The Policy of a Philosophy
By C. H. DOUGLAS
An Address to a Conference of Social Crediters
in London, on June 26, 1937.
First of all, may I express my great pleasure
in being able to talk, not to a general audience, but to a company
of friends.
That is a special pleasure which I have not very frequently, consciously,
given myself, because the're is not very much sense in talking to the
converted, and it is a harder and more difficult job sometimes to talk
to a slightly sceptical audience.
But this is a pleasant occasion, and I am very grateful for the opportunity.
I don't know that anything that I am going to say to you is of any
transcendant importance. It is very largely a question of emphasising
things which, in one way or another, you know probably fairly well
at the present time, but which, like so many other things connected
with this subject in which we are all interested, have certain very
subtle emphases.
I have come to the conclusion, and others in the Social Credit movement,
so-called, have come to the conclusion with me I think, about these
very slight differences of understanding - the very slight differences
of emphasis one may place upon certain things which are quite familiar
in one form, but which if you put a slightly different emphasis on
them, appear in a different light - that it is, indeed, in this different
emphasis that the most important thing which we have to contribute
may be said to reside; and to begin with, I am going to define two
words which will be used a good deal in what I have to say, and a good
deal in what you all have to do, and the first of them is "policy".
We have had a certain amount of correspondence in regard to the use
of this word "policy", and it is not a bad thing, I think, to
go back to the etymological roots of a word; it may not lead to anything,
but sometimes it does.
Policy is allied to "police" and has, I think, much the same meaning.
The just, original meaning was that it was Civil Government applied
to a recognised objective. There is a meaning of objective, a strong
essence of objective, in the word "policy". It is not merely administration.
It is actually, if you like, governmental action, but it is action
taken towards a recognised and conscious objective, and it is in that
sense that we use the word "policy"; it is a little more, but it comprehends
and comprises the word objective. That is the first word.
What is Religion? The second word that I am going to define, for my
own purpose if you like, is the word "religion". Now the
word "religion", again going back to its etymological derivations,
derives from a word meaning to bind back; it is related to the word
ligament, and so forth, and sometimes it is defined as meaning to bind.
Well, it obviously would have a slightly unpleasant flavour if you
define it as being to bind, but I think that the agreed definition,
its original meaning, was to bind back.
In the sense that I am going to use it, and I think I will be using
it correctly, the word religion has to do with a conception of reality.
It is the binding back either of action, or of policy - particularly
of policy in the sense that I was using the word policy - to reality.
In so far as it means to bind back, to bring into close relation again,
and in that sense I am going to use it, religion is any sort of doctrine
which is based on an attempt to relate action to some conception of
reality. It does not necessarily mean, for instance, that your conception
of reality is a correct one, but it does mean that you are postulating
that there is something which we refer to as real, and you are basing
your policy upon that reality.
Not very long ago, a very competent member of the Social Credit Movement,
in whose opinion I place great faith, said he thought the morale of
the Secretariat and, on the whole, the Movement which was closely associated
with it, was extraordinarily good, but that he thought the morale of
the Social Credit Movement as a whole was bad, and he wanted ultimately
to consider that state of affairs, from what it arose, and what could
be done about it.
Well now, first as to the facts. A little later, I shall come to one
more definition of what we mean by Social Credit - but, first, as to
the facts.
In a great many people's minds, Social Credit is a scheme of monetary
reform, and the explanation of why any scheme of monetary reform at
the present time is having rather heavy going, of course, is because
we are all suffering under a wave of so called " prosperity" and obviously,
if your conception of Social Credit is that it is merely a scheme of
monetary reform you will follow the curve of monetary reform. When
things are bad monetary reform is always on the upgrade, and on the
downgrade, at any rate temporarily, when things are a little bit better,
and although I think we should all agree, those of us who really know
anything about what is the position of this country, that there is
a great deal more hot air than prosperity at the present time, the
fact is indubitable that through rearmament, and things of that kind,
there is more money being distributed and people are better off.
I think it is very patchy, but at the same time, there is such a state
of affairs; so that in the narrow sense of a scheme of monetary reform,
it is perfectly easy to see why, just at the moment, we should not
be especially progressive or making the headway perhaps, that people
think we ought to make.
But, in my opinion, it is a very superficial definition of Social Credit
that it is merely a scheme of monetary reform; and this is where the
definitions I insisted on come in to some extent. Social Credit
is the Policy of a Philosophy. It is something based on what
you profoundly believe - what at any rate, I profoundly believe, and
hope you will - to be a portion of reality. It is probably a very small
portion, but we have glimpsed a. portion of reality, and that conception
of reality is a philosophy, and the action that we take based upon
that conception is a policy, and that policy is Social Credit.
