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OUR INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS,
{By .“Hesper.")
What ave the problems of. industry In
Australin? |
A ‘moment's thought” raises a bewilder
ing series. © Whatever form industry ‘takes
—be" it -ship-owning: transport; pasturage,
sheep raising, manufacturing; gold mining
-—each ‘has its" own special set of “ pros
bletus, and “its: set «of inter-related pro-
blemis that are not confined to Australia
alore: © The mdustrial problems of -Aug-
tralia ate the industrial” problems of the
world, and’ an independent solution is
impossible. So complex, sor internationally
involved is the whole question of coni-
merce and industry that any suggested
solution that deals with one industry only
or one country ouly is foredoomed to fail.
ure. The question, then, is seen to be enor.
mous in its scope—so enormous as almost
to defy solution.
The one possibility is to get down. abe
solutely to bedrock, if there be such a
ching: to see it there be one great funda
nental difliculty runderlaging all the minor
difficulties and tackle that. Something is
wroug with the very foundations of the
whole” House Industry: But foundations
are difficult to see and the task of repair
dangerous, It is easier to keep on patehe
mg the wobbling super-structure. Kasier,
but futile. let us try to examine the
foundations.
No thenghtful person will deny that the
whole industrial fabric is in a
Most Parfous Position
to-day. Its problems are erying out for
solution and are being brought home in
no uncertain fashion to men’s business and
bosoms. The great strike weapon never
rusts in disuse. On both sides there is a
sense of injustice: and. justifiably.
Employees are everywhere demanding
more and more, and giving less and less
of honest service; business losses are enor
mous. So save Canital.
The wealth of the world is “cotiling ‘more
nd wore mder the control of individuals,
So says Labour.
On both sides there 15 suspicion, mis-
trust, hatred, the desire for revenge, Capi-
tal'and. Labour are two armed camps, peril
ously ready tor active, war, The ground
of suspicion is -a-tevtile one for the seeds
of. the. anarebist, the social. vandal. gi
England—soher, steidy old -Engiand-—
was perilously. near revolution and perhaps
a total collapse of the “whole social sys-
tem in the great strike of 19927, Australia
has been on the very verge of it more
than onee-“-nearer than the average man
Helieves:
These recurrent shipping strikes have
more serious possibilities than mere butter
and sugar shortages. The whole situation
in industry. to-day is indeed fraught. with
peril. France and Russia have witnessed
revolutions and suffered the agonies of re.
organisation on uwew lines. It is not im-
possible that other countries, including
Australia may have to undergo the same
terrible experience. That slte should is the
am and object of the propoganda of many
men in Australia to-day: that she should
be saved from it. is the object of all who
see its futility aud ave: seeking another
solution. Whatever the solution found, it
will not be an. casy one. But failure to find
one will be followed ‘inevitably by conse-
fuences horrible to contemplate. -
Armed Camps,
Let us study our indnstrial problem with
he seviousness it demands,
The two armed campe ave there, then,
at best in a state of truce. Both are bits
ter with the memories of ancient and of
recent wrongs. Both are suspicions, both
hostile, yet each needs the other's ger-
7ices, znd must have them to exist, Thus,
‘he fundamental. problem ~of industry in
Australis is not. 1 tnke it. the supply of
Brighten Your Home with “The Western Mail.”