[Socialism As It Is by William English Walling]@TWC D-Link book
Socialism As It Is

CHAPTER VI
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A government bureau supervises the industry, sees that the prices and allotments are observed, examines new mines to determine their capacity, and readjusts allotments as new mines reach the producing stage....
"But the radical features of the law are not completed in the foregoing description.

The bill having reduced potash prices, the mine owners threatened to recoup themselves by reducing wages.

But the members of the Reichstag were not to be balked by such threats; they could legislate about wages just as easily as about prices and allotments.

So they amended the bill by providing that if any owner should reduce wages without the consent of his employees, his allotment should be restricted in the corresponding proportion....
"While the law is indeed decidedly Socialistic in tendency, it is not yet Socialism.

It hedges private property about with sharper restrictions than would be thought justifiable in countries where, as in the United States, the creed of individualism is still vigorous; and yet it is, in effect, hardly more than a piece of social reform legislation, though a more radical one than we have hitherto seen....
"In Germany, 'the individual withers' and the world of State and Society, with its multifarious demands upon him, 'is more and more.' This is, of course, a Socialistic tendency, but the substitute that the Germans are finding for unlimited competition is not radical Socialism, but organization....
"The State, of course, takes hold of the individual life more broadly, with more systematic purpose.


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