It is in fact a policy based upon a philosophy, which is, incidentally,
why, in many cases, it is no use arguing with many people about the
techniques of Social Credit, because they don't agree with your philosophy;
often they don' t even understand it, and, therefore, what you say
in regard to policy and techniques sounds like a loud noise to them,
chiefly without any sense; and the best thing to do in the circumstances
is, of course, to agree to differ. Cavaliers
and Roundheads About the middle of the 17th Century we had a Civil
War in this country between the Stuarts who were the protagonists of
a theory of the Divine Right of Kings, and the Roundheads - the Whigs
and the Puritans.
It is a very unfortunate thing that very often the best causes have
the worst protagonists, for there could probably not have been worse
protagonists of what in one particular sense was a very sound thesis,
than the Stuarts.
I am not going to suggest that there is any reality about the Divine
Right of Kings, because whatever there may have been in antediluvian
ages, no one would be foolish enough to suggest that now. But the
point I want to make is this: It was a perfectly logical proposition
to have a civil war about the Divine Right of Kings, and the State
Church- the particular sort of church - and even to have an idea
that the King could impress a religion upon the country, and at the
same time have a particular policy.
If there is one thing which seems to me beyond dispute, it is that
you cannot have a policy
(here I use the word again in the way in which I have defined it),
the policy of a country, policy of a race, or of a nation, without
having a philosophy behind it.
You cannot have a bridge without a model and drawing behind it, or
without having had a desire to have a bridge. You might as well say
the Sydney bridge just grew although nobody had ever said they wanted
a bridge. I am absolutely convinced myself that there must be somewhere
behind the policy a philosophy, or you cannot have a policy.
Now, if you remember, the religious aspect of the Civil War was freedom
of conscience, so called; in other words, you were to be allowed,
and you very rapidly did have, under the Protectorate, 57 religions,
all different, and the only reason that you did not have 570 religions
was that people would not think quickly enough. I am not saying that
any one of point I am trying to make is this - that the philosophies
was either right or wrong. I am not interested.
The rather mind of the people in the country became completely chaotic,
and that left the way open to the dominance of a philosophy which
was not any one of them. I am not suggesting that the philosophy
before the rise of the Protectorate was a right philosophy. What
I am saying is that the attempt of the Stuarts was to have a unified
principle behind their policy, and that it was completely offset
under the plea of freedom of conscience, out of which there could
not possibly come a coherent policy, nor did there. The Perils
of Abstractionism The rise of the Protectorate, as, of course,
we know, was financed by Manasseh ben Israel; and the first Act of
the Protectorate was to re admit the Jews into England, possibly
a good and sound thing, but it had the undoubted effect of elevating
Whiggism, which with one very short interval, that of the Restoration,
has been dominant in this country ever since; and Whiggism is abstractionism.
I am not here as a protagonist of Christianity (in fact I am eventually
going to talk about "Local Objectives", * and I am getting there,
though you may not think so!), but Whiggism is abstractionism, and
this country, which is allegedly a Christian country, is probably
the greatest exponent of abstractionism as a national policy in the
world to-day. The whole of our protestations as to the way in which
we govern our actions allege it to be Christian - as I say, I am
not here as a protagonist of Christianity, I am looking at this from
a very different point of view - but our actions in this country
- our penal system, our industrial system, our methods of dealing
with criminals and our methods of dealing with business - actually
have no relationship whatever to Christianity or anything which could
be remotely related to it at all. *It is possible that this is
to carry broad-mindedness to excess in the light of subsequent events
.-C .H .D . Our policy, so far as it can be' defined, and the
policy of this country, by common consent of all other countries,
is the most difficult to disentangle, is related philosophically
to the adulation of money. Money is an abstraction. Money is a thing
of no value whatever. Money is nothing but an accounting system.
Money is nothing worthy of any attention at all, but we base the
whole of our actions, the whole of our policy, on the pursuit of
money; and the consequence, of course, is that we become the prey
of mere abstractions like the necessity for providing employment.
That is where Whiggism is so successful in that it puts forward in
a moral form something which it is extraordinarily difficult to disentangle
from its slyness, something which, in fact, it is not really aiming
at all. What is being aimed at so far as you can put it in a few
words, is a pyramidal slavery system by which people are kept in
their places, and it is done by elevating things into rewards, and
giving them values which don't exist.
