations, and who can measure the damage
wrought upon the world by the parade of American
battleships? Children cannot look upon symbols of brute
force, extolled and exalted by their elders, without getting
the impression that a nation's power is measured by the
calibre of its guns, and that its influence is determined by
the explosive force of its shells. A fleet of battleships
gives a wrong impression of what America is, and conceals
the secret which has made America great. Children do not
know that we became a great world-power without the
assistance of either army or navy, building ourselves up
on everlasting principles by means of our schools and
our churches. The down-pulling force of our naval pageant
was not needed in a world already dragged down to low
levels by the example of ancient nations, entangled by degrading
traditions from which they are struggling to escape.
The notion that this exhibition of battleships has added to
our prestige among men whose opinion is worthy of consideration,
or has made the world love us better, is only
another feature of the militarist delusion."
* * *
[The foregoing was written by C. E. Jefferson and published
by the American Association for International Conciliation.
It is issued with the endorsement of the forty-eight
Directors of said Association who are amongst the
most prominent American citizens. The interspersed
comments in bold-faced type are ours.--Editor].
CHURCH FEDERATION PROGRESSING
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The national organization for church federation, which
met in Philadelphia last December, and whose 450 delegates
in a general way represented seventeen millions of
Protestants, is slowly but surely moving.
The resolution of the national organization was that
branches of the work should be established at Chicago,
Atlanta and Denver, while the national headquarters should
continue in New York. It was in harmony with these decisions
that the Chicago branch was organized on May
6th. It appointed a district superintendent for its territory,
with local advisory committees on Temperance, The
Church and Modern Industry, Family Life, Sunday Observance,
The Immigrant Problem, Home Missions, Foreign
Missions, International Relations--to carry out locally
just what the national committees propose shall be generally
carried out. One of the committees will be expected
to keep in close touch with labor, not merely along spiritual
lines, but also in temporal matters. The proposition is
that by thorough organization of the religious work in
every large city of the United States, all denominational
rivalry shall be eliminated, and everything adverse to
Christianity or to the Federated Churches shall be opposed.
It will not be an organic union of the denominations, in
which they would lose their individuality, but it will be a
combination for advice and co-operation.
Thus we have the not unreasonable proposition. Who
can tell the ultimate results of this federating? Its power
will be felt in politics, and all the little denominations will
be practically frozen out, and their people ostracized, if
not persecuted. The result will be the loss of individuality
in religious matters, and undoubtedly a great loss in
spirituality.
====================
Satan's kingdom, to make way for the Prince of Peace.
ANGEL OF LIGHT
ADVERSARY'S METHODS AND ADVICE
Smallest since, in............1891--$1,546,961,695.61
Now...........................1909--$2,637,913,747.04