Our Industrial Problems.
47
men and markets. or transport, or other
consequences of our youth, size and iso-
lation. The fundamental problem, here as
elsewhere, is the reconciliation of these
apposing forees. Time and industrial peace
would solve tiie minor problems, were this
nne solved, But this is only a re-statement
of the problem, not a solution. It remains
to inquire by what nieans such a recon-
eciliation would be clfected.
eas, www waves ta dgnore Fis insistence
in the spirit of brotherhood, that we in
the twentieth century are beginning to
glimpse as a solution of all our problems.)
Not even en history do the sceptics base
their claim. As a world-famous lecturer
sald in Sydney the other day: “If I'd
zone to one of those Italian city States of
500 years ago, and told them that one day
their walls would crumble, and Milanese
xd Florentines “would be living together
under one nationality, they would no more
bave believed me than you will believe me
when I say that the vast walls of armas
ment which encase the Powers to-day will
crumble and pass, that people will realise
an ideal of fellowship greater a million
times than the savage impulses of suspicion
and distrust.”
All through the ages there was never a
great cause preached, mever a great ideal
held up before. the people, but found its
followers. It was the same in the Great
War. The men who went did not go only
for fun or adventure or because it was the
expected thing. These motives played
their part, but they saw the war as a
righteous thing, a defence .of something
weak, a needful oposition. to something
cruel and arrogant.
On what grounds then, would it be claims
ad that the great masses serving in one
way or another in the armies of industry
ave incapable of being roused by a great
ideal~the ideal of peace in industry—coms=
mon service for the common weal? Are
they of different flesh from the Crusaders
or the early. Christians, or the tommies in
the last war?
ce
Means of Feconeiliation, ~° 7°
Let us consider a parallel caze, Was it
not a similar problem, and on an equally
vigantic scale, that bought into being the
League of Nations? The League of Na-
tions in an attempt to solve the problem
of mternational war. The grim alternas
tive is war aud vet more war, increasingly
horrible and increasingly cHicient in whole.
sale destruction, till civilisation has des-
troyed itself. Men have come to sce that
the one possible solution of the age-old
problem of war is the creation ‘of a spirit
of brotherhood. Few would deny that,
though some might deny its practicability.
The League of Nations aims to create,
and to give expression to, such a spirit of
brotherhood. * It is aiming in the field of
international velations, "at the enormous
task of changing the ideals of governments,
[ts success and failure will in the end
depend on how far the average man, the
individual, is imbued with the same spirit.
And fhat is the bed-rock difficulty. Is it
possible to change human nature?
Before we attempt to discuss that, let us
turn back from the international to the
industrial problem.- Is not the parallel
clear? The world of industry is a world
at war, with intervals of truce. It has its
alliances, its combines, its trusts, its na-
tional and international unions of workers.
The industrial problem, like the inter-
aational one is: How, by the removal of
injustices, to bring permanent peace to all
these conflicting forces.
To create industrial peace, to substitute
co-operation for the strike and the locks
out, team-work for tariff wars and dump-
ang and the cut-throat tactics of inter
national trade—is this quite hopeless—just
a beautiful dream? The League of Nations
gives every sign of being a great vision
realised.” It has had already an effect un-
paralleled in history. But not yet can we
be gure of its final success. That depends,
as does industrial peace, on whether hu
man nature is capable of improvement.
The Challenge to Australia.
But men will not be roused to a spirit
Jf brotherhood by words. It needed the
Great War to produce the League of Na«
tions. Let us Lope that peace in industry
may not have to be bought at so costly a
price. The leaders of Labour and Capital
are waking to the dangers of industrial
warfare, are growing weary of incessant
strife. Let Australia take the lead.. Let
her create a League of Industry, in which
pvery great group of workers and of em-
ployers shall be represented. Let the aim
of the League be to remove injustices and
preserve peace. Let its members be fired
with the whole-hearted will that ever finds
the way.
And behind the League of Industry must
be a body of goodwill and belief from the
rank and file of the nation: To create
this, to maintain this, is the task of those
who see visions and dream dreams, They
it is who will convince, persuade, inspire,
and just as a little boy, skillfully guided,
directs his pugnacions instincts into cons
gtrnetive channels, so the grown-up child
ren, shown a loftier ideal, will turn from
the suicidal folly of warfare to the beauty
and benefits of peace.
Tet us have the courage of our ideals,
fs Human Nature Unchangeable.
The majority of people do believe that
puman nature is unchangeable. On what
lo they base this belief?
Not on evolution, for the whole story of
svolution is a story of change,
Not on religion. The central eore of
the teaching of Christ was the possibility
of transmuting human dross into gold.
Men, comfortable in their ordinary selfish-
Tha
Brightest Pictures in Australia are in “The Western Mail.”