For instance, take the Honours system in this country. Anybody of
common sense knows that these "Honours" often are bought with a cheque.
Well, there is nothing honourable about buying honour with a cheque.
That is abstractionism - pure Whiggism - giving to a thing qualities
which it does not possess.
You may remember, of course, that after a short interim while the
Stuarts came back again, and there was the orgy of the Restoration
when James II finally disappeared, William and Mary came to the throne
as nominees of the Whigs.
Well their first action, practically, to which you can attach any
importance at all was the foundation of the Bank of England in 1694,
and from that time, of course, we have been happier and happier every
year !
And that is where we are at the present time. The Indispensable
SanctionNow just as I said to you at Buxton that you had to have
a mechanism by which you could bring the desires of people to impinge
upon the organisation through which things are done and the organisation
through which things are allegedly done, or could be done, in this
country, is the Parliamentary system - just so you have to recognise
(and this is nothing fresh to the people I have been inflicting my
ideas more closely on for the past few years) that you have to build
up in some way or other something which will prevent a state of affairs
coming into existence such that, when you have, by the efforts of
a few devoted people, shall we say, got together all the signatures
which are necessary to place pressure upon the House of Commons to
make them do what you want, you can be frustrated by a change in
the rules.
The danger which I have always foreseen, and which under certain
circumstances would be inevitable, and even mathematically certain,
would be for them to say:
"All right ! you have got to the position where you can get what
you want,
so now we'll abolish the Parliamentary system."
Behind any mechanism, you always have to have a sanction. It is the
sanction which is the important thing. If you have the sanction,
the mechanism can always be devised.
You have, in the Electoral Campaign, * the mechanism which will deal
with the Parliamentary system, but you have no sanction to prevent
the Parliamentary system being abolished, and a dictatorship, say,
set up.
We should be lacking in judgment if we were to go forward without
doing certain things along parallel lines, and this does not in the
slightest degree detract from my inflexible opinion that we have
got to push the Electoral Campaign right through, but we have to
make sure that when we have won the game under the rules of the game
as they are at present, the rules are not changed.
In one of those dreadful books which are always being quoted against
me - Credit Power and Democracy or some other - I think I said that
the essential nature of a Social Credit state was a democracy of
consumers accrediting, and being served by an aristocracy of producers.
Now that is the materialistic aspect of certain relationships to
which we think we have claims in reality and I don't want you to
take my word for it, but to consider it for yourselves whether, in
fact, in the world that is working today, there is anything working
successfully which does not really work along these lines.
Nobody knows of a successful democratic producing concern. There
is no such thing, or at least, I have never heard of it.
It certainly does not exist in the Co-operative Movement, or in the
Labour Movement.
On the other hand, we have working today, to a certain extent, with
powerful reservations, a democracy of consumers.
The democracy of consumers is not properly financed, but it is a
fact that no producing concern can go on producing against the inflexible
dislike of all its consumers; to put it plainly, it cannot sell its
goods, so it goes out of business. * A campaign among electors
who were willing to pledge themselves to vote only for candidates
for Parliament undertaking to secure a stated objective chosen by
the electors - in this case the abolition (not redistribution) of
poverty . Inaugurated in 1934, following Major Douglas's Buxton address,
the movement, in various forms, continued until the outbreak of war.
Its principles are still applicable.The Power to make DecisionsExamine
that statement for yourselves.
Does it appear to be, and is it, in fact, in the nature of things
that all producers must be hierarchical, that you must have a grade
of precedence in all people employed in producing, so that you can
always get a decision, so that there is always the possibility of
a decision?
Anybody who has any experience of very large undertakings will probably
know as well as I do, and I have some experience of large undertakings,
that the whole problem of making these undertakings successful is
to devise a method by which you get quick decisions. That is where
the big undertakings in this country, such as the railways, are unquestionably
failing at the present time.
The distance between where things happen and the man who has the
power to say, "Do this about it", is too big. There is too great
a length of time before decisions come through; that is the great
problem, and in order to solve it you have got to have hierarchy
combined with the power to make decisions quickly.
Now it goes without saying that if you are going to devote a very
considerable proportion of the lifetime of people to the economic
process, as we do at the present time, though I hope we shall not
continue to do so, you must have agreement on policy. We have all
been over this before and know, therefore, that it is in the region
of policy that democracy has its proper function, not in that of
method, or, as you might say, production.
Now we are getting a little nearer to the Social Credit Movement
and our various objectives.
Whilst what I have been saying has received, at large, a certain
amount of lip service, when it actually comes to doing something
about the Social Credit Movement - and you must remember that actually
doing something about Social Credit falls quite naturally into the
relationship of producer and consumer, just exactly as everything
else does, because when you have got to do something everybody cannot
take executive positions - you have got to have this fundamental
relationship which is one of the primary conceptions of the policy
of Social Credit.
That you must have policy democratic and execution hierarchical is
one of our fundamental conceptions in Social Credit; yet when we
actually come to the point in which we are doing things, quite a
large proportion of the Social Credit Movement falls into the misconception
of producer and consumer exemplified by an American baseball crowd.
"A good time is had by all," telling people second by second exactly
what those on the field are doing and should do, and how much better
those sitting in the stalls could do it than those who are playing.
I don' t complain, because, as a matter of fact, I have nothing to
complain of - far from it; but I am simply pointing out that in my
opinion, to get a thoroughly sound morale right through the whole
of the Social Credit Movement, this conception - which is one of
the first and most elementary conceptions of how things can possibly
be done, how it is in the nature of reality of things to be done
- has to be grasped first of all.
If anybody can show me a single exception, in industry or even in
games, in which that conception does not stand, then I shall be very
pleased to reconsider my views, if I consider what they see a just
example. I don't know of any example myself.
Now we are getting still nearer to what we call Local Objectives.
The object of the Local Objective idea is at least threefold, but
if I had to place emphasis on one aspect of it more than others,
it is that it is a discipline, or an exercise.
You will remember when I seemed a long way from the subject of Local
Objectives that I said you could not have a policy without a philosophy.
You could not have a country which was pursuing a consistent policy
unless somewhere at the back of it there was a consistent philosophy.
Now the first part of this policy based upon a philosophy that I
should like to see driven home is the reality of this relationship
between the people who are doing things and the people who are empowering
them to do them, and I myself cannot see any better way than trying
if it works.
It is a well known proposition amongst engineers in particular, that
when you are trying something, which is in some of its aspects novel,
you want to try it on the smallest scale you can to begin with; make
a model of it and see how that works.
First make a drawing, then a plan, and if it does not work well on
the model, alter the model, until it does work, and in doing that,
you will not only find out that you can do certain things, but you
will get into the minds of the people who do things in that way the
absolute certainty that they will always succeed if they proceed
along these lines. The Right Use of Tools The Local Objective
proposal, then, is in no sense something to replace the Electoral
Campaign. It is something which has, as I say, several aspects. In
the first place, it gets something useful done. You pick out a local
objective which wants achievement, and then you definitely train
yourselves to achieve that objective in a particular way by the tools
which on a small scale are those which could achieve the results
you desire from the Electoral Campaign; and when you have got a sufficient
number of people to believe in the only way that belief is useful,
that is to say, belief founded on successful experiment and knowledge
- they will not tolerate a change in the rules of the game on the
larger scale of the Electoral Campaign to which ultimately you will
have to address yourselves.
It is only by getting this knowledge, the knowledge which is gained
by discipline, and thus only by accepting this discipline, that you
will become strong enough to carry out a successful objective on
a large scale - only by a knowledge which first of all imposes upon
yourself the grasp of the fact that you must succeed if you will
first of all be democratic about your objective, let us say, to have
a lamp post moved from one side of the road to the other, and get
people together to say:
"We will have this done, and will resolve ourselves into
a firm body and
give orders for getting that lamp post moved from the left
to the right",
and thereafter leave the technician to do the job in his own way.
You will succeed, I am absolutely convinced, and having succeeded,
you will say: "This is the goods - if we can do it in this little
thing, we can do it in a bigger thing, and when we do it in a bigger
thing, we will not have the rules of the game changed." Only
Right Action MattersThat really is all I have of great importance
to say to you. There is nothing new about it. What I feel is that
we have got to the stage in which we must get out of a great many
people' s minds the idea that Social Credit is an unlimited license
for what the Americans call a "free for all," that in some extraordinary
sort of way, by uttering the word " Social Credit" or saying " I
am a Social Crediter"
or saying "finance is rotten" and so forth, you can achieve the millennium.
You cannot achieve the millennium any more than anything else which
has been achieved except by taking action along lines which will
achieve it. All that you can say about Social Credit, either in its
monetary aspects, or in these aspects I am discussing tonight, is
that we see - and I profoundly believe that we do see - just a little
bit of the way in which the universe does in fact act.
We see, through the adulation, what the nature of money is, and knowing
the nature of money, we know what we can make it do, and what we
cannot. Our power is largely in this fact that we know a little,
or believe we know a little - and the sort of belief which made people
fight for religious conviction in the Civil War is an important thing.
The important thing then was not that the religious conviction was
right but that they believed in it.
The trouble now is the people don't know where they are going, nor
how to get there.
We have something we want to achieve so we have to get into our minds
a conception of the mechanism of the universe in order to use it;
whereas, of course, the average man in the street, including the
average politician, the average statesman, and the average person,
does not even know where he is going, much less how to get there.
That is one of the chief explanations of the chaos now, and it leaves
the way clear to those who have a conception of the world they want.
So long as they have a clear-cut conception, together with the use
of the organisation which alone can achieve success, and which is
actually working in the world, they will continue to be the force
which imposes present policy on the world.
That is why the system stays, that is why it achieves the results
it does in the relationship between the democracy of policy, and
the aristocracy of the producer. That is why our present financial
and monetary system hold together.
If the consumers struck, if it were possible for every consumer in
this country to buy nothing for nine months, the whole economic system,
of course, would collapse, and you could make any new one that you
wanted.
It is the relationship which keeps it together, and you have got
to recognise that relationship.
Our new philosophy will change the run of the universe at once. It
will enable you to have a new conception. So if you can do that,
and in my opinion you can do it systematically, you will, in an incredibly
short time, become the most formidable force that the world holds,
because you will have, in my opinion, the sounder philosophy, and
you would have, in that philosophy, a better policy. MAJOR DOUGLAS
ANSWERS QUESTIONS
Questions are given in italics, followed by the answers. A Discipline
to get Results in Association Major Douglas said that the objects
of Local Objectives were threefold and I only gathered one of the "'folds" from
Major Douglas, that is to say, discipline, or training. I am not
quite clear on this. The objects of Local Objectives are threefold.
If properly carried out, it is the training that, in my opinion,
is the most important thing.
The second is that it achieves its objects. It gets something done
which is in itself useful. The object is decided upon before you
start a Local Objective amongst yourselves.
And the third thing is that it is in association that the people
who get involved in one of these things are working together; they
get all the advantages which come from working harmoniously, as far
as it is possible within the limits of human nature, in trying to
achieve a common objective.
Those three things to my mind are of the greatest importance. You
must remember we want to get something done; nothing else is of any
importance at all. I have no more interest in discussing the rights
or wrongs of A plus B than I have in swatting a fly on the wall.
We want to do something, and to my mind, this is the way to begin.
This is a laboratory experiment. An Exercise in Sovereignty. Would
you emphasise the link between Local Objectives and the application
of the Electoral Campaign?
The exact form of the link to some extent must be affected by what
is chosen as a Local Objective, but the connection, in any case,
is quite clear. In the first place, the discipline required is
exactly the same in both cases.
You have got to stop talking about what you want, and take the
action which is necessary to get what you want. In the Electoral
Campaign, the action is perfectly simple; you have to get an undertaking
on the part of a sufficient number of people to bring effective
pressure, by methods which are perfectly well known to everybody
here, to bear upon the Member of Parliament so that he will do
what you want, that is to say, you have got to make your Member
of Parliament a representative,not a delegate.
I think the point that I have just made is so important that I
will enlarge upon it. A Digression on Democracy The whole
technique, as I see it, by which power has been filched from the
House of Parliament, has been a technique for making it quite impossible
for the average Member of Parliament to give an intelligent opinion
upon more than one half per cent. of the things he is asked questions
about. All sorts of technical questions come up in Bills which
eventually become Acts of Parliament, upon which it would be utterly
impossible for a really well trained man who has spent the whole
of his life in any particular business to give decisions in the
time that the average Member of Parliament has to give them.
Now the business of the House of Commons is concerned with the
country. The business of this country is the business of 47 millions
of people, of whom 11 or 12 millions are working in industries
of various kinds. The questions which come up in Parliament are
obviously immensely remote from the place where the action takes
place, and to expect them to be decided by Members of Parliament
who have been elected by vote (even if they were really elected
by the process by which people think they are being elected), would
be sufficiently grotesque. But when you think that each one of
them is carefully vetted to take care that he knows nothing about
things which are likely to be dangerous, the thing is even more
grotesque.
The consequence is that we have got now in the House of Commons
nothing but a rubber stamp for actions taken by the Cabinet.
Now the Cabinet probably is a little closer to what you might call
real things. I should think that where you have people like Mr.
Churchill or Mr. Chamberlain, who have had a lifetime of Cabinet
work, they have got the technique of knowing what it is they cannot
do. They never try to do a thing over the head of Montagu Norman,
for example. The result of that is completely to stultify any chance
of democratic action at all. The only place where democracy impinges
upon the organisation of this country is through the House of Commons,
because the House of Commons rests on the alleged power of the
Purse.
The power of the Purse has now been boiled down to putting a rubber
stamp on a taxation paper. It is impossible to give an opinion
to a delegate, that is to say, to decide for yourself as to what
ought to be done, and yet, at the same time, assume that he is
a delegate. When your Member of Parliament says, "I will vote for
this sort of scheme or that," you should say instead, "You are
not concerned with any technical problems at all - you are only
concerned with seeing that we get what we want. We definitely forbid
you to vote on a technical matter. What we tell you to do is to
command the people whose business it is to carry out the technical
matter. If it is a question of finance, say to the bankers, and
the big industrialists - the people who are actually doing the
work - "You are responsible for methods. Do anything you like,
but we will have such and such a result. We are here to get that
result."
The fundamental fact is the sovereignty of the people, but at the
present time we are not exercising our sovereignty at all.
This is beyond question. If you exercise your sovereignty you surely
would not be landed in a state of affairs in which you cannot have
even moderate prosperity without preparing for another war! That
cannot be a popular policy.
We are led by a lot of people who don't intend to let you have
an opportunity of forming a policy, and therefore put before you
a highly technical proposition upon which you cannot possibly give
an opinion.
Your proper reply is not to say, "Yes," or "No,"; but,
"I won't have a technical proposition put to me, but will
have certain results."
You would not allow a railway company to put up to you technical
reasons as to why it should shut down all the trains on Sunday.
You would say, "That is your trouble, you find a way to run them."
Exactly the same thing is true in regard to the business of the
country. Just as long as you have these six hundred odd Members
of Parliament day after day considering things which they cannot
possibly understand, and on which, even if they did understand
them, they could not agree, because you can never get unanimity
of opinion on a technical method in an assembly of that sort, you
will continue to have the shortest way, and the cleverest way,
and in my opinion, a conscious way by which democracy can be stultified,
as it has been.
Now, having elaborated that at great length, to come back to the
relation between
Local Objectives and the Electoral Campaign:
A Local Objective is a training of a kind which is particularly
sympathetic, in my opinion, to the British mind, which is an inductive
mind, and not a deductive mind. It is a training, and in seeing
how it works people can learn to do the same thing with their Member
of Parliament, and that is the proper thing to do.
A Local Objective consists of getting together a lot of people,
organising them, for the objective they want, getting signatures
to a proper specification of the objective desired, and sending
that specification through the proper channels to the technical
official who deals, let us say, with lamp posts, telling him, "We
are not interested in how you do it. We don't want to know about
lamp posts. All we say is that the lamp post has got to be shifted
from one side of the street to the other."
In exactly the same way, when you have got the Electoral Campaign
in a position to control about 370 of the Members of Parliament,
they will take the orders of their constituents. And, mind you,
most of them agree that this is the right thing for them to do,
but they say they never get the orders.
"How can we carry out your orders when we never get them?"
When you have got 370 Members of Parliament in that position, they
must do what you say.
The House of Commons has the power, by voting £16 millions,
and giving six months' notice, to take away the Charter of the
Bank of England, if you want to do it that way, but only when you
have got the 370 Members of Parliament.
Anyway, it would be cheap at the price. Personality and Character
in OrganisationMost businesses, Governments, and all forms
and processes of living, are controlled by personalities . I have
always felt that I would like Major Douglas to explain how the
will of the people can be mobilised, and how, with so many individuals
who have got personality, this mobilised will can be brought to
bear, except by persons with the will to resist and defeat it.
Everything depends on personality. The whole world depends on personality.
The first thing which is essential in regard to the organisation
of any movement, and that sort of thing, in my opinion, is to depend
first, last and all the time upon character.
Now that sounds like a platitude, but it is not quite as simple
as it sounds. If you start off with a clear conception of what
the relationships which govern an organisation are, you will attract
into that organisation. the right sort of character to suit it.
It is the problem all over again of the hen and the egg - as to
which came first. If you get the wrong sort of personality, it
is very unlikely, out of vacuum, that he will devise the right
sort of organisation. Conversely, if you have got the organisation
of the right kind, you will get into it the right kind of personality.
To my mind, the whole thing depends upon this question of reality.
If you are working in accordance with something which is real (and
when I say real, I mean something which is in the nature of the
universe, in the same way as the law of gravity is in the nature
of the universe), you will get results which cannot be got even
if you are working along proper lines for something which is unreal.
I believe the whole philosophy of the modern world is essentially
unreal.
Never before have we been going through such an orgy of calculated
delusions raised upon a conception, which is consciously vicious,
of what is important in the world; and up to a certain point it
succeeds. There is a curious potency in a correct technique, applied
to an essential proposition or objective, which makes it succeed.
Good will always be vanquished by evil, so long as evil
understands its tools better than good;
but if good can only be taught to use its tools correctly,
the good will vanquish evil.
And what I mean by good is something which is just as much in the
nature of things, as gravity is in regard to physics. In my opinion,
the same thing is true of things that we usually talk of purely
metaphysically, and if you get the right science of metaphysics
- and this essence of social dynamics is for the moment one very
small part of it - applied by the right type of personality, then
the right type of personality will be attracted, but not if you
don't know the proper rules of social dynamics. The Power of
Association Would Major Douglas tell us to what extent he
believes that the powers which control us would change the rules
of the game and abolish the Parliamentary institution, as they
did in Newfoundland?
I think they would be guided entirely by practical considerations.
The thing is a question of manoeuvres for position.
If you can get a sufficient number of people, for instance, in
this country forming a political organisation such as there is
in France, and at the same time get the ideas that I am endeavouring
to put forward tonight into the minds of the people in that political
organisation, you would most infallibly prevent any change in the
rules of the game.
Now the political organisation of France can be put into half a
dozen words.
The local prefect is practically all powerful, but he has his déjeuner
in the café, and if he is not functioning properly,
he gets a damn bad time at lunch, and that is exactly how you want
to behave. Small and Large Scale
Operations Major Douglas suggested that the Local Objective
Campaign is an exercise in control and practice in using tools.
Major Douglas said that if we can make the model work, the Electoral
Campaign can be done in the same way.
When I was a boy of 16, when they told me how to make a canoe,
I attempted to make one and was very successful, and made a beautiful
thing of sixteen inches. I said to myself, "I can make a bigger
one, and I started, and as far as I know I was doing exactly
the same thing.
But the twisting of the planks against the floor when I was forcing
it into shape made the whole thing fail.
I would like Major Douglas to warn us what we may do wrong in
our Electoral Campaign exercise, although we may be successful
in Local Objectives.
It is perfectly true, as a matter of fact, that there are plenty
of things which will work on a small scale, which will not work
on a large scale. That is a well known defect in the use of models.
For instance, we had a great deal of that to begin with in regard
to aeroplanes. You got all sorts of results in regard to small
scale models which were not at all carried out when you came
to building a big one, and the reason for that is that the relationship
of the edges to the total area, of course, is much greater.
The ratio is much greater in a small thing than it is in a large
thing.
That is another way of saying that if a thing of that kind fails,
when the model has been successful, it fails because you have
omitted taking into consideration some factor which you have
overlooked, otherwise it is bound to succeed.
But the fact is that the whole thing is essentially inductive.
You do a certain thing and you find the first methods that you
apply to it are not quite as successful as you thought they were,
and you change them.
The difficulty which I foresee is one which has been raised,
by people who do not understand it, as a conclusive argument
against the Electoral Campaign. "You can get a whole lot of signatures,
but they don' t mean anything." No Half MeasuresAs put
in that way, it is just plain nonsense but there is a grain of
sense in it, because there is a time lag.
Some have moved and therefore are no longer in that electoral
district, and so on, but the fact is this: If you get a sufficient
number of people who were really convinced in the same way that
they are convinced that they have got to go to work in the morning
- if you could get the same sort of psychology into people's
minds about the Abolition of Poverty - you would most certainly
prevent a change in the rules of the game, and you would also
make those signatures, which some people say are of no value,
of infinite value.
Some years ago I went up to Manchester, I think, six times at
intervals of about a fortnight, and I had a very good lunch at
the expense of about 16 or 18 very prominent business men, and
we discussed the techniques of Social Credit. This was in about
1920, and they were all very attentive and very interested, and
very intelligent, and all that sort of thing.
I was getting on beautifully, and at the end of the last luncheon
one of them looked at his watch and said, "Well, this has been
most interesting, but now I must get back to work."
It is all that sort of thing which is the core of the lack of
morale as far as it exists in the Social Credit Movement . It
is not real, they seem to say, but it is interesting.
It is like reading a good detective story. Sometimes it is even
better than playing bridge, but after all, "I have got to go
to work tomorrow morning." I do sympathise with it.
At the same time we have to get the scale of this thing more
into the scale which was behind those people in the days of the
Civil War, when they were not going to work, but were going to
stick their enemy in the gizzard.
There is no doubt about it, this thing is not going to be done
by soft measures.
We have had a demonstration in Alberta of the fallacy of imagining
that you can make an omelette without breaking eggs, and that
is exactly what most of us want to do. We want to live in a Social
Credit state, complete with hot and cold water laid on, and at
the same time "we must go to work in the morning." Precept
versus PracticeI would like to ask Major Douglas to what
extent in conducting these Local Objective campaigns, must we
drive into the minds of people the connection between the success
of these Campaigns and the principles underlying them. The terms
we have so far had from the Secretariat stress that the aim of
these Campaigns is to raise the sense of sovereignty in individuals,
but that we should not connect practice with principles. I should
agree with them.
The average Englishman hates principles, and he will get the
thread of the story all right if it works. I should not think
of mentioning the word principle. I should say, "Here is the
way to get the lamp-post shifted to the other side," I should
say, "What about trying this with the Member of Parliament?
It seems to have worked with the lamp-post!
The purpose of the Local Objective Campaign is to arouse, by
action, through a correct organisation, a philosophy to dethrone
abstractionism.
With regard to the connection of Social Credit with Local
Objectives, I'm afraid I don' t agree with Major Douglas.
If you are going to get this thing done, and you don' t connect
Social Credit with it, they will connect a party label to
you, and you will lose the whole essence of the work that
is being done.
You will be nominated as a Councillor, and put under a
party label, or as an independent, which is no party at
all. Then you will find that all your work has gone to
the devil. There is a satisfaction of knowing that you
have done something for the people, but that is the only
satisfaction you will get. I am not afraid of saying I'm
a Social Crediter, that I believe in Social Credit. What's
the matter with it, anyway?
There is no principle involved in this at all. My experience
of life, so far as it has been spent in this country, is that
explanations are fatal - it is only because this is what I
call a family gathering that I am making them, and it may be
fatal to the family!
The main thing to do is to tell somebody to do something, and
then let them find out, when you have told them to do it, that
it does, in fact work, and for their own particular purpose
they will draw the explanation that is required, and when you
go to ask them to do something bigger, they will say, "It can
work again."
But if you mention Social Credit, they would say, "Oh! this
is another of these damn financial money things," and drag
into it difficulties which have nothing whatever to do with
it, and then, of course, all sorts of arguments about techniques
arise.
I am inclined to think that the more simple and clear you make
this thing (we have got to go back to school ourselves, and
take the public with us) the easier it will be.
We have completely lost all sense of our relationship with
the State. We are readymade material at the present time for
a dictator. We don't take any interest in our own affairs,
and unless we take interest in our own affairs along proper
lines, you may be certain our rulers will not take any interest
in our affairs, but in their own!
There is only one way in which I can see that you will keep
this thing with sanctions behind it. You must go back to school.
I feel sure it will be impregnable then. We have to do things
very quickly, but you can see the awful example there has been
of endeavouring to do a perfectly sound thing by unsound methods,
and we have got to do it a sound way. A Question of Sanctions
If we regard Local Objectives as a tryout
for children, and having in mind eventually the national objective,
Major Douglas suggests that local bodies of electors should approach
the Executives, the experts, or the Local Authority. I should be
interested to know if he feels that it would be better to try through
the local representative, through the Council, in every town, to
educate people to get a national objective without direct approach
to the expert.
That would be perfectly sound. Nobody has ever suggested that you should
go to the Borough Surveyor about these things, unless there is some
difficulty about going to your representative. Don't regard your Council
as an expert.
By all means use, in every case, the mechanism by which democracy can
impinge on action. There is local action, and national action, the
whole theory being that the very nature of the British Commonwealth
is based on the accepted proposition (we have not got to make the proposition
- it is an accepted proposition) that ultimate sovereignty resides
with the people; and where the theory breaks down is that other people
have been clever enough to stultify it by putting up things to the
sovereign power which no sovereign power can be possibly expected to
decide.
I know of one on two Local Objectives in which the demand has been
sent in a letter to the Local surveyor or Waterworks Manager. I thought
it was a mistake of technique.
What, of course, would happen in a case of that sort would be that
the Local Surveyor or water expert would take it to the Town Councillor
and say, "What about it?" So you might just as well have gone to the
Councillor in the first place. You have no power to dismiss the Borough
Surveyor, but you have the power to dismiss the Town Councillor.
It is sanctions that matter